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'ér Oliver Twist
zuòzhě: chá 'ěr · gèng Charles Dickens
   shì shēng zài shí jiǔ shì de yīng guózài hán lěng de shēn yīng guó lún dūn de píng mín yīng 'ér gāng gāng chū shì qīn biàn kāi liǎo rén shìshuí zhī dào chǎn shì shuí xià de 'ér biàn chéng liǎo míng de 'ér 'ér bèi běn jiào huì shōu liúyóu guǎn shì yǎnggěi liǎo míng jiào 'ào
  
   ào jiǔ suì de shí hòu néng xiàng yòu qián rén jiā hái yàng jìn xué xiào niàn shū guǎn shì hái sòng jìn gōng chǎng tóng gōng gànlì shèng rèn de huóbìng qiě ràng chī bǎoxìng juéjiàng de 'ào bèi jiā tuī wéi dài biǎo chū zēng jiā liáng shí de yào qiúgōng chǎng de zhí yuán jīng shī biàn yuàn shōu liú 'ào yǐng xiǎng tóng gōng
  
   dāng shíbìn guǎn de lǎo bàn sēn zhèng yào xué biàn huā liǎo jīn bàng lǐng liǎo chū ào huàn liǎo xīn huán jìngshēng huó guò shāo hǎo liǎo xiē cān jiā chū bìn hánglièxíng dòng guīju lǎo bàn hěn mǎn dàn zāo dào niánzhǎng xué de xiào rén ào rěn rěn quán dǒulǎo bǎn jiāng bēi fèn tián xiōngxīng chū zǒu lián xíng liǎo tiāncái dào lún dūn
  
   qīn hán jiāo zài jué wàng zhōng dào liǎo shàonián dài dào dòng bài de zhè yuán lái shì cáng fěi dào de zéi shǒu gēn jiàn 'ào cōng míng líng hěn shì huānbiàn yào shàng jiē tōu qiè liào shī shǒu bèi xiànào xīn tuǐ táo páojiēguǒ bèi rén zhuā jìn liǎo jǐng zéi shǒu gēn tīng shuō 'ào bèi zhuātòng yòngyòu dān xīn 'ào zài jǐng zhāo rènbiàn lìng zéi shǒu shāng jué dìng yóu de nán shān chū miànmào chōng 'ào jiě jiě bǎo jiāng lǐng huí
  
   dàn shìjǐng shěn shíshū diàn lǎo bǎn zhèng míng kàn dào dāng shí páqiè de xiǎo zéi bìng fēi 'ào bèi qiè de zhù rén shì lún dūn wēng luó yīn yuān wǎng 'ào hěn gǎn qiàn jiùyòu jiàn 'ài yòu liánbiàn jiāng lǐng huí jiā ào dào luó jiā hòushòu dào lǎo rén de chǒng 'ài chóu chī chuānhái néng shàng xué shū liàoluó yòu míng jiào mèng de qīn zhuī jiū 'ào de shēn shì xiàn yuán lái shì luó de wài sūn luó de quán jiā chǎn biàn yào yóu chéng shòumèng mǒu duó móu duó zhè cái chǎnbiàn jiāng shì yán shǒu hái zéi shǒu gòu jié móu hài 'ào
  
   mǒu nán shān zài jiē shàng xún fǎng jiàn 'ào bǎng huí zéi gēn jiāng jīhū sàng mìngnán shān cóng mèng chù tàn tīng dào 'ào de shēn shì hòushí fēn tóng qíngwèile jiù chū xiǎnràng sūn tuán yuánbiàn 'àn 'àn xiāo gào liǎo luó dāyìng xià dài 'ào tóng lái liào shì qíng bèi xiàn gēn jiāng nán shān huó huó luó zài jiā děng hòu nán shāndào liǎo yuē dìng zhī jiàn nán shān dào lái rán tīng dào jiē shàng chuán shuō nán shān cǎn biàn bào gào jǐng suí tóng jǐng chá zhí dǎo zéi shì mín men fēn fēn cān jiā zhuō zéishēng shì hào gēn zuì zhōng nán táo wǎngào táo shēngbèi luó lǐng huí sūn tuán


  Oliver Twist; or, The Parish Boy's Progress (commonly known as Oliver Twist) (1838) is Charles Dickens' second novel. It is about a boy named Oliver Twist, who escapes from a workhouse and meets a gang of pickpockets in London. The novel is one of Dickens's best-known works, and has been the subject of numerous film and television adaptations.
  
  Background
  
  Oliver Twist is notable for Dickens' unromantic portrayal of criminals and their sordid lives. The book also exposed the cruel treatment of many a waif-child in London, which increased international concern in what is sometimes known as "The Great London Waif Crisis". This was the astounding number of orphans in London in the Dickens era. The book's subtitle, The Parish Boy's Progress alludes to Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress and also to a pair of popular 18th-century caricature series by William Hogarth, "A Rake's Progress" and "A Harlot's Progress".
  
  An early example of the social novel, the book calls the public's attention to various contemporary evils, including the Poor Law, child labour and the recruitment of children as criminals. Dickens mocks the hypocrisies of his time by surrounding the novel's serious themes with sarcasm and dark humour. The novel may have been inspired by the story of Robert Blincoe, an orphan whose account of hardships as a child labourer in a cotton mill was widely read in the 1830s. It is likely that Dickens's own early youth as a child labourer contributed to the story's development.
  
  Oliver Twist has been the subject of numerous film and television adaptations, and is the basis for a highly successful musical play and the multiple Academy Award winning motion picture Oliver!.
  Publications
  Cover, first edition of serial, entitled "The Adventures of Oliver Twist" January 1846
  Design by George Cruikshank
  
  The book was originally published in Bentley's Miscellany as a serial, in monthly instalments that began appearing in the month of February 1837 and continued through April 1839. It was originally intended to form part of Dickens's serial The Mudfog Papers. It did not appear as its own monthly serial until 1846. George Cruikshank provided one steel etching per month to illustrate each installment. The first novelization appeared six months before the serialization was completed. It was published in three volumes by Richard Bentley, the owner of Bentley's Miscellany, under the author's pseudonym, "Boz" and included 24 steel-engraved plates by Cruikshank.
  Plot summary
  Workhouse and first jobs
  
  Oliver Twist is born into a life of poverty and misfortune in a workhouse in an unnamed town (although when originally published in Bentley's Miscellany in 1837 the town was called Mudfog and said to be within 75 miles north of London). Orphaned almost from his first breath by his mother’s death in childbirth and his father’s unexplained absence, Oliver is meagerly provided for under the terms of the Poor Law, and spends the first eight years of his life at a baby farm in the 'care' of a woman named Mrs. Mann. Along with other juvenile offenders against the poor laws, Oliver is brought up with little food and few comforts. Around the time of the orphan’s ninth birthday, Mr. Bumble, a parish beadle, removes Oliver from the baby farm and puts him to work picking oakum at the main workhouse (the same one where his mother worked before she died). Oliver, who toils with very little food, remains in the workhouse for six months, until the desperately hungry boys decide to draw lots; the loser must ask for another portion of gruel. The task falls to Oliver, who at the next meal tremblingly comes forward, bowl in hand, and makes his famous request: "Please, sir, I want some more."
  Oliver; "Please, sir, I want some more."
  
  A great uproar ensues. The board of well-fed gentlemen who administer the workhouse, while eating a meal fit for a mighty king, offer five pounds to any person wishing to take on the boy as an apprentice. A brutal chimney sweep almost claims Oliver, but, when he begs despairingly not to be sent away with "that dreadful man" a kindly old magistrate refuses to sign the indentures. Later, Mr. Sowerberry, an undertaker employed by the parish, takes Oliver into his service. He treats Oliver better, and, because of the boy's sorrowful countenance, uses him as a mourner, at children's funerals. However, Mr. Sowerberry is in an unhappy marriage, and his wife takes an immediate dislike to Oliver—primarily because her husband seems to like him—and loses few opportunities to underfeed and mistreat him. He also suffers torment at the hands of Noah Claypole, an oafish but bullying fellow apprentice who is jealous of Oliver's promotion to mute, and Charlotte, the Sowerberry's maidservant, who is in love with Noah.
  
  One day, in an attempt to bait Oliver, Noah insults the orphan’s late mother, calling her "a regular right-down bad 'un". Oliver flies into an unexpected passion, attacking and even beating the much bigger boy. Mrs. Sowerberry takes Noah's side, helps him subdue Oliver, punches and beats Oliver, and later compels her husband and Mr. Bumble, who has been sent for in the aftermath of the fight, into beating Oliver again. Once Oliver is sent to his room for the night, he does something that he hadn't done since babyhood—breaks down and weeps. Alone that night, Oliver finally decides to run away. He wanders aimlessly for a time, until a well-placed milestone sets his wandering feet towards London.
  The Artful Dodger and Fagin
  George Cruikshank original engraving of the Artful Dodger (centre), here introducing Oliver (right) to Fagin (left)
  
  During his journey to London, Oliver encounters Jack Dawkins, more commonly known by the nickname the "Artful Dodger", although Oliver's innocent nature prevents him from recognising this hint that the boy may be dishonest. Dodger provides Oliver with a free meal and tells him of a gentleman in London who will "give him lodgings for nothing, and never ask for change". Grateful for the unexpected assistance, Oliver follows Dodger to the "old gentleman"'s residence. In this way, Oliver unwittingly falls in with an infamous Jewish criminal known as Fagin, the so-called gentleman of whom the Artful Dodger spoke. Ensnared, Oliver lives with Fagin and his gang of juvenile pickpockets in their lair at Saffron Hill for some time, naively unaware of their criminal occupations. He believes they make wallets and handkerchiefs.
  
