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George Silverman's Explanation
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George Silverman's Explanation - 6th Summer Read 2021 (hosted by Janelle)

For anyone who wants to get a head start, the story is available online to read at Gutenberg here :
https://www.gutenberg.org/files/810/8...
Or read where it was first published in January 1868 at The Atlantic
here :
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/...
It’s available for free on Apple Books so I assume kindle as well.
If you want a physical copy you can find it in Selected Short Fiction
Hopefully this will be as good a discussion as all the other reads. Hard acts to follow!

This story is also available in the ebook, Charles Dickens – The Complete Short Stories: 190+ Christmas Tales, Social Sketches, Tales for Children & Other Stories (Illustrated): A Christmas Carol, ... Child's Dream of a Star, Holiday Romance….
So far, this book has been exceptional and has included all of our stories (but it is missing The Beguilement of the Boat section in The Wreck of the Golden Mary). It does have the complete story of A Message from the Sea.

This should be a great story for discussion, Janelle!



It was first published in the Atlantic monthly,and serialised in three instalments. The first instalment appeared in the January 1868 issue.
James T Fields, the editor, paid a thousand pounds for the privilege of printing it a few weeks earlier that Dickens published it in England (in All the Year Round).
This story’s chief claim to fame is how large that payment is for the time!
It has nine chapters (really seven, the first two are false starts).
I thought we could discuss the opening today and then I’d summarise a chapter a day from tomorrow.
So the first and second chapters both begin “It happened in this wise:” and then break off. Just a paragraph each, George doesn’t erase them because “it is not my design to conceal any of my infirmities, whether they be of head or heart.”
Why does Dickens start the story like that? My thoughts are that it shows something of George Silverman’s personality. He lacks confidence and self esteem. He also comes across as honest, not wanting to hide anything and it also suggests that his story is hard for him to share.
For me it made it quite clear that it isn’t Dickens speaking. I can’t imagine Dickens being so unsure of himself!
Great intro thanks Janelle. I'll link it to the first comment :)
(The official start date is today by the way, everyone.)
(The official start date is today by the way, everyone.)

George Silverman feels insecure, and doesn't know how the reader will react to his explanation. He's an innocent person who has been victimized by others in his past. It seems that he doesn't know where to start, how far back in his life to start his explanation. Then he realizes that he has to go back to his early childhood so that the reader will understand him as a person.
I wondered if he is trying to justify his actions to the reader or himself by writing this. It may be cathartic for him to write his explanation. It's self-therapy to write his feelings down on paper.





George describes his miserable childhood living in extreme poverty in a cellar in Preston. He is a timid child, clearly scared of both his parents. His mother calls him “a worldly little devil” because he wants food, comfort or warmth. He knows almost nothing beyond the cellar as he is locked in if both parents are out. He has overheard his mother saying “she would come into a courtful of houses” if her father, a machine maker at Birmingham, died. When he was alone he would wish for his grandfathers death.
Then a change came. First his mother sickened, and then his father “and then there was only I to give them both water, and they both died.”
What an horrific childhood! George doesn’t give his age but I assume he’s quite young, otherwise he’d have been put to work. No education, no love, no understanding of the outside world. We are left to wonder why his mother is estranged from her clearly wealthy father.


I agree it was so sad to read the description of George's childhood in the cellar. The way the mother and father laugh at the end is indeed eerie. the strange sound frightened me. It frightened father too and right there I'm feeling a bit of sympathy for even the father.

Any other pop culture folks out there who were reminded of the little girl in "Interview with a Vampire"? Ouch.



Worldly, dictionary definition:
1. (of a person) experienced and sophisticated
2. of or concerned with material values or ordinary life rather than a spiritual existence
So being used in the second meaning here, but also seems to be selfish and greedy as well

The mother would have a "courtful of houses" one day meant she came from money, yet she lived in poverty. Got me wondering how that came about. Was it her marriage to the father? Did the pair have a bad venture that left them penniless? How did she get into this predicament and lifestyle?
Then her negativity towards her child. What caused that? Did he remind her of her father? What's the story between her & her father?
Whatever the back story of this couple is, they left their child in a sad state with a sad and negative state of mind about himself.
This story certainly has set a mood. Dickens knows how to draw us in.

