DICKENS´ POPULARITY
Dickens was one of the great literary
geniuses of all time and one of the most popular. It has been estimated
that one out of ten Britons who could read read his works, and then read
them aloud to many others! He was, as he was nicknamed, "The Inimitable"
(although innumerable attempts were made to imitate him) and it can be
argued that in all of English literature, his creativity is rivaled only
by Shakespeare's. He was an enormously complex man, a fact seen by many
of the important literary figures of his day who were acquainted with him.
Ralph Waldo Emerson attended one of Dickens's public readings in Boston
during Dickens's American tour. Emerson laughed, he said, "as if he must
crumble to pieces," but afterward he commented that he was afraid that
Dickens possessed "too much talent for his genius; it is a fearful locomotive
to which he is bound and can never be free from it nor set to rest. . .
. He daunts me! I have not the key." Dickens's genius, his obsession with
work, his life-long love affair with his public, and his deep humanity
all helped to make him a literary phenomenon. Because his works appealed
to people of all conditions, and because he could take advantage of new
technological developments, he reached, from the publication of the
Pickwick Papers on, an audience of unprecedented size -- an audience
which he was able to influence emotionally to an extent never equalled.
He was not merely a writer but also a public figure. He was, for example,
widely regarded as the best after-dinner speaker, as well the best amateur
actor, of his day, and during his own lifetime he became a mythic figure:
when he died, a (perhaps apocryphal) little girl cried "Dickens dead? Then
will Father Christmas die too?"He was a great comic artist and a great
entertainer, but his influence over his public was strongest, perhaps,
when he struck a vein of sentiment which ran deep in Victorian society.
Carlyle, quite seriously, recounted the "strange profane story" of a "solemn
clergyman" who had called to comfort a sick man who was, perhaps, on his
death-bed. As the clergyman left the room, having, as he thought, accomplished
his task, he heard the invalid say "Well, thank God, Pickwick will
be out in ten days anyway!" When The Old Curiosity Shop was approaching
its emotional climax -- the death of Little Nell -- Dickens was
inundated with letters imploring him to spare her, and felt, as he said,
"the anguish unspeakable," but proceeded with the artistically necessary
event. Readers were desolated. The famous actor William Macready wrote
in his diary that "I have never read printed words that gave me so much
pain. . . . I could not weep for some time. Sensations, sufferings have
returned to me, that are terrible to awaken." Daniel O'Connell, the great
Irish member of Parliament, read the account of Nell's death while he was
riding on a train, burst into tears, cried "He should not have killed her,"
and threw the novel out of the window in despair. Even Carlyle, who had
not previously succumbed to Dickens's emotional manipulation, was overcome
with grief, and crowds in New York awaited a vessel newly arriving from
England with shouts of "Is Little Nell dead?" Tastes change, however: Oscar
Wilde, that sardonic iconoclast, would later remark (though he might not,
even in the saying, have believed it) that no one could read the death-scene
of Little Nell without dissolving into tears -- of laughter. Today, perhaps,
we do not find it so mawkishly sentimental, but we cannot read it, obviously,
as the Victorians did.
© Mitsuharu
Matsuoka
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