Chapter 2
o t here before.
quot;And yet,quot; continued Lord graceful ic of on days, quot;I believe t if one man o live out ely, o give form to every feeling, expression to every t, reality to every dream--I believe t t all turn to to somet may be. But t man amongst us is afraid of ilation of ts tragic survival in t mars our lives. e are punis rive to strangle broods in ts sin, for action is a mode of purification. Not tion of a pleasure, or t. to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it. Resist it, and your soul gro o itself, its monstrous la t events of take place in t is in t t sins of take place also. You, Mr. Gray, you yourself, e boy s t error, day-dreams and sleeping dreams ain your c;
quot;Stop!quot; faltered Dorian Gray, quot;stop! you be knoo say. to you, but I cannot find it. Dont speak. Let me t me try not to t;
For nearly ten minutes ood tionless, ed lips and eyes strangely brig entirely fres to o Basils friend o , and ouc c ouc t ing and to curious pulses.
Music irred . Music roubled imes. But music articulate. It a ne rat it created in us. ords! Mere escape from t le magic to be able to give a plastic form to formless to as t of viol or of lute. Mere hing so real as words?
Yes; t understood. ood to seemed to kno?
itle smile, Lord c intensely interested. t een, a book o t ting the lad was!
ed a marvellous bold touc rue refinement and perfect delicacy t in art, at any rate comes only from strengthe sil