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The following sections, if they exist, are offprint from Beacham's Guide to Literature for Young Adults: "About the Author", "Overview", "Setting", "Literary Qualities", "Social Sensitivity", "Topics for Discussion", "Ideas for Reports and Papers". (c)1994-2005, by Walton Beacham.
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Table of Contents | |
Section | Page |
Start of eBook | 1 |
CHAPTER I. | 1 |
FOOTNOTES: | 9 |
CHAPTER II. | 10 |
FOOTNOTES: | 16 |
CHAPTER III. | 16 |
FOOTNOTES: | 21 |
CHAPTER IV. | 21 |
FOOTNOTES: | 25 |
CHAPTER V. | 25 |
FOOTNOTES: | 33 |
CHAPTER VI. | 33 |
FOOTNOTES: | 40 |
CHAPTER VII. | 40 |
FOOTNOTES: | 44 |
CHAPTER VIII. | 44 |
FOOTNOTES: | 49 |
CHAPTER IX. | 49 |
FOOTNOTES: | 59 |
CHAPTER X. | 59 |
CHAPTER XI. | 62 |
FOOTNOTES: | 68 |
CHAPTER XII. | 69 |
FOOTNOTES: | 74 |
CHAPTER XIII. | 74 |
THE END. | 81 |
FOOTNOTES: | 81 |
INDEX. | 82 |
B. | 82 |
C. | 82 |
D. | 82 |
E. | 83 |
F. | 83 |
G. | 83 |
I. | 83 |
J. | 83 |
L. | 83 |
M. | 83 |
N. | 84 |
O. | 84 |
P. | 84 |
Q. | 84 |
R. | 84 |
T. | 84 |
W. | 84 |
Y. | 84 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY. | 84 |
JOHN P. ANDERSON | 84 |
II. SELECTIONS. | 85 |
III. SINGLE WORKS. | 86 |
IV. | 90 |
V. APPENDIX. | 91 |
DRAMATIC. | 98 |
MUSICAL. | 101 |
PARODIES AND IMITATIONS. | 103 |
POETICAL. | 105 |
MAGAZINE AND NEWSPAPER ARTICLES. | 106 |
VI.—CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF WORKS. | 115 |
GREAT WRITERS. | 116 |
BY PROFESSOR ERIC S. ROBERTSON | 116 |
THE CAMELOT CLASSICS. | 118 |
PART I. READY 25TH FEBRUARY 1887. | 118 |
OF | 118 |
SCIENCE LECTURES | 119 |
THE ELSWICK SCIENCE SERIES. | 119 |
NOW READY. | 120 |
A POETIC CALENDAR | 120 |
Education is a kind of lottery in which there are good and evil chances, and some men draw blanks and other men draw prizes. And in saying this I do not use the word education in any restricted sense, as applying exclusively to the course of study in school or college; nor certainly, when I speak of prizes, am I thinking of scholarships, exhibitions, fellowships. By education I mean the whole set of circumstances which go to mould a man’s character during the apprentice years of his life; and I call that a prize when those circumstances have been such as to develop the man’s powers to the utmost, and to fit him to do best that of which he is best capable. Looked at in this way, Charles Dickens’ education, however untoward and unpromising it may often have seemed while in the process, must really be pronounced a prize of value quite inestimable.
His father, John Dickens, held a clerkship in the Navy Pay Office, and was employed in the Portsmouth Dockyard when little Charles first came into the world, at Landport, in Portsea, on February 7, 1812. Wealth can never have been one of the familiar friends of the household, nor plenty have always sat at its board. Charles had one elder sister, and six other brothers and sisters were afterwards added to the family; and with eight children, and successive removals from Portsmouth to London, and London to Chatham, and no more than the pay of a Government clerk[1]—pay which not long afterwards dwindled to a pension,—even a better domestic financier than the elder Dickens might have found some difficulty in facing his liabilities. It was unquestionably into a tottering house that the child was born, and among its ruins that he was nurtured.
But through all these early years I can do nothing better than take him for my guide, and walk as it were in his companionship. Perhaps no novelist ever had a keener feeling of the pathos of childhood than Dickens, or understood more fully how real and overwhelming are its sorrows. No one, too, has entered more sympathetically into its ways. And of the child and boy that he himself had once been, he was wont to think very tenderly and very often. Again and again in his writings he reverts to the scenes and incidents and emotions of his earlier days. Sometimes he goes back to his young life directly, speaking as of himself. More often he goes back to it indirectly, placing imaginary children and boys in the position he had once occupied. Thus it is almost possible, by judiciously selecting from his works, and using such keys as we possess, to construct as it were a kind of autobiography. Nor, if we make due allowance for the great writer’s tendency to idealize the past, and intensify its humorous and pathetic aspects, need we at all fear that the self-written story of his life should convey a false impression.
He was but two years old when his father left Portsea for London, and but four when a second migration took the family to Chatham. Here we catch our first glimpse of him, in his own word-painting, as a “very queer small boy,” a small boy who was sickly and delicate, and could take but little part in the rougher sports of his school companions, but read much, as sickly boys will—read the novels of the older novelists in a “blessed little room,” a kind of palace of enchantment, where “‘Roderick Random,’ ‘Peregrine Pickle,’ ‘Humphrey Clinker,’ ’Tom Jones,’ ‘The Vicar of Wakefield,’ ’Don Quixote, ‘Gil Blas,’ and ‘Robinson Crusoe,’ came out, a glorious host, to keep him company.” And the queer small boy had read Shakespeare’s “Henry IV.,” too, and knew all about Falstaff’s robbery of the travellers at Gad’s Hill, on the rising ground between Rochester and Gravesend, and all about mad Prince Henry’s pranks; and, what was more, he had determined that when he came to be a man, and had made his way in the world, he should own the house called Gad’s Hill Place, with the old associations of its site, and its pleasant outlook over Rochester and over the low-lying levels by the Thames. Was that a child’s dream? The man’s tenacity and steadfast strength of purpose turned it into fact. The house became the home of his later life. It was there that he died.
But death was a long way forward in those old Chatham days; nor, as the time slipped by, and his father’s pecuniary embarrassments began to thicken, and make the forward ways of life more dark and difficult, could the purchase of Gad’s Hill Place have seemed much less remote. There is one of Dickens’ works which was his own special favourite, the most cherished, as he tells us, among the offspring of his brain. That work is “David Copperfield.” Nor can there be much difficulty in discovering why it occupied such an exceptional position in “his heart of hearts;” for in its pages he had enshrined the deepest memories of his own childhood and youth. Like David Copperfield, he had known what it was to be a poor, neglected lad, set to rough, uncongenial work, with no more than a mechanic’s surroundings and outlook, and having to fend for himself in the miry ways of the great city. Like David Copperfield, he had formed a very early acquaintance with debts and duns, and been initiated into the mysteries and sad expedients of shabby poverty. Like David Copperfield, he had been made free of the interior of a debtor’s prison. Poor lad, he was not much more than ten or eleven years old when he left Chatham, with all the charms that were ever after to live so brightly in his recollection,—the gay military pageantry, the swarming dockyard, the shifting sailor life, the delightful walks in the surrounding country, the enchanted room, tenanted by the first fairy day-dreams of his genius, the day-school, where the master had already formed a good opinion of his parts, giving him Goldsmith’s “Bee”
The son was taking note of other things besides these moral apothegms, and reproduced, in after days, with a quite marvellous detail and fidelity, all the incidents of his father’s incarceration. Probably, too, he was beginning, as children will, almost unconsciously, to form some estimate of his father’s character. And a very queer study in human nature that must have been, giving Dickens, when once he had mastered it, a most exceptional insight into the ways of impecuniosity. Charles Lamb, as we all remember, divided mankind into two races, the mighty race of the borrowers, and the mean race of the lenders; and expatiated, with a whimsical and charming eloquence, upon the greatness of one Bigod, who had been as a king among those who by process of loan obtain possession of other people’s money.
So little Charles, aged from eleven to twelve, first blacked boots, and minded the younger children, and ran messages, and effected the family purchases—which can have been no pleasant task in the then state of the family credit,—and made very close acquaintance with the inside of the pawnbrokers’ shops, and with the purchasers of second-hand books, disposing, among other things, of the little store of books he loved so well; and then, when his father was imprisoned, ran more messages hither and thither, and shed many childish tears in his father’s company—the father doubtless regarding the tears as a tribute to his eloquence, though, heaven knows, there were other things to cry over besides his sonorous periods. After which a connection, James Lamert by name, who had lived with the family before they moved from Camden Town to Gower Street, and was manager of a worm-eaten, rat-riddled blacking business, near old Hungerford Market, offered to employ the lad, on a salary of some six shillings a week, or thereabouts. The duties which commanded these high emoluments consisted
At first, when he began his daily toil at the blacking business, some poor dregs of family life were left to the child. His father was at the Marshalsea. But his mother and brothers and sisters were, to use his own words, “still encamped, with a young servant girl from Chatham workhouse, in the two parlours in the emptied house in Gower Street North.” And there he lived with them, in much “hugger-mugger,” merely taking his humble midday meal in nomadic fashion, on his own account. Soon, however, his position became even more forlorn. The paternal creditors proved insatiable. The gipsy home in Gower Street had to be broken up. Mrs. Dickens and the children went to live at the Marshalsea. Little Charles was placed under the roof—it cannot be called under the care—of a “reduced old lady,” dwelling in Camden Town, who must have been a clever and prophetic old lady if she anticipated that her diminutive lodger would one day give her a kind of indirect unenviable immortality by making her figure, under the name of “Mrs. Pipchin,” in “Dombey and Son.” Here the boy seems to have been left almost entirely to his own devices. He spent his Sundays in the prison, and, to the best of his recollection, his lodgings at “Mrs. Pipchin’s” were paid for. Otherwise, he “found himself,” in childish fashion, out of the six or seven weekly shillings, breakfasting on two pennyworth of bread and milk, and supping on a penny loaf and a bit of cheese, and dining hither and thither, as his boy’s appetite dictated—now, sensibly enough, on a la mode beef or a saveloy; then, less sensibly, on pudding; and anon not dining at all, the wherewithal having been expended on some morning treat of cheap stale pastry. But are not all these things, the lad’s shifts and expedients, his sorrows and despair, his visits to the public-house, where the kindly publican’s wife stoops down to kiss the pathetic little face—are they not all written in “David Copperfield”? And if so be that I have a reader unacquainted with that peerless book, can I do better than recommend him, or her, to study therein the story of Dickens’ life at this particular time?
At last the child’s solitude and sorrows seem to have grown unbearable. His fortitude broke down. One Sunday night he appealed to his father, with many tears, on the subject, not of his employment, which he seems to have accepted at the time manfully, but of his forlornness and isolation. The father’s kind, thoughtless heart was touched. A back attic was found for Charles near the Marshalsea, at Lant Street, in the Borough—where Bob Sawyer, it will be remembered, afterwards invited Mr. Pickwick to that disastrous party. The boy moved into his new quarters with the same feeling of elation as if he had been entering a palace.
The change naturally brought him more fully into the prison circle. He used to breakfast there every morning, before going to the warehouse, and would spend the larger portion of his spare time among the inmates. Nor do Mr. Dickens and his family, and Charles, who is to us the family’s most important member, appear to have been relatively at all uncomfortable while under the shadow of the Marshalsea. There is in “David Copperfield” a passage of inimitable humour, where Mr. Micawber, enlarging on the pleasures of imprisonment for debt, apostrophizes the King’s Bench Prison as being the place “where, for the first time in many revolving years, the overwhelming pressure of pecuniary liabilities was not proclaimed from day to day, by importunate voices declining to vacate the passage; where there was no knocker on the door for any creditor to appeal to; where personal service of process was not required, and detainers were lodged merely at the gate.” There is a similar passage in “Little Dorrit,” where the tipsy medical practitioner of the Marshalsea comforts Mr. Dorrit in his affliction by saying: “We are quiet here; we don’t get badgered here; there’s no knocker here, sir, to be hammered at by creditors, and bring a man’s heart into his mouth. Nobody comes here to ask if a man’s at home, and to say he’ll stand on the door-mat till he is. Nobody writes threatening letters about money to this place. It’s freedom, sir, it’s freedom!” One smiles as one reads; and it adds a pathos, I think, to the smile, to find that these are records of actual experience. The Marshalsea prison was to Mr. Dickens a haven of peace, and to his household a place of plenty. Not only could he pursue his career there untroubled by fears of arrest, but he exercised among the other “gentlemen gaol-birds” a supremacy, a kind of kingship, such as that to which Charles Lamb referred. They recognized in him the superior spirit, ready of pen, and affluent of speech, and with a certain grandeur in his conviviality. He it was who drew up their memorial to George of England on an occasion no less important than the royal birthday, when they, the monarch’s “unfortunate subjects,”—so they were described in the memorial—besought the king’s “gracious majesty,” of his “well-known munificence,” to grant them a something towards the drinking of the royal health. (Ah, with what keen eyes and penetrative genius did little Charles, from his corner, watch the strange sad stream of humanity that trickled through the room, and may be said to have smeared its approval of that petition!) And while Mr. Dickens was enjoying his prison honours, he was also enjoying his Admiralty pension,[3] which was not forfeited by his imprisonment; and his wife and children were consequently enjoying a larger measure of the necessaries of life than had been theirs for many a month. So all went on merrily enough at the Marshalsea.
But even under the old law, imprisonment for debt did not always last for ever. A legacy, and the Insolvent Debtors Act, enabled Mr. Dickens to march out of durance, in some sort with the honours of war, after a few months’ incarceration—this would be early in 1824;—and he went with his family, including Charles, to lodge with the “Mrs. Pipchin” already mentioned. Charles meanwhile still toiled on in the blacking warehouse, now removed to Chandos Street, Covent Garden; and had reached such skill in the tying, pasting, and labelling of the bottles, that small crowds used to collect at the window for the purpose of watching his deft fingers. There was pride in this, no doubt, but also humiliation; and release was at hand. His father and Lamert quarrelled about something—about what, Dickens seems never to have known—and he was sent home. Mrs. Dickens acted the part of the peacemaker on the next day, probably feeling that amid the shadowy expectations on which she and her husband had subsisted for so long, even six or seven shillings a week was something tangible, and not to be despised. Yet in spite of this, he did not return to the business. His father decided that he should go to school. “I do not write resentfully or angrily,” said Dickens, in the confidential communication made long afterwards to Forster, and to which reference has already been made; “but I never afterwards forgot, I never shall forget, I never can forget, that my mother was warm for my being sent back.”
The mothers of great men is a subject that has been handled often, and eloquently. How many of those who have achieved distinction can trace their inherited gifts to a mother’s character, and their acquired gifts to a mother’s teaching and influence. Mrs. Dickens seems not to have been a mother of this stamp. She scarcely, I fear, possessed those admirable qualities of mind and heart which one can clearly recognize as having borne fruit in the greatness and goodness of her famous son. So far as I can discover, she exercised no influence upon him at all. Her name hardly appears in his biographies. He never, that I can recollect, mentions her in his correspondence; only refers to her on the rarest occasions. And perhaps, on the whole, this is not to be wondered at, if we accept the constant tradition that she had, unknown to herself, sat to her son for the portrait of Mrs. Nickleby, and suggested to him the main traits in the character of that inconsequent and not very wise old lady. Mrs. Nickleby, I take it, was not the kind of person calculated to form the mind of a boy of genius. As well might one expect some very domestic bird to teach an eaglet how to fly.
The school to which our callow eaglet was sent (in the spring or early summer of 1824), belonged emphatically to the old school of schools. It bore the goodly name of Wellington House Academy, and was situated in Mornington Place, near the Hampstead Road. A certain Mr. Jones held chief rule there; and as more than fifty years have now elapsed since Dickens’ connection with the establishment ceased, I trust there may be nothing libellous in giving further currency to his statement, or rather, perhaps, to his recorded impression,[4] that the head master’s one qualification for his office was dexterity in the use of the cane;—especially as another “old boy” corroborates that impression, and declares Mr. Jones to have been “a most ignorant fellow, and a mere tyrant.” Dickens, however, escaped with comparatively little beating, because he was a day-boy, and sound policy dictated that day-boys, who had facilities for carrying home their complaints, should be treated with some leniency. So he had to get his learning without tears, which was not at all considered the orthodox method in the good old days; and, indeed, I doubt if he finally took away from Wellington House Academy very much of the book knowledge that would tell in a modern competitive examination. For though in his own account of the school it is implied that he resumed his interrupted studies with Virgil, and was, before he left, head boy, and the possessor of many prizes, yet this is not corroborated by the evidence of his surviving fellow pupils; nor can we, of course, in the face of their direct counter evidence, treat statements made in a fictitious or half-fictitious narrative as if made in what professed to be a sober autobiography. Dickens, I repeat, seems to have acquired a very scant amount of classic lore while under the instruction of Mr. Jones, and not too much lore of any kind. But if he learned little, he observed much. He thoroughly mastered the humours of the place, just as he had mastered the humours of the Marshalsea. He had got to know all about the masters, and all about the boys, and all about the white mice—of which there were many in various stages of civilization. He acquired, in short, a fund of school knowledge that seemed inexhaustible, and on which he drew again and again, with the most excellent results, in “David Copperfield,” in “Dombey,” in such inimitable short papers as “Old Cheeseman.” And while thus, half unconsciously perhaps, assimilating the very life of the school, he was himself a thorough schoolboy, bright, alert, intelligent; taking part in all fun and frolic; amply indemnifying himself for his enforced abstinence from childish games during the dreary warehouse days; good at recitations and mimic plays; and already possessed of a reputation among his peers as a writer of tales.
[1] L200 a year “without extras” from 1815 to 1820, and then L350. See “Childhood and Youth of Charles Dickens,” by Robert Langton, a very valuable monograph.
[2] Mr. Langton appears to doubt whether John Dickens was not imprisoned in the King’s Bench. But this seems scarcely a point on which Dickens himself can have been mistaken.
[3] According to Mr. Langton’s dates, he would still be drawing his pay.
[4] See paper entitled “Our School.”
Dickens cannot have been very long at Wellington House Academy, for before May, 1827, he had been at another school near Brunswick Square, and had also obtained, and quitted, some employment in the office of a solicitor in New Square, Lincoln’s Inn Fields. It seems clear, therefore, that the whole of his school life might easily be computed in months; and in May, 1827, it will be remembered, he was still but a lad of fifteen. At that date he entered the office of a second solicitor, in Gray’s Inn this time, on a salary of thirteen shillings and sixpence a week, afterwards increased to fifteen shillings. Here he remained till November, 1828, again picking up a good deal of information that cannot perhaps be regarded as strictly legal, but such as he was afterwards able to turn to admirable account. He would seem to have studied the profession exhaustively in all its branches, from the topmost Tulkinghorns and Perkers, to the lowest pettifoggers like Pell and Brass, and also to have given particular attention to the parasites of the law—the Guppys and Chucksters; and altogether to have stored his mind, as he had done at school, with a series of invaluable notes and observations. All very well, no doubt, as we look at the matter now. But then it must often have seemed to the ambitious, energetic lad, that he was wasting his time. Was he to remain for ever a lawyer’s clerk who has not the means to be an articled clerk, and who can never, therefore, aspire to become a full-blown solicitor? Was he to spend the future obscurely in the dingy purlieus of the law? His father, in whose career “something,” as Mr. Micawber would have said, had at last “turned up,” was now a reporter for the press. The son determined to be a reporter too.
He threw himself into this new career with characteristic energy. Of course a reporter is not made in a day. It takes many months of drudgery to obtain such skill in shorthand as shall enable the pen of the ready-writer to keep up with the winged words of speech, and make dots and lines that shall be readable. Dickens laboured hard to acquire the art. In the intervals of his work he made it a kind of holiday task to attend the Reading-room of the British Museum, and so remedy the defects in the literary part of his education. But the best powers of his mind were directed to “Gurney’s system of shorthand.” And in time he had his reward. He earned and justified the reputation of being one of the best reporters of his day.
I shall not quote the autobiographical passages in “David Copperfield” which bear on the difficulties of stenography. The book is in everybody’s hands. But I cannot forego the pleasure of brightening my pages with Dickens’ own description of his experiences as a reporter, a description contained in one of those charming felicitous speeches of his which are almost as unique in kind as his novels. Speaking in May, 1865, as chairman of a public dinner on behalf of the Newspaper Press Fund, he said: “I have pursued the calling of a reporter under circumstances of which many of my brethren at home in England here, many of my modern successors, can form no adequate conception. I have often transcribed for the printer, from my shorthand notes, important public speeches, in which the strictest accuracy was required, and a mistake in which would have been, to a young man, severely compromising, writing on the palm of my hand, by the light of a dark lantern, in a post-chaise and four, galloping through a wild country, and through the dead of the night, at the then surprising rate of fifteen miles an hour. The very last time I was at Exeter, I strolled into the castle-yard there to identify, for the amusement of a friend, the spot on which I once took, as we used to call it, an election speech of my noble friend Lord Russell, in the midst of a lively fight maintained by all the vagabonds in that division of the county, and under such pelting rain, that I remember two good-natured colleagues, who chanced to be at leisure, held a pocket-handkerchief over my note-book, after the manner of a State canopy in an ecclesiastical procession. I have worn my knees by writing on them on the old back row of the old gallery in the old House of Commons; and I have worn my feet by standing to write in a preposterous pen in the old House of Lords, where we used to be huddled together like so many sheep, kept in waiting, say, until the woolsack might want re-stuffing. Returning home from excited political meetings in the country to the waiting press in London, I do verily believe I have been upset in almost every description of vehicle known in this country. I have been, in my time, belated in miry by-roads, towards the small hours, forty or fifty miles from London, in a wheel-less carriage, with exhausted horses, and drunken postboys, and have got back in time for publication, to be received with never-forgotten compliments by the late Mr. Black, coming in the broadest of Scotch from the broadest of hearts I ever knew.”
What shall I add to this? That the papers on which he was engaged as a reporter, were The True Sun, The Mirror of Parliament, and The Morning Chronicle; that long afterwards, little more than two years before his death, when addressing the journalists of New York, he gave public expression to his “grateful remembrance of a calling that was once his own,” and declared, “to the wholesome training of severe newspaper work, when
But I have not really reached “Pickwick” yet, nor anything like it. That master-work was not also a first work. With all Dickens’ genius, he had to go through some apprenticeship in the writer’s art before coming upon the public as the most popular novelist of his time. Let us go back for a little to the twilight before the full sunrise, nay, to the earliest streak upon the greyness of night, to his first original published composition. Dickens himself, and in his preface to “Pickwick” too, has told us somewhat about that first paper of his; how it was “dropped stealthily one evening at twilight, with fear and trembling, into a dark letter-box, in a dark office, up a dark court in Fleet Street;” how it was accepted, and “appeared in all the glory of print;” and how he was so filled with pleasure and pride on purchasing a copy of the magazine in which it was published, that he went into Westminster Hall to hide the tears of joy that would come into his eyes. The paper thus joyfully wept over was originally entitled “A Dinner at Poplar Walk,” and now bears, among the “Sketches by Boz,” the name of “Mr. Minns and his Cousin”; the periodical in which it was published was The Old Monthly Magazine, and the date of publication was January 1, 1834.
“A Dinner at Poplar Walk” may be pronounced a very fairly told tale. It is, no doubt, always easy to be wise after the event, in criticism particularly easy, and when once a writer has achieved success, there is but too little difficulty in showing that his earlier productions were prophetic of his future greatness. At the risk, however, of incurring a charge of this kind, I repeat that Dickens’ first story is well told, and that the editor of The Old Monthly Magazine showed due discernment in accepting it and encouraging his unknown contributor to further efforts. Quite apart from the fact that the author was only a young fellow of some two or three and twenty, both this first story and the stories that followed it in The Old Monthly Magazine, during 1834 and the early part of 1835, possessed qualities of a very remarkable kind. So also did the humorous descriptive papers shortly afterwards published in The Evening Chronicle, papers that, with the stories, now compose the book known as “Sketches
For the “Sketches” published in The Old Monthly Magazine, Dickens got nothing, beyond the pleasure of seeing himself in print. The Chronicle treated him somewhat more liberally, and, on his application, increased his salary, giving him, in view of his original contributions, seven guineas a week, instead of the five guineas which he had been drawing as a reporter. Not a particularly brilliant augmentation, perhaps, and one at which he must often have smiled in after years, when his pen was dropping gold as well as ink. Still, the addition to his income was substantial, and the son of John Dickens must always, I imagine, have been in special need of money. Moreover the circumstances of the next few months would render any increased earnings doubly pleasant. For Dickens was shortly
This date again leads me to a time subsequent to the publication of the first number of “Pickwick,” which had appeared a day or two before;—and again I refrain from dealing with that great book. For before I do so, I wish to pause a brief space to consider what manner of man Charles Dickens was when he suddenly broke on the world in his full popularity; and also what were the influences, for good and evil, which his early career had exercised upon his character and intellect.
What manner of man he was? In outward aspect all accounts agree that he was singularly, noticeably prepossessing—bright, animated, eager, with energy and talent written in every line of his face. Such he was when Forster saw him, on the occasion of their first meeting, when Dickens was acting as spokesman for the insurgent reporters engaged on the Mirror. So Carlyle, who met him at dinner shortly after this, and was no flatterer, sketches him for us with a pen of unwonted kindliness. “He is a fine little fellow—Boz, I think. Clear, blue, intelligent eyes, eyebrows that he arches amazingly, large protrusive rather loose mouth, a face of most extreme mobility, which he shuttles about—eyebrows, eyes, mouth and all—in a very singular manner while speaking. Surmount this with a loose coil of common-coloured hair, and set it on a small compact figure, very small, and dressed a la D’Orsay rather than well—this is Pickwick. For the rest, a quiet, shrewd-looking little fellow, who seems to guess pretty well what he is and what others are."[7] Is not this a graphic little picture, and characteristic even to the touch about D’Orsay, the dandy French Count? For Dickens, like the young men of the time—Disraeli, Bulwer, and the rest—was a great fop. We, of these degenerate days, shall never see again that antique magnificence in coloured velvet waistcoats.
But to return. Dickens, it need scarcely be said, had by this [time][8] long out-lived the sickliness of his earlier years. The hardships and trials of his childhood and boyhood had served but to brace his young manhood, knitting the frame and strengthening the nerves. Light and small, as Carlyle describes him, he was wiry and very active, and could bear without injury an amount of intellectual work and bodily fatigue that would have killed many men of seemingly stronger build. And as what might have seemed unfortunate in his youth had helped perchance to develop his physical powers, so had it assisted to strengthen his character and foster his genius. I go back here to the point from which I started. No doubt a weaker man would have been crushed by such a youth. He would have been indolently content to remain a warehouse drudge, would have listlessly fallen into his father’s ways about money, would have had no ambition beyond his desk and salary as a lawyer’s clerk, would have never cared to piece together and supplement the scattered scraps of his education, would have rested on his oars when he had once shot into the waters of ordinary journalism. With Dickens it was not so. The alchemy of a fine nature had transmuted his disadvantages into gold. To him the lessons of such a childhood and boyhood as he had had, were energy, self-reliance, a determination to overcome all obstacles, to fight the battles of life, in all honour and rectitude, so as to win. From the muddle of his father’s affairs he had taken away a lesson of method, order, and punctuality in business and other arrangements. “What is worth doing at all is worth doing well,” was not only one of his favourite maxims—it was the rule of his life.
And for what was to be his life work, what better preparation could there have been than that which he received? I am far from recommending warehouses, squalid solitary lodgings, pawnshops, debtors’ prisons,—if such could now be found,—ill-conducted private schools,—which probably could be found,—attorneys’ offices, and the hand-to-mouth of journalism, as constituting generally the highest ideal of a liberal education. I am equally far from asserting that the majority of men do not require more training of a purely scholastic kind than fell to Dickens’ lot. But Dickens was not a bookish man. His genius did not lie in that direction. To have forced him unduly into the world of books would have made him, doubtless, an average scholar, but might have weakened his hold on life. Such a risk was certainly not worth the running. Fate arranged it otherwise. What he was above all was a student of the world of men, a passionately keen observer of the ways of humanity. Men were to be his books, his special branch of knowledge; and in order to graduate and take high honours in that school, I repeat, he could have had no better training. Not only had he passed through a range of most unwonted experiences, experiences calculated to quicken to the uttermost his superb faculties of observation and insight; but he had been placed in sympathetic communication with a strange assortment of characters, lying quite out of the usual ken of the literary classes. Knowledge and sympathy, the seeing eye and the feeling heart—were these nothing to have acquired?
That so abnormal an education can have been entirely without drawbacks, it is no part of my purpose to affirm. Tossed, as one may say, to sink or swim amid the waves of life, where those waves ran turbid and brackish, Dickens had emerged strengthened, triumphant. But that some little signs should not remain of the straining and effort with which he had won the land, was scarcely to be expected. He himself, in his more confidential communications with Forster, seems to avow a consciousness that this was so; and Forster, though he speaks guardedly, lovingly, appears to be of opinion that a certain self-assertiveness and fierce intolerance of advice or control[9] occasionally discernible in his friend, might justly be attributed to the harsh influence of early struggles and privations. But what then? That system of education has yet to be devised which shall mould this poor human clay of ours into flawless shapes of use and beauty. A man may be considered fortunate indeed, when his training has left in him only what the French call the “defects of his virtues,” that is, the exaggeration of his good qualities till they turn into faults. Without his immense strength of purpose and iron will, Dickens might never have emerged from obscurity, and the world would have been very distinctly the poorer. One cannot be very sorry that he possessed these gifts in excess.
