Kdo chodil s Oscar Wilde?

  • Lord Alfred Douglas datováno Oscar Wilde od ? do ?. Věkový rozdíl byl 16 roky, 0 měsíců a 6 dny.

  • Robbie Baldwin Ross datováno Oscar Wilde od ? do ?. Věkový rozdíl byl 14 roky, 7 měsíců a 9 dny.

Oscar Wilde

Oscar Wilde

Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde (16. října 1854 Dublin – 30. listopadu 1900 Paříž) byl v Anglii působící dramatik, prozaik, básník a esejista irského původu.

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Lord Alfred Douglas

Lord Alfred Douglas

Lord Alfred Bruce Douglas (22 October 1870 – 20 March 1945), also known as Bosie Douglas, was an English poet and journalist, and a lover of Oscar Wilde. At the University of Oxford, he edited an undergraduate journal, The Spirit Lamp, that carried a homoerotic subtext, and met Wilde, starting a close but stormy relationship. Douglas's father, John Douglas, 9th Marquess of Queensberry, abhorred it and set out to humiliate Wilde, publicly accusing him of homosexuality. Wilde sued him for criminal libel, but Queensberry produced witnesses who attested to the truth of his claim, and Wilde was later imprisoned. On his release, he briefly lived with Douglas in Naples, but they had separated by the time Wilde died in 1900. Douglas married a poet, Olive Custance, in 1902 and had a son, Raymond.

On converting to Catholicism in 1911, he repudiated homosexuality, and in a Catholic magazine, Plain English, expressed openly antisemitic views, but rejected the policies of Nazi Germany. He was jailed for libelling Winston Churchill over claims of World War I misconduct. Douglas wrote several books of verse, some in a homoerotic Uranian genre. The phrase "The love that dare not speak its name" appears in one (Two Loves), though it is widely misattributed to Wilde.

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Oscar Wilde

Oscar Wilde
 

Robbie Baldwin Ross

Robbie Baldwin Ross

Robert Baldwin Ross (25 May 1869 – 5 October 1918) was a British journalist, art critic and art dealer, best known for his relationship with Oscar Wilde, to whom he was a devoted friend, lover and literary executor. A grandson of the Canadian reform leader Robert Baldwin, and son of John Ross and Augusta Elizabeth Baldwin, Ross was a pivotal figure on the London literary and artistic scene from the mid-1890s to his early death, and mentored several literary figures, including Siegfried Sassoon. His open homosexuality, in a period when male homosexual acts were illegal, brought him many hardships.

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