A Week's Tramp in Dickens-Land. William R. Hughes

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу A Week's Tramp in Dickens-Land - William R. Hughes страница 3

A Week's Tramp in Dickens-Land - William R. Hughes

Скачать книгу

long as readers continue to be, so long will our great English trilogy of cognate authors, Shakespeare, Scott, and Dickens, continue to be read. Indeed as regards Dickens, a writer in Blackwood, June, 1871 (and Blackwood was not always a sympathetic critic), said:—"We may apply to him, without doubt, the surest test to which the maker can be subject: were all his books swept by some intellectual catastrophe out of the world, there would still exist in the world some score at least of people, with all whose ways and sayings we are more intimately acquainted than with those of our brothers and sisters, who would owe to him their being. While we live Sam Weller and Dick Swiveller, Mr. Pecksniff and Mrs. Gamp, the Micawbers and the Squeerses, can never die. … They are more real than we are ourselves, and will outlive and outlast us, as they have outlived their creator. This is the one proof of genius which no critic, not the most carping or dissatisfied, can gainsay."

      So long also, the author ventures to think, will pilgrimages continue to be made to the shrines of Stratford-on-Avon, Abbotsford, and Gad's Hill Place, and to their vicinities. The modest aim of this Volume is, that it may add a humble unit in helping to keep his memory green, and that it may be a useful and acceptable companion to pilgrims, not only of our own country, but also from that still "Greater Britain," where "All the Year Round" the name of Charles Dickens is almost a dearer "Household Word" than it is with us.

      William R. Hughes.

      Wood House, Handsworth Wood,

       near Birmingham.

       30th September, 1891.

Statue 1 LISTTable of Contents OFTable of Contents ILLUSTRATIONSTable of Contents Statue 2
PAGE
The Marshes, Cooling F. G. Kitton (from a Sketch by E. L. Meadows) Frontispiece
Headpiece, "Humour" (From two Statuettes of "Mr. Pickwick" and "Sam Weller" in Crown Derby Ware) Engraved by R. Langton xvii
The Golden Cross Herbert Railton 10
Young Dickens at the Blacking Warehouse F. Barnard 12
Fountain Court, Temple C. A. Vanderhoof 16
Staple Inn, Holborn " " 21
Barnard's Inn Herbert Railton 23
Dickens's House, Furnival's Inn " " 25
No. 48, Doughty Street J. Grego 28
Tavistock House, Tavistock Square J. Liddell 30
No. 141, Bayham Street F. G. Kitton 37
No. 1, Devonshire Terrace D. Maclise, R.A. 40
Fac-simile of Letter, Charles Dickens 43
Apotheosis of "Grip" the Raven D. Maclise, R.A. 45
"My magnificent order at the Public House" Phiz 49
Bull Inn, Rochester—"good house, nice beds" Herbert Railton 56
Staircase at "the Bull" F. G. Kitton 58
The "Elevated Den" in the Ball-room, "Bull Inn" F. G. Kitton 61
Old Rochester Bridge Herbert Railton 68
The Guildhall, Rochester F. G. Kitton 71
The "Moon-faced" Clock in High Street " "

Скачать книгу