"Even now, famous and caressed and happy, I often forget in my dreams that I have a dear wife and children; even that I am a man; and wander desolately back to that time of my life."
Charles Dickens composed this passage between 1845 and 1848 referring to the dark times of his youth when his family moved to London in the early 1820s. The imprisonment of his father forced the family to send the twelve-year-old Dickens to work in a blacking factory. This disruption to Dickens's childhood and education remained a source of intense grief throughout his life. Dickens found these memories too painful to continue his autobiography; in fact, he jealously guarded the facts of his London youth. It was only after his biographer John Forster published his Life of Charles Dickens in 1872 that readers learned of Dickens's difficult youth and of the autobiographical nature of one of his finest creations, David Copperfield.
Originally published in serial form from May 1849 through November 1850, David Copperfield is the first of Dickens's novels written entirely in the first person. Converting his autobiographical impulse into fiction allowed Dickens to explore uncomfortable truths about his life. David Copperfield's time at Murdstone and Grinby's warehouse, his schooling at Salem House, and his relationship with Dora all have their bases in Dickens's own life. But, it may be Dickens's most autobiographical novel, David Copperfield is a work of fiction.
Dickens divides the life of Copperfield into two distinct parts, the first recounting the untimely loss of his innocence. In this orphan tale, Copperfield endures the hardships of his mother's death, a wretched education at Salem House, the toiling at Murdstone and Grinby's, and a desperate escape to his aunt's. Made aware of the vicissitudes of life, Copperfield also learns of the cyclical patterns of life as "David Copperfield of Blunderstone" is reborn at his aunt's as "Copperfield Trotwood"; the barbarous schooling of Mr. Creakle is replaced by the kind instruction of Mr. Wickfield and Dr. Strong; the callous neglect of his stepfather is replaced by the solicitude of his aunt. The practical lesson for Copperfield is to eschew the sternness of Murdstone as well as the carelessness of Micawber, the grandiloquent and improvident father figure who lodges Copperfield.
In the novel's second part, Copperfield establishes himself first as a legal clerk and parliamentary reporter, and later as a novelist. But his professional matters are of less importance than Copperfield's two emotional attachments that frame this part of the novel: his relationships with James Steerforth and Dora Spenlow. Both relationships are portrayed as the "mistaken impulses of an undisciplined heart," and we are meant to second Betsey Trotwood's comment, "Blind! Blind! Blind!" In retrospect, Copperfield confesses that he "loved Dora to idolatry." Dora, who resembles Copperfield's mother in looks and manner, lacks the maturity required to share actively in David's life or to take up the Victorian burdens of housekeeping. The relationship falters and Copperfield begins to see parallels with the marriage of the aging Dr. Strong and his "child wife" Annie. When the marriage dissolves, Dora dies in labor-quite conveniently, some critics have charged, for her death releases Copperfield of his conjugal obligations. Idolatry also characterizes his relationship with the Byronic James Steerforth, whom Copperfield unwittingly assists in the seduction of young Emily away from her uncle's care at Yarmouth.
The concluding chapters function as an epilogue to the first two parts. Copperfield, now a famous novelist, takes his sufferings to Europe in a listless journey. He eventually returns to London with renewed vigor to learn of the emigration to Australia of the Micawbers, Peggotty, Emily, and Martha, and of the imprisonment of Steerforth's servant, Littimer, and Uriah Heep. The novel concludes with Copperfield marrying Agnes.
Throughout the novel, Dickens addresses several important social issues of his time: the problem of prostitution in nineteenth-century London, lack of professional opportunities for women in Victorian England, need for humane treatment for the insane, the injustice of debtors' prison, and indictments against the rigidly conventional, purse-proud nineteenth-century English middle class. Against these dilemmas, Dickens offers the intuitive wisdom of Mr. Dick, the genuineness of the Micawbers, and, above all, the simple earnestness of Peggotty.
But Copperfield is foremost a novel about memory. Amidst the tumultuous rise and fall of the London cityscape (obsessively cataloged in the novel), Copperfield's memory preserves the links to his past and brings continuity and coherence to his life while the sudden recollection of the past charges the present with meaning. However, memory also proves to be a source of anguish. Copperfield prefaces the time he spent at Murdstone and Grinby by remarking: "I now approach a period of my life, which I can never lose the remembrance of, while I remember anything; and the recollection of which has often, without my invocation, come before me like a ghost, and haunted happier times." The act of remembrance, even uninvoked remembrance, dredges up early trauma to experience anew.
