Alderson, Brian. “Introduction” to Charles
Kingsley, The Water-Babies (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995):
ix-xxix.
In his introduction to a 1995 edition of The Water-Babies Alderson
discusses the story's first publication as a serial in Macmillan's Magazine
, the subsequent revision of the text for its appearance in book format in
May 1863, and the contemporary market for children's literature. After a
lengthy analysis of The Water-Babies, Alderson treats some of the
critical reaction to it. He concludes with a discussion of the importance
of Kingsley's authorial presence in the novel.
The Water-Babies
; Publication
; Macmillan’s
Magazine ; Reception of
Kingsley's Works .
Avery, Gillian (with the assistance of Angela
Bull). Nineteenth Century Children: Heroes and Heroines in English Children’s
Stories 1780-1900 (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1965).
Though Kingsley in real life did not like the punishing of children, believing
that misbehavior often has a physical cause and that punishment can undermine
a child’s relationship with his parents, punishment is a major theme in The
Water-Babies. Avery declares that Kingsley wishes to point the
moral that punishment is the natural consequence of sin. She also states
that education is the primary purpose of The Water-Babies, “the education
of the child to become the honest English gentleman that was Kingsley’s ideal”
(49). Holding that education and teaching are quite distinct, Kingsley
depicts Tom’s trials and subsequent learning and the final attainment of
grace as constituting his true education.
The Water-Babies
; Punishment
; Children
; Education
.
Banerjee, Jacqueline. Through the Northern
Gate: Childhood and Growing Up in British Fiction, 1719-1901 (New York:
Lang, 1996).
Banerjee commends Kingsley’s unsentimental, positive, and far from frightening
portrayal of child death in The Water-Babies. However, she considers
the end when Tom and Ellie are brought back to land “a let-down” (104).
The Water-Babies
; Child Death
.
Beer, Gillian. Darwin's Plots: Evolutionary
Narrative in Darwin, George Eliot and Nineteenth-Century Fiction (London:
Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1983).
Beer considers Kingsley's debt to Darwin and the evolutionary theories in
his works, particularly The Water-Babies. The latter novel, Beer
points out, echoes how Darwin's natural order reflects such features of Victorian
society as division of labor, competition, and family structures. Kingsley
also follows to a certain degree Darwin's challenge to Malthusian theories.
Like Darwin, Kingsley disputes Malthus by regarding profusion and hyper-productivity
as good and in his account of the evolutionary process of the once excluded
Tom he challenges Malthusian social theory. "In its unguarded and unanalytic
response to Darwin's ideas and rhetoric, Kingsley's work represents the first
phase of assimilation. He grasped much of what was fresh in Darwin's
ideas while at the same time retaining a creationist view of experience"
(138).
Darwin ;
Evolution
; Malthus
; The
Water-Babies .
Beer, Gillian. “Kingsley: 'pebbles on the
shore',” The Listener Vol. 93 (17 April, 1975): 506-7.
Beer briefly considers Kingsley’s views on the importance of catering to
children’s imaginative needs. She reviews certain attributes of The
Water-Babies. It is distressful, very funny, and full of social
and political digressions; some of its episodes are cruel and make us wince;
it is very sensual and crammed with physical experiences. She discusses
the important role aspects of evolutionary theory play throughout the work.
“It is hard, I think, to over-emphasise the richness of Kingsley’s recognition
of mythic elements in the ideas of development and mutation, of ‘metamorphosis’
as Darwin sometimes calls it . . .” In addition, complementing physical
transformation, moral transformation, the responsibility of the individual
himself, is a very significant theme in the work. Beer also stresses
that Mother Carey is a female principle of creativity, as opposed to the more
usual male God. Because of the occurrences of child death in The
Water-Babies Beer views it as a kindertotenlied, “another of those
attempts to give meaning to the death of children, so deeply and terribly
needed by the Victorians” (507).
The Water-Babies
; Evolution
; Females
; Child
Death ; Science .
Carnell, Corbin Scott.
"Charles Kingsley," in Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 178:
British Fantasy and Science-Fiction Writers Before World War I
. Ed. by Darren Harris-Fain (Detroit: Gale, 1997): 132-138.
