|

Add or remove other collections to your search:



 

Narrow your search by:



Browsing items in:

Nichols - Illustrations to Dickens
(426 results)



Display: 50

    • Wren, Jenny

    • Wren, Jenny

    • She is a handicapped child who supports herself and her alcoholic father by making doll dresses. She walks with the aid of crutches and she works all day. She takes care of her father and frequently scolds him for his bad behavior. She also aids...

    • Our Mutual Friend

    • Our Mutual Friend, Dickens' last novel, addresses the issues of money, social class, and human values. John Harmon, heir to his father's fortune made as a dust collector, pretends to be dead in order to find out what people thought about him. He...
    • Witherfield, Miss

    • Witherfield, Miss

    • The lady whose room at the Ipswich Hotel Mr. Pickwick mistook for his own room. "Mr. Pickwick almost fainted with horror and dismay; standing before the dressing glass was a middle-aged lady, in yellow curl papers, busily engaged in brushing...

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • A series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Winkle, Nathaniel

    • Winkle, Nathaniel

    • Member of Pickwick Club. "The sporting Winkle, communicating additional lustre to a new green shooting coat, plaid neckerchief, and closely fitting drabs"

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • A series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Winkle, Nathaniel

    • Winkle, Nathaniel

    • Member of Pickwick Club. The sporting Winkle, communicating additional lustre to a new green shooting coat, plaid neckerchief, and closely fitting drabs

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • Series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Winkle, Mr., senior

    • Winkle, Mr., senior

    • A prosperous wharfinger [owner of a wharf] in Birmingham, father of Nathaniel Winkle. "A little old gentleman in a snuff-coloured suit, with a head and face the precise counterpart of those belonging to Mr. Winkle, Junior, excepting that he...

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • A series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • William, Mr.

    • William, Mr.

    • Mr. William Swidger is the keeper of the institution where Mr. Redlaw teaches. He is a simple good-hearted man

    • Haunted Man and the Ghost's Bargain, The

    • The Haunted Man and the Ghost's Bargain is the fifth and last of Dickens's long stories with a Christmas theme. This book, which is centered around a chemist and lecturer Redlaw, is more about the spirit of the holidays than about the holidays...
    • Willet, Mr. John

    • Willet, Mr. John

    • John Willet is the landlord of the Maypole Inn. He ends his days in a cottage in Chigwell

    • Barnaby Rudge

    • Barnaby Rudge is the fifth novel which was begun in 1839 and finished in 1841. It is also the first of Dickens's two historical novels. This novel is based on the anti-Catholic riots - the Gordon Riots - instigated by Lord George Gordon in 1780,...
    • Willet, John

    • Willet, John

    • John willet is the landlord of the Maypole Inn. He ends his days in a cottage in Chigwell

    • Barnaby Rudge

    • Barnaby Rudge is the fifth novel which was begun in 1839 and finished in 1841. It is also the first of Dickens's two historical novels. This novel is based on the anti-Catholic riots - the Gordon Riots - instigated by Lord George Gordon in 1780,...
    • Wilfer, Mrs.

    • Wilfer, Mrs.

    • Mother of Bella and wife of Mr. Reginald Wilfer, she is tall and angular. She teaches when she has the opportunity. She is discontented and disagreeable, but does what her husband tells her to do

    • Our Mutual Friend

    • Our Mutual Friend, Dickens' last novel, addresses the issues of money, social class, and human values. John Harmon, heir to his father's fortune made as a dust collector, pretends to be dead in order to find out what people thought about him. He...
    • Wilfer, Mrs.

    • Wilfer, Mrs.

    • Mother of Bella and wife of Mr. Reginald Wilfer, she is tall and angular. She teaches when she has the opportunity. She is discontented and disagreeable, but does what her husband tells her to do

    • Our Mutual Friend

    • Our Mutual Friend, Dickens' last novel, addresses the issues of money, social class, and human values. John Harmon, heir to his father's fortune made as a dust collector, pretends to be dead in order to find out what people thought about him. He...
    • Wemmick, Mr., Sen.

    • Wemmick, Mr., Sen.

