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Parenting & Family Quote by Oscar Wilde

"To lose one parent may be regarded as a misfortune; to lose both looks like carelessness"

About this Quote

Leave it to Wilde to make orphanhood sound like bad housekeeping. The line lands because it performs a moral inversion: tragedy is treated as a minor inconvenience until it crosses some imaginary threshold, at which point society’s reflex isn’t compassion but suspicion. Wilde weaponizes that reflex. By phrasing grief in the language of social accounting - “regarded,” “looks like” - he shows how quickly public opinion swaps empathy for judgment, as if calamity were a character flaw.

The joke is built like a legal brief: one death is admissible as “misfortune,” two deaths become incriminating evidence. “Carelessness” is the killer word, a prim, bourgeois scold of a term that belongs to broken china and missed appointments, not dead parents. That mismatch is the engine of the wit. Wilde isn’t mocking loss so much as mocking the Victorian impulse to convert everything, even suffering, into a verdict about personal responsibility. It’s cruelty dressed up as common sense.

Context sharpens the edge. The line comes from The Importance of Being Earnest, a play that treats identity as a costume and manners as a battlefield. Its characters speak in epigrams because they can’t speak honestly; cleverness is their anesthesia. Wilde, writing as an outsider-insider in a rigidly moralizing culture, knew how respectability operates: it pretends to be rational, then uses “reason” to excuse contempt. The laugh catches in your throat because the target isn’t the orphan - it’s the audience’s readiness to blame them.

Quote Details

TopicWitty One-Liners
Source
Later attribution: Oscar Wilde (Oscar Wilde) modern compilation
Text match: 93.75%   Provider: Wikiquote
Evidence:
er algernon act i to lose one parent may be regarded as a misfortune to lose both seems like carelessness la
Other candidates (1)
The Happy Prince: And Other Tales (Oscar Wilde, George Percy Jacomb Hood, 1888) primary37.5%
boy may fall into the deep river and be drowned what a terrible misfortune poor people to lose their only s
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Wilde, Oscar. (2026, February 7). To lose one parent may be regarded as a misfortune; to lose both looks like carelessness. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-lose-one-parent-may-be-regarded-as-a-37156/

Chicago Style
Wilde, Oscar. "To lose one parent may be regarded as a misfortune; to lose both looks like carelessness." FixQuotes. February 7, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-lose-one-parent-may-be-regarded-as-a-37156/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"To lose one parent may be regarded as a misfortune; to lose both looks like carelessness." FixQuotes, 7 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-lose-one-parent-may-be-regarded-as-a-37156/. Accessed 23 Feb. 2026.

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To lose one parent may be misfortune; to lose both, carelessness
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About the Author

Oscar Wilde

Oscar Wilde (October 16, 1854 - November 30, 1900) was a Dramatist from Ireland.

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