Ezra Jennings

Ezra Jennings is a character, and part-narrator, in Wilkie Collins' 1868 novel The Moonstone.

Ill-favoured, and of ill repute, he is ultimately responsible for solving the mystery of the Moonstone's theft, and so for reuniting the hero with the heroine, Rachel Verinder.

Origins

Walking with Dickens in the Lake District, Collins sprained his ankle, and was much struck by the appearance of the doctor's assistant treating him: "a startling object to look at, with his colourless face, his sunken cheeks, his wild black eyes, and his long black hair".[1] He used him as the basis for a series of characters, culminating in Ezra Jennings.[2]

Characteristics

Where the whiter-than-white Godfrey Ablewhite conceals an evil core, the ugly Jennings hides by contrast a heart of gold.[3] A liminal figure, spanning East and West, male and female - "some men are born with female constitutions - and I am one of them"[4] - Jennings is able to use his creative sensitivity to bring the unconscious theft of the stone back into social consciousness.[5]

As an opium-user, and a cultural figure on the margins of Victorian respectability, Jennings is the figure in the novel who comes closest to the author himself.[6]

gollark: This "belt machine" thing looks like an interesting variation on stacks.
gollark: The important question in designing this sort of thing is simple: how much can I make palaiologos complain?
gollark: I'm thinking I might have a fixed 64KiB of memory because it fits neatly into two bytes.
gollark: As of now it is just stored as a string (in Lua that's a bytestring) and immutable.
gollark: Should I map the program code into memory, or not do that?

See also

References

  1. Quoted in G. Lindop, A Literary Guide to the Lake District (London 1993) p. 222
  2. G. Lindop, A Literary Guide to the Lake District (London 1993) p. 222-3
  3. J. Meckier, Hidden Rivalries in Victorian Fiction (2015) p. 139-40
  4. W. Collins, The Moonstone (Oxford 1999) p. 438
  5. L. Pyckett, Wilkie Collins (2009) p. 127
  6. M. Bachman, Reality's Dark Light (2003) p. 125 and 362
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