OLIVER TWIST
-Charles Dickens
Oliver Twist was first
published in 1837 in serial format, in Bentley’s Miscellany, which
Dickens was editing at the time. Oliver Twist was Dickens’s
second novel and his first real social novel, critiquing the harm public
institutions inflicted on the poor. Dickens would come to be known as the
master of this form, and would continue it in Nicholas Nickel,
which he would write while still working on Oliver Twist. The novel
tells the story of Oliver, a young orphan raised in a workhouse seventy miles
outside of London, who runs away and finds himself taken in by thieves. It was
written partially in reaction to the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834, which,
among other things, essentially took the rights of citizenship away from
paupers, who were interred in workhouses and forfeited their political rights
in order to receive aid.
Oliver Twist was well-received, and spawned
many other orphan tales, although it was not as big a success as The
Pickwick Papers. Many also criticized Dickens for his portrayal of
criminals and prostitutes in the novel, which at the time was controversial. Oliver
Twist has also become one of the most dramatized of Dickens’s works—it
was produced in multiple theaters before the serialization was even complete.
Oliver Twist is
the story of a young orphan, Oliver, and his attempts to stay good in a society
that refuses to help. Oliver is born in a workhouse, to a mother not known to
anyone in the town. She dies right after giving birth to him, and he is sent to
the parochial orphanage, where he and the other orphans are treated terribly
and fed very little. When he turns nine, he is sent to the workhouse, where
again he and the others are treated badly and practically starved. The other
boys, unable to stand their hunger any longer, decide to draw straws to choose
who will have to go up and ask for more food. Oliver loses. On the appointed
day, after finishing his first serving of gruel, he goes up and asks for
more. Mr. Bumble, the beadle, and the board are outraged, and decide they
must get rid of Oliver, apprenticing him to the parochial undertaker, Mr.
Sowerberry. It is not great there either, and after an attack on his mother’s
memory, Oliver runs away.
Oliver walks towards London.
When he is close, he is so weak he can barely continue, and he meets another
boy named Jack Dawkins, or the artful Dodger. The Dodger tells Oliver he
can come with him to a place where a gentleman will give him a place to sleep
and food, for no rent. Oliver follows, and the Dodger takes him to an apartment
in London where he meets Fagin, the aforementioned gentleman, and Oliver
is offered a place to stay. Oliver eventually learns that Fagin’s boys are all
pickpockets and thieves, but not until he is wrongfully accused of their crime
of stealing an old gentleman’s handkerchief. He is arrested, but the bookseller
comes just in time to the court and says that he saw that Oliver did not do it.
The gentleman, whose handkerchief was
taken, Mr. Brownlow, feels bad for Oliver, and takes Oliver is very happy
with Mr. Brownlow, but Fagin and his co-conspirators are not happy to have lost
Oliver, who may give away their hiding place. So one day, when Mr. Brownlow
entrusts Oliver to return some books to the bookseller for him, Nancy spots
Oliver, and kidnaps him, taking him back to Fagin.
Oliver is forced to go on a
house-breaking excursion with the intimidating Bill Sikes. At gun point
Oliver enters the house, with the plan to wake those within, but before he can,
he is shot by one of the servants. Sikes and his partner escape, leaving Oliver
in a ditch. The next morning Oliver makes it back to the house, where the kind
owner, Mrs. Maylie, and her beautiful niece Rose, decide to protect him
from the police and nurse him back to health.
Oliver slowly recovers, and
is extremely happy and grateful to be with such kind and generous people, who
in turn are ecstatic to find that Oliver is such a good-natured boy. When he is
well enough, they take him to see Mr. Brownlow, but they find his house
empty—he has moved to the West Indies. Meanwhile, Fagin and his mysterious
partner Monks have not given up on finding Oliver, and one day Oliver wakens
from a nightmare to find them staring at him through his window. He raises the
alarm, but they escape. Nancy, overhearing Fagin and Monks, decides that she
must go to Rose Maylie to tell her what she knows. She does so,
telling Rose that Monks is Oliver’s half-brother, who has been trying to
destroy Oliver so that he can keep his whole inheritance, but that she will not
betray Fagin or Sikes. Rose tells Mr. Brownlow, who tells Oliver’s other
caretakers, and they decide that they must meet Nancy again to find out how to
find Monks.
They meet her on London
Bridge at a prearranged time, but Fagin has become suspicious, and has sent his
new boy, Noah Claypole, to spy on Nancy. Nancy tells Rose and Mr. Brownlow
how to find Monks, but still refuses to betray Fagin and Sikes, or to go with
them. Noah reports everything to Fagin, who tells Sikes, knowing full well that
Sikes will kill Nancy. He does. Mr. Brownlow has in the meantime found Monks,
who finally admits everything that he has done, and the true case of Oliver’s
birth. Sikes is on the run, but all of London is in an uproar, and he
eventually hangs himself accidentally in falling off a roof, while trying to
escape from the mob surrounding him. Fagin is arrested and tried, and, after a
visit from Oliver, is executed. Oliver, Mr. Brownlow, and the Maylies end up
living in peace and comfort in a small village in the English countryside.
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