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Jean's Charles Dickens challenge 2014-2015 (and maybe a little further ...)

The novels of Charles Dickens were first published at the dates and in the form indicated below:
Pickwick Papers — Monthly numbers, April 1836 to November 1837
NOTE: JEAN HAS SHOWN FROM DICKENS' LETTERS THAT PUBLICATION STARTED ON 31 MARCH RATHER THAN APRIL
Oliver Twist — Monthly serial in Bentley's Miscellany February 1837 to April 1839 (24 installments)
Nicholas Nickleby — Monthly numbers, April 1838 to October 1839
The Old Curiosity Shop — Weekly serial in Master Humphrey's Clock, April 2S, 1840, to February 6,1841
Barnaby Rudge — Weekly serial in Master Humphrey's Clock, February 13, 184l, to November 27,1841
Martin Chuzzlewit — Monthly numbers, January 1843 to July 1844
Dombey and Son — Monthly numbers, October 1846 to April 1848
David Copperfield — Monthly numbers, May 1849 to November 1850
Bleak House — Monthly numbers, March 1852 to September 1853
Hard Times — Weekly serial in Household Words, April 1, 1854, to August 12, 1854
Little Dorrit — Monthly numbers, December 1855 to June I857
A Tale of Two Cities — Weekly serial in All the Year Round, April 30, 1859, to November 26, 1859
Great Expectations — Weekly serial in All the Year Round, December 1, 1860 to August 3, 1861
Our Mutual Friend — Monthly numbers, May 1864 to November 1865
The Mystery of Edwin Drood — Monthly numbers, April 1870 to September 1870 (six of twelve numbers completed)
Victorian Web Overview Charles Dickens Contents Next section in print publication
Last Modified January 2000

People approach these threads in two ways, don't they, either final comment first or first comment first. The trouble with amending the first comment is that if a comment disappears then all the references to subsequent numbers are wrong. And adding on the end means that in 15 pages plus it soon gets lost. Snags with both. I'll add something though, as these are both interesting lists :)


I assumed I'd be able to insert extra posts, which I think is what you mean, but I don't think there's any way of doing that. If you're on a computer though you can select whether to see the first posts first, or click "newest", and you can make that the default. Not much use if you regularly use an app though.




10th February 1836 - Publisher's offer
16th February - Dickens accepted the offer
31st March - First number published.
Subsequent numbers published as per my list in message 42.
At this rate I will I will only be able to check one date a day! Is the Victorian Web overview usually reliable, John? Perhaps this is the only mistake and it was intended as a rather feeble April Fool? :/


Thanks.

A Dickens of a list
For some time now I've been wanting to know what the comparative lengths are of Dickens's novels. Your guess is as good as mine as to ..."
Very interesting! I find it also interesting that my favorites are at either end of the list ("David Copperfield", "Bleak House" and "Little Dorrit" at the high end and "Oliver Twist" and "Tale of Two Cities" at the low end"). My impression would have put Pickwick Papers higher and David Copperfield lower...


I realise that since yours is a copy of a list from the Victorian web, it's not appropriate to "alter" it, so if you want to leave it as the original, that's fine. (I've noticed your amendment, thanks). I'm just hoping there are no more discrepancies as I go through it ...
As with many "facts" about Dickens, the objective truth may be lost in the annals of time. From the introduction by Mamie Dickens and Georgina Hogarth (respectively daughter and sister-in-law, as you know) of 1879,
"We find some difficulty in being quite accurate in the arrangement of letters up to the end of 1839, for he had a careless habit in those days about dating his letters, very frequently putting only the day of the week on which he wrote, curiously in contrast with the habit of his later life, when his dates were always of the very fullest."
So thanks for your kind suggestion, but I'll pass on that one! Would rather read more of his stuff! LOL!
Leslie - I think I tend to prefer the longer ones - no, the middle period ones - no I like them all! Oh dear :(
(edited to include the reference to the list)

Link here
The thing is ... he wasn't living there then! This is where he lived when he was much younger, finishing The Pickwick Papers and also writing Oliver Twist! So the image they show of the desk in situ never actually happened.

