
High above a bustling city a gilded statue of a prince glitters on a tall column, his eyes twin sapphires and his sword tipped with a ruby. Citizens admire his beauty, comparing him to an angel, while a weary Swallow, delayed from his migration, seeks shelter after a season of longing for a reed by the river. The little bird, tired of idle romance and yearning for purpose, drifts down to the statue, hoping for a place to rest. As rain begins to fall, the Swallow discovers that even the shining figure is not immune to sorrow.
When the Swallow lands, he finds the Prince weeping golden tears, a startling contrast to the statue’s radiant façade. The Prince confides that, in life, he dwelt in a palace where grief was forbidden, never knowing the weight of suffering. Moved by this revelation, the Swallow feels a sudden kinship, and together they begin to contemplate how compassion might bridge the gap between beauty and pain. Their unexpected friendship promises to turn the glittering monument into something far more human.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (86K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2009-09-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1854–1900
Known for sparkling wit and razor-sharp social comedy, this Irish writer turned elegance, satire, and paradox into an unforgettable literary voice. His plays and prose still feel fresh, funny, and surprisingly daring more than a century later.
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by Oscar Wilde

by Oscar Wilde

by Oscar Wilde

by Oscar Wilde

by Oscar Wilde