Workers in the Dawn
Workers in the Dawn is a novel by George Gissing, which was originally published in three volumes in 1880. It was the first of Gissing's published novels, although he had been working on another prior to this. The work focuses on the unhappy marriage of Arthur Golding, a rising artist from a poor background, and Carrie Mitchell, a prostitute. This plot was partly based on Gissing's negative experiences of marriage to his first wife. It also was designed to serve the function of political polemic, highlighting social issues that Gissing felt strongly about. Reviews of the novel generally recognised some potential in the author, but were critical of Workers in the Dawn. After reading the first known published review in the Athenaeum, Gissing was driven to describe critics as "unprincipled vagabonds".
First edition title page | |
Author | George Gissing |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Publisher | Remington |
Publication date | 1880 |
Plot
Arthur Golding grows up in poverty in London, and is orphaned at the age of eight. With the help of others, he succeeds in leaving this life behind, gains an education and embarks on a career as an artist. He also meets and marries Helen Norman. Arthur later meets a prostitute named Carrie Mitchell and marries her. This second marriage is an unhappy one, with Carrie and Arthur eventually separating due to her drunkenness and unsavoury associations.
After inheriting some money from Helen Norman's father, Arthur attempts to renew his marriage to Helen, although this does not last long when Helen finds out about Arthur's marriage to Carrie. Arthur is driven to commit suicide by jumping over Niagara Falls.
Background and publication
Although Workers in the Dawn is the first of Gissing's published novels, it was not his first attempt at writing one. He had worked on another novel previously, but this unknown work was not accepted by any publishers, and has not survived.[1] The writing of Workers in the Dawn was completed in about a year,[2] and is the longest of Gissing's novels, with over 280,000 words across three volumes.[3] The completion of the work was largely the result of encouragement and support from his friend Eduard Bertz.[4] Writing to a friend in Germany, Bertz described himself as "in a way...the begetter of the book".[5]
The novel is partly based on Gissing's own experiences of an unhappy marriage, to his first wife Marianne Helen Harrison.[6] As well as this semi-autobiographical element, Gissing intended the book to have a social message. In a letter to his brother Algernon after publication, Gissing described the work as an "attack upon certain features of our present religious and social life which to me appear highly condemnable", particularly the "criminal negligence of governments". As an author, he saw himself as "a mouthpiece of the Radical party", concluding that "It is not a book for women and children, but for thinking and struggling men."[7]
The original working title of the novel was Far Far Away, in reference to a song that appears in the novel, but the title was changed to Workers in the Dawn before publication.[8] Gissing explained in a letter to Algernon that he had chosen this latter title because the "principal characters are earnest young people striving for improvement in, as it were, the dawn of a new phase of our civilization".[9]
Gissing first offered it to a publisher in November 1879, but he faced rejection from a number of publishing firms, including Smith and Elder, Chatto and Windus and C. Kegan Paul. Eventually, he decided to publish a run of 277 copies of the novel at his own expense, through Remington and Company. This project cost him £125, with the contract demanding payment of £50 upfront, £40 after the printing of the first two volumes and £35 after the publication of the third. Under the agreement of Remington, two-thirds of any profit would go to the author.[10] In the end, Gissing's income from Remington was sixteen shillings.[11]
Later, when three-volume novels were less fashionable, Gissing worked on shorter revisions of his works, including Workers in the Dawn. He outlined changes in his own copy of the novel,[12] but this revision was not completed.[13]
Reception
Contemporary reviews generally acknowledged that there were positive aspects of the novel, but on the whole were critical of it. The first known review to appear was an anonymous piece in the Athenaeum. The reviewer considered Gissing to have "considerable readiness and fluency of style" and also praised the author for his graphically realistic depiction of the poor. However, he accused Gissing of making a mistake common among "polemical novelists", of taking away from the novel's seriousness by making the negative characterisations of the novel "so very grotesque". The reviewer also commented that Gissing was "not quite a master of...the Queen's English".[14] In The Academy, George Saintsbury was also unconvinced by the characterisations of the "wicked" upper classes, but he remarked positively on Gissing's sincerity, imagination and adventurousness.[15]
The Graphic was critical of many aspects of the work, with the reviewer stating that he finished reading it with a feeling of "perplexity" and "weariness". He further stated that "the book is without plot", showing "little evidence of literary skill". He suggested that the time and effort put into writing it "might well have been diverted to another channel".[16] The Examiner suggested that its shortcomings meant that it would have been better if the novel had never been published, as "it is so very suggestive of what he might have done, and has not done; of what he might have avoided, and has not avoided".[17]
The publication of the review in the Athenaeum prompted Gissing, in a letter to Algernon, to describe critics as "unprincipled vagabonds". He criticised this particular reviewer for not understanding the "spirit of [the] book" and for judging it as a "mere polemical pamphlet, and not a work of art". However, he was flattered that his novel had received such a long critique in the magazine and concluded that overall it was "an attractive review".[18]
References
- Citations
- Korg, George Gissing, p. 25.
- Korg, George Gissing, p. 32.
- Law, "'A vile way of publishing'", p. 82.
- Korg, George Gissing, p. 32.
- Quoted in Young, "George Gissing's friendship", p. 230.
- Korg, George Gissing, pp. 34-35.
- Quoted in Korg, George Gissing, p. 28.
- Korg, George Gissing, p. 28.
- Korg, "Division of purpose", p. 325.
- Korg, George Gissing, p. 32.
- Korg, George Gissing, p. 155.
- Wolff, "Gissing's revision", p. 42.
- Korg, George Gissing, p. 180.
- Coustillas, George Gissing, pp. 51-52.
- Coustillas, George Gissing, p. 56.
- "New novels". The Graphic. 19 June 1880.
- "Novels". The Examiner. 17 July 1880.
- Coustillas, George Gissing, p. 51.
- Bibliography
- Pierre Coustillas (5 March 1996). George Gissing: The Critical Heritage. Psychology Press. pp. 49–. ISBN 978-0-415-13468-2. Retrieved 12 June 2012.
- Korg, Jacob (1975). George Gissing: A Critical Biography. Taylor & Francis.
- Korg, Jacob (June 1955). "Division of purpose in George Gissing". PMLA. 70 (3): 323–336. doi:10.2307/460041. JSTOR 460041.
- Law, Graham (2007). ""A Vile Way of Publishing": Gissing and Serials". Victorian Review. 33 (1): 82–83. JSTOR 27793626.
- Wolff, Joseph J. (June 1953). "Gissing's revision of "The Unclassed"". Nineteenth-Century Fiction. 8 (1). doi:10.2307/3044275. ISSN 0891-9356. JSTOR 3044275.
- Young, Arthur C. (December 1958). "George Gissing's friendship with Eduard Bertz". Nineteenth-Century Fiction. 13 (3): 227–237. doi:10.1525/ncl.1958.13.3.99p0390x. ISSN 0891-9356. JSTOR 3044381.