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Posts Tagged ‘Walking Dickensian London’

London Walking Tours - Walk With Dickens

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

Charles Dickens knew London intimately and Walks around the Victorian metropolis truly inspired his work.

 He had a photographic memory for the streets, buildings and people he encountered on his numerous ramblings around the Capital.

To read his books is to be transported back in time and it is still possible to stand at certain London locations with a Dickens book in hand and see those locations through the eyes of the great novelist.

For example, just off Fleet Street you will find Middle Temple and Inner Temple. These are two of London’s four Inns of Court, the places where Barristers (the wigged and robed lawyers) have their chambers. Dickens wrote of the Temple that you can read on its gates “who enters here leaves noise behind” and that description really does hold true to this day.

Several of our London walks explore this wonderful “time slip” part of London, but you can also explore it on your own by taking the tube to Temple Station, going left and up the steps, turning right at their top, over the crossing, off which turn right, and just keep ahead till you reach the gates of The Temple.

Another location that has changed little since Dickens day is Lincoln’s Inn, another of the Inns of Court. Our Dickens London Christmas Walks tend to explore this area, but it also features on our regular Dickens Tours as it was in Lincoln’s Inn Old Hall that the foggy introduction to Bleak House begins.

These are just two of the many parts of London covered by Richard Jones’s book Walking Dickensian London which is available from Amazon.

A Walking Tour of London

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

London walks make a great way to and experience the streets, buildings and hidden places of England’s capital.

There is so much to see and do in London and walks make the ideal way to really get beneath the skin of this fascinating city.

Walks around London can include the ever popular night time Jack the Ripper Tour. This takes place seven chilling nights a week and is both a fascinating and atmospheric tour of London.

Perhaps your interest is more towards the literary aspects of the City? Don’t worry we have several walks that you might find of interest. Although our Literary London walks are currently only for pre-booked groups of 20 plus they make a great way to experience and explore the streets of London following in the footsteps of some of England’s greatest author.

Richard Jones is the author of the acclaimed book Walking Dickensian London, so who better to guide you on a series of Dickens London walks.

Our Blue Badge Guides also lead a series of highly popular tours that can make a great addition to your day in London. How about a Royal London Walk around the old streets of the village St James? Why not let them lead you on your very own private tour around Westminster Abbey or the Tower of London. The cost of one of these great London walks in the company of a fully qualified Blue Badge Guide  is just £165 plus VAT per group plus admissions.

Richard Jones is the also the author of the international best seller Walking Haunted London. He leads  regular Haunted London walks on Friday and Saturday nights which takes in the more sinister sights and aspects of the City. A great way to spend two hours whilst also enjoying a night out that is both spooky and slightly different.

So when you’re looking for a way of exploring London then walks are far and away the best way to really get to know a city that has spent an amazing 2,000 years preparing for your visit.

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.