charles
dickens
Charles Dickens was born in 1812 and he lived during a very challenging
time for Europe. His stories were very realistic and sometimes very
sad to read. They dealt with how life was for the poor and lower-classes.
His art, although not always pleasant to read, has a unique style
and I love the way Dickens put words together. He lived until 1870
and during his life-time, he wrote several books. Out of all his
works, my favorites are "Great Expectations" and "A
Tale of Two Cities".
Charles Dickens is to Victorian England what Shakespeare is to Renaissance
England: he typifies the period his writings disclose and expose.
The greatest comic genius of his age, Dickens relentlessly calls
for reform at every level, implores us to embrace the disadvantaged
for our own good, and offers the values of a loving heart and the
image of a warm hearth as the emblem of the solution to the cruel
and mindless indifference of a society given over to the pursuit
of "money, money, money, and what money can make of life,"
as Bella Wilfer says in Our Mutual Friend.
Born in Portsmouth, England, on February 7, 1812, the second of
John and Elizabeth Dickens's eight children, Charles was raised
with the assumption that he would receive an education and, if he
worked hard, might some day come to live at Gad's Hill Place, the
finest house on the main road between Rochester and Gravesend. But
John Dickens, on whom Mr. Micawber is based, moved the family to
London in 1823, fell into financial disaster, was arrested for debt
and imprisoned in the Marshalsea Debtors' Prison. Charles was forced
to go to work at Warren's Blacking Factory at Hungerford Stairs
labeling bottles. In his Life of Charles Dickens, John Forster shares
the fragment of Dickens's autobiography upon which David Copperfield's
Murdstone and Grinby experiences are based:
It is wonderful to me how I could have been so easily cast away
at such an age. It is wonderful to me, that, even after my descent
into the poor little drudge I had been since we came to London,
no one had compassion on me -- a child of singular abilities, quick,
eager, delicate, and soon hurt, bodily or mentally -- to suggest
that something might have been spared, as certainly it might have
been, to place me at any common school. Our friends, I take it,
were tired out. No one made any sign. My father and mother were
quite satisfied. They could hardly have been more so, if I had been
twenty years of age, distinguished at a grammar-school, and going
to Cambridge.
Dickens himself did not know how long this ordeal lasted, "whether
for a year, or much more, or less"; surely it must have seemed
as if it would last forever to this sensitive twelve-year-old
boy and it so seared his psyche that Dickens the man never "until
I impart it to this paper [a full quarter century later], in any
burst of confidence to anyone, my own wife not excepted, raised
the curtain I then dropped, thank God."
Dickens was able to continue his education after his father received
a legacy from a relative and was released from the Marshalsea.
Charles attended Wellington House Academy from 1824 to 1826 before
taking work as a clerk in Gray's Inn for two years. In order to
qualify himself to become a newspaper parliamentary reporter,
Dickens spent eighteen months studying shorthand, a perfect command
of which was "equal in difficulty to the mastery of six languages,"
he was cautioned, and studying in the reading room of the British
Museum. He won a reputation for his quickness and accuracy during
his two years (1828-1830) as a reporter in the court of Doctors'
Commons before reporting for the True Sun and the Mirror Parliament
and finally becoming a reporter for the Morning Chronicle in 1834.
Dickens's first published piece appeared in the December, 1833,
number of the Monthly Magazine , followed by nine others, the
last two appearing over the signature "Boz," a pseudonym
Dickens adopted from a pet name for his younger brother. These
sketches were collected into two volumes and published on Dickens's
twenty-fourth birthday, February 7, 1836, as Sketches by Boz.
Illustrative of Everyday Life and Everyday People. Dickens's skills
as an observant reporter intimately familiar with middle and lower
class London are demonstrated in these descriptive vignettes of
everyday life, which also reveal his high humor and his deep concern
for social justice, qualities that will dominate his novels.
