[Conclusion
in English is in the bottom of this post]
Andai pada
musim gugur 1832 itu seorang penulis muda—dengan gemetar ketakutan—tidak jadi
memasukkan naskah tulisannya ke kotak surat gelap di sebuah kantor, dan andai
sang Editor yang kemudian membacanya tidak kemudian menerbitkannya di The
Monthly Magazine dengan judul ‘A Dinner
At Poplar Walk’, maka dunia mungkin takkan pernah menikmati karya-karya menawan
seorang Charles Dickens. Ya, penulis muda yang kuceritakan tadi adalah Charles
Dickens. Dan dari naskah awal yang diterbitkan itu, mengalirlah pesanan tulisan
berupa sketsa jurnalistik yang mengisi The Monthly Magazine secara berkala.
Saat itu sang penulis menggunakan nama pena “Boz”. Di kemudian hari,
sketsa-sketsa Boz akhirnya diterbitkan sebagai buku yang aku review ini:
Sketches by Boz.
Sketches byBoz adalah cerita-cerita pendek yang merupakan ilustrasi dari hasil observasi
Charles Dickens terhadap denyut kehidupan kota London saat itu (jaman
Victoria), mulai tahun 1833 hingga 1836. Dickens menulis tentang banyak hal,
dari suasana jalanan kota London dari pagi hingga malam hari, tempat-tempat
hiburan yang diminati penduduk London, toko-toko, kebiasaan-kebiasaan
orang-orangnya, sampai ke masalah-masalah yang sepele maupun serius yang sering
mereka hadapi. Semuanya ia tuliskan dengan gayanya yang khas, kadang lucu yang
sinis, kadang juga lucu yang membuatku sungguh-sungguh terbahak.
Membaca
Skecthes by Boz kita jadi seolah hidup juga di London abad 19. Kita jadi
mengenal tipe dan cara pandang orang-orang saat itu, gaya berbicara mereka,
singkatnya budaya mereka. Inilah yang paling menarik dari buku ini, karena
tidak gampang dengan sabar melahap 60 cerita pendek dengan gaya bertutur
Dickens yang penuh kalimat-kalimat panjang. Dan salah satu kelemahanku adalah
selalu tidak sabar membaca cerita pendek, sehingga kenikmatan membaca buku ini
menjadi sedikit berkurang. Yang jelas, Sketches by Boz menawarkan perkenalan
pertama pada karya Charles Dickens, karena dari variasi cerpen-cerpen di buku
ini, kita akan menemukan humor sinis yang menyindir keabsurdan sosial jaman
itu, dan melankoli dalam ketidakadilan yang kelak menjadi tema utama
karya-karya besar Dickens berikutnya.
Tiga
setengah bintang untuk Boz!
Conclusion:
Being his
earliest work, Sketches by Boz has already shown Dickens’ witticisms and
satires that we would find later in most of his works. Consisting of 60 short
stories, Boz is a combination of literary journalisms and fictional stories, as
the result of Dickens’ thorough observation of his surroundings. Sketches by
Boz was first published as installments in The Monthly Magazine from 1833 to
1836. Later on, the sketches were sorted and categorized under four big parts: Our Parish, Scenes, Characters, and Tales, to be made into a book. Outside
the four parts, there are three more collections of sketches, and the book is
finally closed with Familiar Epistle From
A Parent To A Child, which is—no doubt—something Dickens wrote for one of
his children. So far, the epistle is one of my favorites from all sketches.
The tale of The Black Veil—which is the most
touching of all stories—is also one of my favorites. It depicted the faith of a
widow after her son hanged for a crime he committed. The touching part is when
the young surgeon who attained the case, being a generous and kind hearted
fellow, was willingly to take care of the widow now and then, despite of his
unfruitful business. The widow on the other hand, always prayed heartily for
her young supporter, that at the end her prayers was heard by the Heaven and
resulting a good business for the young surgeon in return. A tale of love
always touches my heart!
The most
intriguing tale is perhaps The Drunkard’s
Death. It’s about a drunkard who neglected everything in his life for
drinking. Dickens wanted to speak about the risk of alcohol which can lead men
and women into poverty and death. This tale is very similar to Emile Zola’s
L’Assommoir, although Dickens wrote it more on the melancholy aspect, rather
than its brutality as depicted by Zola. It’s interesting to see two different
ways of writing, from two great authors, for the same topic at the same era.
But of course, in this case, my winner is Zola.
I think the
main strong point of this book is Dickens’ thorough observation, especially on
human’s character. I am only imagining, if I was being in a dinner party where
Dickens was also invited; would I become his observation object too? And if I
happened to subscribe The Monthly Magazine, would I find myself illustrated on
one of his sketches few days after the party? What would he write of me? That’d
be interested! But of course I wouldn’t know whether Dickens was going to write
good things or bad things about me. Anyhow, I think, people cannot get angry
with him for writing about them. In worst cases, I think they would only put
sour smiles on their lips. Or it is most likely that they would laugh heartily
on their own sketches. Like Dickens said in ‘The Pantomime of Life’: “A
pantomime is to us a mirror of life; nay more, we maintain that it is so to
audiences generally, although they are not aware of it, and that this very
circumstance is the secret cause of their amusement and delight.” For
people who lived at that certain time, Sketches by Boz is also a mirror of
their own everyday life, either they were aware of it or—most likely—not. Boz
was like a pantomime, where people can see and laugh at themselves. And that’s why
they love Boz. Boz was something new and different than any other Victorian
readings when it is first published. And the success of Boz then brought
further success for Charles Dickens, until today!
Three and a
half stars for Boz, as although it’s a unique work, Sketches by Boz is
sometimes boring. Anthologies have not been my favorite, so maybe this is why I
cannot put a high appreciation on Boz. It is good but unfortunately flat…
Title:
Sketches by Boz
Author:
Charles Dickens
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Published:
1987
Pages: 688
*This is my 2nd review for The Classic Bribe 2012*
I started reading Dickens with The Pickwick Papers. Maybe I should go back and read this to round out my knowledge of his works. Good for your for sticking with this.
ReplyDeleteIt's always interesting to read the earliest work of great authors, as from that we can learn how they had developed to their masterpieces. Thanks for the visit Donna, I like to meet people who also love and appreciate Dickens! :)
DeleteI adore Dickens and have put of reading this, his earliest work, for far too long. I have blogged about him a few times and each time go through his books. Thank you for the great post.
ReplyDeleteDickens has written many books for us, that I think we can enjoy them in many years, not mentioning the re-read. So in the end it's like we develop together with Dickens (especially if we read his books in chronology). How lovely that would be.. :). Thanks Steph, for your visit..
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