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24/12/2011 by Emma Jolly.
Eliza Fay (1756-1816) is one of the best-known female chroniclers of European life in India during the late eighteenth
century. Although she was no Jane Austen, Eliza’s writing was fresh and perceptive. What her letters lack in finesse,
they make up in directness and humour. And, whilst she was not sophisticated, Eliza was adventurous and keen to learn
about India, its cultures and people. Her enthusiasm is conveyed through the letters she wrote after her arrival in India
with her lawyer husband in May 1780.
More than a century later, it was this freshness and eye for detail that inspired EM Forster to arrange for the British
publication of Eliza Fay’s letters in 1925.
After their arrival in India, Eliza and her husband settled in Calcutta. It was there that she was living at the Christmas of
that year. Eliza detailed her first Christmas in India in a letter to her sister on 27th January 1781 (Letter XVIII):
My Dear Sister,— Since my last we have been engaged
in a perpetual round of gaiety. Keeping Christmas, as it is
called, though sinking into disuse at home, prevails here with
all its ancient festivity. The external appearance of the
English gentlemen’s houses on Christmas Day is really
pleasing from its novelty. Large plantain trees are placed
on each side of the principal entrances, and the gates and
pillars, being ornamented with wreaths of flowers fancifully
disposed, enliven the scene.
All the servants, from the Banian down to the lowest menial,
bring presents of fish and fruit ; for these, it is true, we are
obliged in many instances to make a return perhaps beyond
the real value, but still it is regarded as a compliment to our
burrah din. A public dinner is given at Government House
to the gentlemen of the Presidency, and the evening concludes
with an elegant ball and supper for the ladies. These are
repeated on New Year’s Day and on the King’s birthday. I
should say have been, for that grand festival happening at the
hottest season, and every one being obliged to appear full
dressed, so much inconvenience resulted from the immense
crowd, even in some cases severe fits of illness being the
consequence, that it has been determined to change the day
of celebration to the 8th of December which arrangement
gives general satisfaction. I shall not attempt to describe
these splendid entertainments further than by saying that they
were in the highest style of magnificence. In fact such grand
parties so much resemble each other that a particular detail
would be unnecessary and even tiresome.
Eliza then goes on to describe a social event of ’some time ago’ giving further insight into the social mores of the Georgian
British abroad:
Mrs. Hastings was of the party. She came in late, and
happened to place herself on the opposite side of the room,
beyond a speaking distance: so strange to tell, I quite forgot
she was there ! After some time had elapsed, my observant
friend, Mrs. Jackson, who had been impatiently watching
‘ my looks, asked if I had paid my respects to the Lady
Governess? I answered in the negative, having had no
opportunity, as she had no chance to look towards me when
I was prepared to do so. ” Oh !” replied the kind old lady,
” you must fix your eyes on her, and never take them off till
she notices you. Miss C— dy has done this and so have I.
It is absolutely necessary to avoid giving offence.” I followed
her prudent advice, and was soon honoured with a complacent
glance, which I returned, as became me, by a most respectful
bend. Not long after, she walked over to our side, and
conversed very affably with me, for we are now, through
Mrs. Jackson’s interference, on good terms together.
She also introduced me to Lady Coote and her inseparable
friend, Miss Molly Barrett. It was agreed between them
when they were both girls, whichever married first, the other
was to live with her : and accordingly when Sir Eyre took his
lady from St. Helena, of which place her father was
Governor, Miss Molly, who is a native of the island, accom-
panied them to England and from thence to India, where
she has remained ever since. Thus giving a proof of steady
attachment not often equalled and never perhaps excelled.
A few months after this was written Eliza Fay and her husband separated. The split left her struggling to maintain her
social status. She tried her hand at a number of dubious business investments, several of which required her to continue
her travels. She was later to record journeys to England, New York and India.
Sadly, after several bouts of bankruptcy, Eliza died insolvent on 9 September 1816 in Calcutta, where was buried
the following day (British Library ref. IOR:N/1/9-10).
Posted in EM Forster, letters, Eliza Fay, Calcutta, Georgian, Christmas, social history, Genealogy, Genealogic, Emma Jolly, India, Family History | No Comments »
08/12/2011 by Emma Jolly.
