Charles John Huffam Dickens (7
February 1812 – 9 June 1870) was an English writer and social critic who
is generally regarded as the greatest novelist of the Victorian period and
the creator of some of the world's most memorable fictional characters. During
his lifetime Dickens's works enjoyed unprecedented popularity and fame, and by
the twentieth century his literary genius was fully recognized by critics and
scholars. His novels and short stories continue to enjoy an enduring popularity
among the general reading public.
Born in
Portsmouth, England, Dickens left school to work in a factory after his father
was thrown into debtors' prison. Though he had little formal education, his
early impoverishment drove him to succeed. He edited a weekly journal for 20
years, wrote 15 novels and hundreds of short stories and non-fiction articles,
lectured and performed extensively, was an indefatigable letter writer, and
campaigned vigorously for children's rights, education, and other social
reforms.
Dickens
rocketed to fame with the 1836 serial publication of The Pickwick
Papers. Within a few years he had become an
international literary celebrity, celebrated for his humour, satire, and keen
observation of character and society. His novels, most published in monthly or
weekly instalments, pioneered the serial publication
of narrative fiction, which became the dominant Victorian mode for novel
publication. The instalment format allowed Dickens to evaluate his
audience's reaction, and he often modified his plot and character development
based on such feedback. For example, when his wife's chiropodist expressed
distress at the way Miss Mowcher in David Copperfield seemed
to reflect her disabilities, Dickens went on to improve the character with
positive lineaments. Fagin in
Oliver Twist apparently mirrors the famous fence, Ikey Solomon; His
caricature of Leigh Hunt in the figure of Mr Skimpole in Bleak House was likewise toned
down on advice from some of his friends, as they read episodes. In
the same novel, both Lawrence Boythorne and Mooney the beadle are drawn from
real life – Boythorne from Walter Savage
Landor and Mooney from 'Looney', a beadle at
Salisbury Square.[ His plots were carefully constructed, and
Dickens often wove in elements from topical events into his narratives. Masses
of the illiterate poor chipped in ha'pennies to
have each new monthly episode read to them, opening up and inspiring a new
class of readers.
Dickens
was regarded as the 'literary colossus' of his age.[ His 1843
novella, A Christmas Carol, is one
of the most influential works ever written, and it remains popular and
continues to inspire adaptations in every artistic genre. His creative genius
has been praised by fellow writers—from Leo Tolstoy to G. K. Chesterton and George Orwell—for
its realism, comedy,
prose style, unique characterisations, and social criticism. On the
other hand Oscar Wilde, Henry James and Virginia Woolf complained
of a lack of psychological depth, loose writing, and a vein of saccharine
sentimentalism.
Life
Early years
Charles
Dickens was born on 7 February 1812, at Landport in Portsea, the
second of eight children to John and Elizabeth Dickens. His
father was a clerk in the Navy Pay Office and was temporarily on duty in the
district. Very soon after his birth the family moved to Norfolk Street, Bloomsbury, and
then, when he was four, to Chatham, then
in Kent, where he spent his
formative years until the age of 11. His early years seem to have been idyllic,
though he thought himself a "very small and
not-over-particularly-taken-care-of boy".
Charles
spent time outdoors, but also read voraciously, especially the picaresque novels of Tobias Smollett and Henry Fielding. He
retained poignant memories of childhood, helped by a near-photographic memory
of people and events, which he used in his writing. His father's brief period
as a clerk in the Navy Pay Office gave him a few years of private education,
first at a dame-school, and
then at a school run by William Giles, a dissenter, in
Chatham.
This
period came to an abrupt end when, because of financial difficulties, the
Dickens family moved from Kent to Camden Town in
London in 1822. Prone to living beyond his means, John Dickens was imprisoned
in the Marshalsea debtors' prison in Southwark London
in 1824. Shortly afterwards, his wife and the youngest children joined him
there, as was the practice at the time. Charles, then 12 years old, was boarded
with Elizabeth Roylance, a family friend, in Camden Town. Roylance
was "a reduced [impoverished] old lady, long known to our family",
whom Dickens later immortalised, "with a few alterations and embellishments",
as "Mrs. Pipchin", in Dombey and Son. Later,
he lived in a back-attic in the house of an agent for the Insolvent Court,
Archibald Russell, "a fat, good-natured, kind old gentleman ... with
a quiet old wife" and lame son, in Lant Street in The Borough.[
They provided the inspiration for the Garlands in The Old
Curiosity Shop.[
On
Sundays—with his sister Frances, free from her studies at the Royal Academy
of Music—he spent the day at the Marshalsea. Dickens
would later use the prison as a setting in Little Dorrit. To pay
for his board and to help his family, Dickens was forced to leave school and
work ten-hour days at Warren's Blacking Warehouse,
on Hungerford Stairs, near the present Charing Cross
railway station, where he earned six shillings a
week pasting labels on pots of boot blacking. The strenuous and often cruel
working conditions made a lasting impression on Dickens and later influenced
his fiction and essays, becoming the foundation of his interest in the reform
of socio-economic and labour conditions, the rigours of which he believed were
unfairly borne by the poor. He later wrote that he wondered "how I could
have been so easily cast away at such an age". As he recalled
to John Forster (from The Life of Charles Dickens):
The blacking-warehouse was the last house on the left-hand side of the
way, at old Hungerford Stairs. It was a crazy, tumble-down old house, abutting
of course on the river, and literally overrun with rats. Its wainscoted rooms,
and its rotten floors and staircase, and the old grey rats swarming down in the
cellars, and the sound of their squeaking and scuffling coming up the stairs at
all times, and the dirt and decay of the place, rise up visibly before me, as
if I were there again. The counting-house was on the first floor, looking over
the coal-barges and the river. There was a recess in it, in which I was to sit
and work. My work was to cover the pots of paste-blacking; first with a piece
of oil-paper, and then with a piece of blue paper; to tie them round with a
string; and then to clip the paper close and neat, all round, until it looked
as smart as a pot of ointment from an apothecary's shop. When a certain number
of grosses of pots had attained this pitch of perfection, I was to paste on
each a printed label, and then go on again with more pots. Two or three other
boys were kept at similar duty down-stairs on similar wages. One of them came
up, in a ragged apron and a paper cap, on the first Monday morning, to show me
the trick of using the string and tying the knot. His name was Bob Fagin; and I
took the liberty of using his name, long afterwards, in Oliver Twist.
