|

The
Consummate Victorian: Charles Dickens
by Marilyn
Green Faulkner
Charles
Dickens was himself as interesting as any of the more than two thousand
characters he created.
He was born
in 1812 to middle class, English 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 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.) John
Dickens 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 spent a dozen hours
a day putting the labels on bottles of shoe polish, was thrown together
with a group of coarse boys who horrified him, and lived alone in
London in a small rented room. This terrible season of his life
had such an impact on him 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 aged
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 a child, 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. Another of her sisters, 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 his unique,
comic-tragic style.
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 age of 58, still a young man but 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 artsthe
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. He did not believe in organized religion
but 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, and never ceased to champion the
forgotten masses of poor and suffering people left in the wake of
the industrial revolution. He trusted the individual and feared
the mob. For this reason A
Tale of Two Cities reveals a different side of revolution
than the historical narratives of the day. Though it is called the
least "Dickensian" of his novels, it is a great starting point on
the journey to an appreciation of this funny, tragic and always
brilliant author. 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.
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
© 2001 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
|