Well. It's been more than a month since I posted anything -- I haven't fallen off the face of the earth, I've just been busy, work and travel and the
Jane Austen Society Annual General Meeting, which was
fabulous. I've really been wondering if I need to give up blogging for awhile. But fear not, I have been reading!
Before I give up on blogging, I need to make a case for
Barnaby Rudge, probably Dickens' most least-popular work -- yes, less popular even than
Martin Chuzzlewit or
Dombey and Son, both of which I've read in the past two years. It's a shame really, because after I finally gave it my full attention, I actually liked BR better than the other two.
But I'm getting ahead of myself.
Barnaby Rudge was published in 1841, just after
The Old Curiosity Shop (one of the most popular) and before
Chuzzlewit, one of the least popular. Dickens was inspired by the works of Sir Walter Scott to write a sweeping historical story -- his only other historical work is
A Tale of Two Cities, and I can definitely see in BR glimmers of the great writing to come.
Barnaby Rudge is "A Tale of the Riots of 'Eighty," but it's not just a historical novel. It's about fathers and sons, a double murder, two feuding families, divided lovers, an abduction, even a talking raven -- tons of great stuff, right?
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The real Grip the Raven, Dickens' pet, now on view at the Free Library of Philadelphia |
It starts out in 1775, in a small village about ten miles or so from London, and much of the action centers around a inn called The Maypole. John Willet is the proprietor and his son Joe is much-maligned and dissatisfied; there's also another unhappy father and son, the rich and sleazy Mr. Chester and his noble son Edward. Edward is in love with the local beauty, Emma Haredale, but a long-time feud between the Chesters and the Haredales threatens to separate them forever. Also, Emma's father was murdered years before under mysterious circumstances, along with his faithful steward Mr. Rudge, father of the eponymous Barnaby, the local village simpleton with a heart of gold, who owns a talking raven, Grip. We also meet another family, the Vardens. Gabriel Varden is a locksmith with a shrewish wife, a beautiful, coquettish daughter Dolly; a scheming apprentice, Simon Tappertit; and a shrieking maidservant, Miggs, who provides most of the comic relief.
The first half of the book sets up all these different characters and gives some back story, along with a mysterious stranger. Then, about halfway through the novel, the action jumps forward in time five years, to the beginning of the "No Popery" riots of 1780, also known as the Gordon Riots, which I'm sorry to say I knew nothing about. My sincere apologies to any British readers, but is this a subject that anyone ever learned in school? My shoddy Yank education regarding the 18th century was much more centered on the American Revolution.
If you didn't know either, the Gordon Riots were a backlash against Catholics, that culminated in anti-Catholic mob violence and riots, including a mob of at least 40,000 that marched on Parliament in June of 1780. Churches, embassy, and prisons were burned, including Newgate. (If you want to read more about it, click
here).
I really think that's one reason
Barnaby Rudge isn't popular -- honestly, a lot of people know enough about the French Revolution and the guillotine to make ATOTC a much more compelling subject. And
Barnaby Rudge is a
terrible name, right up there with
Martin Chuzzlewit. I know Dickens has a talent for giving his characters goofy names to reflect their personalities, but surely he could have come up with something better!
Oliver Twist, David Copperfield, and even
Edwin Drood have mystery, romance, or some other interesting qualities to entice readers.
My biggest problem with this novel is how it shifts. The first half sets up the mystery and the characters -- there are so many, it's confusing and there really isn't that much development of any of them -- and then -- ta-da!!! The story jumps forward in time five years, to just before the Gordon Riots, and we get very little information about what's happened to most of the characters.
Don't get me wrong, the part about the riots and the mobs are extremely well-written, and I was riveted -- and I'm normally bored by big action scenes. Dickens is really good at describing the mobs and the violence, and it's pretty scary. But I really wanted more about the characters, and the story itself was kind of all over the place. After the riots, things wrap up very quickly, and I just felt it was uneven. Having read most of the Dickens canon, I can see hints of all the great stuff to follow --
Bleak House is a great murder mystery, and so many of his later novels have complex plots and multiple characters, plus there's all the great history in
A Tale of Two Cities. (
Barnaby Rudge even has a little shout-out to
Oliver Twist, with mention of a pick-pockets' gang).
Anyway. I'm really glad I finished Rudge; I'm nearing the end of my quest to complete all the works of Dickens -- only three left to go of the major works:
The Old Curiosity Shop,
The Pickwick Papers, and
The Mystery of Edwin Drood.
Has anyone else read
Barnaby Rudge? What did you think? Am I crazy to want to complete all of Charles Dickens' works?