63 pages • 2 hours read
Summary
Background
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
Character Analysis
Themes
Symbols & Motifs
Important Quotes
Essay Topics
Tools
Content Warning: Both the novel and guide contain discussions of alcohol addiction, death by suicide, and antisemitism.
One evening in the fall, a waterman named Gaffer Hexam and his daughter, Lizzie Hexam, take their small boat along the River Thames in London. An anxious Lizzie steers the boat as her father fishes a corpse from the water. He takes money from the dead man’s pockets. A man from a passing boat calls out to Hexam; they are seemingly rivals, as Hexam warns that the man—unlike him—is a thief. Hexam does not regard his theft as a crime, as the dead have no “use for money” (4).
Elsewhere in London, a couple named the Veneerings are introduced to high society. They have recently become wealthy, and a man named Twemlow is introducing them to other wealthy people, including the lawyer Mortimer Lightwood, his friend Eugene Wrayburn, and Mr. and Mrs. Podsnap. At the gathering, Mortimer tells a story about a man named Harmon, “a tremendous old rascal who made his money by Dust” (13). Harmon was an abusive figure whose cruelty to his wife and daughter drove his son
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By Charles Dickens