CHAPTER 2: OSCAR WILDE’S masterpieces 2.1 The Picture of Dorian Gray The first published version of Wilde’s novel, which contained thirteen chapters, appeared in Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine (Philadelphia and London), (July 1890), when published as a separate volume in 1891, the novel contained six new chapters and many revisions. The review, written by Samuel Henry Jeyes (1857–1911), journalist and biographer, and titled ‘A Study in Puppydom’, appeared on 24 June 1890, reprinted in Mason, Art and Morality. According to Sidney Low (1857–1932), editor of the St. James’s Gazette, who wrote a prefatory memoir to a volume of Jeyes’ writings titled Samuel Henry Jeyes. Wilde responded to Jeyes’ attack (which Low calls ‘a brilliant piece of slashing criticism’) with a letter to the editor which provoked a series of responses and replies. In his first letter (dated 25 June appeared 26 June), Wilde objected to the reviewer’s moralistic criticism of the novel, stating what he was to repeat, in various ways in succeeding letters: ‘The sphere of art and the sphere of ethics are absolutely distinct and separate.’ In his memoir Low states that he asked Jeyes to comment on Wilde’s response. Accordingly, Jeyes appended a note to the published letter stating in part: ‘We are quite aware that ethics and aesthetics are different matters, and that is why the greater part of our criticism was devoted not so much to the nastiness of The Picture of Dorian Gray, but to its dulness and stupidity.’ Incensed, Wilde wrote a second letter on 26 June (which was published on 27 June) charging that the review contained ‘the most unjustifiable attack that has been made upon any man of letters for many years’, and elaborately defended his novel. Time was (it was in the ’70’s) when we talked about Mr. Oscar Wilde time came (it came in the ’80’s) when he tried to write poetry and more adventurous, we tried to read it time is when we had forgotten him, or only remember him as the late editor of The Woman’s World—a part for which he was singularly unfitted, if we are to judge him by the work which he has been allowed to publish in Lippincott's Magazine and which Messrs. Not being curious in ordure, and not wishing to offend the nostrils of decent persons, we do not propose to analyse The Picture of Dorian Gray: that would be to advertise the developments of an esoteric prurience. Whether the Treasury or the Vigilance Society will think it worth while to prosecute Mr. Oscar Wilde or Messrs. Ward, we do not know but on the whole we hope they will not. The puzzle is that a young man of decent parts, who enjoyed (when he was at Oxford) the opportunity of associating with gentlemen, should put his name to so stupid and vulgar a piece of work. Let nobody read it in the hope of finding witty paradox or racy wickedness. The writer airs his cheap research among the garbage of the French Décadents like any drivelling pedant, and he bores you unmercifully with his prosy rigmaroles about the beauty of the Body and the corruption of the Soul. The grammar is better than Ouida’s the erudition equal but in every other respect we prefer the talented lady who broke off with ‘pious aposiopesis’ when she touched upon ‘the horrors which are described in the pages of Suetonius and Livy’-not to mention the yet worse infamies believed by many scholars to be accurately portrayed in the lost works of Plutarch, Venus, and Nicodemus, especially Nicodemus. The element in it that is unclean, though undeniably amusing, is furnished by Mr Oscar Wilde’s story of The Picture of Dorian Gray. It is a tale spawned from the leprous literature of the French Décadents-a poisonous book, the atmosphere of which is heavy with the mephitic odours of moral and spiritual putrefaction-a gloating study of the mental and physical corruption of a fresh, fair and golden youth, which might be horrible and fascinating but for its effeminate frivolity, its studied insincerity, its theatrical cynicism, its tawdry mysticism, its flippant philosophisings, and the contaminating trail of garish vulgarity which is over all Mr Wilde’s elaborate Wardour Street aestheticism and obtrusively cheap scholarship. Mr Wilde says his book has ‘a moral.’ The ‘moral,’ so far as we can collect it, is that man’s chief end is to develop his nature to the fullest by ‘always searching for new sensations,’ that when the soul gets sick the way to cure it is to deny the senses nothing, for ‘nothing,’ says one of Mr Wilde’s characters, Lord Henry Wotton, ‘can cure the soul but the senses, just as nothing can cure the senses but the soul.’ Man is half angel and half ape, and Mr Wilde’s book has no real use if it be not to inculcate the ‘moral’ that when you feel yourself becoming too angelic you cannot do better than rush out and make a beast of yourself. There is not a single good and holy impulse of human nature, scarcely a fine feelingor instinct that civilisation, art, and religion have developed throughout the ages as part of the barriers between Humanity and Animalism that is not held up to ridicule and contempt in Dorian Gray, if, indeed, such strong words can be fitly applied to the actual effect of Mr Wilde’s airy levity and fluent impudence. His desperate effort to vamp up a ‘moral’ for the book at the end is, artistically speaking, coarse and crude, because the whole incident of Dorian Gray’s death is, as they say on the stage, ‘out of the picture.’ Dorian’s only regret is that unbridled indulgence in every form of secret and unspeakable vice, every resource of luxury and art, and sometimes still more piquant to the jaded young man of fashion, whose lives ‘Dorian Gray’ pretends to sketch, by every abomination of vulgarity and squalor is—what? Why, that it will leave traces of premature age and loathsome sensualness on his pretty face, rosy with the loveliness that endeared youth of his odious type to the paralytic patricians of the Lower Empire. Dorian Gray prays that a portrait of himself which an artist, who raves about him as young men do about the women they love not wisely but too well, has painted may grow old instead of the original. This is what happens by some supernatural agency, the introduction of which seems purely farcical, so that Dorian goes on enjoying unfading youth year after year, and might go on for ever using his senses with impunity ‘to cure his soul,’ defiling English society with the moral pestilence which is incarnate in him, but for one thing. That is his sudden impulse not merely to murder the painter-which might be artistically defended on the plea that it is only a fresh development of his scheme for realising every phase of life-experience-but to rip up the canvas in a rage, merely because, though he had permitted himself to do one good action, it had not made his portrait less hideous. But all this is inconsistent with Dorian Gray’s cool, calculating, conscienceless character, evolved logically enough by Mr Wilde’s ‘New Hedonism’. Then Mr Wilde finishes his story by saying that on hearing a heavy fall Dorian Gray’s servants rushed in, found the portrait on the wall as youthful looking as ever, its senile ugliness being transferred to the foul profligate himself, who is lying on the floor stabbed to the heart. This is a sham moral, as indeed everything in the book is a sham, except the one element in the book which will taint every young mind that comes in contact with it. That element is shockingly real, and it is the plausibly insinuated defence of the creed that appeals to the senses ‘to cure the soul’ whenever the spiritual nature of man suffers from too much purity and self-denial.
The Baron has read Oscar Wilde’s Wildest and Oscarest work, called Dorian Gray, a weird sensational romance, complete in one number of Lippincott’s Magazine. The Baron recommends anybody who revels in diablerie, to begin it about half-past ten, and to finish it at one sitting up; but those who do not so revel he advises either not to read it at all, or to choose the daytime, and take it in homoeopathic doses. The portrait represents the soul of the beautiful Ganymede-like Dorian Gray, whose youth and beauty last to the end, while his soul, like John Brown’s, ‘goes marching on’ into the Wilderness of Sin. It becomes at last a devilled soul. And then Dorian sticks a knife into it, as any ordinary mortal might do, and a fork also, and next morning. Lifeless but ‘hideous’ he lay, while the portrait has recovered the perfect beauty which it possessed when it first left the artist’s easel. If Oscar intended an allegory, the finish is dreadfully wrong. Does he mean that, by sacrificing his earthly life, Dorian Gray atones for his infernal sins, and so purifies his soul by suicide? ‘Heavens! I am no preacher,’ says the Baron, ‘and perhaps Oscar didn’t mean anything at all, except to give us a sensation, to show how like Bulwer Lytton’s old-world style he could make his descriptions and his dialogue, andwhat an easy thing it if to frighten the respectable Mrs Grundy with a Bogie.’ The style is decidedly Lyttonerary. His aphorisms are Wilde, yet forced. Mr Oscar Wilde says of his story, ‘it is poisonous if you like, but you cannot deny that it is also perfect, and perfection is what we artists aim at.’ Perhaps but ‘we artists’ do not always hit what we aim at, and despite his confident claim to unerring artistic marksmanship, one must hazard the opinion, that in this case Mr Wilde has ‘shot wide.’ There is indeed more of ‘poison’ than of ‘perfection’ in Dorian Gray. The central idea is an excellent, if not exactly novel one and a finer art, say that of Nathaniel Hawthorne, would have made a striking and satisfying story of it. Dorian Gray is striking enough, in a sense, but it is not ‘satisfying’ artistically, any more than it is so ethically. Mr Wilde has preferred the sensuous and hyperdecorative manner of ‘Mademoiselle de Maupin,’ and without Gautier’s power has spoilt a promising conception by clumsy, unideal treatment. His ‘decoration’ (upon which he plumes himself) is indeed ‘laid on with a trowel.’ The luxuriously elaborate details of his ‘artistic hedonism’ are too suggestive of South Kensington Museum and aesthetic Encyclopaedias. A truer art would have avoided both the glittering conceits, which bedeck the body of the story, and the unsavoury suggestiveness which lurks in its spirit. Poisonous! Yes. But the loathly ‘leperous distilment’ taints and spoils, without in any way subserving ‘perfection,’ artistic or otherwise. If Mrs Grundy doesn’t read it, the younger Grundies do; that is, the Grundies who belong to Clubs, and who care to shine in certain sets wherein this story will be much discussed. ‘I have read it, and, except for the ingenious idea, I wish to forget it,’ says the Baron. The Picture of Dorian Gray begins to show its quality in the opening pages. Mr Wilde’s writing has what is called ‘colour,’—the quality that forms the mainstay of many of Ouida’s works,—and it appears in thesensuous descriptions of nature and of the decorations and environments of the artistic life. The general aspect of the characters and the tenor of their conversation remind one a little of Vivian Gray and a little of Pelham, but the resemblance does not go far: Mr Wilde’s objects and philosophy are different from those of either Disraeli or Bulwer. Meanwhile his talent for aphorisms and epigrams may fairly be compared with theirs: some of his clever sayings are more than clever,—they show real insight and a comprehensive grasp. Their wit is generally cynical but they are put into the mouth of one of the characters, Lord Harry, and Mr Wilde himself refrains from definitely committing himself to them though one cannot help suspecting that Mr Wilde regards Lord Harry as being an uncommonly able fellow. Be that as it may, Lord Harry plays the part of Old Harry in the story, and lives to witness the destruction of every other person in it. He may be taken as an imaginative type of all that is most evil and most refined in modern civilisation,—a charming, gentle, witty, euphemistic Mephistopheles, who deprecates the vulgarity of goodness, and muses aloud about ‘those renunciations that men have unwisely called virtue, and those natural rebellions that wise men still call sin.’ Upon the whole, Lord Harry is the most ably portrayed character in the book, though not the most original in conception. Dorian Gray himself is as nearly a new idea in fiction as one has nowadays a right to expect. If he had been adequately realised and worked out, Mr Wilde’s first novel would have been remembered after more meritorious ones were forgotten. But, even as ‘nemo repente fuit turpissimus,’ so no one, or hardly any one, creates a thoroughly original figure at a first essay. Dorian never quite solidifies. In fact,his portrait is rather the more real thing of the two. Dorian Gray, as the finished work of a literary exquisite, must command a certain attention. It is the very genius of affectation crystalised in a syrup of words. Reading it, we move in a heavy atmosphere of warm incense and slumbering artificial light. We thread our way through a mob of courtier epigrams, all bowing, all murmuring to the white lily of beauty, all forced to premature growth in the hothouse of a somewhat sickly fancy. We long to push on to the light, and the blowing wind, and the clean air of honest commonplace that Mr. Wilde’s cultured puppets cry faugh! to. The author and his following have nothing in common with the lilac and violet they belaud. Their most fragrant speech stirs no one of the breezy plumes: nor is the spirit of the dank ghostly wood an open secret to them. Not for them is ‘A green thought in a green shade,’ but rather that comfortable mystic pessimism, which ‘the bliss of being sad made melancholy.’ Power is here, but rather the inventive power of the engineer than the creative force of the artist. Still, to say that only an age that had produced the wild study of Dr. Jekyl’s dual personality could give birth to a Dorian Gray is not necessarily to disparage the latter. That shrewd knowledge of the weight and value of words that Mr. Stevenson has taught us, has pierced the cuticle of many a man of letters who would be loth to acknowledge his teacher. But that disciples may outdo their masters is an obvious truism, and Dorian Gray may remain a psychical curiosity when Dr. Jekyl is forgotten. It is at least undeniably clever, and even brilliant-as a sick man’s eye. Looking at it from the point of view of dramatic possibilities, we are bound to recognise in it great attractions, saving, alone, in its almost utter lack of true humanity. As a book, it isfrom cover to finish, an elaborate work of art, extremely clever, wonderfully ingenious, and even fascinating; but not convincing, from that same absence of human interest. Mr. Oscar Wilde’s paradoxes are less wearisome when introduced into the chatter of society than when he rolls them off in the course of his narrative. Some of the conversation in his novel is very smart, and while reading it one has the pleasant feeling, not often to be enjoyed in the company of modern novelists, of being entertained by a person of decided ability. The idea of the book may have been suggested by Balzac’s Peau de Chagrin, and it is none the worse for that. So much may be said for The Picture of Dorian Gray, but no more, except, perhaps, that the author does not appear to be in earnest. For the rest the book is unmanly, sickening, vicious (though not exactly what is called ‘improper’), and tedious.9