Miscellaneous Forgeries
Scope and Content
This collection contains manuscript materials that have been confirmed as or strongly suspected of being forgeries of Oscar Wilde's work, in addition to legal and other materials related to such forgeries. Materials described here date largely from the 1920s and include forged literary manuscripts and correspondence said to be from Wilde, correspondence regarding forged materials, legal documents, news clippings and booksellers' catalogs.
Series 1 and 2 below contain materials thought to be composed by the same forger or group of forgers, going by the name Dorian Hope. In 1921, London antiquarian booksellers Maggs Bros. and Dublin booksellers Hodges Figgis were both offered previously unknown Wilde manuscripts from people posing as Pierre Louÿs and André Gide (respectively). Dorian Hope posed as an intermediary between the booksellers,"Louÿs" and "Gide." Though the materials related to Hodges Figgis' dealings with Hope/"Gide" are included in this collection, Maggs Bros. still retains their archive of forged Wilde materials and correspondence from "Louÿs" -- the materials described below are photocopies from their collections.
Series 3 contains material related to Mrs. Chan-Toon (née Mabel Cosgrove) and For the love of the king, a Burma-themed play that she alleged Wilde had written for her in the 1890s. Christopher Millard, Wilde's bibliographer, was sued for libel in 1926 by her publishers Methuen and Co., and he assembled an exhaustive dossier of his evidence and of the court proceedings.
Dates
- Creation: 1887-1957
Creator
- From the File: William Andrews Clark Memorial Library (Organization)
Access
Collection is open for research.
Extent
From the File: 5 boxes
Language of Materials
From the File: English
Repository Details
Part of the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library Repository