And now, at last, having slightly sketched the history of his earlier years, and endeavoured to show, however perfectly, what influences had gone to the formation of his character, I proceed to consider the book that lifted him to fame and fortune. The years of apprenticeship are over, and the master-workman brings forth his finished work in its flower of perfection. Let us study “Pickwick.”
[5] Macmillan’s Magazine, July, 1870.
[6] It was the pet name of one of his brothers; that was why he took it.
[7] Froude’s “Thomas Carlyle: A History of his Life in London.”
[8] Transcriber’s Note: The word “time” appears to be missing from the original text.
[9] “I have heard Dickens described by those who knew him,” says Mr. Edmund Yates, in his “Recollections,” “as aggressive, imperious, and intolerant, and I can comprehend the accusation.... He was imperious in the sense that his life was conducted on the sic volo sic jubeo principle, and that everything gave way before him. The society in which he mixed, the hours which he kept, the opinions which he held, his likes and dislikes, his ideas of what should or should not be, were all settled by himself, not merely for himself, but for all those brought into connection with him, and it was never imagined they could be called in question.... He had immense powers of will.”
Dickens has told us, in his preface to the later editions, much of how “Pickwick” came to be projected and published. It was in this wise: Seymour, a caricaturist of very considerable merit, though not, as we should now consider, in the first rank of the great caricaturists, had proposed to Messrs. Chapman and Hall, then just starting on their career as publishers, a “series of Cockney sporting plates.” Messrs. Chapman and Hall entertained the idea favourably, but opined that the plates would require illustrative letter-press; and casting about for some suitable author, bethought themselves of Dickens, whose tales and sketches had been exciting some little sensation in the world of journalism; and who had, indeed, already written for the firm a story, the “Tuggs at Ramsgate,” which may be read among the “Sketches.” Accordingly Mr. Hall called on Dickens for the purpose of proposing the scheme. This would be in 1835, towards the latter end of the year; and Dickens, who had apparently left the paternal roof for some little time, was living bachelorwise, in Furnival’s Inn. What was his astonishment, when Mr. Hall came in, to find he was the same person who had sold him the copy of the magazine containing his first story—that memorable copy at which he had looked, in Westminster Hall, through eyes bedimmed with joyful tears. Such coincidences always had for Dickens a peculiar, almost a superstitious, interest. The circumstance seemed of happy augury to both the “high contracting parties.” Publisher and author were for the nonce on the best of terms. The latter, no doubt, saw his opening; was more than ready to undertake the work, and had no quarrel with the remuneration offered. But even then he was not the man to play second fiddle to anybody. Before they parted, he had quite succeeded in turning the tables on Seymour. The original proposal had been that the artist should produce four caricatures on sporting subjects every month, and that the letter-press should be in illustration of the caricatures. Dickens got Mr. Hall to agree to reverse that position. He, Dickens, was to have the command of the story, and the artist was to illustrate him. How far these altered relations would have worked quite smoothly if Seymour had lived, and if Dickens’ story had not so soon assumed the proportions of a colossal success, it is idle to speculate. Seymour died by his own hand before the second number was published, and so ceased to be in a position to assert himself. It was, however, in deference to the peculiar bent of his art that Mr. Winkle, with his disastrous sporting proclivities, made part of the first conception of the book; and it is also very significant of the book’s origin, that the design on the green wrapper in which the monthly parts made their appearance, should have had a purely sporting character, and exhibited Mr. Pickwick sleepily fishing in a punt, and Mr. Winkle shooting at what looks like a cock-sparrow, the whole
So, little thinking how soon he would begin to regard the “emolument” as ludicrously inadequate, he set to work on “Pickwick.” The first part was published on the 31st of March or 1st of April, 1836.
That part seems scarcely to have created any sensation. Mr James Grant, the novelist, says indeed, that the first five parts were “a dead failure,” and that the publishers were even debating whether the enterprise had not better be abandoned altogether, when suddenly Sam Weller appeared upon the scene, and turned their gloom into laughter. Be that as it may, certain it is that before many months had passed, Messrs. Chapman and Hall must have been thoroughly confirmed in a policy of perseverance. “The first order for Part I.,” that is, the first order for binding, “was,” says the bookbinder who executed the work, “for four hundred copies only.” The order for Part XV. had risen to forty thousand. All contemporary accounts agree that the success was sudden, immense. The author, like Lord Byron, some twenty-five years before, “awoke and found himself famous.” Young as he was, not having yet numbered more than twenty-four summers, he at one stride reached the topmost height of popularity. Everybody read his book. Everybody laughed over it. Everybody talked about it. Everybody felt, confusedly perhaps, but very surely, that a new and vital force had arisen in English literature.
And English literature just then was in one of its times of slackness, rather than full flow. The great tide of the beginning of the century had ebbed. The tide of the Victorian age had scarcely begun to do more than ripple and flash on the horizon. Byron was dead, and Shelley and Keats and Coleridge and Lamb; Southey’s life was on the decline; Wordsworth had long executed his best work; while of the coming men, Carlyle, though in the plenitude of his power, having published “Sartor Resartus,” had not yet published his “French Revolution,"[11] or delivered his lectures on the “Heroes,” and was not yet in the plenitude of his fame and influence; and Macaulay, then in India, was known only as the essayist and politician; and Lord Tennyson and the Brownings were more or less names of the future.
Still, it may not be superfluous to inquire into the why and wherefore of his success. All effects have a cause. What was the cause of this special phenomenon? In the first place, the admirable freshness of the book won its way into every heart. There is a fervour of youth and healthy good spirits about the whole thing. In a former generation, Byron had uttered his wail of despair over a worthless world. We, in our own time, have got back to the dreary point of considering whether life be worth living. Here was a writer who had no such misgivings. For him life was pleasant, useful, full of delight—to be not only tolerated, but enjoyed. He liked its sights, its play of character, its adventures—affected no superiority to its amusements and convivialities—thoroughly laid himself out to please and to be pleased. And his characters were in the same mood. Their fund of animal spirits seemed inexhaustible. For life’s jollities they were never unprepared. No doubt there were “mighty mean moments” in their existence, as there have been in the existence of most of us. It cannot have been pleasant to Mr. Winkle to have his eye blackened by the obstreperous cabman. Mr. Tracy Tupman probably felt a passing pang when jilted by the maiden aunt in favour of the audacious Jingle. No man would elect to occupy the position of defendant in an action for breach of promise, or prefer to sojourn in a debtors’ prison. But how jauntily do Mr. Pickwick and his friends shake off such discomforts! How buoyantly do they override the billows that beset their course! And what excellent digestions they have, and how slightly do they seem to suffer the next day from any little excesses in the matter of milk punch!
Then besides the good spirits and good temper, there is Dickens’ royal gift of humour. As some actors have only to show their face and utter a word or two, in order to convulse an audience with merriment, so here does almost every sentence hold good and honest laughter. Not, perhaps, objects the superfine and too dainty critic, humour of the most delicate sort—not humour that for its rare and exquisite
So much the first readers of “Pickwick” might note as the book unfolded itself to them, part by part; and they might also note one or two things besides. They might note—they could scarcely fail to do so—that though there was a touch of caricature in nearly all the characters, yet those characters were, one and all, wonderfully real, and very much alive. It was no world of shadows to which the author introduced them. Mr. Pickwick had a very distinct existence, and so had his three friends, and Bob Sawyer, and Benjamin Allen, and Mr. Jingle, and Tony Weller, and all the swarm of minor characters. While as to Sam Weller, if it be really true that he averted impending ruin from the book, and turned defeat into victory, one can only say that it was like him. When did he ever “stint stroke” in “foughten field”? By what array of adverse circumstances was he ever taken at a disadvantage? To have created a character of this vitality, of this individual force, would be a feather in the cap of any novelist who ever lived. Something I think of Dickens’ own blood passed into this special progeniture of his. It has been irreverently said that Falstaff might represent Shakespeare in his cups, just as Hamlet might represent him in his more sober moments. So I have always had a kind of fancy that Sam Weller might be regarded as Dickens himself seen in a certain aspect—a sort of Dickens, shall I say?—in an humbler sphere of life, and who had never devoted himself to literature. There is in both the same
Ah, if we add to all this—to the freshness, the “go,” the good spirits, the keen observation, the graphic painting, the humour, the vitality of the characters, the gradual development of power—if we add to all this that something which is in all, and greater than all, viz., genius, and genius of a highly popular kind, then we shall have no difficulty in understanding why everybody read “Pickwick,” and how it came to pass that its publishers made some L20,000 by a work that they had once thought of abandoning as worthless.[12]
[10] See the Letters published by Chapman and Hall.
[11] It was finished in January, 1837, and not published till six months afterwards.
[12] They acknowledged to Dickens that they had made L14,000 by the sale of the monthly parts alone.
Dickens was not at all the man to rest on his oars while “Pickwick” was giving such a magnificent impetus to the boat that contained his fortunes. The amount of work which he accomplished in the years 1836, 1837, 1838, and 1839 is, if we consider its quality, amazing. “Pickwick,” as we have seen, was begun with the first of these years, and its publication continued till the November of 1837. Independently of his work on “Pickwick,” he was, in the year 1836, engaged in the arduous profession of a reporter till the close of the parliamentary session, and also wrote a pamphlet on Sabbatarianism, a farce in two acts, “The Strange Gentleman,” for the St. James’s Theatre, and a comic opera, “The Village Coquettes,” which was set to music by Hullah. With the very commencement
Naturally, with the success of “Pickwick,” came a great change in Dickens’ pecuniary position. He had, as we have seen, been glad enough, before he began the book, to close with the offer of L14 for each monthly part. That sum was afterwards increased to L15, and the two first payments seem to have been made in advance for the purpose of helping him to defray the expenses of his marriage. But as the sale leapt up, the publishers themselves felt that such a rate of remuneration was altogether insufficient, and sent him, first and last, a goodly number of supplementary cheques, for sums amounting in the aggregate, as they
It was also while living at Doughty Street that he seems, in great measure, to have formed those habits of work and relaxation which every artist fashions so as to suit his own special needs and idiosyncrasies. His favourite time for work was the morning, between the hours of breakfast and lunch; and though, at this particular period, the enormous pressure of his engagements compelled him to work “double tides,” and often far into the night, yet he was essentially a day-worker, not a night-worker. Like the great German poet Goethe, he preferred to exercise his art in the fresh morning hours, when the dewdrops, as it were, lay bright upon his imagination and fancy. And for relaxation and sedative, when he had thoroughly worn himself out with mental toil, he would have recourse to the hardest bodily exercise. At first riding seems to have contented him—fifteen miles out and fifteen miles in, with a halt at some road-side inn for refreshment. But soon walking took the place of riding, and he became an indefatigable pedestrian. He would think nothing of a walk of twenty or thirty miles, and that not merely in the vigorous heyday of youth, but afterwards, to the very last. He was always on those alert, quick feet of his, perambulating London from end to end, and in every direction; perambulating the suburbs, perambulating the “greater London” that lies within a radius of twenty miles, round the central core of metropolitan houses. In short, he was everywhere, in all weathers, at all hours. Nor was London, smaller and greater, his only walking field. He would walk wherever he was—walked through and through Genoa, and all about Genoa, when he lived there; knew every inch of the Kent country round Broadstairs and round Gad’s Hill—was, as I have said, always, always, always on his feet. But if he would pedestrianize everywhere, London remained the walking ground of his heart. As Dr. Johnson held that nothing equalled a stroll down Fleet Street, so did Dickens, sitting in full view of Genoa’s perfect bay, and with the blue Mediterranean sparkling at his feet, turn in thought for inspiration to his old haunts. “Never,” he writes to Forster, when about to begin “The Chimes,” “never did I stagger so upon a threshold before. I seem as if I had plucked myself out of my proper soil when I left Devonshire Terrace, and could take
[13] I think critics, and perhaps I myself, have been a little hard on this Quarterly Reviewer. He did not, after all, say that Dickens would come down like a stick, only that he might do so if he wrote too fast and furiously.
“Pickwick” had been a novel without any plot. The story, if story it can be called, bore every trace of its hasty origin. Scene succeeded scene, and incident incident, and Mr. Pickwick and his three friends were hurried about from place to place, and through adventures of all kinds, without any particularly defined purpose. In truth, many people, and myself among the number, find some difficulty in reading the book as a connected narrative, and prefer to take it piecemeal. But in “Oliver Twist” there is a serious effort to work out a coherent plot, and real unity of conception. Whether that conception be based on probability, is another point. Oliver is the illegitimate son of a young lady who has lapsed from virtue under circumstances of great temptation, but still lapsed from virtue, and who dies in giving him birth. He is brought up as a pauper child in a particularly ill-managed workhouse, and apprenticed to a low undertaker. Thence he escapes, and walks to London, where he falls in with a gang of thieves. His legitimate brother, an unutterable scoundrel, happens to see him in London, and recognizing him by a likeness to their common father, bribes the thieves to recapture him when he has escaped from their clutches. Now I would
With this reservation, however, how much there is in the book to which unstinted admiration can be given! As “Pickwick” first fully exhibited the humorous side of Dickens’ genius, so “Oliver Twist” first fully exhibited its tragic side;—the pathetic side was to come somewhat later. The scenes at the workhouse; at the thieves’ dens in London; the burglary; the murder of poor Nancy; the escape and death of the horror-haunted Sikes,—all are painted with a master’s hand. And the book, like its predecessor, and like those that were to follow, contains characters that have passed into common knowledge as types,—characters of the keenest individuality, and that yet seem in themselves to sum up a whole class. Such are Bill Sikes, whose ruffianism has an almost epic grandeur; and black-hearted Fagin, the Jew, receiver of stolen goods and trainer of youth in the way they should not go; and Master Dawkins, the Artful Dodger. Such, too, is Mr. Bumble, greatest and most unhappy of beadles.
Comedy had predominated in “Pickwick,” tragedy in “Oliver Twist.” The more complete fusion of the two was effected in “Nicholas Nickleby.” But as the mighty actor Garrick, in the well-known picture by Sir Joshua Reynolds, is drawn towards the more mirthful of the two sisters, so, here again, I think that comedy decidedly bears away the palm,—though tragedy is not beaten altogether without a struggle either. Here is the story as it unfolds itself. The two heroes are Ralph Nickleby and his nephew Nicholas. They stand forth, almost from the beginning, as antagonists, in battle array the one against the other; and the story is, in the main, a history of the campaigns between them—cunning and greed being mustered on the one side, and young, generous courage on the other. At first Nicholas believes in his uncle, who promises to befriend Nicholas’s mother and sister, and obtains for Nicholas himself a situation
And this leads me, by a kind of natural sequence, to what I have to say about his next book, “The Old Curiosity Shop;” for here, again, though in a very much more marked degree, I fear I shall have to run counter to a popular opinion.
But first a word as to the circumstances under which the book was published. Casting about, after the conclusion of “Nicholas Nickleby,” for further literary ventures, Dickens came to the conclusion that the public must be getting tired of his stories in monthly parts. It occurred to him that a weekly periodical, somewhat after the manner of Addison’s Spectator or Goldsmith’s Bee, and containing essays, stories, and miscellaneous papers,—to be written mainly, but not entirely,
There is no hero in “The Old Curiosity Shop,”—unless Mr. Richard Swiveller, “perpetual grand-master of the Glorious Apollos,” be the questionable hero; and the heroine is Little Nell, a child. Of Dickens’ singular feeling for the pathos and humour of childhood, I have already spoken. Many novelists, perhaps one might even say, most novelists, have no freedom of utterance when they come to speak about children, do not know what to do with a child if it chances to stray into their pages. But how different with Dickens! He is never more thoroughly at home than with the little folk. Perhaps his best speech, and they all are good, is the one uttered at the dinner given on behalf of the Children’s Hospital. Certainly there is no figure in “Dombey and Son” on which more loving care has been lavished than the figure
If it “argues an insensibility” to stand somewhat unmoved among all these tears and admiration, I am afraid I must be rather pebble-hearted. To tell the whole damaging truth, I am, and always have been, only slightly affected by the story of Little Nell; have never felt any particular inclination to shed a tear over it, and consider the closing chapters as failing of their due effect, on me at least, because they are pitched in a key that is altogether too high and unnatural. Of course one makes a confession of this kind with diffidence. It is no light
Do the passages describing her death and burial really possess the rhythm of poetry? That would seem to me, I confess, to be as ill a compliment as to say of a piece of poetry that it was really prose. The music of prose and of poetry are essentially different. They do not affect the ear in the same way. The one is akin to song, the other to speech. Give to prose the recurring cadences, the measure, and the rhythmic march of verse, and it becomes bad prose without becoming good poetry.[15] So, in fairness to Dickens, one is bound, as far as one can, to forget Horne’s misapplied praise. But even thus, and looking upon it as prose alone, can we say that the account of Nell’s funeral is, in the high artistic sense, a piece of good work. Here is an extract: “And now the bell—the bell she had so often heard, by night and day, and listened to with solemn pleasure almost as a living voice—rang its remorseless toll, for her, so young, so beautiful, so good. Decrepit age, and vigorous life, and blooming youth, and helpless infancy, poured forth—on
There are some, indeed, who deny to Dickens the gift of pathos altogether. Such persons acknowledge, for the most part a little unwillingly, that he was a master of humour of the broader, more obvious kind. But they assert that all his sentiment is mawkish and overstrained, and that his efforts to compel our tears are so obvious as to defeat their own purpose. Now it will be clear, from what I have said about Little Nell, that I am capable of appreciating the force of any criticism of this kind; nay, that I go so far as to acknowledge that Dickens occasionally lays himself open to it. But go one inch beyond this I cannot. Of course we may, if we like, take up a position of pure stoicism, and deny pathos altogether, in life as in art. We may regard all human affairs but as a mere struggle for existence, and say that might makes right, and that the weak is only treated according to his deserts when he goes to the wall. We may hold that neither sorrow nor suffering call for any meed of sympathy. Such is mainly the attitude which the French novelist adopts towards the world of his creation.[16] But once admit that feeling is legitimate; once allow that tears are due to those who have been crushed and left bleeding by this great world of ours as it crashes blundering on its way; once grant that the writer’s art can properly embrace what Shakespeare calls “the pity of it,” the sorrows inwoven in all our human relationships; once acknowledge all this, and then I affirm, most confidently, that Dickens, working at his best, was one of the greatest masters of pathos who ever lived. I can myself see scarce a strained discordant note in the account of the short life and early death of Paul Dombey, and none in the description of the death of Paul Dombey’s mother, or in the story of Tiny Tim, or in the record of David Copperfield’s childhood and boyhood. I consider the passage in “American Notes” describing the traits of gentle kindliness among the emigrants as being nobly, pathetically eloquent. Did space allow, I could support my position by quotations and example to any extent. And my conclusion is that, though he failed with Little Nell, yet he succeeded elsewhere, and superbly.
The number of Master Humphrey’s Clock, containing the conclusion of “The Old Curiosity Shop,” appeared on the 17th of January, 1841, and “Barnaby Rudge” began its course in the ensuing week. The first had been essentially a tale of modern life. All the characters that made a kind of background, mostly grotesque or hideous, for the figure of Little Nell, were characters of to-day, or at least of the day when the book was written; for I must not forget that that day ran into the past some six and forty years ago. Quilp, the dwarf,—and a far finer specimen of a scoundrel by the by, in every respect, than that poor stage villain Monks; Sampson Brass and his legal sister Sally, a goodly pair; Kit, golden-hearted and plain of body, who so barely escapes from the plot laid by the afore-mentioned worthies to prove him a thief; Chuckster, most lady-killing of notaries’ clerks; Mrs. Jarley, the good-natured waxwork woman, in whose soul there would be naught save kindliness, only she cannot bring herself to tolerate Punch and Judy; Short and Codlin, the Punch and Judy men; the little misused servant, whom Dick Swiveller in his grandeur creates a marchioness; and the magnificent Swiveller himself, prince among the idle and impecunious, justifying by his snatches of song, and flowery rhetoric, his high position as “perpetual grand-master” among the “Glorious Apollers,”—all these, making allowance perhaps for some idealization, were personages of Dickens’ own time. But in “Barnaby Rudge,” Dickens threw himself back into the last century. The book is a historical novel, one of the two which he wrote, the other being the “Tale of Two Cities,” and its scenes are many of them laid among the No Popery Riots of 1780.
A ghastly time, a time of aimless, brutal incendiarism and mad turbulence on the part of the mob; a time of weakness and ineptitude on the part of the Government; a time of wickedness, folly, and misrule. Dickens describes it admirably. His picture of the riots themselves seems painted in pigments of blood and fire; and yet, through all the hurry and confusion, he retains the clearness of arrangement and lucidity which characterize the pictures of such subjects when executed by the great masters of the art—as Carlyle, for example. His portrait of the poor, crazy-brained creature, Lord George Gordon, who sowed the wind which the country was to reap in whirlwind, is excellent. Nor is what may be called the private part of the story unskilfully woven with the historical part. The plot, though not good, rises perhaps above the average of Dickens’ plots; for even we, his admirers, are scarcely bound to maintain that plot was his strong point. Beyond this, I think I may say that the book is, on the whole, the least characteristic of his books. It is the one which those who are most out of sympathy with his peculiar vein of humour and pathos will probably think the best, and the one which the true Dickens lovers will generally regard as bearing the greatest resemblance to an ordinary novel.
[14] “Dickens in Camp.”
[15] Dickens himself knew that he had a tendency to fall into blank verse in moments of excitement, and tried to guard against it.
[16] M. Daudet, in many respects a follower of Dickens, is a fine and notable exception.
The last number of “Barnaby Rudge” appeared in November, 1841, and, on the 4th of the following January Dickens sailed with his wife for a six months’ tour in the United States. What induced him to undertake this journey, more formidable then, of course, than now?
Mainly, I think, that restless desire to see the world which is strong in a great many men, and was specially strong in Dickens. Ride as he might, and walk as he might, his abounding energies remained unsatisfied. In 1837 there had been trips to Belgium, Broadstairs, Brighton; in 1838 to Yorkshire, Broadstairs, North Wales, and a fairly long stay at Twickenham; in 1839 a similar stay at Petersham—where, as at Twickenham, frolic, gaiety and athletics had prevailed,—and trips to Broadstairs and Devonshire; in 1840 trips again to Bath, Birmingham, Shakespeare’s country, Broadstairs, Devonshire; in 1841 more trips, and a very notable visit to Edinburgh, with which Little Nell had a great deal to do. For Lord Jeffrey was enamoured of that young lady, declaring to whomsoever would hear that there had been “nothing so good ... since Cordelia;” and inoculating the citizens of the northern capital with his enthusiasm, he had induced them to offer to Dickens a right royal banquet, and the freedom of their city. Accordingly to Edinburgh he repaired, and the dinner took place on the 26th of June, with three hundred of the chief notabilities for entertainers, and a reception such as kings might have envied. Jeffrey himself was ill and unable to take the chair, but Wilson, the leonine “Christopher North,” editor of Blackwood, and author of those “Noctes Ambrosianae” which were read so eagerly as they came out, and which some of us find so difficult to read now—Wilson presided most worthily. Of speechifying there was of course much, and compliments abounded. But the banquet itself, the whole reception at Edinburgh was the most magnificent of compliments. Never, I imagine, can such efforts have been made to turn any young man’s brain, as were made, during this and the following year, to turn the head of Dickens, who was still, be it remembered, under thirty. Nevertheless he came unscathed through the ordeal. A kind of manly genuineness bore him through. Amid all the adulation and excitement, the public and private hospitalities, the semi-regal state appearance at the theatre, he could write, and write truly, to his friend Forster: “The moral of this is, that there is no place like home; and that I thank God most heartily for having given me a quiet spirit and a heart that won’t hold many people. I sigh for Devonshire Terrace and Broadstairs, for battledore and shuttlecock; I want to dine in a blouse with you and Mac (Maclise).... On Sunday evening, the 17th July, I shall revisit my household gods, please heaven. I wish the day were here.”
Yes, except during the few years when he and his wife lived unhappily together, he was greatly attached to his home, with its friendships and simple pleasures; but yet, as I have said, a desire to see more of the world, and to garner new experiences, was strong upon him. The two conflicting influences often warred in his life, so that it almost seemed sometimes as if he were being driven by relentless furies. Those furies pointed now with stern fingers towards America, though “how” he was “to get on” “for seven or eight months without” his friends, he could not upon his “soul conceive;” though he dreaded “to think of breaking up all” his “old happy habits for so long a time;” though “Kate,” remembering doubtless her four little children, wept whenever the subject was “spoken of.” Something made him feel that the going was “a matter of imperative necessity.” Washington Irving beckoned from across the Atlantic, speaking, as Jeffrey had spoken from Edinburgh, of Little Nell and her far-extended influence. There was a great reception foreshadowed, and a new world to be seen, and a book to be written about it. While as to the strongest of the home ties—the children that brought the tears into Mrs. Dickens’ eyes,—the separation, after all, would not be eternal, and the good Macready, tragic actor and true friend, would take charge of the little folk while their parents were away. So Dickens, who had some time before “begun counting the days between this and coming home again,” set sail, as I have said, for America on the 4th of January, 1842.
And a very rough experience he, and Mrs. Dickens, and Mrs. Dickens’ maid seem to have had during that January passage from Liverpool to Halifax and Boston. Most of the time it blew horribly, and they were direfully ill. Then a storm supervened, which swept away the paddle-boxes and stove in the life-boats, and they seem to have been in real peril. Next the ship struck on a mud-bank. But dangers and discomforts must have been forgotten, at any rate to begin with, in the glories of the reception that awaited the “inimitable,”—as Dickens whimsically called himself in those days,—when he landed in the New World. If he had been received with princely honours in Edinburgh, he was treated now as an emperor in some triumphant progress. Halifax sounded the first note of welcome, gave, as it were, the preliminary trumpet flourish. From that town he writes: “I wish you could have seen the crowds cheering the inimitable in the streets. I wish you could have seen judges, law-officers, bishops, and law-makers welcoming the inimitable. I wish you could have seen the inimitable shown to a great elbow-chair by the Speaker’s throne, and sitting alone in the middle of the floor of the House of Commons, the observed of all observers, listening with exemplary gravity to the queerest speaking possible, and breaking, in spite of himself, into a smile as he thought of this commencement to the thousand and
Extracts like these could be multiplied to any extent, and the question arises, why did such a change come over the spirit of Dickens? Washington Irving, at the great New York dinner, had called him “the guest of the nation.” Why was the guest so quickly dissatisfied with his host, and quarrelling with the character of his entertainment? Sheer physical fatigue, I think, had a good deal to do with it. Even at Boston, before he had begun to travel over the unending railways, water-courses, and chaotic coach-roads of the great Republic, that key-note had been sounded. “We are already,” he had written, “weary at times, past all expression.” Few men can wander with impunity out of their own professional sphere, and undertake duties for which they have neither the training nor acquired tastes. Dickens was a writer, not a king; and here he was expected to hold a king’s state, and live in a king’s publicity, but without the formal etiquette that hedge a king from intruders, and make his position tolerable. He was hemmed in by curious eyes, mobbed in the streets, stared at in his own private rooms, interviewed by the hour, shaken by the hand till his arm must often have been ready to drop off, waylaid at every turn with formal addresses. If he went to church the people crowded into the adjacent pews, and the preacher preached at him. If he got into a public conveyance, every one inside insisted on an introduction, and the people outside—say before the train started—would pull down the windows and comment freely on his nose and eyes and personal appearance generally, some even touching him as if to see if he were real. He was safe from intrusion nowhere—no, not when he was washing and his wife in bed. Such attentions must have been exhausting to a degree that can scarcely be imagined. But there was more than mere physical weariness in his growing distaste for the United States. Perfectly outspoken at all times, and eager for the strife of tongues in any cause which he had at heart, it horrified him to find that he was expected not to express himself freely on such subjects as International Copyright, and that even in private, or semi-private intercourse, slavery was a topic to be avoided. Then I fear, too, that as he left cultured Boston behind, he was brought into close and habitual contact with natives whom he did not appreciate. Rightly or wrongly, he took a strong dislike for Brother Jonathan as Brother Jonathan existed, in the rough, five and forty years ago. He was angered by that young gentleman’s brag, offended by the rough familiarity of his manners, indignant at his determination by all means to acquire dollars, incensed by his utter want of care for literature and art, sickened by his tobacco-chewing and expectorations. So when Dickens gets to “Niagara Falls, upon the English side,” he puts ten dashes under the word English; and, meeting two English officers, contrasts them in thought with the men whom he has just left, and seems, by note of exclamation and italics, to call upon the world to witness, “what gentlemen, what noblemen of nature they seemed!”
And Brother Jonathan, how did he regard his young guest? Well, Jonathan, great as he was, and greater as he was destined to be, did not possess the gift of prophecy, and could not of course foresee the scathing satire of “American Notes” and “Martin Chuzzlewit.” But still, amid all his enthusiasm, I think there must have been a feeling of uneasiness and disappointment. Part, as there is no doubt, of the fervour with which he greeted Dickens, was due to his regarding Dickens as the representative of democratic feeling in aristocratic England, as the advocate of the poor and down-trodden against the wealthy and the strong; “and”—thus argued Jonathan—“because we are a democracy, therefore Dickens will admire and love us, and see how immeasurably superior we are to the retrograde Britishers of his native land.” But unfortunately Dickens showed no signs of being impressed in that particular way. On the contrary, as we have seen, such comparison as he made in his own mind was infinitely to the disadvantage of the United States. “We must be cracked up,” says Hannibal Chollop, in “Martin Chuzzlewit,” speaking of his fellow countrymen. And Dickens, even while feted and honoured, would not “crack up” the Americans. He lectured them almost with truculence on their sins in the matter of copyright; he could scarcely be restrained from testifying against slavery; he was not the man to say he liked manners and customs which he loathed. Jonathan must have been very doubtfully satisfied with his guest.
