He Could Have Escaped - But Refused to Hide | Oscar Wilde's Trial
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概要
What happens when the most famous man in England is told his love is a crime? In 1895, Oscar Wilde stood in a London courtroom and called love between men "beautiful" and "noble," refusing to apologize, recant, or run. This is the trial that sent queer people underground for seventy years, and the defiance that planted a seed we're still growing today.
By early 1895, Wilde was untouchable. Two plays running in the West End, a reputation as the wittiest man alive. But behind the velvet and the wit, he was living a double life with Lord Alfred Douglas, and the walls were closing in. When the Marquess of Queensberry left a card accusing Wilde of "posing" as a sodomite, Wilde sued for libel. The trap closed. Within weeks, Wilde himself was in the dock, charged with gross indecency under the same vaguely worded law that would later destroy Alan Turing.
Friends begged him to catch the evening boat to France. He stayed. Because running meant agreeing that love was something to hide. When asked about "the love that dare not speak its name," Wilde delivered one of the bravest speeches ever given in a courtroom. The gallery erupted in applause. The jury did not. He was sentenced to two years of hard labor at Reading Gaol.
This episode explores what silence costs, not just the person being silenced, but everyone around them. Kris shares a deeply personal story about his own family, the grandfather who never knew, and the grandmother who crossed the line at the very end. It is a story about choosing truth over safety, about the people who refuse to hide, and about the seeds they plant for the rest of us.
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