Abstract:
Wicked or evil characters were indispensible tools for the Victorian writers.
Dickens also used this instrument to make his stories more attractive and to create
suspense. It has been aimed that the more the Good struggle against the Evil, the
more the Victorian readers are trapped in the novel plots. The wicked gentlemen,
whom Dickens chose for the novel David Copperfield, are ‘Mr. Murdstone’,
‘James Steerforth’ and ‘Uriah Heep’. As David Copperfield is Dickens’s most
autobiographical novel and ‘favourite child,’ these wicked gentlemen play important
roles in various periods of his life. Mr. Murdstone enters David’s life as a stepfather and he immediately becomes his first enemy as a result of his “firmness” and
brutal behavior. While it is quite easy to guess from his name that Mr. Murdstone
becomes one of the obvious wicked gentlemen in the novel, it takes some time for
the readers to see especially Steerforth’s real face and Uriah also disguises behind
his ‘umble’ background.