Carnell provides a bibliography of Kingsley’s own works, a brief bibliography
of secondary material, an overview of his life and works with a focus on his
fantasy work The Water-Babies. His assessment: “Charles Kingsley
can be considered a competent novelist, an engaging writer of sermons, and
the author of a significant work of fantasy. His lively engagement
with the issues of his day will make his life and ideas of interest even
as his writings are read with declining frequency” (138).
Overview
; The
Water-Babies .
Carpenter, Humphrey.
“Parson Lot Takes a Cold Bath: Charles Kingsley and The Water-Babies
,” in his Secret Gardens: A Study of the Golden Age of Children’s Literature
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1985): 23-43.
In this chapter Carpenter provides an overview of Kingsley’s life and works.
He suggests that Kingsley’s overt heterosexuality may not have been so real
as he indicates in his letters to his wife. He praises The Water-Babies
for its innovation and readability but considers that it is also greatly
muddled by its multitudinous social and political commentaries. Quite
different from anything else in the history of children’s literature, declares
Carpenter, “it was both brilliant and a failure, self-contradictory, muddled,
inspiring, sentimental, powerfully argumentative, irrationally prejudiced,
superbly readable” (24).
Overview
; Children
; Sexuality
; The
Water-Babies .
Chapman, Raymond. The Victorian Debate:
English Literature and Society 1832-1901 (New York: Basic Books, 1968).
Chapman briefly discusses Kingsley’s major social and political novels, Yeast
(1848), Alton Locke, Tailor and Poet (1850), Hypatia (1853),
and Two Years Ago (1857). He also mentions The Water Babies
(1863) for its treatment of child labor and social justice. Chapman
declares that Kingsley wrote in fiction about some of the topics with which
Maurice was dealing in more theological terms. “From Maurice he learned
that the needs of the time could be a pragmatic sanction for Christianity;
from Carlyle, how to subordinate reason to emotion. The combination
was, to say the least, a lively one. Like Samuel Butler, so different
in other ways, Kingsley wrote best about those things which he had made into
a personal grievance” (135).
Social and Political
Novel ; Yeast ; Alton Locke
; Hypatia
; Two Years
Ago ; The Water
Babies .
Charques, R. D., Mrs. “Kingsley as Children’s
Writer,” Times Literary Supplement Vol. 2576 (15 June, 1951): i
In this short article, Charques discusses Kingsley's writings for children
as well as his attitudes towards and his understanding of children.
She also touches briefly on his educational views.
Children
; The
Water-Babies ; Education
.
Chitty, Susan. Charles Kingsley’s Landscape
(Newton Abbot; North Pomfret, Vt.: David and Charles, 1976).
The first part of this work is essentially a biography of Kingsley with particular
focus on the places he lived and visited, especially those in Devon. Most
of the second part is an examination of the places, again mainly in Devon,
mentioned in his works, particularly Westward Ho!, Two Years Ago
, and The Water-Babies.
Overview ; Devon ; Westward Ho! ; Two Years Ago ; The Water-Babies.
Coleman, Dorothy. “Rabelais and The
Water-Babies,” Modern Language Review Vol. 66, No. 3 (July 1971):
511-21.
Coleman examines the influence of Rabelais on Kingsley and, more specifically,
discusses Rabelaisian themes, echoes, and style in The Water-Babies
.
Rabelais
; The
Water-Babies.
Cosslett, Tess. “Child's Place in Nature: Talking
Animals in Victorian Children's Fiction,” Nineteenth-Century Contexts
Vol. 23, No. 4 (2001): 475-495.
In her article discussing the close link between children and animals in
the nineteenth century, Cosslett briefly considers the evolutionary model
employed by Kingsley in The Water-Babies.
Evolution;
The Water-Babies.
Cripps, Elizabeth A. “Lewis Carroll, and
Charles and Henry Kingsley,” Jabberwocky: The Journal of the Lewis Carroll
Society Vol. 9, No. 3 (Summer 1980): 59-66.
Cripps considers data relating to three topics in this article: Carroll's
knowledge of and interest in Kingsley and his works; Carroll's friendship
with Henry Kingsley; and the parallels between The Water-Babies and
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. With respect to the parallels,
Cripps cautions about talking of influences, declaring that it is quite likely
that two authors, themselves the product of similar backgrounds, should sometimes
use the same ideas when composing a children's story.
