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The Picture of Dorian Gray Oscar Wilde
Chapters Thirteen–Fourteen
Summary: Chapter Thirteen
Dorian leads Basil to the room in which he keeps the painting locked.
Inside, Dorian lights a candle and tears the curtain back to reveal
the portrait. The painting has become hideous, a foul parody of
its former beauty. Basil stares at the horrifying painting in shock:
he recognizes the brushwork and the signature as his own. Dorian
stands back and watches Basil with a flicker of triumph in his
eyes. When Basil asks how such a thing is possible, Dorian reminds
him of the day he met Lord Henry, whose cautionary words about the
ephemeral nature of beauty caused Dorian to pledge his soul for
eternal, unblemished youth. Basil curses the painting as an awful
lesson, believing he worshipped the youth too much and is now being
punished for it. He begs Dorian to kneel and pray for forgiveness,
but Dorian claims it is too late. Glancing at his picture, Dorian
feels hatred welling up within him. He seizes a knife and stabs
Basil repeatedly. He then opens the door and listens for the sound
of anyone stirring. When he is satisfied that no one has heard the
murder, he locks the room and returns to the library. Dorian hides
Basil's belongings in a secret compartment in the wall, then slips
quietly out to the street. After a few moments, he returns, waking
his servant and thus creating the impression that he has been out all
night. The servant reports that Basil has been to visit, and Dorian says
he is sorry to have missed him.
Summary: Chapter Fourteen
The next morning, Dorian wakes from a restful sleep. Once
the events of the previous night sink in, he feels the return of
his hatred for Basil. He decides not to brood on these things for
fear of making himself ill or mad. After breakfast, he sends for
Alan Campbell, a young scientist and former friend from whom he
has grown distant. While waiting for Campbell to arrive, Dorian
passes the time with a book of poems and reflects on his once intimate
relationship with the scientist: the two were, at one point, inseparable.
He also draws pictures and reflects on his drawings' similarity
to Basil's likeness. Dorian then wonders if Campbell will come and
is relieved when the servant announces his arrival.
Campbell has come reluctantly, having been
summoned on a matter of life and death. Dorian confesses that there
is a dead man locked in the uppermost room of his house, though
he refrains from discussing the circumstances of the man's death.
He asks Campbell to use his knowledge of chemistry to destroy the body.
Campbell refuses. Dorian admits that he murdered the man, and Campbell
reiterates that he has no interest in becoming involved. Dorian
blackmails Campbell, threatening to reveal a secret that would bring
great disgrace on him. With no alternative, Campbell agrees to dispose
of the body and sends a servant to his home for the necessary equipment.
Dorian goes upstairs to cover the portrait and notices that one
of the hands on the painting is dripping with red, as though the
canvas had sweated blood. Campbell works until evening, then leaves.
When Dorian returns to the room, the body is gone, and the odor
of nitric acid fills the room.
Analysis: Chapters Thirteen–Fourteen
Chapters Thirteen and Fourteen take a decided
turn for the macabre: the murder of Basil and the gruesome way it
is reflected in the portraitas though the canvas had sweated bloodroot
the novel firmly in the Gothic tradition, where darkness and supernatural
horrors reign. In this setting, it becomes a challenge for Wilde
to keep his hero from becoming a flat archetype of menacing evil.
Much to his credit, he manages to keep Dorian a somewhat sympathetic
character, even as he commits an unspeakable crime and blackmails
a once dear friend to help him cover it up. Dorian remains worthy
of sympathy because we see clearly the failure of his struggle to
rise above a troubled conscience. With a murder added to his growing
list of sins, Dorian wants nothing more than to be able to shrug
off his guilt: he perceives Basil's corpse as a thing sitting
in a chair and tries to lose himself in the lines of a French poet.
The most telling evidence of Dorian's guilt can be seen as he sits
waiting for the arrival of Alan Campbell; Dorian draws and soon
remarks that every face that he drew seemed to have a fantastic
likeness to Basil Hallward. This scene resonates with the Chapter
Nine scene in which Dorian asks the artist to draw a picture of
Sibyl Vane so that he may better remember her: in both instances,
the hedonistic Dorian betrays his gnawing conscience.
Throughout the novel, Basil acts as a sort of moral ballast, reminding
Lord Henry and Dorian of the price that must be paid for their pleasure
seeking. In these chapters, he provides a fascinating counterpoint
to the philosophy by which Dorian lives. Refusing to believe that
the dissipation of a soul can occur without notice, he claims that
[i]f a wretched man has a vice, it shows itself in the lines of
his mouth, the droop of his eyelids, the moulding of his hands even.
The introduction of such an opposing view discloses Wilde's love
of contradiction. In his essay The Truth of Masks, Wilde wrote
that [a] Truth in art is that whose contradictory is also true. Indeed,
the truth of The Picture of Dorian Gray, if one
is to be found, emerges from oppositions. After all, as Dorian reflects
while gazing upon his ruined portrait, art depends as much upon
horror as it does upon marvellous beauty, just as one's being
is always the synthesis of a Heaven and Hell.
Like the other secondary characters in the novel, Alan
Campbell is introduced and rather quickly ignored. His appearance,
however, plays a vital role in establishing the darkening mood of
the novel. The macabre experiments that he is accustomed to conducting
as a chemist provide him with the knowledge that Dorian finds so
necessary. Furthermore, the secrets that surround his personal life
contribute to the air of mystery that surrounds Dorian. It is significant that
the reader never learns the details of the circumstances by which
Dorian blackmails Campbell. Given Wilde's increasingly indiscreet
lifestyle and the increasingly hostile social attitudes toward homosexuality
that flourished at the end of the nineteenth century, the reader
can assume that Campbell's transgression is of a sexual nature.
In 1885, the British Parliament passed the Labouchere
Amendment, which widened prohibitions against male homosexual acts
to include not only sodomy (which was punishable by death until 1861)
but also gross indecency (meaning oral sex), an offense that carried
a two-year prison term. Oscar Wilde himself was eventually found
guilty of the latter offense. This new law was commonly known as
the Blackmailer's Charter. Thus, Alan Campbell, a seemingly inconsequential
character, serves as an important indicator of the social prejudices
and punishments in Wilde's time.
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