After a
few months in Marshalsea, John Dickens's paternal grandmother, Elizabeth
Dickens, died and bequeathed him the sum of £450. On the expectation of this
legacy, Dickens was granted release from prison. Under the Insolvent Debtors Act, Dickens
arranged for payment of his creditors, and he and his family left Marshalsea, for
the home of Mrs. Roylance.
Although
Dickens eventually attended the Wellington House Academy in North London, his
mother Elizabeth Dickens did
not immediately remove him from the boot-blacking factory. The incident may
have done much to confirm Dickens's view that a father should rule the family,
a mother find her proper sphere inside the home. "I never afterwards
forgot, I never shall forget, I never can forget, that my mother was warm for
my being sent back". His mother's failure to request his return was a
factor in his dissatisfied attitude towards women.[
Righteous
anger stemming from his own situation and the conditions under which working-class people
lived became major themes of his works, and it was this unhappy period in his
youth to which he alluded in his favourite, and most autobiographical,
novel, David Copperfield: "I
had no advice, no counsel, no encouragement, no consolation, no assistance, no
support, of any kind, from anyone, that I can call to mind, as I hope to go to
heaven!" The Wellington House Academy was not a good school. "Much of
the haphazard, desultory teaching, poor discipline punctuated by the headmaster's
sadistic brutality, the seedy ushers and general run-down atmosphere, are
embodied in Mr. Creakle's Establishment in David Copperfield."[
Dickens
worked at the law office of Ellis and Blackmore, attorneys, of Holborn
Court, Gray's Inn, as a
junior clerk from
May 1827 to November 1828. Then, having learned Gurney's system
of shorthand in his spare time, he left to become a freelance reporter. A
distant relative, Thomas Charlton, was a freelance reporter at Doctors' Commons, and
Dickens was able to share his box there to report the legal proceedings for
nearly four years. This education was to inform works such as Nicholas Nickleby, Dombey and Son, and
especially Bleak House—whose
vivid portrayal of the machinations and bureaucracy of the legal system did
much to enlighten the general public and served as a vehicle for dissemination
of Dickens's own views regarding, particularly, the heavy burden on the poor
who were forced by circumstances to "go to law".
In 1830,
Dickens met his first love, Maria Beadnell, thought to have been the model for
the character Dora in David
Copperfield. Maria's parents disapproved of the courtship and ended the
relationship by sending her to school in Paris.[
Journalism and early novels
In 1832,
at age 20, Dickens was energetic, full of good humour, enjoyed mimicry and
popular entertainment, lacked a clear sense of what he wanted to become, yet
knew he wanted to be famous. He was drawn to the theatre and landed an acting
audition at Covent Garden, for
which he prepared meticulously but which he missed because of a cold, ending
his aspirations for a career on the stage. A year later he submitted his first
story, "A Dinner at Poplar Walk" to the London periodical, Monthly Magazine. He
rented rooms at Furnival's Inn becoming
a political journalist, reporting on parliamentary debate and travelling across
Britain to cover election campaigns for the Morning Chronicle. His
journalism, in the form of sketches in periodicals, formed his first collection
of pieces Sketches by Boz—Boz
being a family nickname he employed as a pseudonym for some years—published in
1836. Dickens apparently adopted it from the nickname Moses which he had
given to his youngest brother Augustus Dickens, after a
character in Oliver Goldsmith's The Vicar of
Wakefield. When pronounced by anyone with a headcold,
'Moses' became 'Boses', and was later shortened to Boz. Dickens's own name was considered "queer" by
a contemporary critic, who wrote in 1849: "Mr Dickens, as if in revenge
for his own queer name, does bestow still queerer ones upon his fictitious
creations." He continued to contribute to and edit journals throughout his
literary career.[
The
success of these sketches led to a proposal from publishers Chapman and Hall for
Dickens to supply text to match Robert
Seymour's engraved illustrations in a monthly letterpress. Seymour
committed suicide after the second instalment and Dickens, who wanted to write
a connected series or sketches, hired "Phiz" to
provide the engravings (which were reduced from four to two per instalment) for
the story. The resulting story was the The Pickwick
Papers with the final instalment selling
40,000 copies.
