
OSCAR WILDE
DE PROFUNDIS
GEAUTORISEERDE VERTALING VAN P.C. BOUTENS MET ENKELE BRIEVEN VAN WILDE
INHOUDSOPGAVE
INLEIDING
DE PROFUNDIS
BIJLAGEN
TWEE BRIEVEN, OVER HET LEVEN IN DE GEVANGENIS, AAN DE "DAILY CHRONICLE."
From a damp cell in Reading Gaol, a celebrated writer pours his thoughts onto paper, addressing a trusted friend with a blend of raw confession and poetic insight. The letters trace his journey from the shock of public disgrace to the quiet moments of self‑examination, revealing the tangled emotions that accompany love, betrayal, and exile. Though penned under strict prison rules, his voice remains unmistakably witty and fiercely observant.
In these pages the author wrestles with the moral strictures of his era, questioning the society that condemned him while defending the value of art and individual conscience. He reflects on the fragile balance between personal responsibility and the cruelty of external judgment, offering a meditation on forgiveness—both of others and of oneself. The prose is suffused with melancholy, yet it glimmers with the resilient humor that marked his earlier works.
Listeners will be drawn into a deeply personal narrative that feels both intimate and universal, a rare glimpse into the mind of a man confronting his own downfall. The lyrical quality of his language makes the experience as much a listening pleasure as an intellectual one, inviting reflection on how creativity endures even in the darkest confines. This work stands as a testament to the enduring power of honesty and artistic spirit.
Language
nl
Duration
~3 hours (212K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Miranda van de Heijning and the PG Online Distributed Proofreading Team
Release date
2004-10-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1854–1900
Celebrated for sparkling wit and sharp social comedy, this Irish writer gave the world The Picture of Dorian Gray and The Importance of Being Earnest. His life was as dramatic as his art, marked by dazzling success, public scandal, and a legacy that only grew stronger after his death.
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by Oscar Wilde

by Oscar Wilde

by Oscar Wilde

by Oscar Wilde

by Oscar Wilde