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OUR MUTUAL FRIEND


'''Our Mutual Friend''' (written in the years 1864–65) is the last novel completed by Charles Dickens. It centres on, in the words of critic J. Hillis Miller, "money, money, money, and what money can make of life" (which is, incidentally, a quote from ''Our Mutual Friend'', spoken by Bella at the end of book III, chapter iv.). In the opening chapter, a young man is on his way to receive his inheritance, which, according to his father's will, he can only claim if he marries Bella Wilfer, a beautiful, mercenary girl whom he has never met. However, before he can arrive, a body is found in the Thames and identified as him. The money passes on, instead, to the working-class Boffins, and the effects spread throughout various corners of London society.

Contents
Characters in "Our Mutual Friend"
Major characters
Minor characters
Original publication
Film, TV or Theatrical Adaptations & Influence
Television
Misc.
Trivia
External links

Characters in "Our Mutual Friend"


Like all of Dickens' works, ''Our Mutual Friend'' contains many memorable characters. (This list is incomplete.)
Major characters


★ ''John Harmon'', the absent centre of the story

★ ''Bella Wilfer'', a mercenary young person

★ ''John Rokesmith'', a Secretary (Alias of ''John Harmon'')

★ ''Nicodemus (Noddy) Boffin'', aka ''the Golden Dustman'', probably based on Henry Dodd, a ploughboy who made his fortune removing London's rubbish

★ ''Mrs Boffin'', his wife

★ ''Lizzie Hexam'', a waterman's daughter

★ ''Charley Hexam'', her brother

★ ''Mortimer Lightwood'', a young lawyer

★ ''Eugene Wrayburn'', a dilettante lawyer

★ ''Jenny Wren'', a dolls' dressmaker

★ ''Mr Riah'', Jewish manager of a money-lending business

★ ''Bradley Headstone'', a sociopathic school teacher

★ ''Silas Wegg'', a seller of ballads and would-be literary man with a wooden leg

★ ''Mr Venus'', a taxidermist and articulator of bones

★ ''Mr Podsnap'', an extremely pompous, complacent man

★ ''Mrs Podsnap'', his wife

★ ''Georgiana Podsnap'', their daughter

★ ''Mr Inspector'', a police officer

★ ''Mr Fledgeby'', often referred to as ''Fascination Fledgeby'', a young friend of the Lammles, actual owner of Mr Riah's money-lending business
Minor characters


★ ''Julius Handford'', Alias of John Harmon on first returning to London

★ ''Mrs Wilfer'', Bella's querulous mother

★ ''Reginald Wilfer'' (The Cherub), Bella's father

★ ''Lavinia Wilfer'', Bella's younger sister

★ ''George Sampson'', Lavinia's boyfriend

★ ''Mr Alfred Lammle'', a mature young gentleman

★ ''Mr Twemlow'', a gentleman

★ ''Mrs Betty Higden'', a child-minder

★ ''Johnny'', orphan grandson of Betty

★ ''Sloppy'', a foundling, adopted by Betty

★ ''Jesse Hexam'' aka ''Gaffer'', a waterman, father of Lizzie and Charlie

★ ''Rogue Riderhood'', an unscrupulous and kiniving waterman and associate of Gaffer

★ ''Pleasant Riderhood'', Rogue's daughter

★ ''Mr and Mrs Veneering'', nouveaux-riches

★ ''Miss Abbey Potterson'', proprietor of the Six Jolly Fellowship Porters pub

★ ''Miss Peecher'', a school teacher

Original publication


''Our Mutual Friend'', like most Dickens novels, was published in 19 monthly installments, each costing one shilling (with the exception of the nineteenth, which was double-length and cost two). Each issue featured 32 pages of text and two illustrations by Marcus Stone.
'BOOK THE FIRST: THE CUP AND THE LIP'

★ I - May 1864 (chapters 1-4);

★ II - June 1864 (chapters 5-7);

★ III - July 1864 (chapters 8-10);

★ IV - August 1864 (chapters 11-13);

