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小说: wgolding.lordoftheflies 字数: 每页4000字

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ation; but when by some magic or accident civilization is abolished and the human animal is left on his own; dependent upon his mere humanity; then being human is not enough。 The beast appears; though not necessarily spontaneously or inevitably; for it never rages in Ralph or Piggy or Simon as it does in Roger or Jack; but it is latent in all of them; in the significantly named Piggy; in Ralph; who sometimes envies the abandon of the hunters (p。 69) and who shares the desire to 〃get a handful〃 of Robert's 〃brown; vulnerable flesh〃 (p。 106); and even in Simon burrowing into his private hiding place。 After Simon's death Jack attracts all the boys but Ralph and the loyal Piggy into his army。 Then when Piggy is killed and Ralph is alone; only civilization can save him。 The timely arrival of the British Navy is less theatrical than logically necessary to make Golding's point。 For civilization defeats the beast。 It slinks back into the jungle as the boys creep out to be rescued; but the beast is real It is there; and it may return。
 
 
 
 
 
 〃A World of Violence and Small Boys〃1
 J。 T。 C。 GOLDING
 
 PROBABLY he will agree that his real education was picked up; almost by the way; at home。 In those days when the radio was non…existent and the cost of gramophones prohibitive the only local music was the town band。 Bill was lucky that Mom was good enough to acpany Dad through Handel; Mozart and others。 They were often joined by an ex…bandmaster of the Coldstream Guards。 The walls of that small front room are probably vibrating still。 Bill; as a small boy; was terribly affected by Tosti's 〃Good…bye。〃 There was painting。 Dad's own paintings of scenery in Wiltshire and Cornwall hung on the walls and there were a couple of books of cheap reprints of the great ones。 There were books。 Chief among them was the Children's Encyclopaedia and of course Dad had access to the School Library。2 Bill was disappointed when he got to school to find he'd read most of the library。 It was a small one。
 One book that was read and re…read was Nat the Naturalisf; by George Manville Fenn。 The scene was set somewhere in the jungle in South East Asia。 Bill could quote whole pages by heart and it often acpanied him to the top of 
 
 1。The following is an excerpt from a letter by J。 T。 C。 Golding (William Golding's brother) addressed to James R。 Baker on December 4; 1962。 The letter appears here by permission of J。 T。 C。 Golding and James R。 Baker。
 2。 William Golding's father was Senior Master of Marlborough Grammar School。…Eds。
 
 the chestnut tree in the garden。3 And all the time there was a father only too willing to give a logical answer to a small boy's questions。
 Eventually he entered Marlborough Grammar School and emerged from a pretty sheltered life into a world of violence and small boys…and not…so…small boys。 Here he met physical violence and the deliberate infliction of pain by boys。 Also he noticed the tendency of small boys to gang up against the weak or those with a mannerism that put them out of step。4 Not that it was a bad school for bullying… official policy was hot against it and in any case Bill was physically well…equipped enough to look after himself。 Many others will have noticed all this but the effect; in this case; on an impressionable ten…year…old may have had important results。 The conjunction of the boy in the jungle in Nat the Naturalist and the school playground may have lain dormant for years until some later experience pushed it to the surface as Lord of the Flies。 On the other hand the explanation is so obvious and easy that it probably isn't true。
 During these last years at school another writer; I think of considerable importance to him; entered his life。 This was Mark Twain。 Not Mark Twain of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn but of Roughing It and Innocents Abroad。 He swallowed these almost as pletely as he had done Nat the Naturalist。 The humour of these books and their irreverence towards many accepted things encour…
 
 3。 The symbolic significance of this tree is made clear in Golding's autobiographical essay; 〃The Ladder and the Tree;〃 The Listener; 63 (March 24; 1960); 531…33)。 The essay is vital to an understanding of the basic dialectic which is dramatized in all the novels: the conflict between the rational and the irrational elements in man's nature and the effects of this conflict on both the individual and historical levels。…Eds。
 4。 The 〃tendency〃 is obvious enough in Lord of the Flies: note Simon's position in Jack's chorus; Roger's attack on the 〃litthins;〃 and the general abuse of Piggy。 After fear drives most of the boys into the hunter tribe; they lose all capacity for dialectic and begin sadistic persecution of those who stand outside their powerful group。 In Free Fall a similar pattern of behavior appears in the episodes which describe the rough…and…tumble boyhood adventures of Sammy Mountjoy。…Eds。
 
 aged his own scepticism。 It was an attitude he was already adopting toward the society of 4000 people around him。 In addition he had a father who weled criticism of any institution under the sun; though any deviation in personal conduct produced a muted rumble of thunder。
 
 
 
 
 
 The Fables of William Golding1
 JOHN PETER
 
 A useful critical distinction may be drawn between a fiction and a fable。 Like most worthwhile distinctions it is often easy to detect; less easy to define。 The difficulty arises because the clearest definition would be in terms of an author's intentions; his pre…verbal procedures; and these are largely inscrutable and wholly imprecise。 For a definition that is objective and specific we are reduced to an 〃as if;〃 which is at best clumsy and at worst perhaps delusive。
 The distinction itself seems real enough。 Fables are those narratives which leave the impression that their purpose was anterior; some initial thesis or contention which they are apparently concerned to embody and express in concrete terms。 Fables always give the impression that they were preceded by the conclusion which it is their function to draw; though of course it is doubtful whether any author foresees his conclusions as fully as this; and unlikely that his work would be improved if he did。 The effect of a fiction is very different。 Here the author's aim; as it appears from what he has written; is evidently to present a more or less faithful reflection of the plexities; and often of the irrelevancies; of life as it is actually experienced。 Such conclusions as he may draw…he is under much less pulsion to draw them than a writer of fables…do not appear to be anterior but on the contrary take their origin from the fiction itself; in which they are latent; and occasionally unrecognized。 It is a matter of approach; so far as that can be
 
 1。 This article first appeared in the Kenyon Review; 19 (Autumn; 1957); 577…592。 It is reprinted in part here through the courtesy of the Kenyon Review and the author。
 
 gauged。 Fictions make only a limited attempt to generalize and explain the experience with which they deal; since their concern is normally with the uniqueness of this experience。 Fables; starting from a skeletal abstract; must flesh out that abstract with the appearances of 〃real life〃 in order to render it interesting and cogent。 1984 is thus an obvious example of a fable; while The Rainbow is a fiction。 Orwell and Lawrence; in these books; are really moving in opposite directions。 If their movements could be geometrically projected to exaggerate and expose each other; Lawrence's would culminate in chaotic reportage; Orwell's in stark allegory。
 。 。 。 'The distinction' has a particular value for the critic whose concern is with novels; in that it assists him in locating and defining certain merits which are especially characteristic of novels and certain faults to which they are especially prone。 Both types; the fiction and the fable; have their own particular dangers。 The danger that threatens a fiction is simply that it will bee confused; so richly faithful to the plexity of human existence as to lose all its shape and organization。 。 。 。 The danger that threatens a fable is utterly different; in fact the precise opposite。 When a fable is poor…geomet

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