On April 2, 1836, Dickens married Catherine Hogarth, daughter
of George Hogarth, with whom Dickens worked on the Morning Chronicle
. Catherine and Charles had ten children before they separated
in 1858. Mary Hogarth, Catherine's beautiful younger sister, joined
the Dickens household shortly after the honeymoon. Mary's death,
at seventeen years of age, in Dickens's arms established in his
mind an image of ideal womanhood that never left him. The ring
he took from Mary's dead finger remained on his hand until his
own death.
The introduction of Sam Weller into the fourth number of Pickwick
Papers (1836-37) launched the most popular literary career in
the history of the language. Pickwick Papers became a publishing
phenomenon, selling forty thousand copies of every issue. Published
in twenty monthly installments, Pickwick took England by storm:
Judges read it on the bench, doctors in the carriages between
visiting patients, boys on the street. Carlyle tells Forster the
story of a clergyman who, after consoling a sick person, was alarmed
to hear the patient exclaim, upon the clergyman's leaving the
sickroom, "Well, Thank God, Pickwick will be out in ten days
anyway!" People named their pet animals after characters
in the novel; there were Pickwick hats, cigars, and coats, and
innumerable plays and sequels based on the original.
The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club chronicle the amusing
misadventures of Mr. Pickwick, a lovable innocent who seeks to
discover the world with his youthful companions, parodies of the
lover, the sportsman, and the poet. While the Papers begin as
a hilarious romp parodying the eighteenth-century novels Dickens
had pored over as a child, they eventually assume a shape rising
to the mythic level of great literature. Pickwick's education,
under the guidance of Sam Weller, his streetwise, Cockney manservant,
leads him to the discovery of the world of shyster lawyers, guile,
corruption, vice, and imprisonment. The comic exuberance of Pickwick
dominates this dark underside, though, and the sheer energy and
wonderful good humor of the Papers carries the sunny day. There
are, however, the Interpolated Tales of madness, betrayal, and
murder, and Mr. Pickwick is forced to become a prisoner in his
own room in the Fleet, for three months. The horrors young Charles
Dickens had witnessed as a boy working in the blacking warehouse
while his father was imprisoned for debt in the Marshalsea are
not eliminated from Pickwick's world; indeed, his awareness of
their existence is what allows Mr. Pickwick to become a fully
loving, if finally not fully effective human being, who, with
Sam's help, can see reality and relieve evil--to the best of his
limited abilities.
Even as Pickwick Papers was enjoying its huge success, Dickens
started Oliver Twist; or The Parish Boy's Progress in January,
1837; it continued in monthly numbers through 1838. In Oliver
, Dickens explores the social evils attendant upon a political
economy that made pauperism the rule rather than the exception.
Oliver flees the cruel Sowerbys where he is apprenticed as an
undertaker, having been sold to them by the workhouse for daring
to ask for more -- food, love, nutrition, warmth -- and seeks
his fortune in the criminal slum world of London proper. Befriended
by the irrepressible Artful Dodger, he discovers warmth and good
humor in Fagin's den, among thieves, pickpockets, prostitutes,
and burglars. Dickens presents an unrelenting portrait of the
filth and squalor that surround poverty and, refusing to romanticize
the criminal world, at the same time makes it clear that this
sector has been abandoned by society just as surely as Oliver
and the other Parish Boys have been abandoned by an unresponsive
system. This is the world the young Dickens saw at the blacking
warehouse.
The contrasting world of the Brownlows and the Maylies may serve
to rescue Oliver from the corruption of Fagin and the brutality
of Sikes, but the other boys in Fagin's gang--who have been nurtured
better by Fagin than Oliver's fellows had been in the workhouse--will
remain abandoned. Rose Maylie, Dickens's first resurrection of
Mary Hogarth, is discovered to be Oliver's aunt and Oliver is
returned to her through Nancy's intervention, When Bill Sikes
learns of Nancy's betrayal of him and the gang, Dickens has Sikes
brutally murder her. Dickens's almost compulsive public reading
of the death of Nancy some thirty years later--readings that shortened
his own life--seems an insistent reminder to his public that this
problem has not been successfully addressed. The social system
has victimized Nancy and Sikes just as surely as the Poor Law
has failed Oliver. There may be Brownlows and Maylies who can
intervene individually and occasionally--and miraculously--in
the lives of some Olivers, but the masses of screaming mobs hot
in pursuit of Sikes for the murder of Nancy need to know how those
destructive forces can be reversed. Sikes has been as brutalized
by that society as Nancy has been by him. Dickens's novels seek
to help us understand this and to do something about it, as a
society.
