首页
登录
职称英语
London is steeped in Dickensian history. Every place he visited, every person
London is steeped in Dickensian history. Every place he visited, every person
游客
2023-12-18
26
管理
问题
London is steeped in Dickensian history. Every place he visited, every person he met, would be drawn into his imagination and reappear in a novel. There really are such places as Hanging Sword Alley in Whitefriars Street, ECl (Where Jerry Cruncher lived in A Tale of Two Cities) and Bleeding Heart Yard off Greville Street, ECl (Where the Plornish family lived in Little Dorrit); riley are just the sort of places Dickens would have visited on his frequent nighttime walks.
He first came to London as a young boy, and lived at a number of addresses throughout his life, moving as his income and his issue (he had ten children)increased. Of these homes only one remains, at 48 Doughty Street, WC1, now the Dickens House Museum (Tel:405 2127, Mon-Sat 10:00 -17:00, admission ~ 1.50) , and as good a place as any to start your tour of Dickens’s London.
The Dickens family lived here for only two years—1837 - 1839—but during this brief period, Charles Dickens first achieved great fame as a novelist, finishing Pickwick Papers, and working on Oliver Twist, Barnaby Rudge and Nicholas Nickleby. If you want a house full of atmosphere, you may be a little disappointed, for it is more a collection of Dickensiana than a recreation of a home. Don’t let this deter you, however, for this is the place to see manuscripts, first editions, letters, original drawings, as well as furniture, pictures and artifacts from different periods of his life. Just one room, the Drawing Room, has been reconstructed to look as it would have done in 1839, but elsewhere in the house you can see the grandfather lock which belonged to Moses Pickwick and gave the name to Pickwick Papers, the writing table from Gad’s Hill, Rochester, on which he wrote his last words of fiction, and the mahogany sideboard he bought in 1839.
It was in the back room on the first floor that Dickens’s sister-in-law Mary Hogarth died when she was only 17. He loved Mary deeply, probably more than his wife, her sister. The tragedy haunted him for years, and is supposed to have inspired the famous death scene of Little Nell in The Old Curiosity Shop.
If you walk through Lincoln’s Inn Fields, you will come across Portsmouth Street, and a building which, since Dickens’s death, has claimed to be the Old Curiosity Shop itself. It is thought to date from 1567, and is the oldest shop in London, but it seems more likely that the real Curiosity Shop was off Leicester Square. Whatever file truth, file shop makes a pleasant change from the many modern buildings which line the street.
If you know Dickens’s work well, you may like to make your own way around this area, or you may prefer to rely on the experts and join a guided walk.
"City Walks" organize a tour around a part of London which features strongly both in Dickens’s early life and his books. This is Southwark, SEI, an area not normally renowned as tourist attraction, but one which is historically fascinating. When the Dickens family first arrived in London, John Dickens, Charles’s father, was working in Whitehall. He was the model for Mr. Micawber in David Copperfield, so it is not surprising to learn that within a few months he was thrown into the Marshalsea Prison, off Borough High Street, for debt (Micawber was imprisoned in King’s Bench Prison which stood on the corner of the Borough Road). The Marshalsea Prison has long gone, but you can stand by the high walls and recall the time that Dickens would go into prison for supper each evening, after a hard and humiliating day sticking labels on pots at the Blacking Warehouse at Hungerford Stairs (near Chafing Cross Station).
Off Borough High Street are several small ’alleys called Yards. These mark the sites of the old coaching inns where passengers would catch a stagecoach to destinations around the country. In one, White Hart Yard, stood the White Hart Inn, a tavern that Dickens knew well and in which he decided to introduce one of his best-loved characters, Sam Weller, of The Pickwick Papers. Mr. Pickwick’s meeting with Sam ensured the popularity of’ the novel which was then serialized in monthly installments, and made Dickens a famous name. [br] Why should you visit Portsmouth Street?
选项
A、To see a place where Dickens worked.
B、To see the oldest shop in London.
C、To see the authentic setting of a Dickens novel.
D、To see some interesting modern architecture.
答案
C
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3283022.html
相关试题推荐
______isthefirstimportantgovernessnovelintheEnglishliteraryhistory.A、
WhichofthefollowingmightfailtoassociateyouwithLondon?A、CapitalofEngl
[originaltext]Akeycomponentintheexplosivesusedinlastweek’sLondonb
ApersoninBeijingcandescribewhathappensinAustralia;similarly,a21st-ce
[originaltext]Chairperson:Goodeveningladiesandgentlemen.It’snicetosee
[originaltext]Chairperson:Goodeveningladiesandgentlemen.It’snicetosee
[originaltext]Chairperson:Goodeveningladiesandgentlemen.It’snicetosee
PresidentBushhasproposedaddingoptionalpersonalaccountsasoneofthec
PresidentBushhasproposedaddingoptionalpersonalaccountsasoneofthec
PresidentBushhasproposedaddingoptionalpersonalaccountsasoneofthec
随机试题
HowtoWriteaResearchReportAstandardformatwillhelpreaderstolocatethe
TheFutureofTelevision:What’sonNext?Bossesinthetelev
下列主接线形式哪个不属于有母线的接线方式()A.单母线 B.双母线
对复合树脂有阻聚作用的水门汀是A.氧化锌丁香酚水门汀 B.磷酸锌水门汀 C.
奈替米星不同于庆大霉素的是A、抗菌作用强 B、对绿脓杆菌有效 C、对钝化酶稳
千百年来,我国人民的生活方式和行为方式都或多或少地留有儒家倡导的“格物、致知、诚
属于“相侮”的脏病传变是A.肝病及脾 B.肝病及肾 C.肝病及肺 D.肝病
自然界的睡因与大气、土壤、岩石等接触,所以含有多种“杂质”,如钙‘镁、钾、钠、铁
中国共产党自成立以来,就非常重视民族问题。1949年《中国人民政治协商会议共同纲
根据建筑物重要性和使用要求,一般居住建筑的建筑物的重要性等级是( )。A.特等
最新回复
(
0
)