It is no part of my purpose to follow Dickens lingeringly, and step by step, from the day when he landed at Halifax, to the 7th of June, when he re-embarked at New York for England. From Boston he went to New York, where the great dinner was given with Washington Irving in the chair, and thence to Philadelphia and Washington,—which was still the empty “city of magnificent distances,” that Mr. Goldwin Smith declares it has now ceased to be;—and thence again westward, and by Niagara and Canada back to New York. And if any persons want to know what he thought about these and other places, and the railway travelling, and the coach travelling, and the steamboat travelling, and the prisons and other public institutions—aye, and many other things besides, they cannot do better than read the “American Notes for general circulation,” which he wrote and published within the year after his return. Nor need such persons be deterred by the fact that Macaulay thought meanly of the book; for Macaulay, with all his great gifts, did not, as he himself knew full well, excel in purely literary criticism. So when he pronounces, that “what is meant to be easy and sprightly is vulgar and flippant,” and “what is meant to be fine is a great deal too fine for me, as the description of the Falls of Niagara,” one can venture to differ without too great a pang. The book, though not assuredly one of Dickens’ best, contains admirable passages which none but he could have written, and the description
And now, with three observations, I will conclude what I have to say about the visit to America in 1842. The first is that the “Notes” are entirely void of all vulgarity of reference to the private life of the notable Americans whom Dickens had met. He seems to have known, more or less intimately, the chief writers of the time—Washington Irving, Channing, Dana, Bryant, Longfellow, Bancroft; but his intercourse with them he held sacred, and he made no literary capital out of it. Secondly, it is pleasant to note that there was, so far, no great “incompatibility of temper” between him and his wife. He speaks of her enthusiastically, in his correspondence, as a “most admirable traveller,” and expatiates on the good temper and equanimity with which she had borne the fatigues and jars of a most trying journey. And the third point to which I will call attention is the thoroughly
And who was glad one evening—which would be about the last evening in June, or the first of July—when a hackney coach rattled up to the door of the house in Devonshire Terrace, and four little folk, two girls and two boys, were hurried down, and kissed through the bars of the gate, because their father was too eager to wait till it was opened? Who were glad but the little folk aforementioned—I say nothing of the joy of father and mother; for children as they were, a sense of sorrowful loss had been theirs while their parents were away, and greater strictness seems to have reigned in the good Macready’s household than in their own joyous home. It is Miss Dickens herself who tells us this, and in whose memory has lingered that pretty scene of the kiss through the bars in the summer gloaming. And she has much to tell us too of her father’s tenderness and care,—of his sympathy with the children’s terrors, so that, for instance, he would sit beside the cot of one of the little girls who had been startled, and hold her hand in his till she fell asleep; of his having them on his knees, and singing to them the merriest of comic songs; of his interest in all their small concerns; of the many pet names with which he invested them.[17] Then, as they grew older, there were Twelfth Night parties and magic lanterns. “Never such magic lanterns as those shown by him,” she says. “Never such conjuring as his.” There was dancing, too, and the little ones taught him his steps, which he practised with much assiduity, once even jumping out of bed in terror, lest he had forgotten the polka, and indulging in a solitary midnight rehearsal. Then, as the children grew older still, there were private theatricals. “He never,” she says again, “was too busy to interest himself in his children’s occupations, lessons, amusements, and general welfare.” Clearly not one of those brilliant men, a numerous race, who when away from their homes, in general society, sparkle and scintillate, flash out their wit, and irradiate all with their humour, but who, when at home, are dull as rusted steel. Among the many tributes to his greatness, that of his own child has a place at once touching and beautiful.
[17] Miss Dickens evidently bears proudly still her pet name of “Mamie,” and signs it to her book.
With the return from America began the old life of hard work and hard play. There was much industrious writing of “American Notes,” at Broadstairs and elsewhere; and there were many dinners of welcome home, and strolls, doubtless, with Forster and Maclise, and other intimates, to old haunts, as Jack Straw’s Castle on Hampstead Heath, and similar houses of public entertainment. And then in the autumn there was “such a trip ... into Cornwall,” with Forster, and the painters Stanfield and Maclise for travelling companions. How they enjoyed themselves to be sure, and with what bubbling, bursting merriment. “I never laughed in my life as I did on this journey,” writes Dickens, “... I was choking and gasping ... all the way. And Stanfield got into such apoplectic entanglements that we were often obliged to beat him on the back with portmanteaus before we could recover him.” Immediately on their return, refreshed and invigorated by this wholesome hilarity and enjoyment, he threw himself into the composition of his next book, and the first number of “Martin Chuzzlewit” appeared in January, 1843.
“Martin Chuzzlewit” is unquestionably one of Dickens’ great works. He himself held it to be “in a hundred points” and “immeasurably” superior to anything he had before written, and that verdict may, I think, be accepted freely. The plot, as plot is usually understood, can scarcely indeed be commended. But then plot was never his strong point. Later in life, and acting, as I have always surmised, under the influence of his friend, Mr. Wilkie Collins, he endeavoured to construct ingenious stories that turned on mysterious disappearances, and the substitution of one person for another, and murders real or suspected. All this was, to my mind, a mistake. Dickens had no real gift for the manufacture of these ingenious pieces of mechanism. He did not even many times succeed in disposing the events and marshalling the characters in his narratives so as to work, by seemingly unforced and natural means, to a final situation and climax. Too often, in order to hold his story together and make it move forward at all, he was compelled to make his personages pursue a line of conduct preposterous and improbable, and even antagonistic to their nature. Take this very book. Old Martin Chuzzlewit is a man who has been accustomed, all through a long life, to have his own way, and to take it with a high hand. Yet he so far sets aside, during a course of months, every habit of his life, as to simulate the weakest subservience to Pecksniff—and that not for the purpose of unmasking Pecksniff, who wanted no unmasking, but only in order to disappoint him. Is it believable that old Martin should have thought Pecksniff worth so much trouble, personal
But of course, with all this, the question still remains how far Dickens’ comparative failure as a constructor of plots really detracts from his fame and standing as a novelist. To my mind, I confess, not very much. Plot I regard as the least essential element in the novelist’s art. A novel can take the very highest rank without it. There is not any plot to speak of in Lesage’s “Gil Blas,” and just as little in Thackeray’s “Vanity Fair,” and only a very bad one in Goldsmith’s “Vicar of Wakefield.” Coleridge admired the plot of “Tom Jones,” but though one naturally hesitates to differ from a critic of such superb mastery and power, I confess I have never been struck by that plot, any more than by the plots, such as they are, in “Joseph Andrews,” or in Smollett’s works. Nor, if I can judge of other people’s memories by my own, is it by the mechanism of the story, or by the intrigue, however admirably woven and unravelled, that one remembers a work of fiction. These may exercise an intense passing interest of curiosity, especially during a first perusal. But afterwards they fade from the mind, while the characters, if highly vitalized
And Dickens sometimes succeeds in reaching a higher unity than that of mere plot. He takes one central idea, and makes of it the soul of his novel, animating and vivifying every part. That central idea in “Martin Chuzzlewit” is the influence of selfishness. The Chuzzlewits are a selfish race. Old Martin is selfish; and so, with many good qualities and possibilities of better things, is his grandson, young Martin. The other branch of the family, Anthony Chuzzlewit and his son Jonas, are much worse. The latter especially is a horrible creature. Brought up to think of nothing except his own interests and the main chance, he is only saved by an accident from the crime of parricide, and afterwards commits a murder and poisons himself. As his career is one of terrible descent, so young Martin’s is one of gradual regeneration from his besetting weakness. He falls in love with his cousin Mary—the only unselfish member of the family, by the bye—and quarrels about this love affair with his grandfather, and so passes into the hard school of adversity. There he learns much. Specially valuable is the teaching which he gets as a settler in the swampy backwoods of the United States in company with Mark Tapley, jolliest and most helpful of men. On his return, he finds his grandfather seemingly under the influence of Pecksniff, the hypocrite, the English Tartuffe. But that, as I have already mentioned, is only a ruse. Old Martin is deceiving Pecksniff, who in due time receives the reward of his deeds, and all ends happily for those who deserve happiness. Such is something like a bare outline of the story, with the beauty eliminated. For what makes its interest, we must go further, to the household of Pecksniff with his two daughters, Charity and Mercy, and Tom Pinch, whose beautiful, unselfish character stands so in contrast to that of the grasping self-seekers by whom he is surrounded; we must study young Martin
Yet not at the time a successful book. Why Fortune, the fickle jade, should have taken it into her freakish head to frown, or half frown, on Dickens at this particular juncture, who shall tell? He was wooing her with his very best work, and she turned from him. The sale of “Pickwick” and “Nicholas Nickleby” had been from forty to fifty thousand copies of each part; the sale of Master Humphrey’s Clock had risen still higher; the sale of even the most popular parts of “Martin Chuzzlewit” fell to twenty-three thousand. This was, as may be supposed, a grievous disappointment. Dickens’ personal expenditure had not perhaps been lavish in view of what he thought he could calculate on earning; but it had been freely based on that calculation. Demands, too, were being made upon his purse by relations,—probably by his father, and certainly by his brother Frederic, which were frequent, embarrassing, and made in a way which one may call worse than indelicate. Any permanent loss of popularity would have meant serious money entanglements. With his father’s career in full view, such a prospect must have been anything but pleasant. He cast about what he should do, and determined to leave England for a space, live more economically on the Continent, and gather materials in Italy or Switzerland for a new travel book. But before carrying out this project, he would woo fortune once again, and in a different form. During the months of October and November, 1843, in the intervals of “Chuzzlewit,” he wrote a short story that has taken its place, by almost universal consent, among his masterpieces, nay, among the masterpieces of English literature: “The Christmas Carol.”
All Dickens’ great gifts seem reflected, sharp and distinct, in this little book, as in a convex mirror. His humour, his best pathos, which is not that of grandiloquence, but of simplicity, his bright poetic fancy, his kindliness, all here find a place. It is great painting in miniature, genius in its quintessence, a gem of perfect water. We may apply to it any simile that implies excellence
Nor did the public of Christmas, 1843, fail to appreciate that something of very excellent quality had been brought forth for their benefit. “The first edition of six thousand copies,” says Forster, “was sold” on the day of publication, and about as many more would seem to have been disposed of before the end of February, 1844. But, alas, Dickens had set his heart on a profit of L1,000, whereas in February he did not see his way to much more than L460,[18] and his unpaid bills for the previous year he described as “terrific.” So something, as I have said, had to be done. A change of front became imperative. Messrs. Bradbury and Evans advanced him L2,800 “for a fourth share in whatever he might write during the ensuing eight years,”—he purchased at the Pantechnicon “a good old shabby devil of a coach,” also described as “an English travelling carriage of considerable proportions”; engaged a courier who turned out to be the courier of couriers, a very conjurer among couriers; let his house in Devonshire Terrace; and so started off for Italy, as I calculate the dates, on the 1st of July, 1844.
[18] The profit at the end of 1844 was L726.
Ah, those eventful, picturesque, uncomfortable old travelling days, when railways were unborn, or in their infancy; those interminable old dusty drives, in diligence or private carriage, along miles and miles of roads running straight to the low horizon, through a line of tall poplars, across the plains of France! What an old-world memory it seems, and yet, as the years go, not so very long since after all. The party that rumbled from Boulogne to Marseilles in the old “devil of a coach” aforesaid, “and another conveyance for luggage,” and I know not what other conveyances besides, consisted of Dickens himself; Mrs. Dickens; her sister, Miss Georgina Hogarth, who had come to live with them on their return from
The Italy of 1844 was like, and yet unlike the Italy of to-day. It was the old disunited Italy of several small kingdoms and principalities, the Italy over which lowered the shadow of despotic Austria, and of the Pope’s temporal power, not the Italy which the genius of Cavour has welded into a nation. It was a land whose interest came altogether from the past, and that lay as it were in the beauty of time’s sunset. How unlike the United States! The contrast has always, I confess, seemed to me a piquant one. It has often struck me with a feeling of quaintness that the two countries which Dickens specially visited and described, were, the one this lovely land of age and hoar antiquity, and the other that young giant land of the West, which is still in the garish strong light of morning, and whose great day is in the future. Nor, I think, before he had seen both, would Dickens himself have been able to tell on which side his sympathies would lie. Thoroughly popular in his convictions, thoroughly satisfied that to-day was in all respects better than yesterday, it is clear that he expected to find more pleasure in the brand new Republic than his actual experience warranted. The roughness of the strong, uncultured young life grated upon him. It jarred upon his sensibilities. But of Italy he wrote with very different feeling. What though the places were dirty, the people shiftless, idle, unpunctual, unbusinesslike, and the fleas as the sand which is upon the sea-shore for multitude? It mattered not while life was so picturesque and varied, and manners were so full of amenity. Your inn might be, and probably was, ill-appointed, untidy, the floors of brick, the doors agape, the windows banging—a contrast in every way to the palatial hotel in New York or Washington. But then how cheerful and amusing were mine host and hostess, and how smilingly determined all concerned to make things pleasant. So the artist in Dickens turned from the new to the old, and Italy, as she is wont, cast upon him her spell.
First impressions, however, were not altogether satisfactory. Dickens owns to a pang when he was “set down” at Albaro, a suburb of Genoa, “in a rank, dull, weedy courtyard, attached to a kind of pink jail, and told he lived there.” But he immediately adds: “I little thought that day that I should ever come to have an attachment for the very stones in the streets of Genoa, and to look back upon the city with affection, as connected with many hours of happiness and quiet.” In sooth, he enjoyed the place thoroughly. “Martin Chuzzlewit” had left his hands. He was fairly entitled for a few weeks to the luxury of idleness, and he threw himself into doing nothing, as he was accustomed to throw himself into his work, with all energy. And there was much to do, much especially to see. So Dickens bathed and walked; and strolled about the city hither and thither, and about the suburbs and about the surrounding country; and visited public buildings and private palaces; and noted the ways of the inhabitants; and saw Genoese life in its varied forms; and wrote light glancing letters about it all to friends at home; and learnt Italian; and, in the end of September, left his “pink jail,” which had been taken for him at a disproportionate rent, and moved into the Palazzo Peschiere, in Genoa itself: a wonderful palace, with an entrance-hall fifty feet high, and larger than “the dining-room of the Academy,” and bedrooms “in size and shape like those at Windsor Castle, but greatly higher,” and a view from the windows over gardens where the many fountains sparkled, and the gold fish glinted, and into Genoa itself, with its “many churches, monasteries, and convents pointing to the sunny sky,” and into the harbour, and over the sapphire sea, and up again to the encircling hills—a view, as Dickens declared, that “no custom could impair, and no description enhance.”
But with the beginning of October came again the time for work; and beautiful beyond all beauty as were his surroundings, the child of London turned to the home of his heart, and pined for the London streets. For some little space he seemed to be thinking in vain, and cudgelling his brains for naught, when suddenly the chimes of Genoa’s many churches, that seemed to have been clashing and clanging nothing but distraction and madness, rang harmony into his mind. The subject and title of his new Christmas book were found. He threw himself into the composition of “The Chimes.”
Earnest at all times in what he wrote, living ever in intense and passionate sympathy with the world of his imagination, he seems specially to have put his whole heart into this book. “All my affections and passions got twined and knotted up in it, and I became as haggard as a murderer long before I wrote ‘the end,’”—so he told Lady Blessington on the 20th of November; and to Forster he expressed the yearning that was in him to “leave” his “hand upon the time, lastingly upon the time, with one tender
Such, however, was very far from being Dickens’ view. He had “undergone,” he said, “as much sorrow and agitation” in the writing “as if the thing were real,” and on the 3rd of November, when the last page was written, had indulged “in what women call a good cry;” and, as usually happens, the child that had cost much sorrow was a child of special love.[19] So, when all was over, nothing would do but he must come to London to read his book to the choice literary spirits whom he specially loved. Accordingly he started from Genoa on the 6th of November, travelled by Parma, Modena, Bologna, Ferrara, Venice—where, such was the enchantment of the place, that he felt it “cruel not to have brought Kate and Georgy, positively cruel and base";—and thence again by Verona, Mantua, Milan, the Simplon Pass, Strasbourg, Paris, and Calais, to Dover, and wintry England. Sharp work, considering all he had seen by the way, and how effectually he had seen it, for he was in London on the evening of the 30th of November, and, on the 2nd of December, reading his little book to the choice spirits aforesaid, all assembled for the purpose at Forster’s house. There they are: they live for us still in Maclise’s drawing, though Time has plied his scythe among them so effectually, during the forty-two years since flown, that each has passed into the silent land. There they sit: Carlyle, not the shaggy Scotch terrier with the melancholy eyes that we were wont to see in his later days, but close shaven and alert; and swift-witted Douglas Jerrold; and Laman Blanchard, whose name goes darkling in the literature of the last generation; and Forster himself, journalist and author of many books; and the painters Dyce, Maclise, and Stanfield; and Byron’s friend and school companion, the clergyman Harness, who, like Dyce, pays to the story the tribute of his tears.
Dickens can have been in London but the fewest of few days, for on the 13th of December he was leaving Paris for Genoa, and that after going to the theatre more than once. From Genoa he started again, on the 20th of January, 1845, with Mrs. Dickens, to see the Carnival at Rome. Thence he went to Naples, returning to Rome for the Holy Week; and thence again by Florence to Genoa. He finally left Italy in the beginning of June, and was back with his family in Devonshire Terrace at the end of that month.
To what use of a literary kind should he turn his Italian observations and experiences? In what form should he publish the notes made by the way? Events soon answered that question. The year 1845 stands in the history of Queen Victoria’s reign as a time of intense political excitement. The Corn Law agitation raged somewhat furiously. Dickens felt strongly impelled to throw himself into the strife. Why should he not influence his fellow-men, and “battle for the true, the just,” as the able editor of a daily newspaper? Accordingly, after all the negotiations which enterprises of this kind necessitate, he made the due arrangements for starting a new paper, The Daily News. It was to be edited by himself, to “be kept free,” the prospectus said, “from personal influence or party bias,” and to be “devoted to the advocacy of all rational and honest means by which wrong may be redressed, just rights maintained, and the happiness and welfare of society promoted.” His salary, so I have seen it stated, was to be L2,000 a year; and the first number came out on the morning of the 21st of January, 1846. He held the post of editor three weeks.
The world may, I think, on the whole, be congratulated that he did not hold it longer. Able editors are more easily found than such writers as Dickens. There were higher claims upon his time. But to return to the Italian Notes: it was in the columns of The Daily News that they first saw the light. They were among the baby attractions and charms, if I may so speak, of the nascent paper, which is now, as I need not remind my readers, enjoying a hale and vigorous manhood. And admirable sketches they are. Much, very much has been written about Italy. The subject has been done to death by every variety of pen, and in every civilized tongue. But amid all this writing, Dickens’ “Pictures from Italy” still holds a high and distinctive position. That the descriptions, whether of places and works of art, or of life’s pageantry, and what may be called the social picturesque, should be graphic, vivid, animated, was almost a matter of course. But a priori, I think one might have feared lest he should “chaff” the place and its inhabitants overmuch, and yield to the temptation of making merriment over matters which hoar age and old associations had hallowed. We can all imagine the kind of observation that would occur to Sam Weller in strolling through St. Mark’s at Venice, or
[19] He read “The Chimes” at his first reading as a paid reader.
The publication of the “Pictures,” though I have dealt with it as a sort of complement to Dickens’ sojourn in Italy, carries us to the year 1846. But before going on with the history of that year, there are one or two points to be taken up in the history of 1845. The first is the performance, on the 21st of September, of Ben Jonson’s play of “Every Man in his Humour,” by a select company of amateur actors, among whom Dickens held chief place. “He was the life and soul of the entire affair,” says Forster. “I never seem till then to have known his business capabilities. He took everything on himself, and did the whole of it without an effort. He was stage director, very often stage carpenter, scene arranger, property man, prompter, and band-master. Without offending any one, he kept every one in order. For all he had useful suggestions.... He adjusted scenes, assisted carpenters, invented costumes, devised playbills, wrote out calls, and enforced, as well as exhibited in his own proper person, everything of which he urged the necessity on others.” Dickens had once thought of the stage as a profession, and was, according to all accounts, an amateur actor of very unusual power. But of course he only acted for his amusement, and I don’t know that I should have dwelt upon this performance, which was followed by others of a similar kind, if it did not, in Forster’s description, afford such a signal instance of his efficiency as a practical man. The second event to be mentioned as happening in 1845, is the publication of another very pretty Christmas story, “The Cricket on the Hearth.”
Though Dickens had ceased to edit The Daily News on the 9th of February, 1846, he contributed to the paper for some few weeks longer. But by the month of May his connection with it had entirely ceased; and on the 31st of that month, he started, by Belgium and the Rhine, for Lausanne in Switzerland, where he had determined to spend some time, and commence his next great book, and write his next Christmas story.
A beautiful place is Lausanne, as many of my readers will know; and a beautiful house the house called Rosemont, situated on a hill that rises from the Lake of Geneva, with the lake’s blue waters stretching below, and across, on the other side, a magnificent panorama of snowy mountains, the Simplon, St. Gothard, Mont Blanc, towering to the sky. This delightful place Dickens took at a rent of some L10 a month. Then he re-arranged all the furniture, as was his energetic wont. Then he spent a fortnight or so in looking about him, and writing a good deal for Lord John Russell on Ragged Schools, and for Miss Coutts about her various charities; and finally, on the 28th of June, as he announced to Forster in capital letters, BEGAN DOMBEY.
But as the Swiss pine with home-sickness when away from their own dear land, so did this Londoner, amid all the glories of the Alps, pine for the London streets. It seemed almost as if they were essential to the exercise of his genius. The same strange mental phenomenon which he had observed in himself at Genoa was reproduced here. Everything else in his surroundings smiled most congenially. The place was fair beyond speech. The shifting, changing beauty of the mountains entranced him. The walks offered an endless variety of enjoyment. He liked the people. He liked the English colony. He had made several dear friends among them and among the natives. He was interested in the politics of the country, which happened, just then, to be in a state of peculiar excitement and revolution. Everything was charming;—“but,” he writes, “the toil and labour of writing, day after day, without that magic-lantern (of the London streets) is IMMENSE!” It literally knocked him up. He had “bad nights,” was “sick and giddy,” desponding over his book, more than half inclined to abandon the Christmas story altogether for that year. However, a short trip to Geneva, and the dissipation of a stroll or so in its thoroughfares, to remind him, as it were, of what streets were like, and a week of “idleness” “rusting and devouring,” “complete and unbroken,” set him comparatively on his legs again, and before he left Lausanne for Paris on the 16th of November, he had finished three parts of “Dombey,” and the “Battle of Life.”
Of the latter I don’t know that I need say anything. It is decidedly the weakest of his Christmas books. But “Dombey” is very different work, and the first five numbers especially, which carry the story to the death of little Paul, contain passages of humour and pathos, and of humour and pathos mingled together and shot in warp and woof, like some daintiest silken fabric, that are scarcely to be matched in the language. As I go in my mind through the motherless child’s short history—his birth, his christening, the engagement of the wet-nurse, the time when he is consigned to the loveless care of Mrs. Pipchin, his education in Dr. Blimber’s Academy under the classic Cornelia, and his death—as I follow it all in thought, now smiling at each well-remembered touch of humour, and now saddened and solemnized as the shadow of death deepens over the frail little life, I confess to something more than critical admiration for the writer as an artist. I feel towards him as towards one who has touched my heart. Of course it is the misfortune of the book, regarding it as a whole, that the chapters relating to Paul, which are only an episode, should be of such absorbing interest, and come so early. Dickens really wrote them too well. They dwarf the rest of the story. We find a difficulty in resuming the thread of it with the same zest when the child is gone. But though the remainder of the book inevitably suffers in this way, it ought not to suffer unduly. Even apart from little Paul the novel is a fine one. Pride is its subject, as selfishness is that of “Martin Chuzzlewit.” Mr. Dombey, the city merchant, has as much of the arrogance of caste and position as any blue-blooded hidalgo. He is as proud of his name as if he had inherited it from a race of princes. That he neglects and slights his daughter, and loves his son, is mainly because the latter will add a sort of completeness to the firm, and make it truly Dombey and Son, while the girl, for all commercial purposes, can be nothing but a cipher. And through his pride he is struck to the heart, and ruined. Mr. Carker, his confidential agent and manager, trades upon it for all vile ends, first to feather his own nest, and then to launch his patron into large and unsound business ventures. The second wife, whom he marries, certainly with no affection on either side, but purely because of her birth and connections, and because her great beauty will add to his social prestige—she, with ungovernable pride equal to his own, revolts against his authority, and, in order to humiliate him the more, pretends to elope with Carker, whom in turn she scorns and crushes. Broken thus in fortune and honour, Mr. Dombey yet falls not ignobly. His creditors he satisfies in full, reserving to himself nothing; and with a softened heart turns to the daughter he had slighted, and in her love finds comfort. Such is the main purport of the story, and round it, in graceful arabesques, are embroidered, after Dickens’ manner, a whole
But there is one person whom I have left out of my enumeration, not certainly because I don’t know him, for I know him very well, but because I want to speak about him more particularly. That person is my old friend, Mr. Toots; and the special point in his character which induces me to linger is the slight touch of craziness that sits so charmingly upon him. M. Taine, the French critic, in his chapters on Dickens, repeats the old remark that genius and madness are near akin.[20] He observes, and observes truly, that Dickens describes so well because an imagination of singular intensity enables him to see the object presented, and at the same time to impart to it a kind of visionary life. “That imagination,” says M. Taine, “is akin to the imagination of the monomaniac.” And, starting from this point, he proceeds to show, here again quite truly, with what admirable sympathetic power and insight Dickens has described certain cases of madness, as in Mr. Dick. But here, having said some right things, M. Taine goes all wrong. According to him, these portraits of persons who have lost their wits, “however amusing they may seem at first sight,” are “horrible.” They could only have been painted by “an imagination such as that of Dickens, excessive, disordered, and capable of hallucination.” He seems to be not far from thinking that only our splenetic and melancholy race could have given birth to such literary monsters. To speak like this, as I conceive, shows a singular misconception of the instinct or set purpose that led Dickens to introduce these characters into his novels at all. It is perfectly true that he has done so several times. Barnaby Rudge, the hero of the book of the same name, is half-witted. Mr. Dick, in “David Copperfield,” is decidedly crazy. Mr. Toots is at least simple. Little Miss Flite, in “Bleak House,” haunting the Law Courts in expectation of a judgment on the Day of Judgment, is certainly not compos mentis. And one may concede to M. Taine that some element of
Dickens was at work on “Dombey and Son” during the latter part of the year 1846, and the whole of 1847, and the early part of 1848. We left him on the 16th of November, in the first of these years, starting from Lausanne for Paris, which he reached on the evening of the 20th. Here he took a house—a “preposterous” house, according to his own account, with only gleams of reason in it; and visited many theatres; and went very often to the Morgue, where lie the unowned dead; and had pleasant friendly intercourse with the notable French authors of the time, Alexandre Dumas the Great, most prolific of romance writers; and Scribe of the innumerable plays; and the poets Lamartine and Victor Hugo; and Chateaubriand, then in his sad and somewhat morose old age. And in Paris too, with the help of streets and crowded ways, he wrote the great number of Dombey, the number in which little Paul dies. Three months did Dickens spend in the French capital, the incomparable city, and then was back in London, at the old life of hard work; but with even a stronger infusion than before of private theatricals—private theatricals on a grandiose scale, that were applauded by the Queen herself, and took him and his troupe starring about during the next three or four years, hither and thither, and here and there, in London and the provinces. “Splendid strolling” Forster calls it; and a period of unmixed jollity and enjoyment it seems to have been. Of course Dickens was the life and soul of it all. Mrs. Cowden Clarke, one of the
This was his Christmas story for 1848; the last, and not the worst of his Christmas stories. Both conception and treatment are thoroughly characteristic. Mr. Redlaw, a chemist, brooding over an ancient wrong, comes to the conclusion that it would be better for himself, better for all, if, in each of us, every memory of the past could be cancelled. A ghostly visitant, born of his own resentment and gloom, gives him the boon he seeks, and enables him to go about the world freezing all recollection in those he meets. And lo the boon turns out to be a curse. His presence blights those on whom it falls. For with the memory of past wrongs, goes the memory of past benefits, of all the mutual kindlinesses of life, and each unit of humanity becomes self-centred and selfish. Two beings alone resist his influence—one, a creature too selfishly nurtured for any of mankind’s better recollections; and the other a woman so good as to resist the spell, and even, finally, to exorcise it in Mr. Redlaw’s own breast.
“David Copperfield” was published between May, 1849, and the autumn of 1850, and marks, I think, the culminating point in Dickens’ career as a writer. So far there had been, not perhaps from book to book, but on the whole, decided progress, the gradual attainment of greater ease, and of the power of obtaining results of equal power by simpler means. Beyond this there was, if not absolute declension, for he never wrote anything that could properly be called careless and unworthy of himself, yet at least no advance. Of the interest that attaches to the book from the fact that so many portions are autobiographical, I have already spoken; nor need I go over the ground again. But quite apart from such adventitious attractions, the novel is an admirable one. All the scenes of little David’s childhood in the Norfolk home—the Blunderstone rookery, where there were no rooks—are among the
While “David Copperfield” was in progress, Dickens started on a new venture. He had often before projected a periodical, and twice, as we have seen,—once in Master Humphrey’s Clock, and again as editor of The Daily News,—had attempted quasi-journalism or its reality. But now at last he had struck the right vein. He had discovered a means of utilizing his popularity, and imparting it to a paper, without being under the crushing necessity of writing the whole of that paper himself. The first number of Household Words appeared on the 30th of March, 1850.