… the great heart of London throbs in its Giant breast. Wealth and beggary,
vice and virtue, guilt and innocence, repletion and the direst hunger, all treading
on each other and crowding together, are gathered round it. Draw but a little
circle above the clustering house-tops, and you shall have within its space,
everything with its opposite extreme and contradiction, close beside.
Master Humphrey’s Clock, 1841
Charles Dickens was born in Portsmouth on 7 February 1812, but lived much of his life in London. Although he died in Kent, his remains lie in the Poets’ Corner of Westminster Abbey where he was buried on 14 June 1870. The city fed his imagination and Dickens spent decades reproducing London’s streets, sights, smells, sounds and people in his many written works.
As part of the 2012 bicentennial celebrations mentioned in the previous blog, the Museum of London has created a stunning exhibition celebrating Dickens’ links with the capital. Exhibits are drawn not just from the Museum’s own extensive collections, but from museums and archives across Britain. There are also particularly notable items, such as Dickens’ writing desk, from private collections.
Copyright Museum of London
From 1822, when the Dickens family settled in Camden, to 1860 when the author took permanent residence at his Kent home of Gad’s Hill Place, London was his home. He explored it by day and, often, by night. As he walked mile after mile he planned stories in his head. Visitors to the Museum can hear a reading of Night Works, Dickens’ description of London after dark, whilst watching William Raban’s 19 minute specially-commissioned film, The Houseless Shadow, made in October 2011.
Throughout those four decades, Dickens’ life changed dramatically. He went from schoolboy and then impoverished son of a prison inmate to the greatest celebrity of his time. His peers changed from workhouse orphans working alongside him at the blacking factory by Hungerford Stairs to famous authors, millionaires and aristocrats from across Europe and the United States.
Hungerford Stairs 1830 by John Harley. Copyright Museum of London
It is thus remarkable that the Dickens and London exhibition captures so much of his own varied life along with the lives of his characters. We see blacking pots, for example, like those Dickens’ worked with in his childhood employment, sitting not far from the author’s bank ledger - a reminder of his later riches. There are displays on the theatre, which Dickens adored, including a footlight from Wilton’s Music Hall. Also featured are themes of childhood, death, transport, wealth and poverty.
Copyright Museum of London
The full geographical area of the capital is covered: there is ‘A copy of Verses from the Year 1835, humbly presented to all the worthy inhabitants of the Parish of St Pancras’ in the north to household items excavated in 1996 from Jacob’s Island in Rotherhithe in the south east. St Pancras parish included Camden where Dickens lived and which inspired scenes from David Copperfield, A Christmas Carol and A Tale of Two Cities. Jacob’s Island is probably most associated with scenes from Oliver Twist, particularly that of the dramatic death of villainous Bill Sykes.
Unlike in the British Library exhibition, the displays here are concerned with Dickens’ world - what many refer to as ‘Dickensian London’ - rather than a detailed focus on what he wrote. However, this does not detract from its success. And those who are interested in how Dickens wrote will delight in the presence of three original manuscripts: Dombey & Son (1847) and Bleak House (Nov 1851) from the Victoria & Albert Museum,
Bleak House manuscript. Copyright V&A Images 
and Great Expectations (1861) lent by the Wisbech and Fenland Museum. Visitors can also experience Dickens’ work like its first readers by flicking through a replica copy of an instalment of Little Dorrit (Copyright V&A Images).
I once researched a family who lived around the corner from Charles Dickens in Holborn. One of my first thoughts was did he ever know them or see them? Did they inspire any of the characters in his novels or short stories? Although it is almost impossible to find out, this reminded me that many of those who inspired Dickens are the ancestors of people living today. That specific family would have recognized a watchman’s box in the centre of the exhibition, that stood outside Dickens’ old home at Furnival’s Inn - the home that neighboured theirs.
For family historians who have at least one ancestor who lived in London between 1820 and 1870, therefore, Dickens’ writing is a unparalleled source of relevant social and domestic detail. This exhibition provides an extension of that. The exhibits bring Dickensian London alive.
