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Nightangke and Rose Oscar Wilde 1
Nightangke and Rose Oscar Wilde 1
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Analysis of Oscar Wilde's "The Nightingale and The Rose"
OSCAR WILDE
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. At
the height of his fame and success, while his masterpiece, The Importance of Being
Earnest (1895), was still on stage in London, Wilde had the Marquess of Queensberry
prosecuted for libel. The Marquess was the father of Wilde's lover, Lord Alfred
Douglas. The charge carried a penalty of up to two years in prison. The trial unearthed
evidence that caused Wilde to drop his charges and led to his own arrest and trial for
gross indecency with men. After two more trials he was convicted and imprisoned for
two years' hard labour. In 1897, in prison, he wrote De Profundis, which was
published in 1905, a long letter which discusses his spiritual journey through his trials,
forming a dark counterpoint to his earlier philosophy of pleasure. Upon his release he
left immediately for France, never to return to Ireland or Britain. There he wrote his
last work, The Ballad of Reading Gaol (1898), a long poem commemorating the harsh
SUMMARY
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Love hurts, especially when we find an undesirable truth about someone we love.
Often we are so blind and foolish that we go to extremes, such us giving up our own
lives, or giving up things that are precious to us. The idea of love is so strong that we
choose to ignore reality and believe instead what we feel. In the story "The
Nightingale and The Rose", Oscar Wilde suggests that sometimes our own
interpretation of true love deceives us. He does this beautifully with the use of irony
and metaphors.
Wilde uses irony to show that the Nightingale's interpretation of true love leads
to her pointless and tragic death. The Nightingale thinks that the student’s love
towards the girl is real. The only thing that can appease the sorrow of the young
student is to find a red rose, which the girl asks him to do. The poor Nightingale, who
is passionate about the idea of true love, is willing to sacrifice her own life to help the
student by producing a red rose. According to her, "Love is better than life, and what
is the heart of a bird compared to the heart of the man?" . However, it transpires that
the bird’s love is more powerful than the student’s, because death did not scare her
until her last breath of life. Indeed, she is the true lover because she knows what true
loves means. This is unlike the student, who only cries. Furthermore, the sacrificial
death of the Nightingale is wasted when the student finds out that the girl chooses the
jewel of the Chamberlain's nephew over his red rose. The student immediately throws
the rose into the street, which is run over by a passing cartwheel. This is in parallel to
what happened to the Nightingale, because the student did not realize the real meaning
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of true love and sacrifice that the bird went through to produce a red rose in exchange
Oscar Wilde also uses a simile to point out that the student’s idea of love is
unauthentic. In the beginning of the story, we see that the student is crying because
he is desperate to find a red rose for his girl. He thinks that he really loves the girl.
Then as soon as he finds out that the girl rejected his rose, he quickly forgets her and
goes back to reading his books. He says, "It is not half as logic, for it does not prove
anything..." (46). It implies that a student only knows love through his books that he
reads. Instead of mourning, he quickly moves on and continues his life rather than
Both the Nightingale and the student interpret love in different ways that
entirely affects their life differently. Using irony in the story, Oscar Wilde clearly
shows us that the Nightingale turns out to be the true lover and not the student. He is
also uses similes to emphasise that not everyone has the same idea of what love is, and
thus he effectively conveys that not all we expect from our ideal love comes true.
“She said that she would dance with me if I bought her a red rose”
These are the opening lines of the story. The thoughts of a young student are revealed
in this line, who is remembering the desire of his beloved. He wanted to take her for
the prince’s ball but she had put a condition that she would go with him only if he gets
a red rose for her. It was difficult to find a red rose anywhere in the garden as it was
very cold and none of the rose bushes bore the flower he wanted. He felt very sad and
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helpless. A little song bird Nightingale heard the thoughts of the young lover and
understood his condition. She could feel his unhappiness of not being able to find a
red rose for his beloved. He was in pain and depressed at his helplessness as he was
unable to take his beloved for the dance without red rose. The Nightingale who sang
songs of love felt the impact of his agony and laments his sadness. She had a deep
insight into the feelings associated with love and relates them to the young student
who was deeply in love. She recognizes the true lover in him and says
“Here at last is the true lover”
1.She approached a rose tree that stood in the centre of the grass and made her
demand. But the tree was sorry because it bore only white roses.