    • Mr. Wemmick, Sen. is Mr. John Wemmick's father. He delights in reading the newspaper aloud and being nodded to. He is hard of hearing

    • Great Expectations

    • Great Expectations is Dickens's 13th novel. It appeared in monthly installments from December 1860 to August 1961 in the periodical All the Year Round. It was also published in the United States in Harper's Weekly. It is one of Dickens's best...
    • Wemmick, Mr. John

    • Wemmick, Mr. John

    • Mr. John Wemmick is employed as Mr. Jagger's clerk. In London, he is all business and a bit gruff. He lives with his father the Aged at Walworth in a small castle replica including a moat and drawbridge. At home, Mr. Wemmick is warm and...

    • Great Expectations

    • Great Expectations is Dickens's 13th novel. It appeared in monthly installments from December 1860 to August 1961 in the periodical All the Year Round. It was also published in the United States in Harper's Weekly. It is one of Dickens's best...
    • Weller, Tony

    • Weller, Tony

    • A coachman; father of Sam Weller. "It is very possible that at some earlier period of his career, Mr. Weller's profile might have presented a bold and determined outline. His face however had expanded, under the influence of good living, and a...

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • Series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Weller, Sam

    • Weller, Sam

    • Boots at the White Hart Inn, afterwards valet to Mr. Pickwick, a Cockney. "He was habited in a coarse striped waistcoat, with black calico sleeves, and blue glass buttons, drab breeches, and leggings, a bright red handkerchief was wound in a...

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • A series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Weller, Sam

    • Weller, Sam

    • Boots at the White Hart Inn, afterwards valet to Mr. Pickwick, a Cockney. He was habited in a coarse striped waistcoat, with black calico sleeves, and blue glass buttons, drab breeches, and leggings, a bright red handkerchief was wound in a very...

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • Series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Wegg, Mr. Silas

    • Wegg, Mr. Silas

    • A street vendor, Mr. Wegg sits every day on the same corner selling gingerbread, fruit, and ballads. He is older, with a hardened face and a wooden leg. He is hired to read books to Mr. Boffin each evening. He finds a will while at the Boffins...

    • Our Mutual Friend

    • Our Mutual Friend, Dickens' last novel, addresses the issues of money, social class, and human values. John Harmon, heir to his father's fortune made as a dust collector, pretends to be dead in order to find out what people thought about him. He...
    • Wegg, Mr. Silas

    • Wegg, Mr. Silas

    • A street vendor, Mr. Wegg sits every day on the same corner selling gingerbread, fruit, and ballads. He is older, with a hardened face and a wooden leg. He is hired to read books to Mr. Boffin each evening. He finds a will while at the Boffins...

    • Our Mutual Friend

    • Our Mutual Friend, Dickens' last novel, addresses the issues of money, social class, and human values. John Harmon, heir to his father's fortune made as a dust collector, pretends to be dead in order to find out what people thought about him. He...
    • Wardle, Mr.

    • Wardle, Mr.

    • Yeoman farmer of Manor Farm, Dingley Dell. A friend of Mr. Pickwick. "A stout old gentleman in a blue coat and bright buttons, corduroy breeches and top boots"

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • A series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Wardle, Mr.

    • Wardle, Mr.

    • Yeoman farmer of Manor Farm, Dingley Dell. A friend of Mr. Pickwick. A stout old gentleman in a blue coat and bright buttons, corduroy breeches and top boots

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • Series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Warden, William, senior

    • Warden, William, senior

    • A drunkard. "There is scarcely a man, in the constant habit of walking day after day through any of the crowded thoroughfares of London, who cannot recollect, among the people whom he 'knows by sight', to use a familiar phrase, some being of...

    • Drunkard's Death, The

    • A series of papers of a humorous character dealing with life and scenes, chiefly in London, at the time of publication and the earlier part of the nineteenth century
    • Vuffin, Mr.

    • Vuffin, Mr.

    • Mr. Vuffin is a showman and the proprietor of a giant and a little lady without legs or arms

    • Old Curiosity Shop, The

    • This novel is Dickens's fourth novel, and one of two novels Dickens wrote for the short-lived magazine Master Humphrey's Clock, begun in March 1840 and finished in January 1941. It was published as a separate book in 1841. The novel tells the story...
    • Vholes, Mr.

