III. Conclusion
We see how David’s perception of the world deepens as he comes of age. We see David’s initial innocence in the contrast between his interpretation of events and our own understanding of them. Although David is ignorant of Steerforth’s treachery, we are aware from the moment we meet Steerforth that he doesn’t deserve the adulation David feels toward him. David doesn’t understand why he hates Uriah or why he trusts a boy with a donkey cart who steals his money and leaves him in the road, but we can sense Uriah’s devious nature and the boy’s treacherous intentions. In David’s first-person narration, Dickens conveys the wisdom of the older man implicitly, through the eyes of a child. Particularly, through the description of the process of David Copperfield’s growing up and the narration of the events that took place in it, he criticized the ruling class and the capitalist society sharply.
参考文献
1. 狄更斯,1980,大卫·科波菲尔.[M].北京.人民文学出版社
2. Charles Dickens, 1981,David Copperfield by Charles Dickens. [M]. Bantam Books, Inc
3. Li Qing-hua, 2001,The Evolution of Charles Dickens’ Humanitarian Out [J]. Journal of Kaifeng Institute of Education. 第2期
4. 肖双喜,2001,David Copperfield: Perfect Reflection of Dickens’ Creative Ideas. [J]. Journal of Tianzhong. 第6期增刊
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