The “preliminary word” heralds the paper in thoroughly characteristic fashion, and is, not unnaturally, far more personal in tone than the first leading article of the first number of The Daily News, though that, too, be it said in passing, bears traces, through all its officialism, of having come from the same pen.[22] In introducing Household Words to his new readers, Dickens speaks feelingly, eloquently, of his own position as a writer, and the responsibilities attached to his popularity, and tells of his hope that a future of instruction, and amusement, and kindly playful fancy may be in store for the paper. Nor were his happy anticipations belied. All that he had promised, he gave. Household Words found an entrance into innumerable homes, and was everywhere recognized as a friend. Never did editor more strongly impress his own personality upon his staff. The articles were sprightly, amusing, interesting, and instructive too—often very instructive, but always in an interesting way. That was one of the periodical’s main features. The pill of knowledge was always presented gilt. Taking Household Words and All the Year Round together—and for this purpose they may properly be regarded as one and the same paper, because the change of name and proprietorship in 1859[23] brought no change in form or character,—taking them together, I say, they contain a vast quantity of very pleasant, if not very profound, reading. Even apart from the stories, one can do very much worse than while away an hour, now and again, in gleaning here and there among their pages. Among Dickens’ own contributions may be mentioned “The Child’s History of England,” and “Lazy Tour of Two Idle Apprentices”—being the record of an excursion made by him in 1857, with Mr. Wilkie Collins; and “The Uncommercial Traveller” papers. While as to stories, “Hard Times” appeared in Household Words; and “The Tale of Two Cities” and “Great Expectations,” in All the Year Round. And to the Christmas numbers he gave some of his best and daintiest work. Nor were novels and tales by other competent hands wanting. Here it was that Mrs. Gaskell gave to the world those papers on “Cranford” that are so full of a dainty, delicate humour, and “My Lady Ludlow,” and “North and South,” and “A Dark Night’s Work.” Here, too, Mr. Wilkie Collins wove together his ingenious threads of plot and mystery in “The Moonstone,” “The Woman in White,” and “No Name.” And here also Lord Lytton published “A Strange Story,” and Charles Reade his “Very Hard Cash.”
The year 1851 opened sadly for Dickens. His wife, who had been confined of a daughter in the preceding August, was so seriously unwell that he had to take her to Malvern. His father, to whom, notwithstanding the latter’s peculiarities and eccentricities, he was greatly attached, died on the 31st of March; and on the 14th of April his infant daughter died also. In connection with this latter death there
In this same year, 1851, Dickens left the house in Devonshire Terrace, now grown too small for his enlarging household, and, after a long sojourn at Broadstairs, moved into Tavistock House, in Tavistock Square. Here “Bleak House” was begun at the end of November, the first number being published in the ensuing March. It is a fine work of art unquestionably, a very fine work of art—the canvas all crowded with living figures, and yet the main lines of the composition well-ordered and harmonious. Two threads of interest run through the story, one following the career of Lady Dedlock, and the other tracing the influence of a great Chancery suit on the victims immeshed in its toils. From the first these two threads are distinct, and yet happily interwoven. Let us take Lady Dedlock’s thread first. She is the wife of Sir Leicester Dedlock, whose “family is as old as the hills, and a great deal more respectable,” and she is still very beautiful, though no longer in the bloom of youth, and she is cold and haughty of manner, as a woman of highest fashion sometimes may be. But in her past there is an ugly hidden secret; and a girl of sweetest disposition walks her kindly course through the story, who might call Lady Dedlock “mother.” This secret, or perhaps rather the fact that there is a secret at all, she reveals in a moment of surprise to the family lawyer; and she lays herself still further open to his suspicions by going, disguised in her maid’s clothes, to the poor graveyard where her former lover lies buried. The lawyer worms the whole story out, and, just as he is going to reveal it, is murdered
What between “Bleak House,” Household Words, and “The Child’s History of England,” Dickens, in the spring of 1853, was overworked and ill. Brighton failed to restore him; and he took his family over to Boulogne in June, occupying there a house belonging to a certain M. de Beaucourt. Town, dwelling, and landlord, all suited him exactly. Boulogne he declared to be admirable for its picturesqueness in buildings and life, and equal in some respects to Naples itself. The dwelling, “a doll’s house of many rooms,” embowered in roses, and with a terraced garden, was a place after his own heart. While as to the landlord—he was “wonderful.” Dickens never tires of extolling his virtues, his generosity, his kindness, his anxiety to please, his pride in “the property.” All the pleasant delicate quaint traits in the man’s character are irradiated as if with French sunshine in his tenant’s description. It is a dainty little picture and painted with the kindliest of brushes. Poor Beaucourt, he was “inconsolable” when he and Dickens finally parted three years afterwards—for twice again did the latter occupy a house, but not this same house, on “the property.” Many were the tears that he shed, and even the garden, the loved garden, went forlorn and unweeded. But that was in 1856. The parting was not so final and terrible in the October of 1853, when Dickens, having finished “Bleak House,” started with Mr. Wilkie Collins, and Augustus Egg, the artist, for a holiday tour in Switzerland and Italy.
[20] “History of English Literature,” vol. v.
[21] “Recollections of Writers,” by Charles and Mary Cowden Clarke.
[22] As, for instance, in such expressions as this: “The stamp on newspapers is not like the stamp on universal medicine bottles, which licenses anything, however false and monstrous.”
[23] The last number of Household Words appeared on the 28th of May, 1859, and the first of All the Year Round on the 30th of April, 1859.
[24] There are one or two slight discrepancies between Forster’s narrative and that of Miss Dickens and Miss Hogarth. The latter are clearly more likely to be right on such a matter.
On his return to England, just after the Christmas of 1853, Dickens gave his first public readings. He had, as we have seen, read “The Chimes” some nine years before, to a select few among his literary friends; and at Lausanne he had similarly read portions of “Dombey and Son.” But the three readings given at Birmingham, on the 27th, 29th, and 30th December, 1853, were, in every sense, public entertainments, and, except that the proceeds were devoted entirely to the local Institute, differed in no way from the famous readings by which he afterwards realized what may almost be called a fortune. The idea of coming before the world in this new character had long been
That they were a success can readily be accounted for. The mere desire to see and hear Dickens, the great Dickens, the novelist who was more than popular, who was the object of real personal affection on the part of the English-speaking race,—this would have drawn a crowd at any time. But Dickens was not the man to rely upon such sources of attraction, any more than an actress who is really an actress will consent to rely exclusively on her good looks. “Whatever is worth doing at all is worth doing well,” such as we have seen was one of the governing principles of his life; and he read very well. Of nervousness there was no trace in his composition. To some one who asked him whether he ever felt any shyness as a speaker, he answered, “Not in the least; the first time I took the chair (at a public
The results justified the care and effort bestowed. There are, speaking generally, two schools of readers: those who dramatize what they read, and those who read simply, audibly, with every attention to emphasis and point, but with no effort to do more than slightly indicate differences of personage or character. To the latter school Thackeray belonged. He read so as to be perfectly heard, and perfectly understood, and so that the innate beauty of his literary style might have full effect. Dickens read quite differently. He read not as a writer to whom style is everything, but as an actor throwing himself into the world he wished to bring before his hearers. He was so careless indeed of pure literature, in this particular matter, that he altered his books for the readings, eliminating much of the narrative, and emphasizing the dialogue. He was pre-eminently the dramatic reader. Carlyle, who had been dragged to “Hanover Rooms,” to “the complete upsetting,” as he says, “of my evening habitudes, and spiritual composure,” was yet constrained to declare: “Dickens does it capitally, such as it is; acts better than any Macready in the world; a whole tragic, comic, heroic, theatre visible, performing under one hat, and keeping us laughing—in a sorry way, some of us thought—the whole night. He is a good creature, too, and makes fifty or sixty pounds by each of these readings.” “A whole theatre”—that is just the right expression minted for us by the great coiner of phrases. Dickens, by mere play of voice, for the gestures were comparatively sober, placed before you, on his imaginary stage, the men and women he had created. There Dr. Marigold pattered his cheap-jack phrases; and Mrs. Gamp and Betsy Prig, with throats rendered husky by much gin, had their memorable quarrel; and Sergeant Buzfuz bamboozled that stupid jury; and Boots at the Swan told his pretty tale of child-elopement; and Fagin, in his hoarse Jew whisper, urged Bill Sikes to his last foul deed of murder.
Chancery had occupied a prominent place in “Bleak House.” Philosophical radicalism occupied the same kind of position in “Hard Times,” which was commenced in the number of Household Words for the 1st of April, 1854. The book, when afterwards published in a complete form, bore a dedication to Carlyle; and very fittingly so, for much of its philosophy is his. Dickens, like Kingsley, and like Mr. Ruskin and Mr. Froude, and so many other men of genius and ability, had come under the influence of the old Chelsea sage.[25] And what are the ideas which “Hard Times” is thus intended to popularize? These: that men are not merely intellectual calculating machines, with reason and self-interest for motive power, but creatures possessing also affections, feelings, fancy—a whole world of emotions that lie outside the ken of the older school of political economists. Therefore, to imagine that they can live and flourish on facts alone is a fallacy and pernicious; as is also the notion that any human relations can be permanently established on a basis of pure supply and demand. If we add to this an unlimited contempt for Parliament, as a place where the national dustmen are continually stirring the national dust to no purpose at all, why then we are pretty well advanced in the philosophy of Carlyle. And how does Dickens illustrate these points? We are at Coketown, a place, as its name implies, of smoke and manufacture. Here lives and flourishes Thomas Gradgrind, “a man of realities; a man of facts and calculations;” not essentially a bad man, but bound in an iron system as in a vice. He brings up his children on knowledge, and enlightened
“Sullen socialism”—such is Macaulay’s view of the political philosophy of “Hard Times.” “Entirely right in main drift and purpose”—such is the verdict of Mr. Ruskin. Who shall decide between the two? or, if a decision be necessary, then I would venture to say, yes, entirely right in feeling. Dickens is right in sympathy for those who toil and suffer, right in desire to make their lives more human and beautiful, right in belief that the same human heart beats below all class distinctions. But, beyond this, a novelist only, not a philosopher, not fitted to grapple effectively with complex social and political problems, and to solve them to right conclusions. There are some things unfortunately which even the best and kindest instincts cannot accomplish.
The last chapter of “Hard Times” appeared in the number of Household Words for the 12th of August, 1854, and the first number of “Little Dorrit” came out at Christmas, 1855. Between those dates a great war had waxed and waned. The heart of England had been terribly moved by the story of the sufferings and privations which the army had had to undergo amid the snows of a Russian winter. From the trenches before Sebastopol the newspaper correspondents had sent terrible accounts of death and disease, and of ills which, as there seemed room for suspicion, might have been prevented by better management. Through long disuse the army had rusted in its scabbard, and everything seemed to go wrong but the courage of officers and men. A great demand arose for reform in the whole administration of the country. A movement, now much forgotten, though not fruitless at the time, was started for the purpose of making the civil service more efficient, and putting John Bull’s house in order. “Administrative Reform,” such was the cry of the moment, and Dickens uttered it with the full strength of his lungs. He attended a great meeting held at Drury Lane Theatre on the 27th of June, in furtherance of the cause, and made what he declared to be his first political speech. He spoke on the subject again at the dinner of the Theatrical Fund. He urged on his friends in the press to the attack. He was in the forefront of the battle. And when his next novel, “Little Dorrit,” appeared, there was the Civil Service, like a sort of gibbeted Punch, executing the strangest antics.
But the “Circumlocution Office,” where the clerks sit lazily devising all day long “how not to do” the business of the country, and devote their energies alternately to marmalade and general insolence,—the “Circumlocution Office” occupies after all only a secondary position in the book. The main interest of it circles round the place that had at one time been almost a home to Dickens. Again he drew upon his earlier experiences. We are once more introduced into a debtors’ prison. Little Dorrit is the child of the Marshalsea, born and bred within its walls, the sole living thing about the place on which its taint does not fall. Her worthless brother, her sister, her father—who is not only her father, but the “father of the Marshalsea”—the prison blight is on all three. Her father especially is a piece of admirable character-drawing. Dickens has often been accused of only catching the surface peculiarities of his personages, their outward tricks, and obvious habits of speech and of mind. Such a study as Mr. Dorrit would alone be sufficient to rebut the charge. No novelist specially famed for dissecting character to its innermost recesses could exhibit a finer piece of mental analysis. We follow the poor weak creature’s deterioration from the time when the helpless muddle in his affairs brings him into durance. We note how his sneaking pride seems to feed even on the garbage
“Little Dorrit” ran its course from December, 1855, to June, 1857, and within that space of time there occurred two or three incidents in Dickens’ career which should not pass unnoticed. At the first of these dates he was in Paris, where he remained till the middle of May, 1856, greatly feted by the French world of letters and art; dining hither and thither; now enjoying an Arabian Nights sort of banquet given by Emile de Girardin, the popular journalist; now meeting George Sand, the great novelist, whom he describes as “just the sort of woman in appearance whom you might suppose to be the queen’s monthly nurse—chubby, matronly, swarthy, black-eyed;” then studying French art, and contrasting it with English art, somewhat to the disadvantage of the latter; anon superintending the translation of his works into French, and working hard at “Little Dorrit;” and all the while frequenting the Paris theatres with great assiduity and admiration. Meanwhile, too, on the 14th of March, 1856, a Friday, his lucky day as he considered it, he had written a cheque for the purchase of Gad’s Hill Place, at which he had so often looked when a little lad, living penuriously at Chatham—the house which it had been the object of his childish ambition to win for his own.
So had merit proved to be not without its visible prize, literally a prize for good conduct. He took possession of the house in the following February, and turned workmen into it, and finished “Little Dorrit” there. At first the purchase was intended mainly as an investment, and he only purposed to spend some portion of his time at Gad’s Hill, letting it at other periods, and so recouping himself for the interest on the L1,790 which it had cost, and for the further sums which he expended on improvements. But as time went on it became his hobby, the love of his advancing years. He beautified here and beautified there, built a new drawing-room, added bedrooms, constructed a tunnel under the road, erected in the “wilderness” on the other side of the road a Swiss chalet, which had been presented to him by Fechter, the French-English actor, and in short indulged in all the thousand and one vagaries of a proprietor who is enamoured of his property. The matter seems to have been one of the family jokes; and when, on the Sunday before his death, he showed the conservatory to his younger daughter, and said, “Well, Katey, now you see positively the last improvement at Gad’s Hill,” there was a general laugh. But this is far on in the story; and very long before the building of the conservatory, long indeed before the main other changes had been made, the idea of an investment had been abandoned. In 1860 he sold Tavistock House, in London, and made Gad’s Hill Place his final home.
Even here, however, I am anticipating; for before getting to 1860 there is in Dickens’ history a page which one would willingly turn over, if that were possible, in silence and sadness. But it is not possible. No account of his life would be complete, and what is of more importance, true, if it made no mention of his relations with his wife.
For some time before 1858 Dickens had been in an over-excited, nervous, morbid state. During earlier manhood his animal spirits and fresh energy had been superb. Now, as the years advanced, and especially at this particular time, the energy was the same; but it was accompanied by something of feverishness and disease. He could not be quiet. In the autumn of 1857 he wrote to Forster, “I have now no relief but in action. I am become incapable of rest. I am quite confident I should rust, break, and die if I spared myself. Much better to die doing.” And again, a little later, “If I couldn’t walk fast and far, I should just explode and perish.” It was the foreshadowing of such utterances as these, and the constant wanderings to and fro for readings and theatricals and what not, that led Harriet Martineau, who had known and greatly liked Dickens, to say after perusing the second volume of his life, “I am much struck by his hysterical restlessness. It must have been terribly wearing to his wife.” On the other hand, there can be no manner of doubt that his wife wore him. “Why is it,” he had said to Forster in one of the letters from which I have just quoted, “that, as with poor David (Copperfield), a sense comes always crushing on me now, when I fall into low spirits, as of one happiness I have missed in life, and one friend and companion I have never made?” And again: “I find that the skeleton in my domestic closet is becoming a pretty big one.” Then come even sadder confidences: “Poor Catherine and I are not made for each other, and there is no help for it. It is not only that she makes me uneasy and unhappy, but that I make her so too, and much more so. She is exactly what you know in the way of being amiable and complying; but we are strangely ill-assorted for the bond there is between us.... Her temperament will not go with mine.” And at last, in March, 1858, two months before the end: “It is not with me a matter of will, or trial, or sufferance, or good humour, or making the best of it, or making the worst of it, any longer. It is all despairingly over.” So, after living together for twenty years, these two went their several ways in May, 1858. Dickens allowed to his wife an income of L600 a year, and the eldest son went to live with her. The other children and their aunt, Miss Hogarth, remained with Dickens himself.
Scandal has not only a poisonous, but a busy tongue, and when a well-known public man and his wife agree to live apart, the beldame seldom neglects to give her special version of the affair. So it happened here. Some miserable rumour was whispered about to the detriment of Dickens’ morals. He was at the time, as we have seen, in an utterly morbid, excited state, sore doubtless with himself, and altogether out of mental condition, and the lie stung him almost to madness. He published an article branding it as it deserved in the number of Household Words for the 12th of June, 1858.
So far his course of action was justifiable. Granted that it was judicious to notice the rumour at all, and to make his private affairs the matter of public comment, then there was nothing in the terms of the article to which objection could be taken. It contained no reflection of any kind on Mrs. Dickens. It was merely an honest man’s indignant protest against an anonymous libel which implicated others as well as himself. Whether the publication, however, was judicious is a different matter. Forster thinks not. He holds that Dickens had altogether exaggerated the public importance of the rumour, and the extent of its circulation. And this, according to my own recollection, is entirely true. I was a lad at the time, but a great lover of Dickens’ works, as most lads then were, and I well remember the feeling of surprise and regret which that article created among us of the general public. At the same time, it is only fair to Dickens to recollect that the lying story was, at least, so far fraught with danger to his reputation, that Mrs. Dickens would seem for a time to have believed it; and further, that Dickens occupied a very peculiar position towards the public, and a position that might well in his own estimation, and even in ours, give singular importance to the general belief in his personal character.
This point will bear dwelling upon. Dickens claimed, and claimed truly, that the relation between himself and the public was one of exceptional sympathy and affection. Perhaps an illustration will best show what that kind of relationship was. Thackeray tells of two ladies with whom he had, at different times, discussed “The Christmas Carol,” and how each had concluded by saying of the author, “God bless him!” God bless him!—that was the sort of feeling towards himself which Dickens had succeeded in producing in most English hearts. He had appealed from the first and so constantly to every kind and gentle emotion, had illustrated so often what is good and true in human character, had pleaded the cause of the weak and suffering with such assiduity, had been so scathingly indignant at all wrong; and he had moreover shown such a manly and chivalrous purity in all his utterance with regard to women, that his readers felt for him a kind of personal tenderness, quite distinct from their mere admiration for his genius as a writer. Nor was that feeling based on his books alone. So far as one could learn at the time, no great dissimilarity existed between the author and the man. We all remember Byron’s corrosive remark on the sentimentalist Sterne, that he “whined over a dead ass, and allowed his mother to die of hunger.” But Dickens’ feelings were by no means confined to his pen. He was known to be a good father and a good friend, and of perfect truth and honesty. The kindly tolerance for the frailties of a father or brother which he admired in Little Dorrit, he was ready to extend to his own father and his own brother. He was most assiduous in the prosecution of his craft as a writer, and yet had time and leisure of heart at command for all kinds of good and charitable work. His private character had so far stood above all floating cloud of suspicion.
That Dickens felt an honourable pride in the general affection he inspired, can readily be understood. He also felt, even more honourably, its great responsibility. He knew that his books and he himself were a power for good, and he foresaw how greatly his influence would suffer if a suspicion of hypocrisy—the vice at which he had always girded—were to taint his reputation. Here, for instance, in “Little Dorrit,” the work written in the thick of his home troubles, he had written of Clennam as “a man who had, deep-rooted in his nature, a belief in all the gentle and good things his life had been without,” and had shown how this belief had “saved Clennam still from the whimpering weakness and cruel selfishness of holding that because such a happiness or such a virtue had not come into his little path, or worked well for him, therefore it was not in the great scheme, but was reducible, when found in appearance, to the basest elements.” A touching utterance if it expressed the real feeling of a writer sorely disappointed and in great trouble; but an utterance moving rather to contempt if it came from a writer who had transferred his affections from his wife to some other woman. I do not wonder, therefore, that Dickens, excited and exasperated, spoke out, though I think it would have been better if he had kept silence.
But he did other things that were not justifiable. He quarrelled with Messrs. Bradbury and Evans, his publishers, because they did not use their influence to get Punch, a periodical in which Dickens had no interest, to publish the personal statement that had appeared in Household Words; and worse, much worse, he wrote a letter, which ought never to have been written, detailing the grounds on which he and his wife had separated. This letter, dated the 28th of May, 1858, was addressed to his secretary, Arthur Smith, and was to be shown to any one interested. Arthur Smith showed it to the London correspondent of The New York Tribune, who naturally caused it to be published in that paper. Then Dickens was horrified. He was a man of far too high and chivalrous feeling not to know that the letter contained statements with regard to his wife’s failings which ought never to have been made public. He knew as well as any one, that a literary man ought not to take the world into his confidence on such a subject. Ever afterwards he referred to the letter as his “violated letter.” But, in truth, the wrong went deeper than the publication. The letter should never have been written, certainly never sent to Arthur Smith for general perusal. Dickens’ only excuse is the fact that he was clearly not himself at the time, and that he never fell into a like error again. It is, however, sad to notice how entirely his wife seems to have passed out of his affection. The reference to her in his will is almost unkind; and when death was on him she seems not to have been summoned to his bedside.
[25] Dickens did not accept the whole Carlyle creed. He retained a sort of belief in the collective wisdom of the people, which Carlyle certainly did not share.
Dickens’ career as a reader reading for money commenced on the 29th of April, 1858, while the trouble about his wife was at the thickest; and, after reading in London on sixteen nights, he made a reading tour in the provinces, and in Scotland and Ireland. In the following year he read likewise. But meanwhile, which is more important to us than his readings, he was writing another book. On the 30th of April, 1859, in the first number of All the Year Round,[26] was begun “The Tale of Two Cities,” a simultaneous publication in monthly parts being also commenced.
“The Tale of Two Cities” is a tale of the great French Revolution of 1793, and the two cities in question are London and Paris,—London as it lay comparatively at peace in the days when George III. was king, and Paris running blood and writhing in the fierce fire of anarchy and mob rule. A powerful book, unquestionably. No doubt there is in its heat and glare a reflection from Carlyle’s “French Revolution,” a book for which Dickens had the greatest admiration. But that need not be regarded as a demerit. Dickens is no pale copyist, and adds fervour to what he borrows. His pictures of Paris in revolution are as fine as the London scenes in “Barnaby Rudge;” and the interweaving of the story with public events is even better managed in the later book than in the earlier story of the Gordon riots. And the story, what does it tell? It tells of a certain Dr. Manette, who, after long years of imprisonment in the Bastille, is restored to his daughter in London; and of a young French noble, who has assumed the name of Darnay, and left France in horror of the doings of his order, and who marries Dr. Manette’s daughter; and of a young English barrister, able enough in his profession, but careless of personal success, and much addicted to port wine, and bearing a striking personal resemblance to the young French noble. These persons, and others, being drawn to Paris by various strong inducements, Darnay is condemned to death as a ci-devant noble, and the ne’er-do-well barrister, out of the great pure love he bears to Darnay’s wife, succeeds in dying for him. That is the tale’s bare outline; and if any one says of the book that it is in parts melodramatic, one may fitly answer that never was any portion of the world’s history such a thorough piece of melodrama as the French Revolution.
With “The Tale of Two Cities” Hablot K. Browne’s connection with Dickens, as the illustrator of his books, came to an end. The “Sketches” had been illustrated by Cruikshank, who was the great popular illustrator of the time, and it is amusing to read, in the preface to the first edition of the first series, published in 1836, how the trembling young author placed himself, as it were, under the protection of the “well-known individual who had frequently contributed to the success of similar undertakings.” Cruikshank also illustrated “Oliver Twist;” and indeed, with an arrogance which unfortunately is not incompatible with genius, afterwards set up a rather preposterous claim to have been the real originator of that book, declaring that he had worked out the story in a series of etchings, and that Dickens had illustrated him, and not he Dickens.[27] But apart from the drawings for the “Sketches” and “Oliver Twist,” and the first few drawings by Seymour, and two drawings by Buss,[28] in “Pickwick,” and some drawings by Cattermole in Master Humphrey’s Clock, and by Samuel Palmer in the “Pictures from Italy,” and by various hands in the Christmas stories—apart from these, Browne, or “Phiz,” had executed the illustrations to Dickens’ novels. Nor, with all my admiration for certain excellent qualities which his work undeniably possessed, do I think that this was altogether a good thing. Such, I know, is not a popular opinion. But I confess I am unable to agree with those critics who, from their remarks on the recent jubilee edition of “Pickwick,” seem to think his illustrations so pre-eminently fine that they should be permanently associated with Dickens’ stories. The editor of that edition was, in my view, quite right in treating Browne’s illustrations as practically obsolete. The value of Dickens’ works is perennial, and Browne’s illustrations represent the art fashion of a time only. So, too, I am unable to see any great cause to regret that Cruikshank’s artistic connection with Dickens came to an end so soon.[29] For both Browne and Cruikshank were pre-eminently caricaturists, and caricaturists of an old school. The latter had no idea of beauty. His art, very great art in its way, was that of grotesqueness and exaggeration. He never drew a lady or gentleman in his life. And though Browne, in my view much the lesser artist, was superior in these respects to Cruikshank, yet he too drew the most hideous Pecksniffs, and Tom Pinches, and Joey B.’s, and a whole host of characters quite unreal and absurd. The mischief of it is, too, that Dickens’ humour will not bear caricaturing. The defect of his own art as a writer is that it verges itself too often on caricature. Exaggeration is its bane. When, for instance, he makes the rich alderman in “The Chimes” eat up poor Trotty Veck’s little last tit-bit of tripe, we are clearly in the region of broad farce. When Mr. Pancks, in “Little Dorrit,” so far abandons the ordinary ways of
Just a year, almost to a day, elapsed between the conclusion of “The Tale of Two Cities,” and the commencement of “Great Expectations.” The last chapter of the former appeared in the number of All the Year Round for the 26th of November, 1859, and the first chapter of the latter in the number of the same periodical for the 1st of December, 1860. Poor Pip—for such is the name of the hero of the book—poor Pip, I think he is to be pitied. Certainly he lays himself open to the charge of snobbishness, and is unduly ashamed of his connections. But then circumstances were decidedly against him. Through some occult means he is removed from his natural sphere, from the care of his “rampageous” sister and of her husband, the good, kind, honest Joe, and taken up to London, and brought up as a gentleman, and started in chambers in Barnard’s Inn. All this is done through the instrumentality of Mr. Jaggers, a barrister in highest repute among the criminal brotherhood. But Pip not unnaturally thinks that his unknown benefactress is a certain Miss Havisham, who, having been bitterly wronged in her love affairs, lives in eccentric fashion near his native place, amid the mouldering mementoes of her wedding day. What is his horror when he finds that his education, comfort, and prospects have no more reputable foundation than the bounty of a murderous criminal called Magwitch, who has showered
Such, as I have had occasion to say before in speaking of similar analyses, such are the dry bones of the story. Pip’s character is well drawn. So is that of Joe. And Mr. Jaggers, the criminal’s friend, and his clerk, Wemmick, are striking and full of a grim humour. Miss Havisham and her protegee, Estella, whom she educates to be the scourge of men, belong to what may be called the melodramatic side of Dickens’ art. They take their place with Mrs. Dombey and with Miss Dartle in “David Copperfield,” and Miss Wade in “Little Dorrit”—female characters of a fantastic and haughty type, and quite devoid, Miss Dartle and Miss Wade especially, of either verisimilitude or the milk of human kindness.
“Great Expectations” was completed in August, 1861, and the first number of “Our Mutual Friend” appeared in May, 1864. This was an unusual interval, but the great writer’s faculty of invention was beginning to lose its fresh spring and spontaneity. And besides he had not been idle. Though writing no novel, he had been busy enough with readings, and his work on All the Year Round. He had also written a short, but very graceful paper[30] on Thackeray, whose death, on the Christmas Eve of 1863, had greatly affected him. Now, however, he again braced himself for one of his greater efforts.
Scarcely, I think, as all will agree, with the old success. In “Our Mutual Friend” he is not at his best. It is a strange complicated story that seems to have some difficulty in unravelling itself: the story of a man who pretends to be dead in order that he may, under a changed name, investigate the character and eligibility of the young woman whom an erratic father has destined to be his bride. A golden-hearted old dust contractor, who hides a will that will give him all that erratic father’s property, and disinherit the man aforesaid, and who, to crown his virtues, pretends to be a miser in order to teach the young woman, also aforesaid, how bad it is to be mercenary, and to induce her to marry the unrecognized and seemingly penniless son; their marriage accordingly, with ultimate result that the bridegroom turns out to be no poor clerk, but the original heir, who, of course, is not dead, and is the inheritor of thousands; subsidiary groups of characters, of course, one which I think rather uninteresting, of some brand-new
One episode, however, deserves longer comment. It is briefly this: Eugene Wrayburn is a young barrister of good family and education, and of excellent abilities and address, all gifts that he has turned to no creditable purpose whatever. He falls in with a girl, Lizzie Hexham, of more than humble rank, but of great beauty and good character. She interests him, and in mere wanton carelessness, for he certainly has no idea of offering marriage, he gains her affection, neither meaning, in any definite way, to do anything good nor anything bad with it. There is another man who loves Lizzie, a schoolmaster, who, in his dull, plodding way, has made the best of his intellect, and risen in life. He naturally, and we may say properly, for no good can come of them, resents Wrayburn’s attentions, as does the girl’s brother. Wrayburn uses the superior advantages of his position to insult them in the most offensive and brutal manner, and to torture the schoolmaster, just as he has used those advantages to win the girl’s heart. Whereupon, after being goaded to heart’s desire for a considerable time, the schoolmaster as nearly as possible beats out Wrayburn’s life, and commits suicide. Wrayburn is rescued by Lizzie as he lies by the river bank sweltering in blood, and tended by her, and they are married and live happy ever afterwards.
