Friday, May 17, 2019
Bleak House Imagery of Bleakness
The Imagery of Bleakness and Disease in Charles  hellers Bleak  field of operations Having been referred to as one of  daemons best novel, Bleak  accommodate is a novel which stands out, not only through its narrative technique, but also through the  hard  imaging the author conveys, managing somehow to relate this imagery to the  substantive world, namely the XIXth century England. Thus, in  appal of some instances of humorous, ironical scenes and a few comic characters, the novel reveals the sordidness and disease which seemed to prevail in England during those  measure.From the opening sentence of the novel, the Court of Chancery is introduced, being associated with the symbols of fog and mud Never can  in that location come a fog too thick, never can there come mud and  bodge too deep, holds, this day The word fog appears thirteen times in one paragraph, and many times throughout the novel, the author conveying thus a  shameful imagery, symbolic for the English society of the XIX   th century. reservation use of a special narrative technique, Dickens chooses to have his story told by two  contrasting narrators, an omniscient third-person narrator and a first-person narrator, Esther Summerson, who is presenting her life from her own viewpoint. Unlike the generalizing, highly rhetorical voice which opens the novel, Esthers voice begins hesitatingly, al near self-deprecating herself. This manner of presenting her story is highly relevant as it is seen as a result of her life as an orphan in the sordid house of a cruel, merciless aunt.Thus,  inclinationing the imagery of  starkness, Esther can be deemed to have passed through a series of symbolic bleak houses before she reaches the real Bleak House, which proves to be the least bleak of all. Consequently, it can be considered that the names of the two houses  Bleak House, is nothing more than Dickenss irony which becomes obvious only in the end of the novel. With regard to Esthers evolution throughout the novel, t   he first and app bently worse bleak house is that of her childhood, where she is raised by her cruel aunt who tells her that It would have been better  hat you had never been born. The little girl is taught to  even off use of submission, self-denial and diligent work so as to compensate for her guilt of having been born. Another bleak house situated in Esthers long evolutionary path is the house of Mrs Jellyby, an apparently  charit adequate woman who is more preoccupied with Africa than with her own numerous family. This was meant as a metaphor of imperial England, which was so much engaged around the world in those times, that it became out of touch with the problems it had at home.The imagery of  loneliness is here complex, revealing a dirty, unkept for house, with children running all around it, without having anyone to care for them. The imagery of bleakness and disease is also evident in the description of Krooks rooming house, an emblem of waste and neglect. Krook is describ   ed as a ragged man who keeps documents, the detritus of legal London(Davis,42) in his bottle shop, while his apartments are the home for the victims of Chancery, little Miss Flite and the ill law writer Nemo, two characters who represent two  unchewable instances of the imagery of disease.What is interesting is the way Dickens chooses to relate the bleakness of these houses to the law and the system of injustice, which serves itself, but ignores the  do its actions have upon humans. But even the law is perceived inside a bleak house, namely Tulkinghorns house in Lincolns Inn Fields, which is described as having been let off in sets of chambers and in those shrunken fragments of its greatness, lawyers lie like maggots in nuts Here among his many boxes  tagged with transcendent names, lives Mr. Tulkinghorn.Everything that can have a lock has got one no key is visible.  As  furthest as the disease metaphor si concerned, this seems to be very complex in Jo, the illiterate sweeper, who i   s seen most of the time starving and begging. Given the society with no public education, Jo is allowed to know nothing, he is neglected by the system itself, being somehow forced to move on, regardless of his deprivations. The most seemingly bizarre  manner of the disease metaphor is found in the figure of Krook, the illiterate rag and bottle merchant who seems to be the underworld equivalent of the Lord Chancellor.Just like him, Krook collects legal documents but he is not able to understand their content, and so they cannot help justice. As a warning for the established legal system stands the  occurrence of Krooks improbable death by spontaneous combustion, which is symbolic for legal England ending in fire, as When the law becomes totally absorbed with itself and its own procedures, it is bound to destroy itself, according to Dickens.In the light of the  preceding(prenominal) evidence, it can be said that the imagery of bleakness and disease in the lives of his characters is us   ed by Charles Dickens so as to reveal the bleakness of England itself and how a sick system caused many injustices and perils for the poor, while the  thick had a life of luxury and abundance. Works cited Primary sources Dickens, Charles, Bleak House, Collins, London and Glasgow, 1953 Secondary sources 2. Davis, Paul, Charles Dickens A Literary Reference to his Life and Work, Infobase Publishing, 1999, pp 41-45 3. Aubrey, Brian, Novels for Students, Gale Publishing, pp 84-86  
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