★ V - September 1864 (chapters 14-17).
'BOOK THE SECOND: BIRDS OF A FEATHER'

★ VI - October 1864 (chapters 1-3);

★ VII - November 1864 (chapters 4-6);

★ VIII - December 1864 (chapters 7-10);

★ IX - January 1865 (chapters 11-13);

★ X - February 1865 (chapters 14-16).
'BOOK THE THIRD: A LONG LANE'

★ XI - March 1865 (chapters 1-4);

★ XII - April 1865 (chapters 5-7);

★ XIII - May 1865 (chapters 8-10);

★ XIV - June 1865 (chapters 11-14);

★ XV - July 1865 (chapters 15-17).
'BOOK THE FOURTH: A TURNING'

★ XVI - August 1865 (chapters 1-4);

★ XVII - September 1865 (chapters 5-7);

★ XVIII - October 1865 (chapters 8-11);

★ XIX-XX - November 1865 (chapters 12-17 (Chapter the Last)).

Film, TV or Theatrical Adaptations & Influence


Television


★ 1998: ''Our Mutual Friend'': BBC miniseries adapted by Sandy Welch. It starred Paul McGann and Anna Friel.

★ 1976:''Our Mutual Friend'': BBC miniseries directed by Peter Hammond.
Misc.


★ At one point, the Royal Shakespeare Company considered a very long stage adaptation of the novel, featuring every last subplot and character, but shied away as there were simply too many drownings or near drownings which would have been too complicated to do on stage. They opted instead to do ''Nicholas Nickleby''.

★ In 2005, Paul McCartney released a song "Jenny Wren" on his ''Chaos and Creation in the Backyard'' album about the character of Jenny Wren.

★ Sir Harry Johnston wrote a sequel to ''Our Mutual Friend'', titled ''The Veneerings'', published in the early 1920s.

★ British pop group The Divine Comedy has a song entitled ''Our Mutual Friend'' on their 2004 album Absent Friends.

★ Despite popular belief, the character Twemlow is not a table. It's just a metaphor.

Trivia



G. K. Chesterton, one of Dickens's critics in the early 20th century, expressed the opinion that Mr. Boffins's pretended fall into miserliness was originally intended by Dickens to be authentic, but that Dickens ran out of time and so took refuge in the awkward pretence that Boffins had been acting. Chesterton argues that while we might believe Boffin could be corrupted, we can hardly believe he could keep up such a strenuous pretence of corruption: "Such a character as his---rough, simple and lumberingly unconscious---might be more easily conceived as really sinking in self-respect and honour than as keeping up, month after month, so strained and inhuman a theatrical performance. . . . It might have taken years to turn Noddy Boffin into a miser; but it would have taken centuries to turn him into an actor."[1] However, Chesterton also praised the book as being a return to Dickens's youthful optimism and creative exuberance, full of characters that "have that great Dickens quality of being something which is pure farce and yet which is not superficial; an unfathomable farce---a farce that goes down to the roots of the universe."

★ Many of the story elements so successfully used by Dickens in ''Our Mutual Friend'' were given another outing two years later in the play and 'Christmas story' ''No Thoroughfare'', released in December 1867.

★ A character in US television series Lost, Desmond Hume, is portrayed as a devoted Dickens fan, and always carries a copy of "Our Mutual Friend", intending it to be the last book he will read before he dies.

T. S. Eliot originally considered titling his poem, The Wasteland "He do the Police in Different Voices"[2], an allusion to a line in the novel where Mrs. Betty Higden describes how Sloppy reads the newspaper aloud. He was later convinced by Ezra Pound to rename the poem The Wasteland.

External links


'Online editions'



''Our Mutual Friend'' – complete book in HTML one page for each chapter.

''Our Mutual Friend'' - Easy to read HTML version.

''Our Mutual Friend: The Scholarly Pages''. The Dickens Project.
'Criticism'

"Our Mutual Friend" From ''Appreciations and Criticisms of the Works of Charles Dickens'' by G.K. Chesterton.

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