  Later, Oliver innocently goes out to "make handkerchiefs" because of no income coming in, with two of Fagin’s underlings: The Artful Dodger and a boy of a humorous nature named Charley Bates. Oliver realises too late that their real mission is to pick pockets. Dodger and Charley steal the handkerchief of an old gentleman named Mr. Brownlow, and promptly flee. When he finds his handkerchief missing, Mr. Brownlow turns round, sees Oliver, and pursues him. Others join the chase and Oliver is caught and taken before the magistrate. Curiously, Mr. Brownlow has second thoughts about the boy—he seems reluctant to believe he is a pickpocket. To the judge's evident disappointment, a bookstall holder who saw Dodger commit the crime clears Oliver, who, by now actually ill, faints in the courtroom. Mr. Brownlow takes Oliver home and, along with his housekeeper Mrs. Bedwin, cares for him.
  Bill Sikes
  
  Oliver stays with Mr. Brownlow, recovers rapidly, and blossoms from the unaccustomed kindness. His bliss, however, is interrupted when Fagin, fearing Oliver might "peach" on his criminal gang, decides that Oliver must be brought back to his hideout. When Mr. Brownlow sends Oliver out to pay for some books, one of the gang, a young girl named Nancy, whom Oliver had previously met at Fagin's, accosts him with help from her abusive lover, a brutal robber named Bill Sikes, and Oliver is quickly bundled back to Fagin's lair. The thieves take the five pound note Mr. Brownlow had entrusted to him, and strip him of his fine new clothes. Oliver, dismayed, flees and attempts to call for police assistance, but is ruthlessly dragged back by the Dodger, Charley and Fagin. Nancy, however, is sympathetic towards Oliver and saves him from beatings by Fagin and Sikes.
  
  In a renewed attempt to draw Oliver into a life of crime, Fagin forces him to participate in a burglary. Nancy reluctantly assists in recruiting him, all the while assuring the boy that she will help him if she can. Sikes, after threatening to kill him if he does not cooperate, sends Oliver through a small window and orders him to unlock the front door. The robbery goes wrong, however, and Oliver is shot. After being abandoned by Sikes, the wounded Oliver ends up under the care of the people he was supposed to rob: Rose Maylie, her guardian Mrs. Maylie (unrelated to Rose and raising her as her own niece), and Harry Maylie (Mrs. Maylie's son who loves Rose). Convinced of Oliver’s innocence, Rose takes the boy in and nurses him back to health.
  Mystery
  
  Meanwhile, a mysterious man named Monks has found Fagin and is plotting with him to destroy Oliver's reputation. Monks denounces Fagin's failure to turn Oliver into a criminal and the two of them agree on a plan to make sure he does not find out about his past. Monks is apparently related to Oliver in some manner, although it's not mentioned until later.
  
  Back In Oliver's hometown, Mr Bumble has married Ms Corney, the wealthy matron of the workhouse, only to find himself constantly arguing with his unhappy wife. After one such argument, Mr Bumble walks over to a pub, where he meets Monks, who informs him about a boy named Oliver Twist. Later the two of them arrange to take a locket and ring which had once belonged to Oliver's mother and toss it into a nearby river. Monks relates this to Fagin as part of the plot to destroy Oliver, unaware that Nancy has eavesdropped on their conversation and gone ahead to inform Oliver's benefactors.
  
  Nancy, by this time ashamed of her role in Oliver's kidnapping, and fearful for the boy's safety, goes to Rose Maylie and Mr. Brownlow to warn them. She knows that Monks and Fagin are plotting to get their hands on the boy again and holds some secret meetings on the subject with Oliver's benefactors. One night Nancy tries to leave for one of the meetings but Sikes refuses permission when she doesn't state exactly where she's going. Fagin realizes that Nancy is up to something and resolves to find out what her secret is.
  
  Meanwhile Noah Claypole has fallen out with the undertaker Mr. Sowerberry, stolen money from him and moved to London. Charlotte has accompanied him—they are now in a relationship. Using the name "Morris Bolter", he joins Fagin's gang for protection. During Noah's stay with Fagin, the Artful Dodger is caught with a stolen silver snuff box, convicted (in a very humorous courtroom scene) and transported to Australia. Later, Noah is sent by Fagin to "dodge" (spy on) Nancy, and discovers her secret: she has been meeting secretly with Rose and Mr. Brownlow to discuss how to save Oliver from Fagin and Monks. Fagin angrily passes the information on to Sikes, twisting the story just enough to make it sound as if Nancy had informed on him (in reality, she had shielded Sikes, whom she loves despite his brutal character). Believing her to be a traitor, Sikes beats Nancy to death in a fit of rage, and is himself killed when he accidentally hangs himself while fleeing across a rooftop from an angry mob.
  Resolution
  Fagin in his cell.
  
  Monks is forced by Mr. Brownlow (an old friend of Oliver's father) to divulge his secrets: his real name is Edward Leeford, and he is Oliver's paternal half-brother and, although he is legitimate, he was born of a loveless marriage. Oliver's mother, Agnes, was their father's true love. Mr. Brownlow has a picture of her, and began making inquiries when he noticed a marked resemblance between her face, and the face of Oliver. Monks has spent many years searching for his father's child—not to befriend him, but to destroy him (see Henry Fielding's Tom Jones for similar circumstances). Brownlow asks Oliver to give half his inheritance (which proves to be meagre) to Monks because he wants to give him a second chance; and Oliver, being prone to giving second chances, is more than happy to comply. Monks then moves to America, where he squanders his money, reverts to crime, and ultimately dies in prison. Fagin is arrested and condemned to the gallows; in an emotional scene, Oliver goes to Newgate Gaol to visit the old reprobate on the eve of his hanging, (where Fagin's terror at being hanged has caused him to come down with fever).
  
  On a happier note, Rose Maylie turns out to be the long-lost sister of Oliver's mother Agnes; she is therefore Oliver's aunt. She marries her long-time sweetheart Harry, and Oliver lives happily with his saviour, Mr. Brownlow. Noah becomes a paid, semi-professional informer to the police (a "stoolie", or "stoolpigeon" in American terminology). The Bumbles lose their jobs (under circumstances that cause him to utter the well-known line "The law is a ass") and are reduced to great poverty, eventually ending up in the same workhouse where they once lorded it over Oliver and the other boys; and Charley Bates, horrified by Sikes's murder of Nancy, becomes an honest citizen, moves to the country, and works his way up to prosperity.
  Major themes and symbols
  Introduction
  
  In Oliver Twist, Dickens mixes grim realism, and merciless satire as a way to describe the effects of industrialism on 19th-century England and to criticise the harsh new Poor Laws. Oliver, an innocent child, is trapped in a world where his only options seem to be the workhouse, Fagin's thieves, a prison or an early grave. From this unpromising industrial/institutional setting, however, a fairy tale also emerges: In the midst of corruption and degradation, the essentially passive Oliver remains pure-hearted; he steers away from evil when those around him give in to it; and, in proper fairy-tale fashion, he eventually receives his reward—leaving for a peaceful life in the country, surrounded by kind friends. On the way to this happy ending, Dickens explores the kind of life an orphan, outcast boy could expect to lead in 1830s London.
  Poverty and social class
  
  Poverty is a prominent concern in Oliver Twist. Throughout the novel, Dickens enlarges on this theme, describing slums so decrepit that whole rows of houses are on the point of ruin. In an early chapter, Oliver attends a pauper's funeral with Mr. Sowerberry and sees a whole family crowded together in one miserable room.
  
  This ubiquitous misery makes Oliver's few encounters with charity and love more poignant. Oliver owes his life several times over to kindness both large and small. The apparent plague of poverty that Dickens describes also conveyed to his middle-class readers how much of the London population was stricken with poverty and disease. Nonetheless, in Oliver Twist he delivers a somewhat mixed message about social caste and social injustice. Oliver's illegitimate workhouse origins place him at the nadir of society; as an orphan without friends, he is routinely despised. His "sturdy spirit" keeps him alive despite the torment he must endure. Most of his associates, however, deserve their place among society's dregs and seem very much at home in the depths. Noah Claypole, a charity boy like Oliver, is idle, stupid, and cowardly; Sikes is a thug; Fagin lives by corrupting children; and the Artful Dodger seems born for a life of crime. Many of the middle-class people Oliver encounters—Mrs. Sowerberry, Mr. Bumble, and the savagely hypocritical "gentlemen" of the workhouse board, for example; are, if anything, worse.
  
  Oliver, on the other hand, who has an air of refinement remarkable for a workhouse boy, proves to be of gentle birth. Although he has been abused and neglected all his life, he recoils, aghast, at the idea of victimizing anyone else. This apparently hereditary gentlemanliness makes Oliver Twist something of a changeling tale, not just an indictment of social injustice. Oliver, born for better things, struggles to survive in the savage world of the underclass before finally being rescued by his family and returned to his proper place—a commodious country house.
  
  In a recent film adaptation of the novel, Roman Polanski dispenses with the problem of Oliver's genteel origins by making him an anonymous orphan, like the rest of Fagin's gang.
  Oliver is wounded in a burglary.
  Symbolism
  
  Dickens makes considerable use of symbolism. The many symbols Oliver faces are primarily good versus evil, with evil continually trying to corrupt and exploit good, but good winning out in the end. The "merry old gentleman" Fagin, for example, has satanic characteristics: he is a veteran corrupter of young boys who presides over his own corner of the criminal world; he makes his first appearance standing over a fire holding a toasting-fork; and he refuses to pray on the night before his execution. The London slums, too, have a suffocating, infernal aspect; the dark deeds and dark passions are concretely characterised by dim rooms, and pitch-black nights, while the governing mood of terror and brutality may be identified with uncommonly cold weather. In contrast, the countryside where the Maylies take Oliver is a pastoral heaven.
  
