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Lord Alfred Douglas

Lord Alfred Bruce Douglas (22 October 1870 – 20 March 1945), also known as Bosie Douglas, was an English poet and journalist, and a lover of Oscar Wilde. At Oxford he edited an undergraduate journal, The Spirit Lamp, that carried a homoerotic subtext, and met Wilde, starting a close but stormy relationship. Douglas's father, the Marquess of Queensberry, abhorred it and set out to humiliate Wilde, publicly accusing him of homosexuality. Wilde sued him for criminal libel, but some intimate notes were found and Wilde was later imprisoned. On his release, he briefly lived with Douglas in Naples, but they had separated by the time Wilde died in 1900. Douglas married a poet, Olive Custance, in 1902 and had a son, Raymond.

Lord Alfred Douglas
Alfred Douglas in 1903
(by George Charles Beresford)
Born(1870-10-22)22 October 1870
Powick, Worcestershire, England
Died20 March 1945(1945-03-20) (aged 74)
Lancing, Sussex, England
Resting placeFriary Church of St Francis and St Anthony, Crawley
OccupationPoet
NationalityBritish
EducationWinchester College, Wixenford School
Alma materMagdalen College, Oxford
Spouse
(m. 1902; died 1944)
ParentsThe 9th Marquess of Queensberry
Sibyl Montgomery

On converting to Catholicism in 1911, he repudiated homosexuality, and in a Catholic magazine, Plain English, expressed openly antisemitic views, but rejected the policies of Nazi Germany. He was jailed for libelling Winston Churchill over claims of World War I misconduct. Douglas wrote several books of verse, some in a homoerotic Uranian genre. The phrase "The love that dare not speak its name" appears in one (Two Loves), though it is widely misattributed to Wilde.

Early life and background edit

 
His father, the 9th Marquess of Queensberry

Douglas was born at Ham Hill House in Powick, Worcestershire, the third son of John Douglas, 9th Marquess of Queensberry and his first wife, Sibyl Montgomery.

He was his mother's favourite child; she called him Bosie (a derivative of "boysie", as in boy), a nickname which stuck for the rest of his life.[1] His mother successfully sued for divorce in 1887 on the grounds of his father's adultery.[2] The Marquess later married Ethel Weeden in 1893 but the marriage was annulled the following year.

Douglas was educated at Wixenford School,[3] Winchester College (1884–88) and Magdalen College, Oxford (1889–93), which he left without obtaining a degree. At Oxford, he edited an undergraduate journal, The Spirit Lamp (1892–3), an activity that intensified the constant conflict between him and his father. Their relationship had always been a strained one and, during the Queensberry-Wilde feud, Douglas sided with Wilde, even encouraging Wilde to prosecute the Marquess for libel. In 1893, Douglas had a brief affair with George Ives.

In 1858 his grandfather, Archibald Douglas, 8th Marquess of Queensberry, had died in what was reported as a shooting accident, but was widely believed to have been suicide.[4][5] In 1862, his widowed grandmother, Lady Queensberry, converted to Catholicism and took her children to live in Paris.[6] One of his uncles, Lord James Douglas, was deeply attached to his twin sister "Florrie" (Lady Florence Douglas) and was heartbroken when she married a baronet, Sir Alexander Beaumont Churchill Dixie. In 1885, Lord James tried to abduct a young girl, and after that became ever more manic; in 1888, he made a disastrous marriage.[7] Separated from Florrie, James drank himself into a deep depression,[7] and in 1891 committed suicide by cutting his throat.[6] Another of his uncles, Lord Francis Douglas (1847–1865) had died in a climbing accident on the Matterhorn. His uncle Lord Archibald Edward Douglas (1850–1938) became a clergyman.[6][8] Alfred Douglas's aunt, Lord James's twin Lady Florence Dixie (1855–1905), was an author, war correspondent for the Morning Post during the First Boer War, and a feminist.[9] In 1890, she published a novel, Gloriana, or the Revolution of 1900, in which women's suffrage is achieved after a woman posing as a man named Hector D'Estrange is elected to the House of Commons. The character D'Estrange is clearly based on Oscar Wilde.[10]

Relationship with Wilde edit

 
Oscar Wilde and Lord Alfred Douglas, May 1893

In 1891, Douglas's cousin Lionel Johnson introduced him to Oscar Wilde; they soon began an affair.[11][12] In 1894, the Robert Hichens novel The Green Carnation was published, a roman à clef depicting satirically Douglas's dependent relationship on Wilde.[13]

Douglas has been described as spoiled, reckless, insolent and extravagant.[14] He would spend money on boys and gambling and expected Wilde to contribute to funding his tastes. They often argued and broke up, but would always be reconciled.

Douglas had praised Wilde's play Salome in the Oxford magazine The Spirit Lamp, of which he was editor. Wilde had originally written Salomé in French, and in 1893 he commissioned Douglas to translate it into English. Douglas's French was very poor and his translation was highly criticised; for example, a passage that runs "On ne doit regarder que dans les miroirs" ("One should look only in mirrors") he rendered "One must not look at mirrors". Douglas was angered at Wilde's criticism, and claimed that the errors were in fact in Wilde's original play. This led to a hiatus in the relationship and a row between the two, with angry messages being exchanged and even the involvement of the publisher John Lane and the illustrator Aubrey Beardsley when they themselves objected to the poor standard of Douglas's work. Beardsley complained to Robbie Ross: "For one week the numbers of telegraph and messenger boys who came to the door was simply scandalous". Wilde redid much of the translation himself, but in a gesture of reconciliation suggested that Douglas be dedicated as the translator rather than be credited, along with him, on the title page. Accepting this, Douglas, vainly likened the difference between sharing the title page and having a dedication to "the difference between a tribute of admiration from an artist and a receipt from a tradesman".[14]

In 1894, Douglas came and visited Oscar Wilde in Worthing, to the consternation of the latter's wife Constance.[15]

On another occasion, while staying with Wilde in Brighton, Douglas fell ill with influenza and was nursed by Wilde, but failed to return the favour when Wilde himself fell ill having caught influenza in consequence. Instead Douglas moved to the luxurious Grand Hotel and on Wilde's 40th birthday sent him a letter informing him that he had charged Wilde with the hotel bill. Douglas also gave his old clothes to male prostitutes, but failed to remove from the pockets incriminating letters exchanged between him and Wilde, which were then used for blackmail.[14]

Alfred's father, the Marquess of Queensberry, suspected the liaison to be more than a friendship. He sent his son a letter, attacking him for leaving Oxford without a degree and failing to take up a proper career. He threatened to "disown [Alfred] and stop all money supplies." Alfred responded with a telegram rudely stating: "What a funny little man you are."

Queensberry's next letter threatened his son with a "thrashing" and accused him of being "crazy". He also threatened to "make a public scandal in a way you little dream of" if he continued his relationship with Wilde.

Queensberry was well known for his short temper and threatening to beat people with a horsewhip. Alfred sent his father a postcard stating "I detest you" and making it clear that he would take Wilde's side in a fight between him and the Marquess, "with a loaded revolver".

In answer Queensberry wrote to Alfred (whom he addressed as "You miserable creature") that he had divorced Alfred's mother so as not to "run the risk of bringing more creatures into the world like yourself" and that when Alfred was a baby, "I cried over you the bitterest tears a man ever shed, that I had brought such a creature into the world, and unwittingly committed such a crime.... You must be demented."

Douglas's eldest brother Francis Viscount Drumlanrig died in a suspicious hunting accident in October 1894, as rumours circulated that he had been having a homosexual relationship with the Prime Minister, Lord Rosebery, and that the cause of death was suicide. The Marquess of Queensberry thus embarked on a campaign to save his other son and began a public persecution of Wilde. Wilde had been openly flamboyant and his actions made the public suspicious even before the trial.[16] The Marquess and a bodyguard confronted Wilde in Wilde's home; later, Queensberry planned to throw rotten vegetables at Wilde on the first night of The Importance of Being Earnest, but forewarned of this, Wilde was able to deny him access to the theatre.

Queensberry then publicly insulted Wilde by leaving at the latter's club a visiting card on which he had written, "For Oscar Wilde posing as a somdomite [sic]". The wording is in dispute – the handwriting is unclear – although Hyde reports it as this. According to Merlin Holland, Wilde's grandson, it is more likely "Posing somdomite", while Queensberry himself claimed it to be "Posing as somdomite". Holland suggests that this wording ("posing [as] ...") would have been easier to defend in court.

