Dickens at his desk

1858

This iconic portrait of Charles Dickens, taken in 1858 by photographer John Jabez Edwin Mayall, captures the great novelist mid-creation — quill in hand, head bowed, lost in thought. It’s one of the most enduring images of Victorian literature’s towering figure, who had by then already published Oliver Twist, David Copperfield, and Bleak House.

In 1858, Dickens was in the midst of a personal and professional turning point. That year he separated from his wife, began public reading tours, and continued to reshape the novel as a vehicle for social change. This photograph freezes a moment of intense creativity at the heart of London, where Dickens lived, observed, and transformed the realities of industrial Britain into unforgettable characters and stories.

🖋️ Do you have vintage photos of writers, desks, or the creative process in your family archive? Upload them to Oldpik.com and help build a gallery of imagination across the ages.

Envíado por OldPik el 7 de enero de 2024

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Dickens at his desk
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