In
November 1836 Dickens accepted the job of editor of Bentley's
Miscellany, a position he held for
three years, until he fell out with the owner. In 1836 as he finished the
last instalments of The Pickwick
Papers he began writing the beginning instalments of Oliver Twist—writing
as many as 90 pages a month—while continuing work on Bentley's, writing four plays, the
production of which he oversaw. Oliver Twist, published in 1838,
became one of Dickens's better known stories, with dialogue that transferred
well to the stage (most likely because he was writing stage plays at the same
time) and more importantly, it was the first Victorian novel with a child protagonist.
On 2
April 1836, after a one year engagement during which he wrote The Pickwick Papers, he married Catherine Thomson Hogarth (1816–1879),
the daughter of George Hogarth, editor
of the Evening Chronicle. After
a brief honeymoon in Chalk, Kent, they
returned to lodgings at Furnival's Inn. The
first of ten children,
Charley, was born in January 1837, and a few months later the family set
up home in
Bloomsbury at 48 Doughty Street,
London, (on which Charles had a three-year lease at £80 a year) from 25 March
1837 until December 1839. Dickens's younger brother Frederick and
Catherine's 17-year-old sister Mary moved in with them. Dickens became very
attached to Mary, and she died in his arms after a brief illness in 1837.
Dickens idealised her and is thought to have drawn on memories of her for his
later descriptions of Rose Maylie, Little Nell and Florence Dombey. His
grief was so great that he was unable to make the deadline for the June
instalment of Pickwick Papers and
had to cancel the Oliver Twist instalment
that month as well.
At the
same time, his success as a novelist continued, Nicholas Nickleby (1838–39), The Old Curiosity Shop and, finally, Barnaby Rudge: A Tale of the Riots of 'Eighty as
part of the Master
Humphrey's Clock series (1840–41)—all
published in monthly instalments before being made into books.
First visit to the United States
In 1842, Dickens
and his wife made their first trip to the United States and Canada. At this
time Georgina Hogarth, another
sister of Catherine, joined the Dickens household, now living at Devonshire
Terrace, Marylebone, to care
for the young family they had left behind. She
remained with them as housekeeper, organiser, adviser and friend until
Dickens's death in 1870.[
He
described his impressions in a travelogue, American Notes for General Circulation. Some of
the episodes in Martin Chuzzlewit (1843–44)
also drew on these first-hand experiences. Dickens includes in Notes a powerful condemnation of
slavery, which he had attacked as early as The Pickwick Papers, correlating the emancipation of the poor in
England with the abolition of slavery abroad. During his visit, Dickens
spent a month in New York City, giving lectures and raising the question of
international copyright laws and the pirating of his work in America. He
persuaded twenty five writers, headed by Washington Irving to
sign a petition for him to take to congress, but the press were generally
hostile to this saying that he should be grateful for his popularity and that
it was mercenary to complain about his work being pirated.
In the
early 1840s Dickens showed an interest in Unitarian Christianity,
although he never strayed from his attachment to popular lay Anglicanism. Soon
after his return to England, Dickens began work on the first of his Christmas
stories, A Christmas Carol, written
in 1843, which was followed by The Chimes in
1844 and The Cricket
on the Hearth in 1845. Of
these A Christmas Carol was
most popular and, tapping in to an old tradition, did much promote a renewed
enthusiasm for the joys of Christmas in Britain and America. The
seeds for the story were planted in Dickens's mind during a trip to Manchester
to witness conditions of the manufacturing workers there. This, along with
scenes he had recently witnessed at the Field Lane Ragged School, caused
Dickens to resolve to "strike a sledge hammer blow" for the poor. As
the idea for the story took shape and the writing began in earnest, Dickens
became engrossed in the book. He wrote that as the tale unfolded he "wept
and laughed, and wept again" as he "walked about the black streets of
London fifteen or twenty miles many a night when all sober folks had gone to
bed."
After
living briefly in Italy (1844) Dickens travelled to Switzerland (1846); it was
here he began work on Dombey and Son (1846–48).
This and David Copperfield(1849–50)
mark a significant artistic break in Dickens's career as his novels became more
serious in theme and more carefully planned than his early works.
Philanthropy
In May
1846 Angela Burdett Coutts, heir to
the Coutts banking fortune, approached Dickens about setting up a home for the
redemption of fallen women from
the working class. Coutts envisioned a home that would replace the punitive
regimes of existing institutions with a reformative environment conducive to
education and proficiency in domestic household chores. After initially
resisting, Dickens eventually founded the home, named "Urania
Cottage", in the Lime Grove section of Shepherds Bush, which
he was to manage for ten years, setting
the house rules and reviewing the accounts and interviewing prospective
residents. Emigration
and marriage were central to Dickens's agenda for the women on leaving Urania
Cottage, from which it is estimated that about 100 women graduated between 1847
and 1859.
