Great Books

Great Books
To read or not to read?....that is a silly question!

Friday, February 17, 2012

Dorian Gray and Katie Scarlett O'Hara Hamilton Kennedy Butler

Ok.  I realize that I probably never would have thought of this if I hadn't been reading both The Picture of Dorian Gray and Gone with the Wind at the same time, but the truth is, I am reading both books at the same time, so I DO see that Scarlett and Dorian have a lot in common!

1.  Both choose to "think about [it] tomorrow"--which, in essence boils down to not thinking about "it" at all because usually when "tomorrow" comes, we have other things pressing that need to be thought about--or put off until....tomorrow!

2.  Both are beautiful.  And they're obsessive about their own youth and beauty--as well as of those around them, but mostly for themselves.  Dorian has always been petted and treated like a little prince because he's handsome--I mean, come one, he has blond, curly hair, and striking blue eyes!!!!  Matthew  McConaughey would make a WONDERFUL Dorian!!!  Yummy!  And Scarlett is very concerned with the fact that she has the smallest waist in the County--16 inches!!!!  And after having Wade, she forces herself into her stays, even though she can't breathe, so she can be back at her original waist-line!  She's very upset that she's had a baby and ruined her tiny figure!  (She's even upset after each child is born about her tiny waist, not just Wade.)  Dorian, of course, sells his soul for his Youth and Beauty. 

3.  Which brings me to the fact that both Scarlett and Dorian sell their souls.  Dorian does it in the second chapter while Scarlett does it after she's gone back home to Tara when the Yankees take Atlanta.  Dorian sees the portrait Basil has painted of him (Dorian) and he's attracted by the youth and beauty of himself in the painting.  To himself, he says that he'd sell his soul if the painting could take the pressures of life while he stays exactly as the painting (he is) at that time.

Scarlett sells her soul when she goes to the abandoned plantations to look for food for the starving mouths looking to her to lead them and feed them.  She's disillusioned because she'd gone home to Tara believing that her mother would take the burdens from her and Scarlett could go back to being the belle of the county with nothing more to worry about than which beaux will flirt with her next.  Rather than peace and tranquility, when she gets home to Tara (after being gone for more than 3 years), she finds that her mother died the day before she got there and her father quickly loses his mind as a result of Ellen's death.  Thus, everyone at Tara is looking to Scarlett to take care of them.  She becomes the master of the plantation--and she's only 19! 

(Another point of comparison between Dorian and Scarlett is that they're both young--I'm not sure what age is considered "coming of age" in Victorian England, but Dorian hasn't "come of age" yet, so he's got to be in his late teens or early twenties.)

So Scarlett goes to the plantations around Tara to look for food.  She finds a vegetable garden by the "darkies'" cabins and soon gobbles down a raddish.  Her empty stomach can't handle the food and she begins to vomit profusely over and over.  As Scarlett is walking home, she declares, "As God as my witness, I'll never go hungry again!"  You all know the famous line from the movie.  It's pretty powerful. 

Many might argue that Scarlett sells her soul much sooner in the story.  Maybe back when Ashley won't marry her and she marries Charles Hamilton to spite Ashley.  Or when she actually convinces Ashley to kiss her, admitting that he DOES care for her.  Or at some other earlier point in the story.  But before Scarlett has the moment previously described, she tries very hard to be a good girl.  She isn't really a praying woman, but she at least TRIES to pray.  She tries so hard to be the young, virtuous woman her mother trained her to be.  She feels the same way Rhett does about so many different issues, but she's afraid to say them aloud because of her upbringing--her training--and of what others will say/think of her.

But once she yells, "As God as my witness...," she completely changes.  She soon kills a man (or had that JUST happened?  I don't have my book in front of me to remember which came first).  She quits praying or even pretending to pray.  She becomes hard (there's a quote--again, I don't have my book to quote it...).  When the war is over, she goes to ANY length to fulfill her declaration and to ensure that she and hers never go hungry again--but especially for herself.  She even steals her sister's affianced, Frank Kennedy (whom Scarlett never could stand), because she knows that Frank has the ability to make money and to make it fast.  (And that her sister would never share with the whole family and/or take care of Tara, while Scarlett will--and does.)

She's ruthless.  Just as Dorian is ruthless.  We don't get as much detail about what Dorian does, but we can understand that he's loved....a LOT....and left....a LOT.  We can also assume that many of his relationships have not been with just women.  He's become a drug addict, smoking opium in opium dens on a consistent basis.  (Remember, Scarlett has her first real taste of strong liquor her first night home to Tara after the burning of Atlanta; she continues to enjoy a good, stiff drink every so often thereafter.  She even uses perfume to try to mask the smell of alcohol on her breath!) 

And, yes, eventually, Dorian kills a man--violently, just as Scarlett has.  Dorian uses his cane (if I'm remembering the scene correctly) while Scarlett shoots the Yankee soldier's face off.  Both cover up their murders swiftly, having the help of someone to clean up quickly so no evidence is left of the act or the body.  And neither really feels any guilt or remorse over what he/she has done.  Again, they both decide to "think about it tomorrow," but tomorrow, they have other cares to concern themselves with, so their murders are swept under the rug as if they never happened.

These are just a few ideas I have at the moment that I can think of.....more is there, but I really need to bring this a close right now.....

2 comments:

  1. Dorian believes that Basil can save him. Just before he kills Basil, he realizes this truth. In spite of the fact that Dorian SAYS that he wants to be good, he kills Basil and seems to damn is soul for good.

    Then, later, he attempts to redeem himself by doing a few good acts: saving the rabbit from being killed by George, yet George kills James Vane in saving the rabbit; he doesn't deflower Hetty, the country girl he'd been leading on; and one or two other things I can't remember right at this moment.

    Of course, none of his ACTS save him--except when he grabs the same knife that killed Basil (who was truly GOOD) and stabs the painting, taking all the sins of the painting back onto himself---and dying, of course.

    Scarlett also tried to be good. At least at first. She keeps promising herself that once she has money, she can go back to the teachings of her mother and Mammy. But of course, the truth is that she's too far gone as she strives for each and every dollar ever to go back to being GOOD.

    It's worse once she marries Rhett.

    Dorian has a catalyst for his sinful behavior--his life-style of living for pleasure: Lord Henry (Harry) Thornton. No matter what Harry does or says, Dorian stands up for him and respects him.

    Scarlett's catalyst seems to Rhett. Money is more her catalyst--well, the insane drive to GET money, but Rhett does tell her that she's a scoundrel and that, essentially, she just needs to go ahead and embrace who she really is. She eventually does give in to her true nature. It ruins her, especially with the "Old Guard" of the south. Rhett attempts to repair the damage and he and Scarlett did by snubbing the "Old Guard," unlike Harry (or Dorian) who could care less what anyone thinks of him....

    He even declares towards the end of the novel that he wishes he knew someone who'd committed a murder because it would be a fine, high romance....

    I'm not doing a good job of explaining myself....If I were writing this to be published (meaning to get paid for it), I'd revise and be more carefully coherent in making my points. But since this is a Blog (an online journal), I'm going to let my stream of consciousness ramblings stay and let them be what they are....

    Sadly, disappointingly, no one's really reading my blogs anyway.....

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