+ ~ -
 

Results 1 - 7 of 7 Article Index

    A?BCDEFGHIJKLMNOPRSTUVWY
Article icon.

Idiots

4/6/1853

Read me now! Export to PDF, including full article record, author information, and annotation.
Authors Charles Dickens
W[illiam] H[enry] Wills
Genres Prose: Leading Article i
Prose: Report i
Subjects Medical care; Nursing; Hospitals; Hospital Care; Surgery; Medicine; Physicians
People with Disabilities; Human Body—Social Aspects; Human Bodies in Literature
Psychology; Psychiatry; Mental Health; Mind-Body Relations (Metaphysics)
Attachments: 0 · Links: 0 · Hits: 2017

Dickens probably wrote the following portions of 'Idiots': the opening paragraph; from 'To this establishment' (p. 316) to the conclusion.
In addition, Dickens seems to have added touches elsewhere - for example, the interjection beginning '- whose name has a peculiar attraction' (p. 314). For a discussion of the Dickens-Wills attributions, see note to 'Valentine's Day at the Post-Office'.
'Idiots' grew out of a visit to Park House Asylum, Highgate. Park House and its sister institution, Essex Hall Asylum, near Colchester, were closely associated with Dickens' friend, Dr. John Conolly (1794-1866), a pioneer in the humane treatment of the insane. Dickens and Wills planned the visit and the article with a view to helping these new institutions. In an unpublished letter to Wills (14 April 1853), now in the Huntington Library, Dickens discussed with Wills the arrangements then being concluded with Conolly for visits to Highgate and Colchester. The plan was to tour Highgate (probably on 21 April) and to decide on the basis of that visit whether it would be advisable to tour Colchester as well. Apparently the latter visit was not deemed necessary.
The treatment of the insane, like the treatment of the blind, the deaf, the poor, the sick, and the criminal, always interested Dickens. He often visited insane asylums, and his writings - from Nicholas Nickleby (1838-1839) to Little Dorrit (1855-1857), and from American Notes (1842) to All the Year Round (1859-1870) - attest to his lifelong interest in the nature and treatment of insanity. For another article by Dickens and Wills on an institution for the mentally ill, see 'A Curious Dance Round a Curious Tree'.

Harry Stone; © Bloomington and Indiana University Press, 1968. DJO gratefully acknowledges permission to reproduce this material.

Article icon.
Read me now! Export to PDF, including full article record, author information, and annotation.
Author William Moy Thomas
Genre Prose: Short Fiction i
Subjects Crime; Criminals; Punishment; Capital Punishment; Prisons; Penal Transportation; Penal Colonies
Literature; Writing; Authorship; Reading; Books; Poetry; Storytelling; Letter Writing
Attachments: 0 · Links: 0 · Hits: 1429

Article icon.

House-Tops

4/6/1853

Read me now! Export to PDF, including full article record, author information, and annotation.
Author George Dodd
Genre Prose: Essay i
Subject Architecture; Building; Housing; Property; Landlord and Tenant;
Attachments: 0 · Links: 0 · Hits: 1510

Article icon.
Read me now! Export to PDF, including full article record, author information, and annotation.
Author William Allingham
Genre Poetry: Lyric i
Subject Nature; Nature (Aesthetics); Nature in Literature; Landscapes
Attachments: 0 · Links: 0 · Hits: 1809

Article icon.

Holiday Times

4/6/1853

Read me now! Export to PDF, including full article record, author information, and annotation.
Author Edmund Saul Dixon
Genre Prose: Essay i
Subjects Christmas; New Year; Holidays and Seasonal Celebrations
France—Social Life and Customs
Great Britain—Social Life and Customs
National Characteristics; Nationalism
Attachments: 0 · Links: 0 · Hits: 1320

Article icon.
Read me now! Export to PDF, including full article record, author information, and annotation.
Author Charles Dickens
Genre Prose: History i
Subject Great Britain—History
Attachments: 0 · Links: 0 · Hits: 1452

Compiled in large part from Thomas Keightley, The History of England, and from George L. Craik and Charles MacFarlane, The Pictorial History of England.

Article icon.

Advertisements

4/6/1853

Read me now!
Genre Advertisement(s) i
Subjects Literature; Writing; Authorship; Reading; Books; Poetry; Storytelling; Letter Writing
Newspapers; Periodicals; Journalism
Attachments: 0 · Links: 0 · Hits: 1312
Advertisement for A Child's History of England

Who's Online

We have 472 guests and 2 robots online.