Summary |
For the character of Little Nell, the beautiful child thrown into a shadowy, terrifying world, Dickens drew on a tragedy in his own life, the death at the age of seventeen of his sister-in-law Mary Hogarth. Five years later he wrote, the desire to be buried next her is as strong upon me now and I know (for I don't think there ever was love like that I bear her) that it will never diminish. The sorrows of Nell and her grandfather are offset by Dickens's creation of a dazzling contemporary world inhabited by some of his most brilliantly drawn characters the eloquent ne er-do-well Dick Swiveller, the hungry maid known as the Marchioness, the mannish lawyer Sally Brass, Quilp's brow-beaten mother-in-law, and Quilp himself, the lustful, vengeful dwarf, whose demonic energy makes a vivid counterpoint to Nell's purity. |