英文摘要 |
The preoccupation with parsons and the parochial socialorder in Henry Fielding’s fiction stems from an awareness thatthe tone and direction of contemporary society were not whatthey ought to be. This was made clear by a spiraling rise incrime and a series of dangerous riots Fielding had to deal with as magistrate. Conscious of the instrumentality of the parish in securing social order, Fielding gives his reader a visionary landscape of an ideal parochial stratum that offers a paradigm of transfiguration, personal and communal, a more orderly, salubrious, and charitable society, to be secured through a balanced parson/squire dynamic. When one looks at Fielding’s novels structurally, a certain symmetry emerges: in Joseph Andrews (1742), Parson Adams is a surreal parson; in the main body of the text, Tom Jones (1749) has no good parson; and in Amelia (1751), Dr. Harrison is an ideal parson. But, it is precisely this absent centre, and the consequent void it creates inthe world of Tom Jones, that give us a clearer insight into Fielding’s idea of balance in the parochial social order. |