preview

Vanity In The Picture Of Dorian Gray

Decent Essays

In my opinion, in Oscar Wilde's novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray, published in 1890, an interesting character is the central character, Dorian Gray. At the beginning of the novel, Dorian appears to be a beautiful, naive and youthful character to readers, until he is corrupted by vanity and appearences. Dorian makes a fraustian deal. He will remain youthful and beautiful physically while a potrait painted of him will reflect his age and his continuous guilty conscience. Dorian thinks that as long as he remains physically attractive, then his personality will not matter. Throughout the novel, readers see him bringing suffering, duplicity and death to all members in the social circles that he switches to. For example, Dorian falls in love with …show more content…

Dorian views his apperance as his most adored quality. Once Dorian realizes his own physically beauty, from Lord Henry, his activity is influenced by appearances and consequently, by vanity, from his desire for abiding youth at the start of the novel to his despairing strive to demolish the potrait at the end of the novel. Even Dorian's efforts at altriuism are compelled are inspired by a wish to ameliorate the appearance of his soul. Vanity and appearance torment Dorian throughout the novel, he appears to condemn his actions before he actually perpetrate's them. This is interesting to readers because it shows that vanity is Dorian's true sin. From this, we see that consequently, Dorian's plummet from finesse is because of his choice to accept vanity and new experiences, whether moral or immoral as a merit at the desire of Lord Henry. his manipulator. In the preface of "The Picture of Dorian Gray", Oscar Wilde states "it is the spectator, and not life, that art really mirrors." This particular feature was interesting and effective because Oscar Wilde provokes readers to explore the unavoidable aspect of vanity and appearance in our own relation to art. If people view ourselves in art and perceive art to be beautiful then we accompany in admiring our own

Get Access