Middle years
In late
November 1851, Dickens moved into Tavistock House where
he wrote Bleak House (1852–53), Hard Times (1854)
and Little Dorrit (1857). It
was here he indulged in the amateur theatricals which are described in
Forster's "Life". In
1856, his income from writing allowed him to buy Gad's Hill Place in Higham, Kent. As a
child, Dickens had walked past the house and dreamed of living in it. The area
was also the scene of some of the events of Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 1 and
this literary connection pleased him.
In 1857,
Dickens hired professional actresses for the play The Frozen Deep, which
he and his protégé Wilkie Collins had
written. Dickens fell deeply in love with one of the actresses, Ellen Ternan, which
was to last the rest of his life.[ Dickens was 45 and Ternan 18
when he made the decision, which went strongly against Victorian convention, to
separate from his wife, Catherine, in 1858—divorce was still unthinkable for
someone as famous as he was. When Catherine left, never to see her husband
again, she took with her one child, leaving the other children to be raised by
her sister Georgina who chose to stay at Gad's Hill.[
During
this period, whilst pondering about giving public readings for his own profit,
Dickens was approached by Great Ormond
Street Hospital to help it survive
its first major financial crisis through a charitable appeal. His 'Drooping
Buds' essay in Household Words earlier
in 3 April 1852 was considered by the hospital's founders to have been the
catalyst for the hospital's success. Dickens,
whose philanthropy was well-known, was asked by his friend, the hospital's
founder Charles West, to preside and he threw himself into the task, heart and
soul. Dickens's public readings secured sufficient funds for an endowment
to put the hospital on a sound financial footing — one of 9 February 1858
alone raised £3,000.
After
separating from Catherine, Dickens
undertook a series of hugely popular and remunerative reading tours which,
together with his journalism, were to absorb most of his creative energies for
the next decade, in which he was to write only two more novels. His
first reading tour, lasting from April 1858 to February 1859, consisted of 129
appearances in 49 different towns throughout England, Scotland and Ireland. Dickens's
continued fascination with the theatrical world was written into the theatre
scenes in Nicholas Nickleby,
but more importantly he found an outlet in public readings. In 1866, he
undertook a series of public readings in England and Scotland, with more the
following year in England and Ireland.
Major
works, A Tale of Two
Cities (1859); and Great Expectations (1861)
soon followed and were resounding successes. During this time he was also the
publisher and editor of, and a major contributor to, the journals Household Words (1850–1859)
and All the Year Round (1858–1870).
In early
September 1860, in a field behind Gad's Hill, Dickens made a great bonfire of
almost his entire correspondence—only those letters on business matters were
spared. Since Ellen Ternan also destroyed all of his letters to her, the
extent of the affair between the two remains speculative. In the 1930s, Thomas
Wright recounted that Ternan had unburdened herself with a Canon Benham, and
gave currency to rumours they had been lovers. That the two had a son who died
in infancy was alleged by Dickens's daughter, Kate Perugini, whom Gladys Storey
had interviewed before her death in 1929, and published her account in Dickens and Daughter, although no
contemporary evidence exists. On his death, Dickens settled an annuity on
Ternan which made her a financially independent woman. Claire Tomalin's
book, The Invisible Woman,
argues that Ternan lived with Dickens secretly for the last 13 years of his
life. The book was subsequently turned into a play, Little Nell, by Simon Gray.
In the
same period, Dickens furthered his interest in the paranormal,
becoming one of the early members of The Ghost Club.
Last years
On
9 June 1865, while returning from Paris with Ternan, Dickens
was involved in the Staplehurst
rail crash. The first seven carriages
of the train plunged off a cast iron bridge
under repair. The only first-class carriage
to remain on the track was the one in which Dickens was travelling. Before
rescuers arrived, Dickens tended and comforted the wounded and the dying with a
flask of brandy and a hat refreshed with water and saved some lives. Before
leaving, he remembered the unfinished manuscript for Our Mutual Friend, and he
returned to his carriage to retrieve it. Dickens later used this experience as
material for his short ghost story, "The Signal-Man",
in which the central character has a premonition of his own death in a rail
crash. He also based the story on several previous rail
accidents, such as the Clayton
Tunnel rail crash of 1861.
Dickens
managed to avoid an appearance at the inquest to
avoid disclosing that he had been travelling with Ternan and her mother, which
would have caused a scandal. Although physically unharmed, Dickens never really
recovered from the trauma of the Staplehurst crash, and his normally prolific
writing shrank to completing Our Mutual Friend and
starting the unfinished The Mystery
of Edwin Drood.
Second visit to the United States
On
9 November 1867, Dickens sailed from Liverpool for
his second American reading tour. Landing at Boston, he devoted the rest of
the month to a round of dinners with such notables as Ralph Waldo
Emerson, Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow and his American
publisher James Thomas
Fields. In early December, the readings began—he
was to perform 76 readings, netting £19,000, from December 1867 to April 1868—and
Dickens spent the month shuttling between Boston and New York, where alone he
gave 22 readings atSteinway Hall for
this period. Although he had started to suffer from what he called the
"true American catarrh", he kept to a schedule that would have
challenged a much younger man, even managing to squeeze in some sleighing
in Central Park.
