Chapter
II The Neoclassical Period
一.新古典主义时期概述
1. 识记:(1)新古典主义时期的界定
(2)政治经济背景
(3)启蒙运动的意义与影响
2. 领会:(1)启蒙运动的主张与文学的特点
(2)新古典主义时期文学的艺术特点
3. 应用:启蒙运动,新古典主义,英雄双行诗,英国现实主义小说等名词的解释
1. 识记Definitions of literary terms
1) The Enlightenment Movement
The 18th-century England is known as the Age
of Enlightenment or the Age of Reason. The Enlightenment Movement was a
progressive intellectual movement which flourished in
2) Neoclassicism
In the field of literature, the Enlightenment
Movement brought about a revival of interest in the old classical works. This
tendency is known as neoclassicism. According to the neoclassicists, all forms
of literature were to be modeled after the classical works of the ancient Greek
& Roman writers (Homer, Virgil, & so on)& those of the contemporary
French ones. They believed that the artistic ideals should be order, logic,
restrained emotion & accuracy, & that literature should be judged in
terms of its service to humanity. This belief led them to seek proportion,
unity, harmony & grace in literary expressions, in an effort to delight,
instruct & correct human beings, primarily as social animals. Thus, a
polite, urbane, witty, & intellectual art developed.
3) The heroic couplet
It means a pair of lines of a type once common
in English poetry, which rhyme & are written with five beats each..
4) the Realistic Novel
The mid-century was, however, predominated by
a newly rising literary form, the modern English novel, which, contrary to the
traditional romance of aristocrats, gives a realistic presentation of life of
the common English people. This-the most significant phenomenon in the history
of the development of English literature in the eighteenth century - is a
natural product of the Industrial Revolution & a symbol of the growing
importance & strength of the English of the growing importance &
strength of the English middle class, Among the pioneers were Daniel Defoe,
Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding, Laurence Sterne,
Tobias Creorge Smollott,
& Oliver Goldsmith.
2. 领会Characteristics
of Neoclassical Literature
According to the neoclassicists, all forms of
literature were to be modeled after the classical works of the ancient Greek
& Roman writers (Homer, Virgil, Horace, Ovid, etc,)& those of the
contemporary French ones. Neoclassicists had some fixed laws &rules for
almost every genre of literature, prose should be precise, direct, smooth &
flexible. Poetry should be lyrical, epical, didactic, satiric or dramatic,
& each class should be guided by its own principles. Drama should be
written in the Heroic Couplets (iambic pentameter rhymed in two lines); the
three unities of time, space & action should be strictly observed; regularity
in construction should be adhered to & type characters rather than
individuals should be represented.
二.该时期的重要作家
1,一般识记:重要作家的创作生涯
2,识记:重要作品及主要内容
3,领会:重要作家的创作思想,艺术特色其代表作的主题结构,人物刻画,语言风格,艺术特色,社会意义等。
4,应用:(1)《天路历程》中"名利场"的寓义。
(2)蒲伯的文学(诗歌)批评观及其诗歌特色。
(3)〈〈格列佛游记〉〉的社会讽刺。
(4)菲尔丁的"散文体史诗"。
(5)格雷诗歌的主题与意象。
I. John Bunyan
1. 一般识记His life
English author & preacher, born in Elstow, England, probably Nov.28, 1628,and died in London,
England, Aug, 31, 1688.
2. 识记His major
works
John Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress (1678) is the
outstanding 17th-century English religious literature. For more than 200 years
this book was second in popularity only to the Bible. Bunyan did not
attempt to portray the political confusion & social upheaval of
17th-century
Bunyan chiefly wrote four prose works - Grace
Abounding to the Chief of Sinners (1666), The Life & Death of Mr. Badman (1680), The Holy War (1682) & The
Pilgrim's Progress, part II (1684).
3. 领会Characteristics
of his works
Bunyan's style was modeled after that of the
English Bible. With his concrete &living language & carefully observed
& vividly presented details, he made it possible for the reader of the
least education to share the pleasure of reading his novel & to relive the
experience of his characters.
4. 应用Selected
Reading
"The Vanity Fair", an excerpt from
Part I of The Pilgrim's Progress.
