31 pages • 1 hour read
Oscar WildeA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
While out riding, Virginia gets her clothes caught and they rip a little, so she decides she will sneak into the back of the house. There, she thinks she has found one of the maids but instead comes upon Sir Simon. He is sad and watching the leaves fall outside. She approaches him and they talk, first about his wife. She tells him that it’s wrong to kill, and he replies by stating the ways in which his wife did not rise to the expectations of her duties.
Then, she challenges Sir Simon about stealing her paints in order to revive the blood stain in the library. She chides him for leaving her with nothing but indigo and white, which forces her to paint only moonlit scenes. “As for colour,” Sir Simon says, “that is always a matter of taste: the Cantervilles have blue blood, for instance, the very bluest in England; but I know you Americans don’t care for things of this kind” (24).
Virginia suggests that he emigrate to America, where she promises he will be successful, and find a reason for existing beyond rattling his chains and lurking in corridors late at night to scare people.
By Oscar Wilde
An Ideal Husband
Oscar Wilde
A Woman of No Importance
Oscar Wilde
De Profundis
Oscar Wilde
Lady Windermere's Fan
Oscar Wilde
Lord Arthur Savile's Crime
Oscar Wilde
Salome
Oscar Wilde
The Ballad Of Reading Gaol
Oscar Wilde
The Decay of Lying
Oscar Wilde
The Importance of Being Earnest
Oscar Wilde
The Nightingale and the Rose
Oscar Wilde
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Oscar Wilde
The Selfish Giant
Oscar Wilde
The Soul of Man Under Socialism
Oscar Wilde