Buchara state university m. Bakoeva, E. Muratova, M. Ochilova english literature
novels and two interludes, as the author calls them: “The Man of
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English literature
novels and two interludes, as the author calls them: “The Man of
Property” ( 1906), “In Chancery” ( 1920), “To Let” (1 921 ), ”Awak- ening” (interlude), “Indian Summer of a Forsyte” (interlude). “T h e Forsyte S aga” is follow ed by “ A M odern C om edy” , also a trilogy, consisting o f three novels and two interludes: ’’The W hite M onkey” (1924), “T he Silver Spoon” (1926), “T he Swan Song” (1 9 2 8 ), “ A S ile n t W ooing” (in terlu d e ), “ P assers-b y ” (interlude). T he trilogy called “ End o f the C harter” , w ritten at a later period, is less critical. T he three novels are: ’’M aid in W aiting” (1 9 3 1), “ Flow ering W ilderness” (1 932), “O ver the River” (1 933). In the first trilogy, which was written in the most m ature period o fh is literary activity, Galsworthy describes the com m ercial world o f the Forsytes, and in particular, the m ain character, Soam es Forsyte, “the m an o f property” . The first part o f “ The Forsyte Saga” (“The Man o f Property”) attains the highest point o f social criticism . The central characters o f the novel are the Forsytes o f the first generation and the m em bers o f their fam ilies. T hey are shareholders and rich ow ners o f apartm ent houses in the best parts o f London. T heir sole aim in life is accum ulation o f w ealth. Their views on life are based fundamentally on a sense o f prop^^ty. T he m ost typical representative o f the second generation oi the Forsytes is Jam es’ son, Soames, whom old Jolyon called the man o f property. In his nature, views, habits and aspiration he perfectly incarnated all the features o f Forsytism . He is firm ly convinced that property alone is the stable basis o f life. His human re la tio n s and feelin g s are also su b o rc in a te d to the sen se o f property. Hav ing m arried Irene, Soam es experiences the greatest pleasure and satisfaction at the thought i:hat she is his property. T he main idea that runs through the novel is the conflict o f the Forsytes w ith A rt and Beauty. Irene personifies B eauty and th e y o u n g a rc h ite c t, B o sin n e y w h o fa lls in love w ith her, im personates Ari. The conflict betw een B osinney and Soam es arose in connection with the building o f a house at Robin Hill. In the second part o f “The Forsyte Saga” (“ In C hancery”) the action refers to the end o f the 19th century and the beginning o f the-20th century. In the concluding part o f “The Forsyte Saga” (“To L et” ) the action takes place after the First World War. T he Forsyte novels are highly valued for the truthful portrayal o f the social and personal life. The cycle is considered to be the peak o f the au th o r’s realism . In his later w orks, “A M odern C om edy” and “T he E nd o f the C hapter”, w ritten after the World W ar I, G alsw orthy’s criticism becom es less sharp. The old generation o f the Forsytes does not seem so bad to the author as com pared to the new one. D uring his progress through six novels and four interludes Soam es be com es alm ost a positive character, in spite o f the a u th o r’s critical attitude tow ards him at the beginning o f the Saga. G alsw orth y’s hum anitarian concerns also led him to w rite plays about the social problem s o f h is tim e. From 1909 he p ro duced in turn plays and novels. His plays deal with burning prob lem s o f life. T he au th o r d esc rib es the hard life o f w o rk ers ( ’’Strife” ), attacks the cruel regime in English prisons ( ” J u stice” ), expresses his indignation tow ards w ars ( ’’The M o b” ), rejects the colonial policy o f G reat B ritain (“T he Forest”), and presents som e other aspects o f evils and injustice. G alsw orthy’s p lays were very popular. B ut it is not his dram atic works, but his novels and “T he Forsyte Saga” in particular, th at m ade him one o f the g reat est figures in w orld literature. Questions and Tasks 1. Wrhy is H erbert G eorge Wells called the great English w riter w ho looked into the future? 2. W'hat is the contribution o f Wells to w orld literature? 3. W hat was W ells’ attitude tow ards scientific progress? 4. W hat are the c h ie f characteristics o f G alsw orthy’s w orks? 5. W hy do w e call “T he Forsyte Saga” a social novel? 6. C om m ent on the title o f the novel “The Man o f P roperty” . 