Chapter XV: I make another beginning
David settles into his new life. He and Mr. Dick become
friends and fly Mr. Dick's kite together. Betsey gives David a new name,
Trotwood Copperfield, or "Trot" for short. She decides that David should go to
school in Canterbury, a proposal that he welcomes. Betsey and David travel to
the house of Mr. Wickfield in Canterbury. Mr. Wickfield is a friend of Betsey's
and a lawyer. At the house, David meets Mr. Wickfield's employee, Uriah Heep, a
sinister young man with red hair and red eyes. Mr. Wickfield and Betsey visit
the school and decide that it is suitable for David, though Betsey does not
approve of the boarding houses that are available. It is agreed that Mr.
Wickfield will accommodate David in his house until something better turns up.
Mr. Wickfield introduces David to his charming and devoted
daughter, Agnes, whom he describes as the "one motive" of his life. David, Mr.
Wickfield, and Agnes dine together. After dinner, David comes across Uriah, and
shakes his hand. He is so revolted by Uriah's clammy touch that he wants to rub
it off.
Chapter XVI: I am a new boy in more senses than one
David goes to the school and meets the headmaster, Dr.
Strong, and his young wife, Annie. Dr. Strong and Mr. Wickfield discuss their
attempts to find some occupation for Annie's cousin, Jack Maldon. Mr. Wickfield
asks whether Dr. Strong would prefer Jack to go abroad, but Dr. Strong insists
that he does not mind whether the post is in England or abroad.
Dining at Mr. Wickfield's house, David learns from Agnes
that her mother died when Agnes was born. Jack Maldon arrives and tells Mr.
Wickfield that he will leave to take up his position abroad without delay. Mr.
Wickfield says the sooner Jack leaves, the better. Jack speaks disrespectfully
of Dr. Strong, drawing attention to the fact that Dr. Strong is older than
Annie, and then leaves. After dinner, Mr. Wickfield drinks a great deal of
alcohol. David notes that Agnes is a force for goodness, peace, and truth, and
that she cares deeply for her father. He feels that she has a beneficial
influence on him (David). Mr. Wickfield invites David to stay with them
permanently, and David gladly agrees.
David finds Uriah in the office, studying legal texts. Uriah
tells David that Mr. Wickfield is paying for him to take his lawyer's
examinations. Uriah adds that if it were not for Mr. Wickfield, he and his
mother, being "umble" (humble, or poor and low-born) people, could never have
afforded this training. Uriah asks David if he admires Agnes, and writhes with
pleasure when David replies that everyone must admire her.
Dr. Strong's school proves excellent, and David does well,
quickly catching up in his studies. The boys love Dr. Strong, a kind, scholarly
man who plans one day to complete his great work, a dictionary.
Dr. Strong and his wife treat each other with great
affection. Annie has a large number of poor relatives, including her mother,
Mrs. Markleham. The schoolboys nickname Mrs. Markleham "the Old Soldier" on
account of her skill in marshalling great forces of relatives against Dr.
Strong in order to get money and other favors from him. One evening, the
Strongs hold a party to celebrate Dr. Strong's birthday and to bid farewell to
Jack Maldon, who is leaving to take up a post in India. Mrs. Markleham
encourages Dr. Strong to keep up his generosity to members of her family. Dr.
Strong cheerfully assents. Annie tries to sing a duet with Jack, but becomes
too emotional to continue. Everyone drinks a toast to Jack's success in India,
and as he leaves, David notices that he has one of Annie's red ribbons in his
hand. Annie faints. Dr. Strong tends to her, pointing out that Jack was her
favorite cousin.
Chapter XVII: Somebody turns up
David receives a letter from Peggotty telling him that the
furniture at his mother's house has been sold, that the Murdstones have moved
away, and that the house is to be let or sold.
Mr. Dick asks David if he knows the identity of the man who
hides near Betsey's house and frightens her by creeping up behind her. One
night, she was so frightened that she fainted. Mr. Dick has seen Betsey give
him money. David has no idea who the man is.
Mr. Dick takes to visiting the school, and becomes a good
friend of Dr. Strong's.
Uriah invites David to tea with him and his mother. David
cannot decide whether he likes Uriah or detests him, but he agrees to the
invitation because he does not wish to be thought too proud to visit the Heeps,
as Uriah suggests he might be. David offers to teach Uriah some Latin to help
with his law studies, but Uriah insists that he is too humble; he does not wish
to outrage the feelings of his superiors by becoming too learned.
David accompanies Uriah to his mother's house. Mrs. Heep is
an older version of her son, and is equally keen to impress David with her
humbleness. The Heeps pump David for information about Mr. Wickfield and Agnes,
and David, not wanting to appear aloof, lets out more than he intends. He
begins to feel manipulated. The gathering is interrupted by the appearance of
Mr. Micawber, who happened to be passing in the street and saw David through
the open door. David introduces Mr. Micawber to the Heeps.