The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby , appearing in twenty
numbers from April, 1838, to October, 1839, returns to the comic
exuberance and vitality of Pickwick Papers. Dickens is exposing
the cruelty and exploitation of children in the Cheap Schools
in Yorkshire, immortalized in the portrayal of Wackford Squeers
at Dotheboys Hall. In Nickleby Dickens brings together the serious
issues of social reform he addresses in Oliver Twist with the
rollicking humor and vast landscape of humanity he presents in
Pickwick Papers . The public responded enthusiastically with sales
reaching fifty thousand.
Fearing the public might weary of long novels like Pickwick and
Nickleby in twenty monthly installments, Dickens decided to embark
on a publication resembling the Spectator , which would come out
weekly and allow him--with the help of others--"to write
amusing essays on the various foibles as they arise" and
to introduce new characters, along with Pickwick and Sam Weller,
to comment on passing events. Thus was born Master Humphrey's
Clock (1840-41), a weekly magazine, the first number of which
sold seventy thousand copies. However, as sales dropped off due
to the lack of a sustained story, Dickens introduced the story
of Little Nell in The Old Curiosity
Shop (1840), beginning with the fourth number of Master Humphrey's
Clock and resuming intermittently until the ninth chapter, at
which point it continued uninterrupted. The story of the innocent
Nell surrounded by surrealistic figures like Quilp and his gang
and continuing onto a nightmarish journey through the industrial
inferno with her half-crazed, gambleholic grandfather calls forth
all of Dickens's original genius. The death of Nell, based on
the death of Mary Hogarth, caused a nation to weep and skyrocketed
sales to 100,000 copies. The publication of The Old Curiosity
Shop secured Dickens's success not only in England but in America,
where he was now famous as well.
Dickens followed The Old Curiosity Shop with Barnaby Rudge
(1841), also published weekly in Master Humphrey's Clock . Set
in the time of the Gordon Riots of 1780, this represents Dickens's
first attempt to write an historical novel. While the riots themselves
were inflamed by anti-Catholic sentiment, Dickens suggests throughout
the novel that they are actually an outburst of social protest.
Dickens is appalled by the mob violence he brilliantly depicts
in the brutal riots, but he expresses deep sympathy for the oppressed
who are driven to such lengths by an indifferent and unresponsive
system. Dickens himself was becoming increasingly impatient with
England's political economy, which he perceives as insensitive
to the needs of the people, and is indignant with the social conditions
he sees around him. While he does not advocate a violent outburst
from those who are the victims of this oppression, the explosive
energy of the riot scenes in Barnaby offers a vision of what is
possible if the needs of the people are not addressed.
Upon completing Barnaby Rudge Dickens visited America where he
was absolutely lionized. However, after several attacks on him
for his insistent speaking out in favor of international copyright
laws and after further acquaintance with American ill breeding
and overly familiar intrusion on his and Catherine's privacy,
Dickens became disenchanted with his own vision of America as
a land of freedom that was fulfilling a democratic ideal. In American
Notes (1842) he expresses his reservations about America, much
to the chagrin of his American audience.
With The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit , Dickens returned
to monthly numbers publishing in twenty installments from January,
1843, to July, 1844. Martin Chuzzlewit is organized around the
theme of selfishness, and marks an advance in Dickens's development
as a novelist. However, sales dropped off to twenty thousand;
in an effort to increase sales, Dickens sends Martin to America
where Martin discovers the boorish behavior Dickens had only gently
portrayed in American Notes . But if Dickens is scathing in his
portrayal of America in Chuzzlewit , he is even fiercer in exposing
greed, selfishness, hypocrisy, and corruption in his homeland.