(1) Theme: The Pilgrim's Progress is
the most successful religious allegory in the English language. Its purpose is
to urge people to comply with Christian doctrines & seek salvation through
constant struggles with their own weakness & all kinds of social evils. It
is not only about something spiritual but also beats much relevance to the
time. Its predominant metaphor-life as a journey-is simple & familiar.
(2) "Vanity Fair" is the most famous
part of The Pilgrim's Progress. It tells how Christian & his friend
Faithful come to Vanity Fair on their way to heaven," a fair where in
should be sold all sorts of vanity & that it should last all the year long:
therefore at this fair all such merchandise sold, as houses, lands, trades,
places, honors, preferments, titles, countries,
kingdoms, lusts, pleasures & delights of all sorts as harlots, wives,
husbands, children, masters, servants, lives, blood, bodies, souls, silver,
gold, pearls, precious stones & what not." As they refuse to buy
anything but truth, they are beaten & put in a cage & then taken out
& led in chains up & down the fair. They are sentenced to death-to be
put to the most cruel death that can be invented." Vanity Fair" is a
satirical picture of English society, law & religion in Bunyan's day.
II.
Alexander pope
1. 一般识记His life
& career
English poet & satirist, born in London,
England, May 21, 1688, died in Twickenham, England May
30, 1744.
Pope is one of the fore-most satirists in
world literature as well as a great poet. He wrote witty & polished verses
ridiculing the behavior of his day. Pope's mock-heroic poem The Rape of the
Lock is one of the finest examples of English comic verse. He made his name as
a great poet with the publication of An Essay on Criticism in 1711. His Dunciad is a scathing attack on dullness
& pedantry in literature. He also composed verse essays on philosophy,
literature, & criticism. In An Essay on Man, he brilliantly expressed the
philosophical trends & concepts of his age.
2. 识记Pope's
literally outlook
As a representative of the Enlightenment, Pope
was one of the first to introduce rationalism to England. He was the greatest
poet of his time. He strongly advocated neoclassicism, emphasizing that
literary works should be judged by classical rules of order, reason, logic,
restrained emotion, good taste & decorum. According to Pope, almost every
genre of literature should have some fixed laws & rules. Prose should be
precise, direct, smooth & flexible, Poetry should be lyrical, epical,
didactic, satiric or dramatic, & drama should be written in the Heroic
Couplets (iambic pentameter rhymed in two lines); the three unities of time,
space & action should be strictly observed; regularity in construction
should be adhered to, & type characters rather than individuals should be
represented.
3. 识记His major
works
1). The Rape
of the Lock
A delightful burlesque of epic poetry, it
ridicules the manners of the English nobility. The poem is based on an actual
incident in which a young nobleman stole a lock of a lady's hair.
2) An Essay
on Criticism
His first important work, An Essay on
Criticism was a long didactic poem in heroic couplets. In this work, he
reflected the neo-classical spirit of the times by advocating good taste, common
sense & the adherence to classical rules in writing & criticism. The
whole poem is written in a plain style, hardly containing any imagery or
eloquence &therefore makes easy reading.
3) The Dunciad
Generally considered Pope's best satiric work,
The Dunciad goes deep in meaning & works
at many levels. Its satire is directed at Dullness in general, & in the
course of it all the literary men of the age. Poets mainly who had made Pope's
enemies, are held up to ridicule. But the poem is not confined to personal
attack.
Dullness as reflected in the corruptness of government, social morals,
education & even religion, is expertly exposed & satirized.
4. 领会His language
style
Pope's works are still enjoyed for their
sparkling wit, good sense & charm of expression. After Shakespeare, he is
the most widely quoted poet in English literature. He worked painstakingly on
his poems, developed a satiric, concise, smooth, graceful &well-balanced
style.
5. 应用Selected
Readings
An Excerpt from Part 2 of An Essay on
Criticism.
An Essay on Criticism is a
didactic poem written in heroic couplets. It consists of 744 lines &is
divided into three parts. It sums up the art of poetry as up held &
practiced by the ancients like Aristotle, Horace, Boileau,
etc. & the eighteenth century European classicists.
