(p. 109-125)
What I like...
"It was an exquisite day. The warm air seemed
laden with spices. A bee flew in, and buzzed round the blue-dragon bowl that,
filled with sulphur-yellow roses, stood before him."
What it's all about...
When Dorian
woke up, he remembered about his cruelness to Sibyl after looking at the
altered painting. He decided to write a letter to ask for her apology, and to
propose that they should marry as they have planned. However, soon after the
letter finished, Lord Henry came to bring dreadful news: Sibyl had been found
dead last night after she committed suicide.
It should be
a blow for Dorian, for he had caused a girl to end her own life; and that's
what he felt at first, before--as usual--Lord Henry injected his ideas about
forgetting his past with a woman and that Dorian should continue his life.
Once again
Dorian struggled with his mind about how the painting could have altered, but
in the end buried all his fears deep in his heart, and tried to follow Lord
Henry's advice, to re-live his life, and went to the Opera with Lord Henry.
My random thoughts...
Painting
= reflection of soul
I think the
painting to Dorian Gray equal to our soul to us. Dorian Gray might pretended
that Sibyl's death meant nothing to him, however every time he looked at the
painting, he would be reminded to his sin. The painting became barometer of his
life; the consequences of what he did would be reflected by the painting. No
matter how hard he pretended, or how well he'd hidden his sin, the painting
would always be there to disturb his consciousness. Man can never runaway from
his conscience...
I don't know what I should feel about...
What Lord
Henry said about Sibyl, what she was for Dorian:
"The girl never really lived, and so she has
never really died. To you at least she was always a dream, a phantom that
flitted through Shakespeare's plays and left them lovelier for its presence, a
reed through which Shakespeare's music sounded richer and more full of joy."
That quote
sounds beautiful, and perhaps that's what happened, but to me it's thrilling.
It's as if we can ignore other people's life because they are 'only dream' to
us; a mere fiction character of a play. Listen people!.. Sibyl was as real as we
are. Being young and naïve doesn't mean to be 'empty'.
Just entered my mind...
Lord
Henry had taken two souls
He had taken
and altered Dorian's soul, and because of that, Dorian had caused Sibyl's
death.
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