Baker, Ernest Albert. The History of the English
Novel. Vol. VIII (New York: Barnes and Noble; first published 1937):
161-176.
Baker provides a brief overview of Kingsley's novels, discussing their
major themes and the context of the times in which they were written, especially
the period of the Crimean war.
Novels
; Social
and Political Novel ; Crimean
War .
Baker, Joseph Ellis. The Novel and the Oxford
Movement (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1932): 88-100.
Baker argues that Kingsley’s hostility to the Oxford Movement was based
on a quite different view concerning the nature of man. Whereas the
Oxford Movement held that man's nature was essentially sinful, Kingsley,
“of the school of Rousseau”, believed that it was essentially good (88).
Baker reviews the novels of this “pugnacious Protestant” for anti-Catholic
sentiments (99). “Though Kingsley’s pictures of Tractarians are so
obviously prejudiced that it is hardly necessary to correct them, his comments
help to reveal the core of his own vigorous mind, and the setting of the
Oxford Movement within the framework of other mid-century ideas” (100).
Oxford
Movement (Tractarianism) ; Novels
; Catholicism
; Religion
.
Cazamian, Louis. The Social Novel in England
1830-1850: Dickens, Disraeli, Mrs. Gaskell, Kingsley Trans. Martin
Fido (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1973; first published in French
in 1903).
Cazamian provides a lengthy examination of Kingsley's life and works,
focusing on his Christian Socialist activities and, particularly, on how
Christian Socialism is represented in his novels, Yeast and Alton
Locke . Cazamian considers Kingsley a "gifted writer" who employs
these novels as a "propaganda vehicle" to describe the age's "most vital
aims and ideals" (241).
Overview
; Social
and Political Views ; Christian
Socialism ; Alton
Locke ; Yeast
; Novels
.
Conacher, W. M. “Charles Kingsley,” Queen’s
Quarterly Vol. 45 (1938): 503-511.
Conacher presents a sketch of Kingsley’s life and works. He praises
the characterization in Hereward the Wake; it surpasses that of
Bulwer Lytton’s Harold and that of Scott’s Ivanhoe.
While he criticizes Kingsley’s anti-Catholic treatment in Westward Ho!
as being mere bigotry and not based on proper historical facts, he admires
the novel’s color and romance. Though Hypatia has matter for
a masterpiece, “haste, over-enthusiasm, and lack of artistry have spoiled
it” (509). Alton Locke is modern in its sympathy for the working
classes and its political views, while Yeast, though the work of
a young author, is praised for its “generous feeling” (510). Kingsley,
according to Conacher, “railed at John Bull in life and in letters and
was essentially in the end John Bull himself” (511).
Overview
; Novels
; Religion
; Catholicism
.
Dawson, W. J. "Charles Kingsley," in The Makers
of English Fiction. 2nd ed. (New York: Fleming H. Revell, 1905): 179-190.
In this overview of Kingsley's life and works Dawson assigns Kingsley
a high place in the secondary order of novelists, declaring that his failure
to attain the highest rank is due to his versatility. While Dawson considers
that none of his novels were as fine as The Cloister and the Hearth
or Lorna Doone, he deems that Kingsley exerted a greater influence
on his age than either Reade or Blackmoore, "an influence subtle and peculiar,
based in part on personality, in part on the nature of his message" (179).
Overview
; Novels
.
Elton, Oliver. A Survey of English Literature 1830-1880.
Vol. II. 309-316. London: Edward Arnold, 1920.
Elton presents a broad overview of Kingsley’s life and works. Yeast
is not really a novel but “a kind of pamphlet-fantasy” in which the authorial
commentary renders Kingsley himself the most distinct character (310).
