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1、Charles Dickens and His Oliver Twist查尔斯 狄更斯与雾都孤儿 【关键词】查尔斯 狄更斯;雾都孤儿;批判现实主义者;批判现实主义【摘要】查尔斯 狄更斯是英国文学史上杰出的现实主义作家。雾都孤儿是他的代表作之一。小说描写了伦敦底层社会中贫苦儿童的悲惨生活,揭露了贫民救济所的黑暗。他所塑造的任务,在今天读来仍栩栩如生。Key Words: Charles Dickens; Oliver Twist; critical realist; critical realismAbstract: Charles Dickens was one of the greatest
2、 critical realist writers of the Victorian Age. Oliver Twist was one of his masterpieces in reflecting the real and terrible life of the workhouse and underworld in the nineteenth-century London.1. Charles Dickens(1) Historical background of Realism Period (1832-1900)The Realism Period is also calle
3、d Victorian Period, because it roughly coincides with the reign of Queen Victorian (1837-1901) chronologically. The early years of the Victorian England was a time of rapid economic development as well as serious social problems. The Industrial Revolution geared up. Scientific discoveries and techno
4、logic inventions from rail ways to steamships from spinning looms to printing machines quickly brought amazing changes to the country. For a time England was the “workshop of the world.” Large amount of profits were accumulated both from expanding its foreign trade markets and from exploiting its hu
5、ge-sized colonies. Towards the mid-century, England had reached its highest point of development as a world power. And beneath the great prosperity and richness, there existed widespread poverty and wretchedness among the working class. In the towns and cities where new factories and mines bloomed,
6、population grew at a high rate, which surely resulted in extreme material and mental poverty. Workers and their families, the component of the population, were crowded in the dirty and insanitary slums. The working conditions under which workers toiled were unimaginably brutal, especially in textile
7、 factories and coal mines where women and children were widely employed. Then Oliver Twist, Dickenss protest against the workhouses, was appearing in serial form. The worsening living and working conditions, the mass unemployment and the new Poor Law of 1834 with its workhouse system finally gave ri
8、se to the Chartist Movement (1836-1848). The English workers got themselves organized in big cities and brought forth the Peoples Charter, in which they demanded basic rights and better living and working conditions. The movement swept over most of the cities in the country. Although the movement fo
9、llowed by riots at Newport and imprisonment of chartists leaders and declined to an end in 1848, it did bring some improvement to the welfare of the working class. This was the first mass movement of the English working class and the early sign of the awakening of the poor, oppressed people.Victoria
10、n literature, as a product of its age, naturally took on its quality of magnitude and diversity. It was many-sided and complex, and reflected both romantically and realistically the great changes that were going on in peoples life and thought. Great writers and great works abounded. In this period,
11、the novel become the most widely read and the most vital and challenging expression of progressive thought. Among the most famous novelists of the time were the critical realists, and Charles Dickens was one of the greatest critical realists.(2) Brief introduction of Charles DickensCharles Dickens w
12、as born on February 7, 1812, in Portsea England in a petty navy office clerk, and suffered from terrible financial problem and forced to work at a blacking factory. For heavy debts, all his families except him were put in prison. So he lived by himself in a horrific condition. Pasting labels on blac
13、king bottles twelve hours by day and sleeping under the counter at night, the child always felt hungry, lonely and ignored. The hardship and suffering inflicted upon the sensitive young Charles had left an everlasting bitter remembrance. The experience of orphan hood haunted him, and then appeared t
14、he vivid orphan Oliver. After inheriting some money, his father got out of prison and Charles returned to school. In 1827, Charles entered a lawyers office, and two years later he became a Parliamentary reporter for newspapers. The journalistic experience not only enabled him to get acquainted with
15、some inside knowledge of the British legal and political system from which he grew disappointed with the attempts of law makers, and give him a chance to meet people of all kinds, but also laid a good foundation for his coming literary career. The novel Oliver Twist can be so successful may due to h
16、is veiled protest against the Poor Law in 1834.From 1833 Dickens began to write occasional sketches of London life, which were later collected and published under the title of Sketches by Boz (1836). Soon The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club (1836-1837) appeared in monthly installments. It at
17、once lifted him into a position of fame and fortune. And since then, his life became one of endless hard work. . Many of his novels, with their recurrent concern for social reform, first appeared in magazines in serialised form, a popular format at the time. Unlike other authors who completed entire
18、 novels before serialization, Dickens often created the episodes as they were being serialized. The practice lent his stories a particular rhythm, punctuated by cliffhangers to keep the public looking forward to the next installment. The continuing popularity of his novels and short stories is such
19、that they have never gone out of print.His work has been praised for its mastery of prose and unique personalities by writers such as George Gissing, Leo Tolstoy and G. K. Chesterton, though others, such as Henry James and Virginia Woolf, criticized it for sentimentality and implausibility.2. Oliver
20、 Twist Oliver Twist is now one of my favorite books. I love the plot and the way Charles Dickens wrote them, it makes everything vivid. Oliver is an orphan whose mother is died when giving birth to him and dad is unknown. He is brought up in a farm until he is nine, the workhouse decide to take him.
