BKMT READING GUIDES
The Picture of Dorian Gray - Oscar Wilde 
  by Oscar Wilde 
                    
                    	
                    Paperback : 208 pages
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Introduction
Basil Hallward, an artist, meets Dorian Gray and paints his portrait.  The artist is so infatuated with Dorian's beauty that he begins to believe it is the reason for his quality of art.  Dorian becomes convinced that beauty is all-important and wishes his portrait could age instead of him.  Beware of what you have wish for!  Each time Dorian commits a sin his portrait ages, showing him what is happening to his soul.
A lush, cautionary tale of a life of vileness and deception or  a loving portrait of the aesthetic impulse run rampant? Why not both?  After Basil Hallward paints a beautiful, young man's portrait, his  subject's frivolous wish that the picture change and he remain the  same comes true. Dorian Gray's picture grows aged and corrupt while he  continues to appear fresh and innocent. After he kills a young woman,  "as surely as if I had cut her little throat with a knife,"  Dorian Gray is surprised to find no difference in his vision or  surroundings. "The roses are not less lovely for all that. The  birds sing just as happily in my garden."  
  As Hallward tries to make sense of his creation, his epigram-happy  friend Lord Henry Wotton encourages Dorian in his sensual quest with  any number of Wildean paradoxes, including the delightful "When  we are happy we are always good, but when we are good we are not  always happy." But despite its many languorous pleasures, The  Picture of Dorian Gray is an imperfect work. Compared to the two  (voyeuristic) older men, Dorian is a bore, and his search for ever new  sensations far less fun than the novel's drawing-room  discussions. Even more oddly, the moral message of the novel  contradicts many of Wilde's supposed aims, not least "no artist  has ethical sympathies. An ethical sympathy in an artist is an  unpardonable mannerism of style." Nonetheless, the glamour boy  gets his just deserts. And Wilde, defending Dorian Gray, had it both  ways: "All excess, as well as all renunciation, brings its own  punishment."
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