In Part 2, Pope advises the critics not to
stress too much the artificial use of conceit or the external beauty of
language but to pay special attention to True wit which is best set in a plain
style.
III. Daniel
Defoe
1. 一般识记His life
English novelist & journalist, born in
London, England, 1660, and died in London, Apr. 26,1731.
Like Pope, he never went to university, but he
received a good education in one of the best Dissenting academies. He started
as a small merchant & all his life his business underwent many ups &
downs & yet he was never beaten. Defoe also had a zest for politics. He
wrote quite a number of pamphlets on the current political issues.
2. 识记His social
outlook
As a member of the middle class, Defoe spoke
for & to the members of his class & his novels enjoyed great popularity
among the less cultivated readers. In most of his works, he gave his praise to
the hard-working, sturdy middle class & showed his sympathy for the
downtrodden, unfortunate poor.
3. 识记His major
works
Defoe is generally considered the first great
realistic novelist in English fiction. He based his stories on current events
& materials, such as the maps & logs of actual sea voyages, personal
memoirs& historical or eyewitness reports.
Perhaps his most popular novel is Robinson
Crusoe (1719), an adventure story based partly on the actual experience of
a man who had been trapped on a deserted island. A Journal of the Plague
Year (1722), sometimes considered his best work, has such a colorful &
detailed account of the
4. 领会Characteristics
of his works
Defoe was a very good story-teller. He had a
gift for organizing minute details in such a vivid way that his stories could
be both credible& fascinating. His sentences are sometimes short, crisp
& plain, & sometimes long & rambling, which leave on the reader on
impression of casual narration. His language is smooth, easy, colloquial &
mostly vernacular. There is nothing artificial in his language: it is common
English at its best.
5. 应用Selected
Reading
An Excerpt from chapter IV of Robinson Crouse.
Robinson Crouse, an adventure story
very much in the spirit of the time, is universally considered his masterpiece.
In the novel, Defoe traces the growth of Robinson from a na?ve
& simple youth into a mature & hardened man, tempered by numerous
trials in his eventful life. The realistic presentation of the successful
struggle of Robinson single-handedly against the hostile nature proves the best
part of the novel. Robinson is here a real hero: a typical eighteenth-century
English middle-class man with a great capacity for work, inexhaustible energy,
courage, patience & persistence in overcoming obstacles, in struggling
against the hostile natural environment. He is the very prototype of the empire
builder, the pioneer colonist. In describing Robinson's life on the island,
Defoe glorifies human labor &the puritan fortitude, which save Robinson
from despair & are a source of pride &happiness .He toils for the sake
of subsistence, & get his reward.
VI. Jonathan
Swift
1. 一般识记His life
English author, born in Dublin, Ireland, Nov.
30, 1667, and died in
Swift is generally considered the greatest
prose satirist in English literature. Through fables, allegories, &
pamphlets he savagely exposed the vices &follies of mankind &championed
common sense.
2. 识记Swift's
humanist view
Swift was a man of great moral integrity &
social charm. A man with bitter life experience, he had a deep hatred for all
the rich oppressors & a deep sympathy for all the poor & oppressed. His
understanding of human nature is profound. In his opinion, human nature is
seriously & permanently flawed. To better human life, enlightenment is
needed, but to redress it is very hard. So, in his writings, although he
intends not to condemn but to reform & improve human nature &human
institutions. There is often an Under-or over tone of helplessness &
indignation.
3 领会His style
Swift is a master satirist. His satire is
usually masked by an out word gravity &an apparent earnestness which
renders his satire all the more powerful.
Swift is one of the greatest masters of
English prose. He is almost unsurpassed in the writing of simple, direct,
precise prose. He defined a good style as "proper words in proper
places." Clear, simple, concrete diction, uncomplicated sentence
structure, economy & conciseness of language mark all his writings-essays,
poems & novels.
4. 应用Selected
reading
An Excerpt from Chapter III, Part I of
Gulliver's Travels.
Gulliver's Travels, Jonathan Swift's best fictional work, contains four
parts, each about one particular voyage during which Gulliver has extraordinary
adventures on some remote island after he has met with shipwreck or piracy or
some other misfortune. As a whole the book is one of the most effective &
devastating criticisms & satires of all aspects in the then English &
satires of all aspects in the then English & European life - socially,
politically, religiously, philosophically, scientifically, & morally. Its
social significance is great & its exploration into human nature profound.