21、 He has a terrible life there, no meat is provided, a little bit porridge is a way not enough for the children. At length, when no more starvation can be borne, Oliver asks for second, he says cautiously Can I have some more, please. And this question, changes his life completely. Oliver is taken by
22、 a benevolent gentleman as a result. The gentleman treats Oliver well, but his wife and other to apprentices dont like him at all. After a fight between Oliver and Noah, Oliver becomes even quieter and more miserable. Finally, he runs away, and reaches the big and dangerous city, London, thinking at
23、 least he can find a way to survive. However, he is taken by a gang, who teach Oliver how to steal. When Oliver realizes they are thieves, he runs away again. Fortunately, a kind-hearted gentleman takes him. Oliver spends the happiest time in his life in this gentlemans house.Maybe God doesnt want O
24、liver to find his happiness so soon, there are much more difficulties waiting for him to conquer. One day, on his way to a bookshop, Oliver is caught by the gang again. They force him to rob. One of the robberies fails, leaves poor wounded Oliver, lying next to the house, which they tried to rob. Fu
25、nny enough, people in that house take care of him, he even starts learning how to read and write. In the end, every member of the gangs life goes horribly wrong. Olivers life history is revealed and found out that Rose is his aunt and Monks is his half-brother. Old gentleman adopts him as his son. I
26、 think, everything ends up in a nice way! I am so happy for little Oliver, he finally found his felicity. He is an optimistic, not scared of difficulties, polite and appreciative boy. He deserves what he gets in the end. The plot is intricate, and every character is masterly linked together.The stor
27、y of Oliver Twist reflects the darkness of the society. At that time, everyone was intrigued in factory revolution, the whole society looked prosperous. But there were still many people lived poorly, or even struggled to survive. The book displays all the problems of Britain at that time - workhouse
28、s, hunger, gangs, stealing, etc. That is one of the reasons why this book caused such a great impression and effect. The effort Oliver put in for a better life is very positive; it shows the optimistic of some people, although they didnt live in a good situation.3. Values and defectsThe novel gives
29、strikingly vivid descriptions of the thieves den and the London underworld. Here the author succeeds in calling forth the readers sympathy for the social environment of the time; either climbs up to be parasites or oppressors of fall victims of who emerges happy and successful in the end. The happy
30、issue which Dickenss novel usually ends in comes about as a result of his optimistic belief in the inevitable triumph of good and evil.In his works, Dickens sets out a full map and a large-scale criticism of the nineteenth century England, particularly London. Most of the chapters , even if they may
31、 be chapters of bursting fantasy, are deeply rooted in his knowledge of that petty-bourgeois urban world which he knows under the skin, from its prestigious absurdity to its most sordid squalor. A combination of optimism about people and realism about het society is presented from the very beginning
32、. In his early novels (up to 1850), he attacks one or more specific social evils in each: the dehumanizing workhouse system and the dark, criminal underworld, the famous scene in Chapter 2, in which Oliver was beaten up and punished merely because he ventured to ask for a extra portion of gruel to a
33、lleviate his gnawing hunger, is only one of the many details to show the extreme brutality and corruption of the oppressors and their agents under the mask of philanthropy. It is in scenes like this that we see the great critical realist voicing the helpless sufferings of the poor and oppressed.Dick
34、ens works are also characterized by a mingling of humor and pathos. He seems to believe that life is itself a mixture of joy and grief. Life is delightful because it is at once comic and tragic. He is a humorist. Whether he exaggerates a persons physical traits to achieve a dramatic effect or to rid
35、icule his personal defects, whether he means to be light-heartedly jocular or bitterly satirical, he is sure to produce roaring laughter or understanding smiles. The pain strikes people to the heart. Tears are shed unashamedly by men, literate or illiterate. The chief defects of the novel include th
