|
See also: English novelist and dramatist, the son of an See also: Oxfordshire See also: squire, was See also: born at Ipsden, Oxfordshire, on the 8th of See also: June 1814
.
He entered Magdalen See also: College, See also: Oxford, proceeded B.A. in 1835, and became a See also: fellow of his college
.
He was subsequently dean of arts, and See also: vice-president of Magdalen College, taking his degree of D.C.L. in 1847
.
His name was entered at Lincoln's See also: Inn in 1836; he was elected Vinerian Fellow in 1842, and was called to the See also: bar in 1843
.
He kept his fellowship at Magdalen all his See also: life, but after taking his degree he spent the greater See also: part of his See also: time in See also: London
.
He began his See also: literary career as a dramatist, and it was his own wish that the word " dramatist " should stand. first in the description of his occupations on his tombstone
.
He was dramatist first and novelist afterwards, not merely chronologically but in his aims as an author, always having an See also: eye to stage-effect in scene and situation as well as in See also: dialogue
.
His first See also: comedy, The Ladies' See also: Battle, appeared at the Olympic Theatre in May 1851
.
It was followed by Angelo (1851), A See also: Village Tale (1852), The Lost See also: Husband (1852), and Gold (1853)
.
But See also: Reade's reputation was made by the two-See also: act comedy, Masks and Faces, in which he collaborated with Tom See also: Taylor
.
It was produced in
See also: November 1852, and later was See also: expanded into three acts
.
By the advice of the actress, Laura Seymour, he turned the See also: play into a See also: prose See also: story which appeared in 1853 as Peg Woffington
.
He followed this up in the same See also: year with See also: Christie See also: Johnstone, a close study of Scottish See also: fisher folk, an extraordinary tour de force for the son of an English squire, whether we consider the dialect or the skill with which he enters into See also: alien habits of thought
.
In 1854 he produced, in See also: con-junction with Tom Taylor, Two Loves and a Life, and The See also: King's
See also: Rival; and, unaided, The See also: Courier of Lyons—well known under its later title, The See also: Lyons Mail—and Peregrine See also: Pickle
.
In the next year appeared See also: Art, afterwards known as Nance See also: Oldfield
.
He made his name as a novelist in 1856, when he produced It's Never Too See also: Late to Mend, a novel written with the purpose of reforming abuses in prison discipline and the treatment of criminals
.
He described prison life with a fidelity which becomes at times tedious and revolting; but the power of the descriptions was undeniable, and the See also: interest was profound
.
The truth of some of his details was challenged, and the novelist defended himself with vigour against attempts to rebut his contentions
.
Five minor novels followed in See also: quick succession,—The Course of True Love never did run Smooth (1857), See also: Jack of all Trades (1858), The Autobiography of a Thief (1858), Love Me Little, Love Me Long (1859), and See also: White Lies (186o), dramatized as The
See also: Double See also: Marriage
.
Then appeared, in 1861, his master-piece, The Cloister and the Hearth, See also: relating, the adventures of the See also: father of See also: Erasmus
.
He had dealt with the subject two years before in a See also: short story in Once a Week, but, seeing its capabilities, expanded it; and the See also: work is now recognized as one of the finest See also: historical novels in existence
.
Returning from the 15th century to See also: modern English life, he next produced another startling novel with a purpose, Hard See also: Cash (1863), in which he strove to See also: direct See also: attention to the abuses of private lunatic asylums
.
Three more such novels, in two of which at least the moral purpose, though fully kept in view, was not allowed to obstruct the flow of incident, were afterwards undertaken,—Foul Play (1869), in which he exposed the iniquities of See also: ship-knackers, and paved the way for the labours of See also: Samuel See also: Plimsoll; Put Yourself in his Place (187o), in which he grappled with the tyrannous outrages of 'trades-unions; and A Woman-Hater (1877), in which he exposed the degrading conditions of village life
.
The Wandering Heir (1875), of which he also wrote a version for the stage, was suggested by the Tichborne trial
.
