[8] [31] [106] [139] [210] [286] [324] [416]
No Thoroughfare [374]
Old Curiosity Shop [45]-[9] [139] [323] [349] [405]
Old Sergeants' Inn [18]
Oliver Twist [31] [232];
Fac-simile [418]
Ordnance Terrace [28] [92] [257]-[8] [265] [274];
Place [265]
Our English Watering-Place [317] [324]-[31]
Our Mutual Friend [1] [17] [18] [39] [91] [171]
234 [414]
Overblow [402]-[3]
Owl Club [59];
Harmonious Owls [59]
Parliament Street [48]
Payne G. [130] [238]
Pearce Sarah [283]-[4];
Mr. [283];
William [284]
Pear Tree Lane [313] [377]-[8]
Pemberton T. Edgar [1] [241] [286]
Perugini Mrs. [248];
(and see [Dickens Kate] and [Collins Mrs. C. A.])
Pickwick Papers [5] [6] [20]-[6]-[9] [31] [50]-[6] [62]-[7] [70]-[5] [111] [151] [231] [251]-[5] [261] [273]-[6]-[9] [293]-[5] [297]-[306] [324] [373]-[6]-[9] [387]-[8] [391]-[3]
Pictures from Italy [18]
"Plorn" [202]
Porchester Castle [284]
Portsea [255] [281]-[2];
St. Mary's Church [255] [285]-[6];
Hawke Street [255] [284]
Portsmouth [281]-[4]-[6]-[7];
Common Hard [287];
Dockyard [285];
Theatre [286]
Portsmouth Street [19]
Prall R. [57] [85]
Prior's Gate [127]-[8]
Proctor R. A. [138]-[9]
Proctors [148]
Punch [90] [175]
Purkis Mrs. [285]
Quarry House [212]
Rainham [317]-[8];
Mear's Barr Farm [318]
Ramsgate [336]
Reculver [324];
The Sisters [324]
Red Lion Square [28] [31]
Regent's Park [39];
Street [46] [51]
Restoration House [53]-[4] [78] [80] [94]-[97] [132] [156]
Robertson Rev. Canon [214]
Robinson G. [269]
Rochester [4] [48] [51]-[97] [376] [396] [406]-[9]
"Blue Boar" [64]
Boley (or Bully) Hill [88] [124] [158]
Boundary Lane [253]
Bridge [50]-[4] [67]-[70] [104] [215] [217] [226]-[7]
"Bull Inn" [54]-[5] et seq. [104] [143]-[5] [409]
Castle [69] [98]-[110] [137] [216] [396] [406]-[9]
Cathedral [53]-[4] [87] [90] [111]-[141] [216] [406]-[9]
Cherry Garden [54]
College (or Jasper's) Gate [72] [124]-[130]
Crow Lane [78] [117] [156]
"Crozier" [116]
Deanery Gatehouse [127]-[9]
"Duck" [117]
Eastgate House [72]-[77] [132]
Episcopal Palace [130]-[1]
Esplanade [134]
Frog Alley [117]
Grammar School [81]-[8]
Guildhall [54]-[5] [72] [108]
High Street [51]-[3]-[5] [63]-[4] [70] [82] [116] [125] [130] [145] [275] [287] [296] [336]
London and County Bank [116]
Maidstone Road [78] [151]
Mathematical School [81] [175]-[6]
Men's Institute [75]
Minor Canon Row [92] [122]-[4]-[7]
New Road [152]
"Old Crown" [116]
Prior's Gate [127]-[8]
Restoration House [53]-[4] [78] [80] [132] [156];
Ghost Story [94]-[97]
Sapsea's House [72]-[5]-[6] [117]
Satis House [78] [97] [156]-[8]
Savings Bank [76] [116]
Sir J. Hawkins's Hospital [81]
Sir J. Hayward's Charity [82]
Star Hill [70] [83]
St. Bartholomew's Hospital [81]
St. Catherine's Charity [81]
St. Margaret's [92];
Church [151]
St. Nicholas' [81] [11]
Cemetery [87] [136]-[7]
Church [136]-[7]
Theatre [83] [143] [242] [256]
Vines (or Monks' Vineyard) [70]-[8] [81] [131]-[2]-[4] [275] [409]
Watts's Almshouses [151]
" Charity [72] [142]-[160] [176] [409]
Rye [345]
Ryland Mr. Arthur [144]-[5];
Mrs. [33] [144]
Sandling [310]
Sandwich [345]
Sapsea's House [72]-[5]-[6] [117]
Satis House [78] [97] [156]-[8]
Seven Poor Travellers [70] [98] [106] [142]-[3] [150] [160] [380]
Seymour R. [58]
Sheerness [54];
Cockle-shell Hard [101]
Sheppard Dr. [342]-[3]-[4]
Shorne [87] [137] [194] [358] [391]-[3] [400]-[2];
Church [403]-[4];
Ridgway [379]
Sisters Reculver [324]
Sketches by Boz [26] [64] [258] [270]
Sketches of Young Gentlemen [31];
of Young Couples [31]
Smetham Henry [368]
Smith C. Roach [52] [101] [148] [231]-[238] [290] [311] [366]
Smith E. Orford [303]
Snodland [288] [290];
Brook [135];
Weir [135]
Somerset House [38] [264] [421]-[3]
Song of the Wreck [33]-[4]-[5] [415]
South Kensington Museum [249] [396] [412]
Spencer Herbert [190] [406]
Stanfield C. [20] [32]-[3] [86] [241]
Stanley Dean [88] [137] [423]
Staplehurst [93];
Accident [198] [200]-[1]-[9]
Staple Inn [22]-[4]-[7]
Star Hill [70] [83]
Steele Dr. [174] [237]-[246]
Sterry J. Ashby [3] [329] [345]-[6]
Stone F. [36];
M. [91] [196] [200]-[2]-[7]
Strange Gentleman [26]
St. Luke's Church Chelsea [26]
St. Margaret's [92];
Church [151]
St. Mary's Church Chatham [92] [255];
Place [260]-[2]
St. Mary's Church Portsea [255] [285]-[6]
St. Nicholas' Church Rochester [81] [114] [136]-[7];
Cemetery [87] [136]-[7]
St. Nicholas' Church Strood [211]
St. Pancras' Road [39];
Church [39]
Strood [50]-[5] [68] [80] [162] [182] [195] [211]-[250]
"Crispin and Crispianus" [217]-[220]
Elocution Society [235]
St. Nicholas' Church [211]
Preceptory [212]
Quarry House [212]
Temple Farm [211]
Sunday under Three Heads [26]
Symond's Inn [19]
Syms Mr. [82] [115]-[117]
Tale of Two Cities [17] [37]-[9] [171] [204] [397]
Tavistock Square [32];
House [32]-[3]-[6]-[7] [42] [86] [171] [325]
Taylor Mrs. [368]-[9]
Temple [17];
Bar [17];
Middle Temple Lane [17];
Fountain Court [17]
Temple Farm [211]
Thackeray W. M. [24]-[6]-[7] [234]
Thames River [188] [314] [350];
Valley [358] [378] [403]
Times [410]-[414]
Tom-All-Alone's [268]
Tom Thumb [33]
Town Malling [292]-[3]-[4] [302]-[306]
Tribe Ald. [264];
Master and Miss [258] [264];
John [264]
Trood W. S. [175] [206]-[209] [400];
Edward [2] [7] [220]
Uncommercial Traveller [6] [7] [37] [83] [159] [163]-[5] [171] [220] [264]-[9] [278]
Upnor Castle [155]
Village Coquettes [376]
Vines The [70]-[8] [81] [131]-[2]-[4] [275]
Waghorn Lieut. [257]
Watts Richard [55] [142];
Almshouses [151];
Charity [72] [142]-[160] [176];
Memorial [157]-[8]
Weald of Kent [316]
Weller Mary [265]-[6];
(and see [Gibson Mary])
Westminster Abbey [87]-[8] [137] [404] [423]-[4]
Whiston Rev. R. [88]-[90] [160]
Whitefriars Street [17]
Whitehall [48]
Whitstable [323]
Wildish W. T. [82] [118] [175] [265] [382]
Wills W. H. [152];
W. G. [152] [193]-[4]
Winchelsea [345]
Woburn Square [31]
Wood H. [273]-[4]
Worsfold C. K. [347]
Wreck of the Golden Mary [260]
Wright Mr. [372]-[3] [415];
Mrs. [370]-[373]

