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wgolding.lordoftheflies-第45部分

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 Is Golding Calvinistic?1
 A more optimistic interpretation of the 
 symbolism found in Lord of the Flies
 THOMAS MARCELLUS COSKREN; O。 P。
 
 IN an issue of America last winter; two critics gave their interpretations of William Golding's remarkably successful Lord of the Flies。2 While the approach of each of these critics differed; Mr。 Kearns being concerned with the sociopolitical implications of the work and Fr。 Egan with the theological; both reached the same conclusion: Lord of the Flies presents the Calvinist view of man as a creature essentially depraved。 As one of the professors who has placed the novel on his required reading list; I should like to raise a dissenting voice。
 While I am prepared to admit that Lord of the Flies is hardly the most optimistic book that has appeared in recent times; I find it difficult to accept the conclusion reached by Fr。 Egan and Mr。 Kearns。 Both; it seems to me; have left too much of the novel unexplained; indeed; their view of the work seems to render important sections inexplicable。 If Golding has presented man as essentially depraved; why are three of his four major characters good people? Granted that Ralph; Piggy and Simon possess a limited goodness; the condition of all men; they are decidedly boys of high
 
 1。This article is reprinted with permission from America; the National Catholic Weekly Review; 920 Broadway; New York City。 It appeared in the issue of July 6; 1963; Volume 109; pp。 18…20。
 2。Francis E。 Kearns; 〃Salinger and Golding: Conflict on the Campus;〃 America; 108 (January 26; 1963); 136…39; and John M。 Egan; 〃Golding's View of Man;〃 140…41。…Eds。
 
 purpose; who use good means to achieve their ends。 Jack may strike many as the perfect symbol of essentially depraved man; but he is only one out of four。 Three…to…one seems a rather impressive ratio favoring at least a limited goodness in the human munity。
 Moreover; if Golding hesitates 〃to view evil in a religious framework;〃 as Mr。 Kearns says; why is Simon; on the symbolic level; so cleverly identified with Christ? 3 In fact; this identification is so obvious that one is tempted to agree with Kearns' statement about Lord of the Flies being 〃too neatly symbolic; too patently artistic。〃 Certainly; the very presence of a Christ…figure in the novel; a presence which pervades the work; implies some kind of religious framework。
 Again; if man were not good or innocent at some time in the long history of the race; why should Ralph at the end of the novel weep 〃for the end of innocence; the darkness of man's heart; and the fall through the air of the true; wise friend called Piggy〃? Ralph weeps for an innocence that man once possessed; he laments the loss of goodness; and this is not some vague goodness; but the palpable goodness in his 〃true; wise friend。〃
 Thus far; the objections I have offered to the view presented by Mr。 Kearns and Fr。 Egan concern only the characters in Lord of the Flies。 These objections are serious enough; but there are others which demand examination by the critic。 If the world into which these characters have been placed is; as Fr。 Egan states; a universe that is 〃a cruel and irrational chaos;〃 why does Golding indicate; with almost obsessive attention to detail; the pattern; the order of the island world which the boys inhabit? Throughout the novel we find natural descriptions which use metaphors from the world of manufacturing。
 In other words; the universe of Lord of the Flies is one that has been made; created。 The novel is filled with phrases like the following: 〃a great platform of pink granite〃; 〃a criss…cross pattern of trunks〃; 〃the palms 。 。 。 made a green roof 〃; 〃the incredible lamps of stars。〃 Further; Golding's adjectives indicate an ordered universe。 This indication is especially apparent after the terrible storm acpanying Simon's death。 In this section he uses such words as 〃angu…
 
 2。Cf。 Donald R。 Spangler's 〃Simon〃 on pp。 211…215 in this volume。 See also Golding's remarks on Simon in the interview with James Keating; p。 192。…Eds。
 
 lar〃 and 〃steadfast〃 to describe the constellations。 If William Golding's universe is 〃a cruel and irrational chaos;〃 he has certainly chosen most inappropriate words to describe it。
 Basically; it seems to me; the real difficulty with the interpretation of Lord of the Flies offered by Fr。 Egan and Mr。 Kearns is its failure to treat the novel as a whole。 William Golding's novel is not antihuman; it is anti…Rousseau。 It does not portray human nature as such; it presents human nature as infected with the romantic chimera of inevitable human progress; a progress which will be achieved because of the innate nobility and innocence of the human species。 In theological terms; which are perhaps the most accurate critical tools for explaining this novel; Lord of the Flies is not so much Manichean as it is anti…Pelagian。 A more detailed analysis should help to show this anti…Pelagian character of the work。
 Lord of the Flies begins with all the paraphernalia of the romantic; and sentimental; preconceptions that owe so much to Rousseau's social philosophy。 In the first chapter we are presented with a group of children; the contemporary world's symbol of innocence。 They are placed on a tropical island; an earthly paradise; Rousseau's habitat for the 〃noble savage。〃 But these boys are not Adam…figures; they are not innocent。 Each of them; in varying degrees; reflects the influence of the serpent…which; by the way; is introduced in the first chapter when Ralph unfastens 〃the snake…clasp of his belt。〃 Here begins the terrible irony that runs through the whole novel。 Romantic man thinks he can rid himself of evil merely by taking off his clothes; the symbol of civilization and its effects。
 
