CHARLES DICKENS
... CHARLES DICKENS. Mr. Blanchard Jerrold contributes an article on the late Charles Dickens to the new number of the Gentlemen's Magazine. The following are extracts : Slow to adopt a cause, Charles Dickens was ...
... CHARLES DICKENS. Mr. Blanchard Jerrold contributes an article on the late Charles Dickens to the new number of the Gentlemen's Magazine. The following are extracts : Slow to adopt a cause, Charles Dickens was ...
... letter introducing it by Hablot Knight Browne, better known (by how many millions ?) as Phiz, the illustrator of Charles Dickens and Charles Lever, and ever so many other less celebrated contemporaries in the world of light literature. The most portentous ...
... lURT—This Day. EXTENSIVE ROBBERY BY A FOREIGNER, The Common Sergeant said the offence to which the pri senor had pleaded guilty was a serious ore, calculated no only to cause great loss to travellers, but affecting the cha racier of the house at which ...
... E I CHA A ., . , 4 A. , . 4 • -V , -,/, PRICE 5d Byng's Dickens Lord Eglinton's Aristides Lord Chesterfield's c by Jereed, out of Progress, and c Parthian—Mr. Mostyn's c by Velocipede, out of Bird-lime, and c by Touchstone, out of Queen of Trumps—Mr. ...
... run up from £1,400 to £3,550, at which price it was knocked down to Mr. Arthur Smith, who was the representative of Mr. Charles Dickens. AN INSULT TO SCOTLAND.—The following letter explains itself :—London, May s—Sir : I have received your letter containing ...
... SIR CHARLES WOLSELEY IN RE PLY To THE EDITOR OF THE SUN, SlR,—The Sun of the December has been this day sent to me. •It contains an article on a certain letter I addressed to the working classes in the manufacturing districts, through the Stockport Advertiser ...
... did not wonder at, as he had on the morning after the robbery shaven off a large pair of black and bushy whiskers. W. Sampson, 83 P, said that about twenty-minutes past 4on the morning of the robbery, he saw a cab standing about 150 yards from Mr. Butler's ...
... Thames and its Tributa- Spring ries, by Chas. Mackay, Esq. Conclusion of Oliver Twist, by The Cremation of Shelley on Charles Dickens, Esq. ; with the Coast of Tuscany an illustration by George Human Life, by Mrs. Torre Cruikshank Holme. &c. &e. Richard ...
... into this robbery by two other men. The policeman in charge of the case said there had been a large quantity of lead stolen from the houses in Burdettroad, and some other men were implicated in it. The prisoner was remanded for a week. MR. DICKENS AND THE ...
... THAMES. ROBBERY BY A SOLDIER IN THE TOIVER.—IVID. Mould, a private in the Grenadier Guards, quartered in the Tower of London, was brought before Mr. Woolrych charged with stealing a gold watch and chain, value £35, and a £5 Bank of England note, the money ...
... THAMES. ROBBERY BY A SOLDIER IN THE TOWER.—WM. Mould, a private in the Grenadier Guards, quartered in the Tower of London, was brought before Mr. Woolrych charged with stealing a gold watch and chain, value £35, and a £5 Bank of England note, the money ...
... and Coltness, New, 41144. POLICE INTELLIGENCE. MARYLEBONE. Mr. Charles Dickens and Mr. Mark Lemon attended at this court, the latter for the purpose of preferring a charge of attempted robbery against Cornelius Hearne, aged 19, and the former as a witness ...