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Arabian Nights. Frederick Clegg never admits to a crude thought! He is one of England's New People, the upwardly mobile lower classes. A post office clerk, he has a harmless hobby: collecting butterflies. He lives in his dreams, especially one about a pretty girl, Miranda Grey, who is everything he is not: gay, warm and perceptive. "The dream began where she was being attacked by a man," Clegg thinks to himself in his flat, monotonous manner, "and I ran up and rescued her. Then somehow I was the man that attacked her, only I didn't hurt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Caliban Revisited | 8/2/1963 | See Source »

...Clegg wins a small fortune in a football pool and his dream of confused chivalry becomes a possibility. Not knowing what to do with his money (he is intimidated by waiters, salesmen and humanity in general), he decides to use it to net Miranda-like a butterfly. He buys a secluded house with a hidden room in the cellar. One night he lies in wait for Miranda, chloroforms her and whisks her off to his cellar to be his "guest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Caliban Revisited | 8/2/1963 | See Source »

...Miranda expects to be murdered or raped. But her gangling, awkward captor blushes at the slightest hint of indecency. He assures her he just wants her to love him. He seldom lets her out of her room, and then only after he has bound and gagged her. But he heaps her with presents: expensive foods, dresses, a phonograph. When she asks for some perfume, he brings her 14 bottles. "It's like living in The Arabian Nights," Miranda muses in bewilderment. "Being the favorite in the harem. But the perfume you really want is freedom...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Caliban Revisited | 8/2/1963 | See Source »

Reduced to a Specimen. Miranda is full of emotions, and she tries them all on Clegg to win her release. She wheedles, she sympathizes, she fasts, she taunts him; but his response is always a numbing impassivity. He is too self-absorbed to follow an argument, too repressed to allow himself an emotion. Miranda tries to teach him something about art and music, but with typical self-pity he says he cannot appreciate them because he was not brought up with her advantages. Gradually it dawns on Miranda that Clegg is a modern version of Caliban-"anti-life, antiart, anti...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Caliban Revisited | 8/2/1963 | See Source »

...desperation, Miranda offers him her body. But he proves completely impotent and is now doubly resentful: she has betrayed the pure girl of his dreams. Eventually, he lets her die in a peculiarly hideous way-an act, the reader comes to feel, that he intended all along without ever admitting it to himself. For his conscience is always clear: "I know what some would think; they would think my behaviour peculiar. I know most men would only have thought of taking an unfair advantage and there were plenty of opportunities. I could have used the chloroform, done what I liked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Caliban Revisited | 8/2/1963 | See Source »

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