The Ballad of Reading Gaol - Oscar Wilde

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  • Опубліковано 17 жов 2024
  • The Ballad of Reading Gaol
    by Oscar Wilde
    Read by Nick Gisburne
    Full Text:
    www.love-poems....

КОМЕНТАРІ • 49

  • @WKelleyLucas_KustomScatterguns
    @WKelleyLucas_KustomScatterguns 5 місяців тому +1

    This is the best reading of The Ballad of Reading Gaol. I have literally listened to it at least 50 times over the years. Well done.

  • @JJTownley_Classical-Composer
    @JJTownley_Classical-Composer 7 років тому +31

    1:40 "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." Great, great, poem. On a level with Rime of the Ancient Mariner. My favorite part starts at 11:49 with the spirits who invade the cells of the inmates taunting, "Oooo", they cried, "the world is wide but fettered limbs go lame. And once or twice to throw the dice is a gentlemanly game. But he does not win who plays with sin in the secret house of shame!" Great, GREAT stuff.

  • @moscairritante
    @moscairritante 11 років тому +22

    Startling that Wilde wrote so little yet produced masterpieces in almost every literary format: novel (A Picture of Dorian Grey), play (Salome et. al.), Essay/Letter (De Profundis), poem/ballad (Reading Gaol).
    A genius.

    • @rosema7909
      @rosema7909 2 роки тому +1

      Dorian grey is only cool if you are new to wilde. His best play was the importance of being earnest.

  • @express777100
    @express777100 10 років тому +36

    written by a genius.

  • @dogsforever5707
    @dogsforever5707 6 років тому +9

    I love the "but each man kills the thing he lives" and the "the coward does it with a kiss" bits, I love the reiteration and the slow building upon each time it is said
    But the most touching part is anytime he talks of God because it really affirms my faith and reminds he of his forgiveness.

  • @zoheirbenmezdad7281
    @zoheirbenmezdad7281 3 роки тому +3

    He was the engineer in his era. The Lord of words. And wisdom. Telling that he is genius is too poor to describe his ability to write and paint the paper with a magic touches. And warm. Cosy. Emotions. RIP. WILDE

  • @zero_bs_tolerance8646
    @zero_bs_tolerance8646 5 років тому +2

    Heartbreaking. RIP Oscar Wilde.
    Excellent reading. Thank you.

  • @RisingStar2045
    @RisingStar2045 11 років тому +18

    Now that's what I call a poem. It has meter and rhyme. It displays mastery of words while evoking mood and the feeling of despair, fear, and elation and depicts a scene like a painter on his canvas and creates hot and cold to the imagination.
    Is this genius or just simply how it should be done?
    Try:
    The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe
    and
    The Deserted Village by Oliver Goldsmith

    • @sidd5938
      @sidd5938 6 років тому

      right!

    • @jamescorr1722
      @jamescorr1722 4 роки тому

      Jimmy Corr reminds me of the rhyme of the ancient mariner, brilliant|

    • @khyatirawat602
      @khyatirawat602 4 роки тому

      Hey I'm into poems these days because of quarantine . thanks for sharing!

  • @maitreyalux
    @maitreyalux 8 років тому +9

    Oscar Wilde is someone I have heard about . However, I had no Idea He was so talented.

    • @StigCarlsson
      @StigCarlsson 8 років тому

      Shhh, Just another Victorian hack writer!.. ;-)

    • @Paslayas
      @Paslayas 5 років тому

      Read the Happy Prince, his best short story in my opinion. He has always been a favorite author of mine. Audiable has an extensive collection of his plays. Genius.

  • @unclephilsie
    @unclephilsie 11 років тому +4

    One of my favorites, an enchanting mesmerizing flow. such a subject.