1895 trials edit

With Douglas's avid support, but against the advice of friends such as Robbie Ross, Frank Harris and George Bernard Shaw, Wilde had Queensberry arrested and charged with criminal libel in a private prosecution, as sodomy was then a criminal offence. According to the libel laws of the time, since his authorship of the charge of sodomy was not in question, Queensberry could avoid conviction by demonstrating in court not only that the charge he had made was true and that there was also a public interest in having made the charge public. Edward Carson, Queensberry's lawyer, portrayed Wilde as a vicious older man who preyed upon naive young boys and with extravagant gifts and promises of a glamorous lifestyle seduced them into a life of homosexuality. Several highly suggestive erotic letters that Wilde had written to Douglas were introduced as evidence; Wilde claimed they were works of art. Wilde was questioned closely on the homoerotic themes in The Picture of Dorian Gray and The Chameleon, a single-issue magazine published by Douglas to which Wilde had contributed "Phrases and Philosophies for Use of the Young".

 
The calling card, labelled Exhibit A in the trial (bottom left corner)

Queensberry's attorney announced in court that he had located several male prostitutes who were to testify that they had had sex with Wilde. Wilde's lawyers advised him that this would make a conviction on the libel charge very unlikely; he then dropped the libel charge, on his lawyers' advice, to avoid further pointless scandal. Without a conviction, the libel law of the time left Wilde liable to pay Queensberry's considerable legal costs, leaving him bankrupt. Based on the evidence raised during the case, Wilde was arrested the next day and charged with committing criminal sodomy and "gross indecency", a crime capable of being committed only by two men, which might include sexual acts other than sodomy.

Douglas's September 1892 poem "Two Loves" (published in the Oxford magazine The Chameleon in December 1894) was used against Wilde at the latter's trial. It ends with the famous line that calls homosexuality the love that dare not speak its name, which is often attributed wrongly to Wilde. Wilde gave an eloquent but counter-productive explanation of the nature of this love on the witness stand. The trial resulted in a hung jury.

In 1895, when Wilde was released on bail during his trials, Douglas's cousin Sholto Johnstone Douglas stood surety for £500 of the bail money.[17] The prosecutor opted to retry the case. Wilde was convicted on 25 May 1895 and sentenced to two years' hard labour, first at Pentonville, then Wandsworth, then famously in Reading Gaol. Douglas was forced into exile in Europe.

While in prison, Wilde wrote Douglas a long and critical letter entitled De Profundis, describing how he felt about him. Wilde was not permitted to send it but it might have been sent to him after Wilde's release. It was given to Robbie Ross with instructions to make a copy and send the original to Lord Alfred Douglas. Lord Alfred Douglas later said that he received only a letter from Ross with a few choice quotations and did not know there was a letter until reference was made to it in a biography of Wilde's on which Ross had consulted. After Wilde's release on 19 May 1897, the two reunited in August at Rouen but stayed together only a few months due to personal differences and various pressures on them.

Naples and Paris edit

The meeting in Rouen was disapproved of by the friends and families of both men. During the later part of 1897, Wilde and Douglas lived together in Naples, but they separated due to financial pressures and for other personal reasons. Wilde spent the rest of his life mainly in Paris; Douglas returned to Britain in late 1898. The cohabitation period in Naples later became controversial. Wilde claimed Douglas had offered a home, but had no funds or ideas. When Douglas eventually gained funds from his late father's estate, he refused to grant Wilde a permanent allowance, although he gave him occasional sums. Wilde was still bankrupt when he died in 1900. Douglas served as chief mourner, but there was reportedly a graveside altercation between him and Robbie Ross that developed into a feud and foreshadowed the later litigation between the two former lovers of Wilde.[18]

Marriage edit

 
Lady Alfred Douglas

After Wilde's death, Douglas made a close friendship with Olive Custance, a bisexual heiress and poet.[19] They married on 4 March 1902. Olive Custance was in a relationship with the writer Natalie Barney when she and Douglas first met.[20] Barney and Douglas eventually became close friends and Barney was named godmother to their son, Raymond Wilfred Sholto Douglas, born on 17 November 1902.[21]

The marriage grew stormy after Douglas became a Catholic in 1911. They separated in 1913, lived together for a time in the 1920s after Custance also converted, and then lived apart after she gave up her Catholicism. The health of their only child further strained the marriage, which by the end of the 1920s was all but over, although they never divorced.

Repudiation of Wilde edit

In 1911, Douglas embraced Catholicism as Wilde had done earlier. More than a decade after Wilde's death, with the release of suppressed portions of Wilde's De Profundis letter in 1912, Douglas turned against his former friend, whose homosexuality he grew to condemn. He was a defence witness in the libel case brought by Maud Allan against Noel Pemberton Billing in 1918. Billing had accused Allan, who was performing Wilde's play Salome, of being part of a deliberate homosexual conspiracy to undermine the war effort.

Douglas also contributed to Billing's journal Vigilante as part of his campaign against Robbie Ross. He had written a poem calling Margot Asquith one "bound with Lesbian fillets", while her husband Prime Minister Herbert gave Ross money.[22] During the trial he called Wilde as "the greatest force for evil that has appeared in Europe during the last three hundred and fifty years", adding that he intensely regretted having met Wilde and helped him with the French translation of Salome, which he called "a most pernicious and abominable piece of work".

Plain English edit

In 1920 Douglas founded a right-wing, Catholic, and deeply antisemitic weekly magazine called Plain English,[23] in which he collaborated with Harold Sherwood Spencer and initially Thomas William Hodgson Crosland. It claimed to succeed The Academy, to which Douglas had been a contributing editor. Plain English ran until the end of 1922. Douglas later admitted that its policy was "strongly anti-Semitic".[24][25]

From August 1920 (issue No 8) Plain English began publishing a long series of articles called "The Jewish Peril" by Major-General Count Cherep-Spiridovitch, whose title was taken from the fore-title of George Shanks's version of a fraudulent work, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Plain English advertised from issue 20 The Britons' second edition of Shank's version of the Protocols. Douglas challenged the Jewish Guardian, published by the League of British Jews, to take him to court, suggesting they refrained from doing so because they were "well aware of the absolute truth of the allegations which we have made."[26] The magazine suggested in 1921, "We need a Ku Klux Klan in this country,"[27] but a promotion for Ostara magazine was generally not well received by readers.

Other regular targets of the magazine included David Lloyd George, Alfred Viscount Northcliffe, H. G. Wells, Frank Harris, and Sinn Féin. In December 1920 the magazine was the first to publish the secret constitution of the Irish Republican Brotherhood.

From 25 December 1920 it began publishing notorious articles alleging that a "powerful individual in the Admiralty" had alerted the Germans at the Battle of Jutland that the British had broken their code, and that Winston Churchill had falsified a report in return for a large sum of money from Ernest Cassel, who thereby profited. In May 1921 Douglas insinuated that Lord Kitchener had been murdered by Jews.[28]

Douglas ceased to be editor after issue 67 in 1921, after a row with Spencer.[29] He then produced a short-lived, almost identical rival called Plain Speech in 1921 with Herbert Moore Pim. Its first issue contained a letter from a correspondent in Germany praising "Herr Hittler" (so spelt) and "The German White Labour Party".

