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David Copperfield (Paperback, illustrated Edition)
Loot Price: R848
Discovery Miles 8 480
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David Copperfield (Paperback, illustrated Edition)
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In a preface to this novel, Dickens described David Copperfield as
his "favorite child," and the story has remained among the
favorites of Dickens' readers, too, with the characters of Betsy
Trotwood, Mr. Pegotty, Uriah Heep, and Wilkins Micawber as well as
David himself becoming part of the fabric of Western culture. This
facsimile reprint is of the Household Edition of the Works of
Charles Dickens, published in the 1870s; the edition makes the work
available again in a form in which tens of thousands of Victorians
read it-in two-column format, interspersed with illustrations
throughout. David Copperfield was originally published in nineteen
monthly parts between May 1, 1849 and November 1, 1850.* Each part
except the last was of roughly the same length; the final
installment was approximately twice as long as the others (and sold
for 2 shillings, twice the price of previous parts). For the
original serial publication, as well as early publication in book
form, David Copperfield was illustrated by Hablot Browne (more
commonly known as "Phiz"). Shortly after Dickens' death in 1870 the
British publisher Chapman & Hall began to issue the Household
Edition of the Works of Charles Dickens (not to be confused with
the American Household Edition of the Works, which appeared in the
1860s). The principal illustrator for the edition was Fred Barnard,
and the Dalziel brothers (the leading wood-engravers of the time)
created the engravings from Barnard's illustrations; they described
The Household Edition as "by far the most important commission ever
placed in our hands by Messrs. Chapman & Hall." Volumes in The
Household Edition began to appear in 1871, and the series was
completed in 1879. Dickens' works appeared in a great many
Victorian editions (including numerous pirated ones). Scholars have
understandably paid most attention to the earliest publication in
serial form; The Household Edition may well have been the most
popular form in which the novel appeared, however; the plates for
The Household Edition were widely used for other editions as well,
and it is certainly arguable that more Victorian readers would have
read Dickens' novels in this form than in any other. In 1911 the
populist bibliophile J.A. Hammerton described The Household Edition
as "the most important illustrated edition" of Dickens' works. This
is one of a series from Broadview Press of facsimile
editions-editions that provide readers with a direct sense of these
works as the Victorians themselves experienced them. The breaks
were as follows: I - May 1849 (chs. 1-3); II - June 1849 (chs.
4-6); III - July 1849 (chs. 7-9); IV - August 1849 (chs. 10-12); V
- September 1849 (chs. 13-15); VI - October 1849 (chs. 16-18); VII
- November 1849 (chs. 19-21); VIII - December 1849 (chs. 22-24); IX
- January 1850 (chs. 25-27); X - February 1850 (chs. 28-31); XI -
March 1850 (chs. 32-34); XII - April 1850 (chs. 35-37); XIII - May
1850 (chs. 38-40); XIV - June 1850 (chs. 41-43); XV - July 1850
(chs. 44-46); XVI - August 1850 (chs. 47-50); XVII - September 1850
(chs. 51-53); XVIII - October 1850 (chs. 54-57); XIX-XX - November
1850 (chs. 58-64).
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