The Pickwick Club discussion
The Old Curiosity Shop
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OCS Chapters 1-7
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Kim wrote: "Christine wrote: "I have been sooooooo in love with dick that everyone else is just there at times. in this weeks reading he showed up again... I giggled and my heart went pitter pat."
Ah, Christi..."
Becky Sharp and Dick Swiveller would have made an interesting couple.
Ah, Christi..."
Becky Sharp and Dick Swiveller would have made an interesting couple.
Kim wrote: "Jonathan wrote: "I love the setting here. Every week I visit at least one or two thrift stores, which are basically the "poor man's curiosity shop". My favorite reality show is Pawn Stars. I hope w..."
I hate reality tv. Dickens' novels with his too perfect heros and heroines and his too nefarious villains are truer to life than that junk. But, I like Pawn Stars. So, it is easy to say it is my favorite, because it is the only one I like.
I hate reality tv. Dickens' novels with his too perfect heros and heroines and his too nefarious villains are truer to life than that junk. But, I like Pawn Stars. So, it is easy to say it is my favorite, because it is the only one I like.
Kim wrote: "Quilp is repulsive, just think of Chapter 6 when he has this conversation with Nell:
'You look very pretty to-day, Nelly, charmingly pretty. Are you tired,
Nelly?'
'No, sir. I'm in a hurry to get..."
We find out later Nell is 14. I know this is not the Elizabethan era, but I do think women married younger than they tend to now. I'm not sayin'; I'm just sayin'. It's not as sick as it would be considered now.
'You look very pretty to-day, Nelly, charmingly pretty. Are you tired,
Nelly?'
'No, sir. I'm in a hurry to get..."
We find out later Nell is 14. I know this is not the Elizabethan era, but I do think women married younger than they tend to now. I'm not sayin'; I'm just sayin'. It's not as sick as it would be considered now.
Everyman wrote: "Margaret wrote: "*I do want to point out to anyone who might not know: Dickens late work makes it evident that he developed enormously as an artist and as a moral being over the years. Honestly, it..."
Now, since the advent of the formalists, one has to write questions which cannot be answered in order to be considered good.
Now, since the advent of the formalists, one has to write questions which cannot be answered in order to be considered good.
Kim wrote: "Everyman wrote: "I do agree, and I think most modern critics would, that his later work is his best work. But I also think it's interesting to look at his development over time, and also to contemp..."
I prefer his middle works if I have to pick a Dickens era. The early stuff like Twist and Nickleby were poorly organized. (I know you love coincidences and so did Dickens.) The later stuff is too dark and he wrote stuff to "be great" I think in the end. He was working on his legacy.
I prefer his middle works if I have to pick a Dickens era. The early stuff like Twist and Nickleby were poorly organized. (I know you love coincidences and so did Dickens.) The later stuff is too dark and he wrote stuff to "be great" I think in the end. He was working on his legacy.
Kim wrote: "I'll stick to his early works myself I happen to love Dickens first novels. I like the characters, I like the plots, I like the endings, and I especially like the craziness of people like Mrs. Nick..."
I say this without the least bit of sarcasm: It is great to have a Dickens proselyte in the group. It helps.
I say this without the least bit of sarcasm: It is great to have a Dickens proselyte in the group. It helps.

According to the following website
http://www.elizabethan-era.org.uk/eli...
in the Elizabethan age, it was legal for boys to get married at 14, for girls to do so at 12 - but it also says that it was not usual nor even traditional for people to get married at that early age. Usually men would not get married before their 21st year.
I know that you always have to be careful deriving information from websites, but this one looks quite trustworthy to me, and I don't feel like rushing off to the university library just now ;-)
However, the average age of marriage in the 19th century was surprisingly high, almost like nowadays. I am referring to Thomas Nipperdey, Deutsche Geschichte 1866-1918: Arbeitswelt und Bürgergeist, pp. 20ff. - a renowned historian -, who points out that in the second half of the 19th century the age of marriage for men fell from 28,8 (1871) to 27,9 (1910), for women from 26,3 (1871) to 25,3 (1910). All these are average values, irrespective of social classes, religion etc., and based on statistics for the German Kaiserreich. However, I would think it highly likely that the figures are not too different for Great Britain at that time, seeing that culturally the differences between these two countries are not overwhelming.
So to think of a 14-year old as a wife, as Quilp obviously does - and mind you, writing about marriage also implied something else for a Victorian reading public, as it was the only way at that time to hint at it - must have been gross and revolting to the readers. No doubt, as the author intended it to be.
I still find it difficult to care about Nell in any way because she is too perfect. A Becky Sharp or a Lizzy Greystock are women that set my heart a-pounding ;-)

characters like Silas weg, Mr toots, panks, grip the raven ... NO ONE but dickens has ever created such wonderful images.
I live for dick swivaller in this story. he's the best of this mess.
rules or no rules , I believe there was too much of people ( men ) doing what iever they want back then.

