(1812 - 1870)
Charles Dickens, the first novelist o f the trend of Critical
Realism, was bom in 1812 near Portsmouth on the southern coast
o f England. His father was a clerk and the family lived on his
small salary. They belonged to the lower middle class. The father
was often transferred from place to place. First they moved to the
ancient town o f Rochester, then, in 1822 to London. In Rochester
Charles began to attend school. He continued his studies in
London as well. But soon his father lost his jo b and was
imprisoned for debt. Charles had to begin to work at a factory. In
about a year the Dickenses received a small sum o f money after
the death of a relative, so all the debts were paid. Charles got a
chance to go to school again. Dickens left school when he was
twelve. He had to continue his education by himself. His father
sent him to a lawyer’s office to study law. He did not stay there
long, but he learned the ways and manners o f lawyers, as many
ofhis books show.
In 1832 Dickens became a parliamentary reporter. Dickens’s
first efforts at writing were little stories about the ordinary
Londoners he saw. He signed them Boz (the nickname given to
him by his youngest brother). At the age of 24 Dickens married
Catherine Hogarth. Later he discovered his ability as a novelist
and devoted himself to literary work. Twice he visited the USA.
Besides Dickens was a master of reading. He had invented the
theatre for one actor. From 1858 to 1868 he had give i dramatic
readings o fhis novels in England and America. An audience to
Dickens was like a potent wine, he delighted in the applause.
Dickens knew more than he revealed. His own nature was
involved in a high emotionalism, which prevented him from
reaching the sense of tragedy o f Dostoyevsky, or that full vision
of life, which makes Tolstoy supreme among novelists of the
world. Short of this he had eveiything. In 1867-186 8 Dickens
made a triumphant reading tour in the United States during his
second visit, which was a great strain on him and undermined his
health. He died suddenly on June 9, 1870. Dickens was buried in
Westminster Abbey. When Dickens died something had gone out
o f English life that was irreplaceable, a bright light thal had shone
upon the drab commercialism of the century, calling men back to
laughter and kindliness, and the disruption of the cruelties in which
they were entangling themselves. Like all great artists he saw the
world as if it was an entirely fresh experience seen for the first
time, and he had an extraordinary range o f language, from comic
invention to great eloquence. He invented character and situation
with a range that had been unequalled since Shakespeare. So
deeply did he affect his audiences that the view o f life behind his
novels has entered into the English tradition. Reason and theory
he distrusted, but compassion and cheerfulness o f heart he el
evated into the supreme virtues. He knew in his more reflective
moments that cheerfulness alone would not destroy the
Coketowns of the world. This reflection he kept mainly to himself,
and his inlense emotionalism helped him to obscure it.
Dickens’s Creative Work
Dickers was the greatest novelist ofh is age. He wrote a tre
mendous number of works. He created a new type o f novel - a
social novel. The great contrast between rich and poor Dickens
considered abnormal in a civilized society. Dickens put all his
hopes in the good qualities of human nature. To the end o fh is
life he hoped to find means to better the world he lived in. But
while painting hard reality, Dickens changed his attitude as years
went by, as to the causes of poverty and exploitation. His creative
work has been divided into four periods.
I. The works written between the years 1833-1841 belong to
the first period. They are: “Sketches by Boz” (1833-1836), “The
Posthumous Papers o f the Pickwick Club”, “Oliver Twist”,
“Nicholas Nickleby”, “Barnaby Rudge”, “The Old Curiosity
Shop”. Dickens’s heroes and heroines of the first period are
remarkable for their fortitude. They never hesitate to take the
wisest way and remain true to the principles of honor. They pre
fer to live in poverty and work hard. Finally virtue conquers evil.
Humor and optimism are characteristic of the first period in
Dickens’s writings.
II. The following books, written between the years 1842-1848,
belong to the second period in the w riter’s creative work:
’’American Notes”, “Martin Chuzzlewit”, “The Christmas
Books”, “Dombey and Son”. In the works o f the second period
Dickens begins, to describe the crimes that arise from the existing
system itself.
III. During the third period (1850-1859) he wrote “ David
Copperfield”, “Bleak House”, “HardTimes”, “Little Dorrit”, “A
Tale ofTwo Cities”. These novels are the strongest for the social
criticism expressed in them. Dickens describes in detail the social
institutions of the day and draws a vivid picture of the English
people life.
IY. The fourth period in Dickens’s creative work was the six
ties. During those years he wrote only 2 novels: “Great Expecta
tions”, and “Our Mutual Friend”. These works are written in a
spirit o f disillusionment. Now he feels that a better future is too
far off and he only allows himself, as a writer, to dream o f that
future. His heroes show the moral strength and patience of the
common people.
“Dom bey and Son”
In this novel, the writer turns away for the first time from the
world o f little people to that of the high bourgeoisie.
The full title o f the novel is: “Dealings with the Firm of
Dombey and Son, Wholesale, Retail and for Exportation.” It tells
the story o f a rich family, the Dombeys. Mr Dombey is a merchant
and his only interest in life is the prosperity ofhis family firm.
Mrs. Dombey dies at the close of Chapter 1, after giving
birth to her only son, which is depicted as glacial and cavernous.
Little Paul Dombey is a sickly, sensitive child, whose father adopts
toward him the attitude of ihe prince consort to an eldest son; he
must be made “the most perfect man”, and to that end he is starved
of the affection he needs, and sent, at the age o f five, to Mrs.
Pipchin’s establishment in Brighton. If he has received little, his
sister Florence, older than he by six years, gets even less. As a
daughter, she is of no consequence to her father, or to anyone
else except her faithful and outspoken attendant, Susan Nipper.
The machinery of the plot is comparatively simple in contrast
to the richness of its orchestration. Dombey, distressed by the
death o fh is son and the foundering o fh is hopes, increasingly
rejects his daughter Florence, in spite of her attempts to win his
affection. Dombey marries again, this time choosing a beauty of
superior social standing to his own. Edith Dombey is instantly
drawn to Florence, who in her teens, not only takes warmly to
her stepmother but counts on her help to overcome her father’s hos
tility. However, Edith has her own kind of pride. She sets up in
flat opposition to her husband, whom her one aim is to humiliate.
For Florence’s sake, she begins to keep the little girl at arm’s
length until, after a final scene, she leaves for France with
Dombey’s trusted manager.
Dickens considers all blows that have fallen upon Mr. Dombey
as punishment deserved. Mr. Dombey is the symbol of all that
was cruel and far from human in the upper middle class in
Dickens’s time.
But the character of Mr. Dombey changes unexpectedly at
the end o f the novel. Misfortunes soften his character and he
becomes a good man. Old Mr. Dombey lives in the happy home
of Florence, who is now married to Walter Gay. Now Mr. Dombey
loves his daughter and grandchildren.
The author of the book, Charles Dickens, always wanted to
reconcile people with one another, and the end o f the book is a
vivid example o f it.
Questions and Tasks
1. Speak about the 19,h century England?
2. What poets are considered to be the two great pillars o f the
literature of the Victorian Age?
3. What forced Tennyson to leave Cambridge without
completing his education?
4. When did Robert Browning become famous and Tennyson’s
equal among Victorian readers?
5. Name the greatest English critical realists you know.
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