For London’s National Portrait Gallery last year, writer
and biographer Lucinda Hawksley
was asked to provide a book on Charles Dickens and
his friends. The result was Charles
Dickens and His Circle, and it provides a valuable primer for
understanding Dickens and the people who influenced him.
Hawksley is
rather ideally suited to have written the book – she’s the great-great-great
granddaughter of Dickens and has written a number of works about him and the
family.
Hawksley moves
forward chronologically, starting with George Hogarth (Dickens’
father-in-law), and Catherine
Hogarth, who became Dickens’ wife; his early illustrators like George Cruikshank
and Hablot Knight
Brown (aka “Phiz”); and the people he knew as a young, up-and-coming
writer. The short, readable descriptions (with accompanying paintings of the
individuals) include artists, lawyers, writers, and philanthropists.
The writers
include people from both sides of the Atlantic; Dickens met and maintained correspondence
with American writers like Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow, Washington
Irving, and Edgar
Allen Poe. On the British side, there are William
Makepeace Thackeray, Wilkie
Collins, and Thomas
Carlyle, among others.
Each entry
includes a concise text and photograph or illustration; Hawksley also has
several introductory sections that include drawings and photographs as well.
In addition to
her family connection, Hawksley has published The
Mystery of Princess Louise: Queen Victoria’s Rebellious Daughter; Essential
Pre-Raphaelites; Charles
Dickens’ Favorite Daughter: The Life, Loves, and Art of Katey Dickens Perugini;
and March,
Women, March; among several other works. She’s also an art historian
and public speaker, especially on environmental causes.
Lucinda Hawksley |
While each entry
is concise, Hawksley manages to include interesting items that provide more in-depth
understanding about the relationships and friendships Dickens developed and
maintained (and sometimes set aside). Hans Christian Anderson
was a guest at Dickens’ home, Gad’s Hill in Kent, and managed to seriously
overstay his welcome. Poe believed Dickens had written an unflattering article
about him; Dickens hadn’t, but Poe broke off the relationship. And when many
friends began to avoid Dickens after the scandal of his separation from his
wife, Edward
Bulwer-Lytton did not; In fact, the two men became closer friends, because
Bulwer-Lytton had been through his own scandalous separation.
Charles Dickens
and His Circle is a fine introduction to Dickens and the people he attracted and was
attracted to, who worked with him and influenced him, and helped to make him
the great novelist he was.
Painting: Charles Dickens by his friend
Daniel Maclise (1839).Maclise is one of the entries in Charles Dickens and His Circle.
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