  Food is another important symbol; Oliver's odyssey begins with a simple request for more gruel, and Mr. Bumble's shocked exclamation, represents he may be after more than just gruel. Chapter 8—which contains the last mention of food in the form of Fagin's dinner—marks the first time Oliver eats his share and represents the transformation in his life that occurs after he joins Fagin's gang.
  
  The novel is also shot through with a related motif, obesity, which calls attention to the stark injustice of Oliver's world. When the half-starved child dares to ask for more, the men who punish him are fat. It is interesting to observe the large number of characters who are overweight.
  
  Toward the end of the novel, the gaze of knowing eyes becomes a potent symbol. For years, Fagin avoids daylight, crowds, and open spaces, concealing himself in a dark lair most of the time: when his luck runs out at last, he squirms in the "living light" of too many eyes as he stands in the dock, awaiting sentence. After Sikes kills Nancy, he flees into the countryside but is unable to escape the memory of her dead eyes. Charley Bates turns his back on crime when he sees the murderous cruelty of the man who has been held up to him as a model.
  
  Nancy’s decision to meet Brownlow and Rose on London Bridge reveals the symbolic aspect of this bridge in Oliver Twist. Bridges exist to link two places that would otherwise be separated by an uncrossable void. The meeting on London Bridge represents the collision of two worlds unlikely ever to come into contact—the idyllic world of Brownlow and Rose, and the atmosphere of degradation in which Nancy lives. On the bridge, Nancy is given the chance to cross over to the better way of life that the others represent, but she rejects that opportunity, and by the time the three have all left the bridge, that possibility has vanished forever.
  
  When Rose gives Nancy her handkerchief, and when Nancy holds it up as she dies, Nancy has gone over to the "good" side against the thieves. Her position on the ground is as if she is in prayer, this showing her godly or good position.
  Characters
  The Last Chance.
  
  In the tradition of Restoration Comedy and Henry Fielding, Dickens fits his characters with appropriate names. Oliver himself, though "badged and ticketed" as a lowly orphan and named according to an alphabetical system, is, in fact, "all of a twist." Mr. Grimwig is so called because his seemingly "grim", pessimistic outlook is actually a protective cover for his kind, sentimental soul. Other character names mark their bearers as semi-monstrous caricatures. Mrs. Mann, who has charge of the infant Oliver, is not the most motherly of women; Mr. Bumble, despite his impressive sense of his own dignity, continually mangles the king's English he tries to use; and the Sowerberries are, of course, "sour berries", a reference to Mrs. Sowerberry's perpetual scowl, to Mr. Sowerberry's profession as an undertaker, and to the poor provender Oliver receives from them. Rose Maylie’s name echoes her association with flowers and springtime, youth and beauty, while Toby Crackit’s is a reference to his chosen profession–housebreaking.
  
  Bill Sikes’s dog, Bull’s-eye, has “faults of temper in common with his owner” and is an emblem of his owner’s character. The dog’s viciousness represents Sikes’s animal-like brutality, while Sikes's self-destructiveness is evident in the dog's many scars. The dog, with its willingness to harm anyone on Sikes's whim, shows the mindless brutality of the master. Sikes himself senses that the dog is a reflection of himself and that is why he tries to drown the dog. He is really trying to run away from who he is.[citation needed] This is also illustrated when Sikes dies and the dog does immediately also. After Sikes murders Nancy, Bull’s-eye also comes to represent Sikes’s guilt. The dog leaves bloody footprints on the floor of the room where the murder is committed. Not long after, Sikes becomes desperate to get rid of the dog, convinced that the dog’s presence will give him away. Yet, just as Sikes cannot shake off his guilt, he cannot shake off Bull’s-eye, who arrives at the house of Sikes’s demise before Sikes himself does. Bull’s-eye’s name also conjures up the image of Nancy’s eyes, which haunts Sikes until the bitter end and eventually causes him to hang himself accidentally.
  
  Dickens employs polarised sets of characters to explore various dual themes throughout the novel;[citation needed] Mr. Brownlow and Fagin, for example, personify 'Good vs. Evil'. Dickens also juxtaposes honest, law-abiding characters such as Oliver himself with those who, like the Artful Dodger, seem more comfortable on the wrong side of the law. 'Crime and Punishment' is another important pair of themes, as is 'Sin and Redemption': Dickens describes criminal acts ranging from picking pockets to murder (suggesting that this sort of thing went on continually in 1830's London) only to hand out punishments with a liberal hand at the end. Most obviously, he shows Bill Sikes hounded to death by a mob for his brutal acts, and sends Fagin to cower in the condemned cell, sentenced to death by due process. Neither character achieves redemption; Sikes dies trying to run away from his guilt, and on his last night alive, the terrified Fagin refuses to see a rabbi or to pray, instead asking Oliver to help him escape. Nancy, by contrast, redeems herself at the cost of her own life, and dies in a prayerful pose.
  
