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・ The Cobbler (2014 film)
・ The Cobbler (disambiguation)
・ The Cobbler and the Financier
・ The Cobbler of Ordis
・ The Cobbler's Apprentice
・ The Cobden Centre
・ The Clown
・ The Clown (1916 film)
・ The Clown (1927 film)
・ The Clown (1931 film)
・ The Clown (1953 film)
・ The Clown (1976 film)
・ The Clown (2011 film)
・ The Clown (album)
・ The Clown (Conway Twitty song)
The Clown (novel)
・ The Clown (short story)
・ The Clown and Automobile
・ The Clown and the Kid
・ The Clown at Midnight
・ The Clown Barber
・ The Clown Died in Marvin Gardens
・ The Clown Murders
・ The Clown's Prayer
・ The Clowns (film)
・ The CLR James Journal
・ The Club
・ The Club (1980 film)
・ The Club (2015 film)
・ The Club (Australian TV series)


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The Clown (novel) : ウィキペディア英語版
The Clown (novel)

''The Clown'' ((ドイツ語:Ansichten eines Clowns), lit. "Opinions of a clown") is a 1963 novel by West German writer Heinrich Böll.
==Plot==
Hans Schnier is the "Clown" of the novel's title. He is twenty-seven years old from a very wealthy family. At the beginning of the story he arrives in Bonn, Germany. As a clown, he had to travel across the country from city to city to perform as an artist. He always sees himself an artist. His home is in Bonn, so he has to stay in hotels when he is not in Bonn. The woman he has been living with, Marie, has left him to marry another man, Zupfner. Therefore Hans has become depressed. He wants to get Marie back from Zupfner, and also has serious financial problems.
He describes himself as a clown with no church affiliation. His parents, devout Protestants, sent him to a Catholic school. He met Marie in school and fell in love with her. Although Marie was a Catholic, she agreed to live with him. They never got legally married, largely because Hans would not agree to sign a paper agreeing to raise his children as Catholics. He did not even want to get a marriage license, because he thought that they were for people who did not go to church. While living together, they never had any children. Marie always stated that even though she was living in sin, she was still a Catholic. Once in high school, Hans saw her holding hands with Zupfner, but she told him that Zupfner was only a friend. Hans brought her along on every trip and took her everywhere he went. After five years, there was a Catholic conference near their hotel in a German city. Marie wanted to breathe some Catholic air and ask Hans to go there. Hans had a performance at the same time. When they arrived late at night, he fell asleep. The next morning, he discovered Marie was gone, but had had left a note. He never saw her again. The note read: “I must take the path that I must take.”
Hans has a mystical peculiarity, as he can detect smells through the telephone. As he explains, he does not only suffer from depression, headaches, laziness and that mystical ability, but also he suffers from his disposition to monogamy. There is only one woman that he can live with: Marie. His reversal of values is clearly shown in his statement: "I believe that the living are dead, and that the dead live, not the way Protestants and Catholics believe it."
When he goes to his home in the Bonn, the first person he meets is his millionaire father. He remembers all of his memories from the past. He had a sister named Henrietta. The family forced her to volunteer for anti-aircraft duty seventeen years ago and she never came back. He also has a brother named Leo. He recently converted to Catholicism and is studying theology in college. Hans tells his father about his financial problems. After his father offers him to work for him for a relatively low wage, Hans rejects the offer. He tells his father that he and his brother never benefited from the wealth of their family. War has affected the family. They were never given enough food or pocket money. Many things were regarded as extravagances. Thus, he has no good memory from his past and maybe it was a factor that drove him, at age 21, to leave home to become a clown.
He calls many of his relatives in Bonn, but nobody can help him. He soon discovers that Marie is now in Rome on her honeymoon. This news only depresses him more. Finally, he calls his brother, Leo, who promises to bring him money the next day. But, in the middle of the conversation, Leo says that he has talked to Zupner about something and that they became friends. Because Leo has converted to Catholicism, his father no longer supports him. Therefore, Leo is not in a good position financially. In anger, Hans tells him not to come to bring the money. At the end, Hans takes his guitar to the train station and plays as people throw coins into his hat.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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