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Oscar Wilde and His Fairy Tales

2023-02-04 17:11:17

Oscar Wilde and his fairy tale I. Fingal O'Flahertie Wills (16th October 1854, Dublin, Ireland, 30th November 1900, Paris, Florida) The reputation of Irish, poet and playwright is his Masterpiece of cartoons, Mrs. Windowmere's fan (1893) and "serious importance" (1899) is influenced. He is a sportsman of the British movement in the late nineteenth century aesthetically advocating art for art. But it can be thought that Oscar Wilde took over his business and created his own unique style work originated from his fairy tale.

Oscar Wilde is known for his sharp and elegant nonfiction and is a master of a fairy tale. Although some of his irony that can not be imitated still exists, Wild has created several cute stories filled with prince and nightingale mermaid, giant and king. Indeed, all his fairy tales are written with the aesthetic sounds learned. As a representative of aesthetics, his fairy tale is used as a model of style aesthetics. Wild shows the special attraction of the language to the reader, making literature and art more appealing. His fairy tale is characterized by rhetoric and satireful humor to convey themes such as love and art, and the spirit of self-sacrifice in "nightingale and rose".

In the story, Oscar Wilde uses many languages ​​to complete the semantic representation. Personification is a typical rhetoric of a fairy tale. In a fairy tale, the nightingale is only a symbol of Oscar Wilde himself, and roses represent real love and real art. In addition, this story applies similar languages ​​and vice versa to make the language diverse and beautiful. This is an example for explaining the semantic function of this story.

This is a story written in "fairy tale" style published by Oscar Wilde in 1888 and includes a story of a series of children called "Happy Prince" and "Other Stories". But this is not just a short paragraph of children's sentences, it causes problems of loyalty, faith, values, friendship, and most important love. One person, usually an amateur, in particular supports the provision of religious services in the British National Church. Albert Dobson is a very good person who has served the church for many years. However, when a modern new pastor discovered that Albert could not read or write, he gave no choice but to resign soon.