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The ballad of Reading Gaol

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The ballad of Reading Gaol Oscar Wilde Brief Biography Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) first rose to prominence at Oxford University, where he founded the Aesthetic Movement ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The ballad of Reading Gaol


1
The ballad of Reading Gaol
  • Oscar Wilde

2
Brief Biography
  • Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) first rose to prominence
    at Oxford University, where he founded the
    Aesthetic Movement which promoted art for arts
    sake and was notorious for his colourful style
    of dress. His major successes were on the London
    stage, with a number of highly accomplished,
    witty plays which undermined social conventions,
    culminating in The Importance of Being Earnest.
  • His life ended bitterly. He was convicted for
    homosexual practices and sentenced to
    imprisonment. After his release, he lived his
    last years in Paris under a pseudonym. The Ballad
    of Reading Gaol was written at this time.
  • The finished poem was published in 1898 under the
    name C.3.3., which stood for cell block C,
    landing 3, cell 3. This ensured that Wilde's name
    by then notorious did not appear on the
    poem's front cover. It was not commonly known,
    until June 1899, that C.3.3. was actually Wilde.

3
The ballad of Reading Gaol
  • He did not wear his scarlet coat, For
    blood and wine are red, And blood and wine were
    on his hands When they found him with the
    dead, The poor dead woman whom he loved, And
    murdered in her bed.He walked amongst the Trial
    Men In a suit of shabby grey A cricket cap was
    on his head, And his step seemed light and
    gay But I never saw a man who looked So
    wistfully at the day.

4
  • Dear Christ! the very prison walls Suddenly
    seemed to reel, And the sky above my head
    became Like a casque of scorching steel And,
    though I was a soul in pain, My pain I could not
    feel.I only knew what hunted thought Quickened
    his step, and why He looked upon the garish
    day With such a wistful eye The man had killed
    the thing he loved And so he had to die.
  • I never saw a man who looked With such a wistful
    eye Upon that little tent of blue Which
    prisoners call the sky, And at every drifting
    cloud that went With sails of silver by.I
    walked, with other souls in pain, Within another
    ring, And was wondering if the man had done A
    great or little thing, When a voice behind me
    whispered low, "That fellow's got to swing."

5
  • Some love too little, some too long, Some
    sell, and others buy Some do the deed with many
    tears, And some without a sigh For each man
    kills the thing he loves, Yet each man does not
    die.He does not die a death of shame On a day
    of dark disgrace, Nor have a noose about his
    neck, Nor a cloth upon his face, Nor drop feet
    foremost through the floor,Into an empty place
  • Yet each man kills the thing he loves By
    each let this be heard, Some do it with a bitter
    look, Some with a flattering word, The coward
    does it with a kiss, The brave man with a
    sword!Some kill their love when they are
    young, And some when they are old Some
    strangle with the hands of Lust, Some with the
    hands of Gold The kindest use a knife,
    because The dead so soon grow cold.

6
Summary
  • This excerpt comprises of the first ten stanzas
    of Wildes much longer poem The Ballad of
    Reading Gaol (gaol is pronounced jail). He was
    inspired to write the poem by the execution of a
    fellow inmate for the brutal murder of his wife.
    However, the poem also is an attack on the
    injustice and hypocrisy of Victorian Society. It
    also has a political undercurrent, appealing for
    prison reform.

7
Summary contd
  • The excerpt concentrates on the condemned man
    (Charles Thomas Wooldridge), whom the persona
    (the voice speaking in the poem) never meets but
    observes during exercise period, eyeing the sky
    wistfully. Wilde quickly shifts to presenting the
    impact on the persona, who reacts to the news
    that the convict is to be executed. He then
    meditates on the wider implications of guilt
    each man is guilty of a crimekilling the thing
    he lovesbut is not held accountable. The persona
    then resumes his account of the plight of the
    condemned man, execution.

8
Questions on structure and language
  1. What rhythm does Wilde use in this poem?
  2. Find examples of internal rhyme in the poem?
    What might these rhymes represent?
  3. The rhythm, rhyme and simple vocabulary or stanza
    8 create an almost nursery rhyme effect? Why
    does Wilde do this?
  4. One stanza contains lots of different examples of
    alliteration. Which one is it and why does Wilde
    do this here?
  5. Two consecutive stanzas contains a number of
    examples of imagery. Why are they used at this
    particular point?
  6. What is the purpose of the exclamation in stanza
    5?
  7. Stanzas 7, 8 and 9 use a great deal of antitheses
    (opposites). Why does Wilde do this?
  8. Where and why does Wilde use repetition in this
    extract?
  9. There is a great deal of negative diction in
    stanza ten. What is the effect of this?
  10. Why do you think Wilde describes the execution in
    such detail in stanza ten?

9
Structure
  • Although the poem is labelled a ballad, Wilde
    did not adhere to the traditional, four-line
    ballad stanza (with the second and fourth lines
    rhyming) but adopted a six-line stanza instead.
    Wilde also used iambic tetrameter (four
    repetitions of the iambic pattern of stress on
    the second syllable) rather than the five
    repetitions popular in English poetry (iambic
    pentameter). Internal rhyme is also frequently
    used.