  Nancy is also one of the few characters in Oliver Twist to display much ambivalence. Although she is a full-fledged criminal, indoctrinated and trained by Fagin since childhood, she retains enough empathy to repent her role in Oliver's kidnapping, and to take steps to try to atone. As one of Fagin's victims, corrupted but not yet morally dead, she gives eloquent voice to the horrors of the old man's little criminal empire. She wants to save Oliver from a similar fate; at the same time, she recoils from the idea of turning traitor, especially to Bill Sikes, whom she loves. When he was later criticised for giving a "thieving, whoring slut of the streets" such an unaccountable reversal of character, Dickens ascribed her change of heart to "the last fair drop of water at the bottom of a dried-up, weed-choked well".
yīng guó zuò jiā gèng de míng zhù
  zuò zhěchá 'ěr · gèng
   yīng guó xiǎo shuō jiā chá 'ěr · yuē hàn · fēn · gèng ( CharlesJohnHuffamDickens, 1812 nián 2 yuè 7 ~1870 nián 6 yuè 9 yīng guó wéi duō shí de zhù míng xiǎo shuō jiā de zuò pǐn zhì jīn rán shèng xíngbìng duì yīng guó wén xué zhǎn dào zhòng yào yǐng xiǎng
   gèng 1812 nián chū shēng yīng guó máo ( Portsmouth), shì hǎi jūn zhí yuán yuē hàn · gèng suō bái · luò suǒ shēng de 'èr hái gèng 5 suì shí quán jiā jiù qiān zhàn sōng( Chatham), 10 suì shí yòu bān dào kāng dēng zhèn( CamdenTown)。
   xiǎo shí hòu gèng céng jīng zài suǒ xué xiào jiē shòu guò duàn shí jiān de jiào dàn shì 12 suì shí gèng de qīn jiù yīn zhài wèn 'ér gèng yīn bèi sòng dào lún dūn jiā xié yóu chǎng dāng xué měi tiān gōng zuò 10 xiǎo shíhuò shì yóu zhè duàn jīng shǐ gèng de zuò pǐn gèng guān zhù céng shè huì láo dòng rén mín de shēng huó zhuàng tài
   guò hòu lái yóu qīn chéng liǎo chǎn 'ér lìng jiā tíng jīng zhuàng kuàng yòu suǒ hǎo zhuǎn gèng cái yòu huì chóngxīn huí dào xué xiào。 15 suì shí cóng wēi líng dùn xué yuàn suí hòu jìn jiā shī xíng gōng zuòhòu lái yòu zhuǎn bào guǎnchéng wéi míng bào dǎo guó huì biàn lùn de zhě gèng bìng méi yòu jiē shòu hěn duō de zhèng guī jiào běn shàng shì kào xué chéng cái
   xiǎo shuō fēn
   gèng zài xiǎo shuō zhōng qíng jiē biān liǎo běn zhù shè huì de hēi 'àn wěi。 1838 nián 1839 nián biǎo liǎo 'ér · bèi》, miáo xiě liǎo běn zhù shè huì qióng 'ér tóng de bēi cǎn shēng huójiē liǎo pín mín jiù suǒ xué xiào jiào de hēi 'àn gèng shì yīng guó zuì wěi de xiǎo shuō jiā zhī yīng guó xiàn shí zhù wén xué de jié chū dài biǎoduì shì jiè wén xué yòu de yǐng xiǎng
  《 'érshì gèng 'èr cháng piān xiǎo shuōzhè wèi nián jǐn 'èr shí suì de xiǎo shuō jiā jué xīn xué yīng guó xiàn shí zhù huà jiā wēi lián jiā ( WilliamHogarth,1697 1764) de bǎng yàngyǒng gǎn zhí miàn rén shēngzhēn shí biǎo xiàn dāng shí lún dūn pín mín de bēi cǎn shēng huó bào zhe chóng gāo de dào kàng shè huì de gōngbìng huàn shè huì lùntuī xíng gǎi shǐ chǔyú shuǐ shēn huǒ zhōng de pín mín dào jiù zhùzhèng yīn wéi gèng lái bèi guó qián lián xué zhě jiè dìng wéi yīng guó wén xué shàng pàn xiàn shí zhù de chuàng shǐ rén zuì wěi de dài biǎo duì yòu xiē tóng de jiàn jiěwén xué shù shì zhǒng shū de shè huì shí xíng tài rán shì shè huì cún zài de fǎn yìngdàn shì men jué néng fǎn yìng xiàn shí de wén xué dōushuō chéng shì xiàn shí zhù wén xuéxiàn shí zhù de wài yán xiàn kuò zhǎnshì shí shàngzuò jiā yùn yòng de chuàng zuò fāng duō zhǒng duō yàngyīn rén 'ér zhè zuò jiā de shū zhì xìng diǎn mìqiè xiāng guān gèng de chuàng zuòxiǎng xiàng wéi fēng chōng mǎn shī de qíng zhuóyì xuàn rǎn de dào xiǎngchù chù rán de zhōng shí lín jiè yòng de huà rán gāo liǎo céngzhè léi luò luó děng jiān chí de guānlěng jìngyán xiě shí de fāng yòu xiǎn zhù de bié
   shì 'érwéi ,( xìng huà de yán shì gèng zài rén zào shàng yùn yòng shí fēn chū de zhǒng shǒu duànshū zhōng de liú mángdào zéi de yán qièhé shēn fènshèn zhì hái yòng liǎo hángyè de hēi huàrán 'ér gèng jué zuò rán zhù de zài xiànér shì jìn xíng jiā gōng liàn xuǎn miǎn shǐ yòng huìxià liú de huà zhù rén gōng 'ào yán guī fàntán wén shèn zhì zhī tōu qiè wèihé shì zài pín yuàn zhǎngdà de 'ércóng wèi shòu dào liáng hǎo de jiào suǒ jiē chù dedōu shì zuì 'è lěi lěiduò luò kān zhī bèi zěn me huì jiǎng zhè me hǎo de yīng wén zhè yòngrén shì qiē shè huì guān zǒng de shǐ wéi zhù guān diǎn shì jiě shì de jiàn gèng zhuólì biǎo xiàn de shì de dào xiǎngér shì zhuī qiú wán quán de zhēn。( èrzài yōu xiù de xiàn shí zhù xiǎo shuō zhōng shì qíng jié wǎng wǎng shì zài huán jìng zuò yòng xià de rén xìng zhǎn shǐ gāo 'ěr suǒ shuō demǒu zhǒng xìng diǎn xíng de chéng cháng gòu chéng de shǐ”。 rán 'ér gèng rèn tàoxiǎng yào duō shǎo qiǎo jiù 'ān pái duō shǎo qiǎo ào gēn xiǎo tōu shàng jiēbèi tāo dōu de rén qià qiǎo jiù shì wáng de hǎo yǒu lǎng luó 'èr zài fěi sài de jié chí xià shì xíng qièbèi tōu de qià hǎo shì qīn méi lāi jiāzhè zài qíng shàng lùn shì shuō guò dedàn gèng yòu tiān de běn lǐngzài de jié miáo xiě zhōng chōng mǎn shēng huó qíngshǐ shí jǐn zhāng chuǎn guò láiduì zhè zhǒng běn lái shì qiānqiǎng de rán de qíng jié xìn wéi zhēnzhè jiù shì gèng de shù shì jiè de mèi 。( sān gèng xiě zuò shíshǐ zhōng yòu zhǒnggǎn tóng shēn shòu de xiǎng xiàng ”( Sympatheticimagination), shǐ duì shí 'è shè de rén yàngshū zhōng zéi shǒulǎo yóu tài fèi jīn shòu shěn de yīcháng shǐ zhōng cóng fèi jīn de xīn shì jiǎo chū cóng tiān huā bǎn kàn dào bǎnzhǐ jiàn chóngchóng dié dié de yǎn jīng dōuzài zhù shì zhe tīng dào duì zuì xíng de chén shù bào gào kěn qiú de guāng zhuànxiàng shī wàng néng wèitā biàn rén qún zhōng yòu rén zài chī dōng yòu rén yòng shǒu juàn shānfēnghái yòu míng qīng nián huà jiā zài huà de miáo xīn xiǎng zhī dào xiàng xiàngzhēn xiǎng shēn guò kàn kàn wèi shēn shì chū yòu jìn lái xiǎngzhǔn shì chī fàn liǎo zhī chī de shénme fànkàn dào tiě lán gān shàng yòu jiān zhuó zhezhè hěn róng zhé duàncóng yòu xiǎng dào jiǎo xíng jiàzhè shí tīng dào bèi chù jiǎo xíng zhǐ shì nán nán shuō suì shù liǎo liǎojiē zhe jiù shénme shēng yīn chū lái liǎozài zhè gèng jīng xīn xuǎn liǎo liè jié dàn miáo huì liǎo guān shì ér qiě qiē liǎo rén de nèi xīn shì jièbiǎo xiàn liǎo fēng de xiǎng xiàng yùn yòng de shù fāng shì pàn xiàn shí zhù suǒ néng gài kuò de dǎo shì zàn shǎng yīng guó zuò jiā gèng zhuān jiā qiáo zhì · xīn( GeorgeGiss ing, 1857 héng 1903) de biǎo shù gèng de chuàng zuò fāng chēng wéilàng màn de xiàn shí zhù ”( romanticrealism)。 rèn wéi zhè biǎo shù cái gòu zhǔn quècái gèng xiǎo shuō shù de shí