He is able to sustain this satiric exposure with his comic genius,
creating here characters who have achieved a reality beyond their
pages. Sairey Gamp is no less real for us than Mrs. Harris is
for her, and Pecksniff's name has entered the language as descriptive
of hypocritical benevolence.
In December, 1843, Dickens published the most popular and beloved
of his works, A Christmas Carol, a work that expresses succinctly
his "Carol philosophy." Scrooge has sacrificed joy,
love, and beauty for the pursuit of money and is representative
of a society whose economic philosophy dooms the less fortunate
to lives of want and oppression. The ghosts help him to a Wordsworthian
recollection of youth and the promise of a better being, and as
a result, Scrooge's imagination is extended sympathetically beyond
himself and he is redeemed. Dickens's vision of a society redeemed
through love and generosity will haunt his works from now on.
The alternative to this vision seems to be the threat of revolutionary
violence we see in Brandy Rudge .
Dickens traveled to Italy in 1844-45 and then to Switzerland
and Paris in 1846. His next Christmas book, The Chimes (1844),
continued the assault on the economic philosophy exposed in A
Christmas Carol. Dickens ridicules Malthusian philosophy and the
economic theory that the poor have no right to anything beyond
meager subsistence. He is coming increasingly to believe that
the social problems in England are an inevitable byproduct of
an economic philosophy that is fundamentally wrong-minded. The
Cricket and the Hearth (1845) and The Battle of Life (1846) continue
the Christmas books, and Pictures from Italy (1846) recounts Dickens's
impressions of his Italian travel.
Dealings with the Firm of Dombey and Son appeared in seventeen
monthly numbers from January, 1847, through April 1848, the last
being a double number. In this work Dickens is able to integrate
his criticism of the social philosophy dominating nineteenth-century
England into the structure of the novel itself, as he will continue
to do in Bleak House, Hard Times, Little Dorrit, and Our Mutual
Friend. Dombey and Son investigates the callous indifference of
an economic system that places the cash nexus before human relations.
Mr. Dombey, who represents the enterprising nineteenth century
businessman, rejects the love of his daughter in favor of the
son who will become heir to the firm. Dombey's universe collapses
around him as his son dies, he drives his daughter away, his second
wife leaves him, his business goes bankrupt, and he loses his
fortune. Like Scrooge, though, Dombey is redeemed by memory and
remorse--and the loving forgiveness of his daughter.
The importance of memory once again becomes central to Dickens's
next Christmas book, The Haunted Man and the Ghost's Bargain (1848),
the tale of a man who gets his wish to lose all memory of sorrow
at the expense of losing the attendant sensibility that comes
with the loss of memory. This Wordsworthian concern for the importance
of recollection of the past and the healing influence of memory--even
the memory of sorrow and grief--comes to be central for Dickens,
as he has his story conclude with the prayer, "Lord, Keep
my Memory Green."
It is at this time that Dickens is writing the autobiographical
fragment he shares with Forster and which he mined for his most
autobiographical novel, The Personal History of David Copperfield
, published in twenty monthly installments from May, 1849, to
November, 1850, the last issue being a double number. David Copperfield
opens with David, the narrator, indicating that the pages of his
book must show whether he will turn out to be the hero of his
own life. After overcoming the brutal experiences based on Dickens's
own experience at the blacking warehouse, David eventually marries,
sets up household, establishes a growing reputation as a novelist,
and yet discovers "a vague unhappy loss or want of something"
in his life. He wonders if this unhappiness is the result of his
having given in to "the first mistaken impulse of an undisciplined
heart" by marrying his child-wife, or if it is representative
of the human condition. He does know it would have been better
if his wife "could have helped me more, and shared the many
thoughts to which I had no partner; and that this might have been;
I knew."
Dickens was himself experiencing a similar sense of vague dissatisfaction
at this time and may have wondered if his wife were not partly
responsible. Whether she was or whether Dickens was experiencing
the angst that every major Victorian thinker suffered from we
cannot know. David's problem is settled by Dora's early death
and David's recognition that Agnes has loved him all along and
that on a level he was not aware of he had loved her too. They
marry, have a lovely family, and share a fulfilled existence.
