Charles
Dickens was born in Portsmouth, England, on February 7, 1812, to John and
Elizabeth Dickens. He was the second of eight children. His mother had been in
service to Lord Crew, and his father worked as a clerk for the Naval Pay
office. John Dickens was imprisoned for debt when Charles was young. Charles
Dickens went to work at a blacking warehouse, managed by a relative of his
mother, when he was twelve, and his brush with hard times and poverty affected
him deeply. He later recounted these experiences in the semi-autobiographical
novel David Copperfield.
Similarly, the concern for social justice and reform which surfaced later in
his writings grew out of the harsh conditions he experienced in the warehouse.
As
a young boy, Charles Dickens was exposed to many artistic and literary works
that allowed his imagination to grow and develop considerably. He was greatly
influenced by the stories his nursemaid used to tell him and by his many visits
to the theater. Additionally, Dickens loved to read. Among his favorite works
were Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes, Tom Jones by Henry Fielding, and Arabian Nights, all of which
were picaresque novels composed of a series of loosely linked adventures. This
format no doubt played a part in Dickens' idea to serialize his future works.
Dickens
was able to leave the blacking factory after his father's release from prison,
and he continued his education at the Wellington House Academy. Although he had
little formal schooling, Dickens was able to teach himself shorthand and launch
a career as a journalist. At the age of sixteen, Dickens got himself a job as a
court reporter, and shortly thereafter he joined the staff of A Mirror of Parliament, a
newspaper that reported on the decisions of Parliament. During this time
Charles continued to read voraciously at the British Library, and he
experimented with acting and stage-managing amateur theatricals. His experience
acting would affect his work throughout his life--he was known to act out
characters he was writing in the mirror and then describe himself as the
character in prose in his novels.
Fast
becoming disillusioned with politics, Dickens developed an interest in social
reform and began contributing to the True
Sun, a radical newspaper. Although his main avenue of work would consist of
writing novels, Dickens continued his journalistic work until the end of his
life, editing The Daily News, Household Words, and All the Year Round. His
connections to various magazines and newspapers as a political journalist gave
him the opportunity to begin publishing his own fiction at the beginning of his
career. He would go on to write fifteen novels. (A final one, The Mystery of Edwin Drood, was
left unfinished upon his death.)
While
he published several sketches in magazines, it was not until he serialized The Pickwick Papers over 1836-37 that he experienced true
success. A publishing phenomenon, The
Pickwick Papers was published
in monthly installments and sold over forty thousand copies of each issue.
Dickens was the first person to make this serialization of novels profitable
and was able to expand his audience to include those who could not normally
afford such literary works.
Within
a few years, he was regarded as one of the most successful authors of his time,
with approximately one out of every ten people in Victorian England avidly
reading and following his writings. In 1836 Dickens also married Catherine
Hogarth, the daughter of a fellow co-worker at his newspaper. The couple had
ten children before their separation in 1858.
Oliver Twist and Nicholas Nickleby followed in monthly installments, and
both reflected Dickens' understanding of the lower classes as well as his comic
genius. In 1843, Dickens published one of his most famous works, A Christmas Carol.
His disenchantment with the world's economic drives is clear in this work; he
blames much of society's ills on people's obsession with earning money and
acquiring status based on money.
His
travels abroad in the 1840s, first to America and then through Europe, marked
the beginning of a new stage in Dickens' life. His writings became longer and
more serious. InDavid Copperfield (1849-50),
readers find the same flawed world that Dickens discovered as a young boy.
Dickens published some of his best-known novels including ATale of Two Cities and Great Expectations in his own weekly periodicals.
The
inspiration to write a novel set during the French Revolution came from
Dickens' faithful annual habit of reading Thomas Carlyle's book The French Revolution, first
published in 1839. When Dickens acted in Wilkie Collins' play The Frozen Deep in 1857, he was inspired by his own
role as a self-sacrificing lover. He eventually decided to place his own
sacrificing lover in the revolutionary period, a period of great social
upheaval. A year later, Dickens went through his own form of social change as
he was writing A Tale of
Two Cities: he separated from his wife, and he revitalized his career
by making plans for a new weekly literary journal called All the Year Round. In 1859, A Tale of Two Cities premiered in parts in this journal.
Its popularity was based not only on the fame of its author, but also on its
short length and radical (for Dickens' time) subject matter.
Dickens'
health began to deteriorate in the 1860s. In 1858, in response to his
increasing fame, he had begun public readings of his works. These exacted a
great physical toll on him. An immensely profitable but physically shattering
series of readings in America in 1867-68 sped his decline, and he collapsed
during a "farewell" series in England.
On
June 9, 1870, Charles Dickens died. He was buried in Poet's Corner of
Westminster Abbey. Though he left The
Mystery of Edwin Drood unfinished,
he had already written fifteen substantial novels and countless shorter pieces.
His legacy is clear. In a whimsical and unique fashion, Dickens pointed out
society's flaws in terms of its blinding greed for money and its neglect of the
lower classes of society. Through his books, we come to understand the virtues
of a loving heart and the pleasures of home in a flawed, cruelly indifferent
world. Among English writers, in terms of his fame and of the public's
recognition of his characters and stories, he is second only to William
Shakespeare.
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