The importance of being Ernest; Oscar Wilde

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THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING ERNEST
BY
OSCAR WILDE
INDEX:
• INTRODUCTION
• BIOGRAPHY. OSCAR WILDE
• PLOT
• CHARACTERS
• A COMMENTARY ABOUT OSCAR WILDE'S STYLE
• PERSONAL OPINION
• BIBLIOGRAPHY
• INTRODUCTION
• The Importance of Being Earnest is one of the most known plays of Oscar Wilde, is the most brilliant
of all his comedies, through the absurd of the action and very sharp dialogues, the virtuosity and the
exaggerated sentimentalist are exposed to the liberation of laugh.
• Wilde plays with the sense of the sentence, since − The importance of being earnest − can have two
meanings, in one hand, it can mean to have a fixed name, in this case, the name of Ernest; in the other
hand it can mean to be self−sufficient, talking about money; the reader can choose between these two
options because they are different in writing but equal in pronunciation.
• BIOGRAPHY. OSCAR WILDE.
• (Dublin 1854− Paris 1900) The true name of Oscar Wilde was Oscar Fingall O´Flahertie Wills Wilde,
he was the son of the surgeon William Wilde and the writer Jane Francesca Elgee, he went to the
Royal School and to the Trinity College of Dublin.
• Thanks to his talent and personal delight he soon did himself a place on the literary world of London
as an essayist and poet.
• His first book Poems was published in 1881, and in 1882 he went to lecture in America. After his
marriage with Constance Lloyd in 1884, he published several book of stories for children. Then
followed: The picture of Dorian Gray (1891), The happy prince and other plays, The duchess of
Padua, Lady Windermere's Fan, A woman of no importance, An ideal husband and The Importance of
Being Earnest, these last four were produced in theatre . He wrote too the drama Salomé which was
published in France because in England was forbidden by the decision of the lord Chambelan, who
denied the authorisation to play a drama based on Bible's characters.
• In 1895 Oscar Wilde was accused of be homosexual by the Marquis of Queensberry and was himself
sentenced to two years' imprisonment with hard labour at the Reading Gaol, here he wrote an elegy
De Profundis (which appeared on a posthumos way in 1905). He was released from prison in 1897
and went to Paris, where he was hidden under the pseudonym of Sebastian Helmoth, was here where
he wrote his famous work The Ballad of Reading Gaol as a result of his experience in prison.
• He lived in Paris until his death in 1900.
• PLOT
• The story turns around two friend, Algernon Moncrief and Jack Worthing, they have created two
imaginary people, one in each case, Mr. Bunbury (Algernon's friend) and Ernest Worthing (Jack's
brother) in order to can escape from the routine always they want, these identities have a personality
completely different to their owners so they can do it everything that they want.
• Jack Worthing is in love with Gwendolen Fairfax, but she knows him as Ernest Worthing, what is a
problem, moreover, his mother, Lady Bracknell, dislikes Jack because he hasn't a very good social
position. In the other hand Algernon goes to Jack's country house and introduce himself as Ernest
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Worthing, and he falls in love with Cecily Cardew, when the two girls meet themselves, start lots of
scrapes and misunderstandings which finish finding out the true identity of the two men, and appear
other surprises like the revelation of the true parents of Jack, his true name and the link of blood that
unites him with Algernon.
• CHARACTERS
• JOHN WORTHING, J.P.
• More known as Jack Worthing, he was abandoned when he was a baby, he was given shelter by Mr.
Cardew, who looked after him till his death afterthat Jack became the guardian of Mr. Cardew's
daughter, Cecily. They live in the same house in the country, but Jack lives too in the town as Ernest
Worthing, a false brother with very bad reputation that Jack has invented in order to can do everything
he wants without problems. Jack is in love with Gwendolen Fairfax but she knows him as Ernest
Worthing.
• ALGERNON MONCRIEF
• He is a person who likes to argue for everything, is extremely educated and a few strict, he lives in the
town but when he wants to go out to enjoy himself he has a technique called Bunburyist, it consists of
make this family believe that he has a friend called Mr. Bunbury who has very bad health and due to
that Algernon has to visit him many times. In one of his leavings Algernon falls in love with Cecily
when he was doing like he was Ernest Worthing.
• HON. GWENDOLEN FAIRFAX
• She is the only daughter of Lady Bracknell, she is nice, clever and a few romantic, but she lives with
the obsession of getting married to somebody called Ernest.
• LADY AUGUSTA BRACKNELL
• She is the mother of Gwendolen and the aunt of Algernon. She is a very hard woman, and worried in
excess for what the society thinks of her and her family. She wants, above all, to find an ideal husband
(good family and position) to Gwen and is very critical to all her candidates.
• CECILY CARDEW
• She is the ward of Jack Worthing, she lives in a country house with her governess Ms. Prism, Cecily
is a nice, young lady, very impatient, romantic and a few crazy, as the same as Gwendolen she wants
to get married to somebody called Ernest.
