Wednesday, January 23, 2019

Dorian Gray Passage Analysis

Dorian Gray Passage Literary abridgment In this scene, Wilde creates a threatening atmosphere as he describes Dorian heading to the Opium House at night, a place that represents his sins. Dorians carriage jerks into a dark area, the sudden movement suggesting that the horse is instinctively nervous or scared. And the low roofs and jagged chimney-stacks that looked like black masts shrouded by a mist of ghostly sails paint a nightmarish physical body of hostility due to harsh words like jagged, and fear with mentions of ghosts both(prenominal) add to the tension.In the next paragraph Wilde uses diction such as in haste and quickly to build the suspense with Dorians obvious discomfort in the situation and desire to get out of the open. Then, Wilde uses light vision to illustrate a dark setting which would explain Dorians fear. The description that the night was lit by a red twinkling and lights that shook and splintered in the puddles contributes to the uneasiness because red is often the color of perversive and shaking lights can be associated with panic.Dorians anxiety heightens as he hurried and glanced back now and then to see if he was creation followed. His actions suggest that he is paranoid and running from something, causing the environment nearly him to erupt more threatening. And finally, Wildes description of gaunt factories completes the image of a foreboding neighborhood because even at night, factories are supposed to appear formidable, not desolate as if they couldnt stand up to their surroundings.

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