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Dickens Walks of London

Saturday, June 27th, 2009

We have many Dickens London walks that cover numerous areas and districts of the capital. Each of these Walking Tours of London includes biographical details about Dickens life and touches upon one of the most traumatic periods of his childhood. A period that would effect him both emotionally and creatively for the rest of his life.

Indeed, as we explain on the various London walks we conduct around Dickens London, he would return to this period of his life time and again in his fiction.

John Dickens, Charles Dickens father, was a Clerk in the Naval Pay. He was a man who could never control his spending.

In 1816 John Dickens was transferred to Chatham, near Rochester in Kent, and Charles began the happiest period of his childhood. He received an education from a young Baptist school teacher named William Giles.

But the happy years came to an abrupt end in 1821 when John was transferred back to London.

His father’s spending continued and, to try and help the ailing famly finances Charles was found work at Warrens Blacking Warehouse, whose manager was James Lamert the stepson of his mother’s sister.

To compound the misery he began working there on his twelfth birthday 7th February 1812 Charles. The factory was accoring to his later description “a crazy tumbledown house, abutting on the river and overrun with rats.”

Aged just twelve the sudden loss of his childhood proved a huge trauma for the sensitive boy who had been convinced that he was destined to become a gentleman.

Instead he now found himself sticking lids and labels on to bottles of boot blacking surrounded by men and boys from the class he would later refer to as “Shabby Genteel” for a weekly wage of six shillings.

Many years later Charles recalled:-

“My whole nature was so penetrated with the grief and humiliation that even now, famous and caressed and happy, I often forget in my dreams that I have a dear wife and children; even that I am a man and wander desolately back to that time.”

Two weeks after Charles started work John Dickens was arrested for debt and imprisoned in the Marshal Debtors Prison in Southwark.

Charles was found lodgings, first in Camden Town, then later in Lant Street, Borough, which was close to the prison.

Each morning he would visit his father and mother and the rest of the family at Marshalsea, then go to work after which he would go back to the prison before making his way back to his lodgings in Lant Street.Left to his own devices and he began exploring London.

Walks around Covent Garden and Seven Dials introduced him to the seedier side of 19th century London amnd his wanderings would later provide him with inspiration in his books.

The blacking factory inspired him in another way. He was befriended by an older boy named Bob Fagin whose name he would ater use in Oliver Twist.

The strange thing is that his father was in receipt of payments of over £6 a week from the Naval Pay Office and yet made no attempt to clear his debts. Indeed, Dickens parents confessed that they felt more comfortable and unmolested by their creditors than they had done for a long time. It appears that they didn’t want to be released.

But then in April 1824 his father’s mother died, leaving him £450 and after three months in prison John Dickens was released.

Dickens still went daily to the blacking factory, which had transferred to Chandos Street, just off Strand.

Here he now worked in the window in full view of the public. One day his father visited and had a furious row with James Lamert and Charles was sacked.

Mrs Dickens did her best to get Lamert to take the boy back and patched things up.

She said he should go back to work but his father was adamant he should have an education and he was sent to Wellington Academy on Hampstead Road.

Dickens never forgave his mother for wanting him to return and later wrote:

“I never afterwards forgot” he wrote later “I never shall forget, I never can forget, that my mother was warm for my being sent back.

Walks in Dickens London

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

When you join Richard Jones for one of his Dickens London walks, you are joining someone who really knows the subject and who has the ability to bring the Streets of Dickens London vividly to life.Richard is the author of the classic Dickensian guide Walking Dickensian London.

Walks through all parts of London are featured in this book and it really is an eyeopener to the streets, places and people that Dickens would have known.

One of Richard’s more intriguing Dickens London Walking Tours is the area that covers Trafalgar Square. This gives Richard the opportunity to introduce a little biography on Charles Dickens and also to quote one of Dickens’s great comic passages.

In 1834 Dickens was working as a Parliamentary reporter for the Morning Chronicle, whose offices were at 332 Strand. As well as reporting on the various debates in Parliament he also began writing a series of essays or sketches about London Life.

His favourite book as a child had been Oliver Goldsmith’s The Vicar of Wakefield, and he had even nicknamed youngest brother, Augustus, Moses after Moses Primrose, the vicars son in the book.

However, Augustus Couldn’t pronounce Moses so he repeated it as “Boses”.Delighted by this childish mispronunciation the family shortened this to Boz, which was the name Dickens adopted for his essays and they appeared as Sketches by Boz.

the Sketches Dickens to the attention of the publishers Chapman and Hall who in 1835 had been approached by the artist Robert Seymour to publish a series of his cartoons showing the mishaps of a group of sporting gentlemen whom he had named the Nimrod Club.

Mr Hall objected because, as he pointed out, although he had been raised in country he had no interest in sport. He suggested instead that the book be novel-like and that it be about a wide range of English scenes. He also suggested that the plates (drawings) should arise naturally out of the text.

Mr Hall approached Charles Dickens about writing the text and Dickens, who had recently been in Bath remembered a name he had seen there – Moses Pickwick - a coach proprietor. He thought this a perfect name and thus Pickwick Papers was born.

In his first sketch of Mr Pickwick Robert Seymour depicted him as a tall thin man. Again Mr Hall objected and suggested he make him more portly. Seymour did and thus the appearance of Pickwick that we all know today came in to being.

The publication suffered a major setback when, between the first and second numbers Seymour committed suicide in his garden shed at his house in Islington.

Chapman and Hall advertised for a new artist and among those who applied but was rejected was a young man by the name of William Makepeace Thackeray.

In the end the commission went to the artist Hablot Browne who adopted the Pseudonym Phiz to match Dickens’s Boz and remained his principle illustrator for the next 23 years.

The Pickwick Papers became a huge success and well and truly set the young writer on the road to literary fame and fortune.

We start our West End Dickens London walks at Charing Cross because it is where the Pickwickians began their adventures.

There is a building called Golden Cross House opposite Charing Cross Station which remembers the Golden Cross Inn, which was first mentioned in 1643. The one Dickens wrote of and knew was built in 1811 and was pulled down in 1827 to make way for Trafalgar Square.

Its location, as we explain on our Dickens London walk was more or less where Nelsons Column stands today.

Dickens has left us a picture of it in one of the Sketches By Boz entitled Early Coaches. Later it would be the place where David Copperfield spent his first night in London when newly arrived from Canterbury.

One of its main features was the danger to public safety from the low arch that led from the coach yard onto Strand. People travelling on top of a coach had to crouch to avoid banging their heads on this arch.

As the Pickwickians leave the yard en route to Rochester aboard the famous Coach The Commodore, Mr Jingle, reminds them of the arch in a memorable fashion:

Heads – Heads – take care of your heads – terrible place – dangerous work – other day – five children – mother – tall lady, eating sandwiches – forgot the arch – crash – knock – children look round – mother’s head off – sandwich in her hand – no mouth to put it in – head of a family off – shocking – shocking.

So when you are looking for Dickens London walks to take don’t stick to the familiar area around Holborn, consider a walking tour in an area that is not readily associated with Dickens.