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Dorian Gray - Chapters 6-10
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Meghan
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Apr 06, 2008 04:33PM

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1. you poor sap!
or
2. great. where's the remote, i want to put on espn!
And then they will completely forget about it.
This is an oversimplification of course, but it is yet another illustration of how the guys in this book (if i may call them guys) do not act like guys--at least not like 21st century american guys.
;)

But come on...you're telling me that if your best bud comes in and says "I've met the most beautiful woman and now I'm going to marry her" you wouldn't want to check her out? At least to see if she really is that hot? heh


"Women are wonderfully practical...much more practical than we are. In situations of that kind we often forget to say anthying about marriage, and they always remind us."
Put differently, but it's the same as the friend calling him a poor sap.
And I now hate Dorian. Not only is he becoming evil, but he's become condescending and judgemental, ie. his speech on how Sybil was not actually an artist after her one bad preformance. I don't remember Dorian being enough of an artist to have the right to declare that.

(well, who *does*???)
;)
T

heeheeheeheeheehee!
(sorry, couldn't keep a straight face!)
T

It's been said that Wilde says that Basil is what he thinks he is and Henry is how the public thinks he is. But after reading Chapter 9, I really don't like Basil. He seems too needy and naive. So I wonder this - do you think Wilde put all his insecurities into Basil and all his bravado into Henry? And the truth is more that they are just two halves of the whole man?
Secondly, how do you think you would behave if you had some physical representation of what your misdeeds were doing to your soul? Would you begin to live a life more pure (as Dorian wanted to after learning of Sibyl's death)? Or would you start to feel like you just got a get out of jail (hell) free card, which allows you to do all the selfish, self-centered things you really want but are otherwised too guilt-ridden to do (as Dorian is becoming after Basil leaves)?

I would enjoy Dorian's decay much more if I felt that he was turning into his own man, making these choices out of his own intuition. His inability to see how Henry is effecting him, and in parts, toying with him is aggravating.
It makes me wonder whether or not it is more Henry's influence than that of the picture that really is making him change.
Oh, sorry Meghan. I hadn't read your above post, and I made a similar one in the other thread.
I'll come back to this when I can think. I've got a results show to get to. :)
I'll come back to this when I can think. I've got a results show to get to. :)


That's a pretty broad generalization, but I think it might be accurate.
What do you think?
T

However, I keep wondering if one day, he will reach an age where it all becomes so old and redundant and if he feels like he "wasted" his youth on petty and ultimately unsatisfactory accomplishments. Or, is evil neverending and the pursuit of it infinite?

I feel like Dorian was more changed by Henry's influence than by the picture. I think the picture made him feel free to pursue whatever vices he wanted, but that he wouldn't have thought to do that had he not been spending time with Henry. I agree Meghan, I would like Dorian more if he was breaking away from Henry instead of just parroting whatever Henry says and changing his life's course based on what Henry tells him.
For me, I feel like if there was a picture that would show the effects of my evil deeds I feel like I'd be more cautious, like the picture would become some yardstick of the types of choices I was making. Not that you don't know when you're making a "bad" choice at the time but I think it's easy to get caught up in something and not necessarily think about the consequences until later. If I had a really bad night and then came home and saw the picture of me looking horrible it would probably make me want to change my ways. Of course I think you could also fall into the trap of doing it and just not looking at the picture at all, which leads me to my question:
If you had a picture like that of yourself would you look at it as frequently as Dorian does or would you lock it away and live your life?
As for "the book" (or was this posted in the other discussion?) my copy-the Penguin Classics edition says the same thing you found Alison,
"The book is sometimes identified as Joris Karl Huysmans's 'A Rebours ('against nature' or 'against the grain'; 1884) In 1892 Wilde wrote that the book was 'partly suggested by Huysmans's A Rebours...It is a fantastic variation on Huysmans's over-realistic study of the artistic temperatment in our inartistic age' and repeated this suggestion when he stood in the Old Bailey in April 1895. Wilde greatly admired Huysmans's novel, which recorded the strange hedonistic, aesthitic and sexual experiments, and eventual physical collapse, of an aristocratic Parisian recluse. Many of Dorian's own experiments in pleasure are modelled after Des Esseintes, he hero of Huysmans's novel, as is the 'scientific' and experimental approach Lord Henry adpots to experience. However, the book is only partly modelled on Huysmans's 'breviary of Decadence.' Wilde had originally given this book a fictitious title and author, 'Le Secret de Raoul par Catulle Sarrazin' but cancelled this in the typescript, wisely shrouding the book in mystery, hinting at rather than specifying a number of likely candidates."
It seems like the book makes Dorian even more aware of all the unexplored possibilities there are in the world and he becomes obsessed with pursuing them all.
I'm liking the book more than I was but still can't say I love it. Maybe I'll like it more when I'm done.