During
his travels, he saw a significant change in the people and the circumstances of
America. His final appearance was at a banquet the American Press held in his
honour at Delmonico's on
18 April, when he promised never to denounce America again. By the end of the
tour, the author could hardly manage solid food, subsisting on champagne and
eggs beaten in sherry. On 23 April, he boarded his ship to return to Britain,
barely escaping a Federal Tax Lien against
the proceeds of his lecture tour.
Farewell readings
Between
1868 and 1869, Dickens gave a series of "farewell readings" in
England, Scotland, and Ireland, beginning on 6 October. He managed, of a
contracted 100 readings, to deliver 75 in the provinces, with a further 12 in
London. As
he pressed on he was affected by giddiness and fits of paralysis and collapsed
on 22 April 1869, at Preston in
Lancashire, and on doctor's advice, the tour was cancelled. After further
provincial readings were cancelled, he began work on his final novel, The Mystery
of Edwin Drood. It was fashionable in the
1860s to 'do the slums' and, in company, Dickens visited opium dens in Shadwell, where
he witnessed an elderly addict known as "Laskar Sal",
who formed the model for the "Opium Sal" subsequently featured in his
mystery novel, Edwin Drood.
When he
had regained sufficient strength, Dickens arranged, with medical approval, for
a final series of readings at least partially to make up to his sponsors what
they had lost due to his illness. There were to be 12 performances, running
between 11 January and 15 March 1870, the last taking place at
8:00 pm at St. James's Hall in
London. Although in grave health by this time, he read A Christmas Carol and The Trial from Pickwick. On
2 May, he made his last public appearance at a Royal Academy Banquet
in the presence of the Prince and Princess of
Wales, paying a special tribute on the death of
his friend, illustratorDaniel Maclise.
Death
On 8 June
1870, Dickens suffered another stroke at his home, after a full day's work
on Edwin Drood. He never
regained consciousness, and the next day, on 9 June, five years to the day
after the Staplehurst rail crash, he died at Gad's Hill Place. Contrary to his
wish to be buried at Rochester
Cathedral "in an inexpensive,
unostentatious, and strictly private manner," he was laid to rest in
the Poets' Corner of Westminster Abbey. A
printed epitaph circulated at the time of the funeral reads: "To the
Memory of Charles Dickens (England's most popular author) who died at his
residence, Higham, near Rochester, Kent, 9 June 1870, aged 58 years. He
was a sympathiser with the poor, the suffering, and the oppressed; and by his
death, one of England's greatest writers is lost to the world." His
last words were: "On the ground", in response to his daughter
Georgina's request that he lie down.
On
Sunday, 19 June 1870, five days after Dickens was buried in the Abbey,
Dean Arthur
Penrhyn Stanley delivered a memorial
elegy, lauding "the genial and loving humorist whom we now mourn",
for showing by his own example "that even in dealing with the darkest
scenes and the most degraded characters, genius could still be clean, and mirth
could be innocent." Pointing to the fresh flowers that adorned the
novelist's grave, Stanley assured those present that "the spot would
thenceforth be a sacred one with both the New World and the Old, as that of the
representative of literature, not of this island only, but of all who speak our
English tongue."
Literary
style
Dickens
loved the style of the 18th century picaresque novels
which he found in abundance on his father's shelves. According to Ackroyd,
other than these, perhaps the most important literary influence on him was
derived from the fables of The Arabian Nights.
His
writing style is marked by a profuse linguistic creativity. Satire,
flourishing in his gift for caricature is his forte. An early reviewer compared
him to Hogarth for
his keen practical sense of the ludicrous side of life, though his acclaimed
mastery of varieties of class idiom may in fact mirror the conventions of
contemporary popular theatre. Dickens worked intensively on developing
arresting names for his characters that would reverberate with associations for
his readers, and assist the development of motifs in the storyline, giving what
one critic calls an "allegorical impetus" to the novels' meanings.[ To
cite one of numerous examples, the name Mr. Murdstone in David Copperfield conjures up
twin allusions to "murder" and stony coldness.[ His
literary style is also a mixture of fantasy and realism. His
satires of British aristocratic snobbery—he calls one character the "Noble
Refrigerator"—are often popular. Comparing orphans to stocks and shares,
people to tug boats, or dinner-party guests to furniture are just some of
Dickens's acclaimed flights of fancy.
The
author worked closely with his illustrators, supplying them with a summary of
the work at the outset and thus ensuring that his characters and settings were
exactly how he envisioned them. He would brief the illustrator on plans for
each month's instalment so that work could begin before he wrote them. Marcus Stone,
illustrator of Our Mutual Friend,
recalled that the author was always "ready to describe down to the
minutest details the personal characteristics, and ... life-history of the
creations of his fancy."
Characters
Dickens's
biographer Claire Tomalin regards him as the greatest creator of character in
English fiction after Shakespeare. Dickensian characters,
especially so because of their typically whimsical names, are amongst the most
memorable in English literature. The likes of Ebenezer Scrooge, Tiny Tim, Jacob Marley, Bob Cratchit, Oliver Twist, The Artful Dodger, Fagin, Bill Sikes,Pip, Miss Havisham, Charles Darnay, David
Copperfield, Mr. Micawber, Abel Magwitch, Daniel Quilp, Samuel Pickwick, Wackford Squeers, Uriah Heep are
so well known as to be part and parcel of British culture, and in some cases
have passed into ordinary language: a scrooge, for example, is a miser.