David accompanies Mr. Micawber to the hotel where he and his
family are staying. Mrs. Micawber tells David that her husband did not succeed
in finding a job in Plymouth and that her relatives there did not make them
welcome. They are once again in a perilous financial situation.
The next day, David feels uneasy when he sees Mr. Micawber
walking arm-in-arm with Uriah. Despite the Micawbers' poverty, David enjoys a
lavish dinner with them, at which they are very merry. However, the next day,
he receives a letter from Mr. Micawber lamenting that he is unable to pay his
hotel bill and that he expects his imminent "destruction." Alarmed, David
hurries to the hotel, but is relieved to see the Micawbers looking cheerful
aboard the coach to London.
Chapter XVIII: A retrospect
David recalls his time at Dr. Strong's school. He falls in
love with a girl called Miss Shepherd, who attends a nearby school, and
thereafter with a thirty-year-old woman called Miss Larkins. He fights a young
butcher who insults him, and is soundly beaten. He is consoled by Agnes, who
has become like a sister to him.
David, now seventeen years old, becomes head boy at the
school.
Analysis of Chapters XV-XVIII
This section of the novel introduces one of Dickens' most
memorable characters, Uriah Heep. Uriah's circumstances have much in common
with David's. A product of a deprived background, Uriah has ambitions to better
himself by training in law, a course that David also pursues; Uriah is under
Mr. Wickfield's tutelage, as David is soon to be; and Uriah is in love with
Agnes, as David will be in the future. But in character, Uriah stands in
dramatic contrast with David. Whereas David is innocent to the point of
naiveté and responds to life's hardships with hope and generosity, Uriah is
bitter, conniving, dishonest, and manipulative, and uses underhand methods to
gain his ends. Dickens makes Uriah's nature plain in his appearance and
manners, giving him a demonic air: Uriah has red hair and eyes, an unhealthy skeletal
appearance, and writhes like a snake whenever he is pleased. Much that Uriah
says is a lie. He constantly proclaims that he is "umble," and implies that he
would not dream of presuming to rise above his lowly station in life. Uriah's
insistence that he would not think of becoming a partner in Mr. Wickfield's law
firm carries much irony, as this is, in fact, his intention. In fact, Uriah is
a social climber who will stop at nothing to get what he wants. Like Mr.
Murdstone and Mr. Creakle, Uriah is a controller and manipulator of others.
Dickens's characterization of Uriah Heep contains a subtle
implied critique of the society of the time. The industrial revolution that
began in late eighteenth-century England and reached its zenith in Dickens's
lifetime had created more social mobility than before, with fortunes being made
or lost on the basis of one's wits, rather than being inherited on the basis of
one's birth. But society was still defined by strong class divisions. Something
in Uriah's "umble" upbringing evidently convinced him that his social
'superiors' did not like to see poor and lowborn people rising above their
station; they preferred to see such people place themselves beneath them. In
order to smooth his way through a class-conscious society, he learned to
disguise his ambition under a veneer of humbleness. The fact that it seems
largely to have worked for him is an indictment of certain upholders of
traditional society. They would rather see a low-class person act with a
befitting submissiveness, even if it were false, than face the threat of a
potentially subversive aspirational attitude.
This novel is largely about David's quest for a proper
family, and in this section of the novel, that family begins to fall into
place. Betsey and Mr. Dick are kind but responsible parent-figures; the
good-hearted Agnes becomes like a sister to David; and Dr. Strong and Mr.
Wickfield provide a useful education and professional mentoring. David blossoms
under the loving care of these people, maintaining his essentially good and
innocent nature and, now that he can focus on things other than mere survival,
learning to be a productive member of society. David's progress underscores
Dickens's concern with the quality of care and education that was given to children.
This theme is taken up later in the novel in relation to Uriah's upbringing,
and the cynical lessons that he has taken from it - in contrast with David, who
takes the best from a similarly challenging childhood.
This section introduces the character of Agnes, who is as
different from Uriah Heep as it is possible to be. She is one of Dickens's
almost-perfect women, and modern readers may find her too good to be true. She
embodies the Victorian feminine ideal of devotion to her father and maidenly purity
and modesty. She does, however, provide a useful contrast with David, in that
she has a disciplined heart (to borrow the terminology of Annie Strong in
Chapter XLV) to his undisciplined one. She loves deeply, but wisely, never
letting the passions of her heart obscure what is right. The importance of a
disciplined heart is a major theme in the novel; the lack of this quality of
emotional maturity causes setbacks to many of the characters.
There are signs that all is not what it seems with Betsey
and also with the Strongs. Betsey is visited by a strange man who frightens her
and to whom she gives money. And there are hints that, while the Strongs seem
devoted to each other, Annie may be having an affair with Jack Maldon. These as
yet unexplained suggestions of trouble serve to build up suspense and to add
conflict to the lives of apparently straightforward characters. Both plotlines
explore Dickens's theme of married and family relationships.
|