Gulliver's Travels is also an artistic
masterpiece. Here we find its author at his best as a master of prose. In
structure, the four parts make an organic whole, with each contrived upon an
independent structure, & yet complementing the others & contributing to
the central concern of study of human nature & life. The first two parts
are generally considered smallness in Part I words just as effectively as the
exaggerated largeness in Part 2. The similarities between human beings &
the Lilliputians & the contrast between the Brobdingnagians
& human beings both bear reference to the possibilities of human state.
Part 3 furthers the criticism of the western civilization & deals with
different malpractices & false illusions about science, philosophy, history
& false illusions about science, philosophy, history & even
immortality. The lost part, where comparison is made through both similarities
&differences, leads the reader to a basic question: What on earth is a
human being?
V. Henry Fielding
1. 一般识记:His life
& career
English author, born in Sharpham
Park, England, April. 22. 1707, and died in
During his career as a dramatist, Fielding had
attempted a considerable number of forms of plays. Witty comedies of manners or
intrigues in the Restoration tradition, farce or ballad operas with political
implication, & burlesques & satires that been heavily upon the status
quo of
Fielding started to write novels when he was preparing himself for the Bar. In
1742 appeared his first novel, The History of the Adventures of Joseph Andrews
& of his friend Mr. Abraham Adams, Written in Imitation of the
Manner of Cervantes, which was first intended as a burlesque of the dubious
morality & false sentimentality of Richardson's Pamela. The next year came The
History of Jonathan Wild the Great, a satiric biography that harks back to Fielding's early plays. The novel was followed by The
History of Tom Jones, a Foundling (1749) & The History of Amelia (1751).
The former is a masterpiece on the subject of human nature & the latter the
story of the unfortunate life of an idealized woman, a maudlin picture of the
social life at the time.
2. 识记: His major works
1) Joseph
Andrews
In this novel, Joseph supposedly the young
handsome & chaste brother of Richardson's virtuous heroine Pamela, is
tempted by his amorous mistress, supposedly aunt of Pamela's husband, Mr. B.
Here, instead of being rewarded for his virtue, Joseph is turned out of doors
by his mistress. But the burlesque ends here; the book quickly turns into a
great novel of the open road, a "comic epic in prose", whose subject
is "the true ridiculous" in human nature, as exposed in all its
variety as Joseph & the amiable quixotic parson journey homeward through
the heart of
2) The
History of Jonathan Wild the Great
It's a satiric biography that harks back to Fielding's early plays. It takes the life of a notorious
real-life thief as a theme for demonstrating the petty division between a great
rogue & a great politician such as Sir Robert Walpole, the Prime Minister.
The ironical praises for the very qualities of the unscrupulous
self-aggrandizement of wild point out the way the Prime Minister had achieved
his "greatness." The Great Man, properly considered, is no letter
than a great gangster.
3. 领会:His achievement in
English novel
Fielding has been regarded by some as
"Father of the English Novel," for his contribution to the
establishment of the form of the modern novel. Of all the eighteenth-century
novelists he was the first to set out, both in theory & practice, to write
specifically a "comic epic in prose," the first to give the modern
novel its structure & style. Before him, the relating of a story in a novel
was either in the epistolary form (a series of letters), as in Richardson's Pamela,
or the picaresque form (adventurous wanderings) through the mouth of the
principal character, as in Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, but Fielding adopted "
the third-person narration," in which the author becomes the
"all-knowing God." He "thinks the thought" of all his
characters, so he is able-to present not only their external behaviors but also
the internal workings of their minds. In planning his stories, he tries to
retain the grand epical form of the classical works but at the same time keeps
faithful to his realistic presentation of common life as it is.
4. 领会:Characteristics of his
language
His language is easy, unlabored &
familiar, but extremely vivid & vigorous. His sentences are always
distinguished by logic & rhythm, & his structure carefully planned
towards an inevitable ending. His works are also noted for lively, dramatic
dialogues & other theatrical devices such as suspense, coincidence &
unexpectedness.