In 1920 he adhered to the idea of "the Jewish Peril", but noted, "Christian Charity forbids us to join in wholesale and indiscriminate abuse and vilification of an entire race."[30] In 1921 he declared it was not acceptable to "shift responsibility" onto the Jews.[31] In his 1929 Autobiography he wrote, "I feel now that it is ridiculous to make accusations against the Jews, attributing them qualities and methods which are really much more typically English than Jewish," and then indicated the country had only itself to blame if the Jews came in and trampled on it.[32]

The historian Colin Holmes argued that while "Douglas had been to the forefront of anti-semitism in the early 1920s, he was quite unable to come to terms with the vicious racist anti-semitism in Germany" under the Nazis.[33] Politically Douglas described himself as "a strong Conservative of the 'Diehard' variety".[34]

Libel actions edit

Douglas started his "litigious and libellous career" by gaining an apology and 50 guineas each from the Oxford and Cambridge university magazines Isis and Cambridge for defamatory references to him in an article on Wilde.[35]

Douglas was plaintiff or defendant in several trials for civil or criminal libel. In 1913 he was charged with libelling his father-in-law. That same year he accused Arthur Ransome of libelling him in his book Oscar Wilde: A Critical Study. He saw the trial as a weapon against his enemy Ross, not understanding that Ross would not be called to give evidence. The court found in Ransome's favour and Douglas was bankrupted by the failed libel suit.[36] Ransome removed the offending passages from the second edition.[37]

The prime case was brought by the Crown on Winston Churchill's behalf in 1923. Douglas was found guilty of libelling Churchill and sentenced to six months in prison. Churchill had been accused as cabinet minister of falsifying an official report on the Battle of Jutland in 1916, when although suffering losses, the Royal Navy drove the German battle fleet off the high seas. Churchill was said to have reported that the British Navy had in fact been defeated, the supposed motive being that when the news was flashed, British security prices would tumble on the world's stock exchanges, allowing a group of named Jewish financiers to snap them up cheaply. Churchill's reward was a houseful of furniture valued at £40,000. The allegations were made by Douglas in Plain English and later at a public meeting in London. A false report of a crushing British naval defeat had indeed been planted in the New York press by German interests, but by this time (after the failure of his Dardanelles Campaign) Churchill was unconnected with the Admiralty. As the attorney general noted in court on Churchill's behalf, there was "no plot, no phoney communiqué, no stock market raid and no present of fine furniture".[38][39]

In 1924, while in prison, Douglas echoed Wilde's composition of De Profundis (From the Depths) during his incarceration and wrote his last major poetic work, In Excelsis (In the Highest) in 17 cantos. Since the prison authorities would not allow Douglas to take the manuscript with him on his release, he had to rewrite the work from memory. Douglas maintained that his health never recovered from his harsh prison ordeal, which included sleeping on a plank bed without a mattress.

Later life edit

Douglas's feelings towards Wilde began to soften after Douglas's own incarceration in 1924. He wrote in Oscar Wilde: A Summing Up, "Sometimes a sin is also a crime (for example, a murder or theft), but this is not the case with homosexuality, any more than with adultery."[40] In 1933 he gave a talk about poetry to the Catholic Poetry Society on 'The Catholic attitude to certain poets.' Of Wilde, Douglas said: 'Many years [after Wilde's death] and after I had become a Catholic, I reacted violently against him...Converts are very apt to be censorious and to be more Catholic than Catholics...I hope I am now more charitable and broad-minded than I was...After swinging to two extremes in my estimate of Wilde I have now got into what I believe to be the happy mean.'[41] Similarly, in 1935 he wrote to the theatre manager Norman Marshall regarding Marshall's proposed production of a play about the Wilde scandal, closing his letter, 'Devoted as I still am and always will be to the memory of this brilliant and wonderful man and conscious as I am and always shall be about my own failings...Wilde was the author of what I consider to be, apart from Shakespeare, the finest comedy in the English language.'[42]

Throughout the 1930s and up to his death, Douglas kept up correspondence with many people, including Marie Stopes and George Bernard Shaw. Anthony Wynn based his play Bernard and Bosie: A Most Unlikely Friendship on the letters between Shaw and Douglas. One of Douglas's final public appearances was a well-received lecture to the Royal Society of Literature on 2 September 1943 on The Principles of Poetry, published in an edition of 1,000 copies. He attacked the poetry of T. S. Eliot; the talk was praised by Arthur Quiller-Couch and Augustus John.[43]

Harold Nicolson described his impression of Douglas after meeting him at a lunch party in 1936:

There is a little trace of his good looks left. His nose has assumed a curious beaklike shape, his mouth has twisted into shapes of nervous irritability, and his eyes, although still blue, are yellow and bloodshot. He makes nervous and twitching movements with freckled and claw-like hands. He stoops slightly and drags a leg. Yet behind this appearance of a little, cross, old gentleman flits the shape of a young man of the 'nineties, with little pathetic sunshine-flashes of the 1893 boyishness and gaiety. I had fully expected the self-pity, suspicion and implied irritability, but I had not foreseen that there would be any remnant of merriment and boyishness. Obviously the great tragedy of his life has scarred him deeply. He talked very frankly about his marriage and about his son, who is in a home at Northampton.[44]

In the book, Secret Historian, Samuel Steward (a professor, poet, and novelist) wrote in his diary that he met Lord Douglas when Douglas was 67; Steward was 27. Lord Douglas professed that he was beyond "sins of the flesh," yet ends up in bed with Steward. Douglas proclaims that Wilde and he did little more than kiss and find other men for each other.[45]

Douglas's only child, Raymond, was diagnosed in 1927, at the age of 24, with schizoaffective disorder and entered St Andrew's Hospital, a mental institution. Though decertified and discharged after five years, he suffered another breakdown and returned to the hospital. In February 1944, when his mother died of a cerebral haemorrhage at the age of 70, Raymond was able to attend her funeral, and in June he was again decertified. His conduct rapidly deteriorated, and he returned to St Andrew's in November, where he stayed until his death on 10 October 1964.[46]

Death edit

 
The grave of Alfred Douglas (and mother) at the Friary Church of St Francis and St Anthony, Crawley, Sussex, pictured in December 2021

Douglas died of congestive heart failure in Lancing, West Sussex, on 20 March 1945 at the age of 74. He was buried on 23 March at the Franciscan Friary, Crawley, alongside his mother, who had died on 31 October 1935 at the age of 90. They share a gravestone.[47]

The elderly Douglas, living a reduced life in Hove in the 1940s, appears in the diaries of Henry Channon and in the first autobiography of Donald Sinden, whose son Marc Sinden claimed his father was one of only two people at the funeral.[48][49] In fact the funeral report in The Times named some 20 mourners, including Sinden, with "other friends".[50] He died at the home of Edward and Sheila Colman, who were the main beneficiaries in his will, inheriting the copyright to his work.[51]

Writings edit

Douglas published several volumes of poetry and two books about his relationship with Wilde, Oscar Wilde and Myself (1914, largely ghost-written by T. W. H. Crosland, assistant editor of the literary journal The Academy and later repudiated by Douglas) and Oscar Wilde: A Summing Up (1940). He also wrote two memoirs: The Autobiography of Lord Alfred Douglas (1929) and Without Apology (1938).

Douglas edited The Academy from 1907 to 1910, during which time he had an affair with the artist Romaine Brooks, who was also bisexual. The main love of her life, Natalie Clifford Barney, also had an affair with Wilde's niece Dorothy and even, in 1901, with Douglas's future wife Olive Custance, the year before the couple married.

Of the six biographies of Douglas, the earlier ones by Braybrooke and Freeman were forbidden to quote from his copyright work, while De Profundis was unpublished. Later biographies were by Rupert Croft-Cooke, H. Montgomery Hyde (who also wrote about Wilde), Douglas Murray (who called Braybrooke's biography "a rehash and exaggeration of Douglas's book" [his autobiography]). The most recent is Alfred Douglas: A Poet's Life and His Finest Work by Caspar Wintermans in 2007.

In 1999, The University of Oxford established the Lord Alfred Douglas Memorial Prize for "...the best sonnet or other poem written in English and in strict rhyming metre."[52] The award was established by Douglas's friend Sheila Coleman, who, on her death, left a legacy of $36,000 to fund the award.[53]

Poetry edit

  • Poems (1896)
  • Tails with a Twist "by a Belgian Hare" (1898)
  • The City of the Soul (1899).
  • The Duke of Berwick (1899)
  • The Placid Pug (1906)
  • The Pongo Papers and the Duke of Berwick (1907)
  • Sonnets (1909)
  • The Collected Poems of Lord Alfred Douglas (1919)
  • In Excelsis (1924)
  • The Complete Poems of Lord Alfred Douglas (1928)
  • Sonnets (1935)
  • Lyrics (1935)
  • The Sonnets of Lord Alfred Douglas (1943)

Non-fiction edit

  • Oscar Wilde and Myself (1914) (ghost-written by T. W. H. Crosland[54])
  • Foreword to New Preface to the 'Life and Confessions of Oscar Wilde' by Frank Harris (1925)
  • Introduction to Songs of Cell by Horatio Bottomley (1928)
  • The Autobiography of Lord Alfred Douglas (1929; 2nd ed. 1931)
  • My Friendship with Oscar Wilde (1932; retitled American version of his memoir)
  • The True History of Shakespeare's Sonnets (1933)
  • Introduction to The Pantomime Man by Richard Middleton (1933)
  • Preface to Bernard Shaw, Frank Harris, and Oscar Wilde by Robert Harborough Sherard (1937)
  • Without Apology (1938)
  • Preface to Oscar Wilde: A Play by Leslie Stokes and Sewell Stokes (1938)
  • Introduction to Brighton Aquatints by John Piper (1939)
  • Ireland and the War Against Hitler (1940)
  • Oscar Wilde: A Summing Up (1940)
  • Introduction to Oscar Wilde and the Yellow Nineties by Frances Winwar (1941)
  • The Principles of Poetry (1943)
  • Preface to Wartime Harvest by Marie Carmichael Stopes (1944)

On film edit

In the films Oscar Wilde and The Trials of Oscar Wilde, both released in 1960, Douglas was portrayed by John Neville and John Fraser respectively. In the 1997 British film Wilde, Douglas was portrayed by Jude Law. In the 2018 film The Happy Prince, he was portrayed by Colin Morgan.