His
characters were often so memorable that they took on a life of their own
outside his books. Gamp became a slang expression for an umbrella from the
character Mrs Gamp and
Pickwickian, Pecksniffian, and Gradgrind all entered dictionaries due to
Dickens's original portraits of such characters who were quixotic,
hypocritical, or vapidly factual. Many were drawn from real life: Mrs Nickleby
is based on his mother, though she didn't recognize herself in the
portrait,just as Mr Micawber is constructed from aspects of his father's
'rhetorical exuberance':[ Harold Skimpole in Bleak House, is based on James Henry
Leigh Hunt: his wife's dwarfish
chiropodist recognized herself in Miss Mowcher in David Copperfield. Perhaps
Dickens's impressions on his meeting with Hans Christian Andersen informed the
delineation of Uriah Heep.
Virginia
Woolf maintained that "we remodel our psychological geography when we read
Dickens" as he produces "characters who exist not in detail, not
accurately or exactly, but abundantly in a cluster of wild yet extraordinarily
revealing remarks."
One
"character" vividly drawn throughout his novels is London itself.
From the coaching inns on
the outskirts of the city to the lower reaches of the Thames, all aspects of the
capital are described over the course of his body of work.
Autobiographical elements
Authors
frequently draw their portraits of characters from people they have known in
real life. David Copperfield is
regarded as strongly autobiographical. The scenes in Bleak House of interminable
court cases and legal arguments reflect Dickens's experiences as law clerk and
court reporter, and in particular his direct experience of the law's procedural
delay during 1844 when he sued publishers in Chancery for breach of copyright.
Dickens's father was sent to prison for debt, and this became a common theme in
many of his books, with the detailed depiction of life in the Marshalsea prison
in Little Dorrit resulting
from Dickens's own experiences of the institution. Lucy Stroughill, a childhood
sweetheart may have affected several of Dickens's portraits of girls such as
Little Em'ly in David Copperfield and
Lucie Manette in A Tale of Two
Cities. Dickens may have drawn on his childhood experiences, but he
was also ashamed of them and would not reveal that this was where he gathered
his realistic accounts of squalor. Very few knew the details of his early life
until six years after his death when John Forster published a biography on
which Dickens had collaborated. Even figures based on real people can, at the
same time, represent at the same time elements of the writer's own personality.
Though Skimpole brutally sends up Leigh Hunt, some critics have detected in his
portrait features of Dickens's own character, which he sought to exorcise by
self-parody.
Episodic writing
Most of
Dickens's major novels were first written in monthly or weekly instalments in
journals such as Master
Humphrey's Clock and Household Words, later
reprinted in book form. These instalments made the stories cheap, accessible
and the series of regular cliff-hangers made
each new episode widely anticipated. When The Old
Curiosity Shop was being serialized,
American fans even waited at the docks in New York, shouting out to the crew of
an incoming ship, "Is little Nell dead?" Part
of Dickens's great talent was to incorporate this episodic writing style but
still end up with a coherent novel at the end.
Another
important impact of Dickens's episodic writing style resulted from his exposure
to the opinions of his readers and friends. His friend Forster had a
significant hand, reviewing his drafts, that went beyond matters of punctation.
He toned down melodramatic and sensationalist exaggerations, cut long passages,
(such as the episode of Quilp's drowning in The Old Curiosity Shop), and made suggestions about plot and
character. It was he who suggested that Charley Bates should be redeemed
in Oliver Twist. Dickens
had not thought of killing Little Nell, and it was Forster who advised him to
entertain this possibility as necessary to his conception of the heroine.[
Social commentary
Dickens's
novels were, among other things, works of social commentary. He was
a fierce critic of the poverty and social
stratification of Victoriansociety.
In a New York address, he expressed his belief that, "Virtue shows quite
as well in rags and patches as she does in purple and fine
linen".Dickens's second novel, Oliver
Twist (1839), shocked readers with its images of poverty and crime:
it destroyed middle class polemics about criminals, making any pretence to
ignorance about what poverty entailed impossible.
Literary techniques
Dickens
is often described as using 'idealised' characters and highly sentimental
scenes to contrast with his caricatures and
the ugly social truths he reveals. The story of Nell Trent in The Old Curiosity Shop (1841)
was received as extraordinarily moving by contemporary readers but viewed as
ludicrously sentimental by Oscar Wilde.
"You would need to have a heart of stone", he declared in one of his
famous witticisms, "not to laugh at the death of little Nell."[
G. K. Chesterton, stating
that "It is not the death of little Nell, but the life of little Nell,
that I object to", argued that the maudlin effect of his description of
her life owed much to the gregarious nature of Dickens's grief, his 'despotic'
use of people's feelings to move them to tears in works like this.
In Oliver Twist Dickens provides readers
with an idealised portrait of a boy so inherently and unrealistically 'good'
that his values are never subverted by either brutal orphanages or coerced
involvement in a gang of young pickpockets. While
later novels also centre on idealised characters (Esther Summerson in Bleak House and Amy Dorrit
in Little Dorrit), this
idealism serves only to highlight Dickens's goal of poignant social commentary.