   xiǎo shuō de zhù rén gōng 'ào · wēi shì míng shēng zài pín yuàn de 'érrěn 'ái’èbèi shòu língyóu kān guān cái diàn lǎo bǎn niànjiào zhí shì bāng 'ér děng rén de nüè dài 'ér táo wǎng lún dūn xìng gāng dào jiù shòu piàn zéi qiè zéi tuán huǒ de shǒu lǐng fèi jìn qiān fāng bǎi 'ào xùn liàn wéi páshǒu gōng shǐào gēn suí qiè zéi huǒ bàn líng guǐ bèi shàng jiē shíbèi rèn wèitā tōu liǎo wèi jiào lǎng luò de shēn shì ( qià qiǎo shì qīn shēng qián de hǎo yǒu ) de shǒu juàn 'ér bèi jǐng chá dài hòu yīn shū tān lǎo bǎn zhèng míng liǎo de shuō míng xiǎo tōu lìng yòu rén cái bèi shì fàngyóu dāng shí bìng zhòng hūn qiě róng mào yǒu rén shēng qián liú xià de shàofù huà xiàng lǎng luò shōu liú zài jiā zhōng zhì bìng dào lǎng luò guǎn jiā wēn tài tài wēi zhì de guān huái gǎn shòu dào rén jiān de wēn nuǎnqiè zéi tuán huǒ hài 'ào huì xiè tuán huǒ de zài fèi jīn zhǐ shì xiàsài nán fèi jìn xīn chèn 'ào wài chū lǎng luò guī hái shū tān lǎo bǎn de shū de shí hòu yòng shǐ chóngxīn xiàn liǎo zéi dàn dāng fèi jīn shì chéng 'ào de shàng shí hòunán tǐng shēn 'ér chū bǎo liǎo 'ào fèi jīn yòng wēi xié yòuguàn shū děng shǒu duàn shǐ 'ào chéng wéi míng qiè zéichéng wéi fèi jīn de yáo qián shù tiān hēi ào zài sài de xié xià cān jiā duì zuò zhái yuàn de xíng qièzhèng dāng 'ào zhǔn bèi chèn jìn chuāng de huì xiàng zhù rén bào gào shíbèi guǎn jiā xiàn hòu kāi qiāng shāngqiè zéi cāng huáng táo páo shí 'ào diū zài bàng shuǐ gōu zhī zhōngào zài xuě zhī zhōng dài shāng xíng zhōng yòu huí dào jiā zhái yuànhūn dào zài mén kǒuhǎo xīn de zhù rén méi rén yǎng luó xiǎo jiě shōu liú bìng liǎo qiǎo chéng shūzhè wèi luó xiǎo jiě zhèng shì 'ào de dàn shuāng fāng dōubù zhī dàozài méi rén jiāào zhēn zhèng xiǎng shòu dào liǎo rén shēng de wēn xīn měi hǎodàn fèi jīn tuán huǒ què néng fàng guò 'ào yòu tiān míng jiào méng de rén lái zhǎo fèi jīnzhè rén shì 'ào de tóng xiōng chángyóu de xiào qīn zài zhǔ zhōngjiàng quán chǎn gěi liǎo 'ào chú fēi 'ào méng shì yàng de xiào 'ér chǎn cái yóu méng chéngwèicǐ méng chū gāo jià mǎi tōng fèi jīnyào shǐ 'ào biàn chéng jiù yào de zuì fàn biàn zhàn 'ào míng xià de quán chǎnbìng xiè duì shì de qīn de yuàn hènzhèng dāng méng yáng yáng de tán dào bāng 'ěr láng bèi wéi jiānhuǐ miè liǎo néng zhèng míng 'ào shēn fèn de wéi zhèng de shí hòubèi nán tīng jiànnán jiàn yǒng wéitóng qíng 'ào de zāo mào shēng mìng wēi xiǎntōu tōu zhǎo dào luó xiǎo jiěxiàng bào gào liǎo zhè qiē
   zhèng dāng luó xiǎo jiě kǎo xíng dòng shíào gào zhǎo dào liǎo lǎng luò xiān shēngluó xiǎo jiě jiù lǎng luò shāng liǎo chù fāng luó xiǎo jiě zài lǎng luò péi tóng xià zài nán huì miàn shí lǎng luò huò zhī méng de hǎo yǒu 'āi wēn de xiào 'ér jué dìng qīn zhǎo méng jiāo shèdàn men de tán huà bèi fèi jīn pài chū de tàn tīng jiànsài jiù xiōng cán de shā hài liǎo nán nán zhī shǐ fèi jīn tuán huǒ zāo dào liǎo miè dǐng zhī zāifèi jīn bèi hòu shàng liǎo jiǎo xíng jiàsài zài táo cuàn zhōng shī bèi de shéng lēisǐ tóng shíméng bèi lǎng luò xié chí dào jiā zhōng gōng chū liǎo qiēshì qíng zhēn xiāng báiào bèi lǎng luò shōu wéi yǎng cóng jié shù liǎo de nán de tóng niánwèile gěi méng xīn de huì běn yìng quán guī 'ào chéng de chǎn fēn bàn gěi dàn méng liè xìng gǎi jiā chǎn huī huò dài jìn zuò 'èzhōng bèi láng chēng zài zhōngbāng 'ěr 'è yòu 'è bàobèi qiē zhí pín zài men céng jīng zuò wēi zuò de pín yuàn guò shēng
   zài zhè běn shū zhōngào nán luó xiǎo jiě dōushì shàn liáng de dài biǎo mendōu chū shēng nán zhī zhōngzài hēi 'àn chōng mǎn zuì 'è de shì jiè zhōng chéngzhǎngdàn zài men de xīn zhōng shǐ zhōng bǎo chí zhe piān chún jié de tiān shàn liáng de xīnzhǒng zhǒng nán bìng néng shǐ men duò luò huò chè duò luòfǎn 'ér gèng xiǎn shì chū men chū 'ér rǎn de guāng cǎi duó mùdì jīng yíng pǐn zhìzuì hòuxié shèng zhèngzhèng de liàng zhàn shèng liǎo xié 'èsuī rán nán zuì hòu yùnàndàn zhèng shì de suǒ zhào huàn chū lái de jīng tiān dòng de shè huì zhèng liàngzhèng shì zài míng míng zhōng de zài tiān zhī língzhù dìng liǎo xié 'è shì de dài biǎo héng héng fèi jīn tuán huǒ de miè dǐng zhī zāiyīn zài xiǎo shuō zhōngnán de jīng shén dào liǎo shēng huáào dào liǎo diǎn xíng shàng de shàn bàoér 'è rén de dài biǎo héng héng fèi jīnméng bāng 'ěrsài luò bēi cǎn de xià chǎng
   rén jiè shào
  1 ào · wéi yǐngpiān de zhù rén gōng
  2 bāng 'ěr jiù yuàn de guǎn shí táng
  3 jīn jiù yuàn de zhí zhǎngguān
  4 gān fěi 'ěr mài huī tàn
  5 'ěr léi mài guān cái
  6 xià luò 'ěr léi de yōng rén
  7 nuò lāi 'ěr léi de yōng rén
  8 jié jīn xiǎo tōu
  9 fèi jīn xiǎo tōu de zhù rén
  10 bái xiǎo tōu
  11 nán xiǎo tōu 'ěr de liáng xīn xiàn hòu lái biàn hǎo liǎo
  12 chá · bèi shén tōu
  13 'ěr · fèi jīn de péng yǒushí de huài dàn
  14 lǎng luó shēn shì
  15 sài 'ěr péng yǒurén fàn
   zhōng wén běn
   běn shū zuì jiā zhōng wén yóu róng nián fān shàng hǎi wén chū bǎn shè chū bǎn
   fān róng jiè shào
   shàng hǎi shì wén shǐ yán jiū guǎn guǎn yuáncóng shì 'éyīng fān zhù yào fān zuò pǐn yòu gèng 'ér 》、 wén sēnjīn yín dǎo》、 wáng 'ěr dào lián · léi de huà xiàng》、 léihuā huā shì jiè》、 tuó tuǒ zuǒ xiōng 》、《 bái chī》、《 bái děng
   cóng shū míngmíng zhù míng chā běn
   chū bǎn shèrén mín wén xué chū bǎn shè
   chū bǎn shí jiān: 2008-6-1
     shù: 437
   kāi  běn: 32 kāi
  ISBN: 9787020071180
   fēn lèi shū >> xiǎo shuō >> shì jiè míng zhù >> ōu zhōu
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nèi róng jiǎn jiè
  《 'ér lún dūn wéi bèi jǐngjiǎng shù liǎo 'ér bēi cǎn de shēn shì zāo zhù rén gōng 'ào zài 'ér yuàn zhǎngdàjīng xué shēng jiān táonàn zéi yòu bèi hěn de xiōng wéi jìn shù xīn suānzuì hòu zài shàn liáng rén de bāng zhù xiàchá míng shēn shì bìng huò liǎo xìng
   xiǎo shuō miáo xiě liǎo shàn 'èměi chǒuzhèng xié 'è de dǒu zhēngzàn yáng liǎo rén men tiān xìng zhōng de zhèng zhí shàn liáng jiē pēng liǎo dāng shí yīng guó shàn gòu de wěi zhì 'ān jǐng chá de zhuān héngtóng shízuò pǐn yòu dài yòu nóng hòu de làng màn zhù qíng diàochōng mǎn zhe rén dào zhù qíng huái
   zuò zhě gèng ( 1812- 1870), shēng yīng guó pín jiā tíng qīn shì hǎi jūn xiǎo zhí yuán, 10 suì shí gèng quán jiā bèi qiān rén zhài rén jiān , 11 suì jiù kāi shǐ chéng dān fán zhòng de jiā gèng de cháng piān xiǎo shuō wēi wàizhuànjiù liǎo jīng rén de chéng gōng。 1836 nián xià bàn nián 25 suì shí dān rènběn zhì de zhù biān 1838 nián 10 yuè wán chéng liǎo xiǎo shuō 'ér 》。
   běn shū wán quán zhōng shí yuán zhù yán liú chàng zhǔn quèqíng jié shēng dòngjīng měi de chā gèng shǐ shū zēng shǎoxiāng xìn shàonián péng yǒu men shū huì 'ài shì shǒu de
shū
   zhāng  guān 'ào · tuì de chū shēng chū shēng shí de qíng jǐng
   'èr zhāng  ào · tuì de chéngzhǎngjiào dǒng shì huì
   sān zhāng  shuō shuō 'ào · tuì xiǎn xiē zhǎo dào fèn chāishidàn rán huì shì shénme bái qián de xián chā
   zhāng  ào dào liǎo lìng chāishi shì shǒu jìn liǎo shè huì shēng huó
   zhāng  ào jié shí liǎo xiē xīn huǒ yǒu cān jiā chū bìn huó dòngbiàn duì zhù rén de zhèyīháng dāng gǎn xīng
   liù zhāng  ào wéi nuò suǒ fèn fǎn kàngjìng shǐ wéi jīng huāng shī cuò
   zhāng  ào réng tīng guǎn shù
   zhāng  ào qián wǎng lún dūn zhōng wèi guài de nián qīng xiān shēng xiāng
