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Oliver Twist
SETTING
Dickens sets Oliver Twist
in early 19th-century England, a
time when long-held ideas and
beliefs came under serious
scrutiny. Profound changes
brought about by the Industrial
Revolution, religious
uncertainty, scientific
advancement, and political and
social upheaval caused many
Victorians to reexamine many
aspects of their society and
culture.
Industrialization drove many
farmworkers into the cities,
where poor labor conditions and
inadequate housing condemned
most of them to poverty. The
unprecedented increase in urban
population fostered new and
overwhelming problems of
sanitation, overcrowding,
poverty, disease, and crime in
the huge slums occupied by
impoverished workers, the
unemployed, and the unfortunate.
London slums bred the sort of
crime Dickens portrays in
Oliver Twist.
The novel is set against the
background of the New Poor Law
of 1834, which established a
system of workhouses for those
who, because of poverty,
sickness, mental disorder, or
age, could not provide for
themselves. Young Oliver Twist,
an orphan, spends his first nine
years in a "baby farm," a
workhouse for children in which
only the hardiest survive. When
Oliver goes to London, he
innocently falls in with a gang
of youthful thieves and
pickpockets headed by a vile
criminal named Fagin. Dickens
renders a powerful and generally
realistic portrait of this
criminal underworld, with all
its sordidness and sin. He later
contrasts the squalor and
cruelty of the workhouse and the
city slums with the peace and
love Oliver finds in the country
at the Maylies' home.
THEMES AND CHARACTERS
Dickens's story revolves around
young Oliver Twist, an orphan
brought up at a "charitable"
institution "where twenty or
thirty other juvenile offenders
against the poor-laws rolled
about on the floor all day,
without the inconvenience of too
much food or too much clothing."
After nine years Oliver
graduates to a workhouse for
young orphans. There his
starving fellow sufferers elect
him to ask for more food, in
punishment for which Oliver is
sold to an undertaker.
Eventually Oliver runs away,
making his painful way to
London. Penniless and hungry,
Oliver is befriended by a young
thief, the Artful Dodger, who
introduces him to Fagin and his
gang, the evil Bill Sikes, and
Sikes's lover, Nancy.
Steadfastly resisting the
criminals' attempts to corrupt
him, Oliver eventually escapes,
discovers his true parentage,
and receives the respect he
deserves. Dickens does a
creditable job of making
Oliver's unshakable goodness
believable. Despite the book's
title, however, Oliver has less
to do with the story's action
than do most protagonists. Other
characters act toward him or
around him more than he acts on
his own; his essentially passive
role in the novel makes him less
interesting than some of the
other, more fully drawn
characters.
The villains of Oliver Twist
are the novel's most memorable
characters. Bill Sikes is
stupid, strong, insensitive, and
thoroughly evil. With no respect
for human life, he insults,
threatens, or beats every living
thing that gets in his way.
Fagin, the clever and devious
master of the young thieves,
shrewdly manipulates Sikes to
his own advantage. Although he
apparently retains some shreds
of kindness and humanity, Fagin
appears primarily as a
grotesque, though at times
humorous, devil figure. Fagin
specializes in corrupting the
young. Another evil character,
Monks, works behind the scenes
for most of the book but exerts
an influence.
The truly good characters in the
novel are Dickens's least
satisfying. Rose Maylie
represents Dickens's early
version of the ideal Victorian
woman. She is sweet, unselfish,
giving, loving, submissive,
completely good—and
unbelievable. Harry Maylie's
condescending sacrifice for Rose
seems unnecessary at best. Mr.
Brownlow fares better; he
champions Oliver's cause, leads
the fight against Oliver's
enemies, and has enough personal
foibles to make him believable.
Nancy, a prostitute, combines
good and bad traits. She lives
with Bill Sikes and has stolen
for Fagin since her childhood,
but she has many admirable
qualities. She becomes Oliver's
advocate and defender while
Fagin holds him prisoner, and
she even betrays her friends to
protect him. Dickens ultimately
judges Nancy's sins to be an
indictment against Fagin and
others who shaped her during her
youth. Dickens writes in the
book's preface that Nancy's
character "involves the best and
worst shades of our nature; much
of its ugliest hues, and
something of its most beautiful;
it is a contradiction, an
anomaly, an apparent
impossibility; but it is a
truth." By the end of the book,
Nancy receives earthly
punishment but heavenly reward.
Dickens's thematic concern with
the nature of good and evil—and
the factors that make a person
choose one or the other—pervades
the novel. Rose Maylie has
little temptation to be bad,
while Nancy has little
opportunity to be good. Oliver
is rescued before hunger and
desperation force him to
compromise his values, and
Charley Bates manages to
overcome his unfortunate
upbringing, although not without
great struggle. Others, however,
seem doomed from the beginning.
Dickens writes that such men as
Bill Sikes "would not give the
faintest indication of a better
nature. Whether every gentler
human feeling is dead within
such bosoms, or the proper chord
to strike has rusted and is hard
to find, I do not pretend to
know; but that the fact is as I
state it, I am sure."
Dickens wrote Oliver Twist
to identify social problems such
as the workhouse system, the
ineffective legal establishment,
and the suffering caused by
poverty. But, as always,
Dickens's deepest concern is
with individuals. He champions
self-sacrifice, benevolence, and
charity, and he suggests that
personal happiness and social
progress can occur only as
individuals develop these
traits.
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