5.应用:Selected Reading
An Excerpt from chapter VIII, Book Four of Tom
Jones.
Tom Jones, generally considered Fielding's
masterpiece, brings its author the name of the "Pose Homer." The
panoramic view it provides of the 18th century English country & city life
with different places & about 40 characters is unsurpassed. The language is
one of clarity & suppleness. And last of all, the plot construction is
excellent. Its 18 books of epic form are divided into 3 sections, 6 books each,
clearly marked out by the change of scenes: in the country, on the high way
& in
VI. Samuel
Johnson
1. 一般识记:His life & literary
career
Samuel Johnson, English writer, critic, &
lexicographer, born in Richfield, England, Sept. 18.1709, and died in
Samuel Johnson, commonly called Dr. Johnson,
was one of the greatest figures of 18th-century English literature. He was an
energetic & versatile writer. He had a hand in all the different branches
of literary activities. He was a poet, dramatist, prose romancer, biographer,
essayist, critic, lexicographer & publicist.
2. 识记:His major works
His major works include poems:
"London"(1738), & "The vanity of Human Wishes"(1749); a
romance: The History of Rasselas, Prince of
Abyssinia (1759); a tragedy: Irene (1749); several hundred essays which
appeared in the two periodicals under his editorship-The Rambler & The
Idler; & literary criticism as found in the preface to his edition of
Shakespeare & in his comments on 52 poet in Lives of the Poets (1779-1781).
As a lexicographer, Johnson distinguished himself as the author of the first
English dictionary by an Englishman-A Dictionary of the English Language
(1755), a gigantic task which Johnson undertook single-handedly & finished
in over seven years.
3. 领会:His neoclassical
literary outlook &style
Samuel Johnson was the last great
neoclassicist enlightener in the late 18th century. He was very much concerned
with the theme of the vanity bear this theme. He tried to warn men against this
folly & hoped to care then of it through his writings. In literary creation
& criticism, be was rather conservative, openly showing his dislike for
some newly rising form of literature &his appreciation for those writings
which carried a lot of moralizing & his appreciation for those writings which
carried a lot of moralizing & philosophizing. He held that a writer must
adhere to universal truth & experience, i.e. Nature; he must please, but he
must also instruct; he must not offend against religion or promote immorality;
& he must let himself be guided by old principles. Like Pope, he was
particularly fond of moralizing & didacticism.
Samuel Johnson's language is
characteristically general, often Latinate & polysyllabic. His sentences
are long & well structured with parallel words & phrases. However, no
matter how complex his sentences are, his idea is always clearly expressed;
& though he tends to use "learned words," they are always
accurately used Reading his works gives the reader the impression that he is
talking with a very learned man.
4. 领会:His contribution to
English language-A Dictionary of the English Language
In 1746, a group of booksellers commissioned
Johnson to prepare a dictionary. Published in 1755, A dictionary of the
English Language was the first real attempt at a systematic &
interestingly written survey of English usage & the first dictionary to
quote from poets & other writers to illustrate definitions. On the whole,
the work showed great scholarship, although it contained humor & reflected
a number of Johnson's prejudices.
5. 应用:Selected Reading
To the Right
Honorable the Earl of chesterfield
The letter is written in a refined & very
polite language, with a bitter undertone of defiance & anger. The seemingly
peaceful retrospection, reasoning & questioning express, to the best satiric
effect, the author's strong indignation at the lord's fame-fishing & his
firm resolution not to be reconciled to the hypocritical lord. It expresses
explicitly the author's assertion of his independence, signifying the opening
of a new era in the development of literature.
VII. Richard
Brinsley Sheridan
1. 一般识记: His dramatic career
Richard B. Sheridan, British dramatist &
statesman, born in Dublin, Ireland, Oct. 30, 1751, and died in London, England,
July 7, 1816.
2识记The theme of his plays
Morality is the constant theme of Richard B.
