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Sketches by Boz (Penguin Classics)
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Sketches by Boz > Background, resources, reading schedule

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Tristram Shandy In order to give the group still a bit of extra time to finish Nicholas Nickleby before starting The Old Curiosity Shop in October, we will read the first seven Sketches, which were grouped as Seven Sketches from Our Parish.

They are comparatively short so that even those who are deeply immersed in NN can maybe find time to read and discuss them.

I'd like to suggest the following reading schedule:

Sep 9th - Sep 15th: Sketches 1 and 2
Sep 16th - Sep 22nd: Sketches 3 and 4
Sep 23rd - Sep 29th: Sketches 5, 6 and 7


Tristram Shandy Whenever we have some time between Dickens's novels, i.e. some people having finished the book, others still following, we might deal with the other Sketches by and by.


message 3: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 2034 comments Tristram wrote: "In order to give the group still a bit of extra time to finish Nicholas Nickleby before starting The Old Curiosity Shop in October, we will read the first seven Sketches, which were grouped as Seve..."

For those who don't have a copy of the Sketches, and who does (well, Dickens fanatics, yes, but not us normal folks!), you can download them here in various formats (including reading on line in the HTML format).

http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/882


message 4: by Kim (new) - rated it 4 stars

Kim Everyman wrote: "Tristram wrote: "In order to give the group still a bit of extra time to finish Nicholas Nickleby before starting The Old Curiosity Shop in October, we will read the first seven Sketches, which wer..."

I do and no I'm not normal and never intend to be (too boring). :-}


message 5: by Karen· (new)

Karen· (kmoll) I expect you already looked at workhouses when you did Oliver Twist - do you know this excellent web resource?

http://www.workhouses.org.uk/

I found it particularly useful for the history of the Poor Laws: it's there on the left hand column to be clicked on, as required.


message 6: by Karen· (new)

Karen· (kmoll) The Beadle is one of Dickens's favourite targets. I was surprised to learn when I was doing a bit of extra, roundabout reading this year, that there was no proper, professional system of local administration in England until well into the 1870s, when the Elementary Education Act meant that some areas had to create a school board, and it was from this school board that local councils emerged.


Tristram Shandy Thanks, Karen, for adding the reference to the website. Alas! had I but more time to dig up and read background information - because I think that especially with regard to the Sketches this would be necessary to appreciate them as Dickens's contemporaries did.


message 8: by Elisa (new)

Elisa Blaisdell | 29 comments This is a great idea. I hope we do add a few of the Sketches between the books.


Tristram Shandy Elisa wrote: "This is a great idea. I hope we do add a few of the Sketches between the books."

Yes, our idea is to add some of the Sketches whenever there is some buffer time between two major reads. That is if people are at all interested in reading these early Dickens texts. Saying that, I've just learned from my edition that not all of these texts are really "early" Dickens and even the earlier ones were quite carefully revised by their author.


Tristram Shandy ·Karen· wrote: "The Beadle is one of Dickens's favourite targets. I was surprised to learn when I was doing a bit of extra, roundabout reading this year, that there was no proper, professional system of local admi..."

My Penguin edition says in one note (p.585):

"The basic administrative division of local government, originally an area having its own church and clergyman; governed until the Local Government Act of 1894 by a body known as the vestry, from the vestry-room attached to a church or chapel, where ratepayers elected the parish officers, that is, the vestry-clerk, churchwardens and overseers - the latter being in charge of relieving the poor in the parish."


message 11: by Pip (new) - added it

Pip | 78 comments Great idea! Looking forward to joining in with this :-)


message 12: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan Moran | 666 comments Mod
Yeah, I think this is a great way to devour the Sketches and maybe some other shorter works of Dickens along the way. We tried this after Oliver Twist with Mr. Minns and His Cousin; we had some participation, but since then the group has grown and so has the number of active participants. I'm looking forward to this, as well as to reading The Old Curiosity Shop, which comes with some mixed reviews from certain members of ours. We'll see how everyone likes it.


message 13: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 2034 comments Tristram wrote: "I've just learned from my edition that not all of these texts are really "early" Dickens and even the earlier ones were quite carefully revised by their author.
"


Although the Preface to the Gutenberg edition says
The whole of these Sketches were written and published, one by one, when I was a very young man. They were collected and republished while I was still a very young man; and sent into the world with all their imperfections (a good many) on their heads.

