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Lord Henry embodies pure aestheticism. He treats people as objects of curiosity, women as decorative, and life as a series of exquisite sensations. His “yellow book” (a veiled reference to Joris-Karl Huysmans’ À rebours ) becomes Dorian’s destructive bible. Yet Lord Henry suffers no consequences; he remains a detached observer. Dorian, however, tries to live Lord Henry’s philosophy in practice and is destroyed by it. The novel thus suggests that aestheticism is a dangerous guide for life, though it may be valid for art.

However, given the structure of the phrase, it appears to be Lithuanian (or possibly a related Baltic language) and could translate roughly to "Doriano Grejaus Portretas" meaning "Portrait of Dorian Gray" — a clear reference to Oscar Wilde’s 1890 novel The Picture of Dorian Gray . The addition of "Pdf" suggests a digital copy. If you intended to ask for an essay on Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray with a focus on a specific Lithuanian edition or critical interpretation, I would be happy to write that instead.

Wilde uses this device to explore the Victorian obsession with respectability. Dorian can attend operas, dine with bishops, and appear in society as a charming gentleman, while the portrait bears the ugliness he refuses to acknowledge. The novel suggests that every Victorian gentleman might hide a similar portrait in his attic — the repressed sins behind a polished facade. Wilde was a leading figure of the aesthetic movement, which held that art should exist for beauty’s sake alone, without moral or didactic purpose. In the preface to the 1891 edition, Wilde famously wrote: “There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well written, or badly written. That is all.” Yet The Picture of Dorian Gray ironically becomes a deeply moral tale, even if it refuses to preach.

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