Bleak House

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Title '''Bleak House by Charles Dickens'''

Title page of first book edition in 1853. Illustration by Hablot Knight Browne.
Author Charles Dickens
Illustrator Hablot Knight Browne
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher Bradbury & Evans
Released 1852-1853 (serialised)
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback) & Audio Book
ISBN NA

Bleak House is the ninth novel by Charles Dickens, published in 20 monthly parts between March 1852 and September 1853. The plot concerns a long-running legal dispute (Jarndyce and Jarndyce) which has far-reaching consequences for all involved. Dickens' assault on the flaws of the British judiciary system is based in part on his own experiences as a law clerk. His harsh characterization of the slow, arcane Chancery law process gave voice to widespread frustration with the system, and is often thought of as helping to set the stage for its eventual reform in the 1870s. In fact, Dickens was writing just as Chancery was reforming itself, with the Six Clerks and Masters mentioned in Chapter One being abolished in 1842 and 1852 respectively: the need for further reform was being widely debated. This raises the interesting point as to when Bleak House is actually set. Technically it must be before 1842: at least some of his readers at the time would have been aware of this, but does this fit with other themes in the book?

Contents

As usual, Dickens drew upon many real people and places but was not constrained by the realities. The character Mrs. Jellyby, always involved in good causes but with a chaotic family, is based upon Caroline Chisholm. Many people saw the character of Harold Skimpole as a portrait of Leigh Hunt but this was always denied by Dickens. Mr Jarndyce's friend Mr Boythorn is based on the writer Walter Savage Landor. The novel also includes one of the first detectives to appear in English fiction, Mr Bucket. This character is probably based on Inspector Charles Frederick Field of the then-recently formed Detective Department at Scotland Yard.[1] Dickens wrote several journalistic pieces about the Inspector and the work of the detectives in Household Words.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
  • Esther Summerson — an orphan, the hero of the complex story. The discovery of her true identity provides for much of the drama in the book. It is later discovered that she is the illegitimate daughter of Lady Dedlock.
  • Richard Carstone — a ward of court in Jarndyce v Jarndyce. A fairly simple but inconstant character who falls under the malign spell of the Jarndyce v Jarndyce case. At the end of the book he dies, tormented by his inability to make any progress in the case at the cost of all his money.
  • Ada Clare — a ward of court in Jarndyce v Jarndyce. A good girl who falls in love with Richard Carstone. They later marry (in secret).
  • John Jarndyce — a party in Jarndyce, guardian of Richard, Ada and Esther, and owner of Bleak House. A good man who falls in love with Esther and proposes that they marry. She agrees but it becomes increasingly clear that the marriage would not suit her. He also realizes this but finds it very hard to give her up.
  • Harold Skimpole — a friend of Jarndyce and "in the habit of sponging his friends" (Nuttall); supposedly based on Leigh Hunt. A thoroughly despicable character, amoral, and without remorse.
  • Sir Leicester Dedlock — a crusty baronet, very much older than his wife and very "out of place" in the England of the 1830s.
  • Honoria, Lady Dedlock — the haughty mistress of Chesney Wold. Her past drives much of the plot as it turns out she had an affair with another man and gave birth to his child. She discovers the child's identity (it's Esther) and then she has to fend off the manipulations of Mr. Tulkinghorn. At the end, she dies, disgraced in her own mind, convinced her aristocratic husband could never forgive her moral failings.
  • Mr. Tulkinghorn — the Dedlock family lawyer. A scheming, manipulative monster of a man. He learns of Lady Dedlock's past and tries to blackmail her. He is murdered and the last part of the book turns into a murder investigation as several characters have good reason to want Tulkinghorn dead.
  • Nemo — a law writer. A mysterious man who dies early in the story. He is later revealed to have been a Captain in the British Army, the lover of Lady Dedlock, and the father of Esther.
  • Miss Flite — an elderly eccentric obsessed with Chancery. She is a party in Jarndyce v Jarndyce.
  • Mr. William Guppy — a law clerk. He becomes very taken with Esther and plays a role in unearthing her true past. He proposes marriage to Esther, then withdraws the offer, then re-proposes. Esther politely refuses both his proposals.
  • Inspector Bucket — a detective. He is the key player in the murder investigation of Mr. Tulkinghorn and he does solve the case.
  • Mr. George — a former soldier. He is a trainer in the martial arts (swords and pistols mostly). Richard Carstone, before he joins the army, trains under him. Later we learn that Mr. George served under the command of "Nemo". He was the prime suspect in the death of Mr. Tulkinghorn and was arrested.
  • Caddy Jellyby — a friend of Esther.
  • Krook — a rag and bottle merchant and collector of papers. He dies from a case of Spontaneous human combustion, something that Dickens believed could, in fact, happen.
  • Jo — a young boy who tries to make a living as a crossing sweeper. He dies from a disease (smallpox?) which Esther also catches (and is nearly killed by).
  • Allan Woodcourt — a physician. A kind, caring man who likes Esther. She in turn likes him a great deal but feels unable to respond to his overtures because of her prior commitment to John Jarndyce. All is resolved happily at the end.
  • Grandfather Smallweed — a money lender. An evil man who enjoys inflicting emotional pain on other people. He drives Mr. George into bankruptcy (by calling in debts).

