No city is more
associated with the word of Charles Dickens than London.
He lived there
most of his life; he worked there; he used London as the setting or a main
setting for most of his novels (including for A Tale of Two Cities). He referred to London as his “magic lantern,”
a reference to a projector of images that became popular in the 19th
century.
In 2012, for the
bicentenary of Dickens’s birth, the Museum of London published
an extensively illustrated book, Dickens’s
Victorian London 1839 – 1901, by Alex Werner and Tony Williams. The book accompanied the museum’s exhibition of
“Dickens and London” – and it was the largest exhibition the museum had
undertaken up to that time.
The exhibition
closed, of course, after its scheduled run. But the book has lasted.
Werner and
Williams assembled hundreds of photographs, drawings, and other illustrations.
They could draw upon a wealth of information – the Victorian Age, and the life
of Dickens, coincided with the birth and widespread popularity of photography.
In the late 1870s, recognizing that so much of old London was fast disappearing
as the city continued to rebuild itself, a special effort was made to
photograph as many vanishing landmarks as possible, and the authors draw upon
that treasure trove as well.
A few coaching
inns remained, and photographs of those are included. They provide a physically
concrete idea of what Dickens utilized for books such The Pickwick Papers. Landmarks of old and new London include St.
Paul’s Cathedral, the Temple Bar, Lincoln Inn Fields, old houses, Devil’s Acre
(the slum that existed near Westminster Abbey), Parliament, the Royal Exchange,
and other structures and areas associated the Dickens’s books.
Alex Werner |
The book
contains a section on slums – few authors wrote as extensively as Dickens did
about London’s slums. Also included are markets and street life, including
Covent Garden; the docks and the River Thames; industry, which show how closely
workers lived to the industrial places they worked; the construction of the
railways and the great stations (in one photograph, Paddington Station in the
19th century looks almost exactly like the same scene in the 21st
century; home life and studio photograph portraits; and the suburbs.
Tony Williams |
Werner is the
head of History Collections at the Museum of London, and has curated several
exhibitions, including “Dickens and London.” He’s also the author of Dockland
Life (2000); Journeys through
Victorian London (2001); Jack
the Ripper and the East End (2008); and Sherlock
Holmes: The Man Who Never Lived and Will Never Die (2014). Williams is
the associate editor of the Dickensian and an Honorary Fellow at the University
of Buckingham. He’s also involved in the Dickens
Journals Online project.
To read the text
and pore over the photographs and illustrations of Dickens’s Victorian London is to immerse oneself in the scenes and
settings of so many novels and stories by Dickens. The book is a delight.
A Week of Dickens: I’ve devoted the posts this week, for
no ostensible reason other than I admire his novels, to a discussion of the
life, works, and resources for Charles Dickens. Tomorrow will conclude the
series with a listing of some of the resources available on the subject of his
life, writings, novels, and the London he knew.
Top illustration: London Bridge in
Dickens’s time.
Again, great post on Dickens. I think there's so much that could be found in his writings to keep a person researching for a lifetime, and it can all be found so fascinating.
ReplyDeleteTarissa
http://inthebookcase.blogspot.com/