10
Language
  • The poem begins with a lot of emotive language,
    poor dead woman and murdered which sets a
    rather melodramatic tone and establishes the
    personas voice. The second stanza describes the
    dead man as he walks around the trial yard at
    the prison. His step seemed light and gay, but
    the prisoner was described as looking wistfully
    at the day. This contrast shows the prisoners
    dilemma, he is under a death sentence.

11
Language
  • In the third stanza, the persona observes the
    condemned man looking at the sky A little tent
    of blue with and the clouds passing With sails
    of silver. This imagery sums up the beauty of
    the natural world and the condemned mans wish to
    remain alive. Which is contrasted by societys
    voice in stanza 4 proclaiming That fellow's got
    to swing. This is perhaps Wildes most poignant
    plea, for us to pause before we condemn others,
    as Wilde was condemned for his homosexuality. In
    stanza 5, Wilde uses a simile to show his
    sympathy with the condemned man, The sky above
    my head became Like a casque of scorching steel

12
Language
  • He goes on to say that everyone in some way is
    responsible for destroying what they love Each
    man kills the thing he loves . He then lists the
    variety of ways men and women hurt each other
    Some do it with a bitter look, Some with a
    flattering word.
  • Although we may not all be murderers, we have all
    hurt the people we love, just as the condemned
    prisoner does, so Wilde is asking why was there
    so little mercy for him in Victorian society?

13
Language
  • The final stanzas of the excerpt use antithesis
    to show the myriad of ways that people hurt and
    abuse each other, Some love too little, some too
    long/Some sell, and others buy. Before using
    negative diction and semantics to show that the
    punishment we all deserve for our cruelty is
    given to the condemned man ,
  • Nor have a noose about his neck/Nor a cloth
    upon his face/Nor drop feet foremost through the
    floor /Into an empty place.
  • This end to the excerpt places us squarely in the
    shoes of the condemned we feel his terror as he
    hangs, an emotional end to this section of the
    poem.

14
Crimes of humanity
  • Look at the various crimes that Wilde lists in
    stanzas 7-9.
  • These all detail ways that man kills the thing he
    loves.
  • In pairs select three of the ways Wilde gives and
    think of examples of how this might kill someone.
    Your examples can be traditional or modern e.g.
    some strangle with the hands of lust this
    could apply to men who rape women and so
    something dies inside or someone who kills
    another by giving them an STI.

15
Jail Mime
  • In groups of three you are going to produce a
    mime for one of the stanzas of the poem.
  • You will need someone to be the condemned man and
    maybe another to be the persona of the poem. The
    third will read the stanza as the mime takes
    place. Try to include as many details as
    possible.
  • You will be numbered 1-10 and must then find your
    other group members.

16
http//www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2009/mar
/23/oscar-wilde-ballad-reading-gaol-poem
  • Wilde wrote the poem in 1898. He was now free,
    but a broken man, and a broke one. Besides two
    letters, he produced nothing else of literary
    significance before his death. It was first
    published simply under his prisoner
    identification number, C.3-3.
  • The poem is dedicated to the memory of the
    "sometime" Royal Horse Guards trooper, Charles
    Thomas Wooldridge, and the central incident is
    Wooldridge's execution for the murder of his
    wife. Around this narrative core, whose genre
    might be described as gothic realism, Wilde
    builds a meditation on the paradoxes of morality.
    The Ballad is an indictment of the death penalty
    and the whole penal system, but it is much more
    than a protest poem. It is a revelation, and its
    structure is part of that revelation.
  • Everyone can quote the refrain "For each man
    kills the thing he loves." Poetically, it's
    unquestionably powerful, and, intellectually,
    it's powerfully questionable. What does Wilde
    mean? Perhaps he is saying that love itself
    corrupts or alters its object. That would
    certainly seem to have been true of his
    relationship with "Bosie", Lord Alfred Douglas,
    seemingly a spoiled brat further spoiled by
    Wilde's adulation. Judas, of course, is on his
    mind the poem refers to the kiss of Caiaphas,
    the latter being the priest who participated in
    Christ's betrayal.
  • Wilde loved paradox, and he found some essential
    symbol of it in the man who murdered his wife.
    Perhaps he found another in the hypocrisy of the
    prison system itself, destroying the souls and
    bodies of those it would reform. The ballad form,
    as he adapts it, encases paradox and story in a
    tight, encircling ring. It is both a Dante-esque
    circle of hell and the deadly routine of prison
    life. It represents the whole cycle of crime and
    punishment. It is inescapable, like the "iron
    gin" mentioned in line 173, a symbol of
    confinement and possibly also an actual machine.
  • In the plodding iambic tetrameter and the
    extensive use of refrain and parallelism, we can
    feel at a physical level the grinding
    relentlessness of prison work. The tasks
    Victorian prisoners were set were part of their
    punishment. They would pedal a treadmill with
    their feet, for example, and though some prison
    treadmills were geared to grind corn or raise
    water, others had no use but to enslave. Then
    there was the nasty business of oakum picking, a
    task of unravelling the twine of old tarred ropes
    salvaged from ships. Wilde had worked at this
    until his fingers bled.
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