3领会: His writing
techniques
Sheridan's greatness also lies in his
theatrical art. He seems to have inherited from his parents a natural ability
&inborn knowledge about the theatre. His plays are the product of a
dramatic genius as well as of a well-versed theatrical man. Though his dramatic
techniques are largely conventional. They are exploited to the best advantage. His
plots are well organized, his characters, either major or miner. Are all
sharply drawn, & his manipulation of such devices as disguise, mistaken
identity & dramatic irony is masterly. Witty dialogues & neat
&decent language also make a characteristic of his plays.
4领会:His major works
His plays, especially The Rivals & The
School for scandal, are generally regarded as important links between the
masterpieces of Shakespeare & those of Bernard Shaw, & as true classics
in English comedy. In The Rivals, a comedy of manners, he is satirizing the
traditional practice of the parents to arrange marriages for their children
without considering the latter's opinion. The school for Scandal is a sharp
satire on the moral degeneracy of the aristocratic-bourgeois society in the
18th century England, on the vicious scandal-mongering among the idle rich, on
the reckless life of extravagance & love intrigues in the high society, and
above all, on the immorality & hypocrisy behind the mask of honorable
living & high-sounding moral principles.
Besides The Rivals & The School for
Scandal, Sheridan's other works include: St. Patrick's Day, or
the Scheming Lieutenant (1775), a two act farce; The Duenna(1775),
a comic opera; The Critic(1779), a burlesque & a satire on
sentimental drama; & Pizarro (1799), a tragedy adapted from a German
play.
5应用:Select reading
An Excerpt from Act 4, Scene III of The School
for Scandal
1) Brief Introductions
The School for Scandal is mainly a
story about 2 brothers, the hypocritical Joseph Surface & the good-natured,
imprudent, spendthrift Charles Surface.
2) Theme
The School for Scandal is one of
the great classics in English drama. It is a sharp satire on the moral
degeneracy of the aristocratic-bourgeois society in the 18th-century England,
on the vicious scandal mongering among the idle rich, on the reckless life of
extravagance & love intrigues in the high society & above all, on the
immorality & hypocrisy behind the mask of honorable living &
high-sounding moral principles. And in terms of theatrical art, it shows the
playwright at his best. No wonder, the play has been regarded as the best
comedy since Shakespeare.
VIII. Thomas
Gray
1. 一般识记:His life
Thomas Gray (1716-1771), son of a London
exchange broker, was born in Cornhill, London on Dec.
26, 1716. He was first educated at
2. 识记: His major works
In contrast to those professional writers,
Gray's literary output was small. His masterpiece, "Elegy Written in a
Country Churchyard" was published in 1751. The poem once & for all
established his fame as the leader of the sentimental poetry of the day,
especially "the
In addition to his elegiac masterpiece, Gray
is known for his odes, including "Ode on the Spring"(1742), "Ode
on a Distant Prospect of Eton College"(1747), "Ode on the Death of a
Favorite Cat" (1748), "Hymn to Adversity"(1742), & two
translations from old Norse: The Descent of Odin(1761) & The
Fatal Sisters(1761).
3. 领会His style
A conscientious artist of the first rate, Gray
wrote slowly & carefully, painstakingly seeking perfection of form &
phrase. His poems are characterized by an exquisite sense of form. His style is
sophisticated & allusive. His poems are often marked with the trait of a
highly artificial diction & a distorted word order.
4. 应用:Selected Reading
"Elegy Written in a Country
Churchyard"
1) Theme: It is a meditation on
human mortality, the tragic dignity it gives to all mankind, & the stability
& serenity of rustic life. The Elegy lies in Gray's perfect expression of
what all men feel about life & death. In this poem, Gray reflects on death,
the sorrows of life & the mysteries of human life with a touch of his
personal melancholy. The poet compares the ordinary people with the great ones,
wondering what the commons could have achieved if they had had the chance. Here
he reveals his sympathy for the poor & the unknown, but mocks the great
ones who despise the poor & bring havoc on them.
2)Language
The poem abounds in images & arouses
sentiment in the bosom of every reader. Though the use of artificial poetic
diction & distorted word order make understanding of the poem somewhat
difficult, the artistic polish-the sure control of language, imagery, rhythm,
& his subtle moderation of style & tone-gives the poem a unique charm
of its own. The poem has been ranked among the best of the 18th century English
poetry.
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