Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Cone Gatherers: Key
Scenes
- The Deer Drive
- Duror insists to LRC on Calum and Neil taking part
in deer drive - he sees it as his opportuinity
to bring harm to Calum
- Tulloch's defense of CGs shocks
LRC as she is being talked back
to by an inferior
- believes anything that Duror
says about CGs because she
does not see them as people.
- She refuses to give Neil and Calum a lift
home in the rain etc. She listens to Duror
when he tells her to keep them in a hut in
the wood rather than the beach house
where there is heat etc.
- not bad but she is only as good
as she makes herself out to be
– she surrenders in the end.
- clear visible indications of Duror’s evil
and decline
- Foreshadowing of climax –
destruction of innocence e.g deer
- “His going therefore must be a destruction, an
agony, a crucifixion.”
- The reference to the crucifixion here
hints at the fact that innocence will
be sacrificed in order for goodness to
prevail.
- Calum runs with the deer as if
he is one; This is contrasted with
Durors behaviour – he projects
his own hatred onto the deer.
- “Duror seemed possessed by a fury to rise up
and attack the hunchback”
- Deer hunt viewed by gentry as symbol of status and duty
yet turns into a ‘shocking demeaning spectacle’
- When Calum flung himself, in sympathy, upon a wounded
deer at the dramatic climax of the deer drive, further
illustrating his harmony and empathy for all living things,
Duror came leaping out of the woods.
- “He seemed to be laughing in some kind of
berserk joy. There was a knife in his hand.”
- Duror’s actions (he slit the
deer’s throat, then appeared
to stay crouching beside it)
were those of a man
completely out of control.
He seemed to believe he
had been attacking his wife
- Duror blames
Calum for
incident
- Roderick – represents
hope.
- just and perceptive who,
throughout the novel, pricks his
mother’s Christian conscience.
- dislikes Duror and recognises
something bad in him. He has
greater vision than his mother.
- has a sense of what’s right or wrong at the deer drive. He
recognises the struggle between good and evil that is
always going on
- The Beach Hut
- Neil and Calum sit in the beach house, sheltering
from the rain. They inspect some abandoned toys
and discuss how attitudes towards them differ
between the classes.
- Calum wants to take home and repair a broken doll but
Neil sees this as stealing. Lady Runcie Campbell arrives
and demands that they leave.
- "What is the meaning of
this?... For God's sake get
out!"
- The doll being broken is
representative of innocence
being destroyed.
- LRC is denial of her wrongful actions
- "Men in their job must
be accustomed to rain"
- LRC determine that the CGs must
leave the estate that weekend
- LRC now concerned over Duror and his Deer Drive actions
- Now faces inner confilct of good vs evil: wants CGs
gone, but isnt convinced by Duror's story
- Duror accuses Calum of taking doll for perverted uses
- Roderick:
- "Didn't somebody say on the wireless that in
the war-time everybody's equal?"
- "There was room for us all, mother."
- Leads directly to Roderick getting stuck up a tree
- Neil refuses to help retrieve him
- "She can not one day treat us lower than dogs, and the next
day order us to do her bidding!"
- This refusal sets Duror over the edge
leading to Murder of Calum
- LRC's realisation of all of her wrongfullness
- "She could not pray, but she could
weep; and as she wept pity, and
purified hope, and joy welled up in
her heart."