Way to go--- thanks for posting everything at one time so it's hard for me to keep up with what you said. :-)
There's a Reader's Digest edition? Hope it's not condensed, my mom used to get the "Reader's Digest Condensed Novels" in the mail every month, there was something like five novels in each one, a lot of them the classics. Or let's say tiny bits of 5 novels, I hated them.

..."
Ugh...Becky Sharp. Becky Sharp and Quilp would have made a nice couple. Or her and Lord V.
Kim wrote: "Jonathan wrote: "In my list of characters in my Reader's Digest edition"
Way to go--- thanks for posting everything at one time so it's hard for me to keep up with what you said. :-)
There's a Re..."
Give me more credit than that. I would not read a condensed or abridged novel. Please! Especially, not a Dickens.
As far as my multiple posts, you are welcome.
Way to go--- thanks for posting everything at one time so it's hard for me to keep up with what you said. :-)
There's a Re..."
Give me more credit than that. I would not read a condensed or abridged novel. Please! Especially, not a Dickens.
As far as my multiple posts, you are welcome.
Kim wrote: "Jonathan wrote: "Becky Sharp and Dick Swiveller would have made an interesting couple.
..."
Ugh...Becky Sharp. Becky Sharp and Quilp would have made a nice couple. Or her and Lord V."
Becky Sharp did some nice things. Lord V. I could go with, but I prefer Dick Swiveller: a match made in literary heaven.
..."
Ugh...Becky Sharp. Becky Sharp and Quilp would have made a nice couple. Or her and Lord V."
Becky Sharp did some nice things. Lord V. I could go with, but I prefer Dick Swiveller: a match made in literary heaven.
Kim wrote: "Jonathan wrote:
I say this without the least bit of sarcasm: It is great to have a Dickens proselyte in the group. It helps. "
Thanks for using another word that I had to go look up, I'm getting ..."
When you get to the word crazy, don't be surprised to see your picture there. They like to give examples.
I say this without the least bit of sarcasm: It is great to have a Dickens proselyte in the group. It helps. "
Thanks for using another word that I had to go look up, I'm getting ..."
When you get to the word crazy, don't be surprised to see your picture there. They like to give examples.

I didn't see it as wrestling with moral questions, but as who would provide the best, most enjoyable future life for him, without any concern over whether either woman would benefit from being married to him. Seemed to me totally egocentric and self-interest driven. No moral ambiguity there that I saw.
If you still think there was, I'll go back and re-read it, but that's my memory of the episode.

I posted a site in the Resources section which has all the illustrations on one page, enlargeable, so that might save you the labor of inserting them all. Or not, if you enjoy doing it.

And yes, the same questions of Who? Why? What? were running thought my mind - plus the odd break at the end of chapter 3, for which I now understand the reason :)
But what was decided about the illustrations? Did you decide not to include them, Jonathan?
I've tried to find the link you mentioned in the "Resources section" thread Everyman, but it doesn't seem to be there.
I note that the illustration at the beginning of the novel is very similar to one at the end, (view spoiler) I am wondering if the narrator of the first 3 chapters is intended to have a "psychic" aspect. This part is so much more like his ghost stories - the humour starts at chapter 4.
This part in particular,
"I had her image, without any effort of imagination, surrounded and beset by everything that was so foreign to its nature...she seemed to exist in a kind of allegory, and having these shapes about her, ...to imagine her in her future life holding her solitary way among a crowd of wild grotesque companions, the only pure, fresh, youthful object among the throng."
seems very portentous.

If my memory serves me, there were the usual wide swings of comments and insights. I confess to have really enjoyed the book ... much more actually than our present read. I never got hooked by Martin Chuzzlewit ... person or novel.


Do you know anything about the frontispiece, which I have in my reprint of the first edition? It's evidently one by "Phiz", as I can see the initials "HKB" at the bottom, and seems to tell the whole story. There's an hourglass prominent in it with scenes around it.
I can't find it anywhere else on the Net either.
I've found what he says is all of them on the David Perdue page, but that one's missing!

Do you know anything about the frontispiece, which I have in my reprint of the first edition? It's evidently one by "Phiz", as I can see the initials "HKB" at the bottom, and ..."
Yes, the only place I can find that allows me to download TOCS illustrations is the David Perdue page, and on that page the frontispiece is missing and also one illustration in Chapter 4 called "Quilp in a Smoking Humor". For some reason they aren't on the Perdue page and no other page I see them on will let me download them. I'm still looking though.
Dick Swiveller? You found something in him to love? Can you explain to me wh..."
I would think that Swiveller was right up your alley, what with your hopeless quest for moral ambiguity inside of a Dickens novel. He is the most interesting character so far in my book. I enjoyed watching him navigate the scene in which he was supposed to be breaking things off with Sophy Wackles. He certainly struggles with some moral questions there in addition to his own jealousy. He is not an outright devil. Just what we have been looking for.