Charles Dickens, India
and the life of Walter Dickens in
Calcutta
Dickens has been so much a part of many Indian generations
since the mid-19th century, we have read his works as part of school
studies, and many others have read him for pleasure and enjoyed his works. We
got to know his characters such as David Copperfield and Oliver Twist, we have
clapped for his stand against social injustice, bureaucracy and oppression of
the downtrodden. But what many of you may not know is that he had another side,
a dark one.
With all that, you may wonder what made him say this in
1857, writing to Angela Burdett Coutts – And
I wish I were Commander in Chief in India. The first thing I would do to strike that Oriental race
with amazement (not in the least regarding them as if they lived in the Strand,
London, or at Camden Town), should be to proclaim to them in their language,
that I considered my holding that appointment by the leave of God, to mean that
I should do my utmost to exterminate the
race upon whom the stain of the late
cruelties rested; and that I was there for that purpose and no other, and was
now proceeding, with all convenient
dispatch and merciful swiftness of execution, to blot it out of mankind and raze it off the face of the
Earth.
Well he did and it was just after he heard about the 1857 revolt.
The mutiny itself which engulfed much of middle and North India, involving the
triumvirate of Nana Saheb, Tayta Tope and the Rani of Jhansi is a subject which
is difficult to maneuver through, for the literature produced since the event
has been so heavily English sided, to say the least. But there have also been
recent attempts to create revisionist works swinging wildly to the other side
of the balance. Perhaps the truth and reality are somewhere in between and to
sift it out from the Burra Saheb’s masterful manipulation of the language and
the media in those days, takes much time and effort, what with time having obliterated
many a track.
Though Charles the pater had not ventured into India, his
desire to send his sons to the imperial colony resulted in two of them securing
positions in India. Walter lived in Bengal for some six years and Frank spent a
brief sojourn in Bengal, returning to England when his father passed on. It was
while searching for information on Louise Ouwerkerk that I came across Dick
Kooiman’s paper on Walter Dickens, Charles’s son and his career in India. One
thing led to the other and I ended up studying Dickens and his Indian
connections.
A recap of the so-called rebellion - The rebellion of 1857
was an unsuccessful uprising in India in 1857–58 against the oppressive rule of
the British East India Company. Starting around May 1857 in the form of a
mutiny of sepoys at Meerut, it spread along as many civilian rebellions across
central, North and East India. It was eventually suppressed with the rebels'
defeat in Gwalior in June 1858. Violence and cruel actions were perpetuated by
both sides and British reprisals were severe, with entire cities laid waste in British
retaliation. When news of the events reached Britain, the populace there were
aghast, unable to understand that their realm was no longer invincible, that it
was being threatened by the lowly masses. The press went on an overdrive and
newspapers published exaggerated accounts. While the majority of writings available
today voice the British story, two books cover the revisionist Indian side, written
by Parag Tope and Amarish Mishra.
An example of the fake news (London Times – 25th
Aug 1857) and the Brits as you can see were masters at it - They took 48 females, most of them girls of
from 10 to 14, many delicately nurtured ladies, violated them, and kept them
for the base purposes of the heads of the insurrection for a whole week. At the
end of that time they made them strip themselves, and gave them up to the
lowest of the people to abuse in broad daylight in the streets of Delhi…..British
investigators as early as 1858 concluded that the allegations of rape,
cannibalism, and mutilation were fabrications, but that did not halt the
circulation of such sordid fake tales, especially those related to the rape of delicate
British ladies.
As the news of the events and violence in Kanpur spread in
England, the Sahib was enraged. Many wanted the race which took to their brave
soldiers and fair women, exterminated. Dickens following the general opinion, said
those very words which we started out with and then he went silent. Never did
he write a novel set in India, nor did he visit country. Instead he wrote “the
tale of two cities’ talking about the throes of the French revolution and a
mutiny. Did he really mean to put an undercurrent of the Indian mutiny in his
two cities?
Joshi explains - Always contemporary and already thinking
about fictionalizing events, Dickens wrote to Henry Morley, a colleague at
Household Words, asking him to research whether an English colony existed, or
could have, in South America. In his 18 October letter to Morley, Dickens
explained that he “wish[ed] to avoid India itself” but wanted a setting “in which
a few English people—gentlemen, ladies, and children—and a few English
soldiers, would find themselves alone in a strange wild place and liable to
hostile attack” (Letters, VIII,469). The language - “strange wild place,”
“hostile attack”- reveals Dickens’s siege mentality, self-righteousness, and
un-complicated response to events in India.
Well, he did get influenced by it in his writings and we can
see its impact on the work "The Perils of Certain English Prisoners,"
around the events in India co-authored with Wilkie Collins late in 1857.
Dickens wrote the first and last chapter of "Perils," a tale set in
the British West Indies and narrated by an English soldier, Gill Davis, sent to
protect the island of Silver Store from attacks by pirates.