The novel ends with David's apostrophe to his true wife: "Oh
Agnes, Oh my soul, so may thy face be by me when I close my life
indeed; so may I, when the shadows which I now dismiss, still
find thee near me, pointing upward!" In his Preface to the
novel, Dickens talks about "dismissing some portion of himself
into the shadowy world" as he finishes David Copperfield.
Both Dickens and David equate the world of vision with the world
of actuality--one is as impermanent as the other. For David, Agnes
is pointing to a world he hopes lasts beyond the worlds of shadow.
In 1842, Dickens had written to Forster in response to the overwhelming
triumph of his welcome in Boston: "I feel, in the best aspects
of this welcome, something of the presence and influence of that
spirit which directs my life, and through a heavy sorrow has pointed
upward with unchanging finger for more than four years past."
He is referring, of course, to Mary Hogarth.
In the novel, David is able to realize his ideal vision, actually
to possess the beauty that is his inspiration and end as artist.
Mary Hogarth becomes, for Dickens, an idealized vision of beauty
that cannot be possessed, but she serves "as a presence and
influence of that spirit that directs" Dickens's life. Whether
that ideal can be attained beyond this realm is not the issue.
The ideal has allowed David to become the hero of his life, not
by possessing the ideal but by acting on its inspiration. David
the artist becomes artist as the result of realizing his imaginative
vision, of creating art. In the act of creating art he possesses
the vision.
The world David is born into is flawed. He experiences the evil
of the world, deeply at Murdstone and Grinby's, and escapes it.
In his adult world he participates in the evil, contributes to
it, unwittingly, as when he introduces Steerforth to the Peggottys
and brings ruin upon that innocent house. He feels responsible
for Dora's death, the loss of Em'ly, Steerforth, and Ham. But
in the end he is able, with Agnes's help, to put his universe
back together. He has been involved in a struggle, with his undisciplined
heart on the one hand, with active evil in the form of Uriah Heep
on the other. Agnes tells David that she believes simple love
and truth will prevail over evil in the end. It will, for Dickens,
only if goodness has the measure of evil and if good people are
willing to use their creative energy to work hard to realize that
goodness. The evil that David experienced as a child on the streets
of London sharpened his wits so that, for example, David is able
to catch Uriah staring at him while pretending to write, on their
first encounter. And as a result of David's experience on the
streets, he has the help of Mr. Micawber in defeating Uriah in
his scheme to take over the Wickfield firm, indeed to take over
the world of the novel. David's first-hand experience with the
evil streets of London as a boy gives him the knowledge and wherewithal
to take the measure of evil. His imaginative creativity, inspired
by Agnes, allows him to order his universe. The very powers that
allow David Copperfield to succeed as hero are the powers that
allow Dickens to create David Copperfield . He will extend those
powers beyond the world of the novel to continue to address the
evils of a social system that is oppressive and life denying.
Dickens extended his capacity to address social issues and to
provide entertainment by founding Household Words , a weekly magazine
that first appeared on March 30, 1850, and continued until he
replaced it with All the Year Round , which he founded and edited
in 1859.
In 1850 he also helped to establish the Guild of Literature
and Art to create an endowment for struggling artists. Money was
raised for the Guild through amateur theatrical performances that
Dickens usually performed in, directed, and managed. Dickens was
a brilliant actor and loved the stage, producing plays throughout
his career as fund raisers for the many charitable concerns he
worked tirelessly to support. His love for the theater culminated
in his captivating public readings from his own novels.
Bleak House , appearing in twenty monthly installments from March,
1852, to September, 1853, is a scathing indictment of government,
law, philanthropy, religion, and society in nineteenth century
England. The organizing principle of the plot is the hopelessly
entangled lawsuit of Jarndyce and Jarndyce, which destroys the
lives of all who become enmeshed in the Court of Chancery through
the suit. The legal system is exposed as itself a symptom of what
is wrong with a society that is structurally flawed. The mud,
ooze, slime, and fog that symbolically dominate the world of this
novel suggest that this society cannot be redeemed through a simple
restructuring. The spontaneous combustion of Krook, the counterpart
of the Lord Chancellor, indicates that this society must be fundamentally
altered or it will explode of its own internal corruption. Jo,
the crossing sweep, has neither the energy nor the tools to sweep
away the mud and slime into which the slum of Tom-all-Alone's
is crumbling. And Tom-all-Alone's is infecting all of London,
just as surely as Jo's smallpox infects the novel's heroine, Esther
Summerson.