Now the amazing part of this story is, that Dickens’ sympathies throughout are with Wrayburn. How this comes to be so I confess I do not know. To me Wrayburn’s conduct appears to be heartless, cruel, unmanly, and the use of his superior social position against the schoolmaster to be like a foul blow, and quite unworthy of a gentleman. Schoolmasters ought not to beat people about the head, decidedly. But if Wrayburn’s thoughts took a right course during convalescence, I think he may have reflected that he deserved his beating, and also that the woman whose affection he had won was a great deal too good for him.
Dickens’ misplaced sympathy in this particular story has, I repeat, always struck me with amazement. Usually his sympathies are so entirely right. Nothing is more common than to hear the accusation of vulgarity made against his books. A certain class of people seem to think, most mistakenly, that because he so often wrote about vulgar people, uneducated people, people in the lower ranks of society, therefore his writing was vulgar, nay more, he himself vulgar
[26] His foolish quarrel with Bradbury and Evans had necessitated the abandonment of Household Words.
[27] See his pamphlet, “The Artist and the Author.” The matter is fully discussed in his life by Mr. Blanchard Jerrold.
[28] Buss’s illustrations were executed under great disadvantages, and are bad. Those of Seymour are excellent.
[29] I am always sorry, however, that Cruikshank did not illustrate the Christmas stories.
[30] See Cornhill Magazine for February, 1864.
But we are now, alas, nearing the point where the “rapid” of Dickens’ life began to “shoot to its fall.” The year 1865, during which he partly wrote “Our Mutual Friend,” was a fatal one in his career. In the month of February he had been very ill, with an affection of the left foot, at first thought to be merely local, but which really pointed to serious mischief, and never afterwards wholly left him. Then, on June 9th, when returning from France, where he had gone to recruit, he as nearly as possible lost his life in a railway accident at Staplehurst. A bridge had broken in; some of the carriages fell through, and were smashed; that in which Dickens was, hung down the side of the chasm. Of courage and presence
But whether failing or stricken, he bated no jot of energy or courage; nay, rather, as his health grew weaker, did he redouble the pressure of his work. I think there is a grandeur in the story of the last five years of his life, that dwarfs even the tale of his rapid and splendid rise. It reads like some antique myth of the Titans defying Jove’s thunder. There is about the man something indomitable and heroic. He had, as we have seen, given a series of readings in 1858-59; and he gave another in the years 1861 to 1863—successful enough in a pecuniary sense, but through failure of business capacity on the part of the manager, entailing on the reader himself a great deal of anxiety and worry.[32] Now, in the spring of 1866, with his left foot giving him unceasing trouble, and his nerves shattered, and his heart in an abnormal state, he accepted an offer from Messrs. Chappell to read “in England, Ireland, Scotland, and Paris,” for L1,500, and the payment of all expenses, and then to give forty-two more readings for L2,500. Mr. Dolby, who accompanied Dickens as business manager in this and the remaining tours, has told their story in an interesting volume.[33] Of course the wear was immense. The readings themselves involved enormous fatigue to one who so identified himself with what he read, and whose whole being seemed to vibrate not only with the emotions of the characters in his stories, but of the audience. Then there was the weariness of long railway journeys in all seasons and weathers—journeys that at first must have been rendered doubly tedious, as he could not bear to travel by express trains. Yet, notwithstanding
But if the strain of the readings was too heavy here at home, what was it likely to be during a winter in America? Nevertheless he determined, against all remonstrances, to go thither. It would almost seem as if he felt that the day of his life was waning, and that it was his duty to gather in a golden harvest for those he loved ere the night came on. So he sailed for Boston once more on the 9th of November, 1867. The Americans, it must be said, behaved nobly. All the old grudges connected with “The American Notes,” and “Martin Chuzzlewit,” sank into oblivion. The reception was everywhere enthusiastic, the success of the readings immense. Again and again people waited all night, amid the rigours of an almost arctic winter, in order to secure an opportunity of purchasing tickets as soon as the ticket office opened. There were enormous and intelligent audiences at Boston, New York, Washington, Philadelphia—everywhere. The sum which Dickens realized by the tour, amounted to the splendid total of nearly L19,000. Nor, in this money triumph, did he fail to excite his usual charm of personal fascination, though the public affection and admiration were manifested in forms less objectionable and offensive than of old. On his birthday, the 7th of February, 1868, he says, “I couldn’t help laughing at myself ...; it was observed so much as though I were a little boy.” Flowers, garlands were set about his room; there were presents on his dinner-table, and in the evening the hall where he read was decorated by kindly unknown hands. Of public and private entertainment he might have had just as much as he chose.
But to this medal there was a terrible reverse. Travelling from New York to Boston just before Christmas, he took a most disastrous cold, which never left him so long as he remained in the country. He was constantly faint. He ate scarcely anything. He slept very little. Latterly he was so lame, as scarcely to be able to walk. Again and again it seemed impossible that he should fulfil his night’s engagement. He was constantly so exhausted at the conclusion of the reading, that he had to lie down for twenty minutes or half an hour, “before
In the first week of May, 1868, Dickens was back in England, and soon again in the thick of his work and play. Mr. Wills, the sub-editor of All the Year Round, had met with an accident. Dickens supplied his place. Chauncy Hare Townshend had asked him to edit a chaotic mass of religious lucubrations. He toilfully edited them. Then, with the autumn, the readings began again;—for it marks the indomitable energy of the man that, even amid the terrible physical trials incident to his tour in America, he had agreed with Messrs. Chappell, for a sum of L8,000, to give one hundred more readings after his return. So in October the old work began again, and he was here, there, and everywhere, now reading at Manchester and Liverpool, now at Edinburgh and Glasgow, anon coming back to read fitfully in London, then off again to Ireland, or the West of England. Nor is it necessary to say that he spared himself not one whit. In order to give novelty to these readings, which were to be positively the last, he had laboriously got up the scene of Nancy’s murder, in “Oliver Twist,” and persisted in giving it night after night, though of all his readings it was the one that exhausted him most terribly.[34] But of course this could not last. The pain in his foot “was always recurring at inconvenient and unexpected moments,” says Mr. Dolby, and occasionally the American cold came back too. In February, in London, the foot was worse than it had ever been, so bad that Sir Henry Thompson, and Mr. Beard, his medical adviser, compelled him to postpone a reading. At Edinburgh, a few days afterwards, Mr. Syme, the eminent surgeon, strongly recommended perfect rest. Still he battled on, but “with great personal suffering such as few men could have endured.” Sleeplessness was on him too. And still he fought on, determined, if it were physically possible, to fulfil his engagement with Messrs. Chappell, and complete the hundred nights. But it was not to be. Symptoms set in that pointed alarmingly towards paralysis of the left side. At Preston, on the 22nd of April, Mr. Beard, who had come post-haste from London, put a stop to the readings, and afterwards decided, in consultation with Sir Thomas Watson, that they ought to be suspended entirely for the time, and never resumed in connection with any railway travelling.
Even this, however, was not quite the end; for a summer of comparative rest, or what Dickens considered rest, seemed so far to have set him up that he gave a final series of twelve readings in London between the 11th of January and 15th of March, 1870, thus bringing to its real conclusion an enterprise by which, at whatever cost to himself, he had made a sum of about L45,000.
Meanwhile, in the autumn of 1869, he had gone back to the old work, and was writing a novel, “The Mystery of Edwin Drood.” It is a good novel unquestionably. Without going so far as Longfellow, who had doubts whether it was not “the most beautiful of all” Dickens’ works, one may admit that there is about it a singular freshness, and no sign at all of mental decay. As for the “mystery,” I do not think that need baffle us altogether. But then I see no particular reason to believe that Dickens had wished to baffle us, or specially to rival Edgar Allan Poe or Mr. Wilkie Collins in the construction of criminal puzzles. Even though only half the case is presented to us, and the book remains for ever unfinished, we need have, I think, no difficulty in working out its conclusion. The course pursued by Mr. Jasper, Lay Precentor of the Cathedral at Cloisterham, is really too suspicious. No intelligent British jury, seeing the facts as they are presented to us, the readers, could for a moment think of acquitting him of the murder of his nephew, Edwin Drood. Take those facts seriatim. First, we have the motive: he is passionately in love with the girl to whom his nephew is engaged. Then we have a terrible coil of compromising circumstances: his extravagant profession of devotion to his nephew, his attempts to establish a hidden influence over the girl’s mind to his nephew’s detriment and his own advantage, his gropings amid the dark recesses of the Cathedral and inquiries into the action of quicklime, his endeavours to foment a quarrel between Edwin Drood and a fiery young gentleman from Ceylon, on the night of the murder, and his undoubted doctoring of the latter’s drink. Then, after the murder, how damaging is his conduct. He falls into a kind of fit on discovering that his nephew’s engagement had been broken off, which he might well do if his crime turned out to be not only a crime but also a blunder. And his conduct to the girl is, to say the least of it, strange. Nor will his character help him. He frequents the opium dens of the East-end of London. Guilty, guilty, most certainly guilty. There is nothing to be said in arrest of judgment. Let the judge put on the black cap, and Jasper be devoted to his merited doom.
Such was the story that Dickens was unravelling in the spring and early summer of 1870. And fortune smiled upon it. He had sold the copyright for the large sum of L7,500, and a half share of the profits after a sale of twenty-five thousand copies, plus L1,000 for the advance sheets sent to America; and the sale was more than answering his expectations. Nor did prosperity look favourably on the book alone. It also, in one sense, showered benefits on the author. He was worth, as the evidence of the Probate Court was to show only too soon, a sum of over L80,000. He was happy in his children. He was universally loved, honoured, courted. “Troops of friends,” though, alas! death had made havoc among the oldest,
On Wednesday, June 8th, he seemed in excellent spirits; worked all the morning in the Chalet[35] as was his wont, returned to the house for lunch and a cigar, and then, being anxious to get on with “Edwin Drood,” went back to his desk once more. The weather was superb. All round the landscape lay in fullest beauty of leafage and flower, and the air rang musically with the song of birds. What were his thoughts that summer day as he sat there at his work? Writing many years before, he had asked whether the “subtle liquor of the blood” may not “perceive, by properties within itself,” when danger is imminent, and so “run cold and dull”? Did any such monitor within, one wonders, warn him at all that the hand of death was uplifted to strike, and that its shadow lay upon him? Judging from the words that fell from his pen that day we might almost think that it was so—we might almost go further, and guess with what hopes and fears he looked into the darkness beyond. Never at any time does he appear to have been greatly troubled by speculative doubt. There is no evidence in his life, no evidence in his letters, no evidence in his books, that he had ever seen any cause to question the truth of the reply which Christianity gives to the world-old problems of man’s origin and destiny. For abstract speculation he had not the slightest turn or taste. In no single one of his characters does he exhibit any fierce mental struggle as between truth and error. All that side of human experience, with its anguish of battle, its despairs, and its triumphs, seems to have been unknown to him. Perhaps he had the stronger grasp of other matters in consequence—who knows? But the fact remains. With a trust quite simple and untroubled, he held through life to the faith of Christ. When his children were little, he had written prayers for them, had put the Bible into simpler language for their use. In his will, dated May 12, 1869, he had said, “I commit my soul to the mercy of God through our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, and I exhort my dear children humbly to try to guide themselves by the broad teaching of the New Testament in its broad spirit, and to put no faith in any man’s narrow construction of its letter here or there.” And now, on this last day of his life, in probably the last letter that left his pen, he wrote to one who had objected to some passage in “Edwin Drood” as irreverent: “I have always striven in my writings to express veneration for the life and lessons of our Saviour—because I feel it.” And with a significance, of
For now the end had come. When he went in to dinner Miss Hogarth noticed that he looked very ill, and wished at once to send for a doctor. But he refused, struggled for a short space against the impending fit, and tried to talk, at last very incoherently. Then, when urged to go up to his bed, he rose, and, almost immediately, slid from her supporting arm, and fell on the floor. Nor did consciousness return. He passed from the unrest of life into the peace of eternity on the following day, June 9, 1870, at ten minutes past six in the evening.
And now he lies in Westminster Abbey, among the men who have most helped, by deed or thought, to make this England of ours what it is. Dean Stanley only gave effect to the national voice when he assigned to him that place of sepulture. The most popular, and in most respects the greatest novelist of his time; the lord over the laughter and tears of a whole generation; the writer, in his own field of fiction, whose like we shall probably not see again for many a long, long year, if ever; where could he be laid more fittingly for his last long sleep than in the hallowed resting-place which the country sets apart for the most honoured of her children?
So he lies there among his peers in the Southern Transept. Close beside him sleep Dr. Johnson, the puissant literary autocrat of his own time; and Garrick, who was that time’s greatest actor; and Handel, who may fittingly claim to have been one of the mightiest musicians of all time. There sleeps, too, after the fitful fever of his troubled life, the witty, the eloquent Sheridan. In close proximity rests Macaulay, the artist-historian and essayist. Within the radius of a few yards lies all that will ever die of Chaucer, who five hundred years ago sounded the spring note of English literature, and gave to all after-time the best, brightest glimpse into mediaeval England; and all that is mortal also of Spenser of the honey’d verse; and of Beaumont, who had caught an echo of Shakespeare’s sweetness if not his power; and of sturdy Ben Jonson, held in his own day a not unworthy rival of Shakespeare’s self; and of “glorious” and most masculine John Dryden. From his monument Shakespeare looks upon the place with his kindly eyes, and Addison too, and Goldsmith; and one can almost imagine a smile of fellowship upon the marble faces of those later dead—Burns, Coleridge, Southey, and Thackeray.
Nor in that great place of the dead does Dickens enjoy cold barren honour alone. Nearly seventeen years have gone by since he was laid there—yes, nearly seventeen years, though it seems only yesterday that I was listening to the funeral sermon in which Dean Stanley spoke of the simple and sufficient faith in which he had lived and died. But though seventeen years have gone by, yet are outward signs not wanting of the peculiar love that clings to him still. As I strolled through the Abbey this last Christmas Eve I found his grave, and his grave alone, made gay with the season’s hollies. “Lord, keep my memory green,”—in another sense than he used the words, that prayer is answered.
And of the future what shall we say? His fame had a brilliant day while he lived; it has a brilliant day now. Will it fade into twilight, without even an after-glow; will it pass altogether into the night of oblivion? I cannot think so. The vitality of Dickens’ works is singularly great. They are all a-throb, as it were, with hot human blood. They are popular in the highest sense because their appeal is universal, to the uneducated as well as the educated. The humour is superb, and most of it, so far as one can judge, of no ephemeral kind. The pathos is more questionable, but that too, at its simplest and best; and especially when the humour is shot with it—is worthy of a better epithet than excellent. It is supremely touching. Imagination, fancy, wit, eloquence, the keenest observation, the most strenuous endeavour to reach the highest artistic excellence, the largest kindliness,—all these he brought to his life-work. And that work, as I think, will live, I had almost dared to prophesy for ever. Of course fashions change. Of course no writer of fiction, writing for his own little day, can permanently meet the needs of all after times. Some loss of immediate vital interest is inevitable. Nevertheless, in Dickens’ case, all will not die. Half a century, a century hence, he will still be read; not perhaps as he was read when his words flashed upon the world in their first glory and freshness, nor as he is read now in the noon of his fame. But he will be read much more than we read the novelists of the last century—be read as much, shall I say, as we still read Scott. And so long as he is read, there will be one gentle and humanizing influence the more at work among men.
[31] For his own graphic account of the accident, see his “Letters.”
[32] He computed that he had made L12,000 by the two first series of readings.
[33] “Charles Dickens as I Knew Him.” By George Dolby. Miss Dickens considers this “the best and truest picture of her father yet written.”
[34] Mr. Dolby remonstrated on this, and it was in connection with a very slight show of temper on the occasion that he says: “In all my experiences with the Chief that was the only time I ever heard him address angry words to any one.”
[35] The Chalet, since sold and removed, stood at the edge of a kind of “wilderness,” which is separated from Gad’s Hill Place by the high road. A tunnel, constructed by Dickens, connects the “wilderness” and the garden of the house. Close to the road, in the “wilderness,” and fronting the house, are two fine cedars.
A.
“Administrative Reform” agitation, 129
All the Year Round, 114, 115
America, Dickens’ first visit to United States
in 1842, 71, 74-82, 94,
95; second visit in 1867-8, 152-153
“American Notes,” 68, 79-81
“Barnaby Rudge,” 52, 69-70, 108
Barnard, Mr., his illustrations to Dickens’ works, 143
“Battle of Life,” 104
Bentley’s Miscellany edited by Dickens, 49, 51
“Bleak House,” 116-119
Boulogne, 119, 120
Bret Harte, Mr., on Little Nell, 64
Browne, or “Phiz,” his illustrations to Dickens’ works, 140-142
Carlyle, his description of Dickens quoted, 35;
and of Dickens’ reading, 124;
his influence on Dickens, 126, 127;
see also 98 and 139
Chapman and Hall, 40, 41, 42, 51, 61
Chatham, 13
Childhood, Dickens’ feeling for its pathos, 12, 63
“Child’s History of England,” 115
“Chimes,” 55, 96-99, 142
“Christmas Carol,” 91-92, 125
“Christopher North,” 72
Cowden Clarke, Mrs., quoted, 110
Cruikshank, his illustrations to “Sketches” and “Oliver Twist,” 140-142
Daily News, started with Dickens as editor,
99, 100, 103, 114
“David Copperfield”—in many
respects autobiographical, 14-16, 21, 133;
analysis of, 63, 68, 111-113
Dick, Mr., 107, 108
Dickens, Charles, birth, 12;
childhood and boyhood, 12-26;
school experiences, 25, 26;
law experiences, 27, 28;
experiences as reporter for the press,
28-30;
first attempts at authorship, 31-33;
marriage, 34;
his personal appearance in early manhood,
35, 36;
influence of his early training, 36-39;
pecuniary position after publication of
“Pickwick,” 51, 52;
habits of work and relaxation, 54-56;
reception at Edinburgh, 71, 72;
American experiences, 74-81;
affection for his children, 82, 83;
Italian experiences, 93-99;
appointed editor of Daily News,
99, 100;
efficiency in practical matters, 102,
103;
his charm as a holiday companion, 110;
first public readings in 1853, 121;
character of his reading, 124, 125;
purchase of Gad’s Hill Place, 131,
132;
separation from his wife, 132-138;
Dickens, John, his character, 16, 17;
his imprisonment, 22, 23, 28;
his death, 115
Dickens, Miss, biography of her father, quoted, 50, 83, 150
Dickens, Mrs. (Dickens’ mother), 24, 25
Dickens, Mrs., 82;
separated from her husband, 132-138
Dolby, Mr., manager for the readings, 150, 151, 153
“Dombey and Son,” 63, 103-107, 110
Dombey, Paul, 63, 65-66, 68, 105
Edinburgh, Dickens’ reception there, 71, 72
“Edwin Drood,” 143, 155-157
Fildes, Mr. L., A.R.A., illustrates “Edwin Drood,” 143
Flite, Miss, 108, 109
Forster, John, 19, 38, 99, 116;
his opinion on the advisability of public
readings, 121, 122
Gad’s Hill Place, 13;
purchase of, 131, 132
Genoa, 54, 55, 95-96, 98, 99
Grant, Mr. James, 42
“Great Expectations,” 63, 143-145
H.
“Hard Times,” 126-129
“Haunted Man,” The, 110-111
Helps, Sir Arthur, on Dickens’ powers of observation,
32;
on his essential refinement, 148
Hogarth, Mary, her death and character, 52-53
Horne, on description of Little Nell’s death and burial, 64, 66-67
Household Words, 113-115, 134
Humour of Dickens, 32, 33, 45, 46, 142, 161
Italy in 1844, 94-95
Jeffrey, his opinion of Little Nell, 63, 71, 72
Landor, his admiration for Little Nell, 64;
his likeness to Mr. Boythorn, 119
Lausanne, 103, 104
Leigh Hunt, 118
“Little Dorrit,” 22, 129-131, 142-143
Little Nell, criticism on her character and story, 63-67, 71, 72, 73
London, Dickens’ knowledge of, and walks in, 32, 54-56
Macaulay, 80, 128, 160
Macready, the tragic actor, 73, 76, 82, 83
Marshalsea Prison, Dickens’ father imprisoned
there, 16, 20, 21-23;
made the chief scene of “Little
Dorrit,” 130
“Martin Chuzzlewit,” 84, 85, 88-90
Master Humphrey’s Clock, 61, 62, 90, 141
Micawber, Mr., 15, 16, 22
Nickleby, Mrs., 25
“Nicholas Nickleby,” 50, 59-61, 90
“Old Curiosity Shop,” 61, 62-69
“Oliver Twist,” 49, 51, 57-59, 63, 141
“Our Mutual Friend,” 86, 143, 145-147
Paris, 109, 131
Pathos of Dickens, 32, 33, 67-69, 161
“Pickwick,” 40-48, 49, 51, 90, 141
“Pictures from Italy,” 99, 100-101
Pipchin, Mrs., 20, 23
Plots, Dickens’, 85-88
Quarterly Review foretells Dickens’ speedy downfall, 50, 51
Readings, Dickens’, 121-125, 139, 150-155
Ruskin, Mr., his opinion of “Hard Times,” 128
S.
Sam Weller, 46, 47
Scott, Sir Walter, 43, 87, 162
Seymour, his connection with “Pickwick,” 40-42, 141
“Sketches by Boz,” 31-33, 52, 140, 141
Stanley, Dean, 159, 161
Stone, Mr. Marcus, R.A., illustrates “Our Mutual Friend,” 143
Taine, M., his criticism criticised, 107-109
“Tale of Two Cities,” 139-140
Thackeray, 53, 135, 145;
as a reader, 124, 125
Tiny Tim, 68, 125
Toots, Mr., 107, 108, 109
Washington Irving, 73, 148
Westminster Abbey, Dickens place of burial, 159-161
Yates, Edmund, Mr., quoted, 38
BY
(British Museum).
* * * * *
I. WORKS.
II. SELECTIONS.
III. SINGLE WORKS.
IV. MISCELLANEOUS WORKS.
V. APPENDIX—
Biographical, Critical, etc.
Dramatic.
Musical.
Parodies and Imitations.
Poetical.
Magazine and Newspaper Articles.
VI. CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF WORKS.
* * * * *
I. WORKS.
FIRST CHEAP EDITION. 19 vols. London, 1847-67, 8vo.
This edition was in three series, the first and third being published by Messrs. Chapman and Hall, the second by Messrs. Bradbury and Evans. It was printed in double columns, with frontispieces by Leslie, Hablot K. Browne, Cruikshank, etc.
LIBRARY EDITION. 22 vols. London, 1858-59, 8vo.
LIBRARY EDITION. Illustrated. 30 vols. London, 1861-1873.
The original illustrations
were added to the later issues of
the Library Edition,
and the series completed in 30 vols.
THE PEOPLE’S EDITION. 25 vols. London, 1865-1867, 8vo.
A re-issue of the Cheap Edition.
THE CHARLES DICKENS EDITION. Illustrated. 21 vols. London, 1867-1873, 8vo.
THE HOUSEHOLD EDITION. Illustrated. 22 vols. London, 1871-1879, 4to.
ILLUSTRATED LIBRARY EDITION. 30 vols. London, 1873-1876, 8vo.
THE POPULAR LIBRARY EDITION. Illustrated. 30 vols. London, 1878-1880, 8vo.
THE POCKET EDITION. 30 vols. London, 1880, 16mo.
THE DIAMOND EDITION. Illustrated. 14 vols. London, 1880, 16mo.
EDITION DE LUXE. Illustrated. 30 vols. London, 1881, 4to.
One thousand copies
only of this Edition de Luxe were
printed for sale, each
numbered, and it was dedicated to Her
Majesty the Queen.
THE CABINET EDITION. Illustrated. London, 1885, etc., 16mo.
A re-issue of the Pocket Edition.
The Beauties of Pickwick. Collected and arranged
by Sam Weller.
London, 1838, 8vo.
The Story Teller. A collection of tales, stories, and novels. By Walter Scott, Washington Irving, Charles Dickens, etc. Edited by Hermann Schuetz. Siegen, 1850, 8vo.
Immortelles from C.D. By Ich. London, 1856, 8vo.
Novels and Tales reprinted from Household Words. 11
vols. (Tauchnitz
Edition). Leipzig, 1856-59, 16mo.
Christmas Stories from the Household Words. Conducted by C.D. London [1860], 8vo.
The Poor Traveller: Boots at the Holly-Tree Inn;
and Mrs. Gamp, by
C.D. London, 1858, 8vo.
Arranged by Dickens for his Readings.
Dialogues from Dickens. Arranged by W.E. Fette. Two Series. Boston, 1870-71, 8vo.
A Cyclopaedia of the best thoughts of C.D. Compiled and alphabetically arranged by F.G. De Fontaine. New York, 1873, 8vo.
A Series of Character Sketches from Dickens. Being fac-similes of original drawings by F. Barnard [with extracts from some of D.’s works]. 2 pts. London [1879]-85, folio.
——Another Edition. London, 1884, folio.
The Dickens Reader. Character Readings from the stories of Charles Dickens. Selected, adapted, and arranged by Nathan Sheppard, with numerous illustrations by F. Barnard, New York, 1881, 4to.
The Charles Dickens Birthday Book. Compiled and edited by his eldest daughter (Mary Dickens). With illustrations by his youngest daughter (Kate Perugini). London, 1882, 8vo.
Readings from the works of C.D. Condensed and adapted by J.A. Jennings. Dublin [1882], 8vo.
The Readings of C.D. as arranged and read by himself. With illustrations. London, 1883, 8vo.
Chips from Dickens selected by Thomas Mason. Glasgow [1884], 32mo.
Tales from Charles Dickens’s Works. London [1884], 8vo.
The Humour and Pathos of Charles Dickens. Selected
by Chas. Kent.
London, 1884, 8vo.
Child-Pictures from Dickens. [Illustrated.] London, 1885, 4to.
Wellerisms from “Pickwick” and “Master Humphrey’s Clock.” Selected by Charles F. Rideal, and Edited, with an Introduction, by Charles Kent, author of “The Humour and Pathos of Charles Dickens.” London, 1886, 8vo.
American Notes for general circulation. 2 vols. London, 1842, 8vo.
——[Other Editions. London, 1850, 8vo.; London, 1884, 8vo].
Bleak House. With illustrations, by H.K. Browne. London, 1853, 8vo.
Boots at the Holly-Tree Inn, by Charles Dickens, as condensed by himself for his readings. Boston, 1868, 8vo.
The Holly-Tree Inn was
the Christmas Number of “Household
Words” for 1855.
Dickens contributed “The Guest,” “The
Boots,” and “The
Bill.”
A Child’s History of England. With a frontispiece by F.W. Topham. 3 vols. London, 1852-54, 16mo.
The Chimes: a Goblin Story of some bells that rang an old year out and a new year in. By Charles Dickens. [Illustrated by Maclise, Doyle, Leech, and Clarkson Stanfield.] London, 1845, 8vo.
An edition with notes
and elucidations by K. ten Bruggencate
was published at Groningen
in 1883.
Christmas Books. London, 1852, 8vo.
Christmas Books. With illustrations by Sir E.
Landseer, Maclise,
Stanfield, F. Stone, Doyle, Leech, and Tenniel.
London, 1869, 8vo.
A Christmas Carol in Prose. Being a Ghost Story
of Christmas. By C.D.
With illustrations by John Leech. London, 1843,
8vo.
——Condensed by himself, for his readings. Boston [U.S.], 1868, 8vo.
The Cricket on the Hearth. A Fairy Tale of Home. By C.D. [Illustrated by Maclise, Doyle, Clarkson Stanfield, Leech, and Landseer.] London, 1846, 16mo.
The Battle of Life: A Love Story. [Illustrated by Maclise, Stanfield, Doyle, and Leech.] London, 1846, 16mo.
The Haunted Man and the Ghost’s Bargain. A Fancy for Christmas Time. [Illustrated by Stanfield, John Tenniel, Frank Stone, and John Leech.] London, 1848, 16mo.
Dealings with the Firm of Dombey and Son, wholesale, retail, and for exportation. With illustrations by H.K. Browne. London, 1848, 8vo.
The Story of Little Dombey. By C.D. London, 1858, 8vo.
Revised by Dickens for his Readings.
The Story of Little Dombey. By C.D., as condensed by himself for his readings. Boston [U.S.], 1868, 8vo.
Doctor Marigold’s Prescriptions. (Tauchnitz Edition, vol. 894.) Leipzig, 1867, 16mo.
The Christmas Number of “All the Year Round” for 1865. Dickens contributed chap. i., “To be Taken Immediately;” chap. vi., “To be Taken With a Grain of Salt;” and the concluding chapter, “To be Taken for Life.”
Doctor Marigold. By C.D., as condensed by himself for his readings. Boston [U.S.], 1868, 8vo.
Great Expectations. By C.D. In three volumes. London, 1861, 8vo.
Appeared originally
in All the Year Round, December 1,
1860, to August 3, 1861.