They comprise my first attempts at authorship—with the exception of certain tragedies achieved at the mature age of eight or ten, and represented with great applause to overflowing nurseries. I am conscious of their often being extremely crude and ill-considered, and bearing obvious marks of haste and inexperience; particularly in that section of the present volume which is comprised under the general head of Tales.

But as this collection is not originated now, and was very leniently and favourably received when it was first made, I have not felt it right either to remodel or expunge, beyond a few words and phrases here and there.


If he did really carefully revise them, then he's dissembling with us here!


Tristram Shandy I have got the Penguin edition with an introduction by Dennis Walder, and he actually points out that Dickens said he hardly made any changes to the Sketches but that this is, in fact, not true. So, indeed, Dickens seems to be dissembling with us here.


message 15: by Kim (new) - rated it 4 stars

Kim When I started Sketches last week, I read the Preface to the first edition, then the Preface to the second edition, and next was Preface to the second series, and I was considering skipping to the Sketches, but I read it and the first paragraph had me smiling:

"If brevity be the soul of wit, anywhere, it is most especially so in a preface; firstly, because those who do read such things as prefaces, prefer them, like grace before meat, in an epigrammatic form; and, secondly, because nine hundred and ninety-nine people out of every thousand, never read a preface at all."


message 16: by Kim (new) - rated it 4 stars

Kim When I read the first Sketch I got thinking about beadles in general, then I got looking and this is what I found:

Beadle, sometimes spelled "bedel" is derived from the Latin "bidellus" or "bedellus", rooted in words for "herald." He was originally an official of the Roman Temple. The word Beadle has also been used to describe early policemen and church or parish wardens.

The Livery Companies, as they evolved, needed a point of contact between the Master, Wardens, and Court of Assistants and the Livery in general. They therefore appointed (and paid for) a Beadle, who took care of the Company's meeting place ('Hall'), called the Court members and/or Livery together on behalf of the Master, and enforced any disciplinary measures decided by the Court.

The Beadle would also find suitable apprentices, and would organise the social and ceremonial functions. He was, in summary, a policeman, an almoner, a friend, social worker and communicator.

He would be issued with a Staff of Office, often wrongly called a mace, with which to protect the Master and enforce discipline. The Staff is usually a tall one so that it could be used as a rallying point at Common Hall etc. when the Livery was summoned to "Attend upon the Master".


Whilst the Livery all lived and worked within the Square Mile, the Beadle was able to summon them personally, but, as people became dispersed, there grew a need for someone who could write and so use the new postal services to summon the Court. The humble Clerk then began his rise in importance to his position today as the chief executive of the Company. The office of Beadle, meanwhile, has become a ceremonial function.



Now of course I have to go see what Livery Companies are. I'll be back. :}


message 17: by Kim (new) - rated it 4 stars

Kim And I'm back:

The Livery Companies of the City of London are various historic trade associations almost all of which are known as the "Worshipful Company of..." their relevant trade, craft or profession.[1][2] The medieval Companies originally developed as guilds and were responsible for the regulation of their trades, controlling, for instance, wages and labour conditions. Until the Protestant Reformation, they were closely associated with religious activities, notably in support of chantry chapels and churches and the observance of ceremonies, notably the mystery plays.

The beadle info I got from an extremely interesting, to me anyway, beadle website:

http://www.thebeadlesoflondon.com


message 18: by Karen· (new)

Karen· (kmoll) Fascinating, Kim, thanks for the info and the link.

Just in case there should be any misunderstanding (sorry if I'm being a bit patronising) this is a different kind of beadle than the one Dickens is writing about. (Obviously). It's always interesting to see where the name comes from.


message 19: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan Moran | 666 comments Mod
Kim: Thank you for the interesting research.

It may be a different kind of beadle, but the position probably evolved from the aforementioned one along with the name. That's my uneducated guess anyways, as the one Dickens is describing wears many hats (nice pun), some of them cocked!


message 20: by Kim (last edited Sep 21, 2013 07:20AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Kim Beadle, sometimes spelled "bedel," is a lay official of a church or synagogue who may usher, keep order, make reports, and assist in religious functions; or a minor official who carries out various civil, educational, or ceremonial duties.

The term has Franco-English pre-renaissance origins, derived from the Vulgar Latin "bidellus" or "bedellus," rooted in words for "herald." It moved into Old English as a title given to an Anglo-Saxon officer who summoned householders to council.

