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The History of Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia
作者Author  /  Samuel  Johnson  山謬爾.約翰生

Study Questions on Johnson's The History of Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia

 

Provider: Cecilia Liu / 劉雪珍

   

 

1.  Johnson's poem "The Vanity of Human Wishes" expresses the theme of Rasselas. Both are based on the OT Book Ecclesiastes, whose refrain is "all is vanity." How is this theme introduced in the first chapters of Rasselas?

2.  The name "Happy Valley" calls to mind the garden of Eden. Critics have interpreted Rasselas as a fable of everyman's passage from innocence to experience. Point out details in the text that support such an interpretation.

3.  To equate the Happy Valley with the biblical Eden is to ignore certain sinister details in its description. Find phrases that suggest the valley stands for the inclination of humanity toward self-deception and immersion in the pleasures of life as a means of avoiding its pains.

4.  In his search for happiness, Rasselas encounters many different types of people all of whom have symbolic significance. By what does Johnson satirize the hermit in Ch. XXI? by what the philosopher in Ch. XII?

5.  In the last chapter of Rasselas we read, "Imlac and the astronomer were contented to be driven along the stream of life without directing their course to any particular port." The metaphor of a ship drifting at the mercy of wind and tide conveys Imlac's passivity which reveals the paradoxical nature of his role as guide. What is the paradox and what does it express abut the joys and pleasures of life?

6.  Compare the final chapter of Rasselas with the final verses of Ecclesiastes. What is the role of religion as expressed in the two texts?

7.  What is an obvious difference between the ideas expressed in the endings of the two texts and what does the difference imply concerning Johnson's philosophical perspective as expressed in Rasselas?

 
   
 
   
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