Carroll,
Lewis ; The Water-Babies
; Kingsley,
Henry .
Cunningham, Valentine. "Soiled Fairy: The
Water-Babies in its Time," Essays in Criticism Vol. XXXV, No.
2 (April 1985): 121-48.
Cunningham analyzes many of the causes and issues Kingsley treats with heat
and hysteria in The Water-Babies declaring that they frequently coincide
with the age’s heatedness and hysterias for these causes and issues.
Cunningham also discusses The Water-Babies’ various affinities to other
classic fairy-story motifs.
The Water-Babies
; Social
and Political Views ; Fairy-Story
Motifs ; Sanitation
; Cheap
Clothes and Nasty ; Glaucus;
Religion
.
Darton, F. J. Harvey. Children’s Books
in England: Five Centuries of Social Life. 3rd ed. (London: British Library,
1999): 252-255.
Darton considers that The Water-Babies and other of Kingsley’s writings
were flawed because of the author’s tendency to preach and to aim at a moral
purpose. However, he also praises Kingsley’s fine imagination and pure
simplicity.
The Water-Babies
; Children
; Didacticism
.
Fasick, Laura. “The Failure of Fatherhood:
Maleness and Its Discontents in Charles Kingsley,” Children's Literature
Association Quarterly Vol. 18, No. 3 (Fall 1993): 106-111.
Fasick declares that Kingsley's ideal of hyper-masculinity coexisted with
his recognition of the need of such moral qualities of humility, gentleness,
and patience. However, she contends that Kingsley, who tended to prize
the former ideal more highly, found it difficult to combine these two distinct
spectra and certainly failed to illustrate their union in his novels.
"Despite his homage to gentleness and patience, Kingley's real attraction
is apparently to the displays of power and aggression with which he adorns
his novels" (109).
Muscular
Christianity ; Manliness
; Fatherhood
; The
Water-Babies ; Westward-Ho!
.
Hawley, John C., S.J. “The Water Babies
as Catechetical Paradigm,” Children's Literature Association Quarterly
Vol. 14, No. 1 (Spring 1989): 19-21.
Hawley declares that The Water-Babies has two principle functions,
to entertain and to teach. The goal of education for Kingsley was ultimately
a religious one. Little Tom’s adventures, his evolutionary progress,
the lessons learned all end in religious salvation. Kingsley also uses
The Water-Babies to show that science and evolution can co-exist
with religion. “With the publication of this novel he offers his most
attractive, deceptively simple presentation of the argument that all purely
scientific explanations of reality would benefit by being placed in the larger
context of Christian revelation” (20).
The Water-Babies
; Religion
; Education
; Science
; Evolution
.
Hoagwood, Terence. “Kingsley's ‘Young and Old',”
Explicator Vol. 46, No. 4 (Summer 1988): 18-21.
Hoagwood analyzes Kingsley’s "Young and Old,” the short poem sung by the
kind schoolmistress at Vendale in The Water-Babies. He shows
that it is impossible for the song to be fully understood when first encountered
in the book. It is only later in the story that we recognize that the
song is the old dame’s lament for her son Grimes who left her. The
realization at the end of the novel that Grimes is her son “enables us to
revisit the lyric and to revise our understanding of its latent, private,
and even secret significance for the grieving old dame” (19).
‘Young and
Old’ ; Poetry
; The
Water-Babies .
Hodgson, Amanda. "Defining the Species:
Apes, Savages and Humans in Scientific and Literary Writing of the 1860s,"
Journal of Victorian Culture Vol. 4, No. 2 (Autumn 1999): 228-251.
Hodgson examines The Water-Babies, and particularly the characterization
of Tom, in the context of the contemporary desire to distinguish humans from
animals, especially apes, and the complementary efforts to define the distinctions
between white civilized Europeans and "savages". Her principal aim
is to examine the relationship of this children's story to contemporary scientific
theories on the nature of species as well as to compare the novel to Browning's
'Caliban upon Setebos'.
The Water-Babies
; Science ;
Evolution
; Huxley
; Characterization
in Novels .
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
.