Many of his novels are concerned with social realism, focusing on mechanisms of
social control that direct people's lives (for instance, factory networks
in Hard Times and
hypocritical exclusionary class codes in Our Mutual Friend).[citation
needed] Dickens's
fiction, reflecting what he believed to be true of his own life, scintillates
with coincidences.[ Oliver Twist turns out to be the lost
nephew of the upper-class family that randomly rescues him from the dangers of
the pickpocket group. Such coincidences are a staple of 18th-century picaresque
novels, such as Henry Fielding's Tom Jones that
Dickens enjoyed reading as a youth.
Reception
Dickens
was the most popular novelist of his time, and remains one of the best known
and most read of English authors. His works have never gone out of print, and
have been adapted continuously for the screen since the invention of
cinema, with at least 200 motion pictures and TV adaptations based on
Dickens's works documented. Many of his works were adapted for the stage
during his own lifetime and as early as 1913, a silent film of The Pickwick Papers was made.
Among
fellow writers, Dickens has been both lionized and mocked. Leo Tolstoy, G. K. Chesterton and George Orwell praised
his realism, comic
voice, prose fluency, and genius for satiric caricature, as well as his passionate advocacy on
behalf of children and the poor. On the other hand, Oscar Wilde generally
disparaged his depiction of character, while admiring his gift for caricature; His
late contemporary William Wordsworth, by
then Poet laureate, thought
him a "very talkative, vulgar young person", adding he had not read a
line of his work; Dickens in return thought Wordsworth "a dreadful Old
Ass". Henry James denied him a premier position, calling him,
"the greatest of superficial novelists": Dickens failed to endow his
characters with psychological depth and the novels, "loose baggy
monsters" betrayed
a "cavalier organisation". Virginia Woolf had a love-hate
relationship with his works, finding his novels "mesmerizing" while
reproving him for his sentimentalism and a commonplace style.
It is
likely that A Christmas Carol stands
as his best-known story, with frequent new adaptations. It is also the
most-filmed of Dickens's stories, with many versions dating from the early
years of cinema. According to the historian Ronald Hutton, the
current state of the observance of Christmas is largely the result of a
mid-Victorian revival of the holiday spearheaded by A Christmas Carol. Dickens catalysed
the emerging Christmas as a family-centred festival of generosity, in contrast
to the dwindling community-based and church-centred observations, as new
middle-class expectations arose. Its
archetypal figures (Scrooge, Tiny Tim, the Christmas ghosts) entered into
Western cultural consciousness. A prominent phrase from the tale, 'Merry Christmas', was
popularised following the appearance of the story. The term Scrooge became a
synonym for miser, and his dismissive put-down exclamation 'Bah! Humbug!' likewise
gained currency as an idiom. Novelist William
Makepeace Thackeray called the book
"a national benefit, and to every man and woman who reads it a personal
kindness".
At a time
when Britain was the major economic and political power of the world, Dickens
highlighted the life of the forgotten poor and disadvantaged within society.
Through his journalism he campaigned on specific issues—such as sanitation and
the workhouse—but his
fiction probably demonstrated its greatest prowess in changing public opinion
in regard to class inequalities. He often depicted the exploitation and
oppression of the poor and condemned the public officials and institutions that
not only allowed such abuses to exist, but flourished as a result. His most
strident indictment of this condition is in Hard Times (1854), Dickens's only novel-length treatment of
the industrial working class. In this work, he uses both vitriol and satire to
illustrate how this marginalised social stratum was termed "Hands" by
the factory owners; that is, not really "people" but rather only
appendages of the machines that they operated. His writings inspired others, in
particular journalists and political figures, to address such problems of class
oppression. For example, the prison scenes in The Pickwick Papers are claimed to have been influential in
having the Fleet Prison shut
down. Karl Marx asserted
that Dickens ..."issued to the world more political and social truths
than have been uttered by all the professional politicians, publicists and
moralists put together". George
Bernard Shaw even remarked
that Great Expectations was
more seditious than Marx's own Das Kapital.
The exceptional popularity of his novels, even those with socially
oppositional themes (Bleak House,
1853; Little Dorrit,
1857; Our Mutual Friend,
1865) underscored not only his almost preternatural ability to create
compelling storylines and unforgettable characters, but also ensured that the
Victorian public confronted issues of social justice that had commonly been
ignored. It has been argued that his technique of flooding his narratives with
an 'unruly superfluity of material' that, in the gradual dénouement, yields up
an unsuspected order, influenced the organisation of Charles Darwin's On the Origin
of Species.[
His
fiction, with often vivid descriptions of life in 19th-century England, has
inaccurately and anachronistically come to symbolise on a global level
Victorian society (1837 – 1901) as uniformly "Dickensian", when
in fact, his novels' time scope spanned from the 1770s to the 1860s. In the
decade following his death in 1870, a more intense degree of socially and
philosophically pessimistic perspectives invested British fiction; such themes
stood in marked contrast to the religious faith that ultimately held together
even the bleakest of Dickens's novels. Dickens clearly influenced later
Victorian novelists such as Thomas Hardy and George Gissing; their
works display a greater willingness to confront and challenge the Victorian
institution of religion. They also portray characters caught up by social
forces (primarily via lower-class conditions), but they usually steered them to
tragic ends beyond their control.
