Experience was… merely the name men gave to their mistakes.
The quip turns regret into branding. It’s witty because it sounds tough-minded, but it also lowers the stakes of wrongdoing—mistakes are just lessons. For Dorian, this is a clean way to file away remorse. Irony sharpens the line: calling sin “experience” doesn’t heal its damage. The portrait contradicts the euphemism; it shows the true cost. Wilde suggests that self-explanations can be as addictive as the acts they excuse. Readers hear the polish and sense the danger.
Experience was… merely the name men gave to their mistakes.
The quip turns regret into branding. It’s witty because it sounds tough-minded, but it also lowers the stakes of wrongdoing—mistakes are just lessons. For Dorian, this is a clean way to file away remorse. Irony sharpens the line: calling sin “experience” doesn’t heal its damage. The portrait contradicts the euphemism; it shows the true cost. Wilde suggests that self-explanations can be as addictive as the acts they excuse. Readers hear the polish and sense the danger.