If this society is to be redeemed, Dickens insists, it will
be through the values represented by Esther Summerson. Jo's broom
cannot sweep away the mud of Tom-all-Alone's, but the clarity
and warmth of Esther's sympathetic love may be capable, if it
becomes contagious, of illuminating this world and dissipating
the fog. Esther and Allan Woodcourt, the physician who attends
Jo at his death, marry, and we believe that their family can contain,
in miniature, the order and love that must be transmitted to the
larger society if it is to be saved. But Dickens is not sure,
at this point, if what Esther and Allan represent can withstand
the evils of London: they set up household in a country cottage,
provided by the benevolent John Jarndyce, Esther's guardian.
In order to improve the sales of Household Words , which had
started to slip in 1854, Dickens began to publish a new serial
in weekly installments in that magazine. Hard Times. For These
Times , an assault on the industrial greed and political economy
that exploits the working classes and deadens the soul, ran from
April 1 to August 12, 1854. The Gradgrind philosophy, based on
Facts, Facts, Facts of utilitarian calculus, is demonstrated as
being not only cruel and destructive to the workers--"hands"--it
dehumanizes and exploits but humanly inadequate to the Gradgrind
family it purportedly serves. Mrs. Gradgrind sees that her husband
has missed something, "not an ology at all," in his
life, and Louisa and her brother Tom, "the whelp," are
nearly destroyed by the mechanical philosophy of Gradgrindery.
Sissy Jupe, who grew up among Sleary's Horse Riding Circus, represents
the imaginative creativity and generosity that the Gradgrind family
miss. The union of Sissy and Loo, at the conclusion of the novel,
is emblematic of what Dickens believes industrial England needs:
"let me lay this head of mine upon a loving heart,"
Loo says to Sissy at the end.
The Crimean War, which broke out in March, 1854, prevented the
government from addressing the domestic social ills Dickens had
been railing against since at least as early as Oliver Twist.
The inept government, which cannot seem to get beyond just muddling
along, is captured brilliantly in the portrayal of the Circumlocution
Office in Little Dorrit , published in monthly numbers from December,
1855, to June, 1857. The dominant symbol of the novel is imprisonment,
and society itself becomes the prison of its inhabitants. Dickens
had begun the novel, significantly, with the title "Nobody's
Fault" in mind, but later entitled the work after its heroine,
Amy Dorrit. Amy is the daughter of the "Father of the Marshalsea,"
who has been confined in debtors' prison for twenty five years.
Arthur Clennam, whose gloomy childhood resembles what David Copperfield's
would have been had he been raised by the Murdstones, is a middle-aged
man looking for meaning in life. Clennam and Little Dorrit escape
the imprisonment of this stultifying society by discovering their
love for each other, a love that is difficult to discover since
Arthur is so much older than Amy and she has the goodness, and
physical resemblance, of a child. Importantly for Dickens, Arthur
and Amy are willing to engage the fallen society of London and
to attempt to change it. After their wedding Arthur and Amy "went
quietly down into the roaring streets, inseparable and blessed;
and as they passed along in sunshine and shade, the noisy and
the eager, and the arrogant and the froward and the vain, fretted,
and chafed, and made their usual uproar." Unlike Esther Summerson
and her husband, Arthur and Amy stay in London where they live
"a modest life of usefulness and happiness."
On April 30, 1859, Dickens launched the weekly journal, All the
Year Round . To get the journal off to a good start, the first
installment of A Tale of Two Cities appeared in the inaugural
issue and continued in weekly installments until November 26,
1859. Set in the time of the French Revolution, this novel once
again looks at the potential for revolutionary violence Dickens
had explored in Barnaby Rudge . If the ruling class in England
does not take seriously the lesson of the French Revolution, Dickens
appears to be saying, such a violent outburst is possible again.