    • Vholes, Mr.

    • Mr. Vholes is a legal adviser to Richard Carstone and ends up involving him in the Jarndyce and Jarndyce case and eventually turns him against Jarndyce

    • Bleak House

    • Bleak House was the ninth novel written by Charles Dickens. He worked on it from November 1851 to August 1853. It was originally published in 20 monthly installments between March 1852 and September 1853 and is considered to be one of his best...
    • Vholes, Mr.

    • Vholes, Mr.

    • Mr. Vholes is a legal advisor to Richard Carstone and ends up involving him in the Jarndyce and Jarndyce case and eventually turns him against Jarndyce

    • Bleak House

    • Bleak House was the ninth novel written by Charles Dickens. He worked on it from November 1851 to August 1853. It was originally published in 20 monthly installments between March 1852 and September 1853 and is considered to be one of his best...
    • Venus, Mr.

    • Venus, Mr.

    • He is a haggard melancholy Frenchman with a sallow face and weak eyes. He owns a taxidermist shop where he works as a taxidermist and practitioner in bones. He collaborates with Silas Wegg to blackmail Noddy Boffin, but informs Mr. Boffin of the...

    • Our Mutual Friend

    • Our Mutual Friend, Dickens' last novel, addresses the issues of money, social class, and human values. John Harmon, heir to his father's fortune made as a dust collector, pretends to be dead in order to find out what people thought about him. He...
    • Vengeance, The

    • Vengeance, The

    • The Vengeance is a companion of Madame Defarge and her chief associate among the women revolutionaries. Vengeance is a nickname for this person

    • Tale of Two Cities, A

    • A Tale of Two Cities is a historical novel written by Charles Dickens in 1859. Through the fate of several main characters, the story tells about the life of people living in London and Paris before and during the French Revolution. In 1775, Dr....
    • Veneering, Mrs. Anastasia

    • Veneering, Mrs. Anastasia

    • The wife of Hamilton Veneering, she has a fair complexion with an aquiline nose. She is beautiful and very enthusiastic. She hosts many society parties and has a new baby

    • Our Mutual Friend

    • Our Mutual Friend, Dickens' last novel, addresses the issues of money, social class, and human values. John Harmon, heir to his father's fortune made as a dust collector, pretends to be dead in order to find out what people thought about him. He...
    • Veneering, Mr. Hamilton, M.P.

    • Veneering, Mr. Hamilton, M.P.

    • A newly rich man, he hosts dinner parties in which he invites people in society. He is forty years old with wavy hair and a stocky build. He becomes a member of parliament by buying the seat in a corrupt borough

    • Our Mutual Friend

    • Our Mutual Friend, Dickens' last novel, addresses the issues of money, social class, and human values. John Harmon, heir to his father's fortune made as a dust collector, pretends to be dead in order to find out what people thought about him. He...
    • Veck, Toby

    • Veck, Toby

    • He was a small, weak, poor man who was over sixty years of age. He earned his living as a ticket porter, a man who delivered messages. He trotted everywhere he went. He had a beautiful daughter named Meg. He was kind to others

    • Chimes, The

    • The Chimes, written in Genoa, Italy, is the second of Dickens' Christmas stories in which he attempts to convince the upper classes to have compassion for the poor. Taking place on New Year's Eve, a poor man named Trotty begins to despair about...
    • Veck, Toby

    • Veck, Toby

    • He was a small, weak, poor man who was over sixty years of age. He earned his living as a ticket porter, a man who delivered messages. He trotted everywhere he went. He had a beautiful daughter named Meg. He was kind to others

    • Chimes, The

    • Written in Genoa, Italy, The Chimes is the second of Dickens' Christmas stories in which he attempts to convince the upper classes to have compassion for the poor. Taking place on New Year's Eve, a poor man named Trotty begins to despair about his...
    • Varden, Gabriel

    • Varden, Gabriel

    • Dolly's father, Gabriel Varden, is an honest locksmith. He owns a shop named the Golden Key. As a friend of Barnaby's mother, he helps clear Barnaby's name