Ison, Mary M. “Things Nobody Ever Heard
Of: Jessie Willcox Smith Draws the Water-Babies,” The Quarterly Journal
of the Library of Congress Vol. 39, No. 2 (1982): 90-101.
In this illustrated article Ison discusses the thirteen color drawings in
oil, charcoal, and pastel made by Jessie Willcox Smith for a 1916 edition
of The Water-Babies. She praises the illustrations declaring
that they “invest the water-babies with such reality as to provide credence
to Kingsley’s story” (101).
The Water-Babies
; Illustrations
; Smith, Jessie
Willcox .
Johnston, Arthur. "The Water-Babies
: Kingsley's Debt to Darwin,” English Vol. 12 (Autumn 1959): 215-19.
Johnston reviews the scientific content in a number of Kingsley’s works, in
particular the novels Yeast, Alton Locke, and Two Years Ago
. He considers that the influence of Darwinian thought and the theory
of evolution is particularly evident throughout The Water-Babies.
In fact, “The metamorphosis of Tom into a water-baby is not more wonderful
than the metamorphosis of the Origin of Species into The Water-Babies”
(219).
Science;
Darwin
; The
Water-Babies .
Labbe, Jacqueline M. “The Godhead Regendered
in Victorian Children’s Literature,” in Alice Jenkins and Juliet John (eds.)
Rereading Victorian Fiction (UK: Macmillan, 2000): 96-114.
Labbe argues that many texts of Victorian children’s literature substituted
the Wise Woman, the Fairy Godmother, for God the Father as the sage of choice.
Christianity, in short, was being feminized. In The Water-Babies
such “female deities” as Mother Carey, Mrs Doasyouwouldbedoneby, and Mrs
Bedonebyasyoudid with their female virtues of love, compassion and inherent
knowledge are more important than the more manly qualities in the divine
order. “In Kingsley’s version of the female Christ, he realigns Christ’s
gender, or rather his sex; this female Christ poses no threat to established
gender roles, but rather makes plain the femininity of Christ’s character”
(104).
Females ;
Religion
; Manliness
; The
Water-Babies .
Leavis, Q. D. “The Water Babies,” Children's
Literature in Education Vol. 23 (Winter 1976): 155-163.
Leavis regrets that the “excitingly written and splendidly imaginative Victorian
classic” The Water-Babies is no longer read by children (155).
She argues that its literary merits justify that it be kept in circulation
and suggests various ways it might be used in modern children’s education.
“The combination of drama, saga, nonsense, science, magic, poetry and comedy
Kingsley invented is irresistible and became a mode adopted by writers for
children in the later 19th and the 20th centuries with great success” (163).
The Water-Babies
; Sambourne,
Linley ; Illustrations
; Children
; Education
.
MacNeice, Louis. Varieties of Parable
(Cambridge: Cambridge at the University Press, 1965).
MacNeice discusses The Water-Babies, “one of the most uneven and ragbaggy
books in the language” (83). Though he enjoys the fantasy and escapism,
he is greatly critical of the digressions about contemporary disputes and
excessive moralizing. While Lewis Carroll also introduces aspects of
contemporary problems into his works, he does not allow them to interfere
with the story. However, Kingsley does, “and in a story which, potentially,
had many of the virtues of a myth it is a very serious fault” (83).
The Water-Babies
; Didacticism
.
Makman, Lisa Hermine. “Child’s Work is Child’s
Play: The Value of George MacDonald’s Diamond,” Children’s Literature
Association Quarterly Vol. 24, No. 3 (Fall 1999): 119-129.
Makman discusses Kingsley's treatment of the child in The Water-Babies,
as well as that of Lewis Carroll in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland,
in her examination of MacDonald's At the Back of the North Wind
. While the latter work, she declares, presents the child as the new
toy-child, depicting, after the cessation of child-labor, the gradual development
of the notion that children are essentially toys, Kingsley's novel has a
different orientation. "But while Kingsley emphasizes the mysterious
nature of the play-world and its inhabitants, MacDonald focuses more on the
mysterious nature of the child who can enter that world" (122).
The Water-Babies
; MacDonald,
George ; Children
; Carroll,
Lewis .
