Dickens' London
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Оглавление
M. F. Mansfield. Dickens' London
Dickens' London
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION
THE LONDON DICKENS KNEW
DICKENS' LITERARY LIFE
THE HIGHWAY OF LETTERS
DICKENS' CONTEMPORARIES
THE LOCALE OF THE NOVELS
DISAPPEARING LONDON
THE COUNTY OF KENT
THE RIVER THAMES
MANNERS AND CUSTOMS
PAST AND PRESENT
THE UNDER WORLD
LONDON TOPOGRAPHY
the end
Index
Отрывок из книги
M. F. Mansfield
Published by Good Press, 2019
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An incident which shows Dickens' sympathy with the literary life of the day was in 1854, when the great-grandson of the man who has given so much to all ages of Englishmen—De Foe—was made happy with a relief of £2 a month. Dickens was (as might have been expected) amongst the most liberal subscribers to the little fund. If everybody who has derived delight from the perusal of "Robinson Crusoe" had but contributed a single farthing to his descendant, that descendant would become a wealthy man. When De Foe was asked what he knew of his great ancestor's writings, he answered (though doubtless without any intentional comment on his ancestor's reputation) that in his happier days he had several of De Foe's works; but that he never could keep a copy of "Robinson Crusoe;" "there were so many borrowers of the book in Hungerford Market alone." Charles Knight, the publisher and antiquarian, instituted the fund, and the money was raised by him chiefly among literary men.
The most sentimental and picturesque interest attaches itself to the extensive series of buildings on the south side of Fleet Street, familiarly known as the Temple. Here Goldsmith is buried beside the curious and interesting Temple Church. The other of the four great Inns of Court are Lincoln's Inn in Chancery Lane and Gray's Inn in Holborn. Allied with the four great inns were the more or less subsidiary Inns of Chancery, all situated in the immediate neighbourhood, one of which, at least, being intimately associated with Dickens' life in London—Furnival's Inn, which, with Thavie's Inn, was attached to Lincoln's Inn. Here Dickens lived in 1835 at No. 15, and here also he lived subsequent to his marriage with Catherine Hogarth in the following year. It was at this time that the first number of "Pickwick" was written and published. The building itself was pulled down sometime during the past few years.
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