   jiǔ zhāng  jìn jiè shào kuài huó de lǎo xiān shēng de qián liàng de mén men de qíng kuàng
   shí zhāng  ào duì de xiē xīn huǒ yǒu de xìng qíng yòu liǎo jìn de liǎo jiě gāo de dài jià mǎi jīng yàn zhāng zài zhè zhuànjì zhōng suī shèn duǎn què hěn zhòng yào
   shí zhāng  jiè shào jǐng chá cháng fàn xiān shēngbìng lüè xiǎo shì gōng zuò zhī bān
   shí 'èr zhāng  zài zhāng zhōng 'ào shòu dào liǎo qián suǒ wèi yòu de qíng zhào tóng shí zhāng hái jiāng zài wèi kuài huó de lǎo xiān shēng de xiē nián yòu de péng yǒu
   shí sān zhāng  zài zhè cōng míng de zhě men jiāng huì jié shí xiē xīn péng yǒubìng liǎo jiě dào běn shì yòu guān de guān men de xiē yòu de qíng jié
   shí zhāng  běn zhāng jiāng jìn shù 'ào zài lǎng luò xiān shēng jiā de jīng wèi wéi xiān shēng zài 'ào chū mén bàn shì shí suǒ zuò de yán
   shí zhāng  biǎo míng kuài huó de yóu tài lǎo rén nán xiǎo jiě shì huān 'ào · tuì
   shí liù zhāng  jiǎng jiǎng 'ào · tuì bèi nán lǐng zǒu hòu de zāo
   shí zhāng  ào de shí yùn réng rán jìng yòu wèi rén lái dào lún dūn bài huài de míng shēng
   shí zhāng  ào zài de jìng de péng yǒu men zhōng jiān guò huò fěi qiǎn de shí guāng
   shí jiǔ zhāng  zài běn zhāng zhōng tǎo lùn liǎo zhòng jìhuà bìng jué dìng jiāng zhū shí shī
   'èr shí zhāng  ào bèi sòng wǎng wēi lián · sài xiān shēng jiā
   'èr shí zhāng  chū dòng
   'èr shí 'èr zhāng  mén dào qiè
   'èr shí sān zhāng  běn zhāng bāo kuò bān xiān shēng wèi tài tài de kuài tán huà de běn nèi róngbiǎo míng shǐ shì wèi jiào guǎn shì yòu shí nán miǎn yòu qíng
  ……
shū zhāi
  “ fán!” ào shēng shuō dào,“ ōqīn 'ài de xiǎo jiě yào shì néng gànhuó jiù hǎo liǎozhǐ yào néng ràng gāo xīng jiāo huā huò zhě shì kàn zhe de niǎo 'éryào jiù zhěng tiān páo shàng páo xià dòu kāi xīnzěn me xíng。”
  “ wán quán yòng zhe zěn me yàng,” méi lāi xiǎo jiě xiào yíng yíng shuō,“ qián gēn jiǎng guò men yòu de shì shì qíng ràng gān zhǐ néng zuò dào dāyìng de bàn me duō jiù zhēn de ràng fēi cháng kāi xīn liǎo。”
  “ kāi xīnxiǎo jiě。” ào jiào liǎo lái,“ zhè me shuō de xīn zhēn hǎo。”
  “ zhī gāi yòu duō gāo xīng ,” shàonǚ dào,“ xiǎng dào qīn 'ài de hǎo chū liǎo rén cóng xiàng men miáo shù de zhǒng bēi de nán zhōng jiě jiù chū láizhè duì jiù shì zhǒng nán xíng róng de huān yòu zhī dào guān huái tóng qíng de duì xiàng zhēn xīn chéng zhī 'ēn bào zhēn de xiǎng xiàng yòu duō me gāo xīng dǒng de ?” zhù shì zhe 'ào chén de miàn róngwèn dào
  “ eshì dexiǎo jiě dǒng。” ào jíqiè huí ,“ zài xiǎng jīng yòu diǎn wàng 'ēn liǎo。”
  “ duì shuí?” shàonǚ wèn dào
  “ wèi hǎo xīn de shēn shì 'āhái yòu wèi qīn 'ài de lǎo 'ā men guò duì hǎo ,” ào dào,“ yào shì men zhī dào xiàn zài duō me xìng de huà men dìng hěn gāo xīng gǎn bǎo zhèng。”
  “ men dìng huì gāo xīng de,” ào de 'ēn rén shuō dào,“ luó xiān shēng zhēn shì hǎo rén dāyìng dàn shēn hǎo láinéng gòu chū mén xíng jiù dài kàn kàn men。”
  “ shì xiǎo jiě?” ào gāo xīng róng guāng huàn jìn jiào liǎo shēng。“ děng zài kàn dào men de xiáng miàn róng de shí hòuzhēn zhī dào huì chéng shénme yàng 。”
   ào de shēn jiǔ jiù huī chàbù duō liǎonéng gòu jīng shòu yuǎn xíng de láo dùnguǒ rán tiān qīng chén luó xiān shēng chéng shàng méi lāi tài tài de xiǎo chē chū liǎochē dào jié qiáo de shí hòuào liǎn biàn shàbái chū shēng gāo hǎn
  “ zhè hái zěn me ?” zhào yòu jǐn zhāng lái shēng wèn dào,“ shì shì kàn jiàn liǎo shénme héng héng tīng jiàn liǎo shénme héng héng gǎn jué dào liǎo shénme héng héng 'ò?”
  “ xiān shēng,” ào biān hǎn biān cóng chē chuāng zhǐ chū ,“ suǒ fáng 。”
  “ shì 'ā yòu shénme guān tíng chēzài zhè tíng xià,” rǎng dào,“ bǎo bèi 'ér fáng zěn me liǎo?”
  “ xiē zéi héng héng men dài de jiù shì suǒ fáng 。” ào shēng shuō dào
  “ ràng jiàn guǐ !” hǎn dào,“ ā zài 'ér yào xià chē!”
   rán 'érchē hái méi lái cóng zuò wèi shàng tiào xià lái jīng xiǎng bàn cóng chē liǎo chū páo dào suǒ fèi de fáng gēn qiánkāi shǐ méngēn fēng
  “ wèi wèi?” wěi suǒ chǒu 'è de tuó bèi hàn měng mén kāishuō dào yóu zuì hòu jiǎo yòng guò měngxiǎn xiē diē jìn liǎo guò dào。“ chū liǎo shénme shì?”
  “ shénme shì!” zhè wèi hǒu shēng jiǎ suǒ jiū zhù rén de lǐng。“ shì duō zhe jié de shì。”
  “ hái huì chū shā rén de shì ,” tuó bèi hàn lěng lěng dào,“ yào shì diū shǒu de huà tīng jiàn méi yòu?”
  “ wèn tīng jiàn méi yòu,” shuō zhegěi liǎo zhèn měng dǒu。“ zài 'ér héng héng de jiā huǒjiào shénme lái zhe héng héng sài duì liǎosài zài 'ér zhè zéi?”
   tuó bèi hàn dèng liǎo yǎn jīng jīng chà fèn kǎi de yàng suí hòu biàn líng qiǎo zhèng tuō de shǒupáo xiào zhe chū zhèn de zhòuwǎng tuì guò hái méi lái guān shàng fáng mén jīng 'èr huà shuōchuǎng jìn liǎo jiān jiāo kàn liǎo kàn zhōuméi yòu jiàn jiā méi yòu yàng dōng guǎn shì yòu shēng mìng de hái shì shēng mìng denéng 'ào de miáo huì duì shànglián zhǐ shí pǐn guì de wèi zhì duì
  “ wèi,” tuó bèi hàn zhí yán zhù shì zhe zhè shí shuō dào,“ zhè me mán jiǎng chuǎng jìn jiā suàn gànshénme shì xiǎng qiǎng hái shì xiǎng shā liǎo shì zhǒng 'ā?”
  “ fēi jiàn dào guò rén chéng shuāng jià chē chū mén shā rén qiǎng dōng zhè xiào de lǎo xuè guǐ?” shēng xìng zào de shuō
  “ xiǎng gànshénme?” tuó bèi wèn dào,“ zài chū bié guài liǎogǔn de!”
  “ rèn wéi shì de shí hòu huì zǒu de,” luó xiān shēng biān shuō biān cháo lìng fáng jiān wàng fáng jiān qián biān jiān yàngwán quán xiàng 'ào shuō de yàng 。“ zǒng yòu tiān huì chá dào de de péng yǒu。”
  “ xíng ?” chǒu 'è de tuó lěng lěng xiào。“ suí shénme shí hòu zhǎo wǒdōu zài zhè 'ér zài zhè fāng zhù liǎo 'èr shí nián liǎo méi yòu fēngèr shì jiù rénhái huì chū dài jià de huì chū dài jià de。” shuō zheǎi xiǎo de chǒu guài chū zhèn háo jiàozài shàng yòu bèng yòu tiàoxiàng shì shī liǎo cháng tài
  “ zhēn gòu chǔn dezhè ,” 'àn shuō dào,“ hái zhǔn shì nòng cuò liǎonuò zhè fàng jìn de kǒu dàichóngxīn 'ér guān lái 。” suí zhe zhè fān huà rēng gěi tuó bèi zhāng chāo piàobiàn huí chē shàng liǎo
   tuó bèi hàn wěi suí zhe lái dào chē mén qián chū shù zuì zuì mán de zhòu rán 'érjiù zài luó xiān shēng zhuǎn shēn chē shuō huà shí tàn tóu cháo chē biān wàng chà jiān qiáo liǎo 'ào yǎn guāng shì yàng duō duō réntóng shí yòu shì yàng xiōng hěnchōng mǎn ào zài hòu lái de yuè guǎn shì xǐng lái de shí hòu hái shì shuì zhe liǎo shǐ zhōng wàng liǎozhí dào chē huí dào zuò wèi shàng hàn hái zài tíng kǒu men chóngxīn shàng zhè shí hái kàn jiàn zài hòu biān duǒ jiǎochě tóu zhī shì zhēn shì jiǎ bào tiào léi
  “ zhēn shì bèn dàn,” chén liǎo hěn jiǔ cái shuō dào,“ qián zhī dào ào ?”
  “ zhī dàoxiān shēng。”
  “ xià huí bié wàng liǎo。”
  “ bèn dàn,” zài xiàn chén guò liǎo fēn zhōng yòu shuō dào,“ jiù suàn fāng zhǎo duì liǎoér qiě jiù shì bāng jiā huǒ dān qiāng yòu néng zěn me yàngjiù suàn yòu bāng shǒu kàn dào shénme jiēguǒzhǐ huì ràng chū chǒuhái gōng chū shì zhē yǎn guò de jīng guòzǒng zhī zhēn shì huó gāi lǎo shì shí xìng gǎo zuǒ yòu wéi nánzhè shì yīnggāi gěi diǎn jiào xùn cái duì。”