When he’s lifted out of the cellar by two men, the light is so bright. He says he’s hungry and thirsty ‘true to my character of worldly little devil’ and the ring of people ask does he realise his parents are dead. George says he doesn’t know what it is to be dead. They are horrified by him but he continues to eat the food they bring him. Vinegar and camphor are thrown at him.
Then a man called Hawkyard arrives, Mr Verity Hawkyard of West Bromwich. The grandfather has also died. George asks “where’s his houses?” The people are shocked by his “worldliness”.
Hawkyard says he has set up a trust for the boy and worried about infection they discuss what to do with the boy. A police officer takes him to a bare room with a bed where he’s fed and washed (and more camphor and vinegar) until Hawkyard comes for him.
He’s then taken to an old farmhouse ‘to be purified’ called Hoghton Towers where he hopes he will eat well. Hawkyard tells George if he behaves well he will send him to school although he’s not obligated to do it. ‘I am a servant of the lord , George, and I have been a good servant to him (I have!) these five and thirty years. The lord has had a good servant in me, and he knows it.’ This all means nothing to George. George says he’s not sure when he became aware that hawkyard is a member of some obscure congregation where he’s known as brother hawkyard.
George travels by cart to the farm, the first ride in his life. Hoghton Towers is old and decaying. A lot of what he sees he has nothing to compare to. The only thing he knows is poverty.
‘To that time I had never had the faintest impression of beauty.’
“I had had no knowledge that there was anything lovely in this life” He has no higher feelings, like a “mangy wolf cub”
Another harrowing chapter. Poor George, he gets no sympathy from his rescuers or onlookers, there’s no recognition of his obvious trauma.
Brother Hawkyard! This awful sanctimonious man seems to want to be congratulated for taking care of George, and setting up a trust for him. The onlookers approve but as a reader I’m already wondering where the grandfathers wealth is going.
Camphor and burning vinegar are used to try and prevent spread of infections. Medical theory of the day believed that infectious disease was transmitted by odours, and thus if you could dispel the odour you could prevent the disease's spread.

At that time poverty and squalor were still considered to be the fault of the poor and unwashed so I suppose having the “Brother” step in for him was a good deed. It may be that he expected to win a new, and indebted, church member. If he hadn’t been taken away, where could he have gone? Did children on their own go to the workhouse?

What is really sad is that the boy, himself, asks what happened to "his houses" and is literally ignored. He has lived such a horrible life up to now that even the ride to the farm is an experience for him. He is ignorant of the depth of his situation and also gullible enough to be at the mercy of anyone unscrupulous enough to misuse him.

I do not trust Brother Hawkyard. Just where is Grandpa's money going if the Brother doesn't "have to" set up a trust for George? Where's the money being siphoned off to?
I like how Dickens has such a knack for great names. Hawkyard. That's a name not to be trusted. It makes one feel as if constantly watched ("hawk") and it has a feeling of confinement ("yard").
This is quickly becoming a very intense and intriguing story.


The lack of food is probably now resolved but Hawkyard has entered his life. One cannot live without food but can one live with Hawkyard?

Sue, from a quick search I can’t really find definitely what would happen to a child in George’s circumstances. It seems children didn’t go to the workhouse, or an orphanage on their own, someone in authority would have to take them.

Hoghton towers is a centuries old decrepit house. George wanders all over the house, he sees scuffling rats that remind him of the cellar. “How not to be this worldly little devil? how not to have a repugnance towards myself as I had towards the rats?”
There was a girl of similar age in the farmhouse family who sat across from him at mealtimes. He worries about giving her an infection so decides to stay away from her. He thinks of it as a noble act, and begins to feel more human, he spends a lot of time crying when he thinks of his parents. Sylvia, the girl invites George to her birthday party but he says he can’t, in his mind he still needs to protect her. Sylvia and Her family think he’s unsocial and rude. He begins to form a shy disposition and a morbid fear of ever being sordid or worldly.
George is isolating himself in this chapter, but he is starting to recognise his own feelings. It’s quite a sad picture of loneliness. There’s not really a sense of time in this chapter either, I suspect it’s quite a few months have gone by.
Interesting the setting too, a building that dates back centuries and is crumbling.


His deceased grandfather was known to have owned many houses. The description of the old house, which is falling apart and full of rats, is a contrast with what George should have inherited from his grandfather.

He cried for the first time over feeling repugnance toward the rats and equating himself with them and not wanting to feel a disgust for himself. It breaks my heart.
George was happy that he believed he protected Sylvia and the other children from fever he may have but the fact that it was unrecognized as such caused his shy personality to develop even more strongly.

This is what can happen when one only looks at the surface of something (in this case, George). Not one person looked at him directly and thought to talk to him about his actions, situation, his past, his thoughts. He was glossed over in every aspect.
What a poor child. I have to admire him, too. For all he's been through, he has positive & good thoughts and doesn't hold malice towards anyone, not even his parents.

It has been restored and several online sites have photos. This is the link to Wikipedia's article:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoghton...
I got the impression that the family lived in a farmhouse on the property. George explored the stone ruins while he was staying away from the family members so they would not be infected with the fever.

