Plot
In the workhouse of a provincial town seventy-five miles north
of London a young woman who has arrived in an exhausted condition
gives birth to a boy, and dies. The child is named OLIVER TWIST
and put into the workhouse orphanage, presided over by the ill-natured
Mrs. Corney. When he is nine, the beadle, BUMBLE, transfers him
to the workhouse itself and he is set to picking oakum. When
Oliver is chosen as the speaker for the other half-staved boys
and asks for more of the gruel which is their staple fare, the
authorities decide it is time to put him to a trade.
He becomes apprenticed to SOWERBERRY, an undertaker, his small
frame and delicate appearance making him suitable for acting as
a mute at children's funerals. But when NOAH CLAYPOLE, anther
apprentice, insults his dead mother, Oliver attacks him and is
cruelly punished by the Sowerberrys. He runs away to London,
and in Barnet meets with a boy thief, Jack Dawkins, 'THE ARTFUL
DODGER', a member of a pickpocket gang run by FAGIN, a Jew. Fagin
decides to use the uncomprehending Oliver, whom he instructs ni
the picking of pockets, and sends him out with the Dodger and
antoehr boy, Charley Bates. Oliver is horrified to see them pick
the pocket of an old gentleman, MR. BROWNLOW, at a bookstall,
runs away, and is captured and taken before a magistrate; but
the bookstall-keeper has seen the true robbers and exculpates
Oliver.
Olvier is taken to Mr. Brownlow's house in Pentonville, where
the housekeeper, MRS. BEDWIN, nurses his through an illness.
He is treated with kindness and affection for the first time in
his life, and is happy. But Fagin plots to recapture him, for
while the boy is free his secrets are in danger. He engages BILL
SIKES, a brutal robber, and NANCY, his mistress, also a member
of the gang, to bring Oliver back.
Their stratagem is successful, and Sikes takes Oliver by night
to Chertsey to carry out a robbery on the house of a MRS. MAYLIE.
When the alarm is given Sikes takes fright and escapes, and Oliver
is shot and wounded. Mrs. Maylie and her adopted niece, ROSE,
take him in, listen to his story, and believe it. He settles
with them, becoming a household favorite.
Rose is suddenly stricken with a serious illness. Mrs. Maylie's
son, HARRY MAYLIE, arrives and on her recovery begs her to marry
him. She refuses because she is nameless, having been adopted
from a baby-farm by Mrs. Maylie. During his idyllic life with
the Maylies Oliver catches glimpses of MONKS, a sinister man who
is in league with Fagin to recapture him. In Fagin's den they
lay plots to do this; but Nancy overhearing them and feeling compassion
for the child, tells Rose about the conspiracy, without giving
away the gang. Rose and her adviser, Dr. Losberne, promise Nancy
that if Monks is brought to justice Fagin and Sikes shall not
be in any danger of arrest.
Fagin has set NOAH CLAYPOLE, now his tool, to follow Nancy
and spy on her as she meets Rose and Mr. Brownlow on the steps
of London Bridge. He reports the conversation to Fagin, who repeats
it to Sikes. Sikes, maddened by Nancy's supposed treachery, rushes
back to his own room, awakens her from sleep and clubs her to
death.
He takes flight into the country north of London, driven from
place to place by fear and conscience. Then, feeling that London
is after all the safest place in which to conceal himself, he
returns to his old haunts. He has been followed by his ill-treated
but faithful dog, Bullseye, and has attempted to drown it, but
it has escaped and returns to the gang's headquarters. Sikes
arrives there to be greeted with horror and loathing by those
of the gang who have escaped a police raid in which Fagin and
Noah Claybole have been arrested. Charley Bates gives the alarm;
Sieks attempts to escape across the roofs in order to drop into
Folly Ditch below, but falls with a rope round his neck and hangs
himself. The dog, which has followed its brutal master even to
this pint, leaps for the dead man's shoulders and falls to death
below.
Fagin is executed, appealing to Oliver in the condemned cell
to save him. The Dodger is transported, Charley Bates sees the
errors of his ways and becomes a reformed character, and Noah
Claypole escapes justice by turning King's evidence.
The plot against Oliver is unraveled by Mr. Brownlow, to whom
Oliver has now been restored. Monks, otherwise Edward Leeford,
is Oliver's half-brother, their father having seduced and promised
marriage to AGNES, Oliver's mother, while still married to Leeford's
mother. The provisions of the father's will leave money to Oliver
on condition that he maintains a spotless reputation, and for
this reason Monks has tried to keep the boy in Fagin's gang in
order to discredit him and inherit the full sum himself. It is
now discovered that Oliver's dead mother and Rose Malie were sisters,
and that Rose is, after all, legitimate.
Monks receives his share of the legacy, goes to America, and
dies there in prison. Mr. and Mrs. Bumble (for the pompous Beadle
has married the orphanage matron) are proved to have been in the
plot against Oliver, lose their positions of trust, and become
workhouse inmates. Oliver is adopted by Mr. Brownlow, and Rose
marries Harry Maylie, who for her sake has given up a promising
political career to become a country clergyman, in whose church
a memorial is raised to Oliver's mother, Agnes.
Begin the Begin