Pickwick Club Lafayette, Indiana |
Pickwick Characters
List from Cliff
Notes
Samuel Pickwick
Founder of the Pickwick Club and hero of the novel; a fat, bald,
elderly, innocent, generous, benevolent gentleman. His adventures
and developing character are the center of interest.
Tracy Tupman
Fat and middle-aged, he fancies himself to be the romantic
adventurer of the Pickwick Club. He has an unhappy flirtation with
Rachael Wardle.
Augustus Snodgrass
A young, innocuous fellow, he poses as the poet of the Pickwick
Club, although he never writes a line of verse. He falls in love
with Emily Wardle and marries her.
Nathaniel Winkle
A very inept young sportsman, Winkle has a flair for misadventures.
A member of the Pickwick Club, he enlists Mr. Pickwick's aid in his
romance and marriage with Arabella Allen.
Mr. Blotton
An unpleasant member of the club with a keen eye for humbug.
Alfred Jingle
A romantic adventurer who schemes for various mercenary marriages,
which Mr. Pickwick tries to thwart. He is brought low in the Fleet
Prison and rehabilitated by Mr. Pickwick.
Dr. Slammer
An army man who challenges Winkle to a duel at Rochester, he is
irascible and has a taste for violence when frustrated.
Lieutenant Tappleton
Dr. Slammer's second at the duel, a stickler for rules.
Dr. Payne
A savage army man who attends the duel to see bloodshed.
Jem Hutley (Dismal Jemmy)
A cadaverous strolling actor who tells the Pickwickians a
morbid tale.
Colonel and Mrs. Bulder
Members of Rochester society.
Sir Thomas Clubber
Another member of Rochester society.
Mr. Wardle
A hospitable country squire at Dingley Dell. Fond of the
Pickwickians, he entertains them on several occasions.
Emily Wardle
Mr. Wardle's pert, pretty daughter; Snodgrass' sweetheart.
Isabella Wardle
Mr. Wardle's other pretty daughter, she marries Mr. Trundle during
the Christmas festivities.
Rachael Wardle
Mr. Wardle's spinster sister, she flirts with Tupman and
unsuccessfully elopes with Jingle.
Mrs. Wardle
Mr. Wardle's partly deaf, cantankerous old mother.
Joe the Fat Boy
A gluttonous, sleepy servant to Mr. Wardle.
Mr. Trundle
Isabella Wardle's colorless fiancé and husband.
An old clergyman
A storyteller with a cheerful disposition and a gloomy mind at
Wardles'.
Mr. Miller
A neighbor of Wardles' who puts his foot in his mouth.
Sam Weller
A shrewd, cocky, clever, affectionate cockney boot cleaner and
general handyman whom Mr. Pickwick engages as a servant, and who
becomes Mr. Pickwick's closest friend.
Mr. Perker
A brisk little attorney for Mr. Wardle and Mr. Pickwick. He admires
legal chicanery but has a good heart and is a friend to his two
clients.
Mrs. Martha Bardell
Mr. Pickwick's landlady, she assumes he has proposed to her and
sues for breach of promise. Thrown in jail because she cannot pay
her legal fees, Mr. Pickwick has her released.
Master Tommy Bardell
Her squalling young son.
Mr. Pott
Editor of the Eatanswill Gazette; a pompous, vindictive,
cowardly, henpecked man.
Mrs. Pott
His aggressive wife, who becomes fond of Winkle, throws hysterics,
and eventually leaves her husband.
Mr. Slurk
Editor of the Eatanswill Independent, Mr. Pott's enemy.
The Hon. Samuel Slumkey
The Blue candidate and winner of the Eatanswill election.
The Hon. Horatio Fizkin
The Buff candidate at the Eatanswill election.
The one-eyed bagman
A traveling salesman who tells stories at Eatanswill and Bristol.
Mrs. Leo Hunter
A fatuous celebrity hunter at Eatanswill.
Mr. Leo Hunter
Her stiff, servile husband.
Count Smorltork
A silly foreigner at Mrs. Hunter's party.
Job Trotter
A cunning, emaciated actor whom Alfred Jingle employs as a servant.
Miss Tomkins
The headmistress of the boarding school at Bury St. Edmunds, where
Mr. Pickwick is taken prisoner.
Captain Boldwig
A ferocious country squire near Bury St. Edmunds, he has the drunken
Mr. Pickwick carted to the animal pound.