7. W hat is the difference betw een the novels w ritten by H erbert Wells and John G alsw orthy? UNIT 9 TWENTIETH CENTURY ENGLISH LITERATURE (1915-2000) 1. The Twenties of the Twentieth century. T he 1920s w ere not a tranquil period for B ritain. M assive unem ploym ent w as created by the return o f hundreds o f thou sands o f veterans to civilian life. English literature changed in both form and subject m atter betw een the end o f W orld W ar I in 1918 and the beginning o f W'orld W ar II in 1939. The terrible d estru ctian o f World W ar I left many people with the feeling that society w as falling apart. T he 20lh century English literature is rem arkable for a great diversity o f artistic values and artistic m ethods. Follow ing the rapid int roduction o f new m odes o f thought in natural science, sociology and psychology, it has naturally reacted to absorb and transform this m aterial into literary com m unication. Fundam en tal political, social and econom ic changes in the w orld and, par ticularly, in G reat Britain deeply affected the creative w riting o f the new century. T he w orks o f such w riters as H.F. W ells, Ber nard Shaw, John Galsworthy, Arnold Bennet, Joseph Conrad, E.M. Forster, K atherine M ansfield show ed an earnest desire to express the feelings arid thoughts o fth e B ritish people. It was the basis o f their approach to literature. T h at’s w hy their w orks becam e a new investm ent in the heritage o f English realism and stim ulated its fu rth e r d ev e lo p m e n t. In the sh o rt-sto ry g en re th e art o f K atherine M ansfield is a significant contribution to the traditions o f English realism . 2. English Literature in the 1930s and 1940s A new generation o f realist w riters, am ong them R ichard A ldington, John Boynton Priestley and A rchibald Joseph Cronin appeared on the literary scene betw een 1930 and W orld War II. T he w orld econom ic depression th at began in the late 1920s had catastrophic effects in highly industrialized and heavily popu lated B ritain. In tw o years exports and im ports declined 35 per cent, and unem ploym ent reached three million. T he Second World War, w hich began in Septem ber, 1939, w ith H itler’s invasion o f Poland, w as disastrous for Britain and her allies. During 1939 and 1940 N azi G erm any m astered Europe. O nly Britain under the leadership o f W inston C hurchill rem ained to oppose Hitler. B ut B ritons heroically withstood the bom bardm ent o f their cit ies. With the entry o f th e L nited States into the war, and the fa il ure o f the G en n an invasion o f the Soviet U nion, the tide began to turn. A lthough B ritain and her allies w ere eventually victorious, the postw ar years w ere extrem ely hard. T he country was nearly bankrupt, and recovery wa s slow. O f the new poets w riting dur ing this period, the m ost im portant and influential w as W.H. Auden. D uring the 1930s, which he characterized as a “ low, d is honest decade,” A uden w as the acknow ledged leader o f a circle o f w riters w ho aligned them selves w ith the political left and at tem pted to expose the social and econom ic ills o f their country. A lthough they considered them selves the creators o f a new po etic tradition, the influence o f H opkins, Yeats, and Eliot on these young w riters is great. Especially, it m ay be observed in th eir use o f precise and suggestive images, ironic understatem ent, and plain speech. William Butler Yeats (1865-1939) W illiam B utler Yeats is considered by m any critics to be the greatest poet w riting in English in the 20th century. He provides a bridge from ihe V ictorian Age into the tw entieth century. His early R om antic w ork, produced before the century turned, gradu ally becam e m ore realistic. W. E.. Y eats, an Irish p o et an d d ra m a tis t, w as b o rn in Sandym ount, Ireland. His father w as a painter. Yeats attended school in D ublin. B eginning as an art student, he soon gave up art fo r literature. A t tw enty-one, he published his first w ork ■‘M osada”, a dram a w ritten in verse. D uring the 1890s and 1900s he published m any volum es o f poem s, w hich w ere sym bolic in m anner, draw ing his im agery from Irish myth and folklore. T he m ost im portant collections o f that period were: “ The W andering o f O isin” (1891), “T he Wind A m ong the R eeds” (1899), “The R ose” (1903), "G reen H elm et and O ther Poem s” (1912). For centuries Ireland had been an English colony, its econom y exploited and its native culture suppressed. Yeats’ early poem s and his book on Irish folk tales, “T he C eltic Tw ilight” (1893), w ere in sart political acts. W.B. Yeats contributed a great deal to the Irish national th e atre. W riting for the stage im pressed Yeats with the im portance o f p re cise, sp are language. His b est know n plays are “T he C ountess C athleen” (1892), “D eirdre” (1907). The latter derived from C eltic m ythology. During the 1920s Yeats becam e m ore prom inent in both policy and literature. H e becam e a senator in the Irish Free State in 1922 and in 1923 received the N oble Prize for Literature. In 1925 Yeats published his m ajor philosophical