Jane Francesca Wilde, also known as Speran
A gifted linguist, she published several translations of French and German works, including Wilhelm Meinhold’s gothic horror novel Sidonia the Sorcess, in 1849, which was reprinted in America; a philosophical novel from the German, The First Temptation, or Eritia sient Deus (in three volumes); Lamartine’s History of the Girondins, as Pictures of the First French Revolution (1850); Lamartine’s Nouvelles Confidences, as The Wanderer and his Home (1851); and Alexander Dumas’s Impression de Voyage en Suisse, as The Glacier Land (1852). Her first volume of poetry also contained translations from several European languages.
After Thomas Davis’s funeral, she began contributing poetry to The Nation under the pseudonym of John Fanshaw Ellis, and published her poem The Stricken Land in the Nation in 1847, at the height of the famine. She became editor of the Nation in July 1848. Although she was thought to disdain marriage, she married the eminent eye surgeon William Wilde in 1851, and settled at Westland Row. She had three children, including Oscar Wilde, but her daughter Isola Emily Francesca died suddenly from a fever at the age of ten. The family moved to 1, Merrion Sqare, opposite which there is now a statue of Oscar Wilde, in 1858.
After the death of Sir William Wilde, she was in reduced circumstances, and moved to London where she was supported in her later years by her son Willie and the gifts of admirers.
Her main works include Poems (Dublin, James Duffy 1864); Poems (Glasgow, Cameron & Ferguson, 1871); Memoir Of Gabriel Beranger ([with Sir William Wilde] Dublin, Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, 1880); Driftwood From Scandinavia (1884); Ancient Legends, Mystic Charms, and Superstitions of Ireland. With Sketches of the Irish Past… to which is added a chapter on “The Ancient Race of Ireland” by the late Sir William Wilde (London, Ward and Downey,1888); Social Studies (Ward & Downey, 1893); and Notes On Men, Women, And Books (Ward & Downey, 1891].
When her son Oscar Wilde sued the Marquess of Queensbury for publicly calling him a homosexual, Lady Jane advised him to stay and fight it, rather than fleeing the country, as others had advised. He took her advice and lost his case, suffering imprisonment as a consequence. Speranza died, at her home in London, of bronchitis, on February 3, 1896, while Oscar was still in prison.
Ancient Legends, Mystic Charms & Superstitions of Ireland, by Lady Wilde
Speranza’s Poems at Victorian Women Writers Project
Speranza Lady Jane Wilde at The National Library of Ireland
