Celebrating Charles Dickens

Celebrating Charles Dickens

Today people in the UK are celebrating the 200th birthday of the great author Charles Dickens.

Dickens himself explained an aspect of his ingenious creative process when he said:

An idea, like a ghost, must be spoken to a little before it will explain itself.

Mr. Dickens Collects

Speaking of harvesting ideas, I bought a book many years ago that showed the lists that he kept, including unusual names that he noticed as he was walking around. At times he used some of this material for his books.

As John Camden-Hotten explained in his book Charles Dickens: The Story of His Life published in 2001:

It is said that when he saw a strange or odd name on a shop-board, or in walking through a village or country town, he entered it in his pocket-book, and added it to his reserve list.

Bah Humbug!

For example, considering the unusual names that Dickens used in his novels – who can forget ‘Ebenezer Scrooge’ featured in A Christmas Carol which was first published by Chapman & Hall only six days before Christmas in 1843.

We featured a quotation from that book here on one of our Christmas ecards:

Charles Dickens – A Christmas Carol

Today’s Memorial Service at Westminster Abbey

Back to our celebration today for Mr. Dickens: Jill Lawless reported for the Associated Press that Prince Charles and his wife Camilla joined the Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, many of Dickens’ descendants, a group of dignitaries, and the actor Ralph Fiennes at a memorial service today in London’s Westminster Abbey.

Prince Charles also laid a wreath of white roses and snowdrops on the writer’s grave in Poet’s Corner, while two of Dickens’ youngest descendants added two small white posies to the floral tribute.

Dear Mr. Dickens

Claire Tomalin who wrote a biography of Dickens published in 2011 called Charles Dickens: A Life wrote the novelist a letter for this special day.

Called A letter to Charles Dickens on his 200th birthday it was published in the Guardian today and you can find it here.

Many thanks for your letter, Ms. Tomalin, and for this ending of yours with which so many of us agree:

Mr Dickens, you are still, and always will be, the Inimitable.

Many happy returns.

Originally published February 7, 2012

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I’m Tamara

Welcome to Travel Tangles. For many years I have lived overseas in several countries outside of my native USA. My posts here cover such travel and cross-cultural matters. The world is wide and deep, however, so my writing embraces other concerns too.