The Man Who Invented Christmas (22 page)

When Bradbury and Evans went to court, claiming exclusive rights to the title of the magazine, Dickens countered by simply dissolving
Household Words
and announcing the formation of a successor,
All the Year Round.
As if to prove the adage that there is no such thing as bad publicity, sales of the new magazine soared immediately above 100,000 copies; for the holiday numbers, sales rose to 300,000 and more, though it would not sustain those rates forever.

The 1850s were in fact an up-and-down period for Dickens. He followed
David Copper
fi
eld
with
Bleak House
(1852–53), an ambitious novel that received mixed reviews in its day (Forster faulted it for its didactic approach toward social institutions, including the chancery courts), but which modern critics have hailed as his masterpiece. Despite its rather downbeat story line and the disdain of many contemporary critics,
Bleak House
nonetheless proved popular, with its sales averaging 34,000 per issue, well up from those for
David Copper
fi
eld.
As a result, Dickens realized a profit of more than £11,000, sending him into previously uncharted financial realms for a writer. Robert C. Patten, a biographer who has meticulously tallied the economics of Dickens’s career, says that
Bleak House
made the author “the literary Croesus” of his time.

In 1854 Dickens began the serial publication of
Hard Times
as part of a strategy to boost the suddenly sagging sales of
Household Words.
It was the first time Dickens had published a novel in weekly rather than monthly installments since the days of
Barnaby Rudge,
and while he lamented the tight deadlines and strictures of space, the strategy worked insofar as
Household Words
was concerned. Published in twenty weekly installments between April 1 and August 12 of 1854, the novel raised the net profits of the magazine by 237 percent. Critics of the day found the book all but impossible to read, however, and indeed the characters in the book are little more than ciphers for Dickens’s scathing commentary on an industrialized society. By this time the author was in his forties, and as
Hard Times
seemed to make clear, something of his youthful optimism had burned away, and his hopeful stance replaced by a decidedly critical one.

In late 1855 Dickens began the monthly publication of
Little Dorrit,
his eleventh novel, under the terms of a new contract with Bradbury and Evans. The eight-year term of their original agreement having expired, Dickens negotiated a new contract that reduced the publishers’ share of profits slightly and gave Dickens the opportunity to walk away whenever he chose. Though once again the critics found the rise of the Dorrit family from abject poverty to wealth overly didactic, with the sixth installment featuring the family’s incarceration in the Marshalsea debtors’ prison, monthly sales of the book rose as high as 40,000 copies per month. “It is a brilliant triumph,” Dickens proclaimed to his publishers, and in the preface to the collected edition he wrote, “I have never had so many readers.”

Nor had he ever had so many admirers, it would seem. In the fallow period that followed the completion of
Little Dorrit
in June of 1857, Dickens busied himself with the production of several benefit performances of a play by his friend Wilkie Collins,
The Frozen Deep,
to aid the family of a writer friend, Douglas Jerrold, who had died unexpectedly. Dickens himself took the part of a noble Arctic explorer who dies while attempting to save the life of a rival. Several preliminary presentations, including a command performance before the queen, had produced the lachrymose effects on the audience that always signaled success to Dickens. But when they were booked into the vast new Free Trade Hall in Manchester, he realized that his troupe of amateurs would need to be bolstered by professionals who could project to the far reaches of the theater.

Thus began, with the hiring of the Ternan family, including mother Frances and her three comely daughters, Fanny, Maria, and Ellen, the last momentous chapter of Dickens’s life. The final scene of the play, in which the lovely Maria Ternan dissolved into unscripted tears as she held the dying Dickens in her arms, “electrified” the audience in Manchester, according to one critic. And while the reviewer did not note the sparks that also flew between youngest sister Ellen Ternan and Mr. Dickens during the performance—or the coincidence that his life was once again taking a momentous turn upon a Manchester stage—talk of Dickens and “Nelly” Ternan was soon the gossip of London literary society.

