Barnaby Rudge: A Tale of the Riots of 'Eighty
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Barnaby Rudge: A Tale of the Riots of 'Eighty is a historical novel by the author Charles Dickens.
Contents |
[edit] Plot introduction
The plot is based on the "no-popery" or Gordon riots of 1780 seen through the eyes of the simple but good-hearted title character. The fanatical anti-Catholic Lord George Gordon is treated with some sympathy in the novel, which concludes with a panoramic description of the riots, which lasted several days.
Barnaby Rudge (along with The Old Curiosity Shop) was one of two novels which Dickens published in his short-lived weekly serial Master Humphrey's Clock, which lasted from 1840 to 1841, when Barnaby Rudge was published. It was Dickens' first attempt at a historical novel, his only other being A Tale of Two Cities.
[edit] Plot summary
The first part of the story details the life of the residents of a small village in Epping Forest, just outside London, in the year 1775, the setting for the action being the Maypole Inn, the Warren (the Haredales' stately home) and the surrounding countryside. The tale opens on the nineteenth of March with a sinister recounting of a violent murder that took place exactly twenty-two years before the story begins. During this first part, the book examines life in this village, including interpersonal relationships, in a traditionally Dickensian style. Some of the most important elements in this first section are:
- The animosity between Mr Haredale and Sir John Chester
- Edward Chester's love for Emma Haredale
- Joe Willet's love for Dolly Varden; also Hugh's love for her
- The tense relationship between Joe and his father
- Barnaby's simpleness and need for his mother's protection
In chapter 35, with the arrival at the Maypole (on the nineteenth of March, five years after the story begins) of Lord Gordon and his followers, the stability of village life is interrupted, echoing the destruction that the riots in Gordon's name will cause in London itself, and the themes and characters that Dickens has built up become essential to the reader's understanding of the effects of the riots on society. Another tactic for subtly drawing attention to the way the story is unfolding is Grip the raven and his seemingly nonsensical comments, which often reveal greater truths to the reader than to the characters.
[edit] Characters in "Barnaby Rudge"
- The Rudges – Barnaby, a simple (developmentally disabled) man, his loving mother Mary, and his companion Grip the loquacious raven
- The Willets – Old John, the keeper of the Maypole Inn, and his kindly son Joe
- The Vardens – Gabriel, the locksmith, his overbearing wife Martha, and his beautiful daughter Dolly
- The Chesters – the villainous Sir John, Esquire, M.P. (Member of Parliament) and his innocent son Edward
- The Haredales – Mr Geoffrey Haredale, younger brother of the murdered Reuben, and his niece (Reuben's daughter) Emma
- Hugh – the Maypole's sinister handyman
- The fanatical and misguided Lord George Gordon, his loyal servant John Grueby, and his obsequious and conniving secretary Mr Gashford
- Simon Tappertit – Gabriel Varden's apprentice, and Miggs, Mrs Varden's shrewish lady's maid
- Ned Dennis – the hangman of Tyburn
- The mysterious stranger, ultimately revealed to be Barnaby Rudge Sr, the steward and murderer of Reuben Haredale
- Stagg – the crafty blind man
- Solomon Daisy, 'Long' Phil Parkes, and Tom Cobb, Old John's three cronies
- Mr Langdale – the purple-faced old vintner
[edit] Allusions/references from other works
Grip the raven may have inspired Edgar Allan Poe to write "The Raven".[1]
[edit] External links
Online editions
- Barnaby Rudge, available at Project Gutenberg.
- Barnaby Rudge - Searchable HTML version.
- Barnaby Rudge - Easy to read HTML version.