CAN BE UTILIZED BY ANY AGE GROUPS BUT ESPECIALLY FOR STUDENTS OF SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
Synopsis
COMPLETE PROJECT ON CHARLES DICKENS
Synopsis
British novelist Charles Dickens was born on
February 7, 1812, in Portsmouth, England. Over the course of his writing
career, he wrote the beloved classic novels Oliver Twist, A
Christmas Carol, Nicholas Nickleby, David Copperfield, A
Tale of Two Cities and Great Expectations. On June 9,
1870, Dickens died of a stroke in Kent, England, leaving his final novel, The
Mystery of Edwin Drood, unfinished.
Famed British author Charles Dickens was born
Charles John Huffam Dickens on February 7, 1812, in Portsmouth, on the southern
coast of England. He was the second of eight children. His father, John
Dickens, was a naval clerk who dreamed of striking it rich. Charles Dickens’
mother, Elizabeth Barrow, aspired to be a teacher and school director. Despite
his parents’ best efforts, the family remained poor. Nevertheless, they were
happy in the early days. In 1816, they moved to Chatham, Kent, where young
Charles and his siblings were free to roam the countryside and explore the old
castle at Rochester.
In 1822, the Dickens family moved to Camden Town, a
poor neighborhood in London. By then the family’s financial situation had grown
dire, as John Dickens had a dangerous habit of living beyond the family’s
means. Eventually, John was sent to prison for debt in 1824, when Charles was
just 12 years old.
Following his father’s imprisonment, Charles
Dickens was forced to leave school to work at a boot-blacking factory alongside
the River Thames. At the rundown, rodent-ridden factory, Dickens earned six
shillings a week labeling pots of “blacking,” a substance used to clean
fireplaces. It was the best he could do to help support his family. Looking
back on the experience, Dickens saw it as the moment he said goodbye to his
youthful innocence, stating that he wondered “how [he] could be so easily cast
away at such a young age.” He felt abandoned and betrayed by the adults who
were supposed to take care of him. These sentiments would later become a
recurring theme in his writing.
Much to his relief, Dickens was permitted to go
back to school when his father received a family inheritance and used it to pay
off his debts. But when Dickens was 15, his education was pulled out from under
him once again. In 1827, he had to drop out of school and work as an office boy
to contribute to his family’s income. As it turned out, the job became an early
launching point for his writing career.
Within a year of being hired, Dickens began
freelance reporting at the law courts of London. Just a few years later, he was
reporting for two major London newspapers. In 1833, he began submitting
sketches to various magazines and newspapers under the pseudonym “Boz.” In
1836, his clippings were published in his first book, Sketches by Boz. Dickens’
first success caught the eye of Catherine Hogarth, whom he soon married.
Catherine would grace Charles with a brood of 10 children before the couple
separated in 1858.
In the same year that Sketches by Boz was
released, Dickens started publishing The Posthumous Papers of the
Pickwick Club. His series of sketches, originally written as captions
for artist Robert Seymour’s humorous sports-themed illustrations, took the form
of monthly serial installments. The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick
Club was wildly popular with readers. In fact, Dickens’ sketches were
even more popular than the illustrations they were meant to accompany.
Around this time, Dickens had also become publisher
of a magazine called Bentley’s Miscellany. In it he started
publishing his first novel, Oliver Twist, which follows the life of
an orphan living in the streets. The story was inspired by how Dickens felt as
an impoverished child forced to get by on his wits and earn his own keep.
Dickens continued showcasing Oliver Twist in the magazines he
later edited, including Household Words and All the
Year Round, the latter of which he founded. The novel was extremely well
received in both England and America. Dedicated readers of Oliver Twist eagerly
anticipated the next monthly installment.
Over the next few years, Dickens struggled to match
the level of Oliver Twist’s success. From 1838 to 1841, he
published The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby, The
Old Curiosity Shop and Barnaby Rudge.
In 1842, Dickens and his wife, Kate, embarked on a
five-month lecture tour of the United States. Upon their return, Dickens penned American
Notes for General Circulation, a sarcastic travelogue criticizing American
culture and materialism.
In 1843, Dickens wrote his novel The Life
and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit, a story about a man’s struggle to
survive on the ruthless American frontier. The book was published the following
year.