Influence
and legacy
Museums
and festivals celebrating Dickens's life and works exist in many places with
which Dickens was associated, such as the Charles Dickens Birthplace Museum
in Portsmouth, the
house in which he was born. The original manuscripts of many of his novels, as
well as printers' proofs, first editions, and illustrations from the collection
of Dickens's friend John Forster are held at the Victoria and
Albert Museum. Dickens's will
stipulated that no memorial be erected in his honour. The only life-size bronze
statue of Dickens, cast in 1891 by Francis Edwin
Elwell, can be found in Clark Park in
the Spruce Hill neighbourhood
of Philadelphia.
Dickens
was commemorated on the Series E £10 note issued by the Bank of
England that was in circulation in the UK
between 1992 and 2003. His portrait
appeared on the reverse of the note accompanied by a scene from The Pickwick Papers. A theme
park, Dickens World,
standing in part on the site of the former naval dockyard where
Dickens's father once worked in the Navy Pay Office, opened in Chatham in
2007, and to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens in
2012, the Museum of London held
the UK's first major exhibition on the author in 40 years. In the UK
survey entitled The Big Read carried
out by the BBC in 2003, five of
Dickens's books were named in the Top 100.
Notable
works
Charles
Dickens published over a dozen major novels, a large number of short stories
(including a number of Christmas-themed stories), a handful of plays, and several
non-fiction books. Dickens's novels were initially serialised in weekly and
monthly magazines, then reprinted in standard book formats.
Novels
§
The
Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club (Monthly
serial, April 1836 to November 1837)
§
The Adventures of Oliver Twist (Monthly serial in Bentley's
Miscellany, February 1837 to April 1839)
§
The Life
and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (Monthly
serial, April 1838 to October 1839)
§
The Old
Curiosity Shop (Weekly serial
in Master Humphrey's Clock,
25 April 1840, to 6 February 1841)
§
Barnaby Rudge: A Tale of the Riots of 'Eighty (Weekly serial in Master
Humphrey's Clock, 13 February 1841, to 27 November 1841)
§ The Christmas books:
§ A Christmas Carol (1843)
§ The Chimes (1844)
§
The Cricket
on the Hearth (1845)
§ The Battle of Life (1846)
§
The Haunted Man and the Ghost's Bargain (1848)
§
The Life
and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit (Monthly
serial, January 1843 to July 1844)
|
§
Dombey and Son (Monthly
serial, October 1846 to April 1848)
§
David
Copperfield (Monthly serial,
May 1849 to November 1850)
§
Bleak House (Monthly
serial, March 1852 to September 1853)
§
Hard Times: For These Times (Weekly serial in Household
Words, 1 April 1854, to 12 August 1854)
§
Little Dorrit (Monthly
serial, December 1855 to June 1857)
§
A Tale of
Two Cities (Weekly serial
in All the Year Round,
30 April 1859, to 26 November 1859)
§
Great
Expectations (Weekly serial
in All the Year Round, 1
December 1860 to 3 August 1861)
§
Our Mutual
Friend (Monthly serial, May 1864 to November
1865)
§ The Mystery
of Edwin Drood (Monthly serial,
April 1870 to September 1870. Only six of twelve planned numbers completed)
|
Short story collections
§ Sketches by
Boz (1836)
§
The Mudfog Papers (1837)
in Bentley's Miscellany magazine
§ Reprinted
Pieces (1861)
§ The Uncommercial Traveller (1860–1869)
Christmas numbers
of Household Words magazine:
§
What
Christmas Is, as We Grow Older (1851)
§
A
Round of Stories by the Christmas Fire (1852)
§
Another
Round of Stories by the Christmas Fire(1853)
§ The
Seven Poor Travellers (1854)
§ The
Holly-Tree Inn (1855)
§
The
Wreck of the "Golden Mary" (1856)
§
The
Perils of Certain English Prisoners (1857)
§ A House to
Let (1858)
|
Christmas numbers of All the Year Round magazine:
§ The
Haunted House (1859)
§
A
Message from the Sea (1860)
§ Tom
Tiddler's Ground (1861)
§ Somebody's
Luggage (1862)
§ Mrs.
Lirriper's Lodgings (1863)
§ Mrs.
Lirriper's Legacy (1864)
§ Doctor
Marigold's Prescriptions (1865)
§ Mugby
Junction (1866)
§ No
Thoroughfare (1867)
|
Selected non-fiction, poetry, and plays
§ The
Village Coquettes (Plays,
1836)
§
The
Fine Old English Gentleman (poetry, 1841)
§ Memoirs of Joseph Grimaldi (1838)
§
American Notes: For General Circulation(1842)
§ Pictures from Italy (1846)
|
§
The Life of
Our Lord: As written for his children(1849)
§
A Child's
History of England (1853)
§ The Frozen
Deep (play,
1857)
§ Speeches,
Letters and Sayings (1870)
|
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario