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A House of Pomegranates

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A House of Pomegranates is a collection of fairy tales, written by Oscar Wilde, that was published in 1891 as a second collection for The Happy Prince and Other Tales (1888). Wilde once said that this collection was "intended neither for the British child nor the British public."

The stories included in this collection are as follows:

The Young King

The Birthday of the Infanta

The Fisherman and his Soul

The Star-Child

THE YOUNG KING (excerpt)

It was the night before the day fixed for his

coronation, and the young King was sitting alone in his beautiful

chamber. His courtiers had all taken their leave of him, bowing

their heads to the ground, according to the ceremonious usage of the

day, and had retired to the Great Hall of the Palace, to receive a

few last lessons from the Professor of Etiquette; there being some of

them who had still quite natural manners, which in a courtier is, I

need hardly say, a very grave offence.

The lad - for he was only a lad, being but sixteen

years of age - was not sorry at their departure, and had flung

himself back with a deep sigh of relief on the soft cushions of his

embroidered couch, lying there, wild-eyed and open-mouthed, like a

brown woodland Faun, or some young animal of the forest newly snared

by the hunters.

And, indeed, it was the hunters who had found him,

coming upon him almost by chance as, bare-limbed and pipe in hand, he

was following the flock of the poor goatherd who had brought him up,

and whose son he had always fancied himself to be. The child of

the old King’s only daughter by a secret marriage with one much

beneath her in station - a stranger, some said, who, by the wonderful

magic of his lute-playing, had made the young Princess love him;

while others spoke of an artist from Rimini, to whom the Princess had

shown much, perhaps too much honour, and who had suddenly disappeared

from the city, leaving his work in the Cathedral unfinished - he had

been, when but a week old, stolen away from his mother’s side, as

she slept, and given into the charge of a common peasant and his

wife, who were without children of their own, and lived in a remote

part of the forest, more than a day’s ride from the town.

Grief, or the plague, as the court physician stated, or, as some

suggested, a swift Italian poison administered in a cup of spiced

wine, slew, within an hour of her wakening, the white girl who had

given him birth, and as the trusty messenger who bare the child

across his saddle-bow stooped from his weary horse and knocked at the

rude door of the goatherd’s hut, the body of the Princess was being

lowered into an open grave that had been dug in a deserted

churchyard, beyond the city gates, a grave where it was said that

another body was also lying, that of a young man of marvellous and

foreign beauty, whose hands were tied behind him with a knotted cord,

and whose breast was stabbed with many red wounds...

Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde (16 October 1854 – 30

November 1900) was an Irish playwright, novelist, essayist, and poet.

After writing in different forms throughout the 1880s, he became one of

London's most popular playwrights in the early 1890s. He is remembered

for his epigrams, his novel The Picture of Dorian Gray, his plays, as well as the circumstances of his imprisonment and early death.

Wilde's parents were successful Anglo-Irish, Dublin intellectuals. Their son became fluent in French and German early in life. At university, Wilde read Greats; he proved himself to be an outstanding classicist, first at Dublin, then at Oxford. He became known for his involvement in the rising philosophy of aestheticism, led by two of his tutors, Walter Pater and John Ruskin. After university, Wilde moved to London into fashionable cultural and social circles.

As a spokesman for aestheticism, he tried his hand at various

literary activities: he published a book of poems, lectured in the

United States and Canada on the new "English Renaissance in Art", and

then returned to London where he worked prolifically as a journalist.

Known for his biting wit, flamboyant dress and glittering conversation,

Wilde became one of the best-known personalities of his day.

At the turn of the 1890s, he refined his ideas about the supremacy of

art in a series of dialogues and essays, and incorporated themes of

decadence, duplicity, and beauty into his only novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray

(1890). The opportunity to construct aesthetic details precisely, and

combine them with larger social themes, drew Wilde to write drama. He

wrote Salome

(1891) in French in Paris but it was refused a licence for England due

to the absolute prohibition of Biblical subjects on the English stage.

Unperturbed, Wilde produced four society comedies in the early 1890s,

which made him one of the most successful playwrights of late Victorian

London.