and historical prose w ork “ A V ision” . W hile many poets produced their finest work during their early years, Yeats w as one o f those rare poets w ho created their great est poem s after the age o f fifty. He began his poetic career as a R om antic and finished it as a poet o f the m odem world. His early w ork was strongly influenced by Blake and Shelley, by the French Symbol sts, and Irish m ythology. T hese early poem s w ere often sim ple, rom antic, m usical, and dream like. In the m iddle o f h i s career, his pee try becam e less dream like and m ore realistic. His tone becam e m ore conver sational and his im agery more econom i cal. In the last stages o f h is poetic career, his interest in historical cycles becam e dom inant. Thus, the evolution o f Yeats art never ceased. The poems written w hen he was an old man (“T he Tower”, 1928, “T he W inding Stair”, 1920) are the m ost audacious. Below, you will read one o f W illiam B utler Y eats’ poem s. It is believed that Yeats w rote this poem for M ajor R obert Gregory, the son o f h is friend Lady A ugusta Gregory. M ajor G regory, an artist and aviator, was killed in action over Italy during W orld W ar I w hile flying for E ngland’s Royal Flying C orps. An Irishman Foresees His Death I know that I shall m eet m y fate Som ew here am ong th e clouds above; T hose th at 1 fight I do not hate, T hose that I guard I do not lo v e;1 M y country is K iltarten2 C ross, M y countrym en K iltarten ’s poor, N o likely end could bring them loss O r leave them happier than before. N o r law, nor duty bade me fight, N o r public men, nor cheering crow ds, A lonely im pulse c f delight D rove to this tum ult in the clouds; I balanced all, brought all to m y m ind, T he years to com e seem ed w aste o f breath, A w aste o f breath the years behind In balance with this life, this death. “Modernist” Poetry and Prose T he achievem ent o f m odern B ritish literature lies in the de v e lo p m e n t o f th e sh o rt sto ry (K a th e rin e M a n s fie ld ), n ew m ovem ents in poetry (T.S. Eliot), exciting experim ents in fiction (Ja m e s J o y c e ), and d ra m a w o rth y o f the n a tio n th a t b re d Shakespeare. 1 . T hose th a t I g u a rd I do not love: In the World War 1 Ireland was technically neutral and wa;; going on struggle for independence from England. But many Irish volunteered to fight on the English side. 2 . K ilta rte n : a village near the estate o f the Gregory famiiy. M odern literature is characterized by great differences from the past in both form and content. N ew rhythm s, especially in free verse, w ere invented. The developm ent o f psychology brought psychological realism into literature: w riters attem pted to show not only w hat their c h a ra c te rs th o u g h t b u t ho w th ey th o u g h t. T h e stre a m -o f- consciousness technique, and various m odifications o f it, created a new attitude tow ard w riting and reading. T he subject m atter o f literature changed too. With the shocks o f the w ars, technological advances, and greater social freedom , w riters realized that they could and should w rite about anything. N o sub ject w as too d ignified or und ig n ified , too fa m iliar or rem ote, to appear in a m odern poem or novel. The revolution in poetry had its cou nterpart in fiction. The novelists o f th e eighteenth and nineteenth centuries had w ritten w ithin a defined social context to an audien ce that shared sim ilar values and beiiefs. M odernist w riters perceived hum an beings as living in private w orlds and th ere fo re took as th e ir ta sk the illum ination o f individual experience. N ovelists like Jam es Joyce and Virginia W oolf attem pted to reproduce the authentic character o f hum an subjectivity, the so-called stream of consciousness Following World War 1, w riters such asT .S . Eliot, W.H. Auden, D ylan Thom as and their follow ers brought about a revolution in poetic taste and practice. Like the painters influenced by cubism and abstract expressionism o r com posers influenced by the atonal w orks o f Stravinsky, Schoenberg, and Bartok, “m odernist” poets developed new techniques to express their vision o f the postw ar world. W hile some o f them are difficult, m odern poetry as a whole em ploys the language o f com m on speech to provide rich insights into the people and events o f m odem life. Intellectua I com plexity, allusiveness and intricacy o f form are characteristics o f m odern poetry. W hen you read these w orks you com e across lines from foreign languages or allusions you d o n ’t recognize. For exam ple, som e o f E liots poem s, such as “The Flallow M en” have epigraphs th at need to be interpreted and applied to the poem. W.H. Auden, in his elegy “In Memory o f W.B. Yeats”, presum es know ledge o f the life o f Yeats