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Charles Dickens

& the law

Inner Temple Library, 2012


Dickens and the Law
2012 marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens,
considered by many to be one of the greatest English authors of all time.
Historians and literary scholars have often argued that it was not only
Dickens' writing style which has placed him so prominently among the
world’s literary elite, but the subject matter that he chose to write about.
His novels were noted for their sense of realism and insight into the social
Fagin in Newgate Gaol,
conditions and issues of the day.
Oliver Twist
One prominent arena that Dickens addressed was the law, and his legal
characters and portraits have given his readers a valuable, albeit highly subjective and not altogether
positive, reflection of the law in his time. From a heart-breaking and damning reflection of the treatment
of orphans in Oliver Twist, to the comprehensive ridicule and satire of Chancery procedure in Bleak
House, Dickens entertained his readers and furnished us with many portrayals of lawyers within a legal
system seemingly set up against the people of the country. His works also brought the plight of the poor
to more common knowledge, which may have contributed to the call for legal reforms aimed at
alleviating their difficulties.

Whatever the truth of Dickens’ perspective, and he was certainly biased, there is no doubting the
centrality of the law in his thought and in his work. To celebrate this, and to reflect his connections with
the Inns of Court and our connections with him through our Library collections, the Inner Temple
Library created a display to highlight just a few elements of Dickens’ life and his reflections of the law,
although given his verbosity and prodigious output a few boards could never do him justice.

Dickens and the Inns of Court


Dickens’ had an interaction and awareness of the Inns of Court from an early age. In May 1827 at the
age of 15 he joined the legal firm Ellis and Blackmore in Gray’s Inn Square South as a Junior Clerk. He
was admitted to Middle Temple in 1839 but rescinded his admittance when his literary career took off,
stating in his petition that literature would entirely engross his time and become the business of his life.
When reflecting on the Inns and this period of his life he wrote:

'There is yet, in the Temple, something of a clerkly monkish atmosphere which public offices of law have
not disturbed and even legal firms have failed to scare away'
This theme is continued in his fiction, In Martin
Chuzzlewit he described Tom Pinch’s feelings upon
entering the Inns thus:

‘...he turned his face towards an atmosphere of


unaccountable fascination, as surely as he turned into
the London smoke, until the time arrived for going home
again and leaving it, like a motionless cloud behind'

Martin Chuzzlewit is not the only Dickens’ fiction to


mention the Inns. Characters in Barnaby Rudge, Our
Mutual Friend, A Tale of Two Cities and even Pip in
Great Expectations all have chambers at the Inns of
The Pickwick Club, Pickwick Papers Court.

Pickwick Papers (1836-7)


In Dickens as a Legal Historian (1929), Holdsworth states that in Pickwick Papers: ‘[W]e are introduced
to three of the leading characteristics of common law procedure and practice. In the first place, we are
introduced to some of the conventional practices and fictions of the courts. In the second place, we are
introduced to the effects of the rule of the law of evidence, which prevented the parties to an action, or
anyone interested in the results of an action, from giving evidence. In the third place, we are introduced
to the rules as to the manner in which a judgment
could be executed; and in that connection, to the
facility with which a creditor could arrest his debtor.’

Through the case of Bardell v Pickwick, Dickens gives


us valuable insights in to the procedure of the common
law courts, equity, debtors, ‘bails’, and the colourful
characters that made their living through the law and
those that made their living on the edges of the law and
the legal system. Along with Bleak House and other
works of Dickens, Pickwick Papers stands as a valuable
guide to the legal system of his time and of Dickens’,
and many of his readers’, opinion of it. Serjeant Buzfuz, Pickwick Papers
Selected Dickens Dickens Material
Quotes in the Inner
"If the law supposes that,' said Mr. Bumble,
squeezing his hat emphatically in both hands, "the
Temple Library
law is a ass--a idiot. If that's the eye of the law,
Dickens and Crime (Collins, 1964)
the law is a bachelor; and the worst I wish the law
is, that his eye may be opened by experience--by The Letters of Charles Dickens (Dickens, 1880-

experience." Oliver Twist (1837-9) 1882)

Letters of Charles Dickens to Wilkie Collins, 1851-


“These sequestered nooks are the public offices of
1870 (Dickens, 1892)
the legal profession, where writs are issued,
Memories of my Father (Dickens, 1928)
judgments signed, declarations filed, and
numerous other ingenious machines put in Works of Charles Dickens, 30 Volume Library
motion for the torture and torment of His Edition (Dickens, 1874-76)
Majesty's liege subjects, and the comfort and Charles Dickens as I Knew Him; the Story of the
emolument of the practitioners of the law.” Reading tours in Great Britain and America (1866-
The Pickwick Papers (1836-7) 1870) (Dolby, 1885)

"The one great principle of the English law is to


The Life of Charles Dickens (Forster, 1872-74)

make business for itself. There is no other The Lawyer in Literature (Gest, 1913)
principle distinctly, certainly, and consistently Charles Dickens as a Legal Historian (Holdsworth,
maintained through all its narrow turnings." 1929)
Bleak House (1852-3)
Charles Dickens : the Story of his Life (Hotten,

“Circumstances may accumulate so strongly even 1870)

against an innocent man, that directed, Charles Dickens in Chancery (Jaques, 1914)
sharpened, and pointed, they may slay him.” The
The Childhood and Youth of Charles Dickens
Mystery of Edwin Drood (1870-1)
(Langton, 1883)

“Lawyers hold that there are two kinds of The Law and Lawyers of Pickwick: a Lecture
particularly bad witnesses--a reluctant witness, (Lockwood, 1894)
and a too-willing witness.” The Pickwick Papers Dickens Landmarks in London (Moreland, 1931)
(1836-7)

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