36、e improbability of the plot and the unreality of some of the characters. Towards the end of the novel, the novel, the plot gets to be very intricate and the reader is simply mystified, and when the mystery is finally revealed to him, he is faced with impossible coincidences which lead to the happy e
37、nding. At critical moments Oliver has been once and again saved by kindly gentlefolk who. As luck would have it, happen to be his parents kith and kin. As for improbable characters, Oliver himself is a pale figure who seems to be ever the helpless victim of fate. Fagin and Bill Sikes are too benevol
38、ent and good/Here we may see that Dickens, while sympathizing with the miseries of the people, did not know what or who was responsible for such miseries and even cherished illusions about rich, idle but benevolent people like Mr. Brownlow and Miss Maylie. The whole social question, Dickens believed
39、, would be solved if only every employer followed the example set by good gentlemen like Pickwick and Brownlow. And sometimes Dickens seems so anxious to wring an extra tear from the audience that he indulges himself in excessive sentimental melodrama and spoils the story. However, in spite of these
40、 defects, the novel is a powerful exposure of bourgeois society. Oliver Twist is one of the best works of Dickens. The merit of the novel is in its truth to reality, sometimes arousing indignation; always full of energy and humor, its fault is in the ending which is in the manner of the sentimental
41、novels of the past century. It is said that the publication of Oliver Twist brought about some bettering of conditions in the English workhouse during the authors day. 生命列车The Train Of Life1. 不久以前,我读了一本书。书中把人生比作一次旅行。2. 人生一世,就好比是一次搭车旅行,要经历无数次上车、下车; 时常有事故发生; 有时是意外惊喜,有时却是刻骨铭心的悲伤 3. 降生人世,我们就坐上了生命列车。我们以为
42、我们最先见到的那两个人-我们的父母,会在人生旅途中一直陪伴着我们。 4. 很遗憾,事实并非如此。他们会在某个车站下车,留下我们,孤独无助。他们的爱、他们的情、他们不可替代的陪伴,再也无从寻找。 5. 尽管如此,还会有其他人上车。他们当中的一些人将对我们有着特殊的意义。 6. 他们之中有我们的兄弟姐妹, 有我们的亲朋好友。我们还将会体验千古不朽的爱情故事。7. 坐同一班车的人当中,有的轻松旅行。8. 有的却带着深深的悲哀 还有的,在列车上四处奔忙,随时准备帮助有需要的人 9. 很多人下车后,其他旅客对他们的回忆历久弥新 但是,也有一些人,当他们离开座位时,却没有人察觉。10. 有时候,对你来说情
43、深义重的旅伴却坐到了另一节车厢。你只得远离他,继续你的旅程。11. 当然,在旅途中,你也可以摇摇晃晃地穿过自己的车厢,去别的车厢找他 12. 可惜,你再也无法坐在他身旁,因为这个位置已经让别人给占了 .13. 没关系。旅途充满挑战、梦想、希望、离别 就是不能回头。因此,尽量使旅途愉快吧!14. 善待旅途上遇见的所有旅客,找出人们身上的闪光点。15. 永远记住,在某一段旅程中,有人会犹豫彷徨,因为我们自己也会犹豫彷徨。16. 我们要理解他人,因为我们需要他人的理解。17. 生命之谜就是:我们在什么地方下车?坐在身旁的伴侣在什么地方下车?我们的朋友在什么地方下车?我们无从知晓 18. 我时常这样想
44、:到我该下车的时候,我会留恋吗?我想我还是会的。和我的朋友分离,我会痛苦。让我的孩子孤独地前行,我会悲伤。 我执著地希望在我们大家都要到达的那个终点站,我们还会相聚 19. 我的孩子们上车时没有什么行李,如果我能在他们的行囊中留下美好的回忆,我会感到幸福。20. 我下车后,和我同行的旅客都还能记得我,想念我,我将感到快慰。21. 献给你, 我生命列车上的同行者, 祝您旅途愉快!1. Not long ago, I read a book, in which a mans life was compared to a journey.2. The life of a man is just li
45、ke a hitchhiking,during which many times we go up and down. Now and then things will happen accidently, some of which are to be unexpected excitement,while some heart-breaking sorrows. 3. When first embraced the world,we are already on the train of life. We take it for granted that the first two per
46、sons, our parents, whom we are encountered with, will accompany us all the way.4. Sadly,things do not go on as we thought.Our parents will get off the train at a certain station,leaving us, bereft and helpless.Their love and emotion to us and their irreplaceable company can be found in nowhere.5. Ho
47、wever,there will be somebody else who will get on the train. Some of them will have special meaning to us.6. Some of them may be our siblings , relatives and friends, and we will also expereince the imperishable love.7. Some of our travelling companions are quite light-hearted on the way.8. While so
48、me may bear immense sorrow.Still some ,back and forth, are ready to hold out their hands for others who need help.9. Some people alight off the train, yet they are still kept in the mind of the other passengers for long;some, to the opposite, leave their seats without being noticed.10. Sometimes, th
49、e one,who is dear to your heart, has huddled into another carriage. Nothing but one you can do is just to keep on going, far away from him.11. Of course, during the journey, you may stagger to another carriage to look for him.12. Its a pity that you will never seat yourself beside him because the seat has been engaged by others. 13. Never mind. The journe