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The ballad of gaol
The ballad of gaol













the ballad of gaol the ballad of gaol

The first edition, of 800 copies, sold out within a week, and Smithers announced that a second edition would be ready within another week that was printed on 24 February, in 1,000 copies, which also sold well. It was not commonly known, until the 7th printing in June 1899, that C.3.3. This ensured that Wilde's name – by then notorious – did not appear on the poem's front cover.

the ballad of gaol

The finished poem was published by Leonard Smithers on 13 February 1898 under the name "C.3.3.", which stood for cell block C, landing 3, cell 3. He adopted the proletarian ballad form, and suggested it be published in Reynold's Magazine, "because it circulates widely among the criminal classes – to which I now belong – for once I will be read by my peers – a new experience for me". Wilde too was separated from his wife and sons. Wilde juxtaposes the executed man and himself with the line "Yet each man kills the thing he loves". No attempt is made to assess the justice of the laws which convicted them, but rather the poem highlights the brutalisation of the punishment that all convicts share. The poem narrates the execution of Wooldridge it moves from an objective story-telling to symbolic identification with the prisoners as a whole. Wilde wrote the poem in mid-1897 while staying with Robert Ross in Berneval-le-Grand. He was convicted of cutting the throat of his wife, Laura Ellen, earlier that year at Clewer, near Windsor. Charles Thomas Wooldridge had been a trooper in the Royal Horse Guards. Wilde had been incarcerated in Reading after being convicted of gross indecency with other men in 1895 and sentenced to two years' hard labour in prison.ĭuring his imprisonment, on Tuesday, 7 July 1896, a hanging took place. The Ballad of Reading Gaol is a poem by Oscar Wilde, written in exile in Berneval-le-Grand, after his release from Reading Gaol ( / r ɛ.















The ballad of gaol