Thus, we can conclude that while Dickens was probably one
with a somewhat balanced view of life, it was restricted to the life in his
world, the British one. The imperial subjects, the masses in the colonies had
their place way down below and were not worthy of study. Affected by the rumored
treatment of the women and brave men of the EIC, he turned a blind eye into the
workings of the EIC, that huge organization which was stripping the country dry
and massacring hundreds of thousands in the name of mutiny. But let’s leave Dickens now in Britain,
nursing his hatred and shift to the life of his son.
Many types of youngsters made their way to India in the
steamers bound east. Fortune seekers, truant youngsters from well-to-do
families, career soldiers who had the needed training rearing up as mercenaries
of a sort and of course administrators, who had never administered anything. There
were businessmen who saw great opportunity to prosper, then there were professionals
such as engineers, missionaries, doctors etc. who saw a great demand in the far
away India. Yes, plenty of good men who wanted to do something for the people
also went to India, not to forget the numerous missionaries who traveled to
implant a new religion and uplift the downtrodden, or so they explained. Finally,
there were women who went out fishing, as part of the fishing fleet, to hook a
husband in India. Not mentioned often, there were also the undesirable of
Britain, the scum and the criminal, heading out East.
Dickens had his fair share of problems, and when you have
ten children and when many of his sons fail to succeed, the worry on a pater can
be manifest. Charles, the eldest went bankrupt toying with banking and
business, Walter the second, we’ll get to him later, Frank joined the Bengal
police, then moved to Canada, was considered incompetent and alcoholic, Alfred
racked up debts and fled to Australia, Sydney went to sea but was also beset
with financial difficulties and died young. Among the last two, Henry did well
in the law field, lived the longest but was killed crossing the road and Edward
went to Australia to work at petty jobs and died penniless.
Walter Landor Dickens |
Walter went through the many rigors required for a career in
India, he learnt to fence, swim and ride, use guns and even learnt a bit of
Hindustani! By July, youngster just 16 years old, had boarded the P and O liner
Indus at Southampton, bound for Calcutta. He was just one of the many thousands
of young people who ventured East, to enrichen themselves in the Indian colony.
Many were to thrive and flourish, some lived their entire lives in that distant
land, some died in war or of disease, some built vast families who survived and
thrived through many generations. Some went native, some intermixed with the
local populace to create the Anglo Indian race, while others ended up as abject
failures.
Back in England, father Dickens was seething with rage,
perhaps also worried stiff about his son wallowing in the thick of things, and
venting about wanting to destroy the Indian race. He blamed the politicians and
administrators of the EIC and Britain for not sending quick reinforcements to
defend the cities of Kanpur and Lucknow, he also took to blaming the Hindu
character as totally untrustworthy. Dickens was equally vehement that mercy
should not be accorded to any Indian prisoner, and remonstrated against Canning
who proposed it. And to top it, he castigated British women flocking to serve
or see Hindu princes.
Walter seems to have been doing well in the military which
was on the move and in action, and got quickly promoted to lieutenant, was
awarded a mutiny medal and of course some prize money or bounty - the spoils of
war. His regiment was involved in the operations at Kanpur and later in the
retaking of Delhi. It is also apparent that not only was he fighting during the
mutiny, but also in the NW frontier province later. Anyway, he settled down to
a routine life in India but seems to have been invalided and carried in a
litter to a hill station, according to a letter written by his pater. We do
know from his father’s writing that he had fallen sick, fainted of sun stroke,
suffered from Smallpox, and caught smart fever, after which he moved to a hill
station to recuperate and rally out of the ailments.
But things went south very quickly and before long Walter
was deeply indebted and no longer popular in his company, being placed low on
account of his debts. What could have happened? Was it due to illness, combat
fatigue or pain from his wounds? Did he get involved with vice and opium? We do
not know, but we do hear that he was always in debt. From the family letters,
we can glean that he had asked his father for money, but Charles refused help,
and we see Walter writing to Mary (Mamie) his sister that he had resolved to
write home no more until he was out of debt. I guess this is when Charles, his
brother arrived (when he was a tea trader in Hong Kong) to settle his debts,
during his fortnights stay in India in 1861. Walter then planned to join the
home service but was advised not to do it as it would reduce his income. Mary
did get another short letter in the fall of 1863 that Walter was unwell. By
Christmas he wrote stating that he was very ill and traveling to Calcutta to
get a medical certificate in order to head back to Britain on medical leave.
Dickens writing to Miss Coutts said – I could have wished
it had pleased god to let him see his home again, but I think he would have
died at the door.
Among his possessions Walter had left nothing of value: only
a small trunk, changes of linen, some prayer books, and a colored photograph of
a woman believed to be a member of the family. According to his captain,
everything else had been turned into cash in preparation for the return to
England. But it is not clear where that money went, though. The officers' mess,
the regimental store, the billiard table, the native servants, a merchant or
two, all remained to be paid. We notice that Walter left behind, considerable
debts and his regiment passed along to the family a claim for a substantial
debt of 140 pounds, including a humble written request from one Ganga Ram for
Rs 18 and annas 8.