Manlove, C. N. “Charles
Kingsley (1819-75) and The Water-Babies,” in his Modern Fantasy:
Five Studies (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1975): 13-54.
Manlove relates this examination of the major
themes, theories, and stylistic devices of The Water-Babies to Kingsley's
wider views. He contends that we should be tentative about categorically
assigning a specific idea to Kingsley. The one constant is the protean
nature, the multiplicity, the diversity, the volatility, and uncertainty of
his thought. Kingsley's many contradictions have "a natural home" in The
Water-Babies (17). Manlove believes that the split in Kingsley's
depiction of Tom's character not only lies at the root of the difficulties
in The Water-Babies and Kingsley's other works but also mirrors the
manifest divisions in Kingsley's own personality and thought, for example
the divide between Kingsley the materialist and the mystic, between Kingsley
as scientist and Christian. Manlove concludes that "Kingsley was not more
of a materialist than a mystic: rather he was each with divided faculties.
About the only thing that unites the dualism in himself and his work is his
vigour" (53).
The Water-Babies
; Dualism in Kingsley
; Natural
Theology .
Manlove, Colin. “Charles
Kingsley, H. G. Wells, and the Machine in Victorian Fiction,” Nineteenth-Century
Literature Vol. 48, No. 2 (Sept. 1993): 212-239.
Manlove declares that apart from Samuel Butler in his Erehwon, the
only important Victorian writers who focus on the central role the machine
plays in life and nature are H. G. Wells, in The Time Machine and
The War of the Worlds, and Kingsley, in The Water-Babies
. He argues that though The Water-Babies may appear to be a
marine pastoral, machines and engines are mentioned over and over again and
the animals themselves are treated as in part machines. He considers
that The Water-Babies reflects Kingsley's view that the whole order
of nature functions as one great engine. In fact, the content and the
style of the novel renders it a type of organic engine itself. "
The Water-Babies is an amazing diversity of contexts, characters, and
apparent irrelevancies, all bound together by secret principles that make
it a machine without being a monolithic one -- indeed, it manages to fuse
all the variety that Kingsley saw in nature with the purposiveness of the
engine."
Dickens ;
Machine,
The ; The Water-Babies
.
Manlove, Colin. “MacDonald and Kingsley:
A Victorian Contrast” in William Raeper (ed.) The Gold Thread: Essays
on George MacDonald (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1990): 140-162.
In this article Manlove compares and contrasts the characters, the views,
and the writings of Kingsley and George MacDonald, who, he declares were
arguably the only two significant writers of Christian fantasy in the Victorian
period. Generally, Kingsley, whose belief and involvement in science were
much greater than MacDonald's, places nature first while MacDonald chooses
"supernature." Kingsley's God is so identifiable with the works of
His creation that He is only distinguishable from them by faith. The
God of MacDonald, who has a stronger sense of the supernatural and the mystical,
is invariably a person, whereas for Kingsley He is a force. Nevertheless,
Manlove argues that the two writers for all their differences share a particular
common bond, namely "that they chose, alone and at almost the same time in
the nineteenth century, to put what they could of the divine presence in
the fairy tale" (159).
MacDonald,
George ; Religion
; Science
; The
Water-Babies .
Merrill, Lynn L. “Charles Kingsley and the Wonders
of the Shore,” in her The Romance of Victorian Natural History (New
York; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989).
This chapter considers Kingsley the naturalist and especially his treatment
of natural history in Glaucus; or, the Wonders of the Shore and to
a lesser extent in The Water-Babies. Merrill shows that Kingsley was
a serious and knowledgeable student of natural history and science and that
his views in these areas had distinct influence on his views in such other
areas as, for example, religion.
Glaucus;
Natural
History ; Science ;
The Water-Babies
; Nature.
Muller, Charles H. “The Water Babies
: Moral Lessons for Children.” UNISA English Studies Vol. 24, No. 1
(1986): 12-17.
Muller discusses the numerous biblical and moral lessons in The Water-Babies
and the work’s patent allegorical and didactic significance. However, he
stresses that the fable’s major aim is to assert God’s abiding love and the
ever presence of divine providence.
The Water-Babies
; Moral Lessons
; Children
; Religion
.
