OSCAR WILDE AND MYSELF
LORD ALFRED DOUGLAS
The Book - preface
OSCAR WILDE AND MYSELF
LORD ALFRED DOUGLAS
WITH PORTRAIT OF THE AUTHOR
AND THIRTEEN OTHER PORTRAITS AND ILLUSTRATIONS
ALSO FAC-SIMILE LETTERS
Published by
New York
Duffield & Company
1914
Currently the text is in the Public domain. However, this formatted book is not in the public domain.
This book is published by
VICTORIA INSTITUTIONS
Aaradhana, DEVERKOVIL 673508 India
www.victoriainstitutions.com
admn@victoriainstitutions.com
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Year of publishing: December 2018
Preface
THE manuscript of this book was completed by me and handed over to the publishers as long ago as last July. Certain persons thereupon deemed it advisable to apply to the Court for an injunction restraining me from including in my book any of the letters from Oscar Wilde which were in my possession, and they further applied for an injunction restraining me from quoting from the unpublished portion of the "De Profundis" manuscript which is now sealed up at the British Museum and which was used against me in open Court as part of the justification in the defence to a libel action brought by me, in April 1913.
The application for these injunctions was made in the Vacation Court before Mr. Justice Astbury, the most recent recruit to the Judicial Bench. It was immediately granted, and though I was advised by counsel to appeal against the decision, I thought it better to accept it, at any rate for the moment. Consequently, all the copious extracts I was intending to publish from the “De Profundis," which extracts had already been reproduced in all the newspapers at the hearing of the action of Douglas v. Ransome and The Times Book Club have been entirely removed.
The same applies to those letters of Wilde's which I had originally included in my book. As far as the letters are concerned, the omission does not very much affect the book. The letters were included not to make points against my opponents, but merely as interesting curiosities. The enforced omission of the extracts from the unpublished “De Profundis" has, on the other hand, been an undoubted handicap to me.
A considerable portion of this book is devoted to a reply to the violently mendacious attacks made upon me and upon my family by Wilde in that unpublished portion of the “De Profundis” which has been accepted by the authorities of the British Museum from the literary executor of the late author.
Obviously it is very difficult to reply to an attack which one is unable to quote, and I can only say that I have met the difficulty as best I could, and that at a future date I look forward to being able to deal with the whole matter even more completely and finally. In this connection I refer my readers to the chapter in this book entitled "A Challenge to Mr. Ross."
ALFRED BRUCE DOUGLAS
Boulogne-Sur-Mer
April, 1914
To my Mother
Sibyl, Marchioness of Queensberry
List of Illustrations
Lord Alfred Douglas Frontispiece
Oscar Wilde
Lord Alfred Douglas, at the age of twenty-one, at Oxford
Caricature by Max Beerbohm of Oscar Wilde and Lord Alfred Douglas
Oscar Wilde's House, 16 Tite Street, Chelsea
The Late Marquis of Queensberry
Drawing of Lord Alfred Douglas, at the age of Twenty-four
Cafe de la Paix, Paris
Grand Café, Paris
Hotel D'Alsace, Paris
Raymond Wilfrid Sholto Douglas, only child of Lord Alfred Douglas
Lady Alfred Douglas
KINMOUNT House, Annan, the Seat of the Late Marquis of Queensberry, where Lord Alfred Douglas's childhood was passed
Monument erected over Oscar Wilde's Grave, Pere La Chaise, Paris
Commentary
0. Book profile
2. An undercurrent of a non-English
3. Hiding a trigger for homicide
5. Impressions on Alfred Douglas
6. Inserting oneself into an English
9. Verbal communication issues
10. Sensing hidden communication-code
12. To create a social pedestal
13. What comes out of the revelations
14. A very brief commentary on De Profundis
The book
0. Preface
1. Introductory
2. Oxford
7. Lord Queensberry Intervenes
10. Naples and Paris
11. The "Ballad of Reading Gaol”
12. The Truth about "De Profundis"
15. The Article in the ''Revue Blanche"
16. Fifteen Years of Persecution
17. Wilde's Poetry
19. For Posterity
20. The British Museum and "De Profundis"
21. Ransome's "Critical Study"
23. "The Picture of Dorian Gray"
25. Crosland and "The First Stone"
27. Wilde in Russia, France and Germany
28. The Smaller Fry