In the BBC drama Oscar (1985) he was portrayed by Robin Lermitte (credited as Robin McCallum); Michael Gambon played Wilde.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Douglas, Lord Alfred Bruce (1870–1945)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/32869. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ "The Queensberry Divorce Case", The Times, 24 January 1887, p. 4.
  3. ^ Croft-Cooke, Rupert (1963). Bosie: The Story of Lord Alfred Douglas, His Friends and Enemies. Indianapolis, Indiana: Bobbs-Merrill Company. p. 33. ISBN 978-1299419407.
  4. ^ Linda Stratmann, The Marquess of Queensberry: Wilde's Nemesis, Yale University Press 2013 p. 25
  5. ^ Neil McKenna, The Secret Life of Oscar Wilde, Random House 2011 p. 427.
  6. ^ a b c Lady Florence Dixie 20 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine at Spartacus-Educational.com (accessed 26 February 2019)
  7. ^ a b Douglas, Murray, Bosie: A Biography of Lord Alfred Douglas, Chapter One online at nytimes.com (accessed 8 March 2008).
  8. ^ G. E. Cokayne et al., eds., The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new edition, 13 volumes in 14 (1910–1959; new edition, 2000), volume X, page 694.
  9. ^ Dixie, Lady Florence, poet, novelist, writer; explorer and a keen champion of Woman's Rights in Who Was Who online at 7345683[permanent dead link] at xreferplus.com (subscription required), accessed 11 March 2008.
  10. ^ Heilmann, Ann, Wilde's New Women: the New Woman on Wilde in Uwe Böker, Richard Corballis, Julie A. Hibbard, The Importance of Reinventing Oscar: Versions of Wilde During the Last 100 Years (Rodopi, 2002) pp. 135–147, in particular p. 139.
  11. ^ H. Montgomery Hyde, The Love That Dared not Speak its Name; p. 144
  12. ^ Ellmann (1988:98)
  13. ^ Garcia-Walsh, Katerina (2021). "Oscar Wilde's Misattributions: A Legacy of Gross Indecency". Victorian Popular Fictions Journal. 3 (2): 188–207. doi:10.46911/PYIV5690. hdl:10023/26159.
  14. ^ a b c Oscar Wilde by Richard Ellman, published in 1987.
  15. ^ Antony Edmunds, Oscar Wilde's Scandalous Summer; p. 26 [1] 28 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ Ellmann (1988:101)
  17. ^ Maureen Borland, Wilde's Devoted Friend: A Life of Robert Ross, 1869–1918 (Lennard Publishing, 1990) p. 206 at books.google.com, accessed 22 January 2009.
  18. ^ World Review. E. Hulton. 1970.
  19. ^ Parker, Sarah (September 2011). "'A Girl's Love': Lord Alfred Douglas as Homoerotic Muse in the Poetry of Olive Custance". Women: A Cultural Review. 22 (2–3). London, England: Taylor and Francis: 220–240. doi:10.1080/09574042.2011.585045. S2CID 191468238.
  20. ^ Parker, Sarah (2013). The lesbian muse and poetic identity, 1889–1930. London: Pickering & Chatto. pp. 71–100. ISBN 978-1848933866.
  21. ^ Adams, Jad (2018). "Olive Custance: A Poet Crossing Boundaries". English Literature in Transition. 61 (1): 35–65.
  22. ^ Philip Hoare. (1999). Oscar Wilde's Last Stand: Decadence, Conspiracy, and the Most Outrageous Trial of the Century. Arcade Publishing, p. 110.
  23. ^ Toczek, Nick (2015). Haters, Baiters and Would-Be Dictators: Anti-Semitism and the UK Far Right. London, England: Routledge. p. 239. ISBN 978-1138853485.
  24. ^ The Autobiography of Lord Alfred Douglas (1929) p. 302
  25. ^ Brown, William Sorley The Life and Genius of T.W.H. Crosland (1928), p. 394.
  26. ^ The "Jewish Guardian" Again, Plain English No 21, 27 November 1920
  27. ^ Lies, Plain English No 66, 8 October 1921
  28. ^ Heathorn, Stephen (2016). Haig and Kitchener in Twentieth-Century Britain: Remembrance, Representation and Appropriation. London, England: Routledge. pp. 68–72. ISBN 978-0754669654.
  29. ^ Toczek, p. 34,
  30. ^ Christian Charity and the Jews, Plain English No. 4, 31 July 1920, p. 78.
  31. ^ "The Jews, 'The Britons' and the Morning Post", Plain Speech No. 10, 24 December 1921, p. 149.
  32. ^ The Autobiography of Lord Alfred Douglas (1929) pp. 303–304.
  33. ^ Colin Holmes, Anti-Semitism in British Society, 1876–1939 Routledge (1979) p. 218.
  34. ^ The Autobiography of Lord Alfred Douglas (1929) p. 220.
  35. ^ (Murray p. 152.)
  36. ^ The Edinburgh Gazette Publication date:17 January 1913 Issue: 12530, Page 77.
  37. ^ Ransome, Arthur, Oscar Wilde: A Critical Study, 2nd ed., Methuen, 1913.
  38. ^ accessed 10/2/2017.
  39. ^ accessed 10/2/2017.
  40. ^ (Murray pp 309–310)
  41. ^ Murray, Douglas (2020). Bosie: The Tragic Life of Lord Alfred Douglas (2nd ed.). Sceptre. p. 266.
  42. ^ Ibid. p. 281.
  43. ^ Murray pp. 318–319.
  44. ^ Harold Nicolson (1966). Harold Nicolson Diaries & Letters 1930–39. Collins. p. 261.
  45. ^ Justin Spring (2010). Farrar, Straus and Giroux. {{cite book}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  46. ^ "Timeline to the Life of Lord Alfred 'Bosie' Douglas" anthonywynn.com Retrieved 24 August 2011.
  47. ^ Bastable, Roger (1983). Crawley: A Pictorial History. Chichester: Phillimore & Co. §147. ISBN 978-0-85033-503-3.
  48. ^ Libby Purvis interviews Freddie Fox. The Times, 17 January 2013, p. 8.
  49. ^ "Sir Donald Sinden: Legendary actor dies aged 90". BBC News. 12 September 2014. Retrieved 12 September 2014.
  50. ^ "Funeral: Lord Alfred Douglas", The Times, 24 March 1945, p. 7.
  51. ^ A. N. Wilson in The Telegraph 26 November 2001
  52. ^ "Prizes and Studentships".
  53. ^ "Sheila Colman, 82; Tended Wilde's Lover". Los Angeles Times. 25 November 2001.
  54. ^ Jonathan Fryer (2000). Robbie Ross: Oscar Wilde's Devoted Friend. Carrol & Graf, New York and Constable & Robinson, London. p. 224. ISBN 978-0-7867-0781-2.

