Read Death and Mr. Pickwick Online
Authors: Stephen Jarvis
âWhat does Dickens think of this idea?'
âI haven't told him yet. I came here to seek your support first. Do I have it?'
Chapman stretched, stood and looked out of the window. âDo you remember how I told you that Seymour's wife came here, some years ago, seeking money?'
âYes, I feared she would.'
âOne never knows what sort of trouble a woman like that might cause. It would not be a bad thing if the version of events you are proposing came to be accepted. So â all right â why not? Seymour is dead. He left us in the lurch. Everything that is great about
Pickwick
is by Dickens. You have my support.'
âAnd Mr Hall?'
âI shall speak to him. If I know William, he will not object. He'd had his fill of Robert Seymour.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
âI have been evasive about Seymour,' said Dickens. âYou are proposing the outright invention of the past. What if the press accuse me of being a liar?'
âThere are ways it can be done,' said Forster, âso that even if you were contradicted you would have a reply. I know how to make the scheme congenial to you. Think of it as an audacious conjuring trick, if you like.'
âBut a good magician's secrets are not found out. I am uneasy. Who knows what evidence exists to disprove the claims we would make? Seymour was obviously not quiet about
Pickwick â
that is how the newspapers know about it.'
âSeymour is already forgotten by most of the public. My concern is your enduring reputation and the way you are perceived. The nature of a work reflects an author's character, his true essence, not what a few circumstances may have been â circumstances which, if spelled out in full, would
detract
from understanding.'
âThe works since
Pickwick
are entirely mine, with illustrations made entirely according to my instructions.'
âThat may be so. But, as I have told you before, there are those who say your writing style is too influenced by illustration. People say you strive too much for scenes which can be put in pictures. And no matter how much you seem to be in control, some say you are following the agenda of the caricaturists.'
âThat is not true.'
âThen prove it. Think of Oliver Goldsmith. Think of Jonathan Swift. Conceive of an author who is unconquered and unconquerable. A man who has
nothing
in him of the hired scribe to an illustrator.'
Dickens was silent.
âThe problem is exacerbated,' said Forster, âbecause your work has appeared in serial parts. I
know
it takes immense ability, I
know
that it puts an enormous strain upon the creative powers. But others may see it differently. Others may think there is â frankly â something tawdry about producing these parts. A quantity of writing ordered per month is like ⦠is likeâ¦'
âLike buying half a pound of sausages. What do you propose, Forster?'
âThe trick is to describe the whole by just a part. It is like Sam Weller describing people by their shoes when he first appears. If you describe Seymour's first idea as being about a sporting club, that is a true statement â as far as it goes. But say it, and you will instantly give the impression that the members of this club were involved only in sport, and you will completely undermine the view that Seymour had other ideas. What you say is true, but nowhere near the
whole
truth. It isn't even the largest part of the truth. But that is for one's opponents to point out â
if
they can, and
if
the public listens.'
âStill the lawyer, I see.'
âListen to me! Seymour envisaged men travelling away from the sporting club in London; well then, give him the club, and you take credit for the travels. Except, don't give him the club entirely. Call it something
other
than the Pickwick Club. Something stale. Something used. I have an idea for what you can call it. I remember you told me that Seymour spoke of men who claimed to worship Nimrod the Mighty Hunter, but the god they truly worshipped was Bacchus. So you say that Seymour came up with a
Nimrod
Club. Nimrod â not only from the mighty hunter in the Bible, but from the sporting journalist, Nimrod. So already it sounds stale. And here is the subtle thing. You say he proposed
a
Nimrod Club, not
the
Nimrod Club. So if anyone
should
come forward and say: “Mr Dickens, Seymour invented the Pickwick Club” â you say, “Oh I do apologise, I was merely trying to suggest the sporting theme by using the word âNimrod'. It was meant as a description, not a name.” I can see you like that.'
âYou have obviously given this quite a lot of thought.'
âWe don't stop there. You also say you cannot remember whether the club idea itself came from Seymour or Chapman and Hall. So, at a stroke, even the club concept can be taken away from Seymour.
âThen you say that Seymour did his drawings from the printed proofs of your letterpress. He did his detailed
finished
etchings after he had seen the proofs of course â but all you do is omit the word “finished”, and you will instantly give the impression that he had no preliminary drawings. Everything will seem to come from you, as though you had never seen his preliminary drawings at all. But once again, if someone
should
come forward and challenge what you say, you reply, “Oh I do apologise, I meant to say his
finished
drawings, but I forgot to include that word.” Do you see how easy it is?'
âBut why should Seymour have dropped this Nimrod idea, and put me in charge?'
âSimple. Once again, it is playing around with parts and wholes. You say that Seymour wanted to produce a work on cockney sportsmen. That's partly true. True as far as it goes. Cockney sportsmen aren't a new idea, are they? So merely say that the idea wasn't new, that it was stale, and that everyone deferred to your views. Seymour's influence is gone in a moment.'
âYou are the biggest rogue I have ever met, Forster!'
âDo you know what Smollett says about calling someone a rogue? “You dare not call me rogue for I should have a good action against you and recover.” Do you know what comes next?'
â“If I dare not call you rogue, I dare think you one, damme!”'
Â
*
âSO SEYMOUR'S SCHEME WAS PRESENTED
as being about cockney sportsmen and then the cockney sportsmen were dismissed as old hat,' I said to Mr Inbelicate.
âOld hat! Do you know, Scripty, I have searched and I have never seen a substantial example of prose letterpress linked to cockney sporting pictures prior to
Pickwick
.'
âWhat about Jorrocks?'
âNot published with pictures until after
Pickwick.
'
âWhat about the work Seymour did with Penn?'
