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Part Two
Following
up A Christmas Carol
Di splayed
together here are the four subsequent
Christmas books that Dickens
produced during the 1840s:
The Chimes, 1844;
The
Battle of Life, 1 846;
The Cricket on the Hearth,
1846; and
The Haunted Man and the Ghost’s Bargain,
1848. In format, Dickens stuck closely
to the successful pattern he had es tablished
with A Christmas Carol,
and later the books would often be repri nted
together, as a group. In content and
theme, however, he avoided repetition.
The Chimes mounts a fierce
attack on the Utilitarian social
policies of the hungry forties, and
later Christmas books became
increasingly dark in tone.
Dickens, Ch arles,
1812-1870. A Christmas carol in
prose: being a ghost story of Yule-tide.
East Aurora, N.Y.: The Roycroft
Shop, 1902. Original suede leather
cover. Gift of G. Ross Roy, 2000.
The
Cratchit Family Christmas
Charle s
Dickens, A Christmas carol.
Illustrated by A. C. Michael.
New York: Hodder and Stoughton, 1910.
Salesman's dummy, original green cloth.
Christmas
with the Poor
Charles
Dickens,
The chimes. Illustrated by Hugh
Thomson. New York: Hodder and Stoughton,
1910. Salesman's dummy, original blue
cloth.
Broadsheet
advertisement for A Christmas Carol,
1844
This
stage adaptation of A Christmas Carol
by Edward Stirling, opening at the
Theatre Royal, Adelphi, on February 5
1844, was advertised as sanctioned by
Dickens, to distinguish it from
C.Z.Barnett’s competing production, A
Christmas Carol: or, the Miser’s
Warning!, which opened the same
night at the Surrey Theatre, home of
early Victorian melodrama. Charles
Dickens
Charles
Dickens, A Christmas Carol.
London:
Bradbury and Evans, 1858. Original
wrappers.
Cheap editions such as this attest to
the widening impact and sustained
popularity of Dickens’s book.
Albert
Smith, The entirely new and original
drama . . . the cricket on the hearth.
London: W. S. Johnson.
All of the
Christmas books were rapidly transferred
to the stage. This dramatization, based
on “early Proofs, . . . by express
permission of the Author,” was scripted
even before the book itself was
published. Smith, drama critic for the
Illustrated London News, would
later become famous for his monologue
“The Ascent of Mont Blanc.” Opening at
the Adelphi in London in December 1845,
productions were running at ten other
London theatres and uncountable
provincial ones.
Charles
Dickens, Extra Christmas Numbers from
All the Year Round.
London: Chapman and Hall, 1863-1867.
Following
the breakup
of his marriage in 1859, Dickens founded
a new periodical to replace the
unfortunately-named Household Words,
but continued the practice of editing
(and often largely writing himself) a
special “Extra Christmas Number.”
Displayed here is a complete set of
Dickens’s Christmas stories for All
the Year Round, in the original blue
wrappers. Like most of Dickens’s later
Christmas writings, they eschew the
focus on happy family Christmas
traditions that his earlier writings had
done so much to establish.
Pip’s
Christmas dinner, from Great
Expectations (December 1861)
The most
famous
of Dickens’s later treatments of
Christmas, the pre-Christmas installment
of one of his best-known novels when it
was serialized in All the Year Round,
depicts the orphan Pip, stuffed against
the sharp corner of a crowded Christmas
table among distant relatives he already
dislikes, anxiously waiting his
irascible sister’s discovery that her
prize pie has gone missing from the
larder. This illustration is from a
contemporary American edition of the
novel.
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