The Indelible Nature of Goodness—Review of Oliver Twist 英语专业毕业论文.doc

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1、The Indelible Nature of GoodnessReview of Oliver Twist AbstractCharles Dickens is one of the greatest critical realist writers of Victorian Age. Particularly, he is good at describing the life and conditions in mid-nineteenth century London. In his early works, Dickens emphasizes his belief of goodn

2、ess. Oliver Twist is one of such works. The great of Dickens lies in the fact that he creates several vivid and lively characters of different personalities. But the most well-known and successful thing is that he created the typical and symbolic characters, such as the good and honest Oliver, he is

3、 born a person of morality who know how to thank others for their helps,He is in a vicious environment, but he never changes his innocence and virtue; as for the character of Nancy is of the quality of kindness which is reflected on her evil, the most complex character Nancy fell into the hands of t

4、hieves den for the living and the persistent love affair, but she own has the tendency to become a kind-hearted person. All these characters make a strong impression on the readers. This paper attempts to analyze the different personalities of these characters and deeply research the intentions of c

5、reating these characters. Finally, the author indicates that the kindness is the indispensable part of the human nature, and only a person is consistently kind can he gain the happiness.Key words: Oliver Twist; goodness; character; Nancy 内容摘要查尔斯狄更斯是维多利亚时期最伟大的现实主义批判小说家之一,他尤其善于描写十九世纪中期伦敦中下层人民的生活。在他的早期

6、的作品中,狄更斯强调了对善良的信任和赞美。雾都孤儿就是其中之一。狄更斯的伟大之处在于他在这本小说中创作了不同性格的人物,刻画得栩栩如生,形象逼真。但是最成功之处还是在于他刻画的善良的主人公奥立弗,邪恶中透着善良的女贼南茜。主人公奥列佛是善良的化身,天生就是一个有道德的人,懂得知恩图报,他处在黑暗、邪恶的环境中,却始终没有改变纯洁、善良的本性。南茜因为生活所迫和对爱情的执着,使她堕入贼窟,而南希虽然深受不良环境的毒害,曾一度变得堕落,但是她的内心深处却一直保留着善良的本性,这也正是她牺牲自己保护奥列佛的原因,她本人却有着向善的心。本文旨在分析这些人物的性格,深入挖掘作者的创作意图,最后得出善良是

7、人性中不可或缺的一部分。只有始终如一的坚持善良的品性,才能得到幸福。关键词:雾都孤儿;善良;性格;南希9ContentsAbstract (English)iAbstract (Chinese)ii1. Introduction.12. The characters of Oliver and Nancy .2 2.1 The virtue of Oliver .2 2.2 The virtue of Nancy.4 2.3 The corrupted characters of Nancy .43. The social environment influence .5 3.1 The so

8、cial environment .6 3.2 Environments impact on Olivers character.6 3.3 Environments impact on Nancys character.74. Conclusion.8Works Cited.91. IntroductionCharles Dickens is one of the greatest critical realist writers of the Victorian Age. Oliver Twist is probably the best known of all Dickens nove

9、ls. It strongly exposes the workhouse functions as a sign of the moral hypocrisy of the working class. Oliver is Charles first child hero, who is an orphan living in a workhouse from his birth. Because he cant stand the terrible conditions in the workhouse, he escapes to London where he is trapped b

10、y Fagin and the cruel Bill Sikes who try and teach him to become a thief. Though treated with cruelty and surrounded by coarseness for most of his life, he is a piteous, innocent child and his charms draw the attention of several wealthy benefactors. He lives a happy life at last. By the experience

11、of Oliver Twist, Charles Dickens emphasizes belief of goodness again. In Oliver Twist, Nancy is Bill Sakes mistress; Dickens first depicts her as a willing helper of Fagin who she helps to recapture Oliver. But later Nancy overheard Monks telling Fagin his plans to destroy Oliver; she reports their

12、intention to Rose, which ultimately leads to her death. In this novel, her final decision to protect Oliver at a great personal cost expresses fully the incorruptibility of basic goodness, no matter how many difficulties it may face. In order to discuss one of themesthe incorruptibility of natural g

13、oodness, this paper analyses the character of Oliver and Nancy and environments impact. Oliver and Nancy are two main representatives of basic goodness. On many levels, Oliver is not a believable character, because although he is raised in corruptible surroundings, his purity and virtue are absolute

14、. Throughout the novel, Dickens uses Olivers character to challenge the Victorian idea that paupers and criminals are already evil at birth, arguing instead that a corruptible environment is the source of vice. Oliver talks little and his courage to escape shoes an inner struggle to protect himself.