â“Maxims and Hints for an Angler” consisted mainly of illustrated comments â the maxims and the hints. Gillray and others may have drawn a few pictures of cockney sportsmen, but there was no letterpress attached to them. Cruikshank drew some sporting mishaps, but they were accompanied by poetry. The linking of prose letterpress to cockney sporting images was an innovative fusion. And it appals me how this was misrepresented, with this trick of parts and wholes.
âAnd do you know another misrepresentation, Scripty? The work was briefly described, according to the letter of agreement that Chapman and Hall sent to Dickens, as dealing with manners and life in the country. That is a quote â “Manners and life in the country”. So it wasn't even really about sport at all! Sport would have been involved, that is absolutely true, because sport occurs in the country. But sport was
never
the work's defining principle.'
Â
*
IN SEPTEMBER 1847, WHEN DICKENS
came to compose a preface for a new edition of
Pickwick
, he wrote:
The idea propounded to me was that the monthly something should be a vehicle for certain plates to be executed by Mr Seymour, and there was a notion, either on the part of that admirable humorist, or of my visitor (I forget which) that a âNimrod Club', the members of which were to go out shooting, fishing, and so forth, and getting themselves into difficulties through their want of dexterity, would be the best means of introducing those.
He looked at the word âhumorist'. That could give the public ideas about Seymour's contribution to
Pickwick
. He changed âhumorist' to âhumorous artist'.
He described, according to Forster's formula, Seymour's ideas, and their supposed unsuitability. After some thought, he concluded the section with the statement: âMy views being deferred to, I thought of Mr Pickwick and wrote the first number.' The ambiguity of âI thought of Mr Pickwick' made him smile. Its apparent meaning was that he had created Mr Pickwick, but there was a buried meaning, to be called upon in an emergency, that he had âthought of Mr Pickwick' in the same way as he might have remarked: âI thought of my mother'. Even âmy views being deferred to' was a nice touch â it did not
exactly
say that the enterprise was changed in accordance with his views, even though everyone would think so.
Â
*
âWHAT AN INTRIGUING DOCUMENT THE
1847 preface is, Scripty,' said Mr Inbelicate. âBy the way, by this time William Hall was dead.'
âHow did he die?'
âTorn to pieces by sparrowhawks.'
âWhat?'
âI neither know nor care, Scripty. What
does
interest me is that Dickens mentions the coincidence of purchasing the
Monthly Magazine
from Hall. In this magazine was Dickens's first published story. An anonymous piece, for which he received not a penny in payment.'
Â
*
HE WALKED PAST THE PRINT
shops near Westminster Hall, clutching the
Monthly Magazine of Politics, Literature and the Belles Lettres
for December 1833. That moment, that evening, he had a pride so great, a sense of auspicious beginning so profound, that his very eyesight was disrupted. He could not focus. It was too painful to look. He bumped into a man, who shouted obscenities and asked him to mind where he was going. He smiled meekly in return. So disturbed was his normal perception, it recalled the worst headaches, the illuminated migraines that would not go even when the eyelids were closed â a disruption of vision that gave the buckles on horse furniture, and also the buckles on the shoes of passers-by, a new ferocious glow.
He had to sequester himself.
He stumbled and turned into Westminster Hall. He leant against the ancient masonry while his eyes recovered. It was cold outside, and stony cool within. There were a few lawyers, here and there, in sombre apparel. He held his head against the wall, and tried to take in the great roof, a masterpiece in carpentry. In the high alcoves were statues of kings, their features partly disfigured by time. Here Edward I had been; here Charles I. The whole sweep of English history and culture for centuries had passed through this hall â Bacon, Burke, Sheridan. Destiny had smiled upon them, and now it smiled upon him. He was in their company in Westminster Hall. The
Monthly Magazine
might seem so pitiful and so insignificant and yet
not
. Not now. He turned towards the south memorial window and, though it was a dark evening, he looked at the sunlight through the stained glass.
Â
*
âI DON'T BELIEVE A WORD ABOUT
his vision being disrupted when he purchased the
Monthly Magazine
,' said Mr Inbelicate. âNor do I believe he sought recovery in Westminster Hall. It is such an
obvious
place of destiny. And even the magical coincidence that the very man who sold him the magazine also brought him the offer to write
Pickwick
is a very qualified sort of magic, when all the details are spelt out. In reality, Charles Whitehead had worked at the
Monthly Magazine
, and his proposal to write for the
Library of Fiction
connected Dickens to Chapman and Hall. And their premises, where the magazine was purchased, was very close to where Dickens worked. But when such mundane details are omitted, the impression created is that, out of all the teeming masses of London, fate has selected this man Hall to go into Furnival's with the great offer to write the immortal
Pickwick
.'
Â
*
AS DICKENS CONTINUED TO WORK
upon the preface, he came to consider the status of
Pickwick
as a work of literature. What was it? Forster considered it a novel. Chapman was not so sure.
He could remember thinking, even during the course of
Pickwick
's serial run, that another work would be his first novel, but this was before he saw
Pickwick
published in book form. Yet, even in that form, it was not a novel in the traditional three-volume sense.
He wrote: âIf it be objected to
The Pickwick Papers
, that they are a mere series of adventures in which the scenes are ever changing, and the characters come and go like the men and women we encounter in the real world, he can only content himself with the reflection, that they claim to be nothing else, and the same objection has been made to some of the greatest novelists in the English language.'
But when the proofs arrived, he changed the word ânovelists' to âwriters'.
For perhaps
The Pickwick Papers
was something greater than a novel. Perhaps he should be compared, by producing the work, to the very best writers the entire canon has to offer.
Although, before publication, he changed âwriters' back to ânovelists' again.
Among the revisions to the text was the deletion of a footnote to Seymour's plate
The Sagacious Dog
. All mention of Edward Jesse disappeared. No longer could the plate be linked to the artist's past.