Gissing On Poverty

new-grub-street‘The difference,’ he went on, ‘between the man with money and the man without is simply this: the one thinks, “How shall I use my life?” and the other, “How shall I keep myself alive?” A physiologist ought to be able to discover some curious distinction between the brain of a person who has never given a thought to the means of subsistence, and that of one who has never known a day free from such cares. There must be some special cerebral development representing the mental anguish kept up by poverty.’

‘I should say,’ put in Amy, ‘that it affects every function of the brain. It isn’t a special point of suffering, but a misery that colours every thought.’

‘True. Can I think of a single subject in all the sphere of my experience without the consciousness that I see it through the medium of poverty? I have no enjoyment which isn’t tainted by that thought, and I can suffer no pain which it doesn’t increase. The curse of poverty is to the modern world just what that of slavery was to the ancient. Rich and destitute stand to each other as free man and bond. You remember the line of Homer I have often quoted about the demoralising effect of enslavement; poverty degrades in the same way.’

— George Gissing, New Grub Street

An Author To Admire

Not many readers have filled their reading lists with novels by the Victorian writer, George Gissing. Still, it might be a good idea to give Gissing a try. Who knows, maybe it’s time for a Gissing revival!

Wikipedia provides us with a somewhat complete list of Gissing’s novels, most of which are available online but unfortunately are not available in print.

Gissing
  • Workers in the Dawn (1880)
  • The Unclassed (1884)
  • Isabel Clarendon (1885)
  • Demos (1886)
  • Thyrza (1887)
  • A Life’s Morning (1888)
  • The Nether World (1889)
  • The Emancipated (1890)
  • New Grub Street (1891)
  • Denzil Quarrier (1892)
  • Born In Exile (1892)
  • The Odd Women (1893)
  • In the Year of Jubilee (1894)
  • Eve’s Ransom (1895)
  • The Paying Guest (1895)
  • Sleeping Fires (1895)
  • The Whirlpool (1897)
  • The Town Traveller (1898)
  • Charles Dickens: A Critical Study (1898)
  • The Crown Of Life (1899)
  • By the Ionian Sea (1901)
  • Our Friend the Charlatan (1901)
  • The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft (1903)
  • Will Warburton (1905)
  • Veranilda (1903, unfinished)
  • Stories and Sketches (posthumous, 1938) with preface by Alfred C. Gissing

George Gissing and the Writer’s Life

I have a good-reading-buddy who has always pressed me to read more Gissing, especially New Grub Street. Well, I have read several of Gissing’s texts and even read New Grub Street but was interrupted and didn’t finish the whole book. I keep promising myself that I will finish but now it has been too long and I will have to start at the beginning again.

Continue reading “George Gissing and the Writer’s Life”