CliffsNotes on

Bleak House

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About the Author

About the Novel

Introduction
A Brief Synopsis
List of Characters

Summaries and Commentaries

Chapter 1: In Chancery
Chapter 2: In Fashion
Chapter 3: A Process
Chapter 4: Telescopic Philanthropy
Chapter 5: A Morning Adventure
Chapter 6: Quite at Home
Chapter 7: The Ghost's Walk
Chapter 8: Covering a Multitude of Sins
Chapter 9: Signs and Tokens
Chapters 10 & 11: The Law Writer & Our Dead Brother
Chapter 12: On the Watch
Chapter 13: Esther's Narrative
Chapter 14: Deportment
Chapter 15: Bell Yard
Chapter 16: Tom-all-Alone's
Chapter 17: Esther's Narrative
Chapter 18: Lady Dedlock
Chapter 19: Moving On
Chapters 20 & 21: A New Lodger & The Smallweed Family
Chapter 22: Mr. Bucket
Chapter 23: Esther's Narrative
Chapter 24: An Appeal Case
Chapter 25: Mrs. Snagsby Sees It All
Chapter 26: Sharpshooters
Chapter 27: More Old Soldiers Than One
Chapter 28: The Ironmaster
Chapter 29: The Young Man
Chapter 30: Esther's Narrative
Chapter 31: Nurse and Patient
Chapter 32: The Appointed Time
Chapter 33: Interlopers
Chapter 34: A Turn of the Screw
Chapter 35: Esther's Narrative
Chapter 36: Chesney Wold
Chapter 37: Jarndyce and Jarndyce
Chapter 38: A Struggle
Chapter 39: Attorney and Client
Chapter 40: National and Domestic
Chapter 41: In Mr. Tulkinghorn's Room
Chapter 42: In Mr. Tulkinghorn's Chambers
Chapter 43: Esther's Narrative
Chapter 44: The Letter and the Answer
Chapter 45: In Trust
Chapter 46: Stop Him!
Chapter 47: Jo's Will
Chapter 48: Closing In
Chapter 49: Dutiful Friendship
Chapter 50: Esther's Narrative
Chapter 51: Enlightened
Chapter 52: Obstinacy
Chapters 53 & 54: The Track & Springing a Mine
Chapter 55: Flight
Chapter 56: Pursuit
Chapter 57: Esther's Narrative
Chapter 58: A Wintry Day and Night
Chapter 59: Esther's Narrative
Chapter 60: Perspective
Chapter 61: A Discovery
Chapter 62: Another Discovery
Chapter 63: Steel and Iron
Chapter 64: Esther's Narrative
Chapters 65 & 66: Beginning in the World & Down in Lincolnshire
Chapter 67: The Close of Esther's Narrative

Character Analyses

Lady Dedlock
Esther Summerson
John Jarndyce
Mr. Tulkinghorn
Richard Carstone
Ada Clare
Sir Leicester Dedlock

Critical Essays

Characterization
Theme
Technique and Style
Plot
Setting
The Fog
Symbolism

Study Help

Quiz
Essay Topics And Review Questions

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Critical Essays

Symbolism

Themes or motifs are often presented through symbols—that is, images used in such a way as to suggest a meaning beyond the physical facts of the images themselves.

Two quite effective symbols in Bleak House are the fog and "the Roman" who points down from Mr. Tulkinghorn's ceiling and symbolizes the theme of retribution, of evil ultimately bringing ruin upon itself.

Skillfully handled, symbolism adds both impact and unity to a literary work—or, for that matter, to any piece of writing. It has the impact (also called "power") of the concrete, and it helps unify because it repeats in a different form the motifs that are being presented through plot and character portrayal. Symbolism is commonly called a "device" or "technique," but these terms are somewhat misleading because they imply conscious manipulation by the author and also imply that effective symbolism is external and might be learned by anyone in a classroom or from an instruction manual on how to write. At its best, symbolism comes straight out of the individual writer's unconscious artistry: It is instinctive and individual and often a mark of genius.

Symbols are often used to foreshadow later events in a story.

In turn, the "technique" of foreshadowing lends unity to the story because it prepares us by dealing with things that will be developed later on. The Bleak House fog is a complex symbol that foreshadows several motifs of importance. Richard Carstone, for example, gradually becomes "lost," unable to "see," in the mental and spiritual fog generated by the High Court of Chancery.


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