However, the work reveals promise of the future novelist. The true power
of Alton Locke lies in its pictures rather than its ideas. Hypatia
is praised for its drama and the passion and action of the story. Westward
Ho!, more “a saga than a novel with a plot” (311), is lauded for its
action, its enthusiasm, and its fine scene painting. Though Two Years
Ago has excessive moralizing, “Kingsley is himself again whenever he
gets back to landscape or to narrative” (312). Hereward the Wake
suffers from a surfeit of the professor and a paucity of the artist. The
Heroes receives high praise for its style, its descriptions, its appeal
to children. Elton also lauds Kingsley’s “fervid picturesqueness” in a
number of his shorter works, particularly his naturalist depictions in
At Last. The Water-Babies though popular “is a good book
badly spoilt” (314). Elton commends Kingsley’s poetic power, particularly
his lyric and narrative poems. “He is one of the few poets of the time
who make us wish cordially that he had written more” (315).
Overview;
Novels;
Poetry.
Gerould, Gordon Hall. The Patterns of English and
American Fiction: A History (Boston: Little Brown, 1942).
After a short sketch of Kingsley’s life and major novels, Gerould is
quite disparaging in his summing up of Kingsley’s achievement. The characterization
of his historical novels is lacking in solidity and consistency. Moreover,
in addition to great inaccuracies in historical details, Hypatia
and Westward Ho! fail to represent well even the fundamental aspects
of human nature. Crude melodrama abounds, there is too much homiletic discourse
and sentimentalism, as well as an unwholesomeness of tone. Gerould concludes
that the historical novels are “representative of nineteenth century taste
at its lowest ebb.”
Novels
.
Hartley, Allan John. The Novels
of Charles Kingsley: A Christian Social Interpretation (Folkestone:
The Hour-Glass Press, 1977).
Hartley in this book-length study interprets
Kingsley's novels in the light of the influence of the Christian Social
Movement. He contends that Kingsley is unusual in using novels to set forth
the message of one whom he, together with many others, viewed as the age's
greatest prophet, F. D. Maurice. "The value of Kingsley's novels ultimately
lies less in their advocacy of liberality and reform, than in their insistent
justification of both on the basis of Christian humanism. Kingsley's
inspiration sprang from Maurice whose reading of the Bible had shown his
disciple the meaning, both of Christianity and of history, and the novels
proclaim that social improvement had necessarily to proceed within the
existing framework of society, which for Kingsley meant a Christian dispensation
based on Commandments engraven on tablets of stone and interpreted by sacrificial
love. A minor prophet proclaiming a minor one, Kingsley thus added
a new dimension to the novel" (169).
Christian
Socialism ; Maurice
; Religion
; Social
and Political Views ; Novels
; Yeast
; Alton
Locke ; Hypatia
; Westward
Ho! ; Two
Years Ago ; Hereward
the Wake .
Horsman, Alan. “Elizabeth Gaskell and the Kingsleys,”
in his The Victorian Novel (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990): 256-294.
In his brief examination of Yeast, Alton Locke, Two Years Ago,
and The Water-Babies Horsman praises the clarity, the felicity and
the exactitude of Kingsley's descriptive passages, qualities that make
him "stand out among the minor novelists" (256). However, he also
faults Kingsley for neglecting his novel writing in favor of the pursuit
of his religious and educational aims that led him to take "the short cuts
of melodrama and allegory" (256). Horsman also criticizes the didacticism
pervading Kingsley's novels though he acknowledges that despite its strong
didactic elements The Water-Babies comes closest to a work of the
imagination.
Yeast
; Alton
Locke ; Two
Years Ago ; The
Water-Babies ; Novels
; Didacticism
.
Lord, Walter Frewen. “The Kingsleys,” in his
The Mirror of the Century (London: John Lane, The Bodley Head, 1906):
188-203.
Lord discusses the life and work of the two brothers Henry and Charles
Kingsley, focusing on their novels. “As regards the work of Charles
Kingsley, we shall have to say that over-emphasis destroyed the artistic
effect that he would fain have produced. A not dissimilar lack of
finish is perceptible in the work of Henry Kingsley, owing to his eagerness
to produce. A little more mental concentration in the case of both;
a little more deliberation in the case of Charles, and a little more earnestness
in the case of Henry, and the world of letters would have been enriched
by two great artists. As it is – proxime accesserunt” (202).