and political events o f the 1930s. In such cases the footnotes help y ou by providing such inform ation. M odern poets usually use language that is fresh, exact, and innovative. In “Fern H ill”, for exam ple, D ylan T hom as, regects cliche, and w rites “once below a tim e” instead o f “once upon a tim e” and “All the m oon long” instead o f “All the night long” . M odern poetry is m usical, sensual, and surprising. It also highly varied in subject matter. M odern poets have exercised the freedom to w rite about any subject they please. To com pensate for the limitations o f syllabic rhyme, they have resorted to frequent use o f consonantal, assonantal, and half-rhym es. M odern poets have sought above all to create poetry that will be appreciated for its form and m usic as w ell as m eaning. P oet, c ritic , and d ra m a tis t, T.S. E lio t, w a s th e le a d in g spokesm an for the m odernist poetry that em erged in the 1920s. T h is p o e try is c h a r a c te r iz e d by in te lle c tu a l c o m p le x ity , allusiveness, precise use o f im ages, and pessim ism. James Joyce (1882-1941) Jam es Joyce is regarded to be the m ost original and influential w riter o f the tw entieth century. Irishm an by birth, he ex ercised a considerable influence upon m odern English and A m erican lit erature. He w as bom in Dublin, the eldest o f a fam ily o f ten children. His father w as a civil servant, continually in financial difficulties. For several years Joyce attended C longow es Wood College, be fore his fam ily’s increasing poverty m ade that impossible. He later attended U niversity C ollege, Dublin, w here he was a brilliant scholar, accom plished in Latin, French, Italian and Norwegian. W hile he w as still ari undergraduate he began w riting lyrical poem s, w hich w ere collected in “C ham ber M usic” (1907). Upon graduation from the U niversity in 1902, Joyce lived for a tim e in Paris w here h e contributed book review s to Dublin new spapers. A fter a b rie f return to Dublin for his m o th er’s burial, he moved to the continent w ith N o ra B arnacle to spend the rest o fh is life in Paris, Trieste, Rom e and Zurich. In 1909 and 1912, Joyce m ade his last tw o trips to Ireland to a rra n g e th e p u b lic a tio n o f a c o lle c tio n o f fifte e n sto rie s “D ubliners”, the dom inant mood o f w hich w as realistic. T he work was published only in 1914. Joyce said th at his purpose in w riting the sh o rt sto ries co llected in “ D u b lin ers” w as to produce “a chapter o fth e m oral history o f my country and I chose D ublin for the scene because the city seemed to me the center o f paralysis” . He w anted lo give “the Irish people ... one good look a t them s e lv e s in m y n ic e ly p o lish e d lo o k in g g la s s ” . T he s ty le o f “ D ubliners” m arks a sharp break with the fiction o f the nineteenth century. Joyce located the center o f the action in the m inds o fh is characters;. Incident and plot are subordinated to psychological revelation. Each w ord has, as well as detail, a calculated pur pose, and the m eaning o f the story is presented as an e p ip h a n y - a m om ent o f heightened aw areness that can occur as a result o f a trivial encounter, object, or event. F or exam ple, in “A raby”, one o f “ Dubliners"’ short stories, epiphany occurs in the final para graph and runs as follow ing “G azing up into the darkness I saw m y self as a creature driven and derided by vanity; and m y eyes burned with anguish and anger.” In 1916 his partly autobiographical novel “A Portrait o f the A rtist as a Y oung M an” and in 1922 his m ost fam ous novel “ Ulysses” w ere published. Ulysses” is a dazzling original attempt to tell the story o f group o f D ubliners 011 a single day and at the sam e tim e present a sym bolic view o f hum an history. Seven hun dred pages o f the novel relate o f one day in the life o f tw o D ubliners w ho are not acquainted. L eopold B loom , an advertis ing agent, anc1 Stephen D edalus, a poet and teacher, ram ble in the streets o f Dublin; the paths o f these tw o m en cross and re-cross through the day and finally they m eet only for a leave-taking. The book is built on parallel from H om er’s Odyssey, i.e. each chapter revives an incident from H om er’s epic and each character has a H om eric prototype. In “ U lysses”, rendering the w orkings o fh is character’s minds, Joyce introduced the so-called stream o f consciousness technique recording th e flow o f their thoughts and sensations with all the com plex associations attached to them . The rem aining seventeen years o fh is life Joyce worked on his next novel “Finnegans Wake” (1 9 3 9 ). T h e b o o k c a rrie d th e s ty lis tic e x p e rim e n ta tio n o f “U lysses” further. Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) V irginia W oolf w as bom in a large and talented family. H er father, Sir L eslie Stephen, w as a distinguished literary critic and historian. She w as educated at hom e by h er father. A fter his death she moved to London with h er brother and sister. T heir hom es in the Bloom sbury district, near the British M useum , be cam e the m eeting places o f the so-called “ B loom sbury G roup” , a fam ous group o f intellectuals. One o f the m em bers o f the group w as the w riter Leonard Woolf, whom! she m arried in 1912. In 1917 they founded the Hogarth Press, w hich published her books as well as those o f a num ber o f other im portant m odern w riters, like T.S. Eliot and E.M. Forster. Virginia W oolf began her w riting career as a literary critic. She used her review s and essays to prom ote her opinions about w hat fiction should be. She thought that w riters could get close to real life only by basing their w ork on their own feelings. In 1915 she began to put her theories into practice in her first novel “ The Voyage O ut” . T his novel reveals signs o f its autho r’s search and experience to find new forms o f expression. During the 1920s her w ork becam e increasingly experim ental. Her stories and sketches “ M onday or Tuesday” (1921) show her developing • impressionistic style and bringing some o f the techniques o f lyrical poetry into prose. In novels like “ Mrs. D allow ay” (1925), “To the L ighthouse” (1927), and “The W aves” (1931), she rebels against the social fiction o f the prew ar period with its em phasis on detailed descriptions o f character and setting. Instead she at tem pted to ex p ress the tim e le ss in n e r co n sc io u sn e ss o f her characters. Influenced by Jam es Jo y ce’s ‘ U lysses” she used the techniques o f “ stream o f consciousness” and “ inner m onologue” m oving from one ch a rac te r to a n o th e r to v ariety o f m ental responses to th e sam e event. T h u s, W o o l f s w o rk w as a d e lib e ra te a tte m p t to b reak conventions o f fiction. She saw life not in neatly arranged series o f m ajor events, but in a process people lived every day. T h at’s w h y h e r f ic tio n a v o id s p lo t a n d in s te a d d e a ls w ith th e consciousness o f characters and reveals th e essence o f their lives. The outbreak o f World War II was a shattering event for Woolf. N evertheless, she m anaged to com plete a brief, enigm atic final novel “ B etw een the A cts” (1941). The book is about the eternal England, the beautiful threatened civilization w hich she had alw ays loved. On M arch 28, 1941 V irginia W oolf, acutely d e pressed by the constant G erm an bom bing o f England, com m itted suicide (drow ned herself). Katherine Mansfield (1888 - 1923) K atherine M ansfield, the daughter o f a w ealthy bunker, was bom in N ew Zealand and educated in London at Q ueen’s College. A talented cellist, she studied m usic at the Royal A cadem y o f M usic, bu t later realized that her true calling w as w riting, not m usic. In 1911, through a chance m eeting in Germ any, she be cam e friend to the well known literary critic and editor John M iddleton Murry. T hey w ere m arried in 1918. By th e end o f the war, she had becom e an invalid, m oving from clim ate to clim ate for relief from incurable tuberculosis. She died in France on Janu ary 9,1923, at the age o f thirty four. She began to w rite at an early age. H er contribution to English literature mainly makes the form o f short stories. Katherine M ansfield’s first stories and sketches were published in the peri odical “T he N ew Age”, to which she became a regular contributor. H er first story “Prelude” written in 1918 m ade her fam ous. Her second book, the collection o f stories “Bliss and O ther Stories” was published in 1921. H er third collection “The G arden Party and O ther Stories” appeared a year later. K atherine M an sfie ld ’s style w as often com pared to that o f Chekhov. Like him she w rote stories, w hich depended m ore on atm osphere, character, and nuances o f language than on plot. T he stories o f K atherine M ansfield are not tales o f action, nor have they com plicated plots. She describes human conduct in quite ordinary situations. Yet, they are expressive o f a vast range. M any o fh e r stories cen ter on children and on old people in isolated circum stances and are deeply affecting in their sym pathetic portrayal o f the lonely, the rejected, and the victim ized. For exam ple, in her short story “T he D oll’s H ouse” the au thor show s how the snobbery o f the adults has intruded into the world o f children and has made them selfish and cruel. The Kelvey girls are isolated from the other schoolgirls, because they are poor and their father is in prison. T he girls o f the story (Em m ie C ole, Isabel Burnell, Lena Logan, Jessie M ay) exhibit a