   shì shí shàngzhè wèi chū de shēng bèi bàn shìdōu shì píng shí chōng dòngzhè duì zhī pèi de zhǒng zhǒng chōng dòng shuō dài 'è de gōng wéi huó fēi dàn cóng lái méi yòu bèi juàn jìn rèn bié fán huò zhě dǎo méi de shì qíng zhōng fǎn 'ér cóng suǒ yòu rèn shí de rén dào wéi zhēn chéng de tuī chóng jìng zhòngshí shì qiú shì jiǎngyǎn xià shì yòu diǎn shēng yòu liǎng fēn zhōng shí jiān gǎn dào shī wàng hěn xiǎng dào yòu guān 'ào shēn shì díquè qiē zhèng zhī dào de tóu huì jiù luò kōng liǎo guò hěn kuài yòu huī liǎo cháng tài xiàn 'ào zài de pán wèn shí rán lǎo lǎo shí shíqián hòu wěn xiǎn rán wǎng yàng zhēn chéng tǎn shuài dìng zhù cóng jīn hòu wán quán xiāng xìn de huà
   yīn wéi 'ào zhī dào lǎng luó xiān shēng zhù de jiē míng men zhào zhí kāi dào 'ér chē zhé jìn liǎo tiáo jiē de xīn liè tiào láijīhū chuǎn guò
  “ shuō de hái shì suǒ fáng ?” luó xiān shēng wèn dào
  “ suǒ suǒ。” ào biān huí biān cóng chē chuāng wǎng wài zhǐ diǎn zhe。“ suǒ bái fáng ekuài kāi kuài diǎn jué hǎo xiàng yào liǎoshēn shàng lǎo shì duō suo。”
  “ dào dào 。” hǎo xīn de pāi liǎo pāi de jiān bǎngshuō dào,“ shàng jiù yào kàn jiàn men liǎo men jiàn dào 'ān rán shìkěn dìng huì chū wàng wài de。”
  “ e jiù wàng yàng!” ào shēng shuō dào,“ men duì zhēn hǎofēi cháng fēi cháng hǎo。”
   chē cháo qián kāi tíng xià liǎo shì zhè suǒ fáng cái shìchē yòu kāi liǎo chóngxīn tíng liǎo xià láiào tái tóu wàng zhe xiē chuāng lèi zhū bǎo hán zhe huān de dài gǔn xià miàn jiá
   tiān bái de fáng kōng kōng chuāng fēi shàng tiē zhe zhāng zhāo tiē:“ chū ”。
  “ qiāo qiāo lín de mén kàn。” luó xiān shēng shēng shuō biān wǎn zhù 'ào de gēbei。“ nín zhī dào zhī dàoguò zhù zài de lǎng luó xiān shēng shàng 'ér liǎo?”
   lín jiā de zhī dàodàn yuàn huí wèn wèn huì jiù huí lái liǎoshuō liù xīng zhī qián lǎng luó xiān shēng jīng biàn mài liǎo pǐndào yìn qún dǎo liǎoào shí zhǐ jiāo chāshēn wǎng hòu yǎngtān dǎo zài
  “ de guǎn jiā zǒu liǎo?” luó xiān shēng yóu liǎo xiàwèn dào
  “ shì dexiān shēng,” huí ,“ lǎo xiān shēngguǎn jiāhái yòu wèi shēn shì shì lǎng luó xiān shēng de péng yǒuquándōu kuài 'ér zǒu liǎo。”
  “ jiù diào tóu huí jiā ,” luó xiān shēng duì chē shuō,“ yào tíng xià lái wèi děng kāi chū zhè gāi de lún dūn chéng zài shuō。”
  “ zhǎo wèi shū tān zhǎng guìhǎo hǎoxiān shēng?” ào shuō dào,“ rèn shí shàng 'ér de jiàn jiàn qiú qiú nín liǎoxiān shēng jiàn jiàn 。”
  “ lián de hái zhè tiān jīng gòu lìng rén shī wàng de liǎo,” shuō,“ men liǎ shòu gòu liǎo guǒ men zhǎo shū tān zhǎng guìbǎo zhǔn huì xiàn diào liǎoyào jiù shì fàng huǒ shāo liǎo jiā de fáng huò zhě liù zhī liǎozhè jiù zhí jiē huí jiā。” zài de shí chōng dòng zhī xià men biàn huí jiā liǎo
   zhè shī suǒ wàng de xún fǎng shēng zài 'ào mǎn xīn huān de shí gǎo fēi cháng wǎn shāng xīnhuàn bìng jiān shù gāo gāo xīng xīng xiǎng dào lǎng luó xiān shēng bèi wēn tài tài jiāng yào xiàng jiǎng xiē shénme huì xiàng men jiǎng shùyòu duō shǎo màn cháng de tādōu shì zài huí men zuò de xiē shìtòng men gěi shēng huó chě chāi sàn liǎonéng xiàng men jiǎng shù zhè qiē gāi shì duō me qiè zǒng yòu tiān néng zài men miàn qián shēn shàng de gòushuō qīng shì héng zāo bǎng jià dezhè wàng zhe zhī chí zhe 'áo guò liǎo zuì jìn de kǎo yànxiàn zài men dào me yuǎn de fāng liǎodài zhe shì piàn jiān qiáng dào de xìn niàn zǒu liǎo héng héng men de zhè xìn niàn zhí dào kāi chén shì zhī biàn jiě liǎo héng héng jīhū chéng shòu liǎo zhè yàng de xiǎng
   rán 'érzhè zhǒng qíng kuàng háo méi yòu gǎi biàn de wèi 'ēn rén de tài yòu shì liǎng xīng guò liǎowēn nuǎnqíng hǎo de tiān kāi shǐ wěn dìnghuā cǎo shù cháng chū liǎo nèn de piàn xiān yàn de fán huāzhè shí men zuò hǎo liǎo zhǔn bèiyào kāi jié de zhè suǒ fáng yuè men céng jīng shǐ fèi jīn chuí xián sān chǐ de cān sòng dào yínháng cún láiliú xià kǎi 'ěr lìng rén kàn fáng dài zhe 'ào dào yuǎn chù suǒ xiāng cūn bié shù liǎo
   zhè léi ruò de hái lái dào nèi de xiāng cūn zhe fēn fāng de kōng zhì shēn qīng shān lín zhī zhōngshuí néng miáo shù gǎn shòu dào de kuài yuèpíng níng jìng 'āyòu yòu shuí néng shuō chūxiáng níng jìng de jǐng shì zěn yàng yìng shǒu nào shì de rén men de nǎo hǎiyòu shì jiāng men běn shēn yòu de huó shēn shēn zhù men bèi kān de xīn tiánrén men zhù zài yōng xiá zhǎi de jiē shàng shēng láo cóng wèi xiǎng dào guò huàn huàn huán jìng héng héng guàn dídí què què chéng liǎo men de 'èr tiān xìng men jīhū shuō 'ài shàng liǎo chéng men cháng màn de xiá xiǎo tiān de zhuān shí héng héng biàn shì mendāng shén xiàng men shēn chū shǒu lái de shí hòuzuì zhōng huì fān rán xǐng wàng kàn yǎn rán de róng yán men dàn yuǎn jiù 'āi de chǎng miàn jìn liǎo zhǎn xīn de tiān men huǎn huǎn zǒu xiàng chōng mǎn yáng guāng de cǎo kàn dào tiān kōngshān qiūpíng yuán guāng shuǐ yǐng men biàn zài nèi xīn huàn xǐng liǎo zhǐ xiān pǐn cháng xià tiān guó de wèi biàn píng fēi shuāi xiǔ de tòng men xiàng xià de luò yàng píng jìng jìn de fén xiǎo shí qián men hái céng shǒu zài shì chuāng wàng zhe luò huī màn màn xiāo shī zài 'àn dàn guāng de yǎn jīng níng jìng de shān xiāng huàn de shǔ zhè shì jiè shǔ zhè shì jiè de zhì wàngzhè xiē huí huì wēn gǎn rǎn menjiào huì men biān zhì xiān yàn de huā huánfàng zài men suǒ 'ài de xiē rén de fén qiánnéng jìng huà men de xiǎng dǎo jiù de xián yuàn hèn shì zài zhè qiē zhī xiàzài měi xīn líng zhōng jiù suàn shì zuì de xīn líng qīngshàng wèi wán quán chéng xíng de shíhěn jiǔ qiánzài mǒu xiāng yáo yuǎn de shí jiù yòu guò zhè zhǒng gǎn jué de shíshǐ zhōng liú lián rén men zhuāng zhòng zhǔ yáo yuǎn de wèi láijiāng 'ào màn niàn zài de xià biān。( 32 zhāng
tóng míng diàn yǐng 2005
   běn xìn
   míng chēng 'ér
   wài wén míng chēng OliverTwist(2005)
   biān luó · RonaldHarwood
   dǎo yǎnluó màn · lán RomanPolanski
   zhù yǎn
   běn · jīn BenKingsley shì fèigēn
   · BarneyClark shì 'ào tuì
   jié 'ěr màn shì 'ěrsài
   ài dēng shì duō jié
   luò wéi shì nán qiàn
   āi huáhǎdé wéi shì lǎng luò
   'ēnmài shì jīn
   zhuāng shì tuō
   lèi xíngmíng zhù gǎi biān
   piàn cháng: 130min
   chū pǐn guó luó màn · lán yǐngpiān gōng
   duì bái yányīng
   xíng gōng : SonyPicturesEntertainment( měi guó
   huá xià diàn yǐng xíng yòu xiàn rèn gōng zhōng guó
   shàng yìng : 2005 nián 9 yuè 11 jiā shǒu yìng
  2006 nián 4 yuè 30   zhōng guó
   zhù yào pèi yīn yǎn yuán
   fèi jīn  zhào xiǎo míng
   'ěr    kuí
   dào jīn sēn  dǎng  shēng
   nán qiàn  wáng huà
   lǎng luó    tāo
   jīn  gài wén
   tuō   chén  hào
   ào   zhāng xuě líng
   pèi yīn yǎn yuán
   zhōu zhì qiáng  zhì wěi  zhāng  wěi
   yàn xuān  fēng jūn  bái  tāo
   hán tóng shēng    yàn  liú zhī líng
   liào  jīng  zhāng yún míng  tāo
   xiǎo wáng kǎi  chén tuò   zhāng  chí
   yáo  lín  liào  jīng  zhāng  wěi