An American edition was published
the same year with illustrations
by J. McLenan.
Hard Times. For these Times. By C.D. London, 1854, 8vo.
Appeared originally
in Household Words, April 1 to August
12, 1854.
Hunted Down. (Tauchnitz Edition, vol. 536.) Leipzig, 1860, 16mo.
Appeared originally
in the New York Ledger, August 20, 27,
Sept. 3, 1859, and All
the Year Round, Aug. 4 and 11,
1860.
Hunted Down. A Story. By C.D. With some account of T.G. Wainewright, the poisoner [by John Camden Hotten]. London [1870], 8vo.
Is She his Wife? or, Something Singular. A comic burletta in one act. Boston [U.S.], 1877, 16mo.
First produced at the
St. James’s Theatre, March 6, 1837.
Mr. Shepherd says that
this was first printed in 1837, but
no copy is known to
exist.
The Lamplighter: A Farce. By C.D. (1838).
Only 250 copies were
privately printed in 1879 from the MS.
copy in the Forster
Collection at South Kensington; each
copy numbered.
The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit. With illustrations by Phiz [i.e., H.K. Browne]. London, 1844, 8vo.
Mrs. Gamp [extracted from “The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit"]. By C.D., as condensed by himself, for his readings. Boston [U.S.], 1868, 8vo.
The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby. With illustrations by Phiz. London, 1839, 8vo.
Contains a portrait of Dickens, and 39 illustrations.
Nicholas Nickleby at the Yorkshire School [extracted from “The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby"]. By C.D., as condensed by himself, for his readings. (Four Chapters). Boston [U.S.], 1868, 8vo.
Another edition in three
chapters was published at Boston
the same year.
Little Dorrit. With illustrations, by H.K. Browne. London [1855]-57, 8vo.
Master Humphrey’s Clock. With illustrations by George Cattermole and H.K. Browne. 3 vols. London, 1840-41, 8vo.
Comprises two stories,
“The Old Curiosity Shop” and “Barnaby
Rudge,” both subsequently
issued as independent works, the
first in 1848, and the
second in 1849.
The Old Curiosity Shop. London, 1848, 8vo.
Barnaby Rudge. A Tale of the Riots of Eighty. London, 1849, 8vo.
Mr. Nightingale’s Diary: a Farce, in one act. London, 1851, 8vo.
Privately printed and
extremely scarce. There is a copy in
the Forster Collection
at South Kensington.
——Another edition. Boston [U.S.], 1877, 16mo.
This edition is now scarce.
The Mudfog Papers. Now first collected. London, 1880, 8vo.
Reprinted from Bentley’s Miscellany.
——Second edition. London, 1880, 8vo.
The Mystery of Edwin Drood. With twelve illustrations by S.L. Fildes, and a portrait. London, 1870, 8vo.
Oliver Twist; or, The Parish Boy’s Progress. By “Boz.” In three volumes. [With illustrations by George Cruikshank.] London, 1838, 8vo.
The second edition, with the title-page reading “Oliver Twist, by Charles Dickens,” appeared the following year; the third edition, with a new preface, was published in 1841. The edition of 1846, in one volume, bears the following title-page:—“The Adventures of Oliver Twist; or, The Parish Boy’s Progress. By Charles Dickens. With twenty-four illustrations on Steel, by George Cruikshank.”
Our Mutual Friend. With illustrations by Marcus Stone. 2 vols. London, 1865, 8vo.
The Personal History of David Copperfield. With illustrations, by H.K. Browne. London, 1850, 8vo.
David Copperfield. By C.D., as condensed by himself, for his readings. Boston [U.S.], 1868, 8vo.
Pictures from Italy. By C.D. The vignette illustrations on wood, by Samuel Palmer. London, 1846, 8vo.
Appeared originally
in the Daily News, from January to
March 1846, with the
title of “Travelling Letters written on
the Road. By Charles
Dickens.”
The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club. Being a faithful record of the Perambulations, Perils, Travels, Adventures, and Sporting Transactions of the Corresponding Members. Edited by “Boz.” With forty-three illustrations by R. Seymour, R.W. Buss, and Phiz [H.K. Browne], London, 1837, 8vo.
In twenty monthly parts,
commencing April 1836, and ending
November 1837, no number
being issued for June 1837.
——Another edition. V.D. Land, Launceston, 1838, 8vo.
This edition of Pickwick is interesting from the fact that it was published in Van Dieman’s Land, the illustrations being exact copies of the originals executed in lithography. There is an additional title-page, engraved, bearing date 1836.
——The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club, with notes and illustrations. Edited by C. Dickens the younger, (Jubilee Edition.) 2 vols. London, 1886, 8vo.
Mr. Bob. Sawyer’s Party [extracted from “The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club”] by C.D., as condensed by himself, for his readings. Boston [U.S.], 1868, 8vo.
Bardell and Pickwick [extracted from “The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club”] by C.D., as condensed by himself, for his readings. Boston [U.S.], 1868, 8vo.
Sketches by “Boz,” illustrative of every-day life and every-day people. In two volumes. Illustrations by George Cruikshank. London, 1836, 12mo.
——Second edition. London, 1836, 12mo.
Sketches by “Boz.” Third edition. London, 1837, 12mo.
——Second Series. London, 1837, 12mo.
——First complete edition of the two series. With forty illustrations by George Cruikshank. London, 1839, 8vo.
——Sketches and Tales of London Life. [Selections from “Sketches by Boz.”] London [1877], 8vo.
——The Tuggs’s at Ramsgate [from “Sketches by Boz"]. London [1870], 8vo.
Sketches of Young Gentlemen. Dedicated to the Young Ladies. With six illustrations by “Phiz” (H.K. Browne). London, 1838, 8vo.
Sketches of Young Couples; with an urgent Remonstrance to the Gentlemen of England (being Bachelors or Widowers) on the present alarming Crisis. With six illustrations by “Phiz” [H.K. Browne]. London, 1840, 8vo.
An edition was published in 1869 with the title “Sketches of Young Couples, Young Ladies, Young Gentlemen. By Quiz. Illustrated by Phiz.” Only the first and third of these sketches were written by Charles Dickens. “The Sketches of Young Ladies” were by an anonymous author, who also assumed the pseudonym of Quiz.
Somebody’s Luggage. (Tauchnitz Edition, vol. 888.) Leipzig, 1867, 16mo.
The Christmas Number
of All the Year Round for 1862.
Dickens contributed
“His leaving it till called for”; “His
Boots”; “His
Brown-paper Parcel” and “His Wonderful
End.”
The Strange Gentleman: A Comic Burletta. In two acts. By “Boz.” First performed at the St. James’s Theatre, on Thursday, September 29, 1836. London, 1837, 8vo.
Sunday under Three Heads. As it is; as Sabbath bills would make it; as it might be made. By Timothy Sparks. London, 1836, 12mo.
Reproduced in fac-simile,
London, 1884, and in Pearson’s
Manchester Series of
Fac-simile Reprints, Manchester, same
date.
A Tale of Two Cities. With illustrations by H.K. Browne. London, 1859, 8vo.
Originally issued in
All the Year Round, between April 30
and November 26, 1859.
The Uncommercial Traveller. By C.D. London, 1861, 8vo.
Consists of seventeen papers which originally appeared in All the Year Round with this title between January 28 and October 13, 1860. The impression which was issued in 1868 in the Charles Dickens Edition contains eleven fresh papers.
The Village Coquettes: A Comic Opera. In two acts. By C.D. The music by John Hullah. London, 1836, 8vo.
——Songs, choruses, and concerted pieces in the Operatic Burletta of The Village Coquettes as produced at St. James’s Theatre. The drama and words of the songs by “Boz.” The music by John Hullah. London, 1837, 8vo.
Editions of “The
Village Coquettes” were published at
Leipzig, 1845, and at
Amsterdam, 1868, in English, and it
was reprinted in 1878.
See also under Music.
MISCELLANEOUS WORKS.
All the Year Round. A weekly journal conducted by Charles Dickens. London, 1859-1870, 8vo.
Commenced on the 30th of April 1859.
Bentley’s Miscellany. [Successively edited by Boz, Ainsworth, Albert Smith, etc.] Vol. 1-64. London, 1837-68, 8vo.
Evenings of a Working Man, being the occupation of his scanty leisure. By John Overs. With a preface relative to the author, by C.D. London, 1844, 16mo.
Household Words: a weekly journal. Conducted by C.D. 19 vols. London, 1850-59, 8vo.
This Journal commenced on the 30th March 1850, and was continued to the 28th of May 1859, when it was incorporated with All the Year Round. A cheap edition of Household Words, in 19 vols. was published in 1868-73.
——Christmas Stories from Household Words (1850-58). Conducted by C.D. London, [1860], 8vo.
Legends and Lyrics, by Adelaide Anne Procter. With an introduction by C.D. New edition, illustrated by Dobson, Palmer, Tenniel, etc. London, 1866, 4to.
The Letters of C.D. Edited by his sister-in-law (G. Hogarth) and his eldest daughter (M. Dickens). 3 vols. London, 1880-1882, 8vo.
——Another edition. 2 vols. London, 1882, 8vo.
The Library of Fiction; or Family Story-Teller. [Edited
by C.D.]
London, 1836-37, 8vo.
The Loving Ballad of Lord Bateman. Illustrated
by George Cruikshank.
London, 1839, 8vo.
The notes and preface were written by Dickens.
Memoirs of Joseph Grimaldi. Edited by “Boz.”
With illustrations by G.
Cruikshank. 2 vols. London, 1838, 12mo.
Memoirs of Joseph Grimaldi. Another edition.
Revised by C. Whitehead.
London, 1846, 8vo.
——Another edition. London, 1853, 8vo.
——Another edition. London, 1866, 8vo.
Two other editions were
published in 1884 by G. Routledge
and Sons, and J. Dicks.
The Newsvendors’ Benevolent and Provident Institution. Speeches on behalf of the Institution by C.D. London, 1871, 8vo.
The Pic-Nic Papers by various hands. Edited by C.D. With illustrations by George Cruikshank. 3 vols. London, 1841, 8vo.
Dickens contributed
a preface and the opening tale, “The
Lamplighter’s
Story.”
The Plays and Poems of Charles Dickens. With a few Miscellanies in prose. Now first collected, edited, prefaced, and annotated by R.H. Shepherd. 2 vols. London, 1882, 8vo.
This work was almost
immediately suppressed, as it contained
copyright matter.
A new edition appeared in 1885, without
the copyright play of
“No Thoroughfare.”
Religious Opinions of Chauncy Hare Townshend. Published as directed in his Will, by his literary executor [Charles Dickens]. London, 1869, 8vo.
Royal Literary Fund. A summary of facts in answer to allegations contained in “The Case of the Reformers of the Literary Fund,” stated by C.D., etc. [London, 1858], 8vo.
Speech delivered at the meeting of the Administrative Reform Association. London, 1855, 8vo.
Speech of C.D. as Chairman of the Anniversary Festival Dinner of the Royal Free Hospital, 1863. [London, 1870], 12mo.
The Speeches of C.D., 1841-1870, edited and prefaced by R.H. Shepherd. With a new bibliography, revised and enlarged. London, 1884, 8vo.
Speeches, letters, and sayings of C.D. To which is added a Sketch of the author by G.A. Sala, and Dean Stanley’s sermon. New York, 1870, 8vo.
Speeches: Literary and Social. London [1870], 8vo.
A Wonderful Ghost Story. With letters of C.D. to the author respecting it. By Thomas Heaphy. London, 1882, 8vo.
BIOGRAPHICAL, CRITICAL, ETC.
Adshead, Joseph.—Prisons and Prisoners. London, 1845, 8vo.
The Fictions of Dickens
upon solitary confinement, pp.
95-121.
Allbut, Robert.—London Rambles “En Zigzag,” with Charles Dickens. London [1886], 8vo.
Atlantic Almanac.—The Atlantic Almanac for 1871. Boston, 1871, 8vo.
A short biographical
notice of Dickens, with portrait and
view of Gad’s
Hill, pp. 20-21.
Bagehot, Walter.—Literary Studies, by the late Walter Bagehot. 2 vols. London, 1879, 8vo.
Charles Dickens (1858), vol. 2, pp. 184-220.
Bayne, Peter.—Essays in Biography and Criticism. By Peter Bayne. First series. Boston, 1857, 8vo.
The modern novel: Dickens, Bulwer, Thackeray, pp. 363-392.
Behn-Eschenburg, H.—Charles Dickens. Von H. Behn-Eschenburg. Basel, 1872, 8vo.
Hft. 6, of “Oeffentliche Vortraege gehalten in der Schweiz.”
Brimley, George.—Essays by the late George Brimley. Edited by William George Clark. Cambridge, 1858, 8vo.
“Bleak House,”
pp. 289-301. Reprinted from the Spectator,
September 24th, 1853.
Browne, Hablot K.—Dombey and Son. The four portraits of Edith, Florence, Alice, and Little Paul. London, 1848, 8vo.
——Dombey and Son. Full-length portraits of Dombey and Carker, Miss Tox, Mrs. Skewton, etc. London, 1848, 8vo.
——Six illustrations to The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club. Engraved from original drawings by Phiz. London [1854], 8vo.
Buchanan, Robert.—A Poet’s Sketch-Book; selections from the prose writings of Robert Buchanan. London, 1883, 8vo.
The Good Genie of Fiction.
Charles Dickens, pp. 119-140.
(Reprinted from St.
Paul’s Magazine, 1872, pp. 130-148.)
Calverley, C.S.—Fly Leaves. Second Edition. By C.S. Calverley. Cambridge, 1872, 8vo.
An Examination Paper.
“The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick
Club,” pp. 121-124.
Canning, S.G.—Philosophy of Charles Dickens. By the Hon. Albert S.G. Canning. London, 1880, 8vo.
Cary, Thomas G.—Letter to a lady in France on the supposed failure of a national bank ... with answers to enquiries concerning the books of Captain Marryat and Mr. Dickens. [By Thomas G. Cary.] Boston [U.S.], 1843, 8vo.
——Second Edition. Boston, [U.S.], 1844, 8vo.
Chambers, Robert.—Cyclopaedia of English
Literature. Edited by Robert
Chambers. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1844, 8vo.
Charles Dickens, vol. ii., pp. 630-633.
——Another Edition. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1860, 8vo.
Charles Dickens, with a portrait, vol. ii., pp. 644-650.
——Third Edition, 2 vols. London, 1876, 8vo.
Charles Dickens, with a portrait, vol. ii., pp. 515-521.
Chapman, T.J.—Schools and Schoolmasters;
from the works of Charles
Dickens. New York, 1871, 8vo.
Clarke, Charles and Mary Cowden.—Recollections of Writers. By Charles and Mary Cowden Clarke. With letters of Charles Lamb ... and Charles Dickens, etc. London, 1878, 8vo.
Cleveland, Charles Dexter.—English Literature
of the Nineteenth
Century. A new edition. Philadelphia, 1867,
8vo.
Charles Dickens, pp. 718-730.
Cochrane, Robert.—Risen by Perseverance;
or, lives of self-made men.
By Robert Cochrane. Edinburgh, 1879, 8vo.
Charles Dickens, pp. 172-223.
Cook, James.—Bibliography of the writings of Charles Dickens, with many curious and interesting particulars relating to his works. By James Cook. London, 1879, 8vo.
Cruikshank, George.—George Cruikshank’s Magazine. London, 1854, 8vo.
February 1854, pp. 74-80,
“A letter from Hop-o’-My-Thumb to
Charles Dickens, Esq.,
upon ‘Frauds on the Fairies,’ ’Whole
Hogs,’ etc.”
D., H.W.—Ward and Lock’s Penny Books for the People. Biographical series. The Life of Charles Dickens. By H.W.D. Pp. 513-528. London, 1882, 8vo.
Davey, Samuel.—Darwin, Carlyle and Dickens, with other essays. By Samuel Davey. London, [1876], 8vo.
Denman, Lord.—Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Bleak House, Slavery and Slave Trade. Six articles by Lord Denman. London, 1853, 8vo.
——Second Edition. London, 1853, 8vo.
Depret, Louis.—Chez les Anglais. Shakespeare,
Charles Dickens,
Longfellow, etc. Paris, 1879.
Charles Dickens, 1812-1870, occupies pp. 71-130.
Dickens, Charles.—Chas. Dickens. A critical biography. London, 1858, 8vo.
No. 1 of a series entitled “Our Contemporaries,” etc.
——The Life and Times of Charles Dickens. With a portrait. (Police News edition.) London. [1870], 8vo.
——The Life of Charles Dickens. London [1881], 8vo.
——The Life of Charles Dickens. London [1882], 8vo.
Part of Haughton’s Popular Illustrated Biographies.
——Some Notes on America to be re-written, suggested with respect to Charles Dickens. Philadelphia, 1868, 8vo.
——Catalogue of the beautiful collection of modern pictures, etc., of Charles Dickens, which will be sold by auction by Messrs. Christie, Manson and Woods ... July 9, 1870. London [1870], 4to.
——Dickens Memento, with introduction by F. Phillimore, and “Hints to Dickens Collectors,” by J.F. Dexter. Catalogue with purchasers’ names, etc. London [1884], 4to.
——Mary.—Charles Dickens. By his eldest daughter (Mary Dickens). London, 1885, 8vo.
Part of the series “The World’s Workers,” etc.
Dilke, Charles W.—The Papers of a Critic, etc. 2 vols. London, 1875, 8vo.
Reference to the Literary
Fund Controversy, with a letter
from C.D. to C.W.
Dilke. Vol. i., pp. 79, 80.
Dolby, George.—Charles Dickens as I knew him. The story of the Reading Tours in Great Britain and America (1866-1870). By George Dolby. London, 1885, 8vo.
Drake, Samuel Adams.—Our Great Benefactors; short biographies, etc. Boston, 1884, 8vo.
Charles Dickens, pp. 102-111, illustrated.
Dulcken, A.—Scenes from “The Pickwick Papers,” designed by A. Dulcken. London [1861], obl. fol.
——H.W.—Worthies of the World, a series of historical and critical sketches, etc. Edited by H.W. Dulcken. London [1881], 8vo.
Biography of Charles Dickens, with a portrait, pp. 513-528.
Essays.—English Essays. 4 vols. Hamburg, 1870, 8vo.
Vol. iv. contains an
article reprinted from the Illustrated
London News, June
18, 1870, on Charles Dickens.
Field, Kate.—Pen Photographs of Charles Dickens’s Readings. Taken from life. By Kate Field. Boston, [U.S.], [1868], 8vo.
——Another edition. Illustrated. Boston (U.S.), 1871, 8vo.
Fields, James T.—In and out of doors with Charles Dickens. By James T. Fields. Boston, (U.S.), 1876, 16mo.
——James T. Fields. Biographical Notes and Personal Sketches. Boston [U.S.], 1881, 8vo.
Pp. 152-160 relate to Dickens.
Fitzgerald, Percy.—Two English Essayists. C. Lamb and C. Dickens. By Percy Fitzgerald. London, 1864, 8vo.
Afternoon Lectures on Literature and Art, series 2.
——Recreations of a Literary Man. By Percy Fitzgerald. 2 vols. London, 1882, 8vo.
Charles Dickens as an
editor, vol. i., pp. 48-96; Charles
Dickens at Home, vol.
i., pp. 97-171.
Forster, John.—The Life of Charles Dickens. (With portraits.) 3 vols. London, 1872-4, 8vo.
Numerous editions.
Friswell, J. Hain.—Modern Men of Letters honestly criticised. By J. Hain Friswell. London, 1870, 8vo.
Charles Dickens, pp. 1-45.
Frost, Thomas.—In Kent with Charles Dickens. By Thomas Frost. London, 1880, 8vo.
Gill, T.—Report of the Dinner given to C.D. in Boston. Reported by T. Gill and W. English. Boston [U.S.], 1842, 8vo.
Hall, Samuel Carter.—A Book of Memories of Great Men and Women of the Age, etc. By S.C. Hall. London, 1871, 4to.
Charles Dickens, pp. 449-452.
——Second edition. London, 1877, 4to.
Charles Dickens, pp. 454-458.
Ham, James Panton.—Parables of Fiction: a memorial discourse on C. Dickens. By James Panton Ham. London, 1870, 8vo.
Hanaford, P.A.—Life and Writings of C. Dickens. New York, 1882, 8vo.
Hassard, John R.G.—A Pickwickian Pilgrimage. (Letters on “the London of Charles Dickens.”) By John R.G. Hassard. Boston (U.S.), 1881, 8vo.
Heavisides, Edward Marsh.—The Poetical and Prose Remains of Edward Marsh Heavisides. London, 1850, 8vo.
The Essay on Dickens’s writings, pp. 1-27.
Hollingshead, John.—To-Day; Essays and Miscellanies. 2 vols. London, 1865, 8vo.
Mr. Dickens and his
Critics, vol. ii., pp. 277-283; Mr.
Dickens as a Reader,
vol. ii., pp. 284-296.
Hollingshead, John.—Miscellanies. Stories and Essays by John Hollingshead. 3 vols. London, 1874, 8vo.
Mr. Dickens and his
critics, vol. iii., pp. 270-274; Mr.
Dickens as a Reader,
vol. iii., pp. 275-283.
Horne, Richard H.—A New Spirit of the Age. Edited by R.H. Horne. 2 vols. London, 1844, 12mo.
Charles Dickens, with portrait, vol. i., pp. 1-76.
Hotten, John Camden.—Charles Dickens, the Story of his Life. By the Author of the Life of Thackeray (J.C. Hotten). With illustrations and fac-similes. London (1870), 8vo.
——Popular edition. London (1873), 12mo.
Hume, A.B.—A Christmas Memorial of Charles Dickens. By A.B. Hume. 1870, 8vo.
Contains a fac-simile
of Charles Dickens’s letter to Mr.
J.W. Makeham, dated
June 8, 1870, and an Ode to his memory.
Hutton, Laurence.—Literary Landmarks of London. By Laurence Hutton. London [1885], 8vo.
Charles Dickens, 1812-1870, pp. 79-86.
Irving, Walter.—Charles Dickens. [An essay.]
By Walter Irving.
Edinburgh, 1874, 8vo.
Jeaffreson, J. Cordy.—Novels and Novelists from Elizabeth to Victoria. By J. Cordy Jeaffreson. 2 vols. London, 1858, 8vo.
Charles Dickens, vol. ii., pp. 303-334.
Jerrold, Blanchard.—The Best of All Good Company. Edited by Blanchard Jerrold. Pt. 1., A Day with Charles Dickens. London, 1871, 8vo.
Reprinted in 1872, 8 vo.
Johnson, Charles Plumptre.—Hints to Collectors of original editions of the works of Charles Dickens. By Charles Plumptre Johnson. London, 1885, 8vo.
Johnson, Joseph.—Clever Boys of our Time, and how they became famous men. Edinburgh [1878], 8vo.
Charles Dickens, pp. 40-63.
Jones, Charles H.—Appleton’s New Handy-volume Series. A short life of Charles Dickens, etc. By Charles H. Jones. New York, 1880, 8vo.
Joubert, Andre.—Andre Joubert. Charles Dickens, sa vie et ses oeuvres. Paris, 1872, 8vo.
Kent, Charles.—The Charles Dickens Dinner. An authentic record of the public banquet given to Mr Charles Dickens ... prior to his departure for the United States. [With a preface signed C.K. i.e., Charles Kent.] London, 1867, 8vo.
Kent, Charles.—Charles Dickens as a Reader. By Charles Kent. London, 1872, 8vo.
Kitton, Fred. G.—“Phiz” (Hablot Knight Browne.) A Memoir. Including a selection from his Correspondence and Notes on his principal works. By Fred. G. Kitton. With a portrait and numerous illustrations. London, 1882, 8vo.
An account is given
of the relationship that existed between
Dickens and Phiz.
——Dickensiana. A Bibliography of the literature relating to Charles Dickens and his writings. Compiled by Fred. G. Kitton. London, 1880, 8vo.
Langton, Robert.—Charles Dickens and Rochester, etc. By Robert Langton. London, 1886, 8vo.
Langton, Robert.—The Childhood and Youth of Charles Dickens, etc. By Robert Langton. Manchester, 1883, 8vo.
L’Estrange, A.G.—History of English Humour, etc. By the Rev. A.G. L’Estrange. 2 vols. London, 1878, 8vo.
Chapter 18 of vol. ii. is devoted to Dickens.
Lynch, Judge.—Judge Lynch (of America), his two letters to Charles Dickens (of England) upon the subject of the Court of Chancery. London, 1859, 8vo.
McCarthy, Justin.—A History of Our Own Times. A new edition. 4 vols. London, 1882, 8vo.
Dickens and Thackeray, vol. ii., pp. 255-259.
McKenzie, Charles H.—The Religious Sentiments of C.D., collected from his writings. By Charles H. McKenzie. Newcastle, 1884, 8vo.
Mackenzie, R. Shelton.—Life of Charles Dickens, etc. By R. Shelton Mackenzie. Philadelphia [1870], 8vo.
Macrae, David.—Home and Abroad; Sketches and Gleanings. By David Macrae. Glasgow, 1871, 8vo.
Carlyle and Dickens, pp. 122-128.
Masson, David.—British Novelists and their styles: being a critical sketch of the history of British prose fiction. By David Masson. Cambridge, 1859, 8vo.
Dickens and Thackeray, pp. 233-253.
Mateaux, C.L.—Brave Lives and Noble. By Miss C.L. Mateaux. London, 1883, 8vo.
The Boyhood of Dickens, pp. 313-320.
Mezieres, L.—Histoire Critique de la Litterature Anglaise, etc. Seconde edition. 3 tom. Paris, 1841, 8vo.
Dickens, Le Club Pickwick, tom. iii., pp. 469-496.
Nicholson, Renton.—Nicholson’s Sketches of Celebrated Characters. London [1856], 8vo.
Charles Dickens. By Renton Nicholson, p. 11.
Nicoll, Henry J.—Landmarks of English Literature.
By Henry J. Nicoll.
London, 1883, 8vo.
Dickens noticed, pp. 378-385.
Notes and Queries. General Index to Notes and Queries. Five Series. London, 1856-80, 4to.
Numerous references to C.D.
Parley.—Parley’s Penny Library. London, [1841], 18mo.
Charles Dickens, with a portrait, vol. i.
——Peter Parley’s Annual for 1871, etc. London [1871], 8vo.
Charles Dickens as Boy and Man, pp. 320-335.
Parton, James.—Illustrious Men and their achievements; or, the people’s book of biography. New York [1882], 8vo.
Charles Dickens as a Citizen, pp. 831-841.
——Some noted Princes, Authors, and Statesmen of our time. By Canon Farrar, James T. Fields, Archibald Forbes, etc. Edited by James Parton. New York [1886], 4to.
Dickens with his children,
by Mamie Dickens, pp. 30-47,
illustrated; Recollections
of Dickens, by James T. Fields,
pp. 48-51.
Payn, James.—The Youth and Middle Age of Charles Dickens. By James Payn. Edinburgh, 1883, 8vo.
Reprinted from Chambers’s
Journal, January 1872, February
1873, March 1874.
——Some literary recollections. By James Payn. London, 1884, 8vo.
Chapter vi., First meeting
with Dickens. Reprinted from The
Cornhill Magazine.
Pemberton, T. Edgar.—Dickens’s London; or, London in the works of Charles Dickens. By T. Edgar Pemberton. London, 1876, 8vo.
Perkins, F.B.—Charles Dickens: a sketch of his life and works. By F.B. Perkins. New York, 1870, 12mo.
Pierce, Gilbert A.—The Dickens Dictionary. A key to the characters and principal incidents in the tales of Charles Dickens. By Gilbert A. Pierce. Illustrated. Boston [U.S.], 1872, 12mo.
——Another edition. London, 1878, 8vo.
Poe, Edgar A.—The Literati: some honest opinions about autorial merits and demerits, etc. By Edgar A. Poe. New York, 1850, 8vo.
Notice of “Barnaby Rudge,” pp. 464-482.
——The works of E.A. Poe. 4 vols. Edinburgh, 1875, 8vo.
Vol. 3, Marginalia,
Dickens’s “Old Curiosity Shop,” and
Dickens and Bulwer,
pp. 373-375.
Powell, Thomas.—The Living Authors of England. By Thos. Powell. New York, 1849, 8vo.
Charles Dickens, pp. 153-178.
——Pictures of the Living Authors of Britain. By Thos. Powell. London, 1851, 8vo.
Charles Dickens, pp. 88-115.
Pryde, David.—The Genius and Writings of Charles Dickens. By David Pryde. Edinburgh, 1869, 8vo.
Reeve, Lovell A.—Portraits of men of eminence in literature, science, and art, with biographical memoirs. [Vols. iii.-vi. by E. Walford]. 6 vols. London, 1863-67, 8vo.
Vol. iv., Charles Dickens, pp. 93-99.
Richardson, David Lester.—Literary Recreations, etc. By David Lester Richardson. London, 1852, 8vo.
Dickens’s “David
Copperfield,” and Thackeray’s “Pendennis,”
pp. 238-243.
Rimmer, Alfred.—About England with Dickens. By Alfred Rimmer. With fifty-eight illustrations. London, 1883, 8vo.
Sala, Geo. A.—Charles Dickens. [An Essay.] London [1870], 8vo.
Santvoord, C. Van.—Discourses on special occasions, and miscellaneous papers. By C. Van Santvoord. New York, 1856, 8vo.
Charles Dickens and his philosophy, pp. 333-359.
Schmidt, Julian.—Charles Dickens. Eine charakteristik. Leipzig 1852, 8vo.
Seymour, Mrs.—An account of the Origin of the “Pickwick Papers.” By Mrs. Seymour, etc. London, n.d.
