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Nichols - Illustrations to Dickens
  • All fields: high (and)
  • Physical Dimensions: quarto
(8 results)



Display: 50

    • 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...
    • Boffin, Mrs. Henrietta

    • Boffin, Mrs. Henrietta

    • The wife of Mr. Boffin, she is cheerful and kind, with a broad figure. She loves fashion and high society. She convinces her husband to adopt Bella Wilfer, after the supposed death of John Harmon, and to adopt an orphan boy whom they plan to...

    • 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...
    • Boldwig, Captain

    • Boldwig, Captain

    • A neighbour of Sir Geoffrey Manning. An imperious gentleman with high ideals regarding the sacred nature of land and game. "Captain Boldwig was a little fierce man, in a stiff black neckerchief, and blue surtout. Captain Boldwig's wife's...

    • Pickwick Papers, The

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

    • Boundery, Josiah

    • Banker and manufacturer of Coketown who prided himself on having risen from the gutter, had neither refinement of mind nor manners, and who married Louisa Gradgrind. "He was a rich man, banker, manufacturer, merchant, and what not, a big loud...

    • Hard Times

    • A satire on Utilitarianism set in a provincial industrial town, portraying the dreariness of life for industrial workers, the hopelessness of decent people trapped in a failed marriage, and the fallacy of mechanical theories of human nature
    • Dumps, Nicodemus

    • Dumps, Nicodemus

    • Bachelor-uncle of Mr. Charles Kitterbell, and godfather to his child. "Mr. Nicodemus Dumps, or as his acquaintance called him, 'Long Dumps', was a bachelor; six feet high, and fifty years old; cross, cadaverous, odd, and ill-natured. He was...

    • Bloomsbury Christening, 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
    • Rogers, Mr.

    • Rogers, Mr.

    • A bar parlour orator. "A stoutish man of about forty, whose short stiff black hair curled closely round a broad high forehead, and a face to which something besides water and exercise had communicated a rather inflamed appearance"

    • Parlour Orator, 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
    • Folair, Mr.

    • Folair, Mr.

    • He is an actor and pantomimist with the Crummles theatre troupe. He wears a round hat with a high crown and a threadbare Newmarket coat. He often carries a dress cane with a glass handle. He delights in mischief and jokes. He always states his...

    • Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby, The

    • Nicholas Nickleby, Dickens' third novel, is about social injustice in England. Nicholas Nickleby's father dies and the family, Nicholas, sister Kate, and their mother, are forced to move to London to ask for assistance from their Uncle Ralph...
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