Jack Dawkins, also known as the Artful Dodger, is one of the most interesting and memorable characters in Dickens’ Oliver Twist. He is reckless and very good at pickpocketing. He is denied the opportunity of choosing his own way of life and is fated to become a criminal. Jack has been a victim of circumstances all his life.
The first thing that strikes us when meeting the Dodger in Chapter 8 of Oliver Twist is the way he looks and acts. We see a boy, who appears and behaves like a full-grown man.
The Dodger is a child, who wears a “man’s coat” and “corduroy trousers” and has a big hat on his head, as Dickens describes him. He is dressed like a young gentleman, looking rather funny with his “half-way turned sleeves”, but his manners is the thing that lures our attention even more.
Not only is Jack Dawkins dressed like a man, but his attitude is like a full grown up as well. He walks and talks like a gentleman and we can distinguish him as a child only by his size. Apparently the way he has been treated by society or the way of life he had to lead influenced his manners.
The Artful Dodger is a pickpocket, he is very good at it and he enjoys it. We see in the novel, after he takes Oliver to his home, that he has been trained by Fagin for a long time and lives with him and some other thieves.
Jack lives with some other kids, who are also thieves, and their leader Fagin. The place they live in is dark, old and filthy; “the walls and the ceiling were perfectly black with age and dirt”. It is not the kind of place children are suppose to grow up in, but the Dodger did live a great deal of his life there. He is the most skilled in the group of little thieves and is their leader and his attitude towards them and Fagin is respectful and friendly.
Jack makes his