Reblogged from Beastrabban\'s Weblog:
Charles Dickens is one of the great titans of modern English literature. His
works have been prized, celebrated and imitated since the publication of The
Pickwick Papers . The book’s appearance prompted a horde of copies lower
down the press hierarchy in the penny journals. The copyright laws were much
less rigorous then, and so these, lesser novels all had titles similar, but not
identical to those of Dickens himself. His book, Sketches by Boz, was
taken and copied by one of the 19th century popular journalists, as ‘Sketchbook
by’, followed by a name very similar to Dickens’ ‘Boz’. His books have been
adapted into stage plays, films and musicals, most famously A Christmas
Carol, which has twice been filmed as a cartoon, and Oliver Twist,
which became Lionel Bart’s musical, Oliver! His novels have also been
frequently adapted for television. In the 1970s, for example, many of the Beeb’s
period costume dramas broadcast on Sunday evening were adaptations of Dickens. I
particularly remember Nicholas Nickleby and David Copperfield.
Despite his deserved popularity and immense respect, I suspect Dickens’
status as one of the Great Men of English Literature has probably done much to
put people off him. People have a tendency to distrust automatically anything
that becomes official, established art. One way to guarantee that people refuse
to read a particular willingly is to put it on the school syllabus. Moreover,
modern audiences are also likely to be left alienated by some of the
characteristics of much 19th century writing, such as verbosity and their
sentimentality. Boys in particular are likely to be put off him because of his
novels’ period character, which associates them with the great 19th century lady
novelists Jane Austen and the Brontes. In Superman II, for example,
Clarke Kent’s identity as a wimpish square is firmly established, when
Superman’s alter ego announces he wasn’t around to cover one incident as he was
at home that evening reading Dickens. One suspects that its the kind of
literature that such narrow-minded upholders of bourgeois respectability as Mary
Whitehouse liked. For those younger readers suspicious of Dickens, I strongly
recommend his short story, The Railwayman. It’s one of the classic
British ghost stories, and completely amazed me when I read it as a teenager
with its complete absence of all the dullness, verbosity and sentimentality I’d
expected to come across in his works. Today one of Dickens’ great champions is
the thesp Simon Cowell, who has toured in a one man play about the great writer
and his life, and even appeared as his hero in a episode of Dr. Who,
with Christopher Ecclestone playing the Time Lord. The video below comes from
the Guardian, and is on Youtube. In it, Simon Callow takes the viewer around
Dickens’ London.
.
Dickens is partly celebrated for his work defending the poor and describing
the hardship and poverty of the lives of ordinary people in 19th century
Britain. Indeed, his surname has become a byword for conditions of grinding
poverty and squalor in the word ‘Dickensian’. Dickens himself consciously wrote
some of his novels both as works of social criticism, but also actively to
improve the conditions of the poor. Horrified at the respectable middle classes’
indifference to the suffering of the labouring poor, he wrote A Christmas
Carol. This transformed Christmas from a relatively minor holy day into the
massive festival that it is today. As a socially engaged writer, Dickens could
and did write bitter pieces sharply attacking the Conservatives. In 1841 the
Liberal magazine, The Examiner, published his ballad, The Fine Old
English Gentleman: New Version. It was a parody of a traditional ballad
celebrating the virtues of the gentry. The hero of the traditional ballad shared
his good fortune with his social inferiors, in the line ‘while he feasted all
the great, he never forgot the small’.
Dickens wrote his satirical versions after the reforming Whigs had lost
office and been replaced by Peel’s Conservatives, and the country was in the
middle of a depression. The poem attacks the Tories for their corruption, brutal
and oppressive laws, and their savage oppression of the poor to enrich
themselves and the other members of the aristocracy. Cheekily, Dickens states as
a direction for the poem’s performance that it should be said or sung at all
Conservative dinners. It shows that what could be described as agit-prop
literature long preceded the Communist party. The blackly humorous suggestion of
performance venue and the bitter satire of the poem itself very much reminds me
of the same mixture of humour and bitter social criticism in much contemporary
radical, popular protests following 1960′s Situationism. This leads to the
question of whether Dickens, if he were alive today, would be marching with the
demonstrators, neatly attired in top hat and tail coat, and wearing a Guy Fawkes
mask. Here’s the poem:
‘I’ll sing you a new ballad, and I’ll warrant it first rate,
Of the days
of that old gentleman who had that old estate;
When they spent the public
money at a bountiful old rate
On ev’ry mistress, pimp and scamp, at ev’ry
noble gate,
In the fine old English Tory times;
Soon may they come
again!
The good old laws were garnished well with gibbets, whips,
and chains,
With fine old English penalties, and fine old English
pains,
With rebel heads, and seas of blood once in hot in rebel veins;
For
all these things were requisite to guard the rich old gains
Of the fine old
English Tory timnes;
Soon may the come again!
The brave old code, like Argus, had a hundred watchful eyes,
And ev’ry
English peasant had his good old English spies,
To tempt his starving
discontent with fine old English lies,
Then call the good old Yeomany to stop
his peevish cries,
In the fine old English Tory times;
Soon may they come
again!
The good old times for cutting throats that cried out in their need,
The
good old times for hunting men who held their fathers’ creed.
The good old
times when William Pitt, as all good men agreed,
Came down direct from
Paradise at more than railroad speed …
Oh the fine old English Tory
times;
When will they come again!
In those rare days, the press was seldom known to snarl or bark,
But
sweetly sang of men in pow’r, like any tuneful lark;
Grave judges, too, to
all their evil deeds were in the dark;
And not a man in twenty score knew how
to make his mark.
Oh the fine old English Tory times;
Soon may they come
again!
Those were the days for taxes, and for war’s infernal din;
For scarcity of
bread, that fine old dowagers might win;
For shutting men of letters up,
through iron bars to grin,
because they didn’t think the Prince was
altogether thin,
In the fine old English Tory times;
Soon may they come
again!
But Tolerance, though slow in flight, is strong-wing’d in the main;
That
night must come on these fine days, in course of time was plain;
The pure
old spirit struggled, but its struggles were in vain;
A nation’s grip was on
it, and it died in choking pain,
With the fine old English Tory days,
All
of the olden time.
The bright old day now dawns again; the cry runs through the land,
In
England there shall be deear breat – in Ireland, sword and brand;
And
poverty, and ignorance, shall swell the rich and grand,
So, raly round the
rulers with the gentle iron hand,
Of the fine old English ~Tory days; Hail to
the coming time!
Great literature transcends the ages, and speaks eternal truths about human
nature, politics and society. What is shocking reading this is just how much is
true today. The line about the silence of the press in the face of horrific
oppression and abuse just about sums up much of the modern press under Murdoch,
Dacre, the Barclay twins and the rest.
Source
Colin Firth and Anthony Arnove with David
Horspool, The People Speak: Democracy Is Not A Spectator Sport
(Edinburgh: Canongate 2013).