Overview
; Novels
; Kingsley,
Henry .
Maison, Margaret M. The Victorian Vision:
Studies in the Victorian Novel (New York: Sheed & Ward, 1961).
Maison considers Kingsley’s religious and spiritual thought as represented
in his novels. She declares that matters of the soul tend to be well
overshadowed in these works by stories of adventure, by depictions of physical
activity, by scenes of daring and so on. However, one pervasive religious
theme in Kingsley’s novels is the spiritual development of the characters
through strong physical activity. She contends that one of Kingsley’s
most dominant beliefs is that man’s soul necessarily suffers from long
exposure to dire physical conditions. It was as important a duty
of the parson, Kingsley believed, to care for social, economic, and political
reform as to cater to more spiritual elements. “Thus might Kingsley
answer any critic likely to accuse him of preferring sanitation to meditation”
(127). Maison also briefly considers Kingsley’s desire to reconcile
religion with science.
Religion
; Manliness
; Science
; Novels
.
Marmo, Macario. The Social Novel of Charles
Kingsley (Salerno: Di Giacomo, 1937).
In this book length study of Kingsley’s life, personality, views, and
works Marmo focuses in particular on the art as well as the social implications
of Kingsley’s social novels. He concludes that Kingsley the man was
more significant than his poetry and novels. His very diverse deeds
and objectives were greater than the art of his literary works. Above
all, Marmo contends, Kingsley was a vehement opponent of democracy as well
as of rampant laissez-faire competition. In summing up Marmo
declares “But now that this selfish democratic system has reached its crisis
and civilization is centering again round Rome, we must recognize in Kingsley
an ideal Pioneer; for Charles Kingsley denounced the foul competitive
system at the time of its birth, and remained all his life the assertor
of the Collectivist Ideal and the monitor of Co-operation as the one remedy
for unbridled competition” (114).
Overview
; Full
Book Treatment ; Novels
.
Melville, Lewis. "Charles Kingsley," in his Victorian
Novelists (London: Archibald Constable, 1906): 106-124.
Melville reviews Kingsley’s life and works. He praises some of
Kingsley’s shorter poems though considering that his poetry in general
is not up to the standard of his romances. Yeast is more a
pamphlet than a novel and is spoiled by Kingsley’s dissertations on his
own views. Though the story of Alton Locke is slight, the
novel’s characterization is superior to that of Yeast. Melville
praises Hypatia for its “brilliant and forcible picture of life”,
for its fine characterization, and its good planning. It is, however,
“sometimes stagey, and often melodramatic, and not infrequently grandiloquent”
(114, 118). Westward Ho! is Kingsley’s most successful novel
though it does not quite reach the level of Hypatia. Melville
singles out Kingsley’s command of language and his scene-painting.
“. . . it is this power of description that distinguishes him above his
contemporaries, with the exception, perhaps of Disraeli; indeed, places
him in this respect above all writers since Scott, and even Scott’s landscape
does not always seem so spontaneous” (124).
Overview
; Novels
; Poetry
; Characterization
in Novels .
Muller, Charles H. “The Standard Victorian Novel
of Charles Kingsley and Its Relevance Today,” Communiqué
Vol. 5, No. 2 (1980): 37-46.
Kingsley's novels, according to Muller, typify three major traits of
many Victorian novels: they are didactic; they are frequently sensational;
they have impossibly resourceful heroes. Though Muller finds many
good points in Kingsley's novels, he considers that his art no longer has
much relevance: "it is too subjective, too blatantly polemical or 'preachy',
and unrealistic with its melodramatic or 'heroic' tradition" (45).
Novels
.
Paul, Herbert W. Men & Letters (London;
New York: John Lane, 1901).
Paul very briefly discusses Kingsley the novelist, declaring that he
was a real poet whose poetry will likely outlast his novels.
Novels
.
Price, J. B. “Charles Reade and Charles Kingsley,”Contemporary
Review Vol. 183 (Jan/June 1953): 161-166.
