Monday, September 2, 2019
The Quintessential Rebel :: essays research papers
The Quintessential Rebel In Allan Sillitoeââ¬â¢s The Loneliness of a Long Distance Runner, we are introduced to Smith, a man with his own standards, beliefs, values, and battles. As we are taken through the story of a period of his live, we come to understand what Smith really stands for. He is a diehard rebel that is destined to always stick to his beliefs, and is willing to sacrifice all in a battle against his greatest enemy and opressor, society. Throughout the book Smith gives us a chance to get to know him. He willingly shares his thoughts with the reader, and often times his thoughts develop as he is telling his story giving us an up-close look at the inner workings of Smithââ¬â¢s mind and personality. Smith belongs to a group of people he calls the Out-Laws. It is the underprivileged lower class poor street criminals. Crime runs in Smithââ¬â¢s family, and being born into poverty he nether sees, nor is even willing to contemplate a life without crime. At a point he hints on having some communist views, and perhaps suggests that his father had communist friends, if he wasnââ¬â¢t one himself. Fatally inflicted by cancer, Smithââ¬â¢s father died a painful death. We later find out that it was Smith who found his father breathless in a pool of his own blood, and to this day has a great deal of respect for him. The first time Smithââ¬â¢s family gets a taste of a financially comfortable life is when the factor y his father worked in gave them a lump of cash upon his fatherââ¬â¢s death. ââ¬Å"â⬠¦a wad of crisp blue-back fivers ainââ¬â¢t a sight of goodâ⬠(Sillitoe, 20) says Smith as the one break his family got was only due to his fatherââ¬â¢s death. Smith is not money hungry, he steels simply to get by. He knows exactly where he stands in the world- in direct opposition of the In-laws, the ââ¬Å"pig-faced snotty-nosed dukes and ladies"â⬠(Sillitoe, 8). He realizes that he is a poor nobody, a petty criminal, an outcast of society. Smith by nature is a rebel. He puts himself and his fellow Out-laws in direct opposition of the rest; for him itââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"us versus themâ⬠. As we are getting to know Smith, he is spending his time in a Borstal after having been caught for a bakery robbery. He has no regrets about doing what he did in the bakery shop, and has a big enough heart to be happy for his accomplice, Mike for getting off.
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