References edit

  • Patrick Braybrooke, Lord Alfred Douglas: His Life and Work (1931)
  • Richard Ellmann, Oscar Wilde. New York: Vintage Books (1988) ISBN 978-0-394-75984-5
  • William Freeman, Lord Alfred Douglas: Spoilt Child of Genius (1948)
  • Marquess of Queensberry, [Francis Douglas] and Percy Colson. Oscar Wilde and the Black Douglas (1949)
  • Rupert Croft-Cooke, Bosie: Lord Alfred Douglas, His Friends and Enemies (1963)
  • Brian Roberts, The Mad Bad Line: The Family of Lord Alfred Douglas (1981)
  • Mary Hyde, ed., Bernard Shaw and Alfred Douglas: A Correspondence (1982)
  • H. Montgomery Hyde, Lord Alfred Douglas: A Biography (1985) ISBN 0-413-50790-4
  • Douglas Murray, Bosie: A Biography of Lord Alfred Douglas (2000) ISBN 0-340-76771-5
  • Trevor Fisher, Oscar and Bosie: A Fatal Passion (2002) ISBN 0-7509-2459-4
  • Michael Matthew Kaylor, Secreted Desires: The Major Uranians: Hopkins, Pater and Wilde (2006), a 500-page scholarly volume that considers the Victorian writers of Uranian poetry and prose, such as Douglas
  • Timothy d'Arch Smith, Love in Earnest. Some Notes on the Lives and Writings of English 'Uranian' Poets from 1889 to 1930. (1970) ISBN 0-7100-6730-5
  • Caspar Wintermans, Alfred Douglas: A Poet's Life and His Finest Work (2007) ISBN 978-0-7206-1270-7
  • Molly Whittington-Egan, "Such White Lilies: Frank Miles & Oscar Wilde" Rivendale Press, January 2008

External links edit

  • Unofficial website of Lord Alfred 'Bosie' Douglas
  • Works by Lord Alfred Douglas at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Lord Alfred Douglas at Internet Archive
  • Works by Lord Alfred Douglas at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • "Archival material relating to Lord Alfred Douglas". UK National Archives.  
  • Numerous archival resources relating to Lord Alfred Douglas are listed in ArchiveGrid
  • [2] by Lord Alfred Douglas (with commentary by VED from Victoria Institutions)
  • Finding aid to Alfred Bruce Douglas papers at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.