    • Barnaby Rudge

    • Barnaby Rudge is the fifth novel which was begun in 1839 and finished in 1841. It is also the first of Dickens's two historical novels. This novel is based on the anti-Catholic riots - the Gordon Riots - instigated by Lord George Gordon in 1780,...
    • Unknown man

    • Unknown man

    • This is a male character in the novel

    • Tale of Two Cities, A

    • A Tale of Two Cities is a historical novel written by Charles Dickens in 1859. Through the fate of several main characters, the story tells about the life of people living in London and Paris before and during the French Revolution. In 1775, Dr....
    • Twist, Oliver

    • Twist, Oliver

    • Oliver Twist is a young man who was born in the parish workhouse and grew up as an orphan in there. He is apprenticed to work for an undertaker but runs away after being treated unfairly. He then falls into bad company while living on the streets...

    • Oliver Twist

    • Oliver Twist, or The Parish Boy's Progress, is the second novel written by Charles Dickens. The story is about the life of an orphan boy named Oliver Twist. His mother dies giving birth to him and his father is unknown so Oliver lives a miserable...
    • Twemlow, Mr.

    • Twemlow, Mr.

    • He is a middle-aged bachelor who lives alone in a small apartment over a livery stable. He always wears a collar and cravat. He is a friend of the Veneerings and is believed to have many influential friends. He had been in love with a woman who...

    • Our Mutual Friend

    • Our Mutual Friend, Dickens' last novel, addresses the issues of money, social class, and human values. John Harmon, heir to his father's fortune made as a dust collector, pretends to be dead in order to find out what people thought about him. He...
    • Turveydrop, Mr.

    • Turveydrop, Mr.

    • Mr. Turveydrop owns a dancing academy and agrees to the marriage of his son Prince to Caddy

    • Bleak House

    • Bleak House was the ninth novel written by Charles Dickens. He worked on it from November 1851 to August 1853. It was originally published in 20 monthly installments between March 1852 and September 1853 and is considered to be one of his best...
    • Turveydrop, Mr.

    • Turveydrop, Mr.

    • Mr. Turveydrop owns a dancing academy and agrees to the marriage of his son Prince to Caddy

    • Bleak House

    • Bleak House was the ninth novel written by Charles Dickens. He worked on it from November 1851 to August 1853. It was originally published in 20 monthly installments between March 1852 and September 1853 and is considered to be one of his best...
    • Tupman, Tracy

    • Tupman, Tracy

    • Member of Pickwick Club. "The too susceptible Tupman who, to the wisdom and experience of maturer years, superadded the enthusiasm and ardour of a boy, in the most interesting and pardonable of human weaknesses -love. Time and feeding had...

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • A series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Tupman, Tracy

    • Tupman, Tracy

    • Member of Pickwick Club. The too susceptible Tupman who, to the wisdom and experience of maturer years, superadded the enthusiasm and ardour of a boy, in the most interesting and pardonable of human weaknesses love. Time and feeding had expanded...

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • Series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Tungay

    • Tungay

    • The peg-legged assistant of headmaster Creakle at David's school, Salem House. He lost his leg working for Creakle in the hops business

    • David Copperfield

    • David Copperfield is the partly autobiographical story of the trials of a boy born at the Rookery, Blunderstone. His father dies before he is born, and his mother marries Mr. Murdstone, who is cruel to the boy. When she dies, he is sent to work in...
    • Tulkinghorn, Mr.

    • Tulkinghorn, Mr.

    • Mr. Tulkinghorn is an attorney-at-law and solicitor of the High Court of Chancery. He is also a legal adviser to Sir Leicester Dedlock and discovers the facts about Lady Dedlock's scandalous past. He tells Lady Dedlock what he has learned and...

    • Bleak House

    • Bleak House was the ninth novel written by Charles Dickens. He worked on it from November 1851 to August 1853. It was originally published in 20 monthly installments between March 1852 and September 1853 and is considered to be one of his best...
    • Tulkinghorn, Mr.

    • Tulkinghorn, Mr.

    • Mr. Tulkinghorn is an attorney-at-law and solicitor of the High Court of Chancery. He is also a legal advisor to Sir Leicester Dedlock and discovers the facts about Lady Dedlock's scandalous past. He tells Lady Dedlock what he has learned and...