Overall, for anyone with even a passing interest in either Dickens or the social history of Victorian London, this exhibition is not to be missed.
Useful Links
http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/dickens
http://charlesdickenspage.com/dickens_london.html
http://charlesdickenspage.com/ruth_richardson-cleveland_street_workhouse.html
http://www.bfi.org.uk/whatson/bfi_southbank/film_programme/january_seasons/dickens_on_screen
http://twitter.com/Dickensbookclub
Dickens and London tickets
Adult £8 (£7 advance booking);Child/concession £6 (£5 advance booking);Under 5s FREE; Friends of the Museum FREE; Flexible family tickets are also available
Posted in Wilton's Music Hall, Jacob's Island, The Homeless Shadow, Night Works, Gad's Hill Place, Rotherhithe, David Copperfield, Wisbech and Fenland Museum, Victoria & Albert Museum, V&A, Dickensian London, Oliver Twist, Museum of London, Westminster Abbey, London, social history, Emma Jolly, Genealogic, Genealogy, Theatre History, Charles Dickens, Christmas Carol, Master Humphrey's Clock, exhibition, Pancras, St Pancras, Family History | No Comments »
03/12/2011 by Emma Jolly.
I have endeavoured in this Ghostly little book,
to raise the Ghost of an Idea, which shall not put my
readers out of humour with themselves, with each other,
with the season, or with me. May it haunt their houses
pleasantly, and no one wish to lay it.
Preface to A Christmas Carol (December 1843)
If, like me, you are a fan of Charles Dickens, you have much to look forward to over the next year. In the run up to 7 February 2012, the bicentenary of Dickens’ birth, galleries all over the world are dusting off letters, books, and illustrations of the great author and his many works.
To start us off in London, the British Library have a smallish exhibition in its Folio Society Gallery - the perfect size for a lunch break visit. The rich Christmassy feel also provides welcome escape from currently chilly London streets.
Christmas permeates the display. There are several editions of A Christmas Carol, a theatre poster for an early performance, an oral recording by Ralph Richardson and Paul Scofield, plus a copy of the semi-autobiographical short story ‘A Christmas Tree’ (1850). Indeed, we learn that it was the ghost stories told around the fire in his childhood Christmases that first inspired Dickens’ imagination to ‘hanker’ after the supernatural.
Childhood influences are highlighted throughout: from the supernatural imagery of The Arabian Nights to the ‘fiendish enjoyment’ of young Charles’ nurse in relaying ghostly tales. But later, more tragic events were also to inspire his writing. The deaths of loved ones, like Mary Hogarth, were said to have ‘haunted his dreams’. Similarly, Ebenezer Scrooge was to be haunted at night by the ‘ghosts’ of those he had once cherished.
The Victorian obsession with the supernatural is highlighted through examples of spirit (or psychic) photographs and a display on spiritualism. Dickens satirized the spiritualists but was fascinated with the macabre. A close friendship with one of the finest exponents of the ghost story, Wilkie Collins, only served to further his interest. Although he sought to rationalise supernatural phenomena such as mesmerism, Dickens was not above sensationalizing them to terrify his readers. An original copy of Bleak House, for example, lies open on an illustration showing the spontaneous combustion of the alcoholic Krook.
Amongst featured items in the exhibition are illustrations, theatre posters and a letter written by the author to his wife, Catherine. One of my favourite items was a copy of The Terrific Register - a penny weekly magazine whose tales of horror haunted Dickens throughout his life. He later remembered ‘there was an illustration to every number in which there was always a pool of blood, and at least one body . . .’
The exhibition is free and runs from 29 November 2011 - 4 March 2012: Monday, Wednesday-Friday 9.30 – 18.00, Tuesday 9.30 – 20.00, Saturday 9.30 – 17.00, Sunday and Bank Holidays 11.00 – 17.00.
For more on Dickens, see my article ‘Charles Dickens in Camden’ at the London Historians website http://www.londonhistorians.org/?s=articles
Posted in Christmas Carol, Wilkie Collins, ghosts, supernatural, Christmas, British Library, London, social history, Charles Dickens, Victorian history, Genealogy | 1 Comment »