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The Star Child

A woodcutter finds a baby boy wrapped in a gold cloak with stars, wearing an amber necklace in the forest. He takes the boy home and raises him as his own, calling him the Star-Child. The Star-Child grows up vain and cruel, tormenting beggars. After insulting his biological mother, who reveals his true identity, he is punished with a toad-like face. Years later, as a slave, he shows kindness to animals and beggars three times, regaining his beauty. He is revealed to be the prophesied king and earns his mother's forgiveness, but sadly dies after only three years of rule.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
534 views2 pages

The Star Child

A woodcutter finds a baby boy wrapped in a gold cloak with stars, wearing an amber necklace in the forest. He takes the boy home and raises him as his own, calling him the Star-Child. The Star-Child grows up vain and cruel, tormenting beggars. After insulting his biological mother, who reveals his true identity, he is punished with a toad-like face. Years later, as a slave, he shows kindness to animals and beggars three times, regaining his beauty. He is revealed to be the prophesied king and earns his mother's forgiveness, but sadly dies after only three years of rule.

Uploaded by

pokpaklisa002
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
  • The Star Child: Presents the story of 'The Star Child' by Oscar Wilde, exploring themes of transformation and redemption.
  • Activity and Questions: Provides questions to analyze the themes and personal connections to 'The Star Child' story.

The Star Child

By Oscar Wilde

One winter night, two Woodcutters see a shooting star fall to the ground. They go to the place in
the forest where the star landed, expecting to find a pot of gold. Instead, they find a child wrapped in a
gold cloak embroidered with stars and wearing an amber necklace. Although he is very poor and already
has several children of his own, one of the Woodcutters decides to take the child home with him. He has
difficulty persuading his wife to take in the child but he tells her that the boy is a Star-Child. The
Woodcutter and his wife treat the Star-Child as one of their own children for the next ten years.

The Star-Child grows up to be a handsome boy but he is also very vain. As the son of a star, he
believes himself to be superior to everyone else in the village. He cannot bear people from the lowest
levels of society and throws stones at beggars whenever he sees them. He also tortures and kills small
animals. A gang of similarly-minded children gather around the Star-Child and accept him as their leader.

One day, the Star-Child and his friends throw stones at an ugly beggar woman. The Woodcutter,
who is nearby, chastises the Star-Child, saying that he cannot understand why the boy behaves that way,
given that he treated the Star-Child kindly ever since he found him in the forest. At these words, the
beggar woman faints. When the beggar woman comes around in the Woodcutter's house, she says that
her child, who was wrapped in a gold cloak embroidered with stars and wearing an amber necklace, was
stolen from her by robbers in the forest ten years ago. The Star-Child is told that the woman is his
mother but he wants nothing to do with her. When she asks for a kiss before she leaves, he says, "rather
would I kiss the adder or the toad than thee".

The Star-Child goes to rejoin his friends but they shun him and call him ugly. He finds that he
now has a face like a toad and skin like an adder. He realizes that he is being punished for his
mistreatment of his mother. In the hope that he might regain his former appearance if his mother
forgave him, he goes off in search of her.

After three years, the Star-Child arrives at a city. The soldiers who guard the city gates sell him as
a slave to a Magician. The Magician tells the Star-Child that in a forest near the city there are three
pieces of gold. They are a piece of white gold, a piece of yellow gold and a piece of red gold. He tells the
Star-Child to fetch the piece of white gold the next day, telling him that he will be punished if he does not
bring it back. The Star-Child spends all day looking for the piece of white gold but cannot find it. As he is
about to leave the forest empty-handed, he notices a Hare which is caught in a trap and frees the
animal. Out of gratitude, the Hare leads the boy to the piece of white gold. Outside the city gates, a leper
begs a coin from the Star-Child. The boy gives him the piece of white gold. When he returns to the
Magician's house empty-handed, he is beaten.

The following day, the Star-Child is sent to find the piece of yellow gold. Again, the Hare leads
the Star-Child to the golden piece, again he gives the piece of gold to the begging leper and the Magician
gives him a worse beating when he returns emptyhanded once more. The Magician tells the Star-Child
that he will kill him if he does not return with the piece of red gold the following day. However, after
having been led to it by the Hare, the Star-Child gives the piece of red gold to the leper, whom he
believes needs it more than he does.
As soon as the Star-Child gives the piece of red gold to the beggar, the same soldiers who had
sold him into slavery call him their lord and compliment him on his good looks. When the Star-Child
protests that he is ugly, one of the soldiers shows him his reflection in a shield. The boy finds that he has
become handsome once again. A crowd of people proclaim the Star-Child to be the king who, according
to a prophecy, was to come to them that day. The Star-Child says that he cannot become king until he
has earned his mother's forgiveness. He sees the beggar woman seated next to the leper. The Star-Child
cries at the beggar woman's feet, washing them with his tears. As a result of the kindness the Star-Child
has shown them, the beggar woman and the leper magically take on the appearance of a King and
Queen. The leper is revealed to be the Star-Child's father. For a short while, the people of the city live
happily under the rule of the StarChild. Unfortunately, he dies after only three years and a cruel king
succeeds him (“Star-Child,” n.d.).

Activity # 1

In your notebook, answer the following questions:

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