    • Bleak House

    • Bleak House was the ninth novel written by Charles Dickens. He worked on it from November 1851 to August 1853. It was originally published in 20 monthly installments between March 1852 and September 1853 and is considered to be one of his best...
    • Tuggs, Joseph

    • Tuggs, Joseph

    • A London grocer who was left a fortune. "Once upon a time there dwelt in a narrow street, on the Surrey side of the water, within three minutes' walk of Old London Bridge, Mr. Joseph Tuggs, a little dark-faced man, with shiny hair, twinkling...

    • Tuggses at Ramsgate, The

    • A series of papers of a humorous character dealing with life and scenes, chiefly in London, at the time of publication and the earlier part of the nineteenth century
    • Tugby

    • Tugby

    • The former porter of Sir Joseph Bowley, he had married the former Mrs. Chickenstalker, who operated a grocery store. He was an older man, suffering from the snuffles. He was overweight and had great difficulty breathing

    • Chimes, The

    • The Chimes, written in Genoa, Italy, is the second of Dickens' Christmas stories in which he attempts to convince the upper classes to have compassion for the poor. Taking place on New Year's Eve, a poor man named Trotty begins to despair about...
    • Tuckle Blazes, Monsieur

    • Tuckle Blazes, Monsieur
    •  

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • A series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Tuckle Blazes, Monsieur

    • Tuckle Blazes, Monsieur

    • Chairman at the Bath Footmen's Swarry. "A stoutish gentleman, in a bright crimson coat with long tails, vividly red breeches, and a cocked hat"

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • Series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Trotwood, Miss Betsy

    • Trotwood, Miss Betsy

    • David's great aunt in Dover, whom he lives with after he flees Murdstone and Grinby's warehouse. She helps David and later lives with him in London when she loses her fortune

    • David Copperfield

    • David Copperfield is the partly autobiographical story of the trials of a boy born at the Rookery, Blunderstone. His father dies before he is born, and his mother marries Mr. Murdstone, who is cruel to the boy. When she dies, he is sent to work in...
    • Trotter, Job

    • Trotter, Job

    • The accomplice of Jingle, who posed as his valet. "A young fellow in mulberry-coloured livery"

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • A series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Trotter, Job

    • Trotter, Job

    • Accomplice of Jingle, who posed as his valet. A young fellow in mulberry-coloured livery

    • Pickwick Papers, The

    • Series of adventures of Mr. Samuel Pickwick and three friends, who travel around the environs of London
    • Trent, Nell

    • Trent, Nell

    • Little Nell is the novel's main character. Portrayed as infallibly good and angelic, she is devoted to her grandfather as he is to her. She leads her grandfather on their journey to save them from misery, and is protective of him on their...

    • Old Curiosity Shop, The

    • The Old Curiosity Shop is Dickens's fourth novel, and one of two novels Dickens wrote for the short-lived magazine Master Humphrey's Clock, begun in March 1840 and finished in January 1941. It was published as a separate book in 1841. The novel...
    • Traddles, Tommy

    • Traddles, Tommy

    • A schoolmate of David and Steerforth at Salem House. As David's best friend, he serves as best man at David's wedding to Dora Spenlow. He becomes a lawyer and marries Sophy Crewler

    • David Copperfield

    • David Copperfield is the partly autobiographical story of the trials of a boy born at the Rookery, Blunderstone. His father dies before he is born, and his mother marries Mr. Murdstone, who is cruel to the boy. When she dies, he is sent to work in...
    • Tox, Miss

    • Tox, Miss

    • Friend of Paul Dombey's sister, Mrs. Chick. Dombey breaks her heart by marrying Edith Granger after his first wife dies

    • Dombey and Son

    • First published as a 20 part monthly serial, Dombey and Son is the tale of Paul Dombey, a wealthy shipping merchant who desires a son. His wife dies giving birth to this son, Paul the Younger, who Dombey focuses all his affection on at the expense...
Coming soon

This content is not yet available. Please check back.

 

QuickView

Display a larger image and more item information when the pointer pauses over a thumbnail
on off
 

Layout options:

Thumbnail with title
Grid with smaller thumbnails and more detail
Select the collections to add or remove from your search
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
 
OK
Select the collections to add or remove from your search
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
 
OK