Could this sweet face be that of the original for Estella? After finishing Johnson's chapter on Dickens's ultimately heartbreaking relationship with Maria Beadnell I find myself asking that question.
Charles Dickens met Maria Beadnell when he was 17 years old. He got along famously with Maria's family from the start. He and all the Beadnell girls had a marvelous time together, laughing and singing and generally carrying on as much as Victorian teenagers were allowed. Charles fell head over heels for the lovely Maria, and he fell hard. She, in turn, was apparently smitten with him, as well. Either that or she played the part very convincingly.
Unfortunately for him, Charles wasn't a good catch. As a lowly court reporter with no clear expectations for more on the horizon, he was not at all the sort of man the Beadnells wanted to see their daughter marry. After the Beadnells found out John Dickens had been incarcerated in Marshalsea for a time that was apparently the last nail in that coffin. The Beadnell pater sent Maria packing to the continent, to cool things off a little. When she returned Maria was a different sort of girl. She was cold and aloof to Charles, making him feel very hurt and puzzled. Though he'd nursed his flame for her the entire time she was away, she'd apparently moved beyond him. After a few attempts to reconcile, Charles ultimately had to give up his hopes for Maria. He slunk away, heartbroken.
Cold, aloof, beautiful and trifling with a man's affections. Sounds like Estella to me. Though it's rash to jump to conclusions, I would really not be surprised to think this defining episode in his life ultimately made it into Dickens's fiction. Was Dickens thinking of Maria when he wrote Great Expectations? Hopefully I'll find an answer to that somewhere.
do they every tell if she was born
Posted by: samantha | October 24, 2009 at 01:27 PM
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Posted by: Anna | May 27, 2009 at 05:57 AM
Maybe Maria was pregnant to Charles and 'went away for schooling' to have the baby which...
Beadnell eh....
I don't think so. This kind of tender (seldom seen = true) love usually doesn't lead to explicit sexual activity in the first place/before marriage.
See Erich Fromm: The Art of Loving.
Posted by: Chris | October 02, 2008 at 04:53 PM
Maybe Maria was pregnant to Charles and 'went away for schooling' to have the baby which, apparently, was the euphemism for 'schooling' in those days. Maybe that illegitimate child of Charles had offsprings that brought about a whole new branch of Beadnell's born from the love between Maria and Charles. Thats the story in our family anyhow!!
Posted by: Steve Beadnell | August 25, 2008 at 10:29 AM
Maybe Maria was pregnant to Charles and 'went away for schooling' to have the baby which, apparently, was the euphemism for 'schooling' in those days. Maybe that illegitimate child of Charles had offsprings that brought about a whole new branch of Beadnell's born from the love between Maria and Charles. Thats the story in our family anyhow!!
Posted by: Steve Beadnell | August 25, 2008 at 10:28 AM
I know! I am currently writing a report on the same issue.
Posted by: Kyt Regent | May 16, 2008 at 12:56 PM
I sooo agree with you about the charcter of Estella. I too believe that Dicken's love for Maria Beadnell found its way into Great Expectations. However that is terribly rude of me not to announce myself first, before launching into Dickens mode. I am a university student studying literature at York St John College, in the UK, on my final year. Funnily enough at the moment i'm studying Great Expectations for an assignment.
Posted by: Simon | October 17, 2007 at 06:50 AM