Appreciations and Criticisms of the Works of Charles Dickens

 PART ONE

 CHAPTER I

 INTRODUCTION

 LITTLE DORRIT

 REPRINTED PIECES

 OUR MUTUAL FRIEND

 DAVID COPPERFIELD

 CHRISTMAS BOOKS

 TALE OF TWO CITIES

 BARNABY RUDGE

 THE UNCOMMERCIAL TRAVELLER

 CHAPTER II

 SKETCHES BY BOZ

 CHAPTER III

 PICKWICK PAPERS

 CHAPTER IV

 NICHOLAS NICKLEBY

 CHAPTER V

 OLIVER TWIST

 CHAPTER VI

 OLD CURIOSITY SHOP

 CHAPTER VII

 BARNABY RUDGE

 CHAPTER VIII

 AMERICAN NOTES

 CHAPTER IX

 PICTURES FROM ITALY

 CHAPTER X

 MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT

 CHAPTER XI

 CHRISTMAS BOOKS

 CHAPTER XII

 DOMBEY AND SON

 PART TWO

 CHAPTER XIII

 DAVID COPPERFIELD

 CHAPTER XIV

 CHRISTMAS STORIES

 CHAPTER XV

 BLEAK HOUSE

 CHAPTER XVI

 CHAPTER XVII

 HARD TIMES

 CHAPTER XVIII

 LITTLE DORRIT

 CHAPTER XIX

 A TALE OF TWO CITIES

 CHAPTER XX

 GREAT EXPECTATIONS

 CHAPTER XXI

 OUR MUTUAL FRIEND

 CHAPTER XXII

 EDWIN DROOD

 CHAPTER XXIII

 CHAPTER XXIV

 REPRINTED PIECES

REPRINTED PIECES

The three articles on Sunday of which I speak are almost the last expression of an articulate sort in English literature of the ancient and existing morality of the English people. It is always asserted that Puritanism came in with the seventeenth century and thoroughly soaked and absorbed the English. We are now, it is constantly said, an incurably Puritanic people. Personally, I have my doubts about this. I shall not refuse to admit to the Puritans that they conquered and crushed the English people; but I do not think that they ever transformed it. My doubt is chiefly derived from three historical facts. First, that England was never so richly and recognisably English as in the Shakespearian age before the Puritan had appeared. Second, that ever since he did appear there has been a long unbroken line of brilliant and typical Englishmen who belonged to the Shakespearian and not the Puritanic tradition; Dryden, Johnson, Wilkes, Fox, Nelson, were hardly Puritans. And third, that the real rise of a new, cold, and illiberal morality in these matters seems to me to have occurred in the time of Queen Victoria, and not of Queen Elizabeth. All things considered, it is likely that future historians will say that the Puritans first really triumphed in the twentieth century, and that Dickens was the last cry of Merry England.

And about these additional, miscellaneous, and even inferior works of Dickens there is, moreover, another use and fascination which all Dickensians will understand; which, after a manner, is not for the profane. All who love Dickens have a strange sense that he is really inexhaustible. It is this fantastic infinity that divides him even from the strongest and healthiest romantic artists of a later dayfrom Stevenson, for example. I have read Treasure Island twenty times; nevertheless I know it. But I do not really feel as if I knew all Pickwick; I have not so much read it twenty times as read in it a million times; and it almost seemed as if I always read something new. We of the true faith look at each other and understand; yes, our master was a magician. I believe the books are alive; I believe that leaves still grow in them, as leaves grow on tile trees. I believe that this fairy library flourishes and increases like a fairy forest: but the world is listening to us, and we will put our hand upon our mouth.