Dickens museum evokes author's early success
By Ruby Tuke
LONDON (Reuters Life!) - At his writing desk in a central London townhouse the young Charles Dickens penned some of the novels that made this name as an author and set him on the path of becoming an eminent Victorian man of letters.
For the 2 years that Dickens resided at number 48 Doughty Street he wrote "Oliver Twist", "Nicholas Nickleby" and "The Pickwick Papers".
Now a museum that attracts fans and scholars of Dickens from around the world, the house in Holborn is host to treasures from his 1837-1839 tenure. It was here that he crafted the fictional lives of street urchins, villains and men of ambition whose adventures and mishaps delighted his contemporaries while bringing him wealth and fame.
Museum director Andrew Xavier told Reuters it was while living in the house with his wife and her sister that the young novelist really began his rise to great literary prominence.
"This house is the one he became famous in," Xavier said, adding it was during his time here that Dickens' fame allowed him to climb the ranks of Victorian society from relative obscurity to celebrated author.
The four-storey brick townhouse attracts about 26,000 visitors a year, from the casual fan to the determined academic bent on research.
The museum was almost destroyed before it ever even began. Threatened with the possibility of demolition in the 1920s, The Dickens Fellowship raised the finances to buy the property.
The museum is carefully furnished to resemble how it might have looked when Dickens graced its winding stairways. Continued...



