The Victorian society was fraught with changes in all spheres. Society, politics, economics were all subject to the impact o f gradual but definite

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Ill I N T R O D U C T I O N The Victorian society was fraught with changes in all spheres. Society, politics, economics were all subject to the impact o f gradual but definite changes. The Industrial Revolution, was, the impetus for all these changes. Politically, the fabric o f English society underwent a great change. Personal liberty o f the Anglo Saxons came to be replaced by democracy and individual freedom. The House o f Commons made allowances for the real power to be vested in the hands o f elected representatives. The Theory o f Divinity o f Kings was declared extinct. This helped in the spread o f democracy and popular education, which set the stage for religious tolerance and growing brotherhood. But the impact o f the Industrial Revolution changed all this. The economy which showed a rising trend reflected a society, which was fraught with conflicting forces. The change in the pattern o f production, divided the society into the rich, (lie middle class and the very poor. Various social measures like the Reform Act o f 1832 failed to realize the dreams o f the poor. Friedrich Engels s The Condition o f the Working Class in England, in 1844, probed this question o f social classification. The book is a vivid portrayal o f the evils which followed the Industrial Revolution. Engels depicts the beginning o f the ^Town-ward drift the gradual influx o f the rural population to the industries located in the urban areas. H us migration did not have the desired impact on die lives o f the rural people. They came to be the English proletariat, living and working in inhumane conditions. This class o f English people was completely isolated and

desolate. This gradual discontentment led to arising inddeooe o f die crime rate. This deepening focus on the privileged and die under privileged is best illustrated and analysed in the literary scene o f Victorian England. Dickens and Collins were two such writers who adequately represented the turmoil in Victorian society. Their works served as a guide to the confusing standards and values which were upheld as truths and counter truths. For a basic introduction to Dickens and his partiality to crime and detection in his novels, Philip Collins s, Dickens and Crime, 1962 is perhaps the first full length study that critically analyses Dickens and his depiction o f crime. The book is especially helpful for its exhaustive material not only on Dickens, but also for its insight into Victorian society. Other books which I have found particularly helpful and informative are Peter Owens s, The Development o f the Detective Novel, 1958, lan Ousby s, Bloodhounds o f Heaven: the Detective in English Fiction from Godwin to Doyle, 1976, and Julian Sy mons s Crime and Detection; An illustrated history from 1840, 1966. Alongwith a history o f the development o f the detective novel, its popularity and peculiarities, what is especially striking are the comparisons among the different writers influenced by and writing on crime and detection. Dickens and Collins have found mention in all three books, their field of interest being the same. They shared a very rewarding relationship, personally and professionally. They went together on trips abroad and at home influenced each other professionally. Dickens learnt a thing or two regarding plot construction from Collins. On the other hand, Collins, taking care not to imitate the great master, improved his delineation of characters. Two other books worth IV

V mentioning arc Harvey Pete- Sucksmith s, The Narrative A rt o f Charles Dickens : The Rhetoric o f Sympathy and bony in his Novels, 1970 and Jenny Bourne Taylor s, In The Secret Theatre o f Homer. Wilkie Collins, sensation narrative and nineteenth-century psychology, 1988. These books deal extensively with the subtleties and nuances of Dickens s and Collins s narrative art, respectively. Their appeal lay in the manipulative literary forms which depended cm die w rite s ingenuity in concocting riddles te d mysteries. The examination or analysis o f the criminal, its relation to the trends in Victorian literature, was an important fact of life and it enters this work as an intrinsic part o f the social structure o f Dickens s and Collins s novels. The depiction of the criminal and the question of mystery becomes a fundamental concern o f the novelist and one feels that this element is vital to the complexities that the novel examines in relation to its depiction o f life. The underworld serves as a mode o f existence serving its dual motive of the examination of good and evil as well as a reference to the timeless appeal of a well structured detective tale. It therefore essentializes and focuses on both the quality and mode of narrative in its analysis of a world that serves to highlight one very important structure o f tire Victorian society tire criminal. Crimea mystery and suspense are used to create a world o f make-believe, but it also serves to show the significance o f those qualities in a world which is disturbingly familiar. Worlds are created only to be destroyed. The deterive is the master creator, like the novelist himself he makes only in order to unravel the mysteries o f existence. Thus, this process o f creation and destruction o f mystery forms a very important aspect o f this study. In mastering tire art o f

