Happy Deathday, Mr. Wilde!
“This wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One of us has to go”

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“This wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One of us has to go”

Notorious playwright and wit Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde died of “infection” on this day in 1900 at the age of 46.

Let’s face it, anybody who is anybody knows who good ole Oscar Wilde is! We’ll not list here his accomplishments or the impact his work has had on popular culture, theatre and aspiring “fame whores” everywhere… it would simply take up too much bandwidth! Oscar Wilde was, without a doubt, a truly gifted writer- but it was his personality that propelled him ever forward into the spotlight during his life. He lived large.
Unfortunately, this lavish lifestyle and flamboyant conduct led to rumors and then scandal. For those of you who do not know it, Mr. Wilde was sentenced to two years of hard labor, which broke not only his spirit but his body as well. He died only a few years after being released from prison. And what did he go to prison for? For being himself. Mr. Wilde was officially sentenced for what was referred to as “gross indecency”. To put it plainly, he was a homosexual. Wilde lost everything; his money, his children…his wife and most of his friends, who upon Wilde’s release, avoided him like the plague.
Since his death, he has been immortalized in Great Britain with sculptures and various monuments. His face can be found on tshirts, bookstore walls and even action figures!
If you are new to Wilde and his writings, first let us say we are so sorry to hear you have been so unjustly deprived. Secondly, let us direct you to a wonderful little website for all things Oscar : http://www.oscarwildecollection.com/. We cannot choose his best works, for they are all superb but we will point out a few of our favorites; The Picture of Dorian Gray, The Happy Prince, and The Importance of Being Earnest!
Today, we ask that you hold your head high today and proclaim “I am Me”! Be proud of who you are and never make any apologies for it! Live large today, dear readers, and do try to be as witty as possible in all that you do!
Wit on on peace, Mr. Wilde.
Today is the deathday of several authors/poets that we would like to aknowledge!
We’ll start off by wishing François-Marie Arouet, or Voltaire as he is most commonly called, a very happy deathday! Voltaire, the famous French philosopher and wit, died on this day in 1778 at the age of 83! He is most remembered for his infamous criticisms of the church, his poetry and plays, and a plethora of books, most notably Candide.

Secondly, we would like to wish Mr. Christopher Marlowe and happy deathday! Marlowe, the English playwright that many have thought to have been the true author of a handful of Shakespeare’s plays (see our facebook discussion), died on this day in 1593.

Marlowe, a contemporary of William Shakespeare, was no where near as prolific a writer as Shakespeare, but was quite the dramatist in his own right, with such plays as Doctor Faustus and Dido, Queen of Carthage. It has long been suspected that his death was an assassination…but that’s a whole other story… long story short he was an atheist and quite possibly a homosexual in Elizabethan England.
On this very day in 1744 English poet and satirist Alexander Pope died as well. He is best known for his work The Rape of the Lock, his excellent translation of The Odyssey and his essays.

Today is also the deathday of Harlem Renaissance writer Gwendolyn Bennett who died on this day in 1981. She is best remembered for her poetry and her literary contributions to Opportunity: A Journal of Negro Life. Bennett was an assistant to the editor and columnist for this journal and also co-founded the literary journal Fire!! which brought her into the Harlem arts circle. If you are interested in the literature of the Harlem Renaissance, Bennett is a poet you do not want to miss out on.
Phew… almost done…
Last but not least, novelist Mark Harris (Bang the Drum Slowly) and poet William Meredith (won the Pulitzer prize in 1988 for Partial Accounts) both died on this die in 2007. Meredith died of respiratory failure while Harris died from complications following pneumonia.

While these two writers wrote from opposite ends of the spectrum, we always find it interesting when two writers die on the same day of the same year.
All six of these writers came from different backgrounds and for the most part different time periods and cultures. But the one thing they all have in common, aside from the shared deathday, is that they will all be remembered for their unique literary contributions to this ever changing world. Let us never forget this wonderfully diverse deathday!
Enjoy the weekend and please remember to raise six glasses today in remembrance of these writers.
Write on in peace, Mrs. Bennett and Messrs. Voltaire, Marlowe, Pope, Meredith and Harris!