The Life of Charles Dickens
(1812 - 1870) |
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Charles
Dickens |
DICKENS was driven to achieve success from
the days of his boyhood. With little formal education, he taught himself, worked
furiously at everything he undertook and rocketed to fame as a writer in his
mid-twenties. He continued to work assiduously to the end of his life. Besides
making a prodigious contribution to English Literature as a writer of fiction,
he edited a weekly journal for twenty years and became an accomplished performer
of his own works. 1812-1817
- Infancy in Born on 1817-1822
- Happy boyhood in Father posted first to Sheerness, then to
Chatham Royal Dockyard, Kent. Pleasant, formative boyhood years for Charles. His
experiences in 1822-1827
- Humiliation and little formal education in His schooling interrupted when he followed
the family to 1827-1829
- Making the most of a modest beginning His education over at the age of 15.
Employed by a firm of solicitors. Made a great impression as a lively character,
a skilled mimic, with an encyclopedic knowledge of 1829-1833
- Established in journalism Started as a freelance reporter of law
cases. Admitted as reader at the British Museum Library in 1830. Became a
parliamentary reporter in 1831. 1833-1836
- Success as a short story writer
First
short story published in 1833. Continued his success as a reporter, joining the
The Morning Chronicle in 1834. Married in 1836. 1836-1840
- Fame and dynamic progress as an author
Became
household name through the publication in instalments of Pickwick Papers,
1836-37. Left The Morning Chronicle in 1836. Editor of new magazine, Bentley's
Miscellany, from 1837 to 1839. Wrote Oliver Twist, Nicholas Nickleby, and
shorter pieces. 1840-1843
- Loss of touch and spectacular recovery
After
completing The Old Curiosity Shop and the much less popular Barnaby Rudge in
1841, set off to visit the 1843-1850
- Maturing as a successful author
Christmas
stories, minor works, visits to 1850-1858
- Established as publisher/editor/author Became joint owner and editor of a new
weekly journal, Household Words, in 1850. Contributed three major works during
this period: Bleak House, Hard Times and Little Dorrit. Purchased Gad's 1858-1867
- A new role and a new journal
Gave
first public readings of his works in 1858. Established in 1859 a new weekly
journal, All The Year Round, which replaced Household Words. Serialisation of A
Tale of Two Cities began with first number. Contributed two other major works
during this period: Great Expectations and Our Mutual Friend. 1867-1870
- Final bursts of energy
With
failing health, devoted much of his energy to exhausting reading tours, visiting
the
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