LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Pickwick Papers, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Male Friendship
Predatory Social Institutions
Social Class and Inequality
Marriage and Courtship
Generosity and Forgiveness
Summary
Analysis
Bob Sawyer lives on Lant Street, a quiet, somewhat dreary area where houses are often available for rent. Its inhabitants consist of working-class people, most of whom lead modest lives. The atmosphere of the street has a sense of melancholy and isolation, perfect for someone wishing to retreat from society. Inside Bob’s first-floor room, preparations for a small gathering are in place. Bob, along with Benjamin Allen, awaits the arrival of Pickwick and his companions. However, despite the seemingly festive preparations, there is a tension in the air, stemming from Bob’s landlady, Mrs. Raddle. Bob owes her money, and her displeasure casts a shadow over the evening, as Bob worries that she might disrupt the evening.
Bob’s modest lodgings suggest his precarious financial situation, with the looming figure of Mrs. Raddle embodying the pressures of debt. The tension between festive preparations and the fear of Mrs. Raddle’s interference means that Bob’s life could fall apart at any second if Mrs. Raddle decides she wants to push him hard enough. Like Pickwick, he could end up fighting with the legal system if he is not careful. Still, he decides to prioritize a gathering over all else, even if it will fill him with anxiety.
Active
Themes
Bob’s concerns are realized when a knock on the door brings in the irate Mrs. Raddle. She enters the room, demanding payment for the overdue rent. Bob attempts to placate her with excuses, but Mrs. Raddle only grows more furious. She airs her grievances loudly, ensuring that all the neighbors can hear her. The situation escalates when Benjamin tries to intervene, which only makes Mrs. Raddle angrier, as she thinks Benjamin is talking down to her.
Here, Dickens highlights how debt traps people in cycles of humiliation, with Mrs. Raddle using public shaming as leverage against Bob. Although not the most sympathetic figure on the surface, Mrs. Raddle is also simply trying to get by, so she gets extra angry when Benjamin condescends to her.
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Themes
As the heated exchange reaches its peak, Mrs. Raddle storms out, leaving Bob and Benjamin to contemplate the likely disaster awaiting their evening. Soon after, Pickwick and his friends arrive. Not long after they settle in, Ben’s friend Jack Hopkins arrives to join the gathering. Jack immediately launches into discussions about recent medical cases, including a patient who fell out of a window and a child who swallowed a necklace bead by bead. The stories fascinate Pickwick, who listens with a mix of horror and curiosity.
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Themes
As more guests arrive, the group sits down to play a card game. However, a spat between two guests over a perceived insult interrupts the festivities. The quarrel threatens to get out of hand, but after some mediation, the two men reconcile, with each declaring newfound affection for the other, much to the relief of the group. After the quarrel is resolved, the evening proceeds with more drinking and singing. Jack Hopkins offers to perform a rousing rendition of “The King, God Bless Him.” As the song begins, however, Pickwick notices a noise from upstairs. It quickly becomes apparent that the disturbance is none other than Mrs. Raddle, who has been listening to the commotion and is now shouting down at Bob and his guests. She accuses them of causing a racket, abusing her hospitality, and avoiding rent payments.
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Mrs. Raddle’s tirade continues, and Bob, clearly embarrassed, attempts to calm her down. He asks his guests to leave to avoid further escalation, though his friends express their disappointment at having the evening cut short. As they gather their belongings, Mrs. Raddle continues to shout insults, even targeting Pickwick as he attempts to politely exit. On their way home, Benjamin, who is quite drunk, confides in Winkle that he is determined to defend his sister Arabella’s honor by challenging any suitor who might court her, except for Bob. Back at Lant Street, Bob is left to reflect on the disastrous evening, the growing pressure of his unpaid debts, and the likely confrontation with Mrs. Raddle that awaits him the next day.
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