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قراءة كتاب The Letters of Charles Dickens Vol. 2, 1857-1870
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The Letters of Charles Dickens Vol. 2, 1857-1870
THE LETTERS
OF
THE LETTERS
OF
CHARLES DICKENS.
EDITED BY
HIS SISTER-IN-LAW AND HIS ELDEST DAUGHTER.
In Two Volumes.
VOL. II.
1857 to 1870.
London:
CHAPMAN AND HALL, 193, PICCADILLY.
1880.
[The Right of Translation is Reserved.]
CRYSTAL PALACE PRESS.
ERRATA.
VOL. II.
Page | 84, | line | 35. | For "South Kensington Museum," read "the South Kensington Museum." |
" | 108, | line | 26. | For "frequent contributor," read "a frequent contributor." |
" | 113, | lines | 6, 7. | For "great remonstrance," read "Great Remonstrance." |
" | 130, | line | 10. | For "after," read "afore." |
" | 160, | " | 32. | For "a head," read "ahead." |
" | 247, | " | 12. | For "Shea," read "Shoe." |
" | 292, | " | 12. | For "Mabel's progress," read "Mabel's Progress." |
Book II.—Continued.
THE
LETTERS OF CHARLES DICKENS.
1857.
NARRATIVE.
In July, his second son, Walter Landor, went to India as a cadet in the "Company's service," from which he was afterwards transferred to the 42nd Royal Highlanders. His father and his elder brother went to see him off, to Southampton. From this place Charles Dickens writes to Mr. Edmund Yates, a young man in whom he had been interested from his boyhood, both for the sake of his parents and for his own sake, and for whom he had always an affectionate regard.
In September he made a short tour in the North of England, with Mr. Wilkie Collins, out of which arose the "Lazy Tour of Two Idle Apprentices," written by them jointly, and published in "Household Words." Some letters to his sister-in-law during this expedition are given here, parts of which (as is the case with many letters to his eldest daughter and his sister-in-law) have been published in Mr. Forster's book.
The letters which follow are almost all on the various subjects mentioned in our notes, and need little explanation.
His letter to Mr. Procter makes allusion to a legacy lately left to that friend.
The letters to Mr. Dilke, the original and much-respected editor of "The Athenæum," and to Mr. Forster, on the subject of the "Literary Fund," refer, as the letters indicate, to a battle which they were carrying on together with that institution.
A letter to Mr. Frank Stone is an instance of his kind, patient, and judicious criticism of a young writer, and the letter which follows it shows how thoroughly it was understood and how perfectly appreciated by the authoress of the "Notes" referred to. Another instance of the same kind criticism is given in a second letter this year to Mr. Edmund Yates.
Tavistock House, January 2nd, 1857.
I have to thank you for a delightful book, which has given me unusual pleasure. My delight in it has been a little dashed by certain farewell verses, but I have