Bleak House may well be the finest literary work to come out of nineteenth-century England. In no other Victorian novel is the narrative more artful, the cast of characters more engaging, the satire more biting,the range of life more wonderfully vast.This Bantam Classic edition includes, as Introduction,a series of excerpts from Vladimir Nabokov"s famous Cornell lectures on Bleak House.
Bleak House may well be the finest literary work to come out of nineteenth-century England. In no other Victorian novel is the narrative more artful, the cast of characters more engaging, the satire more biting,the range of life more wonderfully vast. A miracle of authorial creation, the book is constructed around three great themes: the High Court of Chancery,whose endless litigation of Jarndyce and Jarndyce symbolizes the murky institutional fog surrounding all England; the theme of misplaced children, setting whimsical, carefree Harold Skimpote in poignant contrast with sad, young, nameless Jo; and the mystery theme, a romantic tangle of trails followed by the three unforgettable sleuths, Guppy, Tulkinghorn, and Bucket, leading to the astonishing revelation of a certain lady’s long-held secret. In prose that is unexcelled in its vivid evocation and intensely sensual imagery, Bleak House displays Dickens at the height of his creative powers.
This Bantam Classic edition includes, as Introduction,a series of excerpts from Vladimir Nabokov’s famous Cornell lectures on Bleak House.
NABOKOV ON BLEAK HOUSE:
Excerpts from Lectures on Literature
by Vladimir Nabokov
Preface to the Charles Dickens Edition
Preface to the First Edition
(I)
1. In Chancery
2. In Fashion
3. A Progress
4. Telescopic Philanthropy
(II)
5. A Morning Adventure
6. Quite at Home
7. The Ghost"s Walk
(III)
8. Covering a Multitude of Sins
9. Signs and Tokens
10. The Law-Writer
(IV)
11. Our Dear Brother
12. On the Watch
13. Esther"s Narrative
(v)
14. Deportment
15. Bell Yard
16. Tom-all-Alone" s
(VI)
17. Esther"s Narrative
18. Lady Dedlock
19. Moving On
(VII)
20. A New Lodger
21. The Smallweed Family
22. Mr. Bucket
(VⅢ)
23. Esther"s Narrative
24. An Appeal Case
25. Mrs. Snagsby Sees It All
(IX)
26. Sharpshooters
27. More Old Soldiers Than One
28. The lronmaster
29. The Young Man
(x)
30. Esther"s Narrative
31. Nurse and Patient
32. The Appointed Time
(XI)
33. Interlopers
34. A Turn of the Screw
35. Esther" s Narrative
(XII)
36. Chesney Wold
37. Jarndyce and Jarndyce
38. A Struggle
(XlII)
39. Attorney and Client
40. National and Domestic
41. In Mr. Tulkinghom's Room
42. In Mr. Tulkinghpm's Chambers
(XIV)
43. Esther's Narrative
44. The Letter and the Answer
45. In Trust
46. Stop Him!
(xv)
47. Jo's Will
48. Closing In
49. Dutiful Friendship
(XVI)
50. Esther's Narrative
5 I. Enlightened
52. Obstinacy
53. The Track
(XVII)
54. Springing a Mine
55. Flight
56. Pursuit
(XVIII)
57. Esther's Narrative
58. A Wintry Day and Night
59. Esther's Narrative
(XlX)
60. Perspective
61. A Discovery
62. Another Discovery
63. Steel and Iron
64. Esther's Narrative
65. Beginning the World
66. Down in Lincolnshire
67. The Close of Esther's Narrative
Bibliography