15、 He remains unaffected in spite of the surrounding evil forces. The bad environment harms Nancys character and soul as well, but in the end she sacrifices her own life with the purpose to protect Oliver. In a word Oliver or Nancys only difference is whether of not the environment destroys their char

16、acters.2. The Virtue of Oliver and NancyIn his early period, Dickens insists that life is a combat between vice and virtue, and vice is certain to be defeated by virtue. So virtue is one of the most important aspects in Oliver Twist. Dickens wants to give voice to those who served for this purpose.

17、Oliver and Nancy are two typical heroes. This chapter discusses the only junction of Oliver and Nancy-Natural goodness.2.1The virtue of Oliver Oliver is Dickens first child hero. He is possessed with natural charm, innocence, and benefits of character. In fact, Dickens gives readers and exact depict

18、ion of Oliver at the beginning of the novel. “Oliver Twists ninth birthday found him a pale thin child, somewhat diminutive in stature, and decidedly small in circumstance. But nature or inheritance had implanted a good sturdy spirit in Olivers breast.”(Dickens 8) From his birth, Oliver is living in

19、 workhouse, which is closed circumstance and creates his innocence. When Oliver puts up “the old calico robes which had grown yellow” and “falls into his place at once-a parish child” (Dickens 4), he even does not know the fact -he is an orphan. “Boy,” said the gentleman the high chair, “listen to m

20、e, you know youre an orphan, I suppose?” “Whats that, sir?” inquired poor Oliver. “The boy is a fool.” (Dickens 15) in addition, Oliver is so pure that he can scarcely comprehend evil. As soon as entering into the society, Oliver gets into the hand of Fagin. The domestic relationship between Fagin a

21、nd his gang of criminals makes Oliver warm, he is easily changed by Fagin and begins to find tumor and joy in the companionship of the thieves. “Oliver saw that she was very pale, and gently inquire if she were ill.” (Dickens 114) This description indicates Olivers virtue -goodness in nature. It was

22、 Nancy that recaptured him and sent him to the thiefs den again. But he still tries to help her rather than hate her. Cockney slang, in this novel, other pauper children use rough Cockney slang, but Oliver, oddly enough, speaks in proper Kings English. Olivers careful speech is a symptom of his inna

23、te moral goodness. Even Sikes forces him to participate in a robbery, Oliver merely begs to be allowed to “run away and die in the field.” Oliver does not present a complex picture of a person torn between good and evil-instead, he is goodness incarnate. In short, “Oliver is aboriginal something wit

24、h no vice, and no right to speak.”(Dickens 20) He shows his helpless when he is unjustly punished and denied his rights. However, when evil force surrounds him, he remains unaffected and displays an inner strength to protect him. It is his natural goodness and instinct for survival that help him to

25、overcome the difficulties of life, and live a happy life at last. That fact that Oliver speaks and carries himself with a demeanor that is much more sophisticated than that of the rest of Fagins boy suggests that Dickens is using Oliver to show that even when people are born into squalid conditions,

26、 they can appreciate goodness and morality. When the Dodger and Charley pick Brownlows pocket, and again when Sikes and Crackit order Oliver into the house, Oliver reacts with shock and horror at the idea of stealing. It is unclear where he has acquired such moral value. He could not have learned it

27、 amid the life or death struggles of the workhouse. It is his innate goodness that makes him resist vice instinctively. Yet the suggestion that Olive is innately good complicates Dickens argument that corruption is formed by the horrible living conditions of the lower classes, rather than inherently

28、 born into their characters. Descriptions of Olivers face, in fact, seem to suggest that morality on account of the “expression of melancholy in his face.” The usually unperceptive Toby Crackit notes that Olivers “mug is a fortune” to him, meaning that his innocence-looking face is worth money to th

29、e thieves. Mr. Brownlow sees clearly the resemblance between Oliver and the women in the portrait, thus providing both him and us with the first hint that the workhouse-born Oliver has an identity that is worth discovering. Dickens clearly protests against the idea stated by Mr. Bumble, that the poo

30、r born with an affinity for vice and crime. Yet it sometimes seems as if Oliver has been born with and affinity for virtue and love, just as he was born with his angelic face.2.2 The Virtue of NancyAfter Nancy kidnaps Oliver, she regrets returning Oliver to Fagin. She does not want Oliver to be trea

31、ted as her and decides to help him as possible as she can. So when she is ordered to deliver Oliver to Mr. Sakes, she promises: “I have saved you form being ill wed once, and I will again, and I do now, continued the girl aloud, for those who would have fetched you, if I had not; would have been far

32、 more rough that me. I have promised for you being quiet and silent. If you are not, you will only do harm to yourself and me too, and perhaps be my death.”(Dickens 120) Nancys outburst demonstrates her deep and passionate sense of morality. Nancy hopes that Oliver cannot follow in her steps, but sh

33、e is incapable of changing Oliver fate. The only she can do is to protect Oliver from being beaten. Her character is a focus for the novel to express whether an individual can be redeemed from the effects of a bad environment: “I can not leave him now; I could not be his death. If I told others what

34、 I have told you, he would be sure to die. I must go back. I must go him in spite of all my suffering and his cruelty and ill-treatment.”(Dickens 162) Nancys sorrowful words display her deep love for Sakes and that she wants to stay with him regardless of all of sufferings. This fully express her fa

35、ithfulness to sakes, but her cost is lost her life, Even though Nancy has many characters defeats, her virtue defects her vice ultimately.2.3 The corrupted Characters of NancyIn his preface to the third edition of the novel (April, 1841), Dickens wrote that “it is useless to discuss whether the cond

36、uct and character of the girl seem natural or unnatural, probable or improbable, right or wrong, it is true” (Dickens 314). Nancy truly reflects the paupers in Victorian Age. A prostitute, embodies for Dickens all the degradation into which poverty can force otherwise good people.“They were not exac

37、tly pretty, perhaps; and looked quite shout and hearty. Being remarkable free and agreeable in their manners.” (Westbury 4) The narrators reference suggests that Nancy is a prostitute. At Londons dirty street, poor, womens profession is thieves and prostitutes. “I thieved for you when I was a child

38、not half as old as his!” pointing to Oliver.”(Dickens 4) “Nancys words tell readers she has worked for Fagin when she is a child.Every child hopes to have a family. Fagin uses Nancys this psychology to induce her into the family of thieves. But such a thief den makes her become degenerated and compe

39、ls Nancy to kidnap Oliver for Fagin. When Nancy is ordered to go to the station, she dresses in nice clothing and pretends to be Olivers distraught sister.”(Hawes 161) The perfect touch to her disguise is a plainly displayed door key, which marks her as a member of a property-owning class. Because s

40、he disguises herself as a middle-class woman, the police station recognizes her as an individual worth hearing. This indicates that Nancy gradually becomes corrupted and serves for Fagin. In this novel, Nancys“laugh” give readers deep impression. For example, “laughing hysterically”, “the girl laugh

41、ed again; even less composedly than before;” (Dickens 96) “Miss Nancy burst into aloud laugh.” (Dickens 139) In Victorian Age, cultured women have genital manners. They never “burst into laugh”, “drink to excess”, and speak rude words. Nancy, as an individual of low social status, is influenced with

42、out exception by the environment in which she is raised and the company that she keeps. Nancys“laugh” implicate her identity-a paragon of corruption. In a word, the bad environment inevitably poisons Nancys characters, lets her become a thief in Fagins service. To some degree, the fact that she comm

43、its crime does not due to her free willing but to survival.3 Environment Impact on the Characters of Oliver and Nancy In Oliver Twist, environment plays a great part on someones character, especially on Oliver and Nancy.3.1 The Social EnvironmentOliver Twist opens with a bitter Criticism directed at

44、 the nineteenth-century English Poor Laws. These laws were a manifestation of the Victorian middle class emphasis on the virtues of hard work. The middle class was compelled to work, and to alleviate the stigma attached to middle-class wealth, the middle class promoted work as a moral virtue. But th

45、e result is to lead English society to subject the poor to hatred and cruelty. Many members of the middle class were anxious to be different, from the lower classes, and one way to do this was to stigmatize the lower classes as lazy good-for-nothings, Victorian society interpreted economic success a

46、s a sign that God favored the honest, moral virtue of the successful individuals efforts, and thus interpreted the condition of poverty as a sign of the weakness of the poor themselves. Workhouses were deliberately made to be as miserable as possible in order to prevent the poor from relying on publ

47、ic assistance. But the paupers suffered so much that most of them chose to die in the streets rather than seek public aid. Meanwhile, the residents in the workhouse wait for death in the terrible condition.In Oliver Twist, Dickens meant to demonstrate the hypocrisy of the petty middle-class bureaucrats, who treat a small child cruelly while voicing their belief in the Christian virtue of giving charity to the less fortunate.3.2 Environments Impact on Olivers characterEven though Oliver is endowed a perfect vir

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