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Oliver Twist Dickens, London, Realism

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Title: Oliver Twist Dickens, London, Realism


1
Oliver TwistDickens, London, Realism
2
I. Dickens London
  • Hippolyte Taine on London
  • Nothing here is natural everything is
    transformed, violently changed, from the earth
    and man himself, to the very light and air. But
    the hugeness of this accumulation of man-made
    things takes off the attention from this
    deformity and this artifice in default of a
    wholesome and noble beauty, there is life,
    teeming and grandiose.

3
I. Dickens London
  • George Gissing on Dickenss London
  • London as a place of squalid mystery and
    terror, of the grimly grotesque, of labyrinthine
    obscurity and lurid fascination, is Dickenss
    own he taught people a certain way of regarding
    the huge city, and to this day how common it is
    to see London with Dickenss eyes.

4
II. Novelising London
  • Dickens Preface to OT
  • It is useless to discuss whether the conduct
    and character of the girl seems natural or
    unnatural, probable or improbable, right or
    wrong. IT IS TRUE. Every man who has watched
    these melancholy shades of life, must know it to
    be so. . . . From the first introduction of
    that poor wretch, to her laying her blood-stained
    head upon the robbers breast, there is not a
    word exaggerated or over-wrought. It is
    emphatically gods truth, for it is the truth.
    (Preface)

5
II. Novelising London
  • It is the custom on the stage, in all good
    murderous melodramas, to present the tragic and
    the comic scenes, in as regular alternation, as
    the layers of red and white in a side of streaky
    bacon. The hero sinks upon his straw bed, weighed
    down by fetters and misfortunes in the next
    scene, his faithful but unconscious squire
    regales the audience with a comic song. We
    behold, with throbbing bosoms, the heroine in the
    grasp of a proud and ruthless baron her virtue
    and her life alike in danger, drawing forth her
    dagger to preserve the one at the cost of the
    other and just as our expectations are wrought
    up to the highest pitch, a whistle is heard, and
    we are straightway transported to the great hall
    of the castle where a grey-headed seneschal
    sings a funny chorus with a funnier body of
    vassals, who are free of all sorts of places,
    from church vaults to palaces, and roam about in
    company, carolling perpetually.
  • Such changes appear absurd but they are not so
    unnatural as they would seem at first sight. The
    transitions in real life from well-spread boards
    to death-beds, and from mourning-weeds to holiday
    garments, are not a whit less startling only,
    there, we are busy actors, instead of passive
    lookers-on, which makes a vast difference. The
    actors in the mimic life of the theatre, are
    blind to violent transitions and abrupt impulses
    of passion or feeling, which, presented before
    the eyes of mere spectators, are at once
    condemned as outrageous and preposterous. (90)

6
III. Twists London
  • Map of Olivers London

7
III. Twists London
  • Saffron-Hill, Field Lane, Farringdon (near
    Holborn) A dirtier or more wretched place he
    had never seen. The street was very narrow and
    muddy, and the air was impregnated with filthy
    odours. There were a good many small shops but
    the only stock in trade appeared to be heaps of
    children, who, even at that time of night, were
    crawling in and out at the doors, or screaming
    from the inside. The sole places that seemed to
    prosper amid the general blight of the place,
    were the public-houses and in-them, the lowest
    orders of Irish were wrangling with might and
    main. Covered ways and yards, which here and
    there diverged from the main street, disclosed
    little knots of houses, where drunken men and
    women were positively wallowing in filth and
    from several of the door-ways, great ill-looking
    fellows were cautiously emerging, bound, to all
    appearance, on no very well-disposed or harmless
    errands. (42)

8
III. Twists London
  • Smithfield, Farringdon
  • It was market-morning. The ground was covered,
    nearly ankle-deep, with filth and mire a thick
    steam, perpetually rising from the reeking bodies
    of the cattle, and mingling with the fog, which
    seemed to rest upon the chimney-tops, hung
    heavily above.
  • . . . Countrymen, butchers, drovers,
    hawkers, boys, thieves, idlers, and vagabonds of
    every low grade, were mingled together in a mass
    the whistling of drovers, the barking of dogs,
    the bellowing and plunging of oxen, the bleating
    of sheep, the grunting and squeaking of pigs, the
    cries of hawkers, the shouts, oaths, and
    quarrelling on all sides the ringing of bells
    and roar of voices that issued from every
    public-house the crowding, pushing, driving,
    beating, whooping, and yelling the hideous and
    discordant din that resounded from every corner
    of the market and the unwashed, unshaven,
    squalid, and dirty figures constantly running to
    and fro, and bursting in and out of the throng
    rendered it a stunning and bewildering scene,
    which quite confounded the sense (115).

9
IV. Controversies
  • Queen Victorias DiariesTold him (Lord
    Melbourne) Mamma admonished me for reading light
    books (Oliver Twist) (44)Lord Melbourne on
    Oliver Twist I dont like those things
    (Workhouses and Pickpockets) I wish to avoid
    them I dont like them in reality, and therefore
    I dont wish them represented.William
    Thackeray on Oliver TwistNovelist William
    Thackeray, a rival of Dickens', asserted that men
    of genius "had no business to make these
    characters interesting or agreeable, to be
    feeding their readers' morbid fancies, or
    indulging their own, with such monstrous food."

10
IV. Controversies
  • Dickens Letter to a reader about his portrayal
    of Fagin, 1863  
  • I must take leave to say, that if there be any
    general feeling on the part of the intelligent
    Jewish people, that I have done them what you
    describe as a great wrong, they are a far less
    sensible, a far less just, and a far less
    good-tempered people than I have always supposed
    them to be. Fagin, in Oliver Twist, is a Jew,
    because it unfortunately was true of the time to
    which that story refers, that that class of
    criminal almost invariably was a Jew.
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