While Dickens deplores violence, his sympathies are clearly with
the victims of oppression. Only the kind of sacrificial love represented
by Sydney Carton's willing sacrifice of himself for his loved
ones will be able to prevent such a revolution if society continues
along its present course
In an effort to pick up declining sales of All the Year Round
, Dickens once again published a novel in weekly installments
of the journal. Great Expectations ran from December 1, 1860,
to August 3, 1861. Dickens and Catherine had recently separated
after over twenty years of marriage. Perhaps in an attempt to
come to terms with his personal unhappiness, Dickens returns to
the first person narrator in Great Expectations. To assure that
he did not fall into "unconscious repetition" as he
wrote this story of a "hero to be a boy-child, like David,"
he reread David Copperfield.
Pip is "raised by hand" by his shrewish older sister
and her husband, Joe Gargery, whom Pip treats "as an older
species of child." Pip comes into Great Expectations as the
result of befriending the convict, Magwitch, but is led to believe
that it is actually the eccentric and half-mad Miss Havisham to
whom he is indebted. Pip is also under the misapprehension that
the beautiful Estella, Miss Havisham's daughter by adoption, will
become part of his inheritance. Pip's real education begins when
he realizes that Magwitch is his benefactor and that he has betrayed
the loving Joe for the false society made available by ill gotten
gains from an escaped convict. His redemption comes as the result
of his coming to love and value Magwitch, who, he realizes, has
been much truer to Pip than Pip has been to Joe.
In the earlier novel based loosely on his own life, Dickens
has David Copperfield marry Dora, has him suffer the consequences
of yielding to the first mistaken impulse of an undisciplined
heart. When Dora dies, David is able to discover his true wife,
Agnes, who had seemed almost supernaturally removed from him.
Here, Pip falls hopelessly in love with Estella, who is as icily
indifferent to him as are the stars, because, as she says, she
has no heart. Dickens originally intended for Pip and Estella
to remain apart in the end, but Bulwer Lytton persuaded him to
change the ending. Dickens has Estella discover, through suffering
inflicted in a brutal marriage, her own heart and the value of
Pip's love. At this time in his career Dickens seems clear about
the values that must be embraced if society is to succeed, the
values of selflessness, compassion, and sympathetic love. He does
not seem as sure that those qualities can sustain personal happiness,
at least not for him at this point.
In Our Mutual Friend, published in twenty installments from May,
1864, to November, 1865, Dickens makes still another advance in
his artistic vision. Dominated by the dust heaps and the spiritual
wasteland they symbolize, the vision of this novel suggests that
we must die to ourselves if we are to be redeemed, and society
must forego material pursuits if it is to become spiritually and
culturally whole. The recurrent theme of death and resurrection
indicates Dickens's developing understanding of the meaning of
personal fulfillment that he explores in earlier novels, particularly
in David Copperfield and Great Expectations .
There is no first person narrator in Our Mutual Friend , as there
is in David Coppperfield and Great Expectations, although we are
given an interior monologue as John Harmon recounts his own near
death by drowning. However the novel is framed by Mortimer Lightwood's
stories: he tells the story of "The Man from Somewhere,"
John Harmon, at the beginning of the novel; his story of Eugene
Wrayburn's marriage to Lizzie Hexam horrifies the "society"
to whom he recounts this tale at the end. The narrator/hero role
that is central to David Copperfield is shared in Our Mutual Friend
among Harmon, Wrayburn, and Lightwood. The roles of the heroines
are altered from the earlier novels as well. The Agnes who has
been associated with stained glass windows becomes Lizzie Hexam,
daughter of the water rat Gaffer Hexam; and the cruel Estella
becomes the willful, mercenary Bella Wilfer. Dickens is reworking
his themes and relationships from the earlier novels here, particularly
those themes he explored in the novels written from the first
person point of view, the more autobiographical novels.