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《匹克威克外传》的风格与狄更斯后期的严肃作品截然不同,它更像是一部充满英式幽默和温馨友谊的群像喜剧。这本书的结构非常松散,更像是一系列冒险和轶事的集合,以匹克威克先生及其俱乐部的成员们的视角展开。匹克威克先生本人,那个有些迂腐但心地善良的老绅士,是全书的灵魂人物。他对世界保持着一种天真的好奇心和对美好事物的执着追求,这种特质使得他周围发生的一切都蒙上了一层滑稽而可爱的色彩。我特别喜欢书中对各个配角的刻画,他们每个人都有自己鲜明的怪癖和可笑之处,比如萨姆·卫勒那句句珠玑、充满街头智慧的俏皮话,简直让人捧腹不止。这本书的乐趣在于那种无拘无束的漫游感,它让你暂时逃离了狄更斯作品中常见的沉重社会批判,进入了一个充满善意和闹剧的温和世界。它展现了友谊的力量,那种无论遇到什么荒唐事,伙伴们都能相互扶持、共同面对的乐观精神,非常鼓舞人心。阅读过程充满了轻松愉悦,仿佛是和一群有趣的老朋友一起在英格兰乡间进行一次长途旅行,随时都有新的笑料和惊喜等待着你。
评分这本《雾都孤儿》简直是文学瑰宝,它以一种近乎残酷的真实感,将我们带入了维多利亚时代伦敦的阴暗角落。狄更斯对社会底层人民生活困境的描摹,细腻到令人窒息。奥利弗·特威斯特这个小可怜的命运沉浮,从济贫院的饥饿,到太平间学徒的屈辱,再到被法欣一家收留后的恐惧与逃离,每一步都牵动着读者的心弦。那种无助感,那种对善意的极度渴望,被作者刻画得淋漓尽致。你仿佛能闻到伦敦雾霾的呛人味道,听到街头巷尾的叫卖声和阴影中窃窃私语的罪犯。书中对不同阶层的对比也极具讽刺意味,富人阶层的虚伪与穷人的挣扎形成了鲜明对比,揭示了那个时代制度性的冷漠与不公。我特别欣赏作者在描绘人物性格上的深度,比如那个狡猾又充满魅力的费金,他的存在本身就是对人性扭曲的一种深刻反思。读完后,那种挥之不去的压抑感和对正义的深切呼唤,久久不能平息。它不仅仅是一个故事,更是一部具有强大社会批判力量的历史文献,让人不得不思考,在那个时代,一个孤儿的生存本身就是一场奇迹。这本书的语言充满了画面感,即便是描绘最不堪的场景,也流淌着一种独特的文学韵律。
评分《远大前程》带来的情感冲击力,简直让人措手不及。皮普这个出身卑微的孩子,因为一场意外的“馈赠”而突然跻身于上流社会,这种身份的剧烈转变,让他的内心世界变得异常复杂和纠结。我尤其欣赏作者如何处理皮普内心的“阶级焦虑”和“自我认同危机”。他开始瞧不起自己的过去,对乔那样忠厚老实的铁匠感到羞愧,这种对身份提升带来的虚荣心的描绘,太真实了,简直是人性弱点的教科书式展现。而神秘的梅格维奇小姐,她的出现像是给皮普的命运投下了一颗重磅炸弹,揭示了所谓的“远大前程”背后可能隐藏的黑暗真相。这种对财富来源和道德约束的探讨,让故事远远超越了一个简单的成长小说范畴。更不用说艾丝黛拉的冷漠与美丽,她像一朵带刺的玫瑰,吸引着皮普,却又始终保持距离,这种爱情的虐心程度,让人读得又爱又恨。这本书的叙事节奏把握得极好,时而缓慢内省,时而突发事件迭起,特别是最后真相大白的那一刻,那种宿命般的悲剧感,让人唏嘘不已。它迫使读者去思考,真正的“高贵”究竟是来自出身、财富,还是内心的善良与正直。
评分《圣诞颂歌》虽然篇幅相对短小,但其精神内核的饱满和对人性的救赎描绘,达到了惊人的高度。斯克鲁奇这个角色,从一个吝啬到近乎非人的守财奴,到最终蜕变为一个充满慷慨和喜悦的慈善家,这个转变过程被三位圣诞幽灵的拜访刻画得层次分明,引人入胜。我喜欢作者巧妙地运用了时间的概念——过去、现在与未来——来冲击斯克鲁奇麻木的心灵。看到他童年的孤独、青年时的迷失,以及未来那被世人唾弃的凄凉结局,每一点都像一把利刃刺入他那颗冰封已久的心。这种“灵魂唤醒”的主题,在圣诞节这一背景下被升华,具有一种普世的感染力。它不仅仅是关于一个老头的转变,更是对社会责任和人与人之间联结的深刻反思。在那个贫富差距巨大的时代,作者通过小蒂姆的病弱形象,唤起了人们对弱者的关注与同情。这本书的语言充满了温馨的幽默感和恰到好处的魔幻色彩,读起来既有历史的厚重感,又不失节日应有的轻快与希望。它完美地诠释了“仁爱高于财富”的真谛,是一部无论何时阅读都能让人内心温暖的杰作。
评分初读《艰难时世》,我立刻被它那种强烈的、几乎是爆炸性的情感张力所吸引。与一些同期的作品相对温和的叙事方式不同,狄更斯在这里展现了他最尖锐、最不加掩饰的批判锋芒。故事围绕着工业城镇石谷镇展开,那里充斥着机械的轰鸣、工人的辛酸和资本家的冷酷。主角阶层的代表,如葛兰德一家的固执与偏见,以及工厂主邦德比的虚伪,都像是被放到显微镜下,暴露无遗。那种对“事实”和“数据”的盲目崇拜,对人类情感和想象力的彻底压制,被作者讽刺得入木三分。特别是当描绘到学生们被灌输僵化的教条,丧失了对生活的热情时,我感同身受那种精神上的窒息感。塞丽(Sissy)这个角色,则像是黑暗中的一束光,她那份纯粹的同情心和本能的善良,与整个冰冷的工业环境形成了最强烈的反差。这本书的对白充满了戏剧性,充满了一种呼吁行动的激情。它不像是在讲述一个故事,更像是在法庭上对整个社会体制进行一场义正言辞的控诉,力度之大,让人难以抗拒其思想的穿透力。
评分We must be strong or else the gifts that God sends us into the world with will just fade ad wither in the first cold wind that blows on us....the best steel...must go through the fire http://www.ellopos.net/dickens/copperfield.htm.
评分We must be strong or else the gifts that God sends us into the world with will just fade ad wither in the first cold wind that blows on us....the best steel...must go through the fire http://www.ellopos.net/dickens/copperfield.htm.
评分1993年9月1日。
评分1993年9月1日。
评分We must be strong or else the gifts that God sends us into the world with will just fade ad wither in the first cold wind that blows on us....the best steel...must go through the fire http://www.ellopos.net/dickens/copperfield.htm.
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