Read The Fall of the House of Wilde Online
Authors: Emer O'Sullivan
Oscar Wilde, looking every inch the stylish husband to the beautiful Constance.
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The Wildes' âHouse Beautiful', at No. 16 (now 34) Tite Street, Chelsea. The interior was done by the renowned architect and theatre designer, E. W. Godwin.
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Robbie Ross, Oscar's first male lover and dearest friend. They meet in 1886 and Ross moved into Tite Street as the Wildes' lodger.
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Constance and Cyril, Oscar and Constance's first child, who was born in June 1885.
Vyvyan Wilde, their second child, born in 1886 â the same year Oscar met Robbie Ross.
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Constance, aged thirty-four, in 1892; and in the same year, Oscar, aged thirty-eight. Constance and Oscar were leading separate lives, she devoted to religion, he to pleasure.
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Oscar met Lord Alfred Douglas, then a student at Oxford, in 1891.
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Oscar, Constance and Cyril in 1892 in Norfolk, where Oscar wrote
A Woman of No Importance
.
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Willie Wilde (
above
) in America. In 1891 he married an American newspaper magnate, Mrs F. Leslie (
right
), then better known than any American woman. The marriage lasted little more than a year. The American press described Willie as a writer who will not write.
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Oscar in 1895, at the time of his trial, looking subdued.
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Edward Carson, who acted for Queensberry, and made his reputation cross-examining Wilde. Their paths had previously crossed as students at Trinity.
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Constance, aged thirty-nine, in Heidelberg. She left London after Oscar's trial and lived with the boys in much reduced circumstances.
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Oscar and Douglas living in Naples in 1897, both ostracised from polite society, both sour for want of money.
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Cyril and Vyvyan in Heidelberg. Oscar, who had not seen his children since the trial, was deeply pained to receive these photographs from Constance.
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First published in Great Britain 2016
© Emer O'Sullivan, 2016