I – January 1843 (chapters 1–3)
II – February 1843 (chapters 4–5)
III – March 1843 (chapters 6–8)
IV – April 1843 (chapters 9–10)
V – May 1843 (chapters 11–12)
VI – June 1843 (chapters 13–15)
VII – July 1843 (chapters 16–17)
VIII – August 1843 (chapters 18–20)
IX – September 1843 (chapters 21–23)
X – October 1843 (chapters 24–26)
XI – November 1843 (chapters 27–29)
XII – December 1843 (chapters 30–32)
XIII – January 1844 (chapters 33–35)
XIV – February 1844 (chapters 36–38)
XV – March 1844 (chapters 39–41)
XVI – April 1844 (chapters 42–44)
XVII – May 1844 (chapters 45–47)
XVIII – June 1844 (chapters 48–50)
XIX-XX – July 1844 (chapters 51–54)
I've amended message 1 to add the dates of publication as I read the novels. So here seems a good place to put the complete publication dates for the next one :)



Benjamin - I have noticed you are steadily working your way through my reviews of Dickens. Thank you very much - and do feel free to continue to comment here, or after a review. I know some folk are reticent but we're all friends here :)



I will follow along but not rereading this one, as I only read it a few years ago.

"The
Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit
His relatives, friends, and enemies.
Comprising all
His Wills and His Ways,
With an Historical record of what he did
and what he didn't;
Shewing moreover who inherited the Family Plate,
who came in for the Silver spoons,
and who for the Wooden Ladles.
The whole forming a complete key
to the House of Chuzzlewit."
By the time it was published in book form it was simply called "The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit"
Some of the chapter titles are equally long. Chapter 4's title takes up a whole page on my kindle!

Sorry about the clumsy sentence!

I laughed out loud at his sarcastic comments regarding the ancient family of Chuzzlewit. Then loved all the personification at the beginning of chapter 2. All the elements of Nature being so cheery and optimistic just for a moment, but then,
"The sun went down beneath the long dark lines of hill and cloud which piled up in the west an airy city, wall heaped on wall, and battlement on battlement; the light was all withdrawn; the shining church turned cold and dark; the stream forgot to smile; the birds were silent; and the gloom of winter dwelt on everything."
I feel almost sure this must be foreshadowing the feel and tone of the novel to come, and all the dark elements we are to expect. Oh - and I love the introduction we get to that oily Mr Pecksniff, where the impish wind knocks him over making him look ridiculous :D

"The
Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit
His relatives, friends, and enemies.
Comprising all
His Wills and His Ways,
With an Histor..."
Haha, this is hilarious!

"Hall was a genuine comedy figure. Such oily and voluble sanctimoniousness needed no modification to be fitted to appear before the footlights in satirical drama. He might be called an ingenuous hypocrite, an artless humbug, a veracious liar, so obviously were the traits indicated innate and organic in him rather than acquired ... His indecency and falsehood were in his soul, but not in his consciousness; so that he paraded them at the very moment that he was claiming for himself all that was their opposite."
And here are some quotes about Mr Pecksniff which delighted me :)
"When I say we, my dear ... I mean mankind in general; the human race, considered as a body, and not as individuals. There is nothing personal in morality, my love."
So as he gives his daughters Charity and Mercy a lecture, he sermonises using abstract principles, thus cleverly distancing himself from any moral responsibility!
And here, he's doing what he's so expert at - sanctimoniously pretending he's providing for others, whilst in actuality making sure of his own comfort. This seems to me to be a direct comparison with the observation made of Samuel Carter Hall,
"And how,' asked Mr Pecksniff, drawing off his gloves and warming his hands before the fire, as benevolently as if they were somebody else's, not his; 'and how is he now?"
"Who is with him now,' ruminated Mr Pecksniff, warming his back (as he had warmed his hands) as if it were a widow's back, or an orphan's back, or an enemy's back, or a back that any less excellent man would have suffered to be cold. 'Oh dear me, dear me!"

Managed to read the first 1.5 numbers (chapters 1-4) today, despite the presence this week of son and granddaughters. Read in Chatsworth Gardens while they were in the playground!
I can't skim-read, it's too good. How full of joie de vivre. It raised my spirits. The wind and all the nature scene-setting, the Blue Dragon, the Chuzzlewit clan, Chevy/Tigg, John Westlake/Pinch. So much brilliant, deliberate scene/plot setting, while just delightful writing. And above all, Pecksniff and his daughters.
A real mystery writer. So, now reading MC and Bleak House side-by-side. Bring it on.

