The
Consummate Victorian: Charles Dickens
by Marilyn Green Faulkner
Take the Dickens Challenge! The long winter nights are a perfect time to
revisit the greatest of the English novelists.
Charles Dickens was as interesting as any of the more than
two thousand characters he created. Born in 1812 to middle class
parents who loved to socialize and tended to live beyond their
means, Charles was a deeply imaginative child, weak and somewhat
sickly, who enjoyed observing others and exhibited an early
gift for theatrics. His father (who used to take the five-year
old Charles to the local pub and stand him on the counter, where
he performed comic songs for the customers) was a flamboyant
man who aspired to something higher but could not control his
spending, and his prodigality caused the family to lose their
home when Charles was eleven.
While his sister, Fanny, was sent to music school on a scholarship,
Charles was sent into a dark, miserable blacking warehouse to
work. He lived alone in London in a small rented room, spent a dozen hours
a day pasting the labels on bottles of shoe polish, and was
thrown together with a group of coarse boys who horrified him.
This terrible season of his life had such an impact on Dickens
that he never spoke of it, even to his wife, and in fact the
details of that period were only revealed by his biographer
after his death. Within a year his father was released from
debtor's prison and Charles was brought home and sent to school
again, until his father's excesses caused him, at age fifteen,
to leave school for good and start out on his own as a journalist.
These and other childhood experiences combined to form a man
of great ambition and energy coupled with a deep appreciation
for the poor and downtrodden of the world. In a way, Dickens
forever saw the world through the eyes of that child in the
blacking factory; a world full of terror and hope, comedy and
pathos.
Dickens fell in love as a young man but was rejected by his
adored Maria in favor of a more successful man. He married the
next available young lady he met, Catherine Hogarth,
the daughter of a well-known man of letters whom Dickens admired.
Their courtship, from the first, was rather more practical than
romantic. Catherine had a younger sister named Mary whom Dickens
idolized, and who lived with them from the day of their marriage
until her sudden death just a year or so later. Dickens never
got over Mary's death, and her image recurs over and over in
perfect heroines (often seventeen years of age) with sweet natures
and no character flaws.
When Mary died in his arms, Dickens slipped off her ring, placed
it on his finger, and wore it until the day he died. Meanwhile
his relationship with Catherine grew more strained as their
family grew to include ten children. After twenty-two years
of marriage he separated from his wife with a rather bizarre,
public announcement in his paper, Household Words. Catherine’s
sister Georgina managed his home for him thereafter. He remained
close to his children, who were fiercely protective
of his fame and reputation. These three experiences - the abandonment
by his parents and his forced labor in the warehouse, his unrequited
love for Maria Beadnell, and the death
of Mary Hogarth - are cited by critics
as the three greatest influences on Dickens’s unique, comic-tragic
style.
A Self-made Man
As a young boy Charles was walking with his father one day
when they stopped before a fine house at a place called Gad's
Hill. John Dickens pointed to the home and told Charles he might
own something like it some day if he worked hard and was prudent.
It is indicative of the power his father held over him that,
when he achieved success as a novelist, Dickens bought that
very home. He died in his study at Gad's
Hill at the relatively young age of 58, exhausted by a life
of extreme exertion; having written novels, papers and articles
at a feverish pace for nearly forty years. The home is a museum
today, a shrine to the most famous man of letters in England. Though he wished for no ceremony connected with his
death, his family allowed the nation to bury him in Poet's Corner
in Westminster Abbey. His grave was left open for two days and
thousands passed by to look at his simple oak coffin. Later
his son said that among the many bouquets of flowers that were
tossed into the grave, "were afterwards found several small
rough bouquets of flowers tied up with pieces of rag."
(Dickens, Peter Ackroyd, p. xiv.)
These humble tributes illustrate the love the common people
had for Dickens; they felt he represented them and felt his
loss as a loss of something in them.
G.K. Chesterton theorized that Dickens's genius lay in "that
most exquisite of arts—the art of enjoying everybody."
Peter Ackroyd says of him, "it
was his particular genius to represent, to bring together, more
aspects of the national character than any other writer of his
century." Walter Bagehot called him "a special correspondent for posterity,"
and Jules Verne summed it up when he said, "There is everything
in Dickens." During his lifetime Dickens was criticized
for his a lack of religious devotion. Though he did not believe
in organized religion he had a deep personal faith in Christ.
He wrote to a son, "Never abandon the private practice
of saying your own prayers night and morning. I have never abandoned
it, and I know the comfort of it." He took the sayings
of Jesus seriously, and his fiction is full of truly Christian
themes. It is the fashion today to concentrate on Dickens's
later, more cynical novels, and to disparage his earlier works.
But through all of the novels there is an unchanging faith in
the dignity of the human soul, the redeeming power of love,
and the presence of God in the weakest and humblest of settings.
A
man whose life was a microcosm of the Victorian ideal, Dickens
rose from obscurity to greatness on his own merits, yet never
ceased to champion the forgotten masses of poor and suffering
people left in the wake of the industrial revolution. When Dickens
was born, very few middle class homes had more than a few books;
they were too expensive for average families. At the turn of
the next century, very few middle class homes were without a
complete set of Dickens's novels, since they were considered
the foundation of every good education. You may have been raised
in a home with Dickens on the shelf, and I predict you will
find that a treasure trove lies inside the covers of these oft-neglected
books.
Take the Dickens Challenge!
A
good thick book is just the thing on these long winter nights.
Choose a Dickens novel that you’ve wanted to read and join us
in revisiting this wonderful author. I’m choosing Martin
Chuzzlewit – it’s been waiting
on my shelf these twenty years – though I am tempted to reread
one of my old favorites. Share your favorite Dickens with the
Best Books Club and I’ll post your comments in my next article.
Enjoy! Log on to the website at www.thebestbooksclub.com
or write me at bestbooks@meridianmagazine.com.