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Nichols - Illustrations to Dickens
  • All fields: between (and)
  • Date of Drawing: 1887-1899
(20 results)



Display: 50

    • Jo

    • Jo

    • Jo works as a crossing sweeper which was a person who would sweep a path ahead of people crossing dirty urban streets in exchange for a gratuity. Jo is the only mourner for Captain Hawdon and he later shows Lady Dedlock the graveyard where Captain...

    • 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...
    • Jobling, Tony

    • Jobling, Tony

    • Tony Jobling is a law writer for Mr. Snagsby and a close friend of Guppy

    • 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...
    • Chadband, the Reverend Mr.

    • Chadband, the Reverend Mr.

    • Reverend Mr. Chadband is a hypocritical clergyman of no particular denomination. He marries Mrs. Rachael who was Esther Summerson's nurse and becomes involved in a scheme, along with his wife and Bart Smallweed, to extort money from Sir Leicester...

    • 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...
    • Flite, Miss

    • Flite, Miss

    • Miss Flite is a slightly crazy old lady who regularly attends court of Chancery waiting to receive a favorable judgment for a case that may or may not exist

    • 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...
    • Bucket, Inspector

    • Bucket, Inspector

    • Inspector Bucket is a middle-aged police detective who is active in a number of different investigations. He is employed by Mr. Tulkinghorn and works to arrest his murderer. He is later employed by Sir Dedlock and is very helpful in wrapping up...

    • 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...
    • Krook, Mr.

    • Krook, Mr.

    • Mr. Krook is a rag and bottle merchant who also collects papers. He is landlord of the house where Miss Flite and Nemo (Captain Hawdon) live and where Nemo dies. Mr. Krook dies from a case of spontaneous human combustion. The key to resolving...

    • 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...
    • Guster

    • Guster

    • Guster is a young woman in her early 20s who comes from a workhouse and is now working as a servant in the Snagsby home. Her actual christened name is thought to be Augusta

    • 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...
    • Boythorn, Mr. Lawrence

    • Boythorn, Mr. Lawrence

    • Mr. Lawrence Boythorn is an elderly gentleman who is very fond of his pet canary. He has been good friends with Mr. Jarndyce for 45 years since they were schoolboys. He is engaged in a legal battle with his neighbor Sir Leicester Dedlock over a...

    • 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...
    • Kenge, Mr. ""Conversation""

    • Kenge, Mr. ""Conversation""

    • Mr. Kenge is a solicitor in the Kenge and Carboy law firm. He is Mr. Jarndyce's lawyer and arranged his adoption of Esther Summerson for him

    • 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...
    • Guppy, Mr. William

    • Guppy, Mr. William

    • William Guppy is a young clerk in the Kenge and Carboy law firm. He lives with his mother and wants to marry Esther Summerson but she rejects him. He notices a resemblance between Esther and Lady Dedlock and decides to investigate as there is...

    • 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...
    • Dedlock, Sir Leicester

    • Dedlock, Sir Leicester

    • Sir Leicester Dedlock comes from a very old, respected family in the community and has the title of Baronet. He is married to a wife 20 years his junior and is so shocked by his wife's scandalous past that he has a very debilitating stroke when he...

    • 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...
    • Snagsby, Mr.

    • Snagsby, Mr.

    • Mr. Snagsby is a timid man with a bossy wife. He works as a law-stationer in Cooks Court of Cursitor Street and employs Captain Hawdon (called Nemo to disguise his true identity) as a law-writer. He is also kind to the cross-sweeper boy named...

    • 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...
    • Barkis

    • Barkis

    • Carrier between Blunderstone and Yarmouth who marries Clara Peggotty

    • 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...
    • Dorrit, Mr. Wm.

    • Dorrit, Mr. Wm.

    • Amy Dorrit's father, who lives in Marshalsea debtor's prison. He leaves the prison with his daughters after he inherits an estate

    • Little Dorrit

    • Little Dorrit was originally published in 20 parts in 19 monthly installments, with the last two parts published in a double installment. William Dorrit, father of the title character, Amy, has been sent to Marshalsea debtor's prison in London,...
    • Casby, Mr. Christ.

    • Casby, Mr. Christ.

    • Landlord of Bleeding Heart Yard, father of Flora Finching. Using his rent-collector Pancks as a cover, he cruelly gouges his tenants

    • Little Dorrit

    • Little Dorrit was originally published in 20 parts in 19 monthly installments, with the last two parts published in a double installment. William Dorrit, father of the title character, Amy, has been sent to Marshalsea debtor's prison in London,...
    • Bung, Mr.

    • Bung, Mr.

    • Formerly a broker's man, afterwards beadle of the parish. "The life of this gentleman has been one of a very chequered description; he has undergone transitions; not from grave to gay, for he never was grave; not from lively to severe, for...

    • Broker's Man, 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
    • Marchioness, The

    • Marchioness, The

    • The Marchioness is the tiny, wretched and half-starved servant-maid hired by Sampson and Sally Brass. She knows neither her name nor her age. Dick Swiveller names her 'the Marchioness' and marries her eventually. She tells Dick of the conversation...

    • 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...
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