Welcome to London Discovery Tours

Posts Tagged ‘The Chimes’

A Dickens London walk.

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

When you join Richard Jones on one of his Charles Dickens London walks you are joining the man who wrote the book Walking Dickensian London.

One of the addresses that is covered on this walking tour of Dickens London is 58 Lincoln’s Inn Fields which was, from 1834 to 1856, the home of John Forster (1812–76).

Forster was Dickens’s greatest friend and his first significant biographer. Dickens based Mr Podsnap in Our Mutual Friend (1864–65) on Forster, and later used his house for the residence of Mr Tulkinghorn – legal adviser to Sir Leicester Dedlock and evil blackmailer of Lady Dedlock – in Bleak House.

Dickens was at his lawyer-bashing best when he wrote:

The crow flies straight across Chancery Lane… into Lincoln’s Inn Fields. Here, in a large house, formerly a house of state, lives Mr Tulkinghorn. It is let off in sets of chambers now, and in these shrunken fragments of its greatness lawyers lie in maggots in nuts.’

On the 2nd December, 1844 Dickens, who had travelled especially from Italy for the occasion, gave a private reading at Forster’s house from his new Christmas story ‘The Chimes’. The select gathering included Forster, Thomas Carlyle, and Daniel Maclise.

‘There was not a dry eye in the house’, wrote Daniel Maclise to Catherine Dickens, who had remained in Italy. ‘Shrieks of laughter – there were indeed – and floods of tears as a relief to them – I do not think that there ever was such a triumphant hour for Charles… ’

Maclise also did a pencil sketch of the occasion (opposite), showing Dickens seated at the desk, the book open in front of him, surrounded by his enraptured audience.

Forster considered it an accurate depiction of the event, although he did comment that there was a touch of caricature of which he considered himself ‘chief victim.’

A second reading two evenings later was equally successful, and thus were sown the seeds of Dickens forays into amateur theatricals and, according to Forster, ‘those readings to larger audiences by which, as much by his books, the world knew him in later life.’

This is just one location that features on Richard’s Dickens London walks but it really is a Dickensian landmark and a true time capsule of Victorian London.

A Dickens London walk

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

Richard Jones has written numerous books on Walks around London. They include Walking Haunted London, Uncovering Jack the Ripper’s London and Walking Dickensian London.

Recently we were approached by a client who wanted to know which were the best Dickens London walks for an avid Dickens fan to do.

Charles Dickens can be encountered all over London. Indeed his books an even be used to plot a series of exciting and fascinating London walks that take you in to the lesser known places of this great City.

But for the ultimate Charles Dickens London walk you should begin at Chancery Lane Underground Station. Close by is Gray’s Inn one of London’s four Inns of Court. As a teenager Charles Dickens came to waork here for the solicitor’s firm of Ellis and Blackmore and the first Square you come in to is as it was in Dickens day.

From here you can make your way across Holborn into Staple Inn, a black and white timebered building that admits you to a peaceful oasis that has hardly changed since Dickens featured it in The Mystery of Edwin Drood.

Then making your way along Chancery Lane you can turn into Lincoln’s, Inn another of the Inns of Court where Dickens begin his most scathing attack on the English Legal System in Bleak House.

Across Lincoln’s Inn Fields you arrive at the former home of John Forster Dickens great friend and business advisor. It was in an upstairs room of this house that Dickens gave the first reading of his Christmas book The Chimes.

Close nearby is the Old Curiosity Shop in Portugal Street which, although not the one that Dickens wrote about in his book of that name, is nonetheless worth a look at as it is a very picturesque building that dates from 1567.

So within a few short streets you can enjoy a Dickens London walk that takes in numerous locations that are associated with England’s greatest novelist.