Ostry, Elaine. “Magical Growth and Moral Lessons;
or, How the Conduct Book Informed Victorian and Edwardian Children's Fantasy,”
Lion and the Unicorn: A Critical Journal of Children's Literature
Vol. 27, No. 1 (January 2003): 27-56.
Ostry argues that the seemingly opposite genres, conduct books and fantasies,
in fact intersect when treating the topic of maturity. For example, Kingsley
in The Water-Babies uses the structure and themes of conduct books
when describing little Tom’s fantastical and magical physical growth even
though he denigrates this literary form. In particular, the cautionary, didactic
stories told to Tom owe much to the child raising techniques and attitudes
advocated in the conduct books.
The Water-Babies
; Didacticism.
Paget, Stephen. “The Water-Babies.” 102-116 in
I Have Reason to Believe. London: Macmillan, 1921.
This is a personal laudatory appreciation of The Water-Babies. Though admitting
that it is not a book for children because of its numerous digressions, Paget
declares “I would not give my copy of the Water-Babies for a wilderness of
mad hatters” (105).
The Water-Babies.
Paradis, James G.
“Satire and Science in Victorian Culture,” in Bernard Lightman (ed.) Victorian
Science in Context (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997): 143-175.
Paradis points out that though Kingsley was a
strong advocate of the scientific efforts of the likes of Lyell, Darwin, and
Huxley, he also eagerly sought a post-Darwinian equivalent to natural theology.
Kingsley considered that Victorian science was inadequate in itself as a
philosophy of life and caricatured its one-sided scientific naturalist approach
in The Water-Babies.
Science ;
Religion
; Natural
Theology ; The Water-Babies
.
Prickett, Stephen. “Adults in Allegory
Land: Kingsley and MacDonald,” in his Victorian Fantasy (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1979): 150-197.
Prickett provides a lengthy examination of The Water-Babies comparing
and contrasting it with several allegorical fantasies of George MacDonald.
Among other topics, he discusses the extent to which Kingsley was influenced
by Wordsworth regarding his view of nature and his attitude to childhood,
as well as by Rabelais. He also examines Platonism, religion, evolution,
and the nature of allegory in The Water-Babies. Prickett declares
that Kingsley and MacDonald have quite distinct mental sets. “Kingsley,
the botanist, marine biologist and historian is fascinated by every minute
detail of this world; ‘other’ worlds are constructs – telling us yet more
about this. MacDonald is a temperamental Platonist, only interested
in the surface of this world for the news it gives him of another, hidden
reality, perceived, as it were, through a glass darkly” (193).
The Water-Babies
; MacDonald,
George ; Rabelais
; Wordsworth
; Nature
; Children
; Religion
; Plato ;
Evolution
.
Rapple, Brendan A. "Charles Kingsley," in Dictionary
of Literary Biography, Volume 163: British Children's Writers, 1800-1880.
Edited by Meena Khorana (Detroit: Gale 1996): 136-147.
Following 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 writings, in this case his works for children. A short secondary
bibliography is appended. Several illustrations are also provided.
Rapple’s assessment: “Tastes change, and it is not surprising that modern
children eschew works intended for their Victorian ancestors. The
Heroes has been supplanted by other retellings of the Greek tales; the
science of Glaucus and Madam How and Lady Why no longer has
appeal, and today's youth would reject the books’ pervasive social commentary,
sermonizing, and didacticism. Nor is Westward Ho! read much
by present-day youngsters, though it is still available in a children's edition.
The significant exception has been the consistently high readership, especially
in the United Kingdom, for The Water-Babies, of which there are probably
more editions, adaptations, and abridgements in print today than in Kingsley's
own time. The work’s simplicity, brilliant fantasy, and affection for
the young, despite its frequent preaching, still capture the devotion of
children. It is The Water-Babies, though its author would never
have foretold it, that will ensure Kingsley a high rank in the history of
children's literature” (146).
Overview
; Children
; Glaucus
; Westward
Ho! ; Heroes,
The ; The Water-Babies
; Hereward
the Wake ; Madam How and
Lady Why .
Rapple, Brendan. “The Motif of Water in
Charles Kingsley's The Water-Babies,” University of Mississippi
Studies in English Vol. XI-XII (1993-1995): 259-71.
