THE NIGHTINGALE AND THE ROSE - Oscar Wilde

Subject: Short Fictional Narratives

Chapter: Video Lectures

Type: Free PDF Notes

THE NIGHTINGALE AND THE ROSE - Oscar Wilde — Free written notes for Short Fictional Narratives on EduFlame Pakistan.

About the Author
Oscar Wilde was an Irish writer, poet, and playwright known for his wit, elegant writing style, and belief in aestheticism — the idea that art exists for beauty itself. He wrote plays, novels, essays, and fairy tales. This story comes from his book The Happy Prince and Other Tales published in 1888.

Summary
A young Student wants to invite a girl to a dance, but she says she will only dance with him if he brings her a red rose. Unfortunately, there are no red roses in his garden.

A Nightingale hears him crying and believes he truly understands love. She searches for a red rose but finds only white and yellow roses. Finally, a Rose-tree tells her that the only way to make a red rose is to sing all night with her breast pressed against a thorn so her blood will color the flower.

The Nightingale sacrifices her life and creates the red rose.

The next morning, the Student gives the rose to the girl. She rejects it because another admirer has sent her jewels, which she values more. The Student becomes angry, throws the rose into the street, and returns to his books, deciding that love is foolish.

Themes

1. Sacrifice and Ingratitude
The Nightingale gives her life for love, but her sacrifice is ignored and wasted. Wilde shows that true sacrifice is often not valued by society.

2. True Love vs Superficial Love
The Nightingale represents real and unconditional love. The girl and the Student show shallow love based on gifts, appearance, and status.

3. Aestheticism and Materialism
The rose is a beautiful object created through pain and sacrifice. But the girl chooses expensive jewels over beauty. Wilde criticizes a materialistic society.

4. Reason vs Emotion
The Student is educated and speaks about love, but he does not truly understand it. The Nightingale, guided by feeling, understands love more deeply.

Narrative Style and Structure

  • Written as a fairy tale
  • Animals can speak and think
  • Includes a clear moral lesson
  • The tone begins romantic and beautiful
  • The ending becomes bitter and ironic

Wilde uses beautiful descriptions of the Nightingale’s song and sacrifice, then ends the story coldly to create contrast.

Key Literary Device: Irony

The main irony is that the only character who truly understands love is a bird, not the humans.

The Student studies philosophy and talks about love, but he completely fails to understand what the Nightingale understands naturally.

Exam-Ready Points

  • The Nightingale is a Christ-like figure because she sacrifices her life for another
  • Wilde criticizes society’s obsession with wealth and status
  • The rose symbolizes beauty, sacrifice, and true love
  • The girl represents materialism and superficial values
  • The Student represents reason without emotional understanding
  • The ending is anti-romantic and forces the reader to question whether love is foolish or people fail to understand it 
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