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    Literature intensive-Epsilon Seo-Ei-kyoung In the book “the picture of Dorian grey‚ Dorian is influenced by Lord Henry and becomes ruined. Then Dorian influences numerous people and makes them ruined as well. Whether the responsibility lies to those who affect others or those who is affected is not easy to determine. However‚ the one who is affected has more responsibility for their corruptness. It is one’s own job to decide their behavior. Even though‚ people are surrounded by friends who

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    Wilde’s novel The Picture of Dorian Gray is just the sort of book that made Victorian England shiver. This decadent masterpiece is anything but a vehicle for the propagation of middle-class morality. We have in Wilde the ultimate aesthete‚ a disciple of Walter Pater‚ a dandy who in his personal life seems to have lived out Pater’s quiet injunction to "burn with that hard‚ gemlike flame" in experiencing art and‚ no doubt‚ other things. How could Wilde’s book‚ given its affinities with the age’s decadent

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    The Picture of Dorian Gray

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    The Picture of Dorian Gray: Novel Summary: Chapters 13-15 inShare Summary They go upstairs and Dorian shows Basil the picture. Basil is horrified. He wonders who has made the hideous changes. Why has the painting altered? Dorian explains what has happened‚ and Basil‚ shocked‚ says that Dorian must be even worse than his enemies say he is. He is deeply upset and urges Dorian to pray. Dorian says it is too late. Feeling a sudden rush of hatred for the painter‚ he picks up a knife

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    ____________ ____________ ENG 4U1 _________ The importance of symbols in The Picture of Dorian Gray Everyone seems to experience life in a different way based on influences that are set upon them. All actions that one partakes in each day‚ allows one to gather information and assess how it influences them. Not everyone assesses how all things affect them‚ and that is when there become a common sight for predominant patterns to take affect in one’s life. The great array of symbols in The Picture

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    Dorian Gray Essay

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    In the novel‚ “The Picture of Dorian Gray” by Oscar Wilde is about a young‚ naïve man who corrupted by a hedonistic aristocrat named Lord Henry Wotton. Dorian Gray get corrupted by Lord Henry by being introduced to the hedonistic lifestyle which includes drinking‚ drugs‚ and having many sexual relationships with numerous women. This lifestyle changes Dorian’s life quickly and affects his friends such as Basil Hallward‚ Sybil Vane‚ and even an old friend Alan Campbell. At one point in the story

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    Throughout the novel‚ The Picture of Dorian Gray‚ Dorian destroys the lives of multiple people through his slow progression of becoming evil. Through his words‚ actions‚ and relationships with Sibyl Vane‚ Alan Campbell‚ and Basil Hallward he brings their lives to an end by eroding the content of their character. In fact‚ his self-destruction originates by partaking in the evil acts Lord Henry has influenced him to perform. He was once a charming‚ kind‚ young boy who everyone loved‚ and evolved into

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    “Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask‚ and he will tell you the truth‚” wrote Oscar Wilde‚ alluding to the fact that people conceal themselves by nature. When we speak of ourselves‚ we hide away parts of our character we do not wish to reveal‚ whether purposely or accidentally. Although both Wilde in his novel The Picture of Dorian Gray and Edward Arlington Robinson in his poem “Richard Cory” explore the concept of the figurative masks worn to conceal parts of oneself

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    A story of a love between an actress and a heartless man is contained within the pages of The Picture of Dorian Gray written by Oscar Wilde. This actress was Sibyl Vane and the heartless man was the once innocent Dorian Gray. Oscar Wilde uses pathos‚ appealing to an audience’s emotions‚ to convince or convey a message. Oscar Wilde introduces Sibyl Vane as a poor indentured servant and the cruelty of Dorian Gray to make his audience more sympathetic to Sibyl Vane. Oscar Wilde’s appeal to pathos in

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    In “The Picture of Dorian Gray” by Oscar Wilde‚ one of the most distinct and significant motifs is that of the color white. The color white is often associated with light‚ goodness‚ innocence‚ and purity. The meaning of this color evolves as the novel progresses‚ changing in relation to Dorian’s character. The deteriorating portrait is a reminder of this loss of innocence and purity‚ and it shows the detrimental effects of sin. The sins Dorian commit disfigure the beauty of the portrait. Although

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    Dorian Gray Individualism

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    “The aim of life is self-development. To realize one’s own nature perfectly - that is what each of us is here for” (Wilde 20). This statement sets an ironic tone for Oscar Wilde’s novel‚ The Picture of Dorian Gray. In the beginning of the novel‚ Dorian Gray’s mind is a blank slate. However‚ as the novel progresses‚ it is made apparent that he is constantly undergoing self-development as he is influenced by the ideas of morality that surround him; Basil Hallward represents the soul-fulfilling goodness

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