Sir Gibbie

Sir Gibbie is an 1879 novel by the Scottish author George MacDonald, including dialogue written in the Doric dialect of Scotland, that presents a narrative rags-to-riches arc for the title character, in the context of the actual emphasis on the integrity of Gibbie as an obedient Christian servant, and indeed as a Christ-like figure, despite his challenges and circumstances.

Created as a means of supplemental income for MacDonald and his family, the characters of this and thematically related other works of his popular fiction also provided a means by which MacDonald's principle devotion—the spread of the Christian message, and of his conception of Christian obedience—could be furthered as well.[1]

The novel made a significant popular and literary impact in the English-speaking world in its day, both in Great Britain and in the United States, and was reintroduced in the early to mid-20th century through mention of MacDonald and his works by academic and popular Christian author C. S. Lewis.

Sir Gibbie replaced a novel of comparable style by MacDonald, entitled Malcolm, in the 1938 (Swinnerton) edition of the influential Arnold Bennett list of notable English language literature, Literary Taste: How to Form It, as an important fictional work in English (alongside Walter Scott, Benjamin Disraeli, Anthony Trollope, Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot, Samuel Butler, Lewis Carroll, and Robert Louis Stevenson, and others).[2]

  1. ^ "George MacDonald—Biography and Works". online-literature.com. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  2. ^ Bennett, Arnold (1938). Swinnerton, Frank (ed.). Literary Taste: How to Form It, with Detailed Instructions for Collecting a Complete Library of English Literature. Penguin Special Editions, Volume S11 [Issue 2, The New library]. Harmondsworth, ENG: Penguin Books Ltd. p. 143. Retrieved 15 March 2017. Compare to Bennett, Arnold (1914) [1909]. Literary Taste: How to Form It, with Detailed Instructions for Collecting a Complete Library of English Literature. London, ENG: Hodder and Stoughton. p. 117. Retrieved 15 March 2017. Also available in a PDF form of the 1911 edition, where the mention of Malcolm is on page 104.