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Bleak House Lecture: Spontaneous Combustion (Vol. II, Ch. XXIII-XLV)

'The Lord Chancellor of that Court, true to his title in his last act, has died the death of all Lord Chancellors in all Courts, and of all authorities in all places under all names soever, where false pretences are made, and where injustice is done.'

Welcome back to the foggy world of Bleak House by Charles Dickens, where we find ourselves increasingly tangled in the cursed case of Jarndyce & Jarndyce.

Today we're talking about spontaneous combustion, the evolution of detective fiction, duty vs delusion, responsibility, the social framework, bureaucracy, the heroine's journey, the real life inspirations for this novel's themes and characters, and much more.

Please feel free to listen before, during, or after your reading and enjoy the work at the pace that best suits you. You do not need to have read all of these chapters to enjoy the discussion as I am continuing to stay away from plot details revealed later in the work.

Timestamps:

0:00 the painful wisdom of Bleak House

2:00 appreciating your love for this novel

4:00 the world isn’t as large as we think

6:00 Esther Summerson’s heroine’s journey

8:00 real inspiration for the Jarndyce case

11:00 Richard haunted by the family curse

14:00 making ourselves wait for happiness

16:00 work should be love made visible

18:00 losing sight of what’s truly important

20:00 embrace life now because it’s short

22:00 learning from the nihilism of Macbeth

24:00 why is debt such a strong theme?

26:00 life as unsettled, temporary condition

28:00 great literature does two powerful things

31:00 Mrs Jellyby presents a cautionary tale

33:00 the ‘favourite child’ of public duties

35:00 let your loved ones know you care

37:00 voice of delusion vs voice of duty

39:00 it is never too late to begin again

40:00 sunk cost fallacy in Bleak House

42:00 how pain is the road to wisdom

44:00 why we need to reread great books

46:00 an appreciation for Mr George

48:00 what are you aiming at in life?

50:00 you only see what you focus on

52:00 crow’s eye view of the comic court

54:00 Gridley destroyed by Chancery 

56:00 who was the real Inspector Bucket?

59:00 the evolution of detective fiction

1:02:00 the commandments of whodunits 

1:04:00 exploring the mystery of our birth

1:06:00 the character of Captain Hawdon

1:08:00 Tulkinghorn’s search for Nemo

1:10:00 Sir Leicester’s class anxiety

1:12:00 Lady Dedlock’s secret revealed

1:16:00 ‘fallen woman’ in the Victorian era

1:18:00 ‘they dies more than they lives’

1:20:00 Esther brings Jo to Bleak House

1:22:00 suffering the scourge of smallpox  

1:24:00 Esther’s blindness & sickness

1:26:00 Dickens & cliffhangers in fiction

1:28:00 spontaneous combustion of Krook

1:31:00 can one really burst into flames?

1:34:00 public criticism of Krook’s death

1:36:00 Dickens responds to the criticism

1:38:00 symbolism of Krook’s combustion

1:41:00 Esther’s near death experience

1:43:00 on learning to accept our scars

1:45:00 bound to the wheel of Chancery

1:46:00 Esther thinks of Mr Woodcourt

1:48:00 how to coach yourself through pain

1:51:00 mother & daughter reunited at last

1:53:00 darkness as opportunity to be a light

1:55:00 how can we honour our loved ones?

1:56:00 Esther sees herself as the ghost

1:58:00 liberating life philosophy of Esther

2:00:00 inefficiency is the point of bureaucracy

2:02:00 don’t let yourself become cynical

2:04:00 being a touchstone of responsibility 

2:06:00 judging character by response to scars

2:07:00 Mr Guppy vs Esther Summerson

2:08:00 Tulkinghorn threatens Lady Dedlock

2:10:00 marriage proposal & burnt flowers

2:12:00 reading assignment for next discussion

Resources:

Reading Assignment:

Our next discussion will cover the events from chapter forty-six up to and including chapter sixty-seven, which takes us through to the ending of this masterpiece. We'll have a little extra time for this assignment for those wishing to catch up and relish the climax over the holiday season. This coming weekend, we'll revisit one of my discussions going deep into A Christmas Carol that many readers might not have heard. This means the final Bleak House lecture will be the weekend after that. I'm very excited to hear your thoughts on where the story goes next.

Questions for You:

1) Why do you think the works of Charles Dickens remain so popular today?

2) What did you make of the revelation of Esther's personal history?

3) How did you react to the spontaneous combustion scene?

4) Is the social and moral purpose of Bleak House effective?

And please let us know your favourite passages and any insights that have come to you during your reading. If this is a first reading, is Bleak House living up to its reputation? If this is a rereading for you, are you finding new things to appreciate this time around?

Happy reading, folks!

Bleak House Lecture: Spontaneous Combustion (Vol. II, Ch. XXIII-XLV)

Comments

This book needs a character guide, and there are many available for that reason.

Tom Walker

with you all the way

Tom Walker

I have found reading BH quite a slog for most of the first half. My goodness, all the characters. However I have gotten through it because I just find Dickens to be so so funny. The names of his characters - what! And the. The sardonic descriptions of the Boodles, Coodles, doodles, Foodles, etc. exactly!! Made me laugh out loud and whack my forehead at the same time. Now it’s picking up and the connections are being made more explicit and it’s going and going.