high degree o f class consciousness and snobbery. The isolation o f the Kelveys is described in the follow ing way: “M any o fth e children, including the B urnells, w ere not allow ed even to speak to them. They w alked past the Kelveys with their heads in the air, and as they set the fashion in all m atters o f behavior, the Kelveys w ere shunned by everybody. Even the teacher had a special voice for them , and a special smile for the other children when Lil Kelvey cam e up to her w ith a bunch o f dreadfully com m on-looking flow ers.” From all the girls only the Kelveys w ere not allow ed to see the m arvelous d o ll’s house, which was presented to the Burnell children. “O nly the little Kelveys m oved away forgotten; there w as nothing m ore for them to hear.” The story is very short but it provokes a deep feeling o f sym pathy in th e hearts o f readers. The social cruelty to which the K elveys are subjected by the children and adults around is represented skillfull)'. K atherine M ansfield regarded C hekhov as her literary teacher. In collaboration with K otelansky she translated C hekhov’s dia ries and letters into English. Once she called h erself “the English C hekhov” . But differing from Chekhov, K atherine M ansfield de clares that life m ust be taken as it is. She does not see any necessity to change it. Her w riting is objective, but the reader can easily feel her sym pathies and antipathies. She is very sensitive to class d istin c tions, and her sym pathy is alw ays on the side o f the poor. A ny kind o f selfishness and pretence on the part o f the rich people is treated with ironic objectivity. H er short story “A Cup o f Tea” is an exam ple o f it. “A Cup of Tea” The principal character o f the story is R osem ary Fell. The author characterizes her in the follow ing way: “R osem ary Fell was not exactly beautiful. N o, you co u ld n ’t have called her beautiful. Pretty? Well, if you took her to pieces... But w hy be so cruel as to take anyone to pieces? She was young, brilliant, extrem ely m odem , exquisitely w ell dressed, am azingly well read in the new est o f the new books, and her parties w ere the m ost delicious m ixtures o f the really im portant people... R osem ary had been m arried two years. She had a duck o f a boy. N o, not Peter-M ichael. And her husband absolutely adored her. They w ere rich, really rich, not ju s t com fortably well off...” Thus, R osem ary is so rich, that can buy anything, and can go anyw here she w ants. O nce, returning hom e after shopping, she meets a girl. In contrast to Rosem aiy, the girl is absolutely poor and helpless. She has nothing even to eat: “... a young girl, thin, dark, shadow y - w here had she com e from? - w as standing at R osem ary’s elbow and a voice like a sigh, alm ost like a sob, breathed: “ M adam , may I speak to you a m om ent?” “Speak to m e?” R osem aiy turned. She saw a little: battered creature with enorm ous eyes, som eone quite young, no older than herself, w ho clutched at her coat-collar with reddened hands, and shivered as though she had ju st com e out o f the water. “M -m adam ,” stam m ered the voice. “W ould you lei m e have the price o f a cup o f tea?” “ A cup o f tea?” T here w as som ething sim ple, sincere in that voice; it w a sn ’t in the least the voice o f a beggar. “T hen have you no m oney at all?” asked Rosemary. “N one, m adam ,” cam e the answer. “ H ow extraordinary!” R osem ary peered through the dusk and the girl gazed back at her. H ow m ore than extraordinary! And suddenly it seem ed to R osem ary such an adventure. It was like som ething out o f a novel by Dostoyevsky, this m eeting in the dusk. S upposing she took the girl hom e? S upposing she did do one o f w hat would happen? It would be thrilling. A nd she heard h erself saying afterw ards to the am azem ent o f h e r friends: “ I sim ply took her hom e with m e,” as she stepped forw ard and said to that dim person beside her: “C om e hom e to tea w ith m e.” Rosem ary brings the poor girl home to let her have a cup o f tea there. But after a remark m ade by her husband that the girl is pretty, R osem ary’s helpfulness disappears. Her sym pathy to the poor girl is showy, superficial, not real. She wants to help the poor thing only because she wants to boast o f her generous gestures. W illia m S o m e rse t M a u g h a m (1874 - 1965) Н К Ш Ш Ш Ш й W illiam Som erset M augham is one o f the best know n English w rite rs o f th e 2 0 lh century. H e w as no t only a n o v e list o f considerable rank, but also one o fth e most successful dram atists and short story w riters. His first novel “L iza o f L am beth” cam e out in 1897, and he w ent on producing books Download 4.1 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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