Saturday, June 27, 2020
William Dorrits Self-Deception - Literature Essay Samples
This essay will focus on the collapse of William Dorrit (Bk 2, ch 19) and examine Williamââ¬â¢s imprisonment to self-deception in this passage as a consequence of his moral debts to society and Amy, what effects this has on his character in the novel as a whole, and if his collapse and death can be seen as an escape from, or a submission to, the ââ¬Å"paralysing stagnationâ⬠(Daleski, 1970) of his imprisonment.Self-deception is not unique to William, and Showalter (1979, pp. 23) implies that it could even be a means of survival in the Marshalsea, that the ââ¬Å"inhabitants sustain a precarious identity by systematically denying the reality of their situation.â⬠Just as the prisoners refer to themselves as collegians, Dorrit too makes pretences above his station; his welcoming speech asserts that he is ââ¬Å"not a beggarâ⬠(Dickens 1996, pp. 614) and he survives on euphemistically termed ââ¬Ëtestimonials, ââ¬Ësubscriptionsââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëtributesââ¬â¢ which he creatively fails to acknowledge, for example by taking them in concealed packages or via handshake. Self-deception, then, could be argued to be what keeps William alive and well for so long; it is into the safe haven of self-deception and Marshalsea grandeur that William retreats in his final days. When Amy first refuses Arthurââ¬â¢s help she recognises this point, that release from the Marshalsea ââ¬Å"might be anything but a service to himâ⬠¦He might not be so gently dealt with outsideâ⬠¦ he might not be so fit himself for the life outsideâ⬠(Dickens 1996, pp. 95). This duality of the Marshalsea in providing both imprisonment and protection is mirrored by Dickens in Williamââ¬â¢s prison of self-deception; it is a means of survival as much as a means of imprisonment.Self-deception for William, however, is more exaggerated than for the collegians because his debt is much more exaggerated; he owes not only substantial financial debts, but also a deep mor al debt to Amy, what Scott calls a ââ¬Å"human debtâ⬠growing from his obsession with status burdening Amy with care of him and her siblings; a debt which, as for the testimonials, he ââ¬Å"creatively refuses to acknowledgeâ⬠even when ââ¬Å"the payment of [these human debts]â⬠¦is their mere acknowledgmentâ⬠(Scott 1979, pp. 161-165). The effect of this imprisonment on William is shown by his internal conflict, the ââ¬Å"interjections of ââ¬Ëhaââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëhemââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ ¦suggest that he undergoes some struggle with himselfâ⬠(McKnight 1993, pp. 64, cited in Smith 2005) and become more frequent as his deception deepens; his Marshalsea speech in Rome contains 23 stutters plus numerous repetitions. This internal conflict is destructive for William, showing ââ¬Å"the human mindââ¬â¢sâ⬠¦inabilityâ⬠¦to credit its own liesâ⬠(Scott 1979, pp.159). Williamââ¬â¢s eventual collapse is the ââ¬Å"awful revenge of [this] mind that even tually breaks out of its own prison and destroys its gaoler in the processâ⬠(Lucas, 1970). The self-deception that kept him in the Marshalsea has now killed William in wealth, but the impact can be seen as influencing his life further when self-deception is taken as a basis for his greed and social pretentiousness. Williamââ¬â¢s obsession with status is rooted in his self-deception and assumed need to maintain ââ¬Å"a toneâ⬠(Dickens 1996, pp. 614) in the Marshalsea, showing the self-deception of not only William but the collegians who provide the subscriptions, and this status obsession pervades his character throughout whilst also fuelling further deception, for example by not talking of his life in the Marshalsea or when he commissions a portrait. Greed, too, is directly linked to Williamââ¬â¢s imprisonment in self-deception; firstly the necessary worship of money to maintain his status (in the Marshalsea, demanding tribute; in wealth, spending overtly), but his greed for Amyââ¬â¢s attention shows not only his human debt to her by the stresses he places upon her ââ¬â even on his deathbed, William does ââ¬Å"not spare herâ⬠nor is he ââ¬Å"fearful of her being spent by watching or fatigueâ⬠(Dickens, 1996, p615) when she attends him once more. Indeed, his self-deception continues in that he still claims to be ââ¬Å"content to have undergone a great deal for her sakeâ⬠(ibid). This monopoly over Little Dorritââ¬â¢s attention is further greed which is fuelled by Williamââ¬â¢s self-deception and a belief that he should have such a monopoly on Amyââ¬â¢s attention despite the duty of care for the rest of the family he places on her by virtue of his own pretentiousness.Self-deception, greed, social pretentiousness and the worship of money have become character traits for William and it is therefore logical that, extending from Lucasââ¬â¢ (1970) argument, his only escape is in his own destruction. From this pe rspective, then, William cannot be judged to escape from his prison any more than a death row prisoner escapes when they enter the gas chamber. Any escape for Dorrit can only come from him escaping his history of greed, self-deception and social pretentiousness ââ¬â a feat which he fails to achieve. Instead, his only acts of repentance are when he offers his personal items to be pawned in order to restore some genuine dignity, and the collapse itself which goes some way to showing a ââ¬Å"still a human valueâ⬠¦which has not been eliminated.â⬠(Scott 1979, pp. 165).Dorrit can be judged to stay forever in the debt of his daughter and imprisoned in his own lies, leaving him to die, like Merdle, without redemption. Crucially, however, Dorrit is in the pretence of his dignified existence as Father of the Marshalsea and therefore dies a relatively dignified death; family at his side, humanity redeemed (ibid) and personal items pawned from his deathbed to provide for a funera l. Whilst this dignity only exists in the comfort of his mental prison cell, it is there he has found most comfort throughout the novel and it is perhaps a fitting end: William Dorrit makes no escape because he is comfortable as a captive.To conclude, William Dorrit is imprisoned by his own self-deception fuelled by a self-perpetuating greed and a human debt to Amy Dorrit. This has impact upon him throughout his life and death, but ultimately his remaining humanity (be it triggered by Little Dorrit or otherwise) allows him a greater redemption than Merdle and he dies loving his daughter ââ¬Å"in his old wayâ⬠(Dickens 1996, pp. 615) through choice of residing in the comfort of his personal mental prison that maintains him in death as his social pretentiousness determined him to be in life, separate from those around him and judged by a different, and altogether kinder, standard. BibliographyDaleski, H. (1970). Dickens and the Art of Analogy. New York: Schocken. Cited in ENG236 Assignments 1 2 Handout.Dickens, C. (1996). Little Dorrit. Ware, Hertfordshire: Wordsworth ClassicsLucas, J. (1970). The Melancholy Man: A Study of Dickens. London: Methuen. McKnight, N. (1993). Idiots, Madmen, and Other Prisoners in Dickens. New York: St Martinââ¬â¢s Press.Scott, P. (1979). Reality and Comic Confidence in Charles Dickens. London: Macmillan.Showalter, E. (1979). Guilt, Authority, and the Shadows of Little Dorrit. Nineteenth-Century Fiction. 34. Pp. 20-40
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