In England, the word came to refer to a parish constable of the Anglican Church, one often charged with duties of charity. A famous fictional constabulary beadle is Mr. Bumble from Charles Dickens' classic Oliver Twist, who oversees the parish workhouse and orphanage.

In Judaism a synagogue attendant

Also an official in certain British universities and other institutions.

George Wells 1903-1989.
American biologist. He shared a 1958 Nobel Prize for discovering how genes transmit hereditary characteristics.


There, take your pick. :-}


Tristram Shandy I have been thinking about how we are going to pass our time between the end of Barnaby Rudge and the beginning of Martin Chuzzlewit. We already said that we wanted to go on with the Sketches.

Now my question is how many Sketches we could read. From April 24 to April 30 it's seven days - so should we say seven Sketches, all in all, i.e. one Sketch a day; or rather four Sketches, i.e. one Sketch more or less every other day?

What do you think?


message 22: by Kate (new)

Kate Tristram wrote: "I have been thinking about how we are going to pass our...

I've been reading them with just a few to go, so I'll just join in with the discussion when you guys have finished.


Tristram Shandy So then I'm suggesting for our in-between group read the following five Sketches:

1. The Streets - Morning
2. The Streets - Night
3. Shops and Their Tenants
4. Scotland-yard
5. Seven Dials

These are the first five that go under the heading "Scenes", all in all covering some thirty-odd pages. We are not in a rush, after all, but want to do this in a leisurely way.


message 24: by Kim (new) - rated it 4 stars

Kim That's fine with me.


message 25: by Kate (new)

Kate That's good with me too.


Tristram Shandy So then cf. message 23 for our reading schedule!


message 27: by Kate (new)

Kate Tristram wrote: "So then cf. message 23 for our reading schedule!"

Cool. Are you going to create a thread for each sketch?


Tristram Shandy Kate wrote: "Tristram wrote: "So then cf. message 23 for our reading schedule!"

Cool. Are you going to create a thread for each sketch?"



Actually I had wanted to create one for the first two and another for the remaining three sketches fearing that otherwise the threads might not contain too many contributions.

But it is probably easier to navigate if every sketch has its own thread. So then I am going to open the threads on Sunday as usual.


message 29: by Radhamani (new)

Radhamani Sarma | 2 comments Kim wrote: "And I'm back:

The Livery Companies of the City of London are various historic trade associations almost all of which are known as the "Worshipful Company of..." their relevant trade, craft or pro..."

A very interesting thread about medieval companies and their associations with mystery plays later on,a topic which i read in My English major during my undergraduate days -especially mystery plays.Thanks for posting it here.


Tristram Shandy Dear Fellow Pickwickians,

I'm digging this thread up again in order to propose the following reading schedule:

29/01/15 - 04/02/15:

06. Meditations in Monmouth-street
07. Hackney-coach Stands
08. Doctor's Commons
09. London Recreations
10. The River


05/02/15 - 11/02/15

11. Astley's
12. Greenwich Fair
13. Private Theaters
14. Vauxhall-gardens by Day
15. Early Coaches

All in all, this would mean about forty pages a week, i.e. roughly the same (maybe even slightly less) than during our Dombey time.

I will probably open threads on Sundays, giving each Sketch an individual thread even if I may not always have a lot to write about them. I'm sure you will!


message 31: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 2034 comments Tristram wrote: "Dear Fellow Pickwickians,

You and your European dates!

For the Americans among us, here are the correct dates. [g]



I'm digging this thread up again in order to propose the following reading schedule:

Jan 29 - Feb 4:

06. Meditations in Monmouth-street
07. Hackney-coach Stands
08. Doctor's Commons
09. London Recreations
10. The River


Feb 5 to Feb 11

11. Astley's
12. Greenwich Fair
13. Private Theaters
14. Vauxhall-gardens by Day
15. Early Coaches


message 32: by Linda (new) - added it

Linda | 712 comments Everyman wrote: "You and your European dates!

For the Americans among us, here are the correct dates. [g]"


Thank you! I couldn't get past the dates to even begin to look at the list of Sketches... :D


Stormie ~ Book Dragon ~ (stormiebookdragon) | 3 comments LOL! I totally spaced on the dates as well. Thanks for clarifying. :)


message 34: by Hilary (new) - added it

Hilary (agapoyesoun) Or 29th Jan. - 4th Feb. etc.

