Greed and Selfishness
Ralph Nickleby is motivated primarily by greed and selfishness. He cares much more about hoarding money and power than about other people. Because he prioritizes himself over others, he alienates family members like Nicholas and Kate who initially sought his help and counsel. As a result of that selfishness, Ralph spends most of the novel miserable and alone. Though Ralph believes that all he wants is money and power, getting money and power does not…
read analysis of Greed and SelfishnessPower and Abuse
Squeers physically abuses students with impunity. He knows the students can’t retaliate because he is physically stronger than they are and knows that students’ parents or guardians will not step in to protect them, both because many of the students have been essentially abandoned by their parents or guardians and because Squeers controls all communication into and out of the school. Squeers’s abuse is especially prominent in his relationship with Smike. Squeers uses the…
read analysis of Power and AbuseAltruism and Humility
Early in the novel, Ralph attends a parliamentary meeting in which people vote on a bill to bring a new company—called the United Metropolitan Improved Hot Muffin and Crumpet Baking and Punctual Delivery Company—into existence. Dickens makes it clear that Ralph, the politicians, and others in attendance want the business license to be granted because that decision will financially benefit them. However, when politicians make speeches about why the bill should be ratified, they claim…
read analysis of Altruism and HumilityFamily and Loyalty
After Nicholas Sr. dies, Nicholas, Kate, and Mrs. Nickleby have nothing but each other. While they have no money and few material goods, they are bound together by loyalty. Nicholas makes life decisions only after considering what will be best for his family. That includes his initial decision to go and work at Dotheboys Hall, which he believes will ultimately help his family. And, when Nicholas returns to London after his stint as…
read analysis of Family and LoyaltyInjustice, Complicity, and Moral Integrity
When Nicholas arrives at Dotheboys Hall and witnesses the rampant abuse that occurs at the school, he curses his uncle Ralph for making him complicit in the evil occurring there. Even though Nicholas doesn’t commit the abuse himself, his proximity to it—and his position as an employee of the school—weighs on his conscience. That feeling of guilt, borne of a sense of complicity, drives Nicholas to flee from Dotheboys Hall with Smike.
Similarly, at…
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