Charles Pooter

Charles (left) and Lupin Pooter, from The Diary of a Nobody.

Charles Pooter is a fictional character, the supposed author and leading character of George and Weedon Grossmith's comic novel The Diary of a Nobody.

Pooter is a middle aged and middle class City of London clerk with ideas above his station. Apart from taking himself very seriously indeed, he is also an extreme example of self-importance, with the unhappy result that he is much snubbed by those he considers beneath him.[1]

He has a wife called Carrie and a son called Lupin, the latter unsuitably engaged to the distressingly inferior Daisy Mutlar.[1]

The Pooters live at The Laurels, Brickfield Terrace, Holloway, London, in a nice six-roomed residence, not counting basement, with a front breakfast-parlour, a little front garden, and a flight of ten steps up to the front door. A nice little back garden runs down to the railway, which causes no nuisance, other than the cracking up of the garden wall.[1] The exact location of the real "Laurels" had always been a subject of speculation, but in 2008 journalist Harry Mount claimed to have found the original in Pemberton Gardens, a road that cuts from Upper Holloway Road to Junction Road in Archway.[2]

Pooter's intimate friends Cummings and Gowing always let themselves in at the side entrance, thus saving the housemaid the trouble of going to the door.[1] He sometimes drinks Madeira.[3]

The character has spawned the word Pooterism (Pooterish, Pooteresque), which means taking oneself far too seriously: believing that one's importance or influence is far greater than it really is.[4][5][6]

Look up Pooterism in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Portrayals

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 The Diary of a Nobody by George Grossmith and Weedon Grossmith - Project Gutenberg
  2. Finding Pooter's House The Spectator, 8 October 2008
  3. "Gowing produced a pint sample-bottle of Madeira, which had been given him, which he said would get rid of the blues. I dare say it would have done so if there had been more of it; but as Gowing helped himself to three glasses, it did not leave much for Carrie and me to get rid of the blues with." (Diary of a Nobody)
  4. Few knew I was in such a bad way - article by Allison Pearson in The Daily Telegraph, 19 September 2003
  5. It's uncut, leftwing and Pooterish - article by Mark Lawson in The Guardian, London, 23 April 2005
  6. Debt and inflation - article by Robert Peston on his BBC blog, 18 June 2008
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