Peter Lowten
Mr. Perker's cynical law clerk.
Dodson and Fogg
The unscrupulous law partners who handle Mrs. Bardell's lawsuit.
Mr. Jackson
Dodson and Fogg's oily law clerk.
Jack Bamber
A half-crazed, seedy law clerk, he relates a wild tale.
Peter Magnus
A nervous, jealous suitor who involves the Pickwickians in trouble
at Ipswich.
Miss Witherfield
His hysterical middle-aged fiancée.
George Nupkins, Esq.
The windbag magistrate at Ipswich; an ignorant, henpecked man.
Mrs. Nupkins
His nasty, social-climbing wife.
Miss Henrietta Nupkins
Their nasty daughter, she has a crush on Jingle.
Daniel Grummer
An officious police captain who arrests the Pickwickians in Ipswich.
Mr. Dubbley
A big policeman in Ipswich.
Mr. Jinks
The timid court clerk in Ipswich.
Mr. Muzzle
Nupkins' butler.
Tony Weller
Sam Weller's fat, kindly, irresponsible father, a coachman plagued
by domestic trouble.
Susan Weller
Tony Weller's self-righteously pious, hypocritical wife, who has
taken up with a disreputable preacher.
The Reverend Stiggins
An avaricious, alcoholic, unsavory evangelist who sponges off the
Wellers.
Anthony Humm
A temperance lecturer at a meeting Sam and Tony Weller attend.
Mrs. Betsy Cluppins
A nosy, piggish friend of Mrs. Bardell's.
Mrs. Susannab Sanders
Another friend of Mrs. Bardell's.
Arabella Allen
Winkle's pert, attractive sweetheart and wife.
Ben Allen
Her doltish brother, who wants her to marry Bob Sawyer.
Bob Sawyer
A medical student and prankster who wants to marry Arabella.
Jack Hopkins
A medical student who is full of curious, funny anecdotes.
Mrs. Mary Ann Raddle
Bob Sawyer's vituperative landlady and a friend of Mrs. Bardell's.
Mr. Raddle
Her ineffectual, inarticulate husband.
Serjeant Snubbin
Mr. Pickwick's untidy, abstracted, ineffective court lawyer.
Mr. Mallard
His spruce, impressive secretary.
Mr. Phunky
Serjeant Snubbin's nervous assistant at the trial.
Serjeant Buzfuz
Mrs. Bardell's prosecuting attorney; an orotund, silly, but
effective lawyer.
Mr. Justice Stareleigh
The fat, nasty, inattentive judge at Mr. Pickwick's trial.
Colonel Dowler
A vociferous, cowardly, jealous man who challenges Winkle to a duel
at Bath and then retreats.
Mrs. Dowler
His hapless, partying wife.
Mrs. Craddock
Mr. Pickwick's landlady at Bath.
Angelo Cyrus Bantam, Esq.
The master of ceremonies at Bath, a dapper, ignorant,
gregarious man.
John Smauker
His snooty footman, who invites Sam Weller to a "swarry."
Mrs. Wugsby
A fashionable, rather nasty woman at Bath.
Lady Snuphanuph
Another fashionable woman at Bath.
Mary
Sam Weller's sweetheart. Originally the Nupkins' housemaid, she
helps Sam find Arabella Allen at Bristol, assists in Winkle's
elopement, and becomes the Winkle housemaid.
A scientific gentleman
An old man whose desire for fame leads him to mistake Mr.
Pickwick's lantern light for a "scientific" phenomenon.
Mr. Tom Roker
The warder and supply man at Fleet Prison, he charges high rates for
meager lodgings and furniture.
Neddy
His indolent companion.
The Chancery prisoner
The pathetic, dying man from whom Mr. Pickwick rents his prison
cell.
Mr. Smangle
The shifty, predatory prisoner with whom Mr. Pickwick spends his
first night.
Mr. Mivins (The Zephyr)
Smangle's obnoxious, clowning companion.
Mr. Solomon Pell
The seedy, self-advertising lawyer in the debtors' court. The
Wellers become his clients.
Arabella Allen's aunt
The guardian of Arabella, she is horrified when her niece elopes.
Mr. Martin
The aunt's taciturn servant, who is attacked by Ben Allen.
Mr. Winkle, Sr.
A hard-headed businessman, he is suspicious of his son's marriage
until he meets Arabella.
Wilkins Flasher, Esq.
A dapper stockbroker who bets on every topic of conservation |