lord, alfred, douglas, alfred, douglas, redirects, here, other, uses, alfred, douglas, disambiguation, lord, alfred, bruce, douglas, october, 1870, march, 1945, also, known, bosie, douglas, english, poet, journalist, lover, oscar, wilde, oxford, edited, underg. Alfred Douglas redirects here For other uses see Alfred Douglas disambiguation Lord Alfred Bruce Douglas 22 October 1870 20 March 1945 also known as Bosie Douglas was an English poet and journalist and a lover of Oscar Wilde At Oxford he edited an undergraduate journal The Spirit Lamp that carried a homoerotic subtext and met Wilde starting a close but stormy relationship Douglas s father the Marquess of Queensberry abhorred it and set out to humiliate Wilde publicly accusing him of homosexuality Wilde sued him for criminal libel but some intimate notes were found and Wilde was later imprisoned On his release he briefly lived with Douglas in Naples but they had separated by the time Wilde died in 1900 Douglas married a poet Olive Custance in 1902 and had a son Raymond Lord Alfred DouglasAlfred Douglas in 1903 by George Charles Beresford Born 1870 10 22 22 October 1870Powick Worcestershire EnglandDied20 March 1945 1945 03 20 aged 74 Lancing Sussex EnglandResting placeFriary Church of St Francis and St Anthony CrawleyOccupationPoetNationalityBritishEducationWinchester College Wixenford SchoolAlma materMagdalen College OxfordSpouseOlive Custance m 1902 died 1944 wbr ParentsThe 9th Marquess of QueensberrySibyl MontgomeryOn converting to Catholicism in 1911 he repudiated homosexuality and in a Catholic magazine Plain English expressed openly antisemitic views but rejected the policies of Nazi Germany He was jailed for libelling Winston Churchill over claims of World War I misconduct Douglas wrote several books of verse some in a homoerotic Uranian genre The phrase The love that dare not speak its name appears in one Two Loves though it is widely misattributed to Wilde Contents 1 Early life and background 2 Relationship with Wilde 3 1895 trials 4 Naples and Paris 5 Marriage 6 Repudiation of Wilde 7 Plain English 8 Libel actions 9 Later life 10 Death 11 Writings 11 1 Poetry 11 2 Non fiction 12 On film 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksEarly life and background edit nbsp His father the 9th Marquess of QueensberryDouglas was born at Ham Hill House in Powick Worcestershire the third son of John Douglas 9th Marquess of Queensberry and his first wife Sibyl Montgomery He was his mother s favourite child she called him Bosie a derivative of boysie as in boy a nickname which stuck for the rest of his life 1 His mother successfully sued for divorce in 1887 on the grounds of his father s adultery 2 The Marquess later married Ethel Weeden in 1893 but the marriage was annulled the following year Douglas was educated at Wixenford School 3 Winchester College 1884 88 and Magdalen College Oxford 1889 93 which he left without obtaining a degree At Oxford he edited an undergraduate journal The Spirit Lamp 1892 3 an activity that intensified the constant conflict between him and his father Their relationship had always been a strained one and during the Queensberry Wilde feud Douglas sided with Wilde even encouraging Wilde to prosecute the Marquess for libel In 1893 Douglas had a brief affair with George Ives In 1858 his grandfather Archibald Douglas 8th Marquess of Queensberry had died in what was reported as a shooting accident but was widely believed to have been suicide 4 5 In 1862 his widowed grandmother Lady Queensberry converted to Catholicism and took her children to live in Paris 6 One of his uncles Lord James Douglas was deeply attached to his twin sister Florrie Lady Florence Douglas and was heartbroken when she married a baronet Sir Alexander Beaumont Churchill Dixie In 1885 Lord James tried to abduct a young girl and after that became ever more manic in 1888 he made a disastrous marriage 7 Separated from Florrie James drank himself into a deep depression 7 and in 1891 committed suicide by cutting his throat 6 Another of his uncles Lord Francis Douglas 1847 1865 had died in a climbing accident on the Matterhorn His uncle Lord Archibald Edward Douglas 1850 1938 became a clergyman 6 8 Alfred Douglas s aunt Lord James s twin Lady Florence Dixie 1855 1905 was an author war correspondent for the Morning Post during the First Boer War and a feminist 9 In 1890 she published a novel Gloriana or the Revolution of 1900 in which women s suffrage is achieved after a woman posing as a man named Hector D Estrange is elected to the House of Commons The character D Estrange is clearly based on Oscar Wilde 10 Relationship with Wilde edit nbsp Oscar Wilde and Lord Alfred Douglas May 1893In 1891 Douglas s cousin Lionel Johnson introduced him to Oscar Wilde they soon began an affair 11 12 In 1894 the Robert Hichens novel The Green Carnation was published a roman a clef depicting satirically Douglas s dependent relationship on Wilde 13 Douglas has been described as spoiled reckless insolent and extravagant 14 He would spend money on boys and gambling and expected Wilde to contribute to funding his tastes They often argued and broke up but would always be reconciled Douglas had praised Wilde s play Salome in the Oxford magazine The Spirit Lamp of which he was editor Wilde had originally written Salome in French and in 1893 he commissioned Douglas to translate it into English Douglas s French was very poor and his translation was highly criticised for example a passage that runs On ne doit regarder que dans les miroirs One should look only in mirrors he rendered One must not look at mirrors Douglas was angered at Wilde s criticism and claimed that the errors were in fact in Wilde s original play This led to a hiatus in the relationship and a row between the two with angry messages being exchanged and even the involvement of the publisher John Lane and the illustrator Aubrey Beardsley when they themselves objected to the poor standard of Douglas s work Beardsley complained to Robbie Ross For one week the numbers of telegraph and messenger boys who came to the door was simply scandalous Wilde redid much of the translation himself but in a gesture of reconciliation suggested that Douglas be dedicated as the translator rather than be credited along with him on the title page Accepting this Douglas vainly likened the difference between sharing the title page and having a dedication to the difference between a tribute of admiration from an artist and a receipt from a tradesman 14 In 1894 Douglas came and visited Oscar Wilde in Worthing to the consternation of the latter s wife Constance 15 On another occasion while staying with Wilde in Brighton Douglas fell ill with influenza and was nursed by Wilde but failed to return the favour when Wilde himself fell ill having caught influenza in consequence Instead Douglas moved to the luxurious Grand Hotel and on Wilde s 40th birthday sent him a letter informing him that he had charged Wilde with the hotel bill Douglas also gave his old clothes to male prostitutes but failed to remove from the pockets incriminating letters exchanged between him and Wilde which were then used for blackmail 14 Alfred s father the Marquess of Queensberry suspected the liaison to be more than a friendship He sent his son a letter attacking him for leaving Oxford without a degree and failing to take up a proper career He threatened to disown Alfred and stop all money supplies Alfred responded with a telegram rudely stating What a funny little man you are Queensberry s next letter threatened his son with a thrashing and accused him of being crazy He also threatened to make a public scandal in a way you little dream of if he continued his relationship with Wilde Queensberry was well known for his short temper and threatening to beat people with a horsewhip Alfred sent his father a postcard stating I detest you and making it clear that he would take Wilde s side in a fight between him and the Marquess with a loaded revolver In answer Queensberry wrote to Alfred whom he addressed as You miserable creature that he had divorced Alfred s mother so as not to run the risk of bringing more creatures into the world like yourself and that when Alfred was a baby I cried over you the bitterest tears a man ever shed that I had brought such a creature into the world and unwittingly committed such a crime You must be demented Douglas s eldest brother Francis Viscount Drumlanrig died in a suspicious hunting accident in October 1894 as rumours circulated that he had been having a homosexual relationship with the Prime Minister Lord Rosebery and that the cause of death was suicide The Marquess of Queensberry thus embarked on a campaign to save his other son and began a public persecution of Wilde Wilde had been openly flamboyant and his actions made the public suspicious even before the trial 16 The Marquess and a bodyguard confronted Wilde in Wilde s home later Queensberry planned to throw rotten vegetables at Wilde on the first night of The Importance of Being Earnest but forewarned of this Wilde was able to deny him access to the theatre Queensberry then publicly insulted Wilde by leaving at the latter s club a visiting card on which he had written For Oscar Wilde posing as a somdomite sic The wording is in dispute the handwriting is unclear although Hyde reports it as this According to Merlin Holland Wilde s grandson it is more likely Posing somdomite while Queensberry himself claimed it to be Posing as somdomite Holland suggests that this wording posing as would have been easier to defend in court 1895 trials editMain article Oscar Wilde Trials With Douglas s avid support but against the advice of friends such as Robbie Ross Frank Harris and George Bernard Shaw Wilde had Queensberry arrested and charged with criminal libel in a private prosecution as sodomy was then a criminal offence According to the libel laws of the time since his authorship of the charge of sodomy was not in question Queensberry could avoid conviction by demonstrating in court not only that the charge he had made was true and that there was also a public interest in having made the charge public Edward Carson Queensberry s lawyer portrayed Wilde as a vicious older man who preyed upon naive young boys and with extravagant gifts and promises of a glamorous lifestyle seduced them into a life of homosexuality Several highly suggestive erotic letters that Wilde had written to Douglas were introduced as evidence Wilde claimed they were works of art Wilde was questioned closely on the homoerotic themes in The Picture of Dorian Gray and The Chameleon a single issue magazine published by Douglas to which Wilde had contributed Phrases and Philosophies for Use of the Young nbsp The calling card labelled Exhibit A in the trial bottom left corner Queensberry s attorney announced in court that he had located several male prostitutes who were to testify that they had had sex with Wilde Wilde s lawyers advised him that this would make a conviction on the libel charge very unlikely he then dropped the libel charge on his lawyers advice to avoid further pointless scandal Without a conviction the libel law of the time left Wilde liable to pay Queensberry s considerable legal costs leaving him bankrupt Based on the evidence raised during the case Wilde was arrested the next day and charged with committing criminal sodomy and gross indecency a crime capable of being committed only by two men which might include sexual acts other than sodomy Douglas s September 1892 poem Two Loves published in the Oxford magazine The Chameleon in December 1894 was used against Wilde at the latter s trial It ends with the famous line that calls homosexuality the love that dare not speak its name which is often attributed wrongly to Wilde Wilde gave an eloquent but counter productive explanation of the nature of