THE END.

—————————
Richard Clay & Sons, Limited, London & Bungay.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] In The History of Pickwick, a handsome octavo volume of nearly 400 pages, just published (1891), Mr. Percy Fitzgerald, the author, who is one of the few surviving friends of Charles Dickens, mentions the interesting fact that there are 360 characters, 70 episodes, and 22 inns, described in this wonderful book, written when the author was only twenty-four.

[2] Forster (I. 14) infers that the family removed to London in 1821, but Mr. Langton considers (Childhood and Youth of Charles Dickens, 1883, pp. 62-3), from the fact of the birth of Dickens's brother Alfred having been registered at Chatham on 3rd April, 1822, and from the further fact of there being no record of Mr. John Dickens's recall throughout this year to Somerset House, that the family did not remove to London until the winter of 1822-3, and I agree with Mr. Langton. Mr. Kitton in Charles Dickens by Pen and Pencil, 1890, also recognizes this period as the date of the removal of the Dickens family to London.

[3] Mr. Edward Bulwer Lytton Dickens, a son of the great Novelist, is a member of the New South Wales Parliament, having been elected in March 1889. "He stood as a Protectionist for the representation of Wilcannia, an extensive pastoral district in the western portion of the colony. His father, it will be remembered, was an ardent Free Trader, and could not be prevailed upon to enter the British Parliament on any terms, and occasionally said some severe things of our Legislative Assembly. His two sons, Alfred Tennyson and Edward Bulwer Lytton, emigrated to Australia some years ago, and became successful pastoralists."—Yorkshire Daily Post, March 1889. A subsequent account states that Mr. Edward Bulwer Lytton Dickens is about to retire, having been, he remarks, "out of pocket, out of brains, out of health, and out of temper, by the pursuit of political glory."—Pall Mall Gazette, March 1891. I am since informed that Alfred is not a pastoralist, but in business, and that Edward has not retired up to date.

[4] Mr. Aveling subsequently informed me that the vessel in which the king took his departure continued to be used in the Royal Navy for many years as a lighter—its name being altered to the "Royal Escape." Afterwards it was used as a watch-vessel in the Coastguard service at Chatham, and was eventually broken up at Sheerness Dockyard so recently as 1876.

[5] "A Perambulation of Kent: Conteining the Description, Hystorie, and Customes of that Shire. Written in the yeere 1570 by William Lambarde of Lincoln's Inne Gent."

[6] Mr. Kitton was, by an interesting coincidence, present at the ceremony above referred to, and he has kindly given his impressions thereon, which appear at the end of this chapter.