 In this superficially idyllic munity; made up of refugees from an atomic war; we discover Golding's four major characters: Ralph; Piggy; Jack and Simon。 It is with these characters that Golding's symbolism bees somewhat more plex than either Mr。 Keams or Fr。 Egan suggests。 Lord of the Flies is essentially a fable about contemporary man and contemporary ideas。 Thus; Ralph is not only the symbol of the decent; sensible parliamentarian; he is also me figure of an idea: the abstract concept of democratic government。 The same double role is filled by the other characters: Jack is at once the dictator and the concept of dictatorship; Piggy is the intellectual; with all his powers and deficiencies; and representative of the Enlightenment or scientific method。 Finally; Simon is the mystic and poet; who is also a Christ…figure and thus the symbol of religious faith。 The symbolism of Lord of the Flies; therefore; functions on a number of levels; and it seems to be an injustice to Golding's extraordinary dexterity in handling these multiple levels to reduce them to one level; that of universal human nature。
 Golding suggests the plexity of these symbolic figures in their physical descriptions。 Ralph is 〃the boy with fair hair 'who has' a mildness about his mouth and eyes that proclaimed no devil。〃 On the literal level we have the good boy; the 〃solid citizen。〃 As such; Ralph engages our sympathies。 And on the most obvious symbolic level he still has our sympathies; for he represents the decent; sensible parliamentarian; the political ideal of the Western world。
 But on another; and deeper; level Golding has introduced an ironic twist。 The symbolic value Ralph possesses as the abstract concept of the democratic process is presented as a challenge to the reader。 If; as the Western world seems to believe; the democratic process of government is the best devised by man throughout his history; why doesn't it work always and everywhere? It is at this level that Golding suggests symbolically the inadequacy; not the depravity; of the solely human; it is at this level that he directs his devastatingly ironic mentary on the Rousseauvian myth of the general will and its unproved presupposition of the natural goodness of the human species。
 In effect; Golding's modern fable puts Rousseau's social contract to the test: Lord of the Flies takes man back to the primitive condition of things; which the French social reformer had advocated as the one sure way of restoring man to his proper dignity。 Then it shows that; far from being naturally good; man has some type of defect for which civilization is not responsible。 Rousseau's social philosophy fails the test; and the essentially confused notion of nature which Rousseau bequeathed to the contemporary world is exposed for the fraud that it is。
 Moreover; the irony implicit in Ralph's inadequacy is extended to the other characters; either as they participate in the same inadequacy or as they question symbolically the solution offered for human ills by Ralph's faith in Rousseauvian democracy。 Piggy participates in the 〃grand design〃 of restoration。 As a figure of the Enlightenment; he cannot accept the extremes of romanticism; and he votes for Ralph only 〃grudgingly〃; but he will use the more popular romantic concept of government and will try to direct ft。 Yet; even with his discerning rational assessment of the problem of forming a government for the refugees; his inherent weaknesses are evident Ultimately; he is destroyed; not because his intellectual gifts are depraved; but because he falls into the mistaken belief that they are sufficient unto themselves。 Piggy is intelligent enough; for example; to question Ralph's blind faith in rescue by the military (a scathing mentary on the Western democracies' current worship at the shrine of Cape Canaveral); but he remains blind to the limitations of his own reason。
 Jack and Simon; on the other hand; are not taken in by the Rousseauvian solution。 Jack's approach to the human condition is much too twisted for even the remotest parison with the idealism; fanciful though it is; implicit in Rousseau; Simon's view of humanity is so penetrated with realistic self…appraisal that he transcends the idealism of the French reformer。 Jack descends to the subhuman; Simon soars to the superhuman。 While Ralph and Piggy exemplify ironically the 〃noble savage;〃 Jack and Simon provide the necessary counterpoint; Jack exploits the savagery; and Simon explores the nobility。
 And it is probably through the figure of Jack that William Golding pronounces his severest condemnation of the romantic myth of human progress。 For; in the last analysis; it is the dictator who has benefited most from Rousseau's social view。 When man's efforts toward progress and eventual fulfillment; however altruistic his motivation; proceed from sloppy thinking; then brute force takes over to direct the course of progress and subverts even the good in human nature to its own destructive ends。
 Yet; Golding is not interested merely in the altruism or the subversion; between these two forces in contemporary civilization he places the figure of Simon。 He introduces him to the reader in somewhat melodramatic fashion: the boy faints。 In this; the first of Simon's actions; we have a possible ironic twist on Swinburne's famous line: 〃Thou hast conquer'd; O pale Galilean; the world has grown gray from thy breath。〃 It is obvious from Simon's subsequent history that he is a Christ…figure; and the romantic view of
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