So I decided to re-read the old, battered copy of Dorian Gray I had from college. I've learned to not think too much of Lord Henry's remarks (since it seemed as if he doesn't spare much thought on everything he says either) cause it'll just annoy me too much. He kinda reminds me of Simon Cowell, in that respect.
Anyway, the falling in love and getting engaged part was a bit surprising for me cause in the earlier chapters Dorian seemed smitten with Henry, what with the excessive blushing and all. When I first read this I thought it was going to be about Dorian and Henry having an affair.
Anyway, the falling in love and getting engaged part was a bit surprising for me cause in the earlier chapters Dorian seemed smitten with Henry, what with the excessive blushing and all. When I first read this I thought it was going to be about Dorian and Henry having an affair.
Anytime, Sera! But seriously, though, am I the only one who was surprised that Dorian turned out to like women?

Dini, I think that Dorian liked all things that were beautiful, including both men and women. Remember that onerous Chapter 11? His collection of beautiful things I believe supports this point. However, Henry's not good looking it appears so what's Dorian's infatuation with Henry? It's his voice and his words to which he is drawn. At the beginning, when Dorian first meets Henry, he refers to his beautiful, melodius voice. Plus, Henry makes him feel good because he fawns all over Dorian and he continues do so throughout the remainder of the book.

Great insights, ladies. It does make sense that Dorian was in love with Sybil's beauty instead of her person.

Almost like your favorite tv show or movie character you kind of crush on and you get to meet that actor in person. Your feelings are attached to the character he plays not to the person himself. And then you find out he's illiterate or a complete jerk. Doesn't it just ruin your entire image of who that person is? I wonder if that was how Dorian felt after Sybil failed in her acting.
I kind of got the feeling he was enamored with the "rush" he got from watching her perform Shakespeare well--as an artist (basically a re-cap of what's already been said, but anyway...). Then, when she gave a bad performance (see discussion below!)..., he was dismissive to her. He definetely didn't have true feelings of love for her as a person. He was too selfish to love!

death. It was like how you would dismiss the news of another death of child in Afghanistan. You feel for it for a few moments, but then you go on with your life. It just doesn't directly touch your life so you're able to compartamentalize it.

I agree that Dorian was in love with the characters Sybil played and not with Sybil herself. He didn't know anything about Sybil the person! He was in love with the feelings she stirred in him, but never with her.





I think that's what made her such an exceptional actress was that she lived and breathed these other characters.
Alright, guys, I edited my post so as not to confuse anyone. I'm not really sure I "buy" why she bombed (wouldn't you try harder if you knew someone you loved was in the audience? wouldn't the words be more meaningful?)...but I do agree with what you guys said as to the author's intentions.
Sarah, I thought about what you said that both Lord Henry and Basil are infatuated with Dorian. At this point of the book it doesn't seem to me that Lord Henry cared about Dorian at all. I mean, he was just like "Oooh, interesting kid, let's see what happens if I poison his mind."

Lord Henry's infatuated with him because Dorian's good for the ol' ego. He's got this young, handsome boy who hangs on his every word and basically worships the ground he walks on. Whose head wouldn't be turned by that?