• MISS PRISM
• She is the governess of Cecily, is a woman well educated and very cultured, she lives dedicated to
educate Cecily, although inside herself she hide a secret, 20 years ago she lost a baby and this make
her unhappy, moreover, she loves the Rev. Canon Chausuble, but she knows that love is impossible.
• REV. CANON CHASUBLE, D.D.
• He is the reverend of the village, is a man cultured and very nice, he goes frequently to visit Cecily in
order to can talk with Ms. Prism whom her he is in love on a unconscious way.
• LANE
• He is the manservant of Algernon Moncrief. He is a nice, loyal man, an above all, discreet, because he
knows all the secrets of his Mister.
• MERRIMAN
• He is a butler, but he works as a manservant of Jack Worthing in his country house.
• A COMMENTARY ABOUT OSCAR WILDE'S STYLE
• The opposition that Oscar Wilde makes between the hard work and the idleness seems to be oriented
to very old fashioned ideas about the happiness. To Wilde the artist becomes a symbol of a society
free of the duty of a necessary work. His rhetoric goes towards the communication, there isn't never a
division between art and social reality, Wilde sees himself as an artist, constituting an essential aspect
that he never draws, not even in his theoretic writings, a strong line divisors between critic knowledge
and poetical creation.
• This tendency (the aestheticism ) is found in Oscar Wilde in the way that the general idea of a Dandy
only included the provocative characteristics of the eccentric artist. The figure of the Dandy
personalised the necessity of unmask the triviality of the burgess existence, as well as provoke it by a
irritant behaviour ; the Dandy was distinguished for his negative to concern with the daily life
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matters, and for his decision of concentrating his life, in a precise way, on the instant and the caprices
most extravagant.
• PERSONAL OPINION
• I like this story, in general, I've found it very funny, full of scrapes and misunderstandings.
• To start, and to my understanding, i think the false identities that the characters of Algernon and Jack
have (Mr. Bunbury and Ernest) reflect a desire of not to have any sort of responsibility, they want to
do anything without afraid of reprisals.
• For example, i think that the character of Algernon Moncrief seems to be the typical hypocrite guy
that shows a faces but behind of it he thinks a thing completely different, but near the end of the story,
when he falls in love with Cecily he seems like whether he takes the right road.
• About the character of Jack Worthing i believe that he shames himself of his past and lets off steam
with the figure of Ernest and accuses him of a lots of vicious that Jack doesn't dare to confess.
Changing of content, the story said to me that although Jack is very pleased with his protector
Mr.Cardew he is still angry with his parents because they abandoned him when he was a baby, but,
after all he finish forgives them. I believe too that Jack wants to marry Gwendolen in order that she
mean to him the possibility of making up a family, but he is very annoyed with Lady Bracknell since
she doesn't let Gwendolen gets married with Jack because he hasn't the enough good position in
society.
• I believe in fact, that Oscar Wilde wanted, with the personality of Lady Bracknell, to reflect the
prejudgements of the middle of XIX century society (high class) about the people of an inferior class.
This character seems to be an hypocrite too, because when she believed Jack was poor, she didn't
want him to get married Gwendolen, but when she discovers that Jack stems from a good family, her
own family, se doesn't doubt in give her consent to that wedding, as the same to the marriage between
Algernon and Cecily, because she knows that her has a good social position.
• In my opinion, the female characters (Gwendolen and Cecily) are very frivolous, they are obsessed to
marry to somebody called Ernest, which is a nonsense, it is like nowadays was a necessary thing to
marry a man that he has a BMW or a two plants flat, it demonstrate the stupidity of the girls, i find
some similar at the present day, because there are some girls that put their economical situation before
their feelings, which i think is a big nonsense. To sum up i believe that these characters show the
necessity to be approve by the society and they suppose that marry a man called Ernest they will get
it, it is possible too that these girls are used to have everything they wanted and this is only a caprice
more.
• I find, to my way, the character of Mr. Prism very few relevant, she is only the governess of Cecily,
although i think this figure is necessary to be accused of the lost of the baby; in the same way, the
character of the Rev. Canon Chausuble is useless in the story, he can be substituted for another
character and the plot will goes on equal.
• As for the servants, i think they are necessary to situate the story into a society worried in excess for
the appearance, although they are agreeable and put a note of colour in the theme.
• To summarise, i like very much this story full of scrapes, secrets and love in equal dosage, it is
amusing and pleasant to read, although i believe the end of this one can be predicted, (at least for me)
it is known that something is going to happen, something to help Lady Bracknell gives her consent to
the wedding.
• I find it interesting, amusing, comical, with a coherent theme, without shocks and with a satisfactory
result to myself.
• BIBLIOGRAPHY
•
♦ WILDE, Oscar. The Importance of Being Earnest and other plays. Penguin Plays 1986.
♦ Enciclopedia interactiva Planeta Agostini.
♦ AKAL. Historia de la Literatura. Volumen quinto, La edad Burguesa (1830−1914)
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