The
Cricket on the Hearth is third of the three best-known Christmas books of
Charles Dickens. Its publication in 1845 followed A Christmas Carol (1843) and The
Chimes (1844). There were two additional Christmas books (novellas,
actually), The Battle of Life and The Haunted Man, but they’re not as well
known as the first three. Dickens also wrote a whole raft of Christmas short
stories.
As
opposed to his lengthier novels, which were serialized and later assembled as
complete books, the Christmas books were published in their entirety. Another
feature they share in common with each other and with the longer novels is how
much emphasis Dickens places on mood and scene.
The
Cricket and the Hearth is the story of two families. John and Mary Perrybingle
have been married almost a year, and they have a new baby. They are friends
with toymaker Caleb Plummer and his daughter Bertha. Bertha is blind; her
father goes out of his way to make sure she doesn’t know what straitened
circumstances they live in. Caleb works for Tackleton, a man whose first name
we never learn but he is a generally obnoxious character. Tackleton is getting
married to May Fielding, a friend of Mary’s and Bertha’s who had been in love
with Bertha’s brother Edward, who has disappeared into the wilds of South
America.
It
sounds more complicated than it is; the story moves along at a fast pace, and
involves mistaken appearances, a mysterious old stranger, and Tackleton being
maliciously helpful. Disaster looms. But this is a Dickens Christmas story, and
we know all will end well (Dickens killed off a number of well-loved characters
in his longer novels but not in a Christmas story).
Charles Dickens |
The
first several pages of the story are devoted a rather lengthy discussion of
whether the boiling kettle or the cricket chirping in the fireplace at the
Perrybingles set the tale in motion. As the discussion moves forward, Dickens
makes the reader an insider, with an occasional aside, an opinion, a joke, or an
observation that the characters are oblivious of. It’s a way the author has of
hooking the reader by essentially making him a fellow teller of the story. We’re
not just listening to a story or reading a story; we’re sharing inside jokes
and insights with the narrator as the story develops.
These
Christmas books were popular with his readers. They usually involve the
redemption of a scoundrel, engaging characters living close to poverty, a child
or two, often with an affliction (Tiny Tim and Bertha both have disabilities), a
powerful social message. and, of course, a satisfying ending. These Christmas
books, along with the short stories and the Christmas scenes in his novels, have
made Dickens the author we think of when we think of Christmas.
Illustration: A scene drawn by John Lynch
from A Cricket on the Hearth - Caleb Plummer and his daughter Bertha and the mean Mr. Tackleton..
1 comment:
You've had a banner year reading and writing, Glynn.
May you and Janet and all your loved ones enjoy the blessings of Christmas.
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