  • Mr Kenge — a lawyer of Kenge and Carboys
  • Mr Vholes — a lawyer
  • Mr Gridley — an involuntary party to a suit in Chancery (based on a real case, according to Dickens' preface)
  • Mr Snagsby — the proprietor of a law-stationery business
  • Mrs Snagsby — his wife
  • Guster — the Snagsbys' maidservant, prone to fits
  • Neckett — aka Coavinses — a debt collector
  • Charley — Coavinses' daughter
  • Tom — Coavinses' young son
  • Emma — Coavinses' baby daughter
  • Mrs Jellyby — Caddy's mother, a philanthropist with little regard to the notion of charity beginning at home
  • Mr Jellyby — Mrs Jellyby's husband
  • Peepy Jellyby — the Jellybys' young son
  • Prince Turveydrop — a dancing master
  • Old Mr Turveydrop — a master of Deportment
  • Jenny — a brickmaker's wife
  • Rosa — a favourite of Lady Dedlock
  • Hortense — lady's maid to Lady Dedlock (based on murderess Maria Manning)[2]
  • Mrs Rouncewell — housekeeper to the Dedlocks at Chesney Wold
  • Mr Rouncewell — son of Mrs Rouncewell and a prosperous ironmaster
  • Watt Rouncewell — his son
  • Volumnia — a Dedlock cousin
  • Lawrence Boythorn — an old friend of John Jarndyce and neighbour of Sir Leicester Dedlock; based on Walter Savage Landor
  • Miss Barbary — Esther's godmother and severe guardian in childhood
  • Mrs Rachael Chadband — a former servant of Miss Barbary
  • Mr Chadband — an oleaginous preacher, husband of Mrs Chadband
  • Mrs Smallweed — wife of Mr Smallweed senior
  • Young Mr (Bartholemew) Smallweed — grandson of the senior Smallweeds and friend of Mr Guppy
  • Judy Smallweed — granddaughter of the senior Smallweeds
  • Tony Jobling — aka Mr Weevle — a friend of Mr Guppy
  • Mrs Guppy — Mr Guppy's aged mother
  • Phil Squod — Mr George's assistant
  • Captain Hawdon — is the same person as Nemo. an officer under whom Mr George once served
  • Matthew Bagnet — military friend of Mr George and dealer in musical instruments
  • Mrs Bagnet — wife of Matthew Bagnet
  • Mrs Woodcourt — Allan Woodcourt's widowed mother

Bleak House is unique among Dickens' novels for several reasons. In his other novels Dickens would have the main character narrate the story in first person and past tense. In Bleak House Dickens experimented with the device of dual narrators: an unidentified narrator and the orphan Esther Summerson take turns to tell the story. The unidentified narrator narrates in third person and present tense. The narrator Esther Summerson narrates in first person and past tense, in a fashion similar to Dickens' other novels. A chapter would either be wholly narrated by the unidentified narrator or wholly by Esther Summerson. Not one chapter was narrated in parts by the unidentified narrator and Esther Summerson. The style is also remarkable: a hypnotic opening of three paragraphs without a complete sentence. The scope is probably the broadest Dickens ever attempted, ranging from the filthy slums to the landed aristocracy, in a narrative that is in equal parts satire and comedy. One character, Krook, smells of brimstone and eventually dies of spontaneous human combustion, attributed to his evil nature.