This, the Irish understand as it is logical. ;-)

Tristram's dating system is more complete, of course ...


message 35: by Kim (last edited Jan 15, 2015 02:47PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Kim Everyman wrote: "Tristram wrote: "Dear Fellow Pickwickians,

You and your European dates!

For the Americans among us, here are the correct dates. [g]


Thank you, now I don't have to do it. :-}


message 36: by Kate (new)

Kate Tristram wrote: "Dear Fellow Pickwickians,

I'm digging this thread up again in order to propose the following reading schedule:

29/01/15 - 04/02/15:

06. Meditations in Monmouth-street
07. Hackney-coach Stands
08..."


Thanks Tristram. Hopefully I can make it for more 'Sketches'!


Tristram Shandy Kate wrote: "Thanks Tristram. Hopefully I can make it for more 'Sketches'!"

That would be very nice indeed, Kate!


Tristram Shandy Everyman wrote: "Tristram wrote: "Dear Fellow Pickwickians,

You and your European dates!

For the Americans among us, here are the correct dates. [g]



I'm digging this thread up again in order to propose the fo..."



Thanks for, as usual, translating my European date system into the American system, Everyman! I won't even try to adapt the American way for fear of completely getting muddled up, and so it's good when somebody translates these things lest people miss the dates.


message 39: by Kim (new) - rated it 4 stars

Kim Tristram wrote: "Thanks for, as usual, translating my European date system into the American system,"

Hmm....so your system is day/month/year. Well, at least you got the year right, although since we all knew that we were reading the Sketches in 2015 you could have skipped the year entirely. Oh well, maybe you'll learn someday. :-}


Tristram Shandy Kim wrote: "Tristram wrote: "Thanks for, as usual, translating my European date system into the American system,"

Hmm....so your system is day/month/year. Well, at least you got the year right, although sinc..."


Skipping the year? Have you not yet noticed that I am a pedant?


message 41: by Kim (new) - rated it 4 stars

Kim Tristram wrote: "Skipping the year? Have you not yet noticed that I am a pedant?"

I had to go look up the word pedant. Your picture is next to it.


message 42: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 2034 comments Kim wrote: "Hmm....so your system is day/month/year. "

And then there are the computer programmers among us, or at least the ones who learned programming forty years ago, for whom dates will forever be yyyymmdd. Why? Because that makes putting dates in order much, much simpler.


Tristram Shandy Everyman wrote: "Kim wrote: "Hmm....so your system is day/month/year. "

And then there are the computer programmers among us, or at least the ones who learned programming forty years ago, for whom dates will forev..."


Yes, of course, when you file documents on a computer, you had best go by the rule yyyymmdd, but in everyday life dd.mm.yyyy is - don't ask me why - the most logical thing to come up with ;-)

After all, in my native language you don't say thirty-one but one-and-thirty :-)))


Tristram Shandy Kim wrote: "Tristram wrote: "Skipping the year? Have you not yet noticed that I am a pedant?"

I had to go look up the word pedant. Your picture is next to it."


You mean a pedant is the same as a pumpkin?


message 45: by Bionic Jean (new)

Bionic Jean (bionicjean) I think these sketches are read between other reads, Lindsay.


Tristram Shandy Yes, Lindsay - Jean is right: Some time ago we made the decision not to read the Sketches in one go but to squeeze some of them in between whenever we finished one of the major novels. This way there would be some time for those who have not caught up yet, and also some opportunity to let the impressions on the novel sink in a bit.


message 47: by Dee (last edited Jan 27, 2015 03:45AM) (new)

Dee Looks like we're reading these sketches in between the Dickens novels, which we're reading in order (since Dombey is followed by Copperfield)? Then I'll be doing the opposite... Going to take a pass on Copperfield - the only Dickens I didn't like and couldn't get through - and focusing on the sketches until we start Bleak House.


message 48: by Linda (new) - added it

Linda | 712 comments I had put a hold on a copy of Sketches at the library but I haven't picked it up yet and I'm not sure I'm going to be able to fit them into these next two weeks. If I can make time to get over to the library soon, I will try to fit at least a couple in. Otherwise, I will catch up with everyone for David Copperfield.


message 49: by Linda (new) - added it

Linda | 712 comments I went to pick up my copy of Sketches on hold at the library today, only to find out the hold expired yesterday and so it was en route to another library. So, I guess DC is next on the list for me.


Tristram Shandy Linda,

it's just one week and a half to go, and then we'll start with DC.


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