Price considers that with respect to literary merit Kingsley’s romances
are better than his humanitarian novels. Still, the latter “certainly
exhibit his fine social sympathies, and both Yeast and Alton
Locke are excellent sermons” (163). Price praises the conception
of Hypatia , declaring that “the life, realism, and pictorial brilliancy
of the scenes give it a power rare in an historical novel”. Westward
Ho! “is more mature, and more carefully written” (164). Price
also lauds the dramatic element in Kingsley’s works.
Overview
; Novels
.
Sampson, George. The Concise Cambridge History
of English Literature (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1941).
Sampson provides a brief account of Kingsley’s life and principal works
of literature. Neither Yeast nor Alton Locke are very
successful novels “and even as pamphlets they are vague, unvital and inconclusive”
(780). Hypatia is the best conceived and constructed novel.
Westward Ho!, his most successful novel, “is an excellent tale of
its kind” (781). Though Two Years Ago has some vivid episodes,
it fails to hold attention. Hereward the Wake has vigor and
freshness but has never been popular due to the story’s remoteness.
Both The Heroes and The Water-Babies “deserve their success”
(781).
Overview
; Novels
.
Sanders, Andrew. “Last of the English: Charles Kingsley’s
Hereward the Wake,” The Victorian Historical Novel, 1840-1880
(New York : St. Martin's, 1979): 149-167.
Sanders considers that Kingsley's historical novels, despite their
obvious inadequacies, are not, in Henry James's terminology, "amateurish."
In particular, he praises Hereward the Wake's action, its characterization,
and its presentation of a strange medieval period. Sanders also argues
that some of this novel's themes, particularly the divine mission of the
Teutons, had been anticipated by Kingsley in his 1860 Cambridge lectures,
The Roman and the Teuton. Above all, the novel epitomizes
Kingsley's categoric belief that England's Germanic background played a
primary role in the nation's historical development. "It is also central
to an appreciation of Kingsley's work as an historical novelist, for in
it he attempts to examine the concept of a national hero and to relate
heroism to national experience" (165).
Hereward
the Wake ; Novels
; The
Roman and the Teuton ; Teutons
; Anglo-Saxons
; History
.
Scott, Patrick. "Charles Kingsley," in Dictionary
of Literary Biography, Volume 21. Victorian Novelists Before
1885. Edited by Ira B. Nadel and William E. Fredeman (Detroit: Gale,
1983): 195-207.
This follows the usual format of the DLB. A bibliography
of Kingsley’s own works is followed by an account of his life interspersed
with an analysis of his major writings, in this case his novels.
A short secondary bibliography is appended. Several illustrations
are also provided. Scott sums up Kingsley the novelist as follows:
‘If Kingsley never wrote a great work or an unflawed masterpiece, he can
now, in light of the new biographical evidence, be recognized as a writer
of considerable psychological complexity, one who produced searching and
imaginative responses to some of the central issues of the late 1840s”
(206).
Overview
; Novels
; Alton
Locke ; Yeast
; Westward
Ho! ; Two
Years Ago ; Hypatia
; Hereward
the Wake .
Scott, P. G. “Kingsley as Novelist,”
Theology Vol. LXXVIII, No. 655 (January 1975): 8-15.
Scott argues that it is mistaken for modern critics to focus exclusively
on the propaganda element in Kingsley's novels, namely that they
are fictional vehicles utilized to propagate such doctrines as Christian
Socialism and muscular Christianity. Such thinking, declares Scott,
neglects the important imaginative quality of the novels, even of the more
propagandistic and moralistic ones. Rather, "Re-read after a hundred years,
they seem less Victorian documents than Victorian dreams" (9).
Novels
.
Smith, Sheila, and Peter Denman. “Mid-Victorian Novelists,”
in Arthur Pollard (ed.) The Victorians (New York: Peter Bedrick,
1987, c. 1970): 239-285.