Shepard, William.—The Literary Life. Edited by William Shepard. Pen Pictures of Modern Authors. New York, 1882, 8vo.
Charles Dickens, pp. 236-293.
Shepherd, Richard Herne.—The Bibliography of Dickens. A bibliographical list, arranged in chronological order, of the published writings in prose and verse of Charles Dickens. From 1834 to 1880. Manchester, [1880], 8vo.
Spedding, James.—Reviews and Discussions, literary, political, and historical. By James Spedding. London, 1879, 8vo.
Dickens’s “American
Notes,” pp. 240-276. Reprinted from the
Edinburgh Review,
Jan. 1843.
Stanley, Arthur Penrhyn.—Sermon preached in Westminster Abbey, ... the Sunday following the funeral of Dickens. London, 1870, 8vo.
Stoddard, Richard Henry.—Bric-a-Brac Series. Anecdote Biographies of Thackeray and Dickens. Edited by Richard Henry Stoddard. New York, 1874, 8vo.
Taine, H.—Histoire de la Litterature Anglaise. Par H. Taine. 4 tom. Paris, 1864, 8vo.
Le Roman—Dickens, tom. iv., pp. 3-69.
——History of English Literature. 4 vols. Edinburgh, 1874, 8vo.
The Novel—Dickens. Vol. iv., pp. 115-164.
Taylor, Theodore.—Charles Dickens: the story of his life. New York, n.d., 8vo.
Thackeray, William Makepeace.—Early and late papers hitherto uncollected. Boston, 1867, 8vo.
Dickens in France (a
description of a performance of
Nicholas Nickleby in
Paris), pp. 95-121. Appeared originally
in Fraser’s
Magazine, March 1842.
Thomson, David Croal.—Life and Labours of Hablot Knight Browne, “Phiz.” By David Croal Thomson. With one hundred and thirty illustrations, etc. London, 1884, 8vo.
Contains a series of
illustrations to Dickens, printed from
the original plates
and blocks.
Timbs, John.—Anecdote Lives of the later wits and humourists. By John Timbs. 2 vols. London, 1874, 8vo.
Vol. ii., pp. 201-255, relate to Dickens.
Times, The.—A second series of Essays from The Times. London, 1854, 8vo.
Dickens and Thackeray, pp. 320-338.
——Eminent Persons: biographies reprinted from the Times, 1870-79. London, 1880, 8vo.
Mr. Charles Dickens—Leading
Article, June 10, 1870;
Obituary notice, June
11, 1870, pp. 8-12.
Tooley, Mrs. G.W.—Lives, Great and Simple. London, 1884, 8vo.
Charles Dickens, pp. 183-197.
Ward, Adolphus W.—Charles Dickens. A lecture by Professor Ward. [Science Lectures, series 2.] Manchester, 1871, 8vo.
——Dickens. By Adolphus William Ward. [English Men of Letters Series.] London, 1882, 8vo.
Watkins, William.—Charles Dickens, with anecdotes and recollections of his life. Written and compiled by William Watkins. London [1870], 8vo.
Watt, James Crabb.—Great Novelists. Scott, Thackeray, Dickens, Lytton. By James Crabb Watt. Edinburgh, 1880, 8vo.
——Another Edition. London [1885], 8vo.
Weizmann, Louis.—Dickens und Daudet in
deutscher Uebersetzung. Von
Louis Weizmann. Berlin, 1880, 8vo.
Weller, Sam.—On the Origin of Sam Weller, and the real cause of the success of the Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club, etc. London, 1883, 8vo.
Welsh, Alfred H.—Development of English Literature and Language. 2 vols. Chicago, 1882, 8vo.
Dickens, vol. ii., pp. 438-454.
World.—The World’s Great Men: a Gallery of over a hundred portraits and biographies, etc. London [1880], 8vo.
Charles Dickens, with portrait, pp. 125-128.
Yates, Edmund.—Edmund Yates: his recollections and experiences. 2 vols. London, 1884, 8vo.
A Dickens Chapter, vol. ii., pp. 91-128.
Plays founded on Dickens’s Works.
Yankee Notes for English Circulation: a farce, in one act. By E. Stirling. London, n.d., 12mo.
Duncombe’s British Theatre, vol. 46.
The Battle of Life: a drama, in three acts. By Edward Stirling. London, n.d., 12mo.
Duncombe’s British Theatre, vol. 57.
The drama founded on the Christmas Annual of Charles Dickens, called The Battle of Life: dramatized by Albert Smith. In three acts and in verse. London (1846), 12mo.
La Bataille de la Vie. Piece en trois actes, etc. Par M.M. Melesville et Andre de Goy. Paris, 1853, 8vo.
Bleak House; or, Poor “Jo:” a drama, in four acts. Adapted from Dickens’s “Bleak House,” by George Lander. (Dicks’ Standard Plays, No. 388.) London, n.d., 12mo.
Lady Dedlock’s Secret: a drama, in four acts. Founded on an episode in Dickens’s “Bleak House.” By J. Palgrave Simpson. London, n.d., 8vo.
“Move On;” or, Jo, the Outcast: a drama, in three acts. Adapted by James Mortimer.
Not published.
Poor “Jo:” a drama, in three acts. Adapted by Mr. Terry Hurst.
Not published.
Jo: a drama, in three acts. Adapted from
Charles Dickens’s “Bleak
House.” By J.P. Burnett.
Not published.
The Chimes: a Goblin Story. A drama, in four quarters, dramatised by Mark Lemon and Gilbert A. A’Beckett. London, n.d., 8vo.
Webster’s “Acting National Drama,” vol. 11.
A Christmas Carol. By C.Z. Barnett. London (1872), 12mo.
Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. 94.
The Cricket on the Hearth; or, a fairy tale of home: a drama, in three acts. Dramatized by Albert Smith (Dicks’ Standard Plays, No. 394). London, n.d., 12mo.
The Cricket on the Hearth: a fairy tale of home. By Edward Stirling. (Webster’s “Acting National Drama,” vol. 12.) London, n.d., 12mo.
The Cricket on the Hearth: a fairy tale of home in three chirps. By W.T. Townsend. London (1860), 12mo.
Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. 44.
Dot: a Fairy Tale of Home. A drama, in three acts. From the “Cricket on the Hearth,” by Charles Dickens. Dramatized by Dion Boucicault.
Not published.
David Copperfield: a drama, in three acts. Adapted from Dickens’s popular work of the same name, by John Brougham. (Dicks’ Standard Plays, No. 474.) London, n.d., 12mo.
Little Em’ly: a drama, in four acts. Adapted from Dickens’s “David Copperfield,” by Andrew Halliday. New York, n.d., 8vo.
Dombey and Son: in three acts. Dramatized by John Brougham. (Dicks’ Standard Plays, No. 373.) London, n.d., 12mo.
Captain Cuttle: a comic drama, in one act. By John Brougham. (Dicks’ Standard Plays, No. 572.) London, n.d., 12mo.
Great Expectations: a Drama, in three acts, and a prologue. Adapted by W.S. Gilbert.
Not published.
The Haunted Man: a drama. Adapted from Charles Dickens’s Christmas Story.
Not published.
Tom Pinch: a Domestic Comedy, in three acts. Adapted by Messrs. Dilley and Clifton, from “Martin Chuzzlewit.” London, n.d.
Martin Chuzzlewit: or, his Wills and his Ways, etc. A drama, in three acts. By Thomas Higgie. London [1872], 12mo.
Lacy’s Acting Edition, Supplement, vol. i.
Tartueffe Junior, von H.C.L. Klein. [Play in five acts, after “The Life of Martin Chuzzlewit.”] Neuwied, 1864, 16mo.
Martin Chuzzlewit: a drama, in three acts. By E. Stirling. London, n.d., 12mo.
Duncombe’s British Theatre, vol. 50.
Mrs. Harris! a farce, in one act. By Edward Stirling. London, n.d., 12mo.
Duncombe’s British Theatre, vol. 57.
Mrs. Gamp’s Party. (Adapted from “Martin Chuzzlewit.”) In one act. Manchester, n.d., 12mo.
Mrs. Sarah Gamp’s Tea and Turn Out: a Bozzian Sketch, in one act. By B. Webster. London, n.d., 12mo.
Acting National Drama, vol. xiii.
Martin Chuzzlewit: a drama, in three acts. By Charles Webb. London, n.d., 12mo.
Master Humphrey’s Clock: a domestic drama, in two acts. By F.F. Cooper. (Duncombe’s British Theatre, vol. xli.) London, n.d., 12mo.
The Old Curiosity Shop: a drama, in four acts. Adapted by Mr. Charles Dickens, Jun., from his father’s novel.
Not published.
Mrs. Jarley’s Far-Famed Collection of Wax-Works, as arranged by G.B. Bartlett. In two parts. London [1873], 8vo.
The Old Curiosity Shop: a drama, in four acts. Adapted from Charles Dickens’s novel of the same name, by George Lander. (Dicks’ Standard Plays, No. 398.) London, n.d., 12mo.
The Old Curiosity Shop: a drama, in two acts. By E. Stirling. London [1868], 12mo.
Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. lxxvii.
Barnaby Rudge: a drama, in three acts. Adapted from Dickens’s work by Thomas Higgie. London [1854], 12mo.
Barnaby Rudge: a domestic drama, in three acts. By Charles Selby and Charles Melville. London [1875], 12mo.
Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. ci.
A Message from the Sea: a drama, in four acts. Founded on Charles Dickens’s tale of that name. By John Brougham. (Dicks’ Standard Plays, No. 459.) London, n.d., 12mo.
A Message from the Sea: a drama, in three acts. By Charles Dickens and William Wilkie Collins. London, 1861, 8vo.
The Infant Phenomenon, etc.: a domestic piece, in one act. Being an episode in the adventures of “Nicholas Nickleby.” Adapted by H. Horncastle. London, n.d., 8vo.
Nicholas Nickleby: a drama, in four acts. Adapted by H. Simms. (Dicks’ Standard Plays, No. 469.) London, n.d., 12mo.
The Fortunes of Smike, or a Sequel to Nicholas Nickleby: a drama, in two acts. By Edward Stirling. London, n.d., 12mo.
Webster’s “Acting National Drama,” vol. ix.
Nicholas Nickleby: a farce, in two acts. By Edward Stirling. London, n.d., 12mo.
Webster’s “Acting National Drama,” vol. v.
Nicholas Nickleby: an Episodic Sketch, in three tableaux, based upon an incident in “Nicholas Nickleby.”
Not published.
L’Abime, drame en cinq actes. [Founded on the story of “No Thoroughfare.”] Paris, 1868, 8vo.
No Thorough Fare: a drama, in five acts, and a prologue. By Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins. New York, n.d., 8vo.
Identity; or, No Thoroughfare. A drama, in four acts. By Louis Lequel. New York, n.d., 8vo.
Bumble’s Courtship. From Dickens’s “Oliver Twist.” A Comic Interlude, in one act. By Frank E. Emson. London [1874], 12mo.
Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. xcix.
Oliver Twist: a serio-comic burletta, in three acts. By George Almar. London, n.d., 12mo.
Webster’s “Acting National Drama,” vol. vi.
Oliver Twist, or the Parish Boy’s Progress: a domestic drama, in three acts. By C.Z. Barnett. London, n.d., 12mo.
Duncombe’s British Theatre, vol. xxix.
Oliver Twist: a serio-comic burletta, in four acts. By George Almar. New York, n.d.
Sam Weller, or the Pickwickians: a drama, in three acts, etc. By W.T. Moncrieff. London, 1837, 8vo.
The Pickwickians, or the Peregrinations of Sam Weller: a Comic Drama, in three acts. Arranged from Moncrieff’s adaptation of Charles Dickens’s work, by T.H. Lacy. London [1837], 8vo.
The Great Pickwick Case, arranged as a comic operetta. The words of the songs by Robert Pollitt; the music arranged by Thomas Rawson. Manchester [1884], 8vo.
The Pickwick Club ... a burletta, in three acts. By E. Stirling. London [1837], 12mo.
Duncombe’s British Theatre, vol. xxvi.
The Peregrinations of Pickwick: an acting drama. By William Leman Rede. London, 1837, 8vo.
Bardell versus Pickwick; versified and diversified. Songs and choruses. Words by T.H. Gem; music by Frank Spinney. Leamington [1881], 12mo.
The Dead Witness; or Sin and its Shadow. A drama, in three acts, founded on “The Widow’s Story” of The Seven Poor Travellers, by Charles Dickens. The drama written by Wybert Reeve. London [1874], 12mo.
Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. xcix.
A Tale of Two Cities: a drama, in two acts, etc. By Tom Taylor. London [1860], 12mo.
Lacy’s Acting Edition of Plays, vol. xlv.
The Tale of Two Cities: a drama, in three acts. Adapted by H.J. Rivers, etc. London [1862], 12mo.
All the Year Round; or, The Search for Happiness. A song. Words by W.S. Passmore; music by John J. Blockley. London [1860], fol.
Yankee Notes for English Circulation; or, Boz in A-Merry-Key. Comic song, by J. Briton. Music by Loder. [1842.]
Dolly Varden: a Ballad. Words and music by Cotsford Dick. London [1880], fol.
Maypole Hugh: a song. Words by Charles Bradberry; music by George E. Fox. London [1881], fol.
The Chimes Quadrille. (Musical Bouquet, No. 5.) London, n.d., fol.
The Cricket on the Hearth: Quadrille. By F. Lancelott. (Musical Bouquet, No. 57.) London [1846], fol.
What are the Wild Waves Saying? A vocal duet.
Written by Joseph E.
Carpenter; music by Stephen Glover. London [1850],
fol.
A Voice from the Waves: a vocal duet, in answer
to the above. Words by
R. Ryan; music by Stephen Glover. London [1850],
fol.
Little Dorrit’s Vigil. A Song. Written by John Barnes; composed by George Linley. London [1856], fol.
Who Passes by this Road so Late? Blandois’ song, from “Little Dorrit.” Words by Charles Dickens. Music by H.R.S. Dalton, London [1857], fol.
My Dear Old Home: a ballad. Words by J.E. Carpenter. Music by John J. Blockley. [Founded on Dickens’s “Little Dorrit.”] London [1857], fol.
Floating Away: a ballad. Words by J.E. Carpenter. Music by John J. Blockley. [Founded on a passage in “Little Dorrit.”] London [1857], fol.
The Nicholas Nickleby Quadrilles and Nickleby Galop. By Sydney Vernon. London, 1839, fol.
Little Nell: a melody. Composed by George Linley, and arranged for the pianoforte by Carlo Zotti. London [1865], fol.
The Ivy Green: a song. Music by Mrs. Henry Dale. London [1840], fol.
The song is introduced
in chap. vi. of the “Pickwick Papers”
as a recitation by the
clergyman of Dingley Dell.
The Ivy Green: a song. Music by A. De Belfour. London [1843], fol.
The Ivy Green. Arranged for the pianoforte by Ricardo Linter. London [1844], fol.
The Ivy Green: a song. Music by Henry Russell. London [1844], fol.
The Ivy Green. Music by W. Lovell Phillips. London [1844], fol.
Gabriel Grub. Cantata Seria Buffa. Adapted from “Pickwick.” Music by George E. Fox. London [1881], 4to.
Sam Weller’s Adventures: a song of the Pickwickians. (Reprinted in The Life and Times of James Catnach, by Charles Hindley. London, 1878).
The Tuggs’s at Ramsgate. Versified from “Boz’s” sketch.
The Child and the Old Man: song in the Opera, “The Village Coquettes.” The words by Charles Dickens, the music by John Hullah. London [1836], fol.
Love is not a feeling to pass away: a ballad in “The Village Coquettes.” Words by C. Dickens. Music by John Hullah. London [1836], fol.
My Fair Home: air in “The Village Coquettes.” Words by Charles Dickens. Music by John Hullah. London [1836], fol.
No light bound of stag or timid hare. Quintett in the Opera, “The Village Coquettes.” The words by Charles Dickens, the music by John Hullah. London [1836], fol.
Some Folks who have grown old. Song in “The Village Coquettes.” Words by Charles Dickens. Music by John Hullah. London [1836], fol.
There’s a Charm in Spring: a ballad in “The Village Coquettes.” Words by Charles Dickens. Music by John Hullah. London [1836], fol.
The Cares of the Day: song with chorus, in the Opera, “The Village Coquettes.” The words by Charles Dickens, composed by John Hullah. London [1858], fol.
In Rich and Lowly Station shine. Duet in the Opera, “The Village Coquettes.” The words by Charles Dickens, the music by John Hullah. London [1858], fol.
Autumn Leaves: air from the Opera, “The Village Coquettes.” The words by Charles Dickens, the music by John Hullah. London [1871], fol.
Change for the American Notes; or, Letters from London to New York. By an American Lady. London, 1843, 8vo.
Current American Notes. By “Buz.” London, n.d.
The Battle of London Life; or, “Boz” and his Secretary. By Morna. With a portrait and illustrations by G.A. Sala. London, 1849.
The Battle Won by the Wind. By Ch——s D*ck*ns, etc.
Published in The
Puppet Showman’s Album. Illustrated
by
Gavarni.
Bleak House: a Narrative of Real Life, etc. London, 1856.
Characteristic Sketches of Young Gentlemen. By Quiz Junior. With woodcut illustrations. London [1838].
A Child’s History of Germany. By H.W. Friedlaender. A Pendant to a Child’s History of England, by Charles Dickens. Celle, 1861, 8vo.
“Christmas Eve” with the Spirits ... with some further tidings of the Lives of Scrooge and Tiny Tim. London, 1870.
A Christmas Carol: being a few scattered staves, from a familiar composition, re-arranged for performance, by a distinguished Musical Amateur, during the holiday season, at H—rw—rd—n. With four illustrations by Harry Furness.
Punch, Dec. 1885, pp. 304, 305.
Micawber Redivivus; or, How to Make a Fortune as a Middleman, etc. By Jonathan Coalfield [i.e. W. Graham Simpson?]. [London, 1883], 8vo. [Transcriber’s Note: The subtitle of this volume should be “How He Made a Fortune as a Middleman, etc.”]
Dombey and Son Finished: a burlesque. Illustrated by Albert Smith.
The Man in the Moon, 1848, pp. 59-67.
Dombey and Daughter: a moral fiction. By Renton Nicholson. London [1850], 8vo.
Dolby and Father, by Buz. [A satire on C. Dickens.] New York, 1868, 12mo.
Hard Times (Refinished). By Charles Diggens.
Parody on Hard Times,
published in “Our Miscellany.”
Edited by H. Yates and
R.B. Brough, pp. 142-156.
The Haunted Man. By CH—R—S D—C—K—N—S. New York, 1870, 12mo.
Condensed Novels, and Other Papers. By F. Bret Harte.
Mister Humfries’ Clock. “Bos,” Maker. A miscellany of striking interest. Illustrated. London, 1840, 8vo.
Master Timothy’s Bookcase; or, the Magic Lanthorn of the World. By G.W.M. Reynolds. London, 1842.
A Girl at a Railway Junction’s Reply [to an article in the Christmas number for 1866 of “All the Year Round,” entitled “Mugby Junction.”] London [1867], 8vo.
The Cloven Foot: being an adaptation of the English novel, “The Mystery of Edwin Drood” to American scenes, characters, customs, and nomenclature. By Orpheus C. Kerr. New York, 1870, 8vo.
The Mystery of Mr. E. Drood. By Orpheus C. Kerr.
The Piccadilly Annual, Dec. 1870, pp. 59-62.
The Mystery of Mr. E. Drood. An adaptation. By O.C. Kerr. London [1871], 8vo.
John Jasper’s Secret: a sequel to Charles Dickens’s unfinished novel, “The Mystery of Edwin Drood.” Philadelphia [1871].
The Mystery of Edwin Drood. Part the Second, by the Spirit Pen of Charles Dickens, etc. Brattleboro’ [U.S.], 1873.
A Great Mystery Solved: being a sequel to “The Mystery of Edwin Drood.” By Gillian Vase. 3 vols. London, 1878, 8vo.
Nicholas Nickelbery. Containing the adventures of the family of Nickelbery. By “Bos.” With forty-three woodcut illustrations. London [1838], 8vo.
Scenes from the Life of Nickleby Married ... being a sequel to the “Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby.” Edited by “Guess.” With twenty-one etched illustrations by “Quiz.” London, 1840.
No Thoroughfare: the Book in Eight Acts, etc.
The Mask. February 1868, pp. 14-18.
No Throughfare. [A Parody upon Dickens’s “No Thoroughfare.”] By C——s D——s, B. Brownjohn, and Domby. Second Edition. Boston [U.S.], 1868, 8vo.
The Life and Adventures of Oliver Twiss, the Workhouse Boy. [Edited by Bos.] London [1839]. 8vo.
Posthumous Papers of the Cadger’s Club. With sixteen engravings. London [1837].
Posthumous Papers of the Wonderful Discovery Club, formerly of Camden Town. Established by Sir Peter Patron. Edited by “Poz.” With eleven illustrations, designed by Squib, and engraved by Point. London, 1838.
The Post-humourous Notes of the Pickwickian Club. Edited by “Bos.” Illustrated with 120 engravings. 2 vols. London [1839], 8vo.
There are, in fact, 332 engravings.
Pickwick in America! detailing all the ... adventures of taat [sic.] individual in the United States. Edited by “Bos.” Illustrated with forty-six engravings. London [1840], 8vo.
Pickwick Abroad; or, the Tour in France. By George W.M. Reynolds. Illustrated with forty-one steel plates, by Alfred Crowquill, etc. London, 1839, 8vo.
—Another edition. London, 1864, 8vo.
Lloyd’s Pickwickian Songster, etc. London [1837].
Pickwick Songster. With portraits, designed by
C.J. Grant, of “Mr.
Pickwick as Apollo,” and “Sam Weller brushing
boots.” London, n.d.
The Pickwick Comic Almanac for 1838. With twelve comic woodcut illustrations, drawn by R. Cruikshank. London, 1838.
Mr. Pickwick’s Collection of Songs. Illustrated. London [1837], 12mo.
Pickwick Treasury of Wit; or, Joe Miller’s Jest Book. Dublin, 1840.
Sam Weller’s Favourite Song Book. London [1837], 12mo.
Sam Weller’s Pickwick Jest-Book, etc. With illustrations by Cruikshank, and portraits of all the “Pickwick” characters. London, 1837.
The Sam Weller Scrap Sheet. With forty woodcut
portraits of “all the
Pickwick Characters,” etc. London,
n.d.
Facts and Figures from Italy. Addressed during
the last two winters to
C. Dickens, being an appendix to his “Pictures.”
By Don Jeremy
Savonarola. London, 1847, 8vo.
The Sketch Book. By “Bos.” Containing tales, sketches, etc. With seventeen woodcut illustrations. London [1837], 8vo.
Impromptu. By C.J. Davids.
Bentley’s Miscellany, No. 2, March 1837, p. 297.
Poetical Epistle from Father Prout to “Boz.” A poem of seven verses.
Bentley’s Miscellany, Jan. 1838, p. 71.
A Tribute to Charles Dickens. A poem of twelve
lines. By the Hon. Mrs.
Norton.
English Bijou Almanac, 1842.
To Charles Dickens on his proposed voyage to America,
1842. By Thomas
Hood.
New Monthly Magazine, Feb. 1842, p. 217.
To Charles Dickens, on his “Christmas Carol.”
A poem of fifteen lines.
By W.W.G.
Illuminated Magazine, Feb. 1844, p. 189.
To Charles Dickens on his “Oliver Twist.” By T.N. Talfourd.
Tragedies; to which
are added a few Sonnets and Verses, by
T.N. Talfourd,
p. 244. London, 1844. 16mo.
The American’s Apostrophe to “Boz.” A poem.
The Book of Ballads
[by T. Martin and W.E. Aytoun].
Edited by Bon Gaultier,
pp. 81-86. London, 1845, 16mo.
To Charles Dickens. A Sonnet.
Douglas Jerrold’s Shilling Magazine, March 1845, p. 250.
To Charles Dickens. A Dedicatory Sonnet. By John Forster.
The Life and Adventures
of Oliver Goldsmith, by John
Forster. London,
1848, 8vo.
To Charles Dickens. A Dedicatory Poem of two
verses. By James
Ballantine.
Poems, by James Ballantine. Edinburgh, 1856, 8vo.
Au Revoir. A poem of four verses.
Judy, Oct. 30, 1867, p. 37.
A Welcome to Dickens. A poem of eighty-four lines. By F.J. Parmentier.
Harper’s Weekly, Nov. 30, 1867, pp. 757, 758.
Impromptu. A Humorous Verse of six lines.
Life of Charles Dickens,
by R. Shelton Mackenzie, p. 97.
Philadelphia [1870],
8vo.
Charles Dickens reading to his daughters on the Lawn at Gadshill. A poem of eight verses. By the Editor (C.W.).
Life, Dec. 8, 1880, p. 1005.
Memorial Verses, June 9, 1870. Fifteen verses. By F.T.P.
Daily News, June 18, 1870, p. 5.
Ode to the Memory of Charles Dickens. By A.B. Hume.
A Christmas Memorial
of Charles Dickens, by A.B. Hume.
London, 1870, 8vo.
Charles Dickens. Born February 7, 1812. Died June 9, 1870. A memorial poem of fourteen verses.
Punch, June 18, 1870, p. 244.
In Memoriam. June 9, 1870. A poem of six verses.
Graphic, June 18, 1870, p. 678.
Charles Dickens. Born 7th February 1812; died 9th June 1870. A memorial sonnet.
Judy, June 22, 1870, p. 91.
In Memory. A poem of ten verses, with an illustration by F. Barnard.
Fun, June 25, 1870, p. 157.
In Memoriam. A poem of seventy lines. By H.M.C.
Gentleman’s Magazine, July 1, 1870, p. 22.
To His Memory. A poem of five verses.
Argosy, August, 1870, p. 114.
A Man of the Crowd to Charles Dickens. A poem of a hundred-and-six lines. By E.J. Milliken.
Gentleman’s Magazine, August 1870, pp. 277-279.
Dickens. A memorial poem of two verses. By O.C.K. (Orpheus C. Kerr).
Piccadilly Annual, Dec. 1870, p. 72.
In Memoriam. Charles Dickens. Obiit, June 9, 1870. Five verses.
Charles Dickens,
with anecdotes and recollections of his
life. By William
Watkins. London [1870], 8vo.
Dickens in Camp. A poem of ten verses. By F. Bret Harte.
Poems, by F. Bret Harte. Boston, 1871, 12mo.
Dickens at Gadshill. A poem of eighteen verses. By C.K. (Charles Kent).
Athenaeum, June 3, 1871, p. 687.
Death of Charles Dickens. A poem of seventeen verses.
The Circe and other Poems, by John Appleby, 1873.
At Gad’s Hill. An obituary poem of fourteen verses. By Richard Henry Stoddard.
Bric-a-Brac Series.
Anecdote Biographies of Thackeray and
Dickens, p. 296.
By Richard Henry Stoddard. New York, 1874,
8vo.
At the Grave of Dickens. A sonnet. By Clelia R. Crespi.
Detroit Free Press, July 1884.
In Memoriam: Charles Dickens. Died June 9, 1870. A sonnet. By C.K.
Graphic, June 6, 1885, p. 586.
Charles Dickens. Revue Britannique, Avril 1843, pp. 340-376.—People’s Journal (portrait), by William Howitt, 1846, vol. 1, pp. 8-12.—Revue des Deux Mondes, by Arthur Dudley, March 1848, pp. 901-922—Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, April 1855, pp. 451-466; same article, Eclectic Magazine, June 1855, pp. 200-214.—Die Gartenlaube (portrait), 1856, pp. 73-75.—Saturday Review, May 1858, pp. 474, 475; same article, Littell’s Living Age, July 1858, pp. 263-265—Town Talk, June 1858, p. 76.—National Review, vol. 7, 1858, pp. 458-486.—Illustrated News of the World, Supplement, Oct. 9, 1858.—National Review (by W. Bagehot), Oct. 1858, pp. 458-486;
——About England with. Scribner’s Monthly, by B.E. Martin [illustrated], Aug. 1880, pp. 494-503.
——Amateur Theatricals. Macmillan’s Magazine, Jan. 1871, pp. 206-215; same article, Eclectic Magazine, March 1871, pp. 322-330.—Every Saturday, vol. 10, p. 70.
——As “Captain Bobadil” (portrait). Every Saturday, vol. 11, p. 295.
——American Notes. Fraser’s Magazine, Nov. 1842, pp. 617-629.—Monthly Review, Nov. 1842, pp. 392-403.—Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal, Nov. 1842, pp. 348, 349, 356, 357.—New Monthly Magazine (by Thomas Hood), Nov. 1842, pp. 396-406.—Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, by Q.Q.Q., Dec. 1842, pp. 783-801.—Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, vol. 9, 1842, pp. 737-746.—Christian Remembrancer, Dec. 1842, pp. 679, 680.—Edinburgh Review, by James Spedding, Jan. 1843, pp. 497-522. Reprinted in “Reviews and Discussions,” etc., by James Spedding; Note to the above, Feb. 1843, p. 301.—Eclectic Museum, vol. 1, 1843, p. 230.—North American Review, Jan. 1843, pp. 212-237.—Quarterly Review, March 1843, pp. 502-522.—Westminster Review, by H., 1843, pp. 146-160.—New Englander, by J.P. Thompson, 1843, pp. 64-84.—Southern Literary Messenger, 1843, pp. 58-62.—Atlantic Monthly, by Edwin P. Whipple, April 1877, pp. 462-466.
——And Benjamin Disraeli. Tailor and Cutter, July 1870, pp. 401-402.
——The Styles of Disraeli and. Galaxy, by Richard Grant White, Aug. 1870, pp. 253-263.
