Mrs. Caudle's Curtain Lectures by JERROLD, Douglas William
Lecture 24: Mrs Caudle dwells on Caudle’s “cruel neglect” of her on board the “Red Rover”. Mrs Caudle so “ill with the sea”, that they put up at the Dolphin, Herne Bay
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Sinopse
Douglas William Jerrold (1803-1857) was the son of an actor manager. After some time in the Navy and as an apprentice printer he became a playwright and later a journalist. He was a contemporary and friend of Charles Dickens. As a journalist he worked for Punch magazine in which Mrs Caudles Curtain Lectures were serialised, to be published in book form in 1846. Job Caudle, the hero of the book is a Victorian shopkeeper whose wife finds she can only talk to him without interruption in bed. Caudle, who outlives his wife, finds he can no longer sleep easily because of his memory of these lectures and resolves to exorcise his wifes memory by recording the lectures, it seems with a view to future publication for the edification of others. Jerrolds humour shines through this insight into Victorian middle class culture. (Summary by Martin Clifton)