Smith and Denman survey Kingsley’s novels. Yeast and Alton
Locke are his best. Yeast was the first novel devoted
to the notion that unsanitary conditions and disease existed in the countryside
as well as in the towns and cities. A “courageous” novel, it also
provided some indication “of the sexual squalor of the poor” (254, 253).
Though radical views are expressed in the novel, Smith and Denman declare
that Kingsley did not believe in democracy. “In his novels, as in
Disraeli’s, the independence of the lower orders must be achieved within
the existing class-structure” (255). Though Alton Locke has
powerful scenes, its propaganda takes precedence over the novel and its
characters. Though Two Years Ago has some good scenes, it is a “long-winded
novel” (260). Smith and Denman have little positive to say of Hypatia
and Westward Ho! , but state that The Water-Babies is Kingsley’s
“most attractive book” (260). “Charles Kingsley is a minor novelist,
but in Yeast, Alton Locke and Two Years Ago he helped to
extend the novel’s subject matter, and to make it more serious, more concerned
with reality. He saw God, Heaven and Hell in human terms. This
was an asset to him as a novelist, and gave substance to his novels” (261).
Novels
; Yeast
; Alton
Locke ; Two
Years Ago ; Hypatia
; Westward
Ho! ; Social
and Political Views .
Stang, Richard. The Theory of the Novel in
England 1850-1870 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1959).
Stang refers to Kingsley frequently in this work. For example, he mentions
George Meredith's criticism of Kingsley's excessive hortatory approach
in Two Years Ago, George Eliot's similar condemnation of his didacticism
and moralizing in Westward Ho!, the National Review's 1860
very severe treatment of his general novelist style and art, Blackwood's
branding of Yeast as immoral. Stang also discusses Kingsley's belief that
the novel should include long explanatory passages in order to educate
less intelligent readers.
Novels
; Reception
of Kingsley's Works ; Didacticism
.
Uffelman, Larry K. Charles Kingsley (Boston:
Twayne, 1979).
In this book length study Uffelman focuses on Kingsley's literary achievement.
Chapter I provides an overview in which Kingsley's works are presented
chronologically. In subsequent chapters they are grouped thematically.
Uffelman declares that Kingsley, though a writer of some attractive lyrics
and ballads, was a minor poet. His main claim was as a novelist.
Though much of what he wrote was literature with a purpose, Uffelman considers
"that the impact of that literature is due not so much to its purpose as
to its presentation" (136).
Overview
; Full
Book Treatment ; Novels
; Poetry
.
Ward, A. W. and A. R. Waller (eds.). The Cambridge
History of English Literature Vol. XIII, Part II (New York, Putnam’s
Sons, 1917): 392-410.
This is an overview of Kingsley's life and works with particular focus
on his novels. Kingsley's strong imagination and vivid descriptive
style are singled out for especial praise.
Overview
; Social
and Political Views ; Novels
.
Weygandt, Cornelius. A Century of the English
Novel, Being a Consideration of the Place in English Literature of the
Long Story, Together with an Estimate of its Writers from the Heyday of
Scott to the Death of Conrad (New York: Century, 1925): 165-168.
In his short treatment of Kingsley the novelist, Weygandt declares
that Westward Ho! is his best known novel and praises both Hypatia
and Hereward the Wake, the latter being his “most unified and
most completely realized story” (167). On the other hand, both Yeast
and Alton Locke are “amateurish and crude” (167) while Two Years
Ago he dismisses as “an unassimilated hodge-podge of adventure and
Christian Socialism and American Slavery and satire of English conventions”
(167). Weygandt is generally critical of Kingsley’s depiction of
character especially the lack of life in his women: “they are a boy’s women
rather than a man’s” (168).
Novels
.
Wijesinha, Rajiva. The
Androgynous Trollope: Attitudes to Women Amongst Early Victorian Novelists
(University Press of America, 1982).
From a study of his novels Wijesinha concludes
that Kingsley held that woman's primary role was to attach herself to a
man and to serve him. Woman was made for man. Man was to guide
and control, woman was an instrument.
Females
; Novels
.
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