The essential guide to Charles Dickens

Charles Dickens is one of literature's most collected authors. Through his prolific writing, Dickens created an extensive gallery of iconic fictional characters while spotlighting the harsh realities of poverty in England during a period of immense social upheaval and technological change.

Scarcity of Letters & Original Editions

As one of history’s most celebrated writers, authentic Dickens memorabilia is highly sought after by collectors and institutions. This includes autographed letters, rare first edition books, and manuscripts handwritten by the author himself. Their scarcity is due to various factors.

As a prolific writer constantly striving to meet endless publishing deadlines, Dickens produced an enormous volume of manuscript pages daily but discarded most drafts after use. While some of his letters do survive, most very early correspondence was lost or destroyed. The custom of the era was to reuse scarce sheets of expensive writing paper, so only letters deemed personally or socially important were kept.

Early Life & Family

Charles Dickens was born in 1812 in Portsmouth, England, the second of eight children, to John and Elizabeth Dickens. His father worked as a naval pay clerk but was constantly in debt and was eventually sent to Marshalsea debtors’ prison. Young Charles was forced to leave school at age 12 and work long hours pasting labels on shoe polish in a London factory. The difficult time spent working in the blacking warehouse as a child left an indelible mark on Dickens.


After his father received an unexpected inheritance and got out of prison, Dickens returned to school. But at age 15, he left his formal education behind and worked as an office clerk to help support his struggling family. The trauma of his destitute childhood drove his ambition as well as his sympathy for the poor.

In 1833, Dickens began publishing short stories and sketches of London life under the pseudonym “Boz.” The following year, he met and fell in love with Catherine Hogarth, whom he married in 1836. Together the couple would have 10 children, although their marriage ended bitterly in 1858.

His Books

Some of Dickens’ most famous novels highlighted the plight of the poor in Victorian society. Oliver Twist (1838) centres on an orphan growing up in a workhouse. It condemned the Poor Laws that treated struggling citizens so harshly. Published in monthly instalments, it was a massive commercial success that cemented his popularity. Dickens followed it up with Nicholas Nickleby (1839), showcasing abusive Yorkshire schools for unwanted children.

In A Christmas Carol (1843), Dickens showed the stark divide between the rich and poor while promoting compassion and charity. It redefined Christmas traditions now revered in Western culture. Hard Times (1854) criticised the social and economic exploitation of factory workers during Britain’s industrialisation—a subject near to his heart—and exposed the human toll of prioritising industry over individuals.

Great Expectations (1861), his semi-autobiographical novel about class and ambition, provided an intricate glimpse into Victorian society. Through the novel’s orphan hero Pip and eccentric characters like Miss Havisham, Joe Gargery and Abel Magwitch, Dickens explored wealth and morality obtained through commerce rather than traditional land ownership. 

Writing Techniques & Legacy

As a master of serial fiction, Dickens employed cliffhangers, colourful characters, layered plots, social commentary and dashes of sentimentality to hook readers anxiously awaiting the next weekly or monthly literary instalment. He interacted with fans by adopting their suggestions for storylines and new characters. Along with showcasing his vivid imagination and observational skills of Victorian society, his novels promoted social reform.

 

By the time of his death in 1870 at age 58, Dickens had become Britain’s most famous author. His creative legacy endures through memorable characters like Oliver Twist, Tiny Tim, David Copperfield, Ebenezer Scrooge and Miss Havisham.  

American Tours

Eager to reconnect with fans overseas and hoping to negotiate international copyright protections, Dickens embarked on two lucrative reading tours of the United States in 1842 and 1867-68. He found American audiences welcoming and celebrated their enthusiasm for his works. However, he also remained critical of Americans’ brash manners and constant fixation on wealth.

The tours demonstrated Dickens’ fame but severely strained his health. Sea voyages were taxing, his complicated domestic affairs back in England weighed on him, and an intense schedule of public events and long train trips between cities left him exhausted. Still, his dramatic public readings proved extremely popular and profitable, confirming his celebrity status on both sides of the Atlantic.

Personal Life Controversies

Despite his immense fame during his lifetime, Dickens hid private struggles from his legions of fans. His marriage to Catherine ended bitterly when his dictatorial style and constant yearning for solitude and control led him to separate in 1858. He then exiled Catherine from their many children while he maintained relationships with a young actress named Ellen Ternan until his death.

The messy split with his wife alienated many in Victorian society. Yet the intensely private Dickens managed to keep intimate details of his personal affairs largely out of the British newspapers so did little damage to book sales.


Final thoughts 

Charles Dickens left an enduring mark on literature and life in the 19th century. Through detailed descriptions of Victorian society and compelling characters, his stories exposed economic, social and moral injustices while indelibly shaping popular traditions around Christmas. Dickens convinced his readers to show compassion for the poor and marginalised. Though intensely private, money-conscious and eccentric himself at times, his words continue highlighting the basic humanity in us all.

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