vi detection, the works o f these two writers were popular not only because o f the literary aspects o f their tales, but also because o f die way they employed their visions to portray man in society. This thesis consists o f five chapters. The Prelace and Introduction precede these and the Conclusion follows them. Chapter 1 is a broad and general survey o f the Victorian society inhabited by Dickens and Collins. The political, social and especially the economic life o f the Victorians have been studied in brief. Mention has been made o f the Industrial Revolution and how this indirectly changed the entire texture o f the Victorian society. The rural population was gradually displaced from their home and hearth, and was at the same time denied a place in the fast developing industrial towns. This aspect o f study then gradually unravels the criminal scenario as a natural fallout o f die abject state of poverty o f the English proletariat. The chapter also tries to throw insight on the reasons for the popularity o f the detective novel and why Dickens and Collins preferred this form to others. Chapter 2 is a detailed study' o f William Wilkie Collins s three well known novels. They are The Woman in White, I860, No Name, 1862 and The Moonstone, 1868. Stress has been laid on his use o f the elements o f crime, mystery and suspense to manipulate the narrative. His mastery o f plot construction is equalled by his astute projection o f characters, especially the women, considering the fact that he himself was a man. Chapter 3 is a detailed study o f three o f Dickens s more well known novels. They are Bleak House, 1853, Great Expectations, 1861, and The Mystery o f Edwin Drood, 1870. Always famous for his art of characterization, diis chapter throws light on Dickens s ability at plot construction. Chapter 4 is a

comparative study o f the narrative art o f Dickens and Collins. The detective story has been used by them to project their vision and a rt Crime, mystery and suspense are common elements and alongwith many similarities, they also had their dissimilarities. Especially worth mentioning, is the influence each had on the other. The last chapter, that is, Chapter 5 is a comparison o f Dickens and Collins with some contemporaries, showing similar characteristics in their handling o f the detective story. They too have used the same elements, but with subtle differences in the mode o f narration and the importance given to plot and characterization. There seems to be a difference o f opinion regarding the importance to be given to plot construction and characters. The writers studied in this chapter are Edgar Allan Poe, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Anthony Trollope and Arthur Conan Doyle. Thus, crime, mystery and suspense are the techniques used to unravel the psychology o f the criminal not only because o f its fictional popularity, but also as a means o f dwelling on man and his nature. This element o f the criminal helps in adhering to the popular fiction o f the time and also helps to unravel the psychological make up of man. Using this technique, the writers d wel t endlessly on the human psyche - the conscience, where the forces o f good and evil battle with each other for conquest o f the human soul. Unis, was the criminal portrayed the criminal who was an important part o f the Victorian underworld, through the elements of an ordinary detective story. In this survey of the Victorian world, in its impulse and creation, we find the social tensions creating a hiatus between realism and populist trends creating fiction that serves to delve into the psychological disadvantages of a depraved environment This y u

VIII underworld o f Victorian crime finds and recreates a world o f mystery and suspense. So, it Is not surprising that die Victorian novel very often rests between this clash o f good and evil. That this theme has been noticed by the major approaches to the Victorian novel has very often been discussed, but this particular study seeks to highlight this survey by offering a comparison o f two major contemporary writers - Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins. Secondly, in relation to a study o f these dements in their work, a relation to the link between popular and serious literature serves to reflect the need to analyse popular works o f Dickens and Collins as they incorporate many of the contemporary tastes o f the Victorian suspense story. Thus, the study attempts to explore this vital link between the Victorian scene and the genre o f the detective.story, its origin and development. From a broad survey o f the social background o f the Victorian novel, the study then narrows down to a comparison between Dickens and Collins. This study therefore tries to understand the vital forces that entered and reshaped the imagination o f Dickens and Collins, particularly its emphasis on the development of the criminal personality in fiction. Unis, the human psyche and the environment seem to be the controlling medium in our understanding and appreciation o f a major theme in Victorian fiction. Therefore, this aspect needs a full length study as l ittle work has been done to relate the works o f these two contemporaries as part o f our attempts to find reasons why the focus o f both these writers dwell on the criminal and the underworld o f Victorian society. Upheaval and reversal form a major theme in both these writers and as part o f their thematic structure it is interesting to analyse this as part of a recurrent

K pattern which needs further study. Reversal, change and conflict are at the core o f a renewal o f faith by both Dickens and Collins and it would indeed be worthwhile to probe into this aspect o f their art and vision o f life which leads to a re-structuring o f experience in their novels.