Summary of Book
The picture of Dorian Gray
A painter, Basil Hallward, paints a most exquisite portrait of his
muse, the handsome young man named Dorian Gray. During the last session of
painting, Dorian, who has until this point been completely innocent both of his
beauty and of the world, meets Basil's friend Lord Henry Wotton, who opens his
eyes to the ephemeral nature of his own beauty and tells him that he should
experience life to the fullest. Upon the completion of the portrait, Dorian
wishes out loud that the painting would grow old, and not he. Due to Lord
Henry's influence, Dorian goes out looking for passion and falls in love with a
young actress of considerable talent, Sibyl Vane. When she falls in love with
him, however, she realizes the falseness of her stage life and performs very
poorly in front of Basil and Lord Henry when they come to meet her; Dorian is
thoroughly disappointed, loses all respect and love for her, and breaks the
engagement. He goes home to find that the painting has become slightly more
cruel-looking, and the next morning, just after resolving to go back and marry
her regardless, finds out that Sibyl has killed herself. The painting fills him
with fear and he has it locked up in an old schoolroom in his house.Dorian finds a certain joy,
over the next years, in committing sinful or pleasurable deeds and watching the
painting change; he loses none of his beauty or youth, but the painting grows
old and ugly. He is constantly in touch with Lord Henry, who feeds his beliefs
about a new Hedonism-the search for pleasure, not morality-which should take
over the world. When Dorian is thirty-eight, he runs into Basil, having not
seen him for a long time, and finally shows him what has happened to his
portrait. Basil is horrified and tries to make Dorian repent, but Dorian kills
him, and has an old friend of his burn the body and get rid of the evidence.Dorian becomes increasingly
anxious and fearful that someone might discover his secret, and goes to an
opium den to try to erase his bad feelings. Sibyl's brother, James, who has
been searching for him for eighteen years, knowing only that his sister called
him Prince Charming, finds Dorian and threatens his life. He lets him go when
Dorian tells him to look closely at his face; he could not have been more than
twenty years old. While at a hunting party a few days later, a man is
accidentally shot and killed, and Dorian finds out that this man was James. He
decides that from this time on, he will be good; and to do this, he must get
rid of the constant anxiety and fear he has been feeling-he must destroy the
portrait. He stabs it, with the same knife he used to kill Basil, and when the
servants enter they see the portrait as it was when it was new, and a horrible,
old, ugly man lying dead on the floor.
A painter, Basil Hallward, paints a most exquisite portrait of his
muse, the handsome young man named Dorian Gray. During the last session of
painting, Dorian, who has until this point been completely innocent both of his
beauty and of the world, meets Basil's friend Lord Henry Wotton, who opens his
eyes to the ephemeral nature of his own beauty and tells him that he should
experience life to the fullest. Upon the completion of the portrait, Dorian
wishes out loud that the painting would grow old, and not he. Due to Lord
Henry's influence, Dorian goes out looking for passion and falls in love with a
young actress of considerable talent, Sibyl Vane. When she falls in love with
him, however, she realizes the falseness of her stage life and performs very
poorly in front of Basil and Lord Henry when they come to meet her; Dorian is
thoroughly disappointed, loses all respect and love for her, and breaks the
engagement. He goes home to find that the painting has become slightly more
cruel-looking, and the next morning, just after resolving to go back and marry
her regardless, finds out that Sibyl has killed herself. The painting fills him
with fear and he has it locked up in an old schoolroom in his house.Dorian finds a certain joy,
over the next years, in committing sinful or pleasurable deeds and watching the
painting change; he loses none of his beauty or youth, but the painting grows
old and ugly. He is constantly in touch with Lord Henry, who feeds his beliefs
about a new Hedonism-the search for pleasure, not morality-which should take
over the world. When Dorian is thirty-eight, he runs into Basil, having not
seen him for a long time, and finally shows him what has happened to his
portrait. Basil is horrified and tries to make Dorian repent, but Dorian kills
him, and has an old friend of his burn the body and get rid of the evidence.Dorian becomes increasingly
anxious and fearful that someone might discover his secret, and goes to an
opium den to try to erase his bad feelings. Sibyl's brother, James, who has
been searching for him for eighteen years, knowing only that his sister called
him Prince Charming, finds Dorian and threatens his life. He lets him go when
Dorian tells him to look closely at his face; he could not have been more than
twenty years old. While at a hunting party a few days later, a man is
accidentally shot and killed, and Dorian finds out that this man was James. He
decides that from this time on, he will be good; and to do this, he must get
rid of the constant anxiety and fear he has been feeling-he must destroy the
portrait. He stabs it, with the same knife he used to kill Basil, and when the
servants enter they see the portrait as it was when it was new, and a horrible,
old, ugly man lying dead on the floor.
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Thank you very much Vivi, I do now the questions for the next class. a hug!!!
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