Charles Dickens

Scenes and Characters from the Works of Charles Dickens


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" A. B. Frost Martin Chuzzlewit 59 " " Fred Barnard Christmas Books 28 " " Fred Barnard Pictures from Italy 8 " " Gordon Thomson Dombey and Son 62 " " Fred Barnard David Copperfield 61 " " Fred Barnard A Child's History of England 15 " " J. McL. Ralston Bleak House 61 " " Fred Barnard Hard Times 20 " " H. French Little Dorrit 58 " " J. Mahoney Reprinted Pieces 9 " " E. G. Dalziel A Tale of Two Cities 25 " " Fred Barnard Uncommercial Traveller 26 " " E. G. Dalziel Great Expectations 30 " " F. A. Frazer Our Mutual Friend 58 " " J. Mahoney Christmas Stories 23 " " E. G. Dalziel Edwin Drood 12 " " Luke Fildes Life of Dickens 28 " " Fred Barnard

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      THERE is one question upon which the critics and lovers of Dickens seem never able to get into agreement, and that is the question of the original illustrations to his works. To the thorough-going enthusiast Phiz and Dickens seem inseparable, and no edition which does not contain the old, familiar grotesques of Hablot Browne's imagination, or, in the earlier volume, the equally abnormal lineaments portrayed by Cruikshank or Seymour, would be deemed worthy of a place upon his bookshelf. But a younger generation is growing up, for whom the time-honoured pictures have not the charm of long association, and among them it is common to hear the complaint that the natural humour and pathos of the author's best works are spoiled to modern fancy by the violent caricatures of the illustrator. "Let us abolish these pictures altogether," they say: "and illustrate the books with pretty conventionalities by more fashionable artists." At the opposite pole stands yet another group of critics—the "Superior People" who have made up their minds that Dickens himself was a caricaturist, and that therefore the early illustrations, even if they do a little emphasise his exaggerations, are only conceived in fitting harmony with a world of fancy which drowns itself in excesses of the grotesque. Among so many doctors, and all so emphatic, who shall decide? It is, at any rate, no easy task.

      It happens, however, that there does exist a series of Dickens illustrations, now in some danger of being unduly neglected, in which the artists were wonderfully happy in preserving the original features of Phiz and Cruikshank's