Difference between revisions of "Lord Alfred Douglas"

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(added years 'Bosie' was at Winchester College and at Magdalen College, Oxford.)
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[[File:Lord Alfred Douglas by George Charles Beresford (1903).jpg|thumb|Lord Alfred Douglas by George Charles Beresford (1903)|alt=Photograph of Lord Alfred in an open-necked shirt]]'''Lord Alfred Douglas'''<ref>"Lord Alfred Douglas" is a courtesy title, as a younger son of a marquess. It is not correct to describe him as "Lord Douglas".</ref> (Alfred Bruce Douglas 1870–1945, referred to as '''Bosie''') was a poet, better known as the lover of [[Oscar Wilde]].
 
[[File:Lord Alfred Douglas by George Charles Beresford (1903).jpg|thumb|Lord Alfred Douglas by George Charles Beresford (1903)|alt=Photograph of Lord Alfred in an open-necked shirt]]'''Lord Alfred Douglas'''<ref>"Lord Alfred Douglas" is a courtesy title, as a younger son of a marquess. It is not correct to describe him as "Lord Douglas".</ref> (Alfred Bruce Douglas 1870–1945, referred to as '''Bosie''') was a poet, better known as the lover of [[Oscar Wilde]].
  
Lord Alfred was the third son of [[John Douglas, 9th Marquess of Queensberry]]. He was born at [[Powick]], Worcestershire, educated at [[Winchester College]] and studied at [[Magdalen College, Oxford]], but did not take a degree. In 1891, while he was still an undergraduate, his cousin [[Lionel Johnson]] introduced him to Oscar Wilde, who was by then a successful author. They began a torrid affair, which was to lead to Wilde's downfall. Douglas's father took violent exception to the relationship, and in 1895 left a note for Wilde accusing him of being a "somdomite". This led to Wilde unsuccessfully suing the Marquess for libel, largely at Bosie's instigation, and Wilde's subsequent arrest and imprisonment. In 1894 Bosie had published a poem ''Two Loves'', which ended with the line "I am the Love that dare not speak its name",<ref>http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Two_Loves_%281894_poem%29 Text of the poem on Wikisource</ref> which Wilde famously expanded on in court.
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Lord Alfred was the third son of [[John Douglas, 9th Marquess of Queensberry]]. He was born at [[Powick]], Worcestershire, educated at [[Winchester College]](1884-1888) and studied at [[Magdalen College, Oxford]](1889-1893), but did not take a degree. In 1891, while he was still an undergraduate, his cousin [[Lionel Johnson]] introduced him to Oscar Wilde, who was by then a successful author. They began a torrid affair, which was to lead to Wilde's downfall. Douglas's father took violent exception to the relationship, and in 1895 left a note for Wilde accusing him of being a "somdomite". This led to Wilde unsuccessfully suing the Marquess for libel, largely at Bosie's instigation, and Wilde's subsequent arrest and imprisonment. In 1894 Bosie had published a poem ''Two Loves'', which ended with the line "I am the Love that dare not speak its name",<ref>http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Two_Loves_%281894_poem%29 Text of the poem on Wikisource</ref> which Wilde famously expanded on in court.
  
 
In later life Bosie turned against the memory of Oscar Wilde, denounced homosexuality, and married the bisexual poet [[Olive Custance]].
 
In later life Bosie turned against the memory of Oscar Wilde, denounced homosexuality, and married the bisexual poet [[Olive Custance]].

Revision as of 20:51, 5 August 2018

Photograph of Lord Alfred in an open-necked shirt
Lord Alfred Douglas by George Charles Beresford (1903)
Lord Alfred Douglas[1] (Alfred Bruce Douglas 1870–1945, referred to as Bosie) was a poet, better known as the lover of Oscar Wilde.

Lord Alfred was the third son of John Douglas, 9th Marquess of Queensberry. He was born at Powick, Worcestershire, educated at Winchester College(1884-1888) and studied at Magdalen College, Oxford(1889-1893), but did not take a degree. In 1891, while he was still an undergraduate, his cousin Lionel Johnson introduced him to Oscar Wilde, who was by then a successful author. They began a torrid affair, which was to lead to Wilde's downfall. Douglas's father took violent exception to the relationship, and in 1895 left a note for Wilde accusing him of being a "somdomite". This led to Wilde unsuccessfully suing the Marquess for libel, largely at Bosie's instigation, and Wilde's subsequent arrest and imprisonment. In 1894 Bosie had published a poem Two Loves, which ended with the line "I am the Love that dare not speak its name",[2] which Wilde famously expanded on in court.

In later life Bosie turned against the memory of Oscar Wilde, denounced homosexuality, and married the bisexual poet Olive Custance.

In 1923 he was sent to prison for criminal libel, after falsely accusing Winston Churchill of publishing a misleading account of the battle of Jutland.

References

  1. "Lord Alfred Douglas" is a courtesy title, as a younger son of a marquess. It is not correct to describe him as "Lord Douglas".
  2. http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Two_Loves_%281894_poem%29 Text of the poem on Wikisource