La maison de la courtisane: Nouveaux Poèmes by Oscar Wilde

(4 User reviews)   375
By Ashley Johnson Posted on Jan 12, 2026
In Category - Gardening
Wilde, Oscar, 1854-1900 Wilde, Oscar, 1854-1900
French
Hey, if you think you know Oscar Wilde from his witty plays, this book will surprise you. 'La maison de la courtisane' is a collection of his later poems, written during and after his imprisonment. It's raw, beautiful, and heartbreaking. Forget the glittering socialite—this is Wilde stripped bare, wrestling with love, loss, faith, and regret in verse. The main tension isn't a plot twist; it's the quiet, desperate conflict between the man he was and the man he became. It’s haunting and surprisingly tender. You won't look at him the same way again.
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in Dorsetshire, and his stock apparently was west-country English. Browning himself liked to believe that an earlier ancestor was a certain Captain Micaiah Browning who raised the siege of Derry in 1689 by an act of personal bravery which cost him his life. It is most to the point that Browning was London born with two generations of city Londoners behind him. His mother was Sarah Anne--a name which became Sarianna in the poet's sister--Wiedemann, the Scottish daughter of a Hamburg German, a shipowner in Dundee. The characters of the poet's parents are clearly defined. Robert Browning, senior, was a man of business who performed his business duties punctiliously, and by frugality acquired a tolerably comfortable fortune, but he was not a money-making man; his real life was in his books and in the gratification of literary and æsthetic tastes. He was a voracious reader, and in a prudent way a book and print collector. "It was his habit," says Mrs. Orr, "when he bought a book--which was generally an old one allowing of this addition--to have some pages of blank paper bound into it. These he filled with notes, chronological tables, or such other supplementary matter as would enhance the interest, or assist the mastering, of its contents: all written in a clear and firm, though by no means formal, handwriting." He had a talent for versifying which he used for his entertainment; he had a cheerful nature and that genuine sociability which made him a delightful companion in the small circle which satisfied his simple, ingenuous nature. He was born and bred in the Church of England, but in middle life became by choice a Dissenter, though never an exclusive one. Mrs. Browning, the poet's mother, was once described by Carlyle as "the true type of a Scottish gentlewoman." She inherited from her father a love for music and drawing which in him was manifested in execution, in her in good taste and appreciation. She was a woman of serene, gentle and affectionate nature, and of simple, earnest religious belief. She was brought up in the kirk of Scotland, but, like her husband, connected herself in middle life with the Congregationalists. She communicated of her own religious conviction to her children; it is said that she handed down also a nervous organization. Of these parents Robert Browning was born in the parish of St. Giles, Camberwell, London, May 7, 1812. He was the oldest of the small family, having two sisters, one, Clara, who died in childhood, and Sarianna, two years younger than himself, who outlived him. The country in which he was born and where he spent his childhood has been delightfully described by his great contemporary, Ruskin, whose Herne Hill was in the immediate neighborhood. Camberwell at that time was a suburb of London, with rural spaces and near access to the open country, though the stony foot of the metropolis was already stepping outward upon the pleasant lanes and fields. There was room for gardening and the keeping of pets, while the country gave opportunity for forays into nature's fastnesses. The boy kept owls and monkeys, magpies and hedgehogs, an eagle, snakes even, and was touched with the collector's pride, as when he started a collection of rare creatures with a couple of lady-birds brought home one winter day and placed in a box lined with cotton wool and labelled, "Animals found surviving in the depths of a severe winter." It is easy for a reader of his poems to detect the close, sympathetic observation which he disclosed for all lower life. Indeed the characteristics...

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This isn't a novel with a traditional plot. It's a collection of poems, but they tell a powerful story if you read them in order. The book opens with pieces written just before Wilde's world collapsed, still shimmering with his trademark style. Then, it shifts dramatically to works from his time in prison—these are stark, aching, and full of biblical imagery as he grapples with his suffering. Finally, we get poems from his exile in France, marked by a weary, melancholic beauty and reflections on lost love and a fractured life.

Why You Should Read It

I picked this up for the famous Wilde wit, but I stayed for the profound humanity. The poems about his son, 'To L. L.', absolutely wrecked me. You see the brilliant mask completely fall away. It's his voice without the performance. He writes about sorrow with such clarity that it doesn't feel depressing—it feels honest and strangely comforting. This collection shows that his greatest masterpiece wasn't 'Dorian Gray' or 'Earnest'; it was his own ruined, yet still beautiful, spirit.

Final Verdict

Perfect for anyone who loves poetry that feels real, or for Wilde fans ready to see the full, tragic depth of the man behind the quotes. It’s also a great, accessible entry point if you're a bit intimidated by poetry—his language here is direct and powerful. If you only know the quipping dandy, this is the essential, other half of the story.



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Jackson Nelson
2 months ago

As an avid reader, the tone remains consistent and professional throughout. This left a lasting impression on me.

Mark Ramirez
3 months ago

This stood out immedately because the clarity of explanations makes revisiting sections worthwhile. I couldn't put it down until the very end.

Richard Wilson
1 week ago

This immediately felt different because the arguments are well-supported by credible references. This deserves far more attention.

William White
3 months ago

This download was worth it since the balance between theory and practice is exceptionally well done. I’ll definitely revisit this in the future.

5
5 out of 5 (4 User reviews )

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