Outside the See also: line of these moral and occasional See also: works Reade produced three elaborate studies of character, —Griffith Gaunt (1866), A Terrible Temptation (1871), A Simpleton (1893)
.
The first of these was in his own opinion the best of his novels, and his own opinion was probably right
.
He was wrong, however, in his own conception of his See also: powers as a dramatist
.
At intervals throughout his literary career he sought to gratify his dramatic ambition, hiring a theatre and engaging a See also: company for the See also: representation of his own plays
.
An example of his persistency was seen in the See also: case of Foul Play
.
He wrote this in 1869 in combination with Mr See also: Dion See also: Boucicault with a view to stage adaptation
.
The play was more or less a failure; but he produced another version alone in 1877, under the title of A Scuttled Ship, and the failure was pronounced
.
His greatest success as a dramatist attended his last attempt—Drink—an adaptation of Zola's L'Assommoir, produced in 1879
.
In that year his friend Laura Seymour, who had kept See also: house for him since 1854, died
.
Reade's See also: health failed from that time, and he died on the 11th of See also: April 1884, leaving behind him a completed novel, A Perilous Secret, which showed no falling off in the arts of See also: weaving a complicated See also: plot and devising thrilling situations
.
Reade was an See also: amateur of the See also: violin, and among his works is an essay on See also: Cremona violins with the title, A Lost Art Revived
.
It was characteristic of Reade's open and combative nature that he admitted the public freely to the secrets of his method of composition
.
He spoke about his method in his prefaces; he introduced himself into one of his novels—" Dr Rolfe " in A Terrible Temptation; and by his will he See also: left his workshop and his accumulation of materials open for inspection for two years after his See also: death
.
He had collected an enormous mass of materials for his study of human nature, from See also: personal observation, from See also: newspapers, books of travel, blue-books of commissions of inquiry, from See also: miscellaneous See also: reading
.
This vast collection was classified and arranged in huge ledgers and notebooks
.
He had planned a See also: great work on " the wisdom and folly of nations," dealing with social, See also: political and domestic details, and it was chiefly for this that his collection was destined, but in passing he found the materials useful as a store of incidents and suggestions
.
A See also: collector of the kind was bound to be systematic, otherwise his collection would have fallen into confusion, and Reade's collection contains many curiosities in See also: classification and tabulation
.
On the value of this method for his art there has been much discussion, the prevalent opinion being that his See also: imagination was overwhelmed and stifled by it
.
He himself maintained the contrary; and it must be admitted that a priori critics have not rightly understood the use that he made of his laboriously collected facts
.
He did not merely See also: shovel the contents of his notebooks into his novels; they served rather as an atmosphere of reality in which he worked, so that his novels were like pictures painted in the open air
.
His imagination worked freely among them and was quickened rather than impeded by their suggestions of things suited to the purpose in See also: hand; and it is probably to his close and See also: constant contact with facts, acting on an imagination naturally fertile, that we owe his marvellous abundance of incident
.
Even in his novels of character there is no meditative and analytic stagnation; the development of character is shown through a rapid unceasing progression of significant facts
.
This rapidity of See also: movement was perhaps partly the result of his dramatic studies; it was probably in writing for the stage that he learned the value of keeping the attention of his readers incessantly on the alert
.
The hankering after stage effect, while it saved him from dullness, often betrayed him into rough exaggeration, especially in his comic scenes
.
But the gravest defect in his work is a defect of temper . His view of human life, especially of the life ofSee also: women, is almost brutal; his knowledge of frailties and vices is obtruded with repellent force; and he cannot, with all his skill as a story-See also: teller, be numbered among the great artists who warm the See also: heart and help to improve the conduct
.
But as a moral satirist, which was the See also: function he professed over and above that of a story-teller, he did See also: good service, both indirectly in his novels and directly in his own name
.
See See also: Charles L
.
Reade and
See also: Compton Reade, Charles Reade, a Memoir (2 vols., 1887); A
.
C
.
Swinburne, Miscellanies (1886) ; and some recollections by See also: John Coleman, Charles Reade as I knew him (1903)
.
|
|
|
[back] RDTALIDACEAE |
[next] READING |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.