Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Dickens Is So Useful

Charles Dickens
Charles Dickens


When I read the following from Chapter 10 of Charles Dickens' novel Little Dorrit, it gave wonderful form to what was weighing me down about our present Government! So I bring this great, humorous excerpt from Little Dorrit to you here, believing that others will be strengthened as I was in their work to change things.
      Aesthetic Realism sees humor as essential, and in an early class, reported on by writer Sheldon Kranz, Eli Siegel explained:
"The purpose of true satire is to take an ugly thing and present it gracefully and humorously so that the ugliness is seen....Satire changes a bad thing into a good thing, an untrue thing into a true thing. It makes us laugh to make the ugly more apparent."  
Mr. Siegel lectured on many works of Dickens including Hard Times, and I once heard him say that Pickwick Papers was his favorite book. -NH

From Little Dorrit by Charles Dickens--
Chapter 10: Containing the whole Science of GovernmentThe Circumlocution Office was (as everybody knows without being told) the most important Department under Government. No public business of any kind could possibly be done at any time without the acquiescence of the Circumlocution Office. Its finger was in the largest public pie, and in the smallest public tart. It was equally impossible to do the plainest right and to undo the plainest wrong without the express authority of the Circumlocution Office. If another Gunpowder Plot had been discovered half an hour before the lighting of the match, nobody would have been justified in saving the parliament until there had been half a score of boards, half a bushel of minutes, several sacks of official memoranda, and a family-vault full of ungrammatical correspondence, on the part of the Circumlocution Office.
     This glorious establishment had been early in the field, when the one sublime principle involving the difficult art of governing a country, was first distinctly revealed to statesmen. It had been foremost to study that bright revelation and to carry its shining influence through the whole of the official proceedings. Whatever was required to be done, the Circumlocution Office was beforehand with all the public departments in the art of perceiving--HOW NOT TO DO IT.
     Through this delicate perception, through the tact with which it invariably seized it, and through the genius with which it always acted on it, the Circumlocution Office had risen to overtop all the public departments; and the public condition had risen to be--what it was.
     It is true that How not to do it was the great study and object of all public departments and professional politicians all round the Circumlocution Office. It is true that every new premier and every new government, coming in because they had upheld a certain thing as necessary to be done, were no sooner come in than they applied their utmost faculties to discovering How not to do it. It is true that from the moment when a general election was over, every returned man who had been raving on hustings because it hadn't been done, and who had been asking the friends of the honourable gentleman in the opposite interest on pain of impeachment to tell him why it hadn't been done, and who had been asserting that it must be done, and who had been pledging himself that it should be done, began to devise, How it was not to be done.


....For more, see http://www.dickens-literature.com/Little_Dorrit/index.html