Saturday, 11 March 2017
Dickens Part IV
Dickens and his wife separated in 1858. Divorce at the time was very rare. In spite of the separation being due to his affair with Ellen Ternan, he tried to put the blame on his wife to the point where he alienated some of his friends. They felt that he had been very selfish, quite unlike the “supporter of families and virtue” that he claimed to be. Catherine had been his wife for many years, and borne several children to him, yet Dickens just cast her off. He claimed that she was an inefficient housekeeper, not a great mother and that she and he had nothing
in common. Most of the children remained with Dickens, except their eldest son Charley, who lived with his mother.
Dickens turned angrily on friends whom he regarded as “not supporting him”. He fell out with Thackeray, an old friend, because the other novelist had said at his club that “Dickens
was having an affair with an actress”. Rumours had gone around that Dickens had split up with his wife because of an affair with her sister Georgina, who remained with the family as housekeeper; She lived with the family for the rest of her life. Dickens was angrily self-justifying
in his behaviour and he was very anxious, as the novelist of “family life” and
a campaigner for various social reforms, to conceal his affair.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
At the time one of the few ways a woman could get a divorce was if her husband was boffing her sister.
ReplyDeleteTrue but Cath didn't want a divorce and there were no grounds, as a woman had to prove adultery coupled with desertion or with cruelty...or adultery with a wife's sister but Dickens was not having an affiar with Georgina. Howeve he wanted to blame teh separation on poor Catherine
ReplyDelete