"The Nightingale and the Rose" is a fairy tale written by Oscar Wilde. The story follows a nightingale who sacrifices her life to create a red rose for a student to give to his beloved, only to discover that the girl does not appreciate the gesture. The tale explores themes of selfless love, sacrifice, and the nature of true love.
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No, Florence Nightingale did not create the Red Cross. The Red Cross was founded by Henry Dunant in 1863. Florence Nightingale is known as the founder of modern nursing and made significant contributions to healthcare and nursing practices.
# It is Brown. # It has a red-like tail.
Greg Nightingale was the first to bring the red onion to Australia
Queen Victoria awarded Florence Nightingale the Royal Red Cross in recognition of her contributions to nursing during the Crimean War.
She founded the American Red Cross.
Florence Nightingale was the daughter of William Edward Nightingale and Frances Nightingale.
Here is an outline of the story (hope this helps): The Student is in despair because there are no red roses in his garden. The nightingale hears his sobbing, and sees beauty within him. She therefore falls in love with him. The student desires the flower so much because if he brings it to the Prince's Ball and gives it to the love of his life, she will dance with him, embrace him and love him back. But this is unachievable because there are no red roses in his garden. The other little creatures think the Student is ridiculous, but the Nightingale understands his pain and sets out to relieve it. She visits all of the rose plants in the garden, but they can produce only yellow, white and pink roses. The Nightingale asks the tree that grows underneath the Student's window for a red rose. It could not produce any due to the cold weather. The Nightingale wept and pleaded, and the tree revealed that it could produce red roses, but in a terrible way. The Nightingale had to build her red rose. She must sing under the moonlight and produce it with her blood. She must sing all night, pressing her chest against his thorn, thus sacrificing herself for the Student. She did not care, and death was a price she was willing to pay. She sang the Oak-tree song one last time and watched the student walk away. While he slept, the Nightingale sang her most beautiful love song, and a rose blossomed. The Nightingale was dead with a thorn in her heart. The Student finds the rose growing in the garden and picks it. He happily presented it to the girl of his dreams, but she was not pleased. She said the rose did not match her dress and wasn't as expensive as jewellery. He calls her ungrateful and gets thrown out. The Student thought to himself how silly, unuseful, impractical and untrue love is, and continues with his studies instead.
The theft of his beloved nightingale, who had delighted the Mandarin with its beautiful song for many years, upsets and angers him at the beginning of the story.
No.
William Nightingale and Fanny Nightingale
The ROSE AND THE NIGHTINGALE is a fairy tale in which characters from nature speak and understand humans, the whole story is about nightingale and her journey in search of the red rose. The nightingale can speak and understand the feelings of the boy who wish red rose for his love while the three characters from nature, Green Lizard, a Butterfly and a Daisy make fun of the boy's feeling. The nightingale moves from one place to another in search of red rose in the garden. The whole nature is in movement and responses to the nightingale and trees also speak and answer the nightingale. The first two trees refuse nightingale and say that their roses are white and yellow and sent her to the third rose tree. The third tree is red rose tree but it can not produce red rose because it is under the influence of winter. The red rose can be produced through the blood of heart of the nightingale. The nightingale sacrificed herself for sake of red rose. She also sacrificed her melodious songs. She sacrificed herself for the desire of the boy. She sacrificed herself to give rebirth to the whole nature. The character of the Nightingale in the story is very interesting. She is the protagonist of this story, the valiant heroine who sacrifices her life at the altar of love. However, ultimately her sacrifice goes in vain, as the fruit of her singing, the red rose, meets an untimely end in a gutter. The Nightingale marvels at the Student's longing for his love, and so she relents to give up her life. This act of sacrifice instantly reminds of the connect between the Nightingale. However, as we shall see, the rose's symbolism is far more complex. The most romantic and loving character is of course this sweet little bird who helps a poor student to get his chance with the girl of his dreams. This beautiful creature lacks humanity, but sure has a lot she can teach this young student. Not only does she sacrifice her own life for the one thing she thinks is important, but she also truly understands what love actually is. It is not just an emotion it is almost a way of life, an obsession. It can make you feel wonderful, but can also destroy you quite easily. The nightingale didn't even know the student until she heard his story and she still did all she could to help him fulfill his deepest desire. The poor little bird went far and wide to find a single red rose, which she had to make herself with her very own blood and in the end; she literally was thrown away and crushed by a passing cart. The nightingale is the true lover, if there is one. She, at least, is Romance, and the Student and the girl are, like most of us, unworthy of Romance. So, at least, it seems to me, but I like to fancy that there may be many meanings in the tale, for in writing it I did not start with an idea and clothe it in form, but began with a form and strove to make it beautiful enough to have many secrets and many answers The plot is easy to summarize. A young Student is infatuated by the daughter of a Professor. She promises to dance with him till dawn at the Prince's ball if the Student will bring her a red rose. But in his garden there are no red roses. The Nightingale, who night after night romantically sings of such love as she believes she now sees demonstrated, is moved to provide the red rose so as to facilitate the love between the Student and the young woman. Whereas the Prince in the previous story had spoken of the Mystery of Misery, the Nightingale here is struck by "the mystery of Love". Following the typical pattern of threes, she goes to three rose trees asking for a red rose. The first bares only white roses, the second only yellow ones. The third is indeed a red rose tree, but because of a harsh winter cannot bare any roses. The Tree tells her: "If you want a red rose you must build it out of music by moonlight, and stain it with your own heart's blood. You must sing to me with your breast against a thorn. All night long you must sing to me, and the thorn must pierce your heart, and your life-blood must flow into my veins, and become mine." The style of the language that Oscar Wilde applied is tactful in The Nightingale and the Rose. Oscar Wilde has set a brilliant example of achieving the delicate harmony between the language and his own artistic view. For Oscar Wilde the purest art is worthy of his life and is the highest in society.