Kingsley uses the motif of water in The Water-Babies to preach the
virtues of bathing and washing. Cleaning the body and the inculcation
of good sanitary habits is also an effective method of preventing disease.
In addition, washing with water, preferably cold water, helps the attainment
of moral rectitude. “However, the depiction of water as a cleansing
agent may also be viewed in an allegorical sense, namely as purifying morally
and spiritually both the individual Tom as well as the collective society.
Only after Tom's baptismal washing and consequent Christian rebirth does his
deeply felt wish ‘I must be clean, I must be clean’ begin to be truly satisfied.
Only after an analogous allegorical cleansing can any genuine regeneration
of England occur” (269).
The Water-Babies
; Water Motif
; Cleanliness
; Sanitation
; Religion
; Social
and Political Views .
Stevenson, Deborah. “Sentiment and Significance:
The Impossibility of Recovery in the Children's Literature Canon or, The Drowning
of The Water Babies,” The Lion and the Unicorn Vol. 21, No.
1 (1997): 112-130.
Stevenson attempts to define the nature of the canon in children’s literature
and posits two distinct canons. The most important one is the canon
of sentiment, i.e. the popular canon. On the other hand, there is the
academic canon of significance which may rediscover an older work of children’s
literature for academic purposes but which will not give it back its place
in the canon of sentiment. The Water-Babies, Stevenson argues,
certainly resides in the canon of significance but has less and less place
in the popular canon of sentiment. “Within The Water-Babies,
Tom found redemption and new life, but he must content himself with that
internal promise; no matter what efforts scholars may make to rescue it,
the book itself is sliding irrevocably below the waves" (128).
The Water-Babies
; Children
.
Stolzenback, Mary M. “The Water Babies
: An Appreciation,” Mythlore Vol. 8, No. 2 (1981): 20
Praises the story of The Water-Babies and declares that it still holds
interest for students of mythopoeic fiction.
The Water-Babies
.
Tanner, Tony. “Mountains and Depths--An
Approach to Nineteenth-century Dualism,” Review of English Literature
Vol. III (October 1962): 51-61.
Tanner examines the significance of the roles of cleanliness and dirt in
The Water-Babies. This work has dual spheres of truth.
“On the one hand a life debased, dirty and corrupting, on the other hand a
slightly fantastic realm in which many of the values cherished by the Victorian
mind are operative – and the two worlds are separate and in a state of hostile
tension” (55).
The Water-Babies
; Cleanliness
.
Townsend, John Rowe. Written for Children:
An Outline of English-language Children's Literature (New York: Lippincott,
1983; first published 1965): 94-100.
Townsend discusses Kingsley as a writer of children’s literature, paying particular
attention to The Water-Babies. This work, especially the earlier
chapters, though powerful was imperfect mainly due to its plentiful “dross”.
Townsend considers this “marred masterpiece” (100) one of the uncommon instances
of children’s books when an edited version is preferable to the original.
The Water-Babies
; Children
.
Uffelman, Larry, and Patrick Scott. “Kingsley's
Serial Novels, II: The Water-Babies,” Victorian Periodicals Review
Vol. XIX, No. 4 (Winter 1986): 122-131.
Uffelman and Scott, utilizing the Macmillan archive in the British Library,
examine the revision into book form of The Water-Babies, first published
serially from August 1862 to March 1863 in eight monthly episodes in Macmillan’s
Magazine. The revisions were extensive and included a softening
of style and mood from the adult oriented text in Macmillan’s Magazine
to one more suitable for children, a tempering of the serial version’s anti-Americanism,
and, most important, “the systematic introduction of a new character, the
old Irishwoman, to link together the real world of the opening with the spiritual
and fantasy world of the Water-Babies” (122).
The Water-Babies
; Publication
; Macmillan’s
Magazine ; Anti-Americanism
.
Wallace, Jo-Ann “De-Scribing The Water-Babies
: ‘The Child’ in Post-Colonial Theory,” in Chris Tiffin and Alan Lawson (eds.)
De-Scribing Empire: Post-colonialism and Textuality (London and
New York: Routledge, 1994): 171-184.
