The meaning of card, as used in the title, is a clever fellow, a somewhat odd, amusing, unpredictable and often audacious person. Denry (Edward Henry) Machin is The Card.
The time is late Victorian to early Edwardian; the place is the fictional Five Towns in England, based on Bennett’s native Stoke-on-Trent, which at the turn of the century was known as The Six Towns.
Denry begins his career with a deception, a bit of self-help affirmative action. The son of a poor, widowed washerwoman, he cheats on an exam and receives a scholarship to a first-rate grammar school. The education provides a launching pad for his brilliant career.
“Every life is a series of coincidences. Nothing happens that is not rooted in coincidence. All great changes find their cause in coincidence. Therefore, I shall not mince the fact that the next change in Denry's career was due to an enormous and complicated coincidence.”
Denry makes the best of several coincidences; he is adept at turning lemons into lemonade. He is creative, a natural promoter and entrepreneur who climbs the ladder of business and political success by following a great principle of free markets and democracy: Give the people what they want. He also has the knack of charming the ladies. Moreover, Denry has clever ways of getting even with his rivals and adversaries by means of pranks and ridicule.
I enjoyed Bennett’s prose style, his straightforward narrative, his folksy humor, believable characters, and dialogue. Most of all, I developed a fondness for his protagonist.
Machin’s formula for success is summed up as follow:
“A little group of councillors were discussing Denry. ‘What a card!’ said one, laughing joyously. ‘He's a rare 'un, no mistake.’ ‘Of course, this'll make him more popular than ever,’ said another. ‘We've never had a man to touch him for that.’
‘And yet,’ demanded Councillor Barlow, ‘what's he done? Has he ever done a day's work in his life? What great cause is he identified with?’ ‘He's identified,’ said the speaker, ‘with the great cause of cheering us all up.