The story of the affair between Dickens and Miss Ternan is a difficult one to trace, owing largely to the fact that the author, who until that moment had lived his life in full public view, began thereafter an abrupt turnabout, one of the most marked in the history of celebrity. Formerly, Dickens’s personal and private lives had been virtually indistinguishable, and his conduct the very emblem of the Fezziwigian hail-fellow-well-met, more-the-merrier way of life. But after his introduction to Miss Ternan, and his subsequent divorce from Catherine, Dickens simply slammed the door on his private life, a fact that has given modern biographers no end of grief.

The story has its sad and tawdry aspect and is perhaps a bit familiar to the jaded modern reader: noted celebrity fathers several children to devoted wife, and then, finding her turned unaccountably bovine and dull, runs off with a beautiful wisp of an actress less than half his age (Ellen Ternan was all of eighteen when they met, he forty-five). One surmises, however, that from Dickens’s point of view—and at his age—it may have seemed that he had miraculously been given a second chance at the sort of rapture he was denied in his youth, when Maria Beadnell rejected him for better prospects.

He had previously written on this subject to Forster, lamenting in 1855 that passion was the “one happiness” he had missed out on in life. In a twist of fate that might be termed Dickensian, a few weeks after he had written to Forster, he received a letter from the former Miss Beadnell, who wanted to let him know that she had been following his career these many years, and was quite proud of what he had accomplished.

She also told Dickens that she was married, of course, and that she was also “toothless, fat, old and ugly.” Such caveats seemed like a coquette’s protests to Dickens, however, and he persisted in his entreaties until Miss Beadnell, now Mrs. Winter, agreed to bring her husband (a sawmill manager) along to lunch, provided Dickens would escort his wife as well.

At that meeting, it turned out that Mrs. Winter was as accurate as a Victorian novelist in her self-description, and Dickens walked away from the encounter perfectly dazed by the loss of the dream he had borne within him for more than twenty years. No fairy-tale prince who’d dragged himself up a hundred feet of princess hair only to find a hag’s face beaming at him could have been more disheartened.

In any case, the fact that the image of the ineffable Miss Beadnell had vanished forever did not relieve Dickens of his sense that he had made a terrible mistake a long time ago. In September 1857, Dickens would write to Forster, “Poor Catherine and I are not made for each other, and there is no help for it…. She is exactly what you know, in the way of being amiable and complying; but we are strangely ill-assorted for the bond that lays between us.” Soon thereafter, Dickens moved his bed into his dressing room and hired a carpenter to close the door that connected it to Catherine’s chambers with a set of shelves.

Whether or not Dickens and Ellen Ternan ever became lovers is a topic that fuels entire volumes to this day, but—beyond such circumstantial evidence as receipts for jewelry and other gifts sent by him to her, and occasional public sightings of the two together, and the fact that Dickens left Ternan £1,000 in his will—inquiring minds must eternally wait in their quest to know. It can be stated, however, that in the year following his meeting Ellen Ternan, Dickens did leave Catherine, and provide his ex-wife with a home and a yearly stipend of £600, and with access to their children as she chose.

Following his divorce, and the break with Bradbury and Evans, and the reconfiguring of his magazine into
All the Year Round,
Dickens entered into a new relationship with his old publishers Chapman and Hall (perhaps encouraged by the fact that Edward Chapman—one of the original partners who had considered docking Dickens £50 from his monthly draw—had been bought out by his cousin Frederic). The first undertaking in his new business was the weekly serialization of
A Tale of Two Cities
in
All the Year Round,
beginning in April of 1859, followed by its publication in volume form by Chapman and Hall in December. Weekly sales of the rather humorless saga, set against the backdrop of the French Revolution, exceeded 100,000 copies for many issues, but critical opinion of Dickens’s strength as a historical novelist was divided, then as now. It remains one of Dickens’s most popular works, even if one wonders whether its brevity and the resultant assignment to schoolchildren has something to do with that. If it has no other distinction, its immortal first line, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times,” likely rivals Bulwer-Lytton’s “dark and stormy night” as the best known in the language.

