Advertisement
Promo

Become a member of the ZDNet UK community

Resources Downloads

Download Now

Dombey And Son by Charles Dickens 1.00


License Purchase
Requirements Pocket PC with Microsoft Reader
Downloads 17 Limitations None
Publisher dmdSOFTWARE.NET File Size 0
Date added 13 Jul 2003 Check your speed

An ePublication by dmdSOFTWARE.NETAfter tackling the subject of greed and selfishness in "Martin Chuzzlewit",Charles Dickens turned his critical eye on pride and selfishness to achieve another masterwork in "Dombey and Son"."Dombey and Son" presents a vivid "criticism of life" teeming with unforgettable characters and scenes,written with an almost surreal intensity.The novel,like most of Dickens' others,is hauntingly lyrical and is embued with a quiet melancholy."Dombey and Son" tells the story of the destructiveness of a rich merchant's deadening pride on those around him.It details his own "comeuppance",when after ruining much of the lives of those who love him,Dombey is nearly destoyed by the villains and fools surrounding him,who have used his wife-a tragic and desperate golddigger more proud than he-to strike at him."Dombey and Son" illustrates the old message that nothing but love and kindness matter,that we and everything we have will ultimately perish and pride and selfishness are the frailest goods to be bought in this vanity fair.Yet the book's many original characters gives the conception fresh life and its comedy both genial and satiric lightens the sad gloom of such a moral tale.There are(as typical of Dickens)many grotesques in the novel-some good(the affectionate and good-natured Captain Cuttle,the saucy and defensive Susan Nipper),some bad(the sour martinet Mrs. Pipchin,the apoplectic and sycophantic Major) and some just plain evil(that emblem of consummate hypocrisy-Mr. Carker)."Dombey and Son" is like a grand feast where there is so much being served,that you don't know where to begin-and this for some readers may not be a good thing.The book is very long and Dickens' long sentences dwell lovingly on every detail(you will probably never see so many semicolons on one page);they who prefer something that gets to the point quicker or someting lighter may not have the patience for Dickens.However for me this was not a problem-Dickens' use of sentimentality,though, was.It is unfortunate that he chose as with Little Nell,to "angelize" Florence Dombey.She is fatally marred by being made to not only meekly love a father who neglects and despises her but to wander forlornly around their house,kissing the furniture he has touched and spending half the book in tears.This is a shame since Florence is at times charming and some of the book's more powerful scenes make effective use of her.The character of the precocious and doomed Paul Dombey,however is of a different achievement.The chapter entitled(I think)"What the waves were always saying" details with hallucinatory intensity the world to the eyes of a dying child and was one of the most famous scenes with the Victorians;it remains one of the most powerful in all of literature."Dombey and Son" despite its length and flaws will always remain for the true lover of literature-immortal. Details: Classic Novel 5500 pages / 62 chapters (the trial contains 1077 pages / 15 chapters) published/edited by dmdSOFTWARE.NET year of publication 2003 by Charles Dickens written in 1847this novel, sitting as it does between dickens' early and late novels, captures the best of both dickens. it has the humor, grotesque characters, and melodrama that characterized the early novels, but it isn't without the unified structure, mature style, and psychological depth that were the hallmarks of his later books. it's one of my favorite dickens books (i've read 11 of them), and if it weren't for the length i'd recommend dombey as the place to start for someone looking to read chas. if 900 pages doesn't faze you then by all means dive in. if it does, then start with 'great expecations' instead. but be sure to come back to dombey. you won't be disappointed.On the birth of one of Dickens sons, he voiced his disappointment - he would of rather had another girl. The author made an overt and rather personal statement in this novel of one man's condemnation of a daughter and obsession over a son. Florence is an idyllic child. Patient beyond belief, sheltered from the world, but abandonded and made to suffer her parent's emotional detachment and maniacal power. This character format - the young helpless, innocent, angellic girl - shows up time and time again in Dickens' novels (i.e. Nell in 'Curiosity Shop,' Agnes in 'David Copperfield'). Critics believe that the death of the author's younger sister, Mary Hogarth, had a lot to with it. Dickens adored her innocence and grieved her loss to excess. In fact, while mourning her death in the country, he missed a deadline for 'Pickwick Papers' - the only time he EVER missed a deadline. Another interesting fact: he took a ring from her finger moments after she passed and wore it always. * I visited the Dickens House Museum in London - it was not the favorite of his homes. Especially since it was where Mary died.'Dombey' is important in other aspects. It was the first time Dickens ever made character/plot notes, and it signaled his departure from the more light-hearted novels such as 'Pickwick' and 'Nickleby.' He called his notes "mems," which was short for memorandum.The female characters make this an enjoyable read. They are continually in power and direct the plot. Dominant male figures are left powerless or romanced by them in the end. The women of 'Dombey' seek love, revenge, and freedom from varying constraints (i.e. domestic, societal). You need to hang in there - it can be a slow read - or as the tenacious Captain Cuttle would say 'Steady! Stand by!'(for this humor alone, the book is worth reading). For the truest fan of the 'inimitable' author it's a wonderful journey.If you love Dickens, you'll like this book. If you're not committed to the work and style of Boz, you may have a hard time getting through it. It gets off to a very slow start; it wears its didactic aims more prominently on its sleeve than most of Dickens' novels do (the preceding novel, Martin Chuzzlewit, having been a study of the perils of greed, this one is likewise a study on self-destroying pride.) Its heroine is so self-sacrificing, uncomplaining, sweet and forgiving that a modern reader is likely to feel the impulse to throttle her more than once. I found it the least satisfying of the dozen Dickens novels I've read, and have rounded its three and a half stars up rather than down, in honor of all the other good stuff he's produced.All that being said, the book contains plenty of rewards for the persevering. Dombie's daughter, the over-gentle Florence, is more than made up for by a string of sharply drawn women who are nobody's wallflowers: the peppery Susan Nipper, the fearsome landlady Mac Stinger, and the magnificent second Mrs. Dombey, whose inflexible, bent pride puts steel to her husband's flint as the story gains headway halfway through. The plotting is intricate and tight, the peeks into Victorian hypocrisies (never far removed from our own) are trenchant, and we are treated to what is possibly the most riveting death scene in the whole oeuvre, which Dickens chose to present from the decedent's point of view in a stream of consciousness passage as remarkable for its technical daring as its sentimentality.Throw in the superbly menacing, dentally impeccable villain, Mr Carker, and a rogue's gallery of lesser despicables from the streetwise dunce Chicken, to the blustering toady Joe Bagstock, to the second Mrs. Dombey's outrageous tin magnolia of a mother, and it's a book you'd be happy to stumble across in the cabin some snowbound weekend.

Download Now

Did you find this download useful?
6 out of 12 users found this download useful


Broadband Deals? Powered by Top 10 Broadband

150+ broadband packages

Compare 30+ mobile broadband deals

Mobile Broadband »

Download

Trend Micro Worry-Free Business Security Advanced

Trend Micro™ Worry-Free™ Business Security Advanced and Standard 6. #1 for Small Business Security

  • Downloads: 1,249
  • Requirements: Processor: Intel™ Pentium™ or AMD™. RAM: 256MB-1GB (operating system dependant). Disk space: 350MB. Web Browser: Microsoft™ Internet Explorer 6.0 or 7.0.
  • License:
  • Publisher:
  • Size: 0

Download Now

Google Chrome Special Report

All roads lead to Chrome

All roads lead to Chrome

Comment With its new browser, Google has finally taken its gaudy, chrome-plated, futuristic ray gun and pointed it straight at Microsoft's head

More Special Reports


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters