TABLE OF CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I. 1850-1853. | |
| Pages 21-50. | |
| David Copperfield and Bleak House. Æt. 38-41. | |
| page | |
| Interest of Copperfield | [21] |
| Real people in novels | [22] |
| Scott, Smollett, and Fielding | [22] |
| Complaint and atonement | [23] |
| Earlier and later methods | [24] |
| Boythorn and Skimpole | [26] |
| Yielding to temptation | [27] |
| Changes made in Skimpole | [28] |
| Relatives put into books | [29] |
| Scott and his father | [29] |
| Dickens and his father | [30] |
| No harm done | [32] |
| Micawber and Skimpole | [32] |
| Dickens and David | [33] |
| Dangers of autobiography | [34] |
| Design of David's character | [35] |
| Why books continue | [36] |
| The storm and shipwreck | [37] |
| Goethe on the insane | [38] |
| The two heroines | [39] |
| Risks not worth running | [40] |
| Devonshire Terrace | [41] |
| Bleak House | [43] |
| Defects of the novel | [44] |
| Set-offs and successes | [45] |
| Value of critical judgments | [46] |
| The contact of extremes | [47] |
| Dean Ramsay on Jo | [48] |
| Town graves | [49] |
| One last friend | [49] |
| Truth of Gridley's case | [50] |
CHAPTER II. 1853-1855. | |
| Pages 51-75. | |
| Home Incidents and Hard Times. Æt. 41-43. | |
| Titles proposed for Bleak House | [52] |
| Restlessness | [52] |
| Tavistock House | [53] |
| Last child born | [54] |
| A young stage aspirant | [54] |
| Deaths of friends | [55] |
| At Boulogne | [55] |
| Publishing agreements | [56] |
| At Birmingham | [56] |
| Self-changes | [57] |
| Employments in Boulogne | [59] |
| First reading in public | [60] |
| Argument against paid readings | [61] |
| Children's theatricals | [62] |
| Mr. H. in Tom Thumb | [62] |
| Dickens in Fortunio | [63] |
| Titles for a new story | [65] |
| Difficulties of weekly parts | [66] |
| Mr. Ruskin on Hard Times | [67] |
| Truths enforced | [68] |
| Early experiences | [69] |
| Strike at Preston | [69] |
| Speaking at Drury Lane | [70] |
| Stanfield scenes | [71] |
| Tavistock House theatricals | [71] |
| Peter Cunningham | [73] |
| Incident of a November night | [74] |
| Degrees in misery | [75] |
CHAPTER III. 1853. | |
| Pages 76-95. | |
| Switzerland and Italy Revisited. Æt. 41. | |
| Swiss people | [76] |
| Narrow escape | [77] |
| Lausanne and Genoa | [78] |
| The Peschiere and its owner | [79] |
| On the way to Naples | [80] |
| A night on board ship | [81] |
| A Greek potentate | [82] |
| Going out to dinner | [83] |
| The old idle Frenchman | [84] |
| Changes and old friends | [85] |
| A "scattering" party | [86] |
| The puppets at Rome | [87] |
| Malaria and desolation | [88] |
| Plague-smitten places | [89] |
| Again in Venice | [90] |
| A painter among paintings | [91] |
| Liking for the Sardinians | [92] |
| Neapolitans in exile | [93] |
| Travelling police arrangements | [94] |
| Dickens and the Austrian | [95] |
CHAPTER IV. 1853, 1854, and 1856. | |
| Pages 96-120. | |
| Three Summers at Boulogne. Æt. 41, 42, 44. | |
| Visits to France | [96] |
| First summer residence (1853) | [97] |
| Villa des Moulineaux | [98] |
| Doll's house and offices | [99] |
| Bon garçon of a landlord | [100] |
| Making the most of it | [101] |
| Among Putney market-gardeners | [102] |
| Shakespearian performance | [103] |
| Pictures at the pig-market | [104] |
| English friends | [105] |
| Change of villa (1854) | [105] |
| The Northern Camp | [106] |
| Visit of Prince Albert | [107] |
| Emperor, Prince, and Dickens | [108] |
| "Like boxing" | [109] |
| The Empress at a review | [110] |
| A French conjuror | [110] |
| Conjuring by Dickens | [111] |
| Making demons of cards | [112] |
| Conjuror's compliment and vision | [114] |
| Old residence resumed (1856) | [115] |
| Last of the Camp | [116] |
| A household war | [117] |
| State of siege | [118] |
| Death of Gilbert A'Becket | [119] |
| Leaving for England | [119] |
CHAPTER V. 1855, 1856. | |
| Pages 121-153. | |
| Residence in Paris. Æt. 43-44. | |
| Actors and dramas | [122] |
| Frédéric Lemaitre | [122] |
| Last scene in Gambler's Life | [123] |
| Apartment in Champs Elysées | [124] |
| French Translation of Dickens | [125] |
| Ary Scheffer and Daniel Manin | [126] |
| English friends | [126] |
| Acting at the Français | [127] |
| Dumas' Orestes | [129] |
| Paradise Lost at the Ambigu | [130] |
| Profane nonsense | [131] |
| French As You Like It | [132] |
| Story of a French drama | [133] |
| A delightful "Tag" | [134] |
| Auber and Queen Victoria | [134] |
| Scribe and his wife | [136] |
| At Regnier's | [137] |
| Viardot in Orphée | [138] |
| Meets Georges Sand | [138] |
| Banquet at Girardin's | [139] |
| Second banquet | [141] |
| Bourse and its victims | [142] |
| Entry of troops from Crimea | [143] |
| Zouaves and their dog | [144] |
| Streets on New Year's Day | [145] |
| English and French art | [146] |
| Emperor and Edwin Landseer | [147] |
| Sitting to Ary Scheffer | [148] |
| Scheffer as to the likeness | [149] |
| A duchess murdered | [150] |
| Truth is stranger than fiction | [151] |
| Singular scenes described | [152] |
| What became of the actors | [153] |
CHAPTER VI. 1855-1857. | |
| Pages 154-176. | |
| Little Dorrit, and a Lazy Tour. Æt. 43-45. | |
| Watts's Rochester charity | [155] |
| Tablet to Dickens in Cathedral | [155] |
| Nobody's Fault | [155] |
| How the Dorrit story grew | [156] |
| Number-Plan of Copperfield | [157] |
| Number-Plan of Dorrit | [158] |
| Circumlocution Office | [159] |
| Flora and Mr. F—— | [160] |
| Weak and strong points | [161] |
| A scene of boy-trials | [162] |
| Reception of the novel | [163] |
| Christmas theatricals | [164] |
| Theatre-making | [165] |
| Rush for places | [166] |
| Douglas Jerrold's death | [168] |
| Exertions and result | [168] |
| Seeing the serpents fed | [169] |
| Lazy Tour projected | [170] |
| Up Carrick Fell | [170] |
| Accident to Mr. Wilkie Collins | [171] |
| At Wigton and Allonby | [172] |
| The Yorkshire landlady | [173] |
| Doncaster in race week | [174] |
| A performance of Money | [175] |
CHAPTER VII. 1857-1858. | |
| Pages 177-201. | |
| What Happened at This Time. Æt. 45-46. | |
| Disappointments and distastes | [177] |
| What we seem and are | [178] |
| Compensations of Art | [179] |
| Misgivings | [180] |
| A defect and a merit | [181] |
| Reply to a remonstrance | [182] |
| Dangerous comfort | [183] |
| One happiness missed | [184] |
| Homily on life | [185] |
| Confidences | [186] |
| Rejoinder to a reply | [187] |
| What the world cannot give | [189] |
| An old project revived | [189] |
| Shakespeare on acting | [191] |
| Hospital for sick children | [192] |
| Charities of the very poor | [192] |
| Unsolved mysteries | [194] |
| Appeal for sick children | [195] |
| Reading for Child's Hospital | [195] |
| Proposal for Paid readings | [196] |
| Question of the Plunge | [198] |
| Mr. Arthur Smith | [199] |
| Separation from Mrs. Dickens | [200] |
| What alone concerned the public | [201] |
CHAPTER VIII. 1856-1870. | |
| Pages 202-222. | |
| Gadshill Place. Æt. 44-58. | |
| First description of it | [202] |
| The porch | [204] |
| Negotiations for purchase | [204] |
| Becomes his home | [205] |
| Gadshill a century ago | [206] |
| Past owners and tenants | [207] |
| Sinking a well | [209] |
| Gradual additions | [210] |
| Gift from Mr. Fechter | [211] |
| Dickens's writing-table | [211] |
| The châlet | [213] |
| Much coveted acquisition | [214] |
| Last improvement | [215] |
| Visits of friends | [216] |
| Dickens's Dogs | [218] |
| A Fenian mastiff | [218] |
| Linda and Mrs. Bouncer | [219] |
| Favourite walks | [220] |
| The study and chair | [222] |
CHAPTER IX. 1858-1859. | |
| Pages 223-238. | |
| First Paid Readings. Æt. 46-47. | |
| Various managements | [223] |
| One day's work | [224] |
| Impressions of Dublin | [225] |
| Irish audiences | [226] |
| Young Ireland and Old England | [227] |
| Railway ride to Belfast | [229] |
| Brought near his Fame | [229] |
| A knowing audience | [231] |
| Greeting in Manchester | [231] |
| Joined by his daughters | [232] |
| Strange life | [233] |
| Scotch audiences | [234] |
| When most successful in reading | [235] |
| At public meetings | [236] |
| Miss Marie Wilton as Pippo | [237] |
| Ed. Landseer on Frith's portrait | [238] |
CHAPTER X. 1859-1861. | |
| Pages 239-254. | |
| All The Year Round and the Uncommercial Traveller. Æt. 47-49. | |
| Household Words discontinued | [240] |
| Earliest and latest publishers | [240] |
| Dickens and Mr. Bentley | [241] |
| In search of a title | [242] |
| A title found | [243] |
| Success of new periodical | [244] |
| Difference from the old | [245] |
| At Knebworth | [246] |
| Commercial Travellers' Schools | [247] |
| A Traveller for human interests | [248] |
| Personal references in writing | [249] |
| Birds and low company | [250] |
| Bethnal-green fowls | [251] |
| An incident of Doughty Street | [252] |
| Offers from America | [253] |
CHAPTER XI. 1861-1863. | |
| Pages 255-274. | |
| Second Series of Readings. Æt. 49-51. | |
| Daughter Kate's marriage | [255] |
| Charles Alston Collins | [257] |
| Sale of Tavistock House | [257] |
| Brother Alfred's death | [258] |
| Metropolitan readings | [258] |
| Provincial circuit | [259] |
| New subjects for readings | [260] |
| Death of Mr. Arthur Smith | [261] |
| Death of Mr. Henry Austin | [262] |
| Readings at Brighton | [263] |
| At Canterbury and Dover | [264] |
| Alarming scene | [265] |
| Impromptu reading-hall | [266] |
| Scenes in Scotland | [267] |
| At Torquay | [268] |
| Death of C. C. Felton | [269] |
| Offers for Australia | [270] |
| Writing or Reading? | [271] |
| Home arguments | [272] |
| Religious Richardson's Show | [273] |
| Exiled ex-potentate | [274] |
CHAPTER XII. 1855-1865. | |
| Pages 275-297. | |
| Hints for Books Written and Unwritten. Æt. 43-53. | |
| Book of MS. memoranda | [275] |
| Originals of characters | [277] |
| Fancies put into books | [277] |
| Notions for Little Dorrit | [278] |
| Suggestions for other books | [279] |
| Hints for last completed book | [280] |
| Fancies never used | [281] |
| Ideas not worked out | [282] |
| A touching fancy | [284] |
| Domestic subjects | [284] |
| Characters of women | [285] |
| Other female groups | [286] |
| Uncle Sam | [288] |
| Sketches of selfishness | [288] |
| Striking thoughts | [290] |
| Subjects not accomplished | [290] |
| Characters laid aside | [291] |
| Available names | [293] |
| Titles for books | [293] |
| Names for girls and boys | [295] |
| An undistinguished crowd | [296] |
| Mr. Brobity's snuff-box | [297] |
CHAPTER XIII. 1864-1867. | |
| Pages 298-324. | |
| Third Series of Readings. Æt. 52-55. | |
| Death of Thackeray | [298] |
| Mother's death | [300] |
| Death of second son | [300] |
| Interest in Mr. Fechter | [301] |
| Notes on theatres | [302] |
| Sorrowful new year | [303] |
| C. W. Dilke's death | [303] |
| Staplehurst accident | [305] |
| Illness and suffering | [305] |
| Enters on new readings | [306] |
| Last meeting with Mrs. Carlyle | [308] |
| Mrs. Carlyle's death | [309] |
| Offer for more readings | [309] |
| Grave warnings | [311] |
| In Scotland | [312] |
| Exertion and its result | [313] |
| Self-deception | [314] |
| An old malady | [314] |
| Scene at Tynemouth | [316] |
| In Dublin with the Fenians | [317] |
| Yielding to temptation | [318] |
| Pressure from America | [319] |
| At bay at last | [320] |
| Warning unheeded | [321] |
| Discussion useless | [322] |
| The case in a nutshell | [323] |
| Decision to go | [324] |
CHAPTER XIV. 1836-1870. | |
| Pages 325-386. | |
| Dickens as a Novelist. Æt. 24-58. | |
| See before you oversee | [326] |
| M. Taine's criticism | [326] |
| What is overlooked in it | [327] |
| A popularity explained | [328] |
| National excuses for Dickens | [330] |
| Comparison with Balzac | [330] |
| Anticipatory reply to M. Taine | [332] |
| A critic in the Fortnightly Review | [333] |
| Blame and praise to be reconciled | [333] |
| A plea for objectors | [334] |
| "Hallucinative" imagination | [335] |
| Vain critical warnings | [336] |
| The critic and the criticised | [336] |
| An opinion on the Micawbers | [338] |
| Hallucinative phenomena | [338] |
| Scott writing Bride of Lammermoor | [339] |
| Claim to be fairly judged | [340] |
| Dickens's leading quality | [341] |
| Dangers of Humour | [342] |
| His earlier books | [343] |
| Mastery of dialogue | [344] |
| Character-drawing | [345] |
| Realities of fiction | [346] |
| Fielding and Dickens | [347] |
| Touching of extremes | [347] |
| Why the creations of fiction live | [349] |
| Enjoyment of his own humour | [350] |
| Unpublished note of Lord Lytton | [350] |
| Exaggerations of humour | [351] |
| Temptations of all great humourists | [352] |
| A word for fanciful descriptions | [353] |
| Tale of Two Cities | [355] |
| Difficulties and success | [355] |
| Specialty of treatment | [356] |
| Reply to objections | [357] |
| Care with which Dickens worked | [358] |
| An American critic | [359] |
| Great Expectations | [360] |
| Pip and Magwitch | [361] |
| Another boy-child for hero | [362] |
| Unlikeness in likeness | [363] |
| Vivid descriptive writing | [364] |
| Masterly drawing of character | [365] |
| A day on the Thames | [366] |
| Homely and shrewd satire | [367] |
| Incident changed for Lytton | [368] |
| As originally written | [369] |
| Christmas Sketches | [370] |
| Our Mutual Friend | [370] |
| Writing numbers in advance | [373] |
| Working slowly | [374] |
| Death of John Leech | [375] |
| A fatal anniversary | [376] |
| Effects on himself and his novel | [376] |
| A tale by Edmond About | [378] |
| First and Last | [378] |
| Doctor Marigold | [379] |
| Minor stories | [380] |
| "Something from Above" | [381] |
| Purity of Dickens's writings | [382] |
| Substitute for an alleged deficiency | [382] |
| True province of humour | [383] |
| Horace Greeley and Longfellow | [384] |
| Letters from an American | [385] |
| Companions for solitude | [386] |
CHAPTER XV. 1867. | |
| Pages 387-406. | |
| America Revisited. November and December, 1867. Æt. 55. | |
| Warmth of the greeting | [388] |
| Same cause as in 1842 | [388] |
| Old and new friends | [389] |
| Changes since 1842 | [390] |
| First Boston reading | [391] |
| Scene at New York sales | [393] |
| First New York reading | [393] |
| An action against Dickens | [394] |
| A fire at his hotel | [395] |
| Local and general politics | [397] |
| Railway arrangements | [398] |
| Police of New York | [398] |
| Mistletoe from England | [399] |
| As to newspapers | [400] |
| Nothing lasts long | [401] |
| Cities chosen for readings | [401] |
| Scene of a murder visited | [402] |
| A dinner at the murderer's | [403] |
| Illness and abstinence | [404] |
| Miseries of American travel | [405] |
| Startling prospect | [406] |
CHAPTER XVI. 1868. | |
| Pages 407-443. | |
| America Revisited. January to April, 1868. Æt. 56. | |
| Speculators and public | [408] |
| An Englishman's disadvantage | [408] |
| "Freedom and independence" | [408] |
| Mountain-sneezers and eye-openers | [409] |
| The work and the gain | [410] |
| A scene at Brooklyn | [411] |
| At Philadelphia | [412] |
| "Looking up the judge" | [413] |
| Improved social ways | [414] |
| Result of thirty-four readings | [415] |
| Shadow to the sunshine | [416] |
| Readings in a church | [417] |
| Change of plan | [417] |
| Baltimore women | [418] |
| Success in Philadelphia | [419] |
| Objections to coloured people | [420] |
| With Sumner at Washington | [421] |
| President Lincoln's dream | [423] |
| Interview with President Johnson | [423] |
| Washington audiences | [424] |
| A comical dog | [425] |
| Incident before a reading | [426] |
| The child and the doll | [427] |
| North-west tour | [428] |
| Political excitement | [429] |
| Struggle for tickets | [430] |
| American female beauty | [432] |
| Sherry to "slop round" with | [432] |
| Final impression of Niagara | [433] |
| Letter to Mr. Ouvry | [434] |
| "Getting along" through water | [435] |
| Again attacked by lameness | [437] |
| Illness and exertion | [437] |
| Seeing prevents believing | [439] |
| All but used up | [439] |
| Last Boston readings | [440] |
| New York farewells | [441] |
| The receipts throughout | [441] |
| Promise at public dinner | [442] |
| The Adieu | [443] |
CHAPTER XVII. 1868-1870. | |
| Pages 444-460. | |
| Last Readings. Æt. 56-58. | |
| Health improved | [444] |
| What the readings did and undid | [445] |
| Expenses and gains in America | [446] |
| Noticeable changes in him | [447] |
| Oliver Twist reading proposed | [448] |
| Objections to it | [449] |
| Death of Frederick Dickens | [450] |
| Macready at Oliver Twist reading | [451] |
| Another attack of illness | [452] |
| A doctors' difference | [454] |
| At Emerson Tennent's funeral | [454] |
| The illness at Preston | [455] |
| Brought to London | [456] |
| Sir Thomas Watson consulted | [456] |
| His note of the case | [457] |
| Guarded sanction to other readings | [458] |
| Close of career as public reader | [460] |
CHAPTER XVIII. 1869-1870. | |
| Pages 461-477. | |
| Last Book. Æt. 57-58. | |
| The agreement for Edwin Drood | [461] |
| First fancy for it | [462] |
| Story as planned in his mind | [463] |
| What to be its course and end | [463] |
| Merits of the fragment | [464] |
| Comparison of early and late MSS | [466] |
| Discovery of an unpublished scene | [467] |
| Last page of Drood in fac-simile | [468] |
| Page of Oliver Twist in fac-simile | [469] |
| Delightful specimen of Dickens | [470] |
| Unpublished scene for Drood | [470]-[476] |
CHAPTER XIX. 1836-1870. | |
| Pages 478-526. | |
| Personal Characteristics. Æt. 24-58. | |
| Dickens not a bookish man | [479] |
| Books and their critics | [479] |
| Design of present book stated | [480] |
| Dickens made to tell his own story | [480] |
| Charge of personal obtrusiveness | [481] |
| Lord Russell on Dickens's letters | [481] |
| Shallower judgments | [481] |
| Absence of self-conceit in Dickens | [482] |
| Letter to youngest son | [483] |
| As to religion and prayer | [485] |
| Letter to a clergyman in 1856 | [485] |
| Letter to a layman in 1870 | [486] |
| Objection to posthumous honours | [487] |
| As to patronage of literature | [488] |
| Vanity of human wishes | [488] |
| As to writers and publishers | [489] |
| Editorship of his weekly serials | [490] |
| Work for his contributors | [491] |
| Editorial troubles and pleasures | [493] |
| Letter to an author | [493] |
| Help to younger novelists | [495] |
| Adelaide Procter's poetry | [495] |
| Effect of periodical writing | [496] |
| Proposed satirical papers | [497] |
| Political opinions | [498] |
| Not the man for Finsbury | [499] |
| The Liverpool dinner in 1869 | [500] |
| Reply to Lord Houghton | [501] |
| Tribute to Lord Russell | [501] |
| People governing and governed | [502] |
| Alleged offers from her Majesty | [503] |
| Silly Rigmarole | [504] |
| The Queen sees him act (1857) | [505] |
| Desires to hear him read (1858) | [506] |
| Interview at the Palace (1870) | [507] |
| What passed at the interview | [507] |
| Dickens's grateful impression | [508] |
| A hope at the close of life | [509] |
| Games in Gadshill meadow | [510] |
| Home enjoyments | [512] |
| Habits of life everywhere | [513] |
| Family dependence on him | [514] |
| Carlyle's opinion of Dickens | [514] |
| Street walks and London haunts | [515] |
| Christmas Eve and Christmas Day | [517] |
| The first attack of lameness | [518] |
| Effect upon his dogs | [518] |
| Why right things to be done | [519] |
| Silent heroisms | [519] |
| At social meetings | [520] |
| Delight in "assumption" | [520] |
| Humouring a joke | [522] |
| Unlucky hits | [522] |
| Ghost stories | [524] |
| Predominant feeling of his life | [525] |
| Sermon of the Master of Balliol | [525] |
CHAPTER XX. 1869-1870. | |
| Pages 527-545. | |
| The End. Æt. 57-58. | |
| Last summer and autumn | [527] |
| Showing London to a visitor | [528] |
| His son Henry's scholarship | [529] |
| Twelve more readings | [530] |
| Medical attendance at them | [531] |
| Excitement incident to them | [532] |
| The Farewell | [533] |
| Last public appearances | [535] |
| At Royal Academy dinner | [535] |
| Eulogy of Daniel Maclise | [536] |
| Return of illness | [537] |
| Our last meeting | [538] |
| A noteworthy incident | [538] |
| Last letter received from him | [539] |
| Final days at Gadshill | [539] |
| Wednesday the 8th of June | [540] |
| Last piece of writing | [540] |
| The 8th and 9th of June | [541] |
| The general grief | [542] |
| The burial | [544] |
| Unbidden mourners | [544] |
| The grave | [544] |
—————— | |
APPENDIX. | |
| I. The Writings of Charles Dickens | [547] |
| II. The Will of Charles Dickens | [561] |
III. Corrections made in the Later Editions of the | [566] |
| INDEX | [571] |