Yet I've just been reading about Charles Dickens's precarious situation when he started writing Martin Chuzzlewit. He was 30 when he started writing the novel, and given his responsibilities, I don't know how he could write with such a light touch. Apparently the sales were much lower than expected, and it was a worrying time for him. He'd borrowed money to finance his American trip the year before (1842), and he and Kate were expecting child number 5.
It's apparently also the first novel which he planned in advance, and he had his hero Martin go off to America, in the sixth installment, to try to stimulate a bit more interest.
This is really surprising to me, as it's easily among the funniest and most smoothly written so far! I wonder what it was that his readers were wanting, and that they found lacking.
Back to read a bit more. I can't keep away from these wonderful characters - and those names Montague Tigg, Chevy Slyme, Mr and Mrs Spottletoe, Tom Pinch, Charity and Mercy (Cherry and Merry) Pecksniff ...


"I understand your mistake, and I am not offended. Why? Because it's complimentary. You suppose I would set myself up for Chevy Slyme. Sir, if there is a man on earth whom a gentleman would feel proud and honoured to be mistaken for, that man is my friend Slyme. For he is, without an exception, the highest-minded, the most independent-spirited, most original, spiritual, classical, talented, the most thoroughly Shakspearian, if not Miltonic, and at the same time the most disgustingly-unappreciated dog I know. But, sir, I have not the vanity to attempt to pass for Slyme. Any other man in the wide world, I am equal to; but Slyme is, I frankly confess, a great many cuts above me. Therefore you are wrong."
It's not at all clear why Tigg, such a shabby mockery of a gentleman is feigning such admiration for his companion, Slyme, a drunk, self-important and self-loathing, embittered man.
When Mark Tapley describes Tigg, he says,
"And I think Mrs Lupin lets him and his friend off very easy in not charging 'em double prices for being a disgrace to the Dragon. That's my opinion. I wouldn't have any such Peter the Wild Boy as him in my house, sir, not if I was paid race-week prices for it."
Here's a bit about Peter the Wild Boy:
"Peter the Wild Boy was a mentally handicapped boy from Hanover in northern Germany who was found in 1725 living wild in the woods near Hamelin, the town of Pied Piper legend. The boy, of unknown parentage, had been living an entirely feral existence for an unknown length of time, surviving by eating forest grass and leaves; he walked on all fours, exhibited uncivilized behaviour and could not be taught to speak a language. Peter was found in the Hertswold Forest by a party of hunters led by George I while on a visit to his Hanover homeland and brought to Great Britain in 1726. He is now believed to have suffered from the very rare genetic disorder Pitt-Hopkins Syndrome... Jean-Jacques Rousseau called Peter ‘the noble savage’, man ‘unspoilt’ by society and civilisation. Daniel Defoe addressed the subject in his pamphlet 'Mere Nature Delineated', published in 1726. He described Peter as an ‘object of pity’ but cast doubt on the story of his origins, dismissing it as a ‘Fib’"

Speaking of 'wild boys', I saw an interesting French film (Truffault I think) based on a true story about a wild boy found living in the woods in France and the struggle to "tame" him, teach him table manners, speech, etc. I think it was called "The Wild Child".
Back to Dickens -- I love that quote about Slyme (especially the penultimate sentence)!

Sometimes Dickens is clearly referring to stories or people who were well known at the time, and now more or less forgotten. And at others, as you say, it's easy to miss even the fact that it's a reference! I don't know of the film you mention though.
When one of the characters mistakenly suggests "oysters" instead of sirens or mermaids it's just funny, but sometimes the jokes pass by without being noticed, I think. Such as this, when Mr. Pecksniff assures Martin Chuzzlewit and Tom Pinch,
"There is no mystery; all is free and open. Unlike the young man in the Eastern tale - who is described as a one-eyed almanac, if I am not mistaken, Mr Pinch? -'
'A one-eyed calender, I think, sir,' faltered Tom."
Apparently there's a meaning of "calender" which I didn't know, that of meaning "a dancing dervish who begs". So perhaps Pecksniff has not only mistaken the word "almanac" for this meaning of "calendar", but also presumably chosen the grander word of the two in keeping with his self-aggrandisement. So so many levels it's possible to probe ...