Leigh Coop

This is my favorite Dickens and this reread is just reminding me why. This books breaks my heart and makes it soar. Esther as the heroine makes me want to be a better person and woman. I love her just as much as the other characters do. I love little Joe and want to punch some of the other characters in the nose.

Lindsey Chastain

Bleak House has many such moments doesn’t it?

Lily

Chapter 47 has broken my heart. 😢

Guillermo Medina

What a delight it was listening to this lecture. Dickens intricate plot with luminous prose is truly awe-inspiring and just like your other lectures, keeps the listeners engaged and inspired. Moreover, your instructional style Ben, encourages us to delve more deeply into literature with renewed curiosity and appreciation. Thanks to you, Bleak house will certainly be my next read on my to-do list.

Fozy

I finally got to finish this lecture and my first takeaway is how I learn things I’d never heard of through our books. The oddest bit of trivia was that fear of spontaneous combustion was an actual reality in Victorian times : just when thought I’d heard it all 😂 Esther’s history didn’t shock me (Lady Dedlock was clearly hinted as being her mother from early chapters ) but her story continues to be the highlight and central point of interest for me. Waiting for and finally being rewarded her narrative chapters is the biggest treat of Bleak House. She has become one of my favorite literary characters. I find it interesting that Dickens has managed to create some of my most hated male characters but he makes up for it with some wonderful females.

Ellen M

Yes Elizabeth! Very hearty favorites are Bucket, George, Mrs. Bagnet, Esther (in no order) and Charley (though diminutive)….and I cannot help it Hortense!

Lily

Almost at the end and my favorite character is Mrs. Bagnet, Who also supplies my favorite passage in the book so far. In Chapter 55, at her second visit to George, she is overcome by emotion, leans against the wall, wipes her eyes, "and quite enjoys herself like the best of old girls as she is."

Elizabeth

Ah, I thought you were making a clever pun “Bucket filled”! I agree with you Sean. I finished reading it yesterday and the last hundred pages were cascading waves of alternating emotions. Now that I am done the feeling remains of friends having left after a month long visit. I hardly knew what to do after the last chapter. I stared at the closed book in my hands and marveled at all it contained and said out loud “Thank you Charles”.

Lily

I agree! Mr. Bucket and the Bagnets truly deserve their own volumes!

Sean Taylor

Oh my this book! I’ve read too many books to count. In this “group of friends” at the HLBC I’ve read some brilliant books that have affected me, but this was a very different experience. Perhaps the time of year, perhaps time of life…. There are very few books that moved me so that there is “life before reading” and “life after reading” Bleak House. It was not a perfect book and even had some sloppy parts, but I loved it. Ironically the last book that had this affect on me was “Great Expectations” Thank you Mr. Dickens! Bucket filled!

Sean Taylor

I am now so very near the end of this tremendous novel and must declare Mr. Bucket to be one of my most loved characters in quite some time. I have thoroughly enjoyed every instance of him and dearly hope he does not let me down! I must say also that I am fascinated with Hortense. I do not want to befriend her like I do Mr. Bucket but her fiery and brightly charged character within the book absolutely snarls. Such characters are here! I love when reading a book like this when I am easily able to identify all of these characters in my real life. I have mentioned already that on weekends I work at a very busy cafe near a university. All manner of humans inhabit my space and I make efforts to connect with them all meeting them in whatever commonality I am able to detect. I can say for certain I have a Hortense (who I love to talk to so I can hear her talk but would never ever dare be outside of the cafe with), a Mr. Bucket, an Esther (believe it or not), Smallweed, George, adult versions of Jo, Guppy, Bagnet. Very many Richards and Boythorns. All of them. Dickens really saw the people around him in London and fully placed them in this book with all of their shades of spirit.

Lily

Progress is slow! But I’m allowing myself time to be struck by wonder…and it happened in Chapter 5. Miss Jellyby rants: “O! Don’t talk of duty as a child, Miss Summerson; where’s Ma’s duty as a parent? All made over to the public and Africa, I suppose! Then let the public and Africa show duty as a child; it’s much more their affair than mine. You are shocked, I dare say! Very well, so am I shocked too; so we are both shocked, and there’s an end of it!” This struck me. The person who penned this, felt this. I started poking around online and found these quotes from interviews and biographies of Dickens: He thought himself “a very small and not-over-particularly-taken-care-of boy.” Reflecting upon being sent to the blacking factory, “How could I have been so easily cast away at such an age?” When his father was released from prison and his mother did not advocate for his removal from the factory, “I never afterwards forgot, I shall never forget, I never can forget, that my mother was warm for my being sent back.” Wow. The pain comes through. Dickens’ depiction of the pain of children hits hard, over and over again. But it’s comforting, too. For those of us who have experienced childhood pain, it’s hard to read, but affirming. I keep seeing a James Baldwin quote that “you read something which you thought only happened to you, and you discover that it happened 100 years ago to Dostoyevsky. This is a very great liberation for the suffering, struggling person, who always thinks that he is alone. This is why art is important.” INDEED!!!

Linda Hall


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