  • @rexterrocks
    @rexterrocks 12 років тому +4

    The work of a true genius that he truly was. De profundis was written while in prison and not published til 1905 and although not a poem and more a letter it has the wit and guile of any of his great works. I find it a truly moving letter.Requiscat and this I actually learnt off by heart. It was not published under his own name but by his cell number and the only name he was ever called while in prison C33.I have visited the gaol and been to Pere Laichase He was a true genius.

  • @aimajavaid4093
    @aimajavaid4093 4 роки тому +1

    The voice at starting and at the end gave me chills.🙃

  • @iutubgugal5566
    @iutubgugal5566 7 років тому +2

    Thank you for the posting. I enjoy listening to it very much.

  • @Gisburne2000
    @Gisburne2000  13 років тому +12

    Trooper Charles Wooldridge was hanged at Reading Gaol, while Oscar Wilde was an inmate there, on 7 July 1896, for having slashed his wife's throat in a fit of jealousy. This was Oscar Wilde's final work, written after his release. He had served two years' hard labour for homosexual offences (homosexuality was illegal at the time), and he died in 1900.

    • @sidd5938
      @sidd5938 6 років тому

      Thanks!

    • @Paslayas
      @Paslayas 5 років тому +3

      Whatever happened to his children? I know the ex-wife changed their surname and moved away, other than that silence

    • @L0rd0fTh3N3rdz
      @L0rd0fTh3N3rdz Рік тому

      To publish another word would have been an insult, imo. I have seen it argued that the production of this effort broke his heart as much as his incarceration. Putting a gentle heart like Wilde into such a place could only be an act of cruelty.

    • @jerichohill487
      @jerichohill487 24 дні тому

      ​@Paslayas I know I'm way late seeing your comment, but I thought I'd let you know that there is a collected works of wilde, and the intro is written by his grandson

  • @ThomasAllan-up4td
    @ThomasAllan-up4td 14 днів тому

    Who can tell , 23:59 to what red hell his sightless soul may stray.

  • @DeadQ21
    @DeadQ21 11 років тому

    this is maudlin and tearful.

  • @tsestenigma2077
    @tsestenigma2077 5 років тому

    Thanks for your reading

  • @Paslayas
    @Paslayas 5 років тому

    You do justice to the words, Gisburne2000.

  • @laughlight1
    @laughlight1 11 років тому

    thank you for this insight...it adds wonderfully to the poetry...A Gift this is, you are to us, thank you ~ it is a pleasure this day to find you, your creations.

  • @maltasy
    @maltasy 4 роки тому

    That was awesome!

  • @backseatcovers
    @backseatcovers Рік тому

    This is such a beautiful reading. 🖤🤍

  • @lapalad
    @lapalad 4 роки тому +1

    An American serviceman Eddie Leonski who was hanged in Australia during WW2 for the murder of three women learnt and memorised this brilliant poem while awaiting execution .

  • @bloodandwinearered
    @bloodandwinearered 12 років тому

    Thank you for providing the correct information.

  • @deathinmidsummer
    @deathinmidsummer 11 років тому

    Thank you.

  • @hamburglr1
    @hamburglr1 5 років тому +2

    This is mike tysons favorite poem

  • @Auenerkaty
    @Auenerkaty 12 років тому

    Thanks...

  • @elinapuletto5296
    @elinapuletto5296 6 років тому +1

    Stupendo

  • @ROYALWAND
    @ROYALWAND 10 років тому +2

    genius :)

  • @peachyb.4521
    @peachyb.4521 4 роки тому

    6/20/2020 the mud craved blood again

  • @selectforintellect6092
    @selectforintellect6092 3 роки тому

    Explanation, please🙏

  • @h.4349
    @h.4349 5 років тому

    🖤🖤🖤🖤

  • @ryanokura6069
    @ryanokura6069 5 років тому

    4:10 17:00

  • @newglappy2389
    @newglappy2389 4 роки тому

    Part 3: 7:22

  • @johnniejukebox
    @johnniejukebox 12 років тому

    c.3.3.