Tag Archive: dorian gray

Young and Old

Dorian Gray is one of those books which I found unusually striking at the time when I read it. Wilde had completely turned the traditional way of looking at things on its head and illuminated to me a philosophy which was at once seductive and rebellious. I have since come to take the aesthetic philosophy espoused in that book with a grain of salt but there is infinitely more to be learned from the failures of great men than from the successes of small ones. Wilde failed eventually at his own philosophy. He died in penury, alone, and what is to me the most heartbreaking negation of his own life, lost to the mystical and mediocre ideas of Western religion. If only he had died headstrong and rebellious his philosophy could be taken much more seriously. Still, I find the crux of Dorian Gray as illuminating now as I found it then. I find it brimming with the potential for further thought.

The central thesis of the book is that in this world the one thing worth having is youth and wisdom is what old people like to call their absolute surrender to life's inexorable web which closes in on each and every one of us. I think this thesis is pretty spot on and this is what this little post is about. If there's one argument which opens and shuts the case for youth, it is that young people find it easy to be happy. Sneering and cynical people on the wrong side of 25 ascribe this to inexperience and a general lack of responsibility and they are correct. But so what if at the end of the day someone is happy? Of course, the youth of today would grow up and join the ranks of the cynical old people and the cycle would continue. This, therefore, is an argument precisely in support of youth and not of those who are young. There's nothing special about those who are young as they will be, in general, condemned to the same misery in a few years time. Youth likes to think that it has a special grip on reality, a special understanding of the age. This is, thankfully, never true. I say thankfully because such an understanding, if it existed, would be built on very superficial foundations, and because this arrogance is precisely what gives youth its happiness, abandon, and attraction. As people grow old their edges are blunted by circumstances, they are bruised, broken, and battered by life's many pulls. This lost man (or woman) finds it difficult to see his utter surrender honestly in the face and invents a fiction and a euphemism. He calls it experience. I don't say that this experience is useless but it is nothing more than his weak attempts in the face of the incredible forces of life and it signifies the loss of a precious quality, of the happiness which comes so naturally to youth. Old age deals with it in the only way it knows how, by belittling youth through the labels shallow and superficial, by aggrandizing its own follies not as something which is inevitable but as something which is desirable, and by turning its face away from the one truth here, that there exists a deep seated jealousy in the hearts of those who have thus surrendered against those who have not yet had to. Old age waits in vengeful anticipation, knowing that the young will turn into them soon enough, that they will soon enough be smoothed by the sandpaper of experience. The man with such conventional experience, to me, is a broken person and there is very little that is attractive about him. There is even less to learn from him because his ideas are not his own but are owned by the group to which he belongs. Even his surrender is not his own. He surrenders in a completely conventional fashion, devoid of any story, any brilliance. He surrenders in a way which is expected of him by the community, meekly and subserviently.

This brings us full circle. Wilde's ideas in Dorian Gray are those of a man drunk on youth and arrogance. While flawed, they do point honestly to the truth. His eventual surrender is unfortunate and serves only as a reminder, at least to me, that his later ideas need not be taken seriously.

The curious philosophy of Wilde

When I consider Oscar Wilde's writings I am forced to admit the existence of very deep seated contradictions within myself, which is weird because by his own admission he was an aesthete - a person mainly concerned with the superficialities of life. He extolled youth above experience and flamboyance above seriousness. He placed life as being secondary to art and traditional morality as mainly the preoccupation of the fogey whose best years were behind him/her. His prose is resplendent with clever paradoxes and his philosophy, at least on the surface, is the philosophy of the jaded super-intellectual who, despite being bored with the world around him, doesn't want it to change lest it might take away the pleasure that he derives by sneering at its incompetence. And this curious dichotomy of an extremely intelligent person both repulsed and morbidly dependent on his environment is not clearer anywhere than it is in his great novel 'The Picture of Dorian Gray.'

Dorian Gray is a young man who has it all. Wealth, social position, beauty and most importantly youth. What he doesn't have is much intelligence. In fact he has just the wrong amount of intelligence. Just enough to be swept away by the deviously clever logic of Lord Henry. Henry is an extreme cynic and is the mouthpiece of Wilde's philosophy in the novel. He likes Dorian for what he represents - the easy success of flamboyance and beauty and youth. He speaks eloquently and leads Dorian astray and convinces him that the only things worth having in this world are those which he already has. Dorian is eventually seduced by Henry's arguments and really believes in the idea that a life based only on pleasure and self-interest is a life worth having. Given his material success and his beauty Dorian can afford such a life too. In the middle of the novel Dorian even figures out how he can sustain his youth for eternity. The novel thus centers around a person who can have all the pleasures that he wants and for as long as he wants - a perfect Wilde ideal - and then asks the question whether all this really makes him happy.

And this brings me to my final point. I think the novel Dorian Gray is special in the Wilde canon because it is the only one which gives both sides of the story. It presents most of Wilde's philosophy through Henry and it also presents its ramifications through Dorian. Therefore, the gravitational center of the story is neither Dorian nor Henry but Wilde himself. This is the clearest that Wilde ever spoke of what he thought of his own curious take on life. Henry is Wilde and Dorian is what Wilde always hoped for but could never be. In fact if you really consider Wilde's writings in their totality you would find a curious undercurrent. His main characters are sharp gentlemen with biting wits and they all display little patience with the banalities of society but they are all fairly conventional people with conventional marriages. Dorian Gray is his only character who lives what Wilde philosophizes and he is the only central character to not have the intelligence to come up with that philosophy himself. Henry who comes up with Wilde's philosophy is intelligent enough not to follow it and thus has a very safe and conventional life.

So we finally come to this contradiction which I mentioned earlier. To some his (or Henry's) take on life is shallow but it is not to me. I think his seemingly ridiculous and shallow generalizations always have a deeper hidden truth, a concise acerbic little social comment by one who is much more intelligent than most. In fact, he is sufficiently intelligent to also understand that acting upon his philosophies would end up in disaster. This is a tacit approval of the very society that he mocks and therein lies the apparent contradiction. Now one may feel betrayed by Wilde's implicit volte-face but this backdoor compromise is the mark of someone who thought deeply. After all, both conformists and rebels in this world are a dime a dozen!

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