“Every man of ambition has to fight his
century with its own weapons. What this century worship is wealth. The God of
this century is wealth. To succeed one must have wealth. At all costs one must
have wealth.” (Sir Robert Chiltern—An Ideal Husband)
Once again I
was amazed by Oscar Wilde—this guy is really cool, isn’t he? After having been
impressed by The Picture of Dorian Gray—Wilde’s masterpiece for me—Wilde
made me laughing hard at his witty sarcasm in Importance of Being Earnest.
After that I was a little worried whether his other plays would be exactly like
Importance; very funny but lack of
deeper values. I was wrong! This month I picked An Ideal Husband for Let’s Read Plays and, fortunately, The Classics Spin also picked the play from my list by spitting the lucky
number 6! So there I was, plunging into the fraudulent scheme, political twist,
love story and morality of British society in 19th century. And,
although the beginning is rather flat, An
Ideal Husband turns out to be one of the most entertaining plays I’ve ever
read so far; and more importantly, it’s much deeper than Importance!
Sir Robert
Chiltern is an honorable gentleman in society, and respectable politician in
the House of Parliament. He was appraised by so many people, but little do they
know that Chiltern had done a shameful deceit in his earlier career, from which
he has been building his later career and fortune. Lady Chiltern is also a high
reputation ‘flawless’ lady in the society. She adores her husband for being
pure and noble. In a party one night, a crafty woman named Mrs. Cheveley
blackmailed Sir Chiltern to support a fraudulent scheme that he disapproved in
the House, or otherwise she would release an old letter that will prove
Chiltern’s deceit in public and will ruin his life.
Lord Goring,
a young gentleman who leads an easy going, fashionable and enjoyable life
style, is a closest friend of Robert and Gertrude Chiltern. Being sarcastic and
indifferent outside, Arthur Goring is actually a kind hearted friend inside.
When Robert and Gertrude were on the edge of losing each other’s love following
the blackmail, Arthur separately tried to help them. Unfortunately, several
trivial accidents put Arthur in a complex situation himself; he almost lost his
friends’ trust and, most importantly, the young lady he was in love with.
As always,
Wilde’s strength in plays is the combination of intertwining plot, complex
failures, sarcasm paradoxes to criticize British society at that time, and his clever
wittiness. But particularly in this play, Wilde plunged deeper than merely
witty banters. My favorite character here is Lord Goring, he’s as easy going as
Lord Henry in Dorian Gray or Algernon
in Importance, but he also possessed
a wise philosophy beneath his indifferent manner, which was always ready to be
presented whenever his friends needed it. Far from being shallow, Goring’s
advices to Robert and Gertrude were so genuine and useful at the same time. My
favorite scene is when Lord Goring gave his speech to Lady Chiltern after the
lady restrained her husband from accepting seat in Parliament. Here’s part of
it:
“Women are not meant to judge us, but to
forgive us when we need forgiveness. Pardon, not punishment, is their mission.
[…] A woman who can keep a man’s love, and love him in return, has done all the
world wants of women, or should want of them.”
In the end,
Wilde wants to criticize how British society has been worshiping wealth and
status too much that they neglected the genuine values in life: love and
honesty. When Robert Chiltern consulted with Arthur Goring after the blackmail,
Goring’s first advice is to confide to his wife; that Lady Chiltern loves him
and thus will forgive him. On the other hand, Goring also advised Lady Chiltern
to forgive his husband, and instead of blaming him, to accept and support him
with her love. From the Chilterns’ conflict, I learn that every family, every
person must sometimes have crisis in life; but that crisis often get bigger
than it should because we are reluctant to be honest. As soon as the Chilterns
opened themselves to each other, one by one the complicated problems were
eventually unraveled.
Wilde is
also emphasizing women’s role in the society. Instead of expecting their
husband to be perfect and worshipping them like gods, they should act as a
partner by loving and supporting them. It’s really interesting that the
philosophy must come from Lord Goring, who was a bachelor. With that quality of
perspective, we should envy whichever girl Arthur Goring picks to marry, for he
would certainly be an ideal husband!
Four and a
half stars for An Ideal Husband,
really entertaining!
~~~~~~
Let’s Read Plays (June) theme: Oscar Wilde
Baca Bareng BBI 2013: (June) European
Literature
46th book for The Classics Club Project
Intriguing book! I've never read Wilde before mba Fan, what's your suggestion for a newbie?
ReplyDeleteWilde only wrote one complete novel: The Picture of Dorian Gray. If you love gothic stories, this could be your choice. But if you prefer something lighter for start, try his play: The Importance of Being Earnest, it's a witty satire about 19th century British society. One thing is sure: Wilde's writing is very unique: smart, full of sarcastic paradoxes, and witty! :)
Deletebelum pernah baca karya Wilde, apalagi play. Aku kok kurang sreg ya baca play? Dulu dramanya dalam B minus hahaha.
ReplyDeleteMungkin dulu dramanya pake Shakespeare? Coba pake yg lebih modern dari itu. Wilde pilihan bagus, karena dia detail banget di act settingnya, sampe terasa nonton langsung stage-nya. Dalam hal ini, aku lbh suka daripada Shakespeare. Coba baca Importance of Being Earnest, lucuuu banget, bisa kepingkel2 dah :)
DeleteWilde has always been one of my favorites. You just can't match his wit!
ReplyDeleteTrue! Wilde's wittiness and sarcasms are genuinely him, no other can match it!
DeleteI saw the movie and enjoyed it a lot. I must read the book. I've never read any Oscar Wilde book before, and I actually have The Portrait of Dorian Grey on my classics club list, but I think I may enjoy this one better.
ReplyDeleteHave you seen the movie?
I haven't seen the movie. I only have Dorian Gray and Importance of Being Earnest videos, and haven't seen both either :D Compared to the play, personally I still think Dorian Gray is still Wilde's masterpiece. But you might want to start with the lighter play first, it's okay too...
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