Walter was buried in the Bhowanipore Military Cemetery at Calcutta. Charles Dickens, his father received the news of his passing on Feb 6th, 1864, on his birthday. His original tombstone read - In memory of Lieut. Walter Landor Dickens, the second son of Charles Dickens, who died at the Officers' Hospital, Calcutta, on his way home on sick leave, Dec 31st 1863, Aged 23 years.
In April 1987, a group of students from Jadavpur University collected funds and moved the tombstone to the South Park Street Cemetery, more as a tribute to the author, his father. The tombstone is now placed among the memorials of the notable Europeans who died in the 18th century, but is grave is no longer marked or traceable, from what I understood. Walter’s story comes to a sudden stop here and Kooiman, who was responsible for all the original research into this topic in 2002, had been unable to dredge much more. Will the days ahead reveal something more? I doubt it, for few are interested in such forays!
The boy was surely attached to his mother and she to him,
for Catherine’s will mentions leaving an Ivory elephant miniature complete with
a houdah (sitting platform on an elephant), gifted by Walter. In fact, Charles
Dickens did not even tell her of her son’s passing, such was the depth of the animosity
between them. The sad part was that Dickens saw his wife’s genes as the root
cause for all the problems his sons faced. Several of the children “were
undermined by drink” or had gambling addictions. Dickens with his huge ego,
maintained that their flaws came from their mother, them acquiring her “curse
of limpness”, the lack of purpose and energy, and a natural defect of character.
William Hardman, editor of The Morning Post wrote succinctly:
"Poor Mrs. Charles Dickens is in great grief at the loss of her second
son, Walter Landor Dickens, who has died with his regiment in India. Her grief
is much enhanced by the fact that her husband has not taken any notice of the
event to her, either by letter or otherwise. If anything were wanting to sink
Charles Dickens to the lowest depths in my esteem, this fills up the measure of
his iniquity. As a writer, I admire him, as a man, I despise him."
Charles Dickens died in 1870 leaving a legacy of £1,000 to
Ternan in his will and sufficient income from a trust fund to ensure that she
would never have to work again. In 1876, six years after Dickens's death,
Ternan married George Wharton Robinson, 12 years her junior. She died of cancer
in 1914.
Dickens as you see, was a man with great many virtues, but
like many others, one with a lot of failings.
References
Priti Joshi, “Mutiny Echoes: India, Britons, and Charles
Dickens’s A Tale of Two Cities” (pp. 48–87)
Dickens and the Indian Mutiny - William Odie
The short career of Walter Dickens in India – Dick Kooiman
Georgina Hogarth and the Dickens circle - Adrian, Arthur A
Catherine Dickens and Her Colonial Sons - Lillian Nayder
Pics – Wikimedia, thanks to the contributors
What the Dickens – is an idiom unrelated to Charles Dickens
and was apparently in use even before Charles Dickens was born. It seems to
predate Shakespeare as well and is considered to mean 'What the devil?' The
Oxford English Dictionary explains that the expression “the dickens!” is “an
interjectional exclamation expressing astonishment, impatience, irritation,
etc.; usually with interrogative words, as what, where, how, why, etc.” and
explains it as a slang or colloquial term meaning “the deuce, the devil.” The
exclamation is “apparently substituted for ‘devil,’ as having the same initial
sound.”
16 comments:
Maddy’s rambling’s ! One of my favourite blogs . Esoteric topics , well researched and stories well told . This particular story on the Indian connection of the Charles Dickens family is fascinating . Thank you Maddy .
The intermixing with the locals to form the Anglo Indian race is something interesting. I have a few Anglo Indian friends here in Pune as well as in London. (yes some had to flee India when things became too hot for them after Independence)
Thanks Paramjit..
Glad you liked this, do keep visiting
rgds
maddy
Hi Haddock,
I had covered the Anglo Indians earlier, in more details. perhaps you missed those.
https://maddy06.blogspot.com/2019/08/once-promised-land.html
https://historicalleys.blogspot.com/2008/11/anglo-indian-memories.html
Good read during this corona lockdown.
Thanks Sudhir,
glad you enjoyed it..
Never knew about the other side of Dickens. Thanks for the article.
Thanks Roger,
Yeah, Dickens was a complex character with multiple layers...
Never knew Charles Dickens had such a side to his character. Your blog is interesting and enlightening, as usual.
Thanks SW..
Yeah, people had a narrower mind I guess, in those days, today it is perhaps not so overt, but still there.
Never knew
Thanks for sharing this post! It is very interesting.
Enjoyed reading this, and good to see that you handled the charged topic of the "sepoy mutiny" AKA the "first war of independence" with tact.
Thanks hari, now you know!
Thanks trikle trade,
Glad you chanced by
Thanks ss,
The east India company was sometimes like mafia. They used and misused their power. Nevertheless i must add that India also gained from them, and later the British. The mutiny- well it is a topic which requires some study, but i doubt the twitter/x and whatsapp forward generation, likes only 50-100 characters in their stories. It is more of a story than one which started with a greased cartridge…
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