this love on the witness stand The trial resulted in a hung jury In 1895 when Wilde was released on bail during his trials Douglas s cousin Sholto Johnstone Douglas stood surety for 500 of the bail money 17 The prosecutor opted to retry the case Wilde was convicted on 25 May 1895 and sentenced to two years hard labour first at Pentonville then Wandsworth then famously in Reading Gaol Douglas was forced into exile in Europe While in prison Wilde wrote Douglas a long and critical letter entitled De Profundis describing how he felt about him Wilde was not permitted to send it but it might have been sent to him after Wilde s release It was given to Robbie Ross with instructions to make a copy and send the original to Lord Alfred Douglas Lord Alfred Douglas later said that he received only a letter from Ross with a few choice quotations and did not know there was a letter until reference was made to it in a biography of Wilde s on which Ross had consulted After Wilde s release on 19 May 1897 the two reunited in August at Rouen but stayed together only a few months due to personal differences and various pressures on them Naples and Paris editThe meeting in Rouen was disapproved of by the friends and families of both men During the later part of 1897 Wilde and Douglas lived together in Naples but they separated due to financial pressures and for other personal reasons Wilde spent the rest of his life mainly in Paris Douglas returned to Britain in late 1898 The cohabitation period in Naples later became controversial Wilde claimed Douglas had offered a home but had no funds or ideas When Douglas eventually gained funds from his late father s estate he refused to grant Wilde a permanent allowance although he gave him occasional sums Wilde was still bankrupt when he died in 1900 Douglas served as chief mourner but there was reportedly a graveside altercation between him and Robbie Ross that developed into a feud and foreshadowed the later litigation between the two former lovers of Wilde 18 Marriage edit nbsp Lady Alfred DouglasAfter Wilde s death Douglas made a close friendship with Olive Custance a bisexual heiress and poet 19 They married on 4 March 1902 Olive Custance was in a relationship with the writer Natalie Barney when she and Douglas first met 20 Barney and Douglas eventually became close friends and Barney was named godmother to their son Raymond Wilfred Sholto Douglas born on 17 November 1902 21 The marriage grew stormy after Douglas became a Catholic in 1911 They separated in 1913 lived together for a time in the 1920s after Custance also converted and then lived apart after she gave up her Catholicism The health of their only child further strained the marriage which by the end of the 1920s was all but over although they never divorced Repudiation of Wilde editIn 1911 Douglas embraced Catholicism as Wilde had done earlier More than a decade after Wilde s death with the release of suppressed portions of Wilde s De Profundis letter in 1912 Douglas turned against his former friend whose homosexuality he grew to condemn He was a defence witness in the libel case brought by Maud Allan against Noel Pemberton Billing in 1918 Billing had accused Allan who was performing Wilde s play Salome of being part of a deliberate homosexual conspiracy to undermine the war effort Douglas also contributed to Billing s journal Vigilante as part of his campaign against Robbie Ross He had written a poem calling Margot Asquith one bound with Lesbian fillets while her husband Prime Minister Herbert gave Ross money 22 During the trial he called Wilde as the greatest force for evil that has appeared in Europe during the last three hundred and fifty years adding that he intensely regretted having met Wilde and helped him with the French translation of Salome which he called a most pernicious and abominable piece of work Plain English editIn 1920 Douglas founded a right wing Catholic and deeply antisemitic weekly magazine called Plain English 23 in which he collaborated with Harold Sherwood Spencer and initially Thomas William Hodgson Crosland It claimed to succeed The Academy to which Douglas had been a contributing editor Plain English ran until the end of 1922 Douglas later admitted that its policy was strongly anti Semitic 24 25 From August 1920 issue No 8 Plain English began publishing a long series of articles called The Jewish Peril by Major General Count Cherep Spiridovitch whose title was taken from the fore title of George Shanks s version of a fraudulent work The Protocols of the Elders of Zion Plain English advertised from issue 20 The Britons second edition of Shank s version of the Protocols Douglas challenged the Jewish Guardian published by the League of British Jews to take him to court suggesting they refrained from doing so because they were well aware of the absolute truth of the allegations which we have made 26 The magazine suggested in 1921 We need a Ku Klux Klan in this country 27 but a promotion for Ostara magazine was generally not well received by readers Other regular targets of the magazine included David Lloyd George Alfred Viscount Northcliffe H G Wells Frank Harris and Sinn Fein In December 1920 the magazine was the first to publish the secret constitution of the Irish Republican Brotherhood From 25 December 1920 it began publishing notorious articles alleging that a powerful individual in the Admiralty had alerted the Germans at the Battle of Jutland that the British had broken their code and that Winston Churchill had falsified a report in return for a large sum of money from Ernest Cassel who thereby profited In May 1921 Douglas insinuated that Lord Kitchener had been murdered by Jews 28 Douglas ceased to be editor after issue 67 in 1921 after a row with Spencer 29 He then produced a short lived almost identical rival called Plain Speech in 1921 with Herbert Moore Pim Its first issue contained a letter from a correspondent in Germany praising Herr Hittler so spelt and The German White Labour Party In 1920 he adhered to the idea of the Jewish Peril but noted Christian Charity forbids us to join in wholesale and indiscriminate abuse and vilification of an entire race 30 In 1921 he declared it was not acceptable to shift responsibility onto the Jews 31 In his 1929 Autobiography he wrote I feel now that it is ridiculous to make accusations against the Jews attributing them qualities and methods which are really much more typically English than Jewish and then indicated the country had only itself to blame if the Jews came in and trampled on it 32 The historian Colin Holmes argued that while Douglas had been to the forefront of anti semitism in the early 1920s he was quite unable to come to terms with the vicious racist anti semitism in Germany under the Nazis 33 Politically Douglas described himself as a strong Conservative of the Diehard variety 34 Libel actions editDouglas started his litigious and libellous career by gaining an apology and 50 guineas each from the Oxford and Cambridge university magazines Isis and Cambridge for defamatory references to him in an article on Wilde 35 Douglas was plaintiff or defendant in several trials for civil or criminal libel In 1913 he was charged with libelling his father in law That same year he accused Arthur Ransome of libelling him in his book Oscar Wilde A Critical Study He saw the trial as a weapon against his enemy Ross not understanding that Ross would not be called to give evidence The court found in Ransome s favour and Douglas was bankrupted by the failed libel suit 36 Ransome removed the offending passages from the second edition 37 The prime case was brought by the Crown on Winston Churchill s behalf in 1923 Douglas was found guilty of libelling Churchill and sentenced to six months in prison Churchill had been accused as cabinet minister of falsifying an official report on the Battle of Jutland in 1916 when although suffering losses the Royal Navy drove the German battle fleet off the high seas Churchill was said to have reported that the British Navy had in fact been defeated the supposed motive being that when the news was flashed British security prices would tumble on the world s stock exchanges allowing a group of named Jewish financiers to snap them up cheaply Churchill s reward was a houseful of furniture valued at 40 000 The allegations were made by Douglas in Plain English and later at a public meeting in London A false report of a crushing British naval defeat had indeed been planted in the New York press by German interests but by this time after the failure of his Dardanelles Campaign Churchill was unconnected with the Admiralty As the attorney general noted in court on Churchill s behalf there was no plot no phoney communique no stock market raid and no present of fine furniture 38 39 In 1924 while in prison Douglas echoed Wilde s composition of De Profundis From the Depths during his incarceration and wrote his last major poetic work In Excelsis In the Highest in 17 cantos Since the prison authorities would not allow Douglas to take the manuscript with him on his release he had to rewrite the work from memory Douglas maintained that his health never recovered from his harsh prison ordeal which included sleeping on a plank bed without a mattress Later life editDouglas s feelings towards Wilde began to soften after Douglas s own incarceration in 1924 He wrote in Oscar Wilde A Summing Up Sometimes a sin is also a crime for example a murder or theft but this is not the case with homosexuality any more than with adultery 40 In 1933 he gave a talk about poetry to the Catholic Poetry Society on The Catholic attitude to certain poets Of Wilde Douglas said Many years after Wilde s death and after I had become a Catholic I reacted violently against him Converts are very apt to be censorious and to be more Catholic than Catholics I hope I am now more charitable and broad minded than I was After swinging to two extremes in my estimate of Wilde I have now got into what I believe to be the happy mean 41 Similarly in 1935 he wrote to the theatre manager Norman Marshall regarding Marshall s proposed production of a play about the Wilde scandal closing his letter Devoted as I still am and always will be to the memory of this brilliant and wonderful man and conscious as I am and always shall be about my own failings Wilde was the author of what I consider to be apart from Shakespeare the finest comedy in the English language 42 Throughout the 1930s and up to his death Douglas kept up correspondence with many people including Marie Stopes and George Bernard Shaw Anthony Wynn based his play Bernard and Bosie A Most Unlikely Friendship on the letters between Shaw and Douglas One of Douglas s final public appearances was a well received lecture to the Royal Society of Literature on 2 September 1943 on The Principles of Poetry published in an edition of 1 000 copies He attacked the poetry of T S Eliot the talk was praised by Arthur Quiller Couch and Augustus John 43 Harold Nicolson described his impression of Douglas after meeting him at a lunch party in 1936 There is a little trace of his good looks left His nose has assumed a curious beaklike shape his mouth has twisted into shapes of nervous irritability and his eyes although still blue are yellow and bloodshot He makes nervous and twitching movements with freckled and claw like hands He stoops slightly and drags a leg Yet behind this appearance of a little cross old gentleman flits the shape of a young man of the nineties with little pathetic sunshine flashes of the 1893 boyishness and gaiety I had fully expected the self pity suspicion and implied irritability but I had not foreseen that there would be any remnant of merriment and boyishness Obviously the great tragedy of his life has scarred him deeply He talked very frankly about his marriage and about his son who is in a home