Using spontaneous human combustion to dispose of Krook in the story was controversial. The nineteenth century was part of the age of reason, people during the nineteenth century considered scientific and medical endeavor highly admirable. Spontaneous human combustion is rejected by medical doctors and scientists and was also rejected by medical doctors and scientists during the nineteenth century. When the installment of Bleak House containing Krook's demise appeared, the literary critic George Henry Lewes criticized Dickens, saying that he had perpetuated a vulgar and unscientific superstition. Dickens vigorously defended the reality of spontaneous human combustion and cited many documented cases such as those of Mme. Millet of Rheims and of the Countess di Bandi, as well as his own memories of coroners' inquests that he had attended when he had been a journalist/reporter. In the preface of the book edition of Bleak House Dickens wrote:

"I shall not abandon the facts until there shall have been a considerable Spontaneous Combustion of the testimony on which human occurrences are usually received."

Ironically, Bleak House (the house not the novel) is not, in fact, bleak. The house is owned by one of Dickens' good characters, John Jarndyce and, in general, it represents a place of refuge from the other - often depressing - locales described in the story.

Some literature critics, including George Gissing and G. K. Chesterton, consider Bleak House to be the best novel that Charles Dickens wrote. To quote from Chesterton's Introduction from the 1960 reprint of the Everyman's Library edition: "'Bleak House' is not certainly Dickens's best book; but perhaps it is his best novel."

It is a measure of Dickens' talent that Nemo is never actually "seen" alive in the novel. He is always described by others or is presumed to be on the other side of something. The epitome of this is when Esther goes up a flight of stairs in Krook's house, passing the door of Nemo's room, with a heavy presumption that Nemo is on the other side of it.

Bleak House in Broadstairs, Kent, where Dickens wrote some of his novels, although not Bleak House itself.
Bleak House in Broadstairs, Kent, where Dickens wrote some of his novels, although not Bleak House itself.

In the silent film era, it was filmed in 1920 and 1922; the later version starred Sybil Thorndike as Lady Dedlock.

The BBC has produced three television adaptations of Bleak House. The first version was broadcast in 1959 in eleven half-hour episodes;[3] the second, starring Diana Rigg and Denholm Elliott, was broadcast as an eight-part series in 1985;[4] and the third was broadcast in fifteen episodes in 2005.[5] The last version starred Gillian Anderson, Anna Maxwell-Martin, and Charles Dance, among others.

Both the 1985 version and the 2005 versions are available on DVD in the UK. The 2005 version is available in the US from Netflix.

The BBC has also adapted the book for radio.

Like most Dickens novels, Bleak House was published in 20 monthly installments, each containing 32 pages of text and two illustrations by Phiz (the last two being published together as a double issue). Each cost one shilling, except for the last (double issue), which cost two shillings.

Instalment Date of publication Chapters
I March 1852 1–4
II April 1852 5–7
III May 1852 8–10
IV June 1852 11–13
V July 1852 14–16
VI August 1852 17–19
VII September 1852 20–22
VIII October 1852 23–25
IX November 1852 26–29
X December 1852 30–32
XI January 1853 33–35
XII February 1853 36–38
XIII March 1853 39–42
XIV April 1853 43–46
XV May 1853 47–49
XVI June 1853 50–53
XVII July 1853 54–56
XVIII August 1853 57–59
XIX–XX September 1853 60–67

  1. ^ Site of Dr Russell Potter, Rhode Island College Biography of Inspector Field
  2. ^ Dickens' London map
  3. ^ http://imdb.com/title/tt0224837/
  4. ^ http://imdb.com/title/tt0088485/
  5. ^ http://imdb.com/title/tt0442632/ Bleak House (TV serial)
  • Crafts, Hannah; Gates, Jr, Henry Louis (Ed), 2002. The Bondswoman's Narrative. Warner Books. ISBN 0-7628-7682-4

(5) Calkins, Carroll C. (Project Editor), 1982. Mysteries of the Unexplained. The Reader's Digest Association, Inc. Pleasantville, New York/Montreal.

Online editions

Wikisource has original text related to this article:

This article incorporates text from the public domain 1907 edition of The Nuttall Encyclopædia.

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