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'The Happy Prince and the Swallow' is a work by the Irish philosopher, aesthete, writer, and poet Oscar Wilde (1854–1900). The tale was written in 1888. Wilde's tales create an original, enchanting world born from the author's imagination. There are no traditional folklore wonders in it; magic here resides in words, and objects are imbued with enchantment. In this illusory reality, everything comes to life, transforming the ordinary into the fabulous. Wilde turned to this genre at a time when his contemporaries were fascinated by technological progress, and realism and naturalism dominated literature. As the greatest aesthete of the century, he believed that prose should not merely be a chronicle or a sermon. It should be colorful, grotesque, playful, and magical. His tales, artistically perfect and deeply tragic, embody the philosophical ideas of Wilde the thinker. Each reading offers new grounds for reflection. Wilde also wrote the following works: 'The Ballad of Reading Gaol,' 'Salome,' 'The Infanta's Birthday,' 'The Nightingale and the Rose,' 'The Princess's Birthday,' 'The Devoted Friend.'