I find myself wondering how the 19th century audience would read this story. How would they interpret George? Some may have known or been a George. Would they get these subtleties of behavior that we are ascribing to him or are these more modern interpretations? I guess I’m wondering if Dickens was experimenting with this young boy in a pre-psychology world.

I find myself wondering how the 19th century audience would read this story. How would they int..."
Sue, that thought of your last sentence was exactly what I was thinking about when I posted earlier. Mental health wasn't even considered yet as something that could be helped.


Dickens might be ahead of his time, but I think his audience would definitely have followed that this was psychologically damaging to George...they would simply have called it something different. Most of them had probably experienced or witnessed similar events. They might have understood better why the onlookers and the family reacted the way they did, but I think they would have separated themselves from that by seeing the picture Dickens is painting behind the curtain.

I find this story interesting because it seems to be Dickens creating a profile of character development which plays out from childhood through George’s adult life. Here it’s not through a novel but one story or novella. Here we have the child who has no positive influence. Yes he is provided an education, but he has no one to emulate, no one to confide in, no one to remember with love.
He’s actually an odd child, not one we usually read about. Wouldn’t it be nice to know why Dickens wrote this story.

Brother Hawkyard takes George to school (again saying how good a servant of the Lord he is and how he’ll prosper as his reward for helping George) and tells him to work hard . George does work hard and becomes a Foundation boy, costing hawkyard nothing. He hopes to get a Fellowship to College. Other students think George unsocial both because of his hard work and his poor health.
On Sundays George goes to Hawkyards congregation. George from the start dislikes the gathered Brothers and Sisters but wonders whether it’s his own ‘worldly-devilish spirit’ that stops him appreciating them.
Brother Hawkyard is a popular ‘expounder’ here and usually preaches first. Elderly Brother Gimblet is another preacher who seems to have a grudge against Hawkyard. Both men are drysalters.
George then pledges that everything he writes of these assemblies is the truth.
George finishes school and will go to college. On the next Sunday, Brother hawkyard preaches that he’s a great servant (again). George’s grandfather was a member of the congregation also and he brags about getting George his education.
Brother gimblet then preaches for twenty minutes about looking after the orphan, appropriating his property and not giving him his due. (George in his narration suppresses his ‘sordid’ suspicions)
When George returns to his school he writes a document saying how much he appreciates what hawkyard has done for him (he doesn’t want to give in to selfishness). He takes it to Hawkyards business to give it to him in person. Brother Gimblet is also there because the Brothers are going into partnership and Gimblet would share in the profits. When he reads the letter Hawkyard declares ‘Praise the Lord!’ He reads the letter out loud and Gimblet smiles.
One last visit to the congregation to show he is grateful before going to Cambridge, the brothers preach at George against worldliness and greed (mainly because he doesn’t want to join their congregation).
George never sees them again. Hawkyard dies in a few years and leaves everything to gimblet.
*Drysalters were dealers in a range of chemical products, including glue, varnish, dye and colourings. They might supply salt or chemicals for preserving food and sometimes also sold pickles, dried meat or related items.
Brother Gimblet in his preaching accuses Hawkyard of stealing George’s inheritance, yet he is easily bought off by joining in the theft. Again George decides not to accuse Hawkyard because he believes he has been kind to him. It’s hard to read, he’s so obviously being exploited. But I am glad he refused to join their congregation, in his heart he can see through their hypocrisy.
I found an illustration for this chapter from an 1880 edition of The Mystery of Edwin Drood (Dickens’ incomplete final novel). It’s by Sir Luke Fildes.

Added. I'm quite a bit behind but am so pleased you have chosen such an intriguing story to lead, Janelle. All the comments are great too (thanks Connie!)

My comments were a bit long and rambly, so unzip at your peril.
(view spoiler)
Overall, a big thumbs up. I am never sorry to have read Dickens!
Thank you for suggesting this. I would not have picked it up on my own!
Books mentioned in this topic
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Great Expectations (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Luke Fildes (other topics)Charles Dickens (other topics)
Charles Dickens (other topics)
This is the thread to discuss George Silverman's Explanation by Charles Dickens, which is our sixth and final summer read for this year, between 1st and 14th September 2021.
Janelle is the host for this read, so please allow her to comment first. Thanks!
Here is her introduction: LINK HERE for the Opening and first two chapters
Third Chapter LINK HERE
Fourth Chapter LINK HERE
Fifth Chapter LINK HERE
Sixth Chapter LINK HERE
Seventh Chapter LINK HERE
Eighth Chapter LINK HERE