Dickens published
Great Expectations,
his thirteenth novel, in weekly installments of
All the Year Round
from December 1860 to August 1861; these also appeared more or less simultaneously in
Harper’s Weekly
in the United States, from whom the author—much to his satisfaction—had managed to negotiate a £1,000 licensing fee. The complicated story of Pip’s encounters with Miss Havisham and his rise from urchin to successful businessman constitutes perhaps the best-rounded of Dickens’s works in its combination of narrative sweep, juggling of plot, complex characterization, and social commentary. Certainly it was popular in its day, selling above 100,000 copies of each number. The book also spawned what is arguably the most accomplished film version of Dickens to date, the 1946 adaptation directed by David Lean, starring John Mills, Alec Guinness, and Jean Simmons. Of that adaptation, James Agee said it was “almost never less than graceful, tasteful and intelligent, and some of it better than that.”

Dickens’s last completed novel,
Our Mutual Friend,
was written between May 1864 and November 1865, and though the composition of it exasperated him, Dickens ultimately wove its materials—the chase of a fortune by a complexly intertwined group of Londoners—into what is often called his most expertly plotted work. Though sales for the first installment surpassed 30,000, the numbers had dropped to just under 20,000 by the end of its run, but Dickens was not particularly daunted. He had his work on the magazine to distract him, and there is little doubt that he continued a quite active relationship with Ellen Ternan as well.

Over the ten years prior to the publication of
Our Mutual Friend,
Dickens had also devoted more and more time to the avocation of public reading, an activity that led him back to his “little
Carol.
” In 1854, as he took a rest from his labors on
Hard Times,
Dickens agreed to make a benefit appearance in Birmingham on behalf of the cause of the education of workingmen, not unlike that appearance he had agreed to in Manchester so many years before. As he pondered just what to do with his time on stage, it occurred to Dickens that—it being December—he might as well read from
A Christmas Carol.
He had practiced such a thing on his friends plenty of times in the past, after all, and if he could bring a sophisticated group such as that to tears, why not take his act to provincial Birmingham?

It proved to be an inspired decision. Dickens read three nights in Birmingham, and on the last evening more than 2,000 paid their sixpence to hear and be blessed by Tiny Tim, every one. Dickens, who had never lost his love of the theater, relished every moment of it, and in 1855 he read
A Christmas Carol
at charitable events in London, Reading, Sherboune, and Bradford, where 3,700 turned out. As the author Jane Smiley notes in her brief biography of Dickens, the intoxicating effect of eliciting tears while acting in a play and reciting the words of another is one thing, but to see some 4,000 people bursting simultaneously into sobs as you read your own words to them is something else again. And as he discovered, there was no shortage of persons willing to pay good money for the experience.

It was not long, then, before Dickens had begun to give public readings on a regular and commercial basis, a practice he would continue—at considerable gain—until his death. During the winter of 1867–68, in fact, he undertook a triumphant return tour of the United States, where he read in seventy-six cities, to audiences eventually totaling more than 100,000 (including Mark Twain, who wrote of taking his wife-to-be on a first date to hear Dickens perform), and earned himself £19,000 in the process.

Though he enjoyed public reading immensely and had allowed the practice to distract him from writing following the publication of
Our Mutual Friend,
Dickens was also getting along in years, and his health—he was plagued now by gout and high blood pressure—had generally begun to fail. The demands of touring and performing exhausted him, and often even ordinary colds would lay him up for days. In April of 1869, following another serious bout of illness, his doctors ordered him to put an end to the readings to which he gave himself so eagerly, but which taxed him in equal measure.

Somewhat reluctantly, he turned away from those dramatic renditions of the murder scene in
Oliver Twist
and the intonations of Marley frightening Scrooge near to death, and back to the lonely work of writing at his desk. He struggled along through the late months of 1869 at what he had settled on as
The Mystery of Edwin Drood,
then took time off—against the vehement opposition of his doctors—for a series of a dozen readings from January to mid-March of 1870.

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