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The Use Of Connotations In Oscar Wilde's The Picture Of Dorian Gray

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In Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray, he uses specific connotations as well as syntax to convey the admiring and dark tones in the novel. Dorian Gray is seen as this perfect, handsome young man, that unbeknowingly to the other characters has sold his soul to the devil in order to be forever young. In doing so, his portrait takes on all the qualities of what his soul truly looks like as he commits the worst kind of sin in the world. In the end, the tragic tale of Dorian Gray offers greater insight as to what true beauty is and how the innocent can be easily corrupted. The author’s use of diction establishes how the author feels towards beauty as well as the darkness inside everyone as the journey from an admiring tone transfers to one that is dark regarding Dorian. From …show more content…

Dorian is seen as this perfect specimen for Basil, the painter of Dorian’s portrait, whose work becomes obsessed with Dorian. He becomes everything for Basil. It gets to a point in Basil’s work where he begins to hype Dorian’s vanity even more to his subject and in his work Later on in the novel, Basil loses his touch after Dorian refuses to sit with him because of the portrait. However, it doesn’t end there as everyone Dorian comes in contact with falls madly in love with him. It doesn’t matter if he isn’t smart as long as he remains young and beautiful forever, which ultimately happens. In the society that Wilde has established, beauty is everything and is the only thing that matters to anyone in the story. Consequently, the need to be forever young changes Dorian for the worse as he descends down a road that he later ends up regretting at the end. His youth has led to “terrible beauty” (110) that has been “[defiled]” (132) as he has defied the law of nature, causing his true self to be

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