Over the next couple of years, Dickens published
two Christmas stories. One was the classic A Christmas Carol, which
features the timeless protagonist Ebenezer Scrooge, a curmudgeonly old miser,
who, with the help of a ghost, finds the Christmas spirit.
Fame
During his first U.S. tour, in 1842, Dickens
designated himself as what many have deemed the first modern celebrity. He
spoke of his opposition to slavery and expressed his support for additional
reform. His lectures, which began in Virginia and ended in Missouri, were so
widely attended that ticket scalpers started gathering outside his events.
Biographer J.B. Priestly wrote that during the tour, Dickens “had the greatest
welcome that probably any visitor to America has ever had.”
“They flock around me as if I were an idol,”
bragged Dickens, a known show-off. Although he enjoyed the attention at first,
he eventually resented the invasion of privacy. He was also annoyed by what he
viewed as Americans’ gregariousness and crude habits, as he later expressed in American
Notes.
In light of his criticism of the American people
during his first tour, Dickens launched a second U.S. tour, from 1867 to 1868,
hoping to set things right with the public.
On his second tour, he made a charismatic speech
promising to praise the United States in reprints of American Notes for
General Circulation and The Life and Adventures of Martin
Chuzzlewit.
His 76 readings earned him no less than $95,000,
which, in the Victoria era, amounted to approximately $1.5 million in current
U.S. dollars.
Back at home, Dickens had become so famous that
people recognized him all over London as he strolled around the city collecting
the observations that would serve as inspiration for his future work.
In 1845, after Dickens had toured the United States
once, he spent a year in Italy writing Pictures from Italy. Over
the next two years he published, in installments, his next novel, Dealings
with the Firm of Dombey and Son. The novel’s main theme is how business
tactics affect a family’s personal finances. It takes a dark view of England
and was pivotal to Dickens’ body of work in that it set the tone for his other
novels.
From 1849 to 1850, Dickens worked on David
Copperfield, the first work of its kind; no one had ever written a novel
that simply followed a character through his everyday life. In writing it,
Dickens tapped into his own personal experiences, from his difficult childhood
to his work as a journalist. Although David Copperfield is not
considered Dickens’ best work, it was his personal favorite. It also helped
define the public’s expectations of a Dickensian novel.
During the 1850s, Dickens suffered two devastating
losses: the deaths of his daughter and father. He also separated from his wife
during that decade, with Dickens slandering Kate publicly. He had also met a
young actress named Ellen "Nelly" Ternan, with whom he had an
intimate relationship. Sources differ on whether the two started seeing each
other before or after Dickens' marital separation; it is also believed that he
went to great lengths to erase any documentation alluding to Ternan's presence
in his life.
His novels also began to express a darkened
worldview. In Bleak House, published in installments from 1852 to
1853, he deals with the hypocrisy of British society. It was considered his
most complex novel to date. Hard Times (published in 1854)
takes place in an industrial town at the peak of economic expansion. In it,
Dickens focuses on the shortcomings of employers as well as those who seek
change. Also among Dickens’ darker novels is Little Dorrit, a
fictional study of how human values come in conflict with the world’s
brutality.
Coming out of his “dark novel” period, in 1859
Dickens published A Tale of Two Cities, a historical novel that
takes place during the French Revolution. He published it in a periodical he
founded, All the Year Round. His next novel, Great
Expectations (1860-1861), focuses on the protagonist’s lifelong
journey of moral development. It is widely considered his greatest literary
accomplishment. A few years later, Dickens produced Our Mutual Friend,
a novel that analyzes the psychological impact of wealth on London society.
In 1865, Dickens was in a train accident and never
fully recovered. Despite his fragile condition, he continued to tour until
1870. On June 9, 1870, Dickens had a stroke and, at age 58, died at Gad’s Hill
Place, his country home in Kent, England. He was buried in Poet’s Corner at
Westminster Abbey, with thousands of mourners gathering at the beloved author’s
gravesite. Scottish satirical writer Thomas Carlyle described Dickens’ passing
as “an event worldwide, a unique of talents suddenly extinct.” At the time of
Dickens’ death, his final novel, The Mystery of Edwin Drood, was
left unfinished.
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