——And Thackeray. Littell’s Living Age, vol. 21, p. 224.—Dublin Review, April 1871, pp. 315-350.
——And Bulwer. A Contrast. Temple Bar, Jan. 1875, pp. 168-180.
——Living Literati; Sir E. Bulwer Lytton and Mr. Charles Dickens. Eginton’s Literary Railway Miscellany, 1854, pp. 19-25, 174-188.
——And Chauncy Hare Townshend. London Society, Aug. 1870, pp. 157-159.
——And his Critics. The Train, by John Hollingshead, Aug. 1857, pp. 76-79; reprinted in “Essays and Miscellanies” by John Hollingshead.
——And his Debt of Honour. Land We Love, vol. 5, p. 414.
——And his Illustrators. With nine illustrations. Christmas Bookseller, 1879, pp. 15-21.
——And his Letters. Part 1. By Mary Cowden Clarke. Gentleman’s Magazine, Dec. 1876, pp. 708-713.
——And his Works. Fraser’s Magazine, April 1840, pp. 381-400.
——Another Gossip about.—Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine, vol. 12, 1872, pp. 78-83.
——As an Author and Reader. Welcome, with portrait, vol. 12, 1885, pp. 166-170.
——As a Dramatic Critic. Longman’s Magazine, by Dutton Cook, May 1883, pp. 29-42.
——As a Dramatist and a Poet. Gentleman’s Magazine, by Percy Fitzgerald, 1878, pp. 61-77.
——As a Humaniser. St. James’s Magazine, by Arnold Quamoclit, 1879, pp. 281-291.
——As a Journalist. Journalist, A Monthly Phonographic Magazine, by Charles Kent, in Pitman’s Shorthand, vol. 1, Dec. 1879, pp. 17-25. Done into English—Time, July 1881, pp. 361-374.
——As a Literary Exemplar. University Quarterly, by F.A. Walker, vol. 1, p. 91, etc.
——As a Moralist. Old and New, April 1871, pp. 480-483.
——As a Moral Teacher. Monthly Religious Magazine, by J.H. Morison, vol. 44, p. 129, etc.
——As a Reader. The Critic, 1858, pp. 537, 538.
——Eine Vorlesung von Charles Dickens. Die Gartenlaube, by Corvin (portrait), 1861, pp. 612-614.
——Readings by Charles Dickens. Land We Love, by T.C. De Leon, vol. 4, p. 421, etc.
——Farewell Reading in London. Every Saturday, vol. 9, pp. 242, 260.
——Last Readings. Graphic, February 1870, p. 250.
——New Reading. Illustrated. Tinsley’s Magazine, by Edmund Yates, 1869, pp. 60-64.
——At Home. Every Saturday, vol. 2, p. 396. Gentleman’s Magazine (by Percy Fitzgerald), November 1881, pp. 562-583.—Cornhill Magazine (by his eldest daughter), 1885, pp. 32-51.
——At Gadshill Place. Life, 1880, pp. 1005, 1006.
——Biographical Sketch of. The Eclectic Magazine (portrait), 1864, pp. 115-117.
——Bleak House. Rambler, vol. 1. N.S., 1854, pp. 41-45.
——Boyhood of. Thistle, by J.D.D., vol. 1, pp. 51-55.
——Childhood of. (Illustrated.) Manchester Quarterly, by Robert L. Langton, vol. 1, 1882, pp. 178-180.
——Early Life of. Every Saturday, vol. 12, p. 60.
——Boz. The Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine, by J.T., July 1870, pp. 14-16.
——The “Boz” Ball. Historical Magazine, by P.M., pp. 110-113 and 291-294.
——“Boz” in Paris.—Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine, vol. 10, pp. 186-189.
——Boz versus Dickens. Parker’s London Magazine, February 1845, pp. 122-128.
——Grip the Raven, in “Barnaby Rudge.” Every Saturday, vol. 9, 542, 742, 749.
——The Battle of Life. Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, 1847, pp. 55-60.
——Bleak House. Spectator (by George Brimley), Sep. 1853, pp. 923-925. Reprinted in “Essays by the late George Brimley.”—United States Magazine and Democratic Review, Sep. 1853, pp. 276-280.—North American Review (by W. Sargent,) Oct. 1853, pp. 409-439.—Eclectic Review, Dec. 1853, pp. 665-679.
——Characters in. Putnam’s Monthly Magazine (by C.F. Riggs), 1853, pp. 558-562.
——Characters from Dickens [Illustrated]. Jack and Jill, 1885-6.
——The Chimes. Dublin Review, Dec. 1844, pp. 560-568.—Eclectic Review, 1845, pp. 70-88.—Edinburgh Review, Jan. 1845, pp. 181-189; same article, Eclectic Magazine, May 1845, pp. 33-38.
——Christmas Books. Union Magazine, 1846, pp. 223-236.
——A Christmas Carol. Dublin Review, 1843, pp. 510-529.—Fraser’s Magazine, by M.A.T., Feb. 1844, pp. 167-169.—Hood’s Magazine, 1844, pp. 68-75.—Knickerbocker, by S.G. Clark, March, 1844, pp. 276-281.
——Controversy. American Publishers’ Circular, June 1867, pp. 68-69.
——Cricket on the Hearth. Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal, 1846, pp. 44-48.—Oxford and Cambridge Review, vol. 2, 1846, pp. 43-50.
——David Copperfield. Fraser’s Magazine, Dec. 1850, pp. 698-710; same article, Eclectic Magazine, Feb. 1851, pp. 247-258.
——David Copperfield and Arthur Pendennis. Southern Literary Messenger, 1851, pp. 499-504.—Prospective Review, July 1851, pp. 157-191.—North British Review (by David Masson), May 1851, pp. 57-89; same article, Littell’s Living Age, July 1851, pp. 97-110.
——Schools; or, Teachers and Taught. Family Herald, July 1849, pp. 204-205.
——The Death of. Articles reprinted from the Saturday Review, the Spectator, the Daily News, and the Times. Eclectic Magazine, Aug. 1870, pp. 217-224.—Saturday Review, June 11, 1870, pp. 760, 761.—Every Saturday, vol. 9, 1870, p. 450.
——Devonshire House Theatricals. Bentley’s Miscellany, 1851, pp. 660-667.
——Dictionary of (Pierce and Wheeler’s). Every Saturday, vol. 11, p. 258.
——Dogs; or, the Landseer of Fiction. [Illustrated.] London Society, July 1863, pp. 48-61.
——Dombey and Son. Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal, Oct. 1846, pp. 269, 270.—North British Review, May 1847, pp. 110-136.—Rambler, vol. 1, 1848, pp. 64, 66.—Sun (by Charles Kent), April 13, 1848.
—— ——Humourists: Dickens and Thackeray (Dombey and Son and Vanity Fair). English Review, Dec. 1848, pp. 257-275; same article, Eclectic Magazine, March 1849, pp. 370-379.
—— ——The Wooden Midshipman (of “Dombey and Son"). (By Ashby Sterry.) All the Year Round, Oct. 1881, pp. 173-179.
——English Magazines on, 1870. Every Saturday, vol. 9, p. 482.
——Farewell Banquet to, 1867. Every Saturday, vol. 4, p. 705.
——A Few Words on. Town and Country, by A.J.H. Crespi, N.S., vol. 1, 1873, pp. 265-273.
——Footprints of. Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, by M.D. Conway. 1870, pp. 610-616.
——Forster’s Life of (Vol. 1). Examiner, by Herbert Wilson, Dec. 1871, pp. 1217, 1218; same article, Eclectic Magazine, Feb. 1872, pp. 237-240.—Chambers’s Journal (by James Payn), Jan. 1872, pp. 17-21 and 40-45.—Quarterly Review, Jan. 1872, pp. 125-147.—Nation, 1872, pp. 42, 43.—Fortnightly Review, by J. Herbert Stack, Jan. 1872, pp. 117-120.—Fraser’s Magazine, Jan. 1872, pp. 105-113; same article, Eclectic Magazine, March 1872, pp. 277-284.—Canadian Monthly, Feb. 1872, pp. 179-182.—Lakeside Monthly, April 1872, pp. 336-340.—Overland Monthly, by George B. Merrill, May 1872, pp. 443-451.
——Forster’s Life of (vol. 2). Examiner, Nov. 1872, pp. 1132, 1133.—Nation, 1873, pp. 28, 29.—Chambers’s Journal (by James Payn), Feb. 1873, pp. 74-79.—Canadian Monthly, Feb. 1873, pp. 171-173.—Temple Bar, May 1873, pp. 169-185.
——Forster’s Life of (vol. 3). Examiner, 1874, pp. 161, 162.—Nation, 1874, pp. 175, 176.—Chambers’s Journal (by James Payn), March 1874, pp. 177-180.—Canadian Monthly, April 1874, pp. 364-366.
——Forster’s Life of. International Review, May 1874, pp. 417-420.—North American Review, vol. 114, p. 413.—Every Saturday, vol. 14, p. 608.—Revue des Deux Mondes, by Leon Boucher, tom. 8, 1875, pp. 95-126.—American Bibliopolist, vol. 4, p. 125.—Catholic World, by J.R.G. Hassard, vol. 30, p. 692.
——Four months with. (1842.) Atlantic Monthly, by G.W. Putnam. 1870, pp. 476-482, 591-599.
——French Criticism of. People’s Journal, vol. 5, p. 228.
——On the Genius of. Knickerbocker, by F.W. Shelton, May 1852, pp. 421-431.—Putnam’s Monthly Magazine, by G.F. Talbot, 1855, pp. 263-272.—Atlantic Monthly, by E.P. Whipple, May 1867, pp. 546-554.—Spectator, 1870, pp. 749-751.—New Eclectic, vol. 7, 1871, p. 257
——The “Good Genie” of Fiction. St. Paul’s Magazine, by Robert Buchanan, 1872, pp. 130-148; reprinted in “A Poet’s Sketch-Book,” etc., by Robert Buchanan, 1883.
——Great Expectations. Atlantic Monthly, by Edwin P. Whipple, Sep. 1877, pp. 327-333.—Eclectic Review, Oct. 1861, pp. 458-477.—Dublin University Magazine, Dec. 1861, pp. 685-693.
——Bygone Celebrities: I. The Guild of Literature and Art. Gentleman’s Magazine, by R.H. Horne, Feb. 1871, pp. 247-262.
——Hard Times. Westminster Review, Oct. 1854, pp. 604-608.—Atlantic Monthly, by Edwin P. Whipple, March 1877, pp. 353-358.
——The Home of. Hours at Home, by John D. Sherwood, July 1867, pp. 239-242.—Every Saturday, vol. 9, p. 228.
——In and Out of London with. Scribner’s Monthly, by B.E. Martin. [Illustrated.] May 1881, pp. 32-45.
——In London with. Scribner’s Monthly, by B.E. Martin. (Illustrated). March 1881, pp. 649-664.
——In the Editor’s Chair. Gentleman’s Magazine, by Percy Fitzgerald, June 1881, pp. 725-742.
——In Memoriam. By A.H. (Arthur Helps). Macmillan’s Magazine, July 1870, pp. 236-240.—Gentleman’s Magazine, by Blanchard Jerrold, July 1870, pp. 228-241; reprinted, with additions, as “A Day with Charles Dickens,” in the “Best of all Good Company,” by Blanchard Jerrold, 1872.
——In New York (by J.R. Dennett). Nation, 1867, pp. 482, 483.
——In Poet’s Corner. Illustrated London News, June 1870, pp. 652 and 662, 663.
——In Relation to Christmas. Graphic Christmas Number, 1870, p, 19.
——In Relation to Criticism. Fortnightly Review, by George Henry Lewes, 1872, pp. 141-154; same article, Eclectic Magazine, 1872, pp. 445-453; Every Saturday, vol. 12., p. 246, etc.
——A Lost Work of (Is She His Wife? or, Something Singular). The Pen; a Journal of Literature, by Richard Herne Shepherd, October 1880, pp. 311, 312.
——Least known writings of. Every Saturday, vol. 9, p. 471.
——Letters of. Fortnightly Review, by William Minto, Dec. 1879, pp. 845-862; same article, Littell’s Living Age, 1880, pp. 3-13; Eclectic Magazine, 1880, pp. 165-175.—Nation, by W.C. Brownell, December 1879, pp. 388-390.—Literary World, December 1879, pp. 369-371.—Scribner’s Monthly, Jan. 1880, pp. 470, 471.—Appleton’s Journal of Literature, 1880, pp. 72-81.—Contemporary Review, by Matthew Browne, 1880, pp. 77-85.—North American Review, by Eugene L. Didier, March 1880, pp. 302-306.—Westminster Review, April 1880, pp. 423-448; same article, Littell’s Living Age, June 1880, pp. 707-720.—Dublin Review, by Helen Atteridge, April 1880, pp. 409-438.—Month, by the Rev. G. Macleod, May 1880, pp. 81-97.—International Review, by J.S. Morse, Jnn., vol. 8, p. 271.
——Life and Letters of. Catholic World, vol. 30, pp. 692-701.
——Little Boys and Great Men. Little Folks, by C.L.M. Nos. 64, 65.
——Little Dorrit. Edinburgh Review, July 1857, pp. 124-156.—Leader, June 1857, pp. 616, 617.—Sun, by Charles Kent, June 26, 1857.
——Lives of the Illustrious. The Biographical Magazine, by J.H.F., vol. 2, pp. 276-297.
——Manuscripts, Chambers’s Journal, Nov. 1877, pp. 710-712; same article, Eclectic Magazine, 1878, pp. 80-82; Littell’s Living Age, 1878, pp. 252-254.—Potter’s American Monthly, vol. 10, p. 156.
——Life and adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit. Monthly Review, Sept. 1844, pp. 137-146.—National Review, July 1861, pp. 134-150.
——Master Humphrey’s Clock. Monthly Review, May 1840, pp. 35-43.—Christian Examiner, March 1842, pp. 1-19.
——Memories of Charles Dickens. Atlantic Monthly, by J.T. Fields, Aug. 1870, pp. 235-245; same article, Piccadilly Annual, 1870, pp. 66-72.
——Bygone Celebrities: II. Mr. Nightingale’s Diary. Gentleman’s Magazine, by R.H. Horne. May 1871, pp. 660-672.
——Modern Novelists. Westminster Review, Oct. 1864, pp. 414-441; same article, Eclectic Magazine, 1865, pp. 42-59.
——Modern Novels. Including the “Pickwick Papers,” “Nicholas Nickleby,” and “Master Humphrey’s Clock.” Christian Remembrancer, Dec. 1842, pp. 581-596.
——Moral Services to Literature. Spectator, April 1869, pp. 474, 475; same article, Eclectic Magazine, July 1869, pp. 103-106.
——Mystery of Edwin Drood. Graphic, April 1870, p. 438.—Every Saturday, 1870, vol. 9, pp. 291, 594.—Spectator, 1870, pp. 1176, 1177.—Old and New, (by George B. Woods), Nov. 1870, pp. 530-533.—Southern Magazine, 1873, vol. 14, p. 219.—Belgravia (by Thomas Foster), June 1878, pp. 453-473.
——How “Edwin Drood” was Illustrated. [Illustrated.] Century Magazine, by Alice Meynell, Feb. 1884, pp. 522-528.
——A Quasi-Scientific Inquiry into “The Mystery of Edwin Drood.” Illustrated. Knowledge, by Thomas Foster, Sep. 12, Nov. 14, 1884.
——Suggestions for a Conclusion to “Edwin Drood.” Cornhill Magazine, March 1884, pp. 308-317.
——Edwin Drood. Concluded by Charles Dickens, through a Medium. Transatlantic, vol. 2, 1873, pp. 173-183.
——In France. (Acting of Nicholas Nickleby in Paris.) Fraser’s Magazine, March 1842, pp. 342-352.
——Nomenclature. Belgravia, by W.F. Peacock, 1873, pp. 267-276, 393-402.
——Notes and Correspondence. Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine, vol. 11, 1871, pp. 91-95.
——Novel Reading: The works of. Nineteenth Century, by Anthony Trollope, 1879, pp. 24-43.
——Novels and Novelists. North American Review, by E.P. Whipple, October 1849, pp. 383-407; reprinted in “Literature and Life,” etc., by E.P. Whipple.
——Old Curiosity Shop, Barnaby Rudge. Christian Remembrancer, vol. 4, 1842, p. 581.—Pall Mall Gazette, January 1, 1884, pp. 11, 12.
——The Old Lady of Fetter Lane (Old Curiosity Shop). (Illustrated.) Pall Mall Gazette, January 5, 1884, p.
——Oliver Twist. Southern Literary Messenger, May 1837, pp. 323-325.—London and Westminster Review, July 1837, pp. 194-215.—Dublin University Magazine, December 1838, pp. 699-723.—Quarterly Review, June 1839, pp. 83-102.—Christian Examiner, by J.S.D., Nov. 1839, pp. 161-174.—Atlantic Monthly, by Edwin P. Whipple, Oct. 1876, pp. 474-479.
——On Bells. Belgravia, by George Delamere Cowan, Jan. 1876, pp. 380-387.
——Our Letter. St. Nicholas, by M.F. Armstrong, 1877, pp. 438-441.
——Our Mutual Friend. Eclectic Review, Nov. 1865, pp. 455-476.—Nation, Dec. 1865, pp. 786, 787.—Westminster Review, April 1866, pp. 582-585.
——Our Mutual Friend in Manuscript. Scribner’s Monthly Magazine, by Kate Field, August 1874, pp. 472-475.
——Pickwick Club. Southern Literary Messenger, 1836, pp. 787, 788; Sept. 1837, pp. 525-532.—Littell’s Museum of Foreign Literature, vol. 32, 1837, p. 195.—Monthly Review, Feb. 1837, pp. 153-163.—Eclectic Review, April 1837, pp. 339-355.—Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal, April 1837, pp. 109, 110.—London and Westminster Review, July 1837, pp. 194-215.—Quarterly Review, Oct. 1837, pp. 484-518.—Belgravia, by W.S. (W. Sawyer), July 1870, pp. 33-36.—Atlantic Monthly, by Edwin P. Whipple, Aug. 1876, pp. 219-224.
—— ——Mr. Pickwick and Nicholas Nickleby. [Illustrated.] Scribner’s Monthly, by B.E. Martin, Sept. 1880, pp. 641-656.
—— ——From Faust to Mr. Pickwick. Contemporary Review, by Matthew Browne, July 1880, pp. 162-176.
—— ——German Translation of the “Pickwick Papers.” Dublin Review, Feb. 1840, pp. 160-188.
—— ——The Origin of the Pickwick Papers. Society, by R.H. Shepherd, Oct. 4, 1884, pp. 18-20.
—— ——The Portrait of Mr. Pickwick. Belgravia, by George Augustus Sala, Aug. 1870, pp. 165-171.
——Pictures from Italy. Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, vol. 13, 1846, pp. 461-466.—Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal, 1846, pp. 389-391.—Dublin Review, Sept. 1846, pp. 184-201.—Sun, by Charles Kent, March 1846.
——Poetic Element in the Style of. Every Saturday, vol. 9, p. 811.
——The Pressmen of, and Thackeray. Graphic, by T.H. North, 1881, p. 116.
——Reception of. United States Magazine and Democratic Review (portrait), April 1842, pp. 315-320.
——Reminiscences of. Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine, by E.E.C., vol. 10, 1871, pp. 336-344.
——Remonstrance with. Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, April 1857, pp. 490-503; same article, Littell’s Living Age, May 1857, pp. 480-492.
——Sale of the Effects of. Every Saturday, vol. 9, p. 557.—Chambers’s Journal, 1870, pp. 522-505.
——Seasonable Words about. The Overland Monthly, by N.S. Dodge, 1871, pp. 72-82.
——Secularistic Teaching. Secular Chronicle, by Harriet T. Law (portrait). Dec. 1877, pp. 289-291.
——Shadow on Life of. Atlantic Monthly, by Edwin P. Whipple, Aug. 1877, pp. 227-233.
——Sketches by Boz. Monthly Review, March 1836, pp. 350-357; 1837, pp. 153-163.—Mirror, April 1836, pp. 249-250—London and Westminster Review, July 1837, pp. 194-215.—Quarterly Review, Oct. 1837, pp. 484-518.
—— ——The Boarding House (Sketches by Boz). Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal, April 1836, pp. 83, 84.
—— ——Watkins Tottle and other Sketches (Sketches by Boz). Southern Literary Messenger, 1836, pp. 457-460.
——Son talent et ses oeuvres. Revue des Deux Mondes, by H. Taine. Feb. 1856, pp. 618-647.
——Studien ueber Dickens und den Humor. Westermann’s Jahrbuch der Illustrirten Deutschen Monatshefte, Von Julian Schmidt (portrait), April-July 1870.
——Studies of English Authors. No. V. Charles Dickens. In eleven chapters. Literary World, by Peter Bayne, March 21 to May 30, 1879.
——Study. Graphic Christmas Number, by C.C. 1870.
——A Tale of Two Cities. Saturday Review, Dec. 1859, pp. 741-743; same article, Littell’s Living Age, Feb. 1860, pp. 366-369. Sun, by Charles Kent, Aug. 11, 1859.
——Tales. Edinburgh Review, Oct. 1838, pp. 75-97.
——The Tendency of Works of. Argosy, by A.D., 1885, pp. 282-292.
——The Tension in. Every Saturday, Dec. 1872, pp. 678-679.
——A Tramp with. Through London by Night with the Great Novelist. Detroit Free Press, April 7, 1883.
——Tulrumble, and Oliver Twist. Southern Literary Messenger, May 1837, pp. 323-325.
——The “Two Green Leaves” (portrait). Graphic, March 26, 1870, pp. 388-390.
——Unpublished Letters. Times, Oct. 27, 1883.
——Satire on. Blackwood’s Magazine, by S. Warren, vol. 60, 1846, pp. 590-605; same article, Eclectic Magazine, vol. 10, 1847, p. 65.
——Use of the Bible. Temple Bar, September 1869, pp. 225-234; same article, Appleton’s Journal, Oct. 16, 23, 1869, pp. 265-267, 294, 295; Every Saturday, vol. 8, p. 411.
——Verse. Spectator, 1877, pp. 1651-1653; same article, Littell’s Living Age, 1878, pp. 237-241.
——Visit to Charles Dickens by Hans Christian Andersen. Bentley’s Miscellany, 1860, pp. 181-185; same article, Littell’s Living Age, 1860, pp. 692-695, Eclectic Magazine, 1864, pp. 110-114.
—— ——Andersen’s. Temple Bar, December 1870, pp. 27-46; same article, Eclectic Magazine, 1871, pp. 183-196, Every Saturday, vol. 9, p. 874, etc.; Appendix to Pictures of Travels in Sweden, etc.
—— ——Pilgrimage. [Visit to Gadshill.] Lippincott’s Magazine, by Barton Hill. Sept. 1870, pp. 288-293.
——Voice of Christmas Past. (Illustrated.) Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, by Mrs. Z.B. Buddington, January 1871, pp. 187-200.
——With the Newsvendors.—Every Saturday, vol. 9. p. 318.
——Works. London University Magazine, by J.S. (James Spedding), vol. 1, 1842, pp. 378-398.—North British Review, by J. Cleghorn, May 1845, pp. 65-87; same article, Littell’s Living Age, June 1845, pp. 601-610.—National Quarterly Review, by H. Dennison, 1860, vol. 1, p. 91.—British Quarterly Review, Jan. 1862, pp. 135-159.—Scottish Review, Dec. 1883, pp. 125-147.
Sketches by Boz 1836-37
Sunday under Three Heads 1836
The Village Coquettes 1836
The Strange Gentleman 1837
Pickwick Papers 1837
Oliver Twist 1838
Sketches of Young Gentlemen 1838
Memoirs of Joseph Grimaldi 1838
Nicholas Nickleby 1839
Sketches of Young Couples 1840
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From the “Newcastle Weekly Chronicle."
It has repeatedly been suggested that the valuable matter published every week in the Weekly Chronicle should be reprinted in some handier form, so as to be capable of permanent preservation. Not a few of our readers take the trouble to cut out the articles in which they are interested, paste them in scrap-books, and thus form a serviceable collection of local and other literature. But this process involves the purchase of special requisites, and the consumption of considerable patience and time.
We have, therefore, arranged with Mr. WALTER SCOTT, the well-known publisher, of Felling-on-Tyne, and Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row, London, to publish, in monthly parts, all the more permanently interesting contributions that will appear in the future issues of the Weekly Chronicle.
This publication will be entitled the Monthly Chronicle of North-Country Lore and Legend, and will be offered to the public in a special wrapper at the price of sixpence. The size of the reprint will be crown quarto, and each number will consist of forty-eight double-column pages. The articles reprinted will be so revised that the errors which necessarily creep into a weekly newspaper will, as far as possible, be corrected or erased.
The first number of the Monthly Chronicle (for March) will be published on the 25th of February.
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Published for the Proprietor of “The Newcastle Weekly Chronicle,” by
WALTER SCOTT, 24 WARWICK LANE, LONDON,
AND NEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE.
DELIVERED BEFORE THE
TYNESIDE SUNDAY LECTURE SOCIETY.
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Now Ready, Price Threepence Each.
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF INSTINCT.
BY G.J. ROMANES, F.R.S.
ANIMAL LIFE ON THE OCEAN SURFACE.
BY PROFESSOR H.N. MOSELEY, M.A., F.R.S.
THE EYE AND ITS WORK.
BY LITTON FORBES, M.D., F.R.C.S.E., L.R.C.P.
THE MOVEMENTS OF PLANTS.
BY ERNEST A. PARKYN, M.A.
The RELATIONS BETWEEN NATURAL SCIENCE and LITERATURE.
BY PROFESSOR H. NETTLESHIP, M.A.
FACTS AND FICTIONS IN ZOOLOGY.
BY DR. ANDREW WILSON, F.R.S.E.
THE ANIMALS THAT MAKE LIMESTONE.
BY DR. P. HERBERT CARPENTER, F.R.S.
The Seven Lectures may be had in One Vol., Cloth, Price 1/6.
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London: WALTER SCOTT, 24 Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row.
The Elswick Series is intended to supply Teachers and Students with good books, void of cram. They will be issued as rapidly as is consistent with the caution necessary to secure accuracy. A great aim will be to adapt them to modern requirements and improvement, and to keep abreast with the latest discoveries in Science, and the most recent practice in Engineering.
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Already Issued. Crown 8vo, cloth, price 3s. 6d.
PRACTICAL AND THEORETICAL TRIGONOMETRY. By HENRY
EVERS,
LL.D., Author of “Steam,” “Navigation,”
etc.
The following Works may be expected to appear shortly—
MANUAL OF STEAM AND PRIME MOVERS. By HENRY EVERS,
LL.D.,
Author of “Steam,” “Navigation,”
etc.
ALGEBRA (an ELEMENTARY TREATISE). By Professor
R.H. JUDE, of
Huddersfield Technical College, M.A. Cantab.,
D.Sc. London.
DESCRIPTIVE GEOMETRY. By T.H. EAGLES, M.A.,
Instructor in
Geometrical Drawing and Lecturer in Architecture at
the Royal Indian
Engineering College, Cooper’s Hill.
THEORETICAL MECHANICS. By W.M. MADDEN, M.A.,
Cantab.
Wrangler, Scholar of Queen’s, etc.
ELEMENTARY LECTURES OF PHYSICS AND ELECTRICITY.
By WILLIAM JOHN
GREY, F.C.S., etc., Silver Medallist.
Others are in preparation or consideration, such as—
MACHINE DESIGN. By H. FOSTER, M.E. and D. Medallist.
BUILDING CONSTRUCTION. By T.N. ANDREWS, Esq.
SPRINGS: IRON AND STEEL.
APPLIED MECHANICS. By HENRY EVERS, LL.D., Medallist.
A COURSE OF QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS. By W.J.
GREY, F.C.S.
Medallist, etc.
INORGANIC CHEMISTRY. By W.J. GREY, F.C.S. Medallist, etc.
ANIMAL PHYSIOLOGY. By CHARLES J. EVERS, M.B.,
M.R.C.S.
(London), Medallist, etc.
A SERIES OF PRACTICAL LESSONS FOR BLACKBOARD TEACHING
OF MACHINE
DRAWING.
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London: WALTER SCOTT, 24 Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row.
Uniform in size with the “Canterbury Poets,”
365 pages,
Cloth Gilt, price 1s. 4d._
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DAYS OF THE YEAR.
OF PASSAGES FROM THE WORKS OF
ALFRED AUSTIN.
SELECTED AND ARRANGED BY A.S.
With an Introduction by WILLIAM SHARP.
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LONDON: WALTER SCOTT, 24 Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row.
The Canterbury Poets.
In Crown Quarto, Printed on Antique Paper, Price 12s. 6d.
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EDITION DE LUXE.
SONNETS OF THIS CENTURY.
With an Exhaustive and Critical Essay on the Sonnet,
BY WILLIAM SHARP.
This Edition has been thoroughly Revised, and several new Sonnets added.
THE VOLUME CONTAINS SONNETS BY
LORD TENNYSON.
ROBERT BROWNING.
A.C. SWINBURNE.
MATTHEW ARNOLD.
THEODORE WATTS.
ARCHBISHOP TRENCH.
J. ADDINGTON SYMONDS.
W. BELL SCOTT.
CHRISTINA ROSSETTI.
EDWARD DOWDEN.
EDMUND GOSSE.
ANDREW LANG.
GEORGE MEREDITH.
CARDINAL NEWMAN.
By the Late
DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI.
MRS. BARRETT BROWNING.
C. TENNYSON-TURNER, ETC.
AND ALL THE BEST WRITERS OF THIS CENTURY.
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London: WALTER SCOTT, 24 Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row.