   zhì zhí yuán
   fān tiě jūn
   dǎo yǎn liào  jīng  zhāng  wěi
   yīn zhāng  lěi
   huá xià diàn yǐng xíng yòu xiàn rèn gōng tóu zhì
   běi jīng diàn yǐng yìn xiàng shù chǎng zhí xíng zhì
   qíng jiè shào
  19 shì 30 nián dài de yīng guózài hán fēng liào qiào de shēn nán yīng gāng zài pín mín zhuì mìng de qīn biàn shǒu rén huánshuí zhī dào chǎn de shēn fènnán yīng yóu chéng liǎo míng 'érhòu lái bèi dāng jiào huì shōu yǎng yǎng de guǎn shì gěi míng 'ào
   ào · shì) 9 suì shíyóu méi rén gòngyǎng shàng xué shū shì jìn liǎo pín yuàn de tóng gōng zuōfángměi tiān cóng shì fán zhòng de láo dòngyīn wéi 'ào huì shuǎ huá tōu lǎn huì 'ēyú fèng chéngsuǒ jīng cháng shòu dào guǎn shì de zhè xiē zhèng zài de hái men zhōng zhē shí guǒ wàn bān nài xià men jué dìng chōu qiān xuǎn dìng chū jiā de rén xuǎnjiēguǒ chōu zhōng de zhèng shì 'ào wǎn cān shíào shí chū liǎo yào qiú jīng shī de guǎn shì jué dìng niǎn zǒu zhè zào fǎn de yǐn huàn
   guò xìng yùn de shìào zhōng méi néng chéng wéi sǎo yān cōng de xiǎo gōngér shì bèi bìn guǎn lǎo bǎn suǒ 'ěr xiāngzhòngchéng liǎo yòng yīng bàng mǎi lái de xué xún guī dǎo de 'ào hěn kuài dào lǎo bǎn de zhòngquè zāo dào liǎo niánzhǎng xué nuò 'ěr de nuò 'ěr xiào 'ào de qīnào rěn rěn chū shǒuhòu lái què bèi lǎo bǎn jiězāo dào zhī xiàào hán hèn chū zǒubēn xiàng yuǎn fāng de lún dūn
   zài lún dūn jiāo hán jiāo de 'ào dào liǎo 'ā ā jǐn wèitā gōng liǎo shēn zhī chùhái jiāng yǐn jiàn gěi jiào fèi jīn de rénběnjīn shì)。 tiān zhēn xié de 'ào hái méng zài zhù de fāng shí shì zéi zhè xiē hái dōubèi dāng zuò fàn zuì gōng ér fèi jīn zhèng shì men dejiào ”。
   tiānào 'ā děng rén shàng jiēā xíng qiè shí wài bài hùn luàn zhōngào bèi rén dāng zuò xiǎo tōu zhuā jìn liǎo jǐng xìng kuī wèi shū diàn lǎo bǎn zhèng míng liǎo 'ào de ér bèi tōu de wēng lǎng luó xīn shēng 'ài lián shì jiāng 'ào jiē dào liǎo jiā zhōng
   fèi jīn tóng huǒ jié 'ěr màn shìbìng wèi shàn gān xiūchèn 'ào wài chū mǎi shū zhī jiāng bǎng jiàér lǎng luó wéi xiǎo nán hái xié kuǎn qián táoxīn zhōng shī wàng yòu huí dào zéi cháo dídí 'ào zài fèi jīn de hǒngpiàn xià dào chū liǎo lǎng luó jiā de jìng kuàngbìng bèi xié qián qiǎng jiésuī rán qiǎng jié bèi chéng gōng zhǐdàn 'ào què bèi lěng qiāng zhōngzhèng dāng zhǔn bèi jiāng pāo jìn zhōng zhī tóng xíng de tuō jiù xià liǎo 'ào
   xiǎn 'è de rán dòng fèi jīn chú diào 'ào jué hòu huànér de yǒu nán qiàn shì bǎo 'ào bìng lǎng luó lián wàng bāng de 'ào táo chū shú liàonán qiàn de bèi fèi jīn chá jué jiǔ biàn bèi cán rěn de shā hài
   jǐng fāng hěn kuài duì fèi jīn zhǎn kāi zhuā táo páo zhōng shèn sàng mìngfèi jīn zuì zhōng bèi shéng zhī jiǔ lǎng luó dài zhe 'ào tàn wàng zhōng de fèi jīnjìn guǎn jīng liǎo zhǒng zhǒng fèi jīn zào jiù de xìngér shàn liáng de 'ào què réng zài xīn wèitā dǎo……
   hòu zhì zuò
   pāi shè huā sòng gěi hái men de jīng měi
   xiàn nián 72 suì de lán zài dào pāi shè běn piàn de chuàng zuò dòng shí shuōzàigāng qín shīzhī hòuhěn nán jué dìng xià zuò pǐn de fàn chóujīng guò zài sān kǎo jué zhí kuī qiàn hái men diàn yǐngsuī rán zhè tīng shàng wǎng de zuò pǐn cái xiāng jìng tíng shì gāng zuò qīn cháng shí jiān shuāng 'ér shàng wèi xiǎo xué wǎng cháng huì yīn 'àn de shì jiǎo jiàn jiàn duō chū fēn tóng zhēn shì zuì hòu xuǎn dìng liǎo tóng nián shí yìn xiàng shēn de gèng de 'ér 》。
   lán zhǎo lái céng píng degāng qín shīér huò 'ào zuì jiā biān jiǎng de luó ? qǐng jiāng 'érde xiǎo shuō gǎi biān chéng lán fēng de běnér xuǎn dìng bàn yǎn 'ào de xiǎo yǎn yuán shì shàfèi xīnzài de shì jìng jiān, 11 suì de ? líng 'ér zuò zuòcōng huì zhōng 'ér yōu de zhì liǎo lán duì 'ào de rén shè cóng zhòng duō hòu xuǎn zhě zhōng tuō yíng 'ér chūzài zhī qián céng chū yǎn huò jiǎng de yǐngpiānfàng zòng de xīn》。 xiǎo yǎn yuán zài dǎo yǎn de jiàn xià guān kàn liǎo liǎng 'érwéi lán běn de diàn yǐngzài zhè yǐngpiān zhōngdǎo yǎn yào qiú zào chū wǎng gèng yǒng gǎn de 'ào
   wéi hái yuán chū 19 shì 30 nián dài yīng guó lún dūn de fēng mào rén yuán yán jiū liǎo liàng dāng shí de lún dūn bǎn huàshèn zhì xiē qióng jiē lòu xiàng yán zūn cóng dāng shí de jìzǎi jiànyǐngpiān de zhù yào fēn zài pāi shèwài jǐng yóu tiáo jiē liàng de shì chǎng xiǎo xiàng chéngzǒng miàn chāo guò 4 wàn píng jǐn jiàn shí jiān jiù huā fèi liǎo 3 yuèlìng wài de jīng diāo yòu yòng liǎo 3 zhōushèn zhì jiàn zhù shàng de zhuān shì cóng lún dūn zài huí dào zhì wán chéng
diǎn píngshēng hòu de 'ér
   zhè zài chóngpāi de 'ér lán de míng zhāo lǎn liǎo shǎo rén qiáncéng yòu bāo kuò dòng huàpiānyīnyuè děng zài nèi 20 duō bǎn běn de 'érbèi bān shàng yín tái guò néng gòu shòu dào guān zhù de què shì fèng máo lín jiǎo biàn zài měi guó de shǒu yìng shì shàng rán jiàn dào lán de shēn yǐngyīn wéi jìn guǎn dāng nián shěn pàn de guān jīng zuò dàn zuì míng rán chéng měi guó zhì jīn réng shì lán wàng de guó suǒ zhè wèi míng dǎo jiù yuán měi guó guān zhòng
   néng xìng de mìng yùn díquè wéi lán de zuò pǐn píng tiān liǎo zhòng tóng de fēng zài zhè 'érzhōngdǎo yǎn duì 'ào de rén xíng xiàng niē xiāng dāng dào wèi zhè zhǒng shēn céng jiě yǎn tóng nián de kǎn jīng zhèng de yǐng suǒ shuōběn piàn zhōng de 'ào zuì tiē jìn xiǎo shuō zhōng de yuán xíngyǐngpiān de huà miàn tóng xiāng de yīng guó yóu huàér yǎn yuán men de duì bái zhōng míng xiǎn dài yòu 19 shì de yīng guó kǒu yīn zhuāng dào kān chēng jiàng xīnjìn guǎn yuán zhe zhōng de xiē rén qíng jié wèi néng shù zhǎn xiàndàn yǐngpiān wèi cháng chēng wéi gèng xiǎo shuō de zài chuàng zuò suǒ wèishēng hòu de 'ér 》, duì yuán zuò de chéng gōng chéng xiàn lǐng zài jiā zhī yǎn yuán juàn diǎn de jīng xīn biǎo yǎnzhāng chí yòu de shì jié zòu jīng fǎng shí guāng dàoliú de shǐ zài xiànshí wéi xiǎo de shī jiā zuò
jīng cǎi zhào
nèi róng jiǎn jiè
  xiǎo shuō miáo xiě liǎo shàn 'èměi chǒuzhèng xié 'è de dǒu zhēngzàn yáng liǎo rén men tiān xìng zhōng de zhèng zhí shàn liáng jiē pēng liǎo dāng shí yīng guó shàn gòu de wěi zhì 'ān jǐng chá de zhuān héngtóng shízuò pǐn yòu dài yòu nóng hòu de làng màn zhù qíng diàochōng mǎn zhe rén dào zhù qíng huái
   zuò zhě gèng ( 1812- 1870), shēng yīng guó pín jiā tíng qīn shì hǎi jūn xiǎo zhí yuán, 10 suì shí gèng quán jiā bèi qiān rén zhài rén jiān , 11 suì jiù kāi shǐ chéng dān fán zhòng de jiā gèng de cháng piān xiǎo shuō wēi wàizhuànjiù liǎo jīng rén de chéng gōng。 1836 nián xià bàn nián 25 suì shí dān rènběn zhì de zhù biān 1838 nián 10 yuè wán chéng liǎo xiǎo shuō 'ér 》。
   běn shū wán quán zhōng shí yuán zhù yán liú chàng zhǔn quèqíng jié shēng dòngjīng měi de chā gèng shǐ shū zēng shǎoxiāng xìn shàonián péng yǒu men shū huì 'ài shì shǒu de
yīngwénjièshì
  1. :  Oliver Twist,  Wudugu'er
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tóng xīn
bāo hán cí
'ér tiě dào shàonián 'ér / quán běn shì jiè wén xué míng zhù diǎn cáng