Sometimes Dickens is clearly referring to stories or people who were well known at the time, and now mor..."
This reminds me of a family story about me and my brother. We were exposed to Flanders & Swann at an early age (as I mentioned in another thread) and once we were singing "Sounding Brass" in the car. There is a bit that goes:
S: I've got a Mini Cooper
F: A what?
S: A Mini Cooper
F: Oh yes, I've got one in my boot!
Well, Andy & I had no idea what a Mini Cooper was nor that in England, a boot was a car trunk so we sang:
"Oh yes, I've got one in my shoe" :)
After Mom & Dad stopped laughing, they explained it to us.
But it just goes to show that people do sometimes unconsciously choose a synonym for what they thought the meaning of a word was.

"Sanctimonious, officious, hypocritical, pretentious and condescending, affecting high moral standards, hypocritically benevolent."

"Sanctimonious, officious, hypocritical,..."
Off to look in my dictionary! But I do agree he is odious. I don't know if he is worse than Uriah Heep though...

Maybe Pecksniff was festering along nicely in the back of his mind all through Dombey and Son, and then reached new depths of obsequiousness and depravity 5 years later, culminating in the Uriah Heap of David Copperfield.
I can't think of any descriptive words deriving from his name.

"Title and even story had been undetermined while we travelled" and "Beginning so hurriedly as at last he did, altering his course at the opening and seeing little as yet of the main track of his design,"
He even fiddled about with the main character's name, trying out Sweezleden, Sweezleback, Sweezlewag, Chuzzletoe, Chuzzleboy, Chubblewig, and Chuzzlewig
By the third number he'd decided it would be partly about "old Martin's plot to degrade and punish Pecksniff," but this was all writing on the hoof, as usual!

How far have you reached, Jean? I've just finished chapter 10, but don't want to spoil. Are you much further? I keep meaning to remember and quote descriptive phrases or passages, but there are so many! Some writers struggle for just a few of these delights. Dickens drips with them!
Also now half way in Bleak House. Even better!

"All which latter portion of the title was of course dropped as the work became modified, in its progress, by changes at first not contemplated"
So it sounds to me as if Dickens himself changed his mind. Martin senior plays an important role in the novel anyway. He's a pivotal character in a way as it is his money which starts the whole thing off. And his temperament is irresistible - a really quirky so-and-so!

I'll try to update my status each time so you can easily see where I am.


And this is a very droll observation which could probably be applied to the citizens of various countries,
"'You have come to visit our country, sir, at a season of great commercial depression,' said the major.
'At an alarming crisis,' said the colonel.
'At a period of unprecedented stagnation,' said Mr Jefferson Brick.
'I am sorry to hear that,' returned Martin. 'It's not likely to last, I hope?'
Martin knew nothing about America, or he would have known perfectly well that if its individual citizens, to a man, are to be believed, it always IS depressed, and always IS stagnated, and always IS at an alarming crisis, and never was otherwise; though as a body they are ready to make oath upon the Evangelists at any hour of the day or night, that it is the most thriving and prosperous of all countries on the habitable globe."
But the depiction of Colonel Diver is so embittered. And the Norris family! What is their purpose? It seems to be solely so that Dickens can say how hypocritical all Americans are, and that even those who claim to be abolitionists are just as bigoted and racist as all the others.
He really seems to have it in for Americans. They have no table manners, they spit freely, they are coarse, bullies, blackmailers, out to defraud ... I am hoping that when we return we meet some more noble representatives! Yes, we had some very unpleasant greedy egotistical characters in the Chuzzlewit family, but it wasn't quite so unremitting. We also had Tom Pinch, his sister Ruth, Mary, Mark Tapley - in fact quite a few well-meaning characters now I think of it.
Books mentioned in this topic
David Copperfield (other topics)The Cricket on the Hearth (other topics)
Pinocchio (other topics)
The Cricket on the Hearth (other topics)
The Cricket on the Hearth (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
John Sutherland (other topics)John Forster (other topics)
John Sutherland (other topics)
Charles Dickens (other topics)
Fyodor Dostoevsky (other topics)
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I found this list quite interesting in that it was listed in order of longest to incomplete...
I'll definitely review the 1st message in this thread and I'll def let you know when I get started.
Thank you for opening this. There is only 1 other friend that I know who loves Dickens like I do...'KIN' priceless!