Like David Copperfield, Lizzie Hexam has much to be grateful
for in her sordid background. David's experiences on the streets
allow him to take the measure of evil; Lizzie's sordid work with
her father gives her the strength and the experience literally
to save Eugene Wrayburn from drowning. As a result, Eugene is
empowered to renounce the false society and indolent existence
of his former self and to be redeemed by Lizzie's love. Bella
Wilfer sees her own selfishness and vanity played out in Noddy
Boffins's pretended miserliness, and sacrifices her great expectations
in defense of John Harmon. In so doing, Bella demonstrates herself
as worthy of Harmon's love, just as Eugene demonstrates his worth
of Lizzie's love in repudiating the society he had been surrounded
by. Unlike earlier Dickens heroines, though, Bella wants to become
"something so much worthier than the doll in the doll's house,"
and does. Both Bella (the Estella figure) and Eugene (the Pip
figure) prove themselves after marriage, when the real tests come.
Marriage is no longer an end for Dickens, the symbol of order
and success. Rather it is something that needs to be worked at
and worked out. And Bella, who proves to be "true golden
gold at heart," and Lizzie, whom Eugene calls a "heroine,"
live together with their husbands in London where, for Dickens,
the real work needs to be done. Dickens celebrates the moment
of Bella's marriage with John with the message that has been central
to his vision from the beginning: and "O there days in this
life, worth life and worth death. And O what a bright old song
it is that O 'tis love 'tis love, that makes the world go round."
Our Mutual Friend ends with Mortimer Lightwood, who feels that,
like Dickens, he has "the eyes of Europe upon him" as
he tells his stories at the Veneerings' dinner parties, seeking
the true voice of society while he reports the story of Eugene
and Lizzie. He discovers it in Twemlow, who knows what it means
to act nobly. Dickens must himself have been wondering about the
voice of society with regard to his personal situation, and probably
with Mortimer's perspective. Neither Dickens nor Mortimer participates
directly in the happiness of those they tell stories about. But
they share the vision and take joy in seeing the results of the
stories and the effects those stories have on their audiences.
Dickens, our greatest storyteller, may not have discovered the
personal happiness in his own marriage that Eugene and John Harmon,
the Pip and David of his last completed novel, achieve, but in
the end he achieves personal fulfillment through his art. David
realizes, in the life of his novel, what Dickens saw represented
in Mary Hogarth, and what was not attainable in his own life.
That Dickens's own fulfillment is in creating the vision rather
than attaining it here may be explained in part by the fact that
Dickens is an artist and in part by the kind of artist he is.
According to Forster, Not his genius only, but his whole nature,
was too exclusively made up of sympathy for, and with, the real
in its most intense form, to be sufficiently provided against
failure in the realities around him. There was for him no 'city
of the mind' against outward ills, for inner consolation and shelter.
It was in and from the actual he still stretched forward to find
the freedom and satisfaction of an ideal, and by his very attempts
to escape the world he was driven back into the thick of it. But
what he would have sought there, it supplies to none; and to get
the infinite out of anything so finite, has broken many a stout
heart.
Dickens has shown us how the real can more nearly approximate
his vision of the ideal through his novels. In his later years
he told those stories in brilliant public readings from his novels
in England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, and in America, where people
stood all night in lines one half mile long to purchase tickets
to see him perform.
His last novel, The Mystery Of Edwin Drood , was to be issued
in twelve monthly numbers from April, 1870, but he died in June,
having completed half the mystery. In this novel, Dickens extends
his vision beyond England to include the empire itself. It appears
as if he would continue to make yet another advance in his artistic
development in this unfinished novel.
Dickens died June 9, 1870, and was buried in Westminster Abbey.
In a letter to Forster, Carlyle sends his condolences: "I
am profoundly sorry for you and indeed for myself and for us all.
It is an event world-wide; a unique of talents suddenly extinct;
and has "eclipsed," we too may say, "the harmless
gaiety of nations.' No death since 1866 [the year of Carlyle's
wife's death] has fallen on me with such a stroke. No literary
man's hitherto ever did. The good, the gentle, high-gifted, ever-friendly,
noble Dickens, -- every inch of him an Honest Man."
|