Oscar Wilde
Oscar Wilde
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wildewas 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...
NationalityIrish
ProfessionNovelist
Date of Birth16 October 1854
CityDublin, Ireland
CountryIreland
The pure and simple truth is rarely pure and never simple.
A cynic is a man who knows the price of everything but the value of nothing.
A true friend stabs you in the front.
Ah, well, then I suppose I shall have to die beyond my means.
These days man knows the price of everything, but the value of nothing.
Life is too important to be taken seriously.
Experience is the name every one gives to their mistakes.
In all matters of opinion, our adversaries are insane.
I think that God, in creating man, somewhat overestimated his ability.
There's nothing in the world like the devotion of a married woman. It's a thing no married man knows anything about.
One's real life is so often the life that one does not lead.
Consistency is the last refuge of the unimaginative.
We Irish are too poetical to be poets; we are a nation of brilliant failures, but we are the greatest talkers since the Greeks.
Oh, he occasionally takes an alcoholiday.