Dickens
Dickens
Dickens
Whatever the truth of Dickens’ perspective, and he was certainly biased, there is no doubting the
centrality of the law in his thought and in his work. To celebrate this, and to reflect his connections with
the Inns of Court and our connections with him through our Library collections, the Inner Temple
Library created a display to highlight just a few elements of Dickens’ life and his reflections of the law,
although given his verbosity and prodigious output a few boards could never do him justice.
'There is yet, in the Temple, something of a clerkly monkish atmosphere which public offices of law have
not disturbed and even legal firms have failed to scare away'
This theme is continued in his fiction, In Martin
Chuzzlewit he described Tom Pinch’s feelings upon
entering the Inns thus:
make business for itself. There is no other The Lawyer in Literature (Gest, 1913)
principle distinctly, certainly, and consistently Charles Dickens as a Legal Historian (Holdsworth,
maintained through all its narrow turnings." 1929)
Bleak House (1852-3)
Charles Dickens : the Story of his Life (Hotten,
against an innocent man, that directed, Charles Dickens in Chancery (Jaques, 1914)
sharpened, and pointed, they may slay him.” The
The Childhood and Youth of Charles Dickens
Mystery of Edwin Drood (1870-1)
(Langton, 1883)
“Lawyers hold that there are two kinds of The Law and Lawyers of Pickwick: a Lecture
particularly bad witnesses--a reluctant witness, (Lockwood, 1894)
and a too-willing witness.” The Pickwick Papers Dickens Landmarks in London (Moreland, 1931)
(1836-7)