Wallace argues that whereas the child in The Water-Babies is the center
of educational, social reform and imperialist debate, he is depoliticized
in the 1984 abridged Puffin Classics edition and repoliticized in Jamaica
Kincaid’s 1983 short story ‘Wingless’. The Puffin edition, mirroring
post-colonialist guilt, “is paradigmatic of ‘the West’s’ continuing and contradictory
investment in a vision of childhood as a universal unmarked by class,
place, or history”. However, ‘Wingless’, “disallows such a disavowal
of historical and geographical specificity by returning both the text of
The Water-Babies and the child reader to colonialist history”
(182).
The Water-Babies
; Kincaid,
Jamaica ; Imperialism
; Colonialism
; Children
.
Walsh, Susan A. “Darling Mothers, Devilish
Queens: The Divided Woman in Victorian Fantasy,” The Victorian Newsletter
No. 72 (Fall 1987): 32-36.
Walsh discusses the treatment of women in The Water-Babies. Mrs
Doasyouwouldbedoneby, a nurturing spirit, is kindness and gentleness personified
and loved by all babies. She even “suffers the little children to come
to her in a somewhat cloying version of the New Testament invitation” (33).
On the other hand, Mrs Bedonebyasyoudid, though compassionate, has the task
of being strict and tough. She enforces morals and provides retribution
to those who don’t measure up to proper high standards. The enigmatic
Mother Carey combines the soft kindness of Mrs Doasyouwouldbedoneby and the
ancient austerity of Mrs Bedonebyasyoudid. Though amazingly fertile
and fecund, she “suggests a kind of spontaneous, ceaseless birth that is
also removed and static” (33). Accordingly, declares Walsh, one may
easily discern “in these dual personifications the division perceived by
countless Romantic and Victorian writers within the female figure itself,
as gentle monitress on the one hand, and sleepless moral enforcer on the
other” (33).
The Water-Babies
; Females .
Wheeler, Michael. The Old Enemies: Catholic
and Protestant in Nineteenth-Century English Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2006.
Wheeler’s book analyzes the cultural and religious conflicts and divisions
between Catholics and Protestants in Britain from the Reformation through
the nineteenth century. Wheeler is particularly interested in how writers
and other intellectuals interpreted the religious debates. He considers Kingsley’s
views, especially as revealed in Hypatia and Westward Ho! A
major focus of Hypatia is the vehement criticism of Catholic martyrology.
Wheeler contends that though Kingsley in his role of theologian and scientist
was a seeker of truth, as a novelist and historian in Hypatia he was
more intent on distorting ecclesiastical history to support what he considered
a higher truth, the truth of Protestantism as against the lies of Catholicism.
Religion;
Catholicism;
Hypatia;
The Water-Babies.
Wood, Naomi. “(Em)bracing Icy Mothers: Ideology, Identity,
and Environment in Children’s Fantasy.” 198-214 in Wild Things: Children’s
Culture and Ecocriticism, edited by Sidney I. Dobrin and Kenneth Byron
Kidd. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2004.
Wood discusses the depiction by Kingsley of the various maternal Northern
nature goddesses in The Water-Babies. Though emanating from the icy
inhospitable North, these females accentuate the salutary physical and moral
nature of cold, especially cold water. The frozen North is actually a place
of life and the goddesses are life-giving. Even if their embrace results
in the final cold of death, they lead children to a spiritual truer life.
The Water-Babies;
Females;
North.
Wood, Naomi. “A (Sea) Green
Victorian: Charles Kingsley and the The Water-Babies,” Lion
and the Unicorn Vol. 19, No. 2 (1995): 233-52.
Wood argues that Kingsley's naturalism, especially
as depicted in The Water-Babies, may be considered as proto-environmentalism.
Kingsley throughout this tale blames his contemporaries' too ready and uncritical
embracing of machinery and industry as responsible for Victorian England's
pervasive pollution. He contrasts this man-made wastefulness with nature's
productive ways which are invariably economical, pleasurable, and clean.
Wood considers that The Water-Babies anticipates certain contemporary
environmentalist agendas and, remaining "a rich and many-layered commentary
on the biological and metaphorical relationship between humans and their
environment," may still be a relevant environmentalist tract (249).
The Water-Babies
; Environmentalism
; Malthus
.
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