2 .When she went to the tree which produced red roses, it said that intense cold and
winter had frozen its veins and the storm has broken its branches, thus it could not
give her the red rose. When the Nightingale pleaded for the red rose it said that the
only condition on which it could produce the red rose was if she stained its branches
with her life blood and let it flow in its veins. She should set her breast against a thorn,
let her life blood flow into the plant and sing all night in moonlight. This would
eventually kill her. She weighted the sadness of the young boy with its life and thinks
“Death is a great price to pay for a red rose”.
First the Nightingale thought that death was a great price for a red rose and life was
dear, but later she concluded loves to be better than life. She flew to the student and
found him weeping. She was prepared to die for a red rose but in return he must
remain constant as a true lover. The student is a man of philosophy and metaphysics.
He fails to understand why the Nightingale was hovering around him for he only
knew the things that are written down in books. About the Nightingale he has no good
opinion. He thinks that she has form but not feelings. There is irony here for she really
sacrifices her life for him.
When the moon shone that night in the sky, the Nightingale flew to the rose tree and
set her breast against the thorn. She sang all night and her life blood flowed away
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from her body into the veins of the tree. She sang of the birth of love in the souls of a
man and a maid. She sang of love that gains perfection by death. As she died the
making of red rose was in completion. The Nightingale symbolizes the spirit of
sacrifice. She does not care for its life though it knows that life is dear and precious to
everybody. Just to make the student happy, she goes to the extent of sacrificing her
own life.
She felt that the happiness of the dejected student was a serious matter while her own
life was a very small price for the glorification of love.
At noon, the student found a unique red rose, when he opened his window. He was
greatly excited and thanked his stars. He rushed to the girl, gave the rose and
reminded her of her promise that she would dance with him. He requested her to wear
it near to her heart at the ball. But she had no use for it. She had already been given
some real jewels by the Chamberlain’s nephew. She preferred them to the red rose.
She valued the expensive jewels more than the rose. She refuses him, scoffs at the gift
of rose and scorns him in a naughty manner. The rose is the wrong colour for her
dress.
She tells him and it is only a rose. She rejects him as being “only a student”, and one
who lacks silver buckets, appearances and wealth. She turns away (reject) someone
who loved her. The student in disgust and anger threw the flower into street where it
was crushed under the cart wheels. The precious red rose obtained at the cost of a life
is at last thrown on the street. It is hard to imagine what would have happened to the
soul of the Nightingale, who had met a painful death just for the sake of true love. The
sacrifice of the bird was a noble act but it resulted in a fruitless effort. The student was
almost broken and the promise made to the Nightingale was also falsified. He cursed
the girl as well as love. He says
“What a silly thing love is!”
The student and the professor’s daughter fail miserably in the test of love. They take
love as a light plaything. In the end the truth dawned on the student that love would
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give him nothing and so he decided to get back to his studies. He realises that studies
would only help him succeed in future.
CONCLUSION:
One can draw several lessons from the story. However, few of them are:
• Looks can be deceiving. People are not always what they seem to be.
• Infatuation is a very elusive and ephemeral thing without substance. Love, however,
is always true and stands the test of time.
• Before making sacrifices, count the price. Don’t throw away your life for people or
things that aren’t worth it.
Oscar Wilde shows that love is a temporary madness which erupts and then subsides
and when it subsides you have to make a decision.
THEME
Love cannot be measured in materialistic objects .
Self sacrifice
Elfless love
Literary device
Personification – The tree in which the nightingale lives tell of hoe he will miss
her singing
Simile – His hair is a dark as hyacinth blossom and his lips are red as the rose
of his desire
Symbolism – the rose represent the nightingale life
Irony – the nightingale die in vain