at Northampton 44 In the book Secret Historian Samuel Steward a professor poet and novelist wrote in his diary that he met Lord Douglas when Douglas was 67 Steward was 27 Lord Douglas professed that he was beyond sins of the flesh yet ends up in bed with Steward Douglas proclaims that Wilde and he did little more than kiss and find other men for each other 45 Douglas s only child Raymond was diagnosed in 1927 at the age of 24 with schizoaffective disorder and entered St Andrew s Hospital a mental institution Though decertified and discharged after five years he suffered another breakdown and returned to the hospital In February 1944 when his mother died of a cerebral haemorrhage at the age of 70 Raymond was able to attend her funeral and in June he was again decertified His conduct rapidly deteriorated and he returned to St Andrew s in November where he stayed until his death on 10 October 1964 46 Death edit nbsp The grave of Alfred Douglas and mother at the Friary Church of St Francis and St Anthony Crawley Sussex pictured in December 2021Douglas died of congestive heart failure in Lancing West Sussex on 20 March 1945 at the age of 74 He was buried on 23 March at the Franciscan Friary Crawley alongside his mother who had died on 31 October 1935 at the age of 90 They share a gravestone 47 The elderly Douglas living a reduced life in Hove in the 1940s appears in the diaries of Henry Channon and in the first autobiography of Donald Sinden whose son Marc Sinden claimed his father was one of only two people at the funeral 48 49 In fact the funeral report in The Times named some 20 mourners including Sinden with other friends 50 He died at the home of Edward and Sheila Colman who were the main beneficiaries in his will inheriting the copyright to his work 51 Writings editDouglas published several volumes of poetry and two books about his relationship with Wilde Oscar Wilde and Myself 1914 largely ghost written by T W H Crosland assistant editor of the literary journal The Academy and later repudiated by Douglas and Oscar Wilde A Summing Up 1940 He also wrote two memoirs The Autobiography of Lord Alfred Douglas 1929 and Without Apology 1938 Douglas edited The Academy from 1907 to 1910 during which time he had an affair with the artist Romaine Brooks who was also bisexual The main love of her life Natalie Clifford Barney also had an affair with Wilde s niece Dorothy and even in 1901 with Douglas s future wife Olive Custance the year before the couple married Of the six biographies of Douglas the earlier ones by Braybrooke and Freeman were forbidden to quote from his copyright work while De Profundis was unpublished Later biographies were by Rupert Croft Cooke H Montgomery Hyde who also wrote about Wilde Douglas Murray who called Braybrooke s biography a rehash and exaggeration of Douglas s book his autobiography The most recent is Alfred Douglas A Poet s Life and His Finest Work by Caspar Wintermans in 2007 In 1999 The University of Oxford established the Lord Alfred Douglas Memorial Prize for the best sonnet or other poem written in English and in strict rhyming metre 52 The award was established by Douglas s friend Sheila Coleman who on her death left a legacy of 36 000 to fund the award 53 Poetry edit Poems 1896 Tails with a Twist by a Belgian Hare 1898 The City of the Soul 1899 The Duke of Berwick 1899 The Placid Pug 1906 The Pongo Papers and the Duke of Berwick 1907 Sonnets 1909 The Collected Poems of Lord Alfred Douglas 1919 In Excelsis 1924 The Complete Poems of Lord Alfred Douglas 1928 Sonnets 1935 Lyrics 1935 The Sonnets of Lord Alfred Douglas 1943 Non fiction edit Oscar Wilde and Myself 1914 ghost written by T W H Crosland 54 Foreword to New Preface to the Life and Confessions of Oscar Wilde by Frank Harris 1925 Introduction to Songs of Cell by Horatio Bottomley 1928 The Autobiography of Lord Alfred Douglas 1929 2nd ed 1931 My Friendship with Oscar Wilde 1932 retitled American version of his memoir The True History of Shakespeare s Sonnets 1933 Introduction to The Pantomime Man by Richard Middleton 1933 Preface to Bernard Shaw Frank Harris and Oscar Wilde by Robert Harborough Sherard 1937 Without Apology 1938 Preface to Oscar Wilde A Play by Leslie Stokes and Sewell Stokes 1938 Introduction to Brighton Aquatints by John Piper 1939 Ireland and the War Against Hitler 1940 Oscar Wilde A Summing Up 1940 Introduction to Oscar Wilde and the Yellow Nineties by Frances Winwar 1941 The Principles of Poetry 1943 Preface to Wartime Harvest by Marie Carmichael Stopes 1944 On film editIn the films Oscar Wilde and The Trials of Oscar Wilde both released in 1960 Douglas was portrayed by John Neville and John Fraser respectively In the 1997 British film Wilde Douglas was portrayed by Jude Law In the 2018 film The Happy Prince he was portrayed by Colin Morgan In the BBC drama Oscar 1985 he was portrayed by Robin Lermitte credited as Robin McCallum Michael Gambon played Wilde Notes edit Douglas Lord Alfred Bruce 1870 1945 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 32869 Subscription or UK public library membership required The Queensberry Divorce Case The Times 24 January 1887 p 4 Croft Cooke Rupert 1963 Bosie The Story of Lord Alfred Douglas His Friends and Enemies Indianapolis Indiana Bobbs Merrill Company p 33 ISBN 978 1299419407 Linda Stratmann The Marquess of Queensberry Wilde s Nemesis Yale University Press 2013 p 25 Neil McKenna The Secret Life of Oscar Wilde Random House 2011 p 427 a b c Lady Florence Dixie Archived 20 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine at Spartacus Educational com accessed 26 February 2019 a b Douglas Murray Bosie A Biography of Lord Alfred Douglas Chapter One online at nytimes com accessed 8 March 2008 G E Cokayne et al eds The Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom Extant Extinct or Dormant new edition 13 volumes in 14 1910 1959 new edition 2000 volume X page 694 Dixie Lady Florence poet novelist writer explorer and a keen champion of Woman s Rights in Who Was Who online at 7345683 permanent dead link at xreferplus com subscription required accessed 11 March 2008 Heilmann Ann Wilde s New Women the New Woman on Wilde in Uwe Boker Richard Corballis Julie A Hibbard The Importance of Reinventing Oscar Versions of Wilde During the Last 100 Years Rodopi 2002 pp 135 147 in particular p 139 H Montgomery Hyde The Love That Dared not Speak its Name p 144 Ellmann 1988 98 Garcia Walsh Katerina 2021 Oscar Wilde s Misattributions A Legacy of Gross Indecency Victorian Popular Fictions Journal 3 2 188 207 doi 10 46911 PYIV5690 hdl 10023 26159 a b c Oscar Wilde by Richard Ellman published in 1987 Antony Edmunds Oscar Wilde s Scandalous Summer p 26 1 Archived 28 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine Ellmann 1988 101 Maureen Borland Wilde s Devoted Friend A Life of Robert Ross 1869 1918 Lennard Publishing 1990 p 206 at books google com accessed 22 January 2009 World Review E Hulton 1970 Parker Sarah September 2011 A Girl s Love Lord Alfred Douglas as Homoerotic Muse in the Poetry of Olive Custance Women A Cultural Review 22 2 3 London England Taylor and Francis 220 240 doi 10 1080 09574042 2011 585045 S2CID 191468238 Parker Sarah 2013 The lesbian muse and poetic identity 1889 1930 London Pickering amp Chatto pp 71 100 ISBN 978 1848933866 Adams Jad 2018 Olive Custance A Poet Crossing Boundaries English Literature in Transition 61 1 35 65 Philip Hoare 1999 Oscar Wilde s Last Stand Decadence Conspiracy and the Most Outrageous Trial of the Century Arcade Publishing p 110 Toczek Nick 2015 Haters Baiters and Would Be Dictators Anti Semitism and the UK Far Right London England Routledge p 239 ISBN 978 1138853485 The Autobiography of Lord Alfred Douglas 1929 p 302 Brown William Sorley The Life and Genius of T W H Crosland 1928 p 394 The Jewish Guardian Again Plain English No 21 27 November 1920 Lies Plain English No 66 8 October 1921 Heathorn Stephen 2016 Haig and Kitchener in Twentieth Century Britain Remembrance Representation and Appropriation London England Routledge pp 68 72 ISBN 978 0754669654 Toczek p 34 Christian Charity and the Jews Plain English No 4 31 July 1920 p 78 The Jews The Britons and the Morning Post Plain Speech No 10 24 December 1921 p 149 The Autobiography of Lord Alfred Douglas 1929 pp 303 304 Colin Holmes Anti Semitism in British Society 1876 1939 Routledge 1979 p 218 The Autobiography of Lord Alfred Douglas 1929 p 220 Murray p 152 The Edinburgh Gazette Publication date 17 January 1913 Issue 12530 Page 77 Ransome Arthur Oscar Wilde A Critical Study 2nd ed Methuen 1913 accessed 10 2 2017 accessed 10 2 2017 Murray pp 309 310 Murray Douglas 2020 Bosie The Tragic Life of Lord Alfred Douglas 2nd ed Sceptre p 266 Ibid p 281 Murray pp 318 319 Harold Nicolson 1966 Harold Nicolson Diaries amp Letters 1930 39 Collins p 261 Justin Spring 2010 Farrar Straus and Giroux a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a Missing or empty title help Timeline to the Life of Lord Alfred Bosie Douglas anthonywynn com Retrieved 24 August 2011 Bastable Roger 1983 Crawley A Pictorial History Chichester Phillimore amp Co 147 ISBN 978 0 85033 503 3 Libby Purvis interviews Freddie Fox The Times 17 January 2013 p 8 Sir Donald Sinden Legendary actor dies aged 90 BBC News 12 September 2014 Retrieved 12 September 2014 Funeral Lord Alfred Douglas The Times 24 March 1945 p 7 A N Wilson in The Telegraph 26 November 2001 Prizes and Studentships Sheila Colman 82 Tended Wilde s Lover Los Angeles Times 25 November 2001 Jonathan Fryer 2000 Robbie Ross Oscar Wilde s Devoted Friend Carrol amp Graf New York and Constable amp Robinson London p 224 ISBN 978 0 7867 0781 2 References editPatrick Braybrooke Lord Alfred Douglas His Life and Work 1931 Richard Ellmann Oscar Wilde New York Vintage Books 1988 ISBN 978 0 394 75984 5 William Freeman Lord Alfred Douglas Spoilt Child of Genius 1948 Marquess of Queensberry Francis Douglas and Percy Colson Oscar Wilde and the Black Douglas 1949 Rupert Croft Cooke Bosie Lord Alfred Douglas His Friends and Enemies 1963 Brian Roberts The Mad Bad Line The Family of Lord Alfred Douglas 1981 Mary Hyde ed Bernard Shaw and Alfred Douglas A Correspondence 1982 H Montgomery Hyde Lord Alfred Douglas A Biography 1985 ISBN 0 413 50790 4 Douglas Murray Bosie A Biography of Lord Alfred Douglas 2000 ISBN 0 340 76771 5 Trevor Fisher Oscar and Bosie A Fatal Passion 2002 ISBN 0 7509 2459 4 Michael Matthew Kaylor Secreted Desires The Major Uranians Hopkins Pater and Wilde 2006 a 500 page scholarly volume that considers the Victorian writers of Uranian poetry and prose such as Douglas Timothy d Arch Smith Love in Earnest Some Notes on the Lives and Writings of English Uranian Poets from 1889 to 1930 1970 ISBN 0 7100 6730 5 Caspar Wintermans Alfred Douglas A Poet s Life and His Finest Work 2007 ISBN 978 0 7206 1270 7 Molly Whittington Egan Such White Lilies Frank Miles amp Oscar Wilde Rivendale Press January 2008External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alfred Douglas nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Lord Alfred Douglas Unofficial website of Lord Alfred Bosie Douglas Works by Lord Alfred Douglas at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Lord Alfred Douglas at Internet Archive Works by Lord Alfred Douglas at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Archival material relating to Lord Alfred Douglas UK National Archives nbsp Numerous archival resources relating to Lord Alfred Douglas are listed in ArchiveGrid 2 by Lord Alfred Douglas with commentary by VED from Victoria Institutions Finding aid to Alfred Bruce Douglas papers at Columbia University Rare Book amp Manuscript Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lord Alfred Douglas amp oldid 1208531990, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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