Description: The Chimes A Goblin Story Of Some Bells That Rang An Old Year Out And A New One In By Charles Dickens Published By Thomas Y. Crowell New York Printed at the Riverside Press Ltd., Edinburgh ( Scotland ) circa 1935 Undated, however there is an old gift inscription on the front endpaper, dated Christmas , 1935. Hardcover. Textured, Decorated Cloth Binding. Color Endpapers. about 3" x 5" ( not quite miniature in size, but still small ) 142 Pages. The Chimes by Charles Dickens (1812-1870) A " goblin " Christmas story, by the author of " A Christmas Carol ." Written while Dickens was living in Genoa, Italy. The story centers around Trotty Veck, a poor ticket porter, whose outlook is converted from dispair to hope by the spirits of the chimes on New Year's Eve. ** Very Good Condition ** Just slight binding wear. The binding is in very good condition. [ see the photos ] The hinges are tight. Old Christmas gift inscription on the front blank endpaper. (" Ted, from Aunt Alice , 25 December, 1935 ") No other writing. No markings. The pages are otherwise clean and in very good condition throughout. The Story : Just after Christmas, on New Year's Eve, Trotty, a poor and elderly "ticket-porter" ( casual messenger ) is filled with gloom at the reports of crime and immorality in the newspapers ... and wonders whether the "lower" classes are simply wicked by nature. His daughter Meg and her long-time fiance Richard arrive and announce their decision to marry next day, despite their poverty. The family's happiness is dispelled by an encounter with several well-off persons - who together make Trotty, Meg and Richard feel they hardly have a right to exist, let alone marry. Poor old Trotty is further beaten-down by further encounters with wealthy, cruel men, in positions of power. He tries to shield his family and friends from their assaults, but it's difficult. It's all too much for Meg and Trotty, both ; she is just about dissuaded from marrying Richard in conditions this harsh. In the night, the bells seem to call Trotty. Going to the church, he finds the tower door unlocked... Old Trotty climbs to the bellchamber, where he discovers the spirits of the bells and their goblin attendants who reprimand him for losing faith in man's destiny to improve. The spirits and goblins show Trotty a series of sad visions his family, and of their sad future. But it is the Chimes' intention to teach Trotty that mankind is formed to strive for nobler things, and to never give up. Hope still remains; the future can be changed if Trotty acts. In this story, as with Ebenezer Scrooge in its predecessor Christmas Carol , the intention is to sway the central character ( and the reader ) with a moral message. The Chimes represent time, and reveal the importance of striving to improve conditions here and now. They also show that it is an error to believe that individual human joys and sorrows do not matter to a higher power, and that it is a great evil to condemn those who are fallen and unfortunate. Carefully Packed for Shipment to the Buyer. --------------- Biographical Information: Charles Dickens (1812-1870) Charles Dickens was born near Portsmouth England on February 7, 1812. The happiest years of his childhood were spent in Chatham, Kent, where his family lived between 1817 and 1823. It was in Chatham that Dickens was first introduced to the world of literature and drama. In 1823, his family moved to London, where his father was suddenly arrested for debt and incarcerated in Marshalsea Debtors' Prison. For the three months that John Dickens and his family lived in a single, cramped room in the Marshalsea, Charles -- then only eleven -- was left to live alone in lodgings, and was sent to work at Warren's Blacking Factory. These three months changed Dickens as a person and shaped his outlook as a writer and social critic. It was at Warren's that Dickens met the boy on whom he would later base the Artful Dodger of "Oliver Twist". The misery of the Warren experience is reflected in several chapters of the semi-autobiographical "David Copperfield". Many of his broad novelistic images and themes -- prisons, degraded conditions of labour, children lost in the city -- grew out of this traumatic childhood experience. Dickens returned to school after the family's situation improved. He attended the Wellington House Academy from the years of 1824-1827 and, at fifteen, entered the world as a solicitor's clerk. He studied shorthand at Doctors' Commons, which lead to work as a Parliamentary reporter: his speed and accuracy amazed his contemporaries. By 1833, he had contributed his first sketches of urban life to the Monthly Magazine and other periodicals. These were soon collected in his first book, " Sketches by 'Boz' " (1836), and in that same year, on the crest of this wave of success, he married Catherine Hogarth. Now twenty-four, Dickens started the weekly serial publication of "Pickwick Papers" (1836-37) which quickly made him a literary phenomenon. While Dickens wrote his next novel, "Oliver Twist" (1837-39), and edited "Bentley's Miscellany", the Dickens family moved from their first home at Furnival's Inn to 48 Doughty Street. The death of Catherine's sister Mary, to whom both were very attached, troubled the couple deeply during this active time: images of her are later reflected in Dickens's portraits of saintly, diminutive female characters like Little Nell and Little Dorrit. "Nicholas Nickleby" appeared in 1838, and the family moved up again, to 1 Devonshire Terrace. Setting the pattern of industriousness that would typify his entire career, Dickens edited (and ultimately authored) the weekly periodical "Master Humphrey's Clock" (1840-41), which included "Barnaby Rudge" and "The Old Curiosity Shop". In 1842, Dickens took America by storm. His six-month trip bore literary fruit: the controversial and unflattering "American Notes" (1842) and the slyly devastating American episode in "Martin Chuzzlewit" (1843-4). He published "A Christmas Carol" in December 1843, the first of five widely popular Christmas books. In the mid to late 1840s, the Dickens family lived in Italy, Switzerland, and Paris as well as maintaining residence in London. He published "Pictures from Italy" in 1846, "Dombey and Son" in 1848, and his 'favourite child,' "David Copperfield", in 1850. Also during this decade, in 1847, Dickens's commitment to philanthropic causes led him to help establish Miss Coutts's Home for Homeless Women, where he 'booked' the degraded but fascinating clientele. In 1851, the Dickens family moved to Tavistock House. But by now, Dickens's marriage had grown increasingly troubled. Catherine had born Dickens ten children, but by the end of the decade he separated permanently from her, and in 1858, he made the acquaintance of the actress Ellen Ternan, with whom he maintained a close relationship until his death. The fifties marked a return to journalism for Dickens, and increasing attention to social problems. He launched Household Words in 1850, a periodical that spanned the decade (and was incorporated into All the Year Round in 1859). In 1852-3 "Bleak House" appeared, one of his most famous novels and a frontal attack on the foggy and wasteful English legal system. "Hard Times" (1854) and "Little Dorrit" (1855-57) shortly followed, lambasting exploitative industrialism and rapacious financial greed. The benefit of all this social criticism, however, was his purchase in 1856 of the gentleman's residence he'd always dreamed of owning, Gad's Hill Place in Kent. He then detoured into historical fiction, publishing A Tale of Two Cities in 1859. Dickens began his immensely popular public readings in 1858. The stress and strain of these performances, which he toured in both England and the United States, led to a breakdown in 1869. The sixties saw the publication of more journalistic essays in "The Uncommercial Traveller" (1860), the weekly-serialised novel Great Expectations (1860-61), and his last twenty-number monthly novel, "Our Mutual Friend" (1864-65). After a farewell season of public readings early in 1870, he began "The Mystery of Edwin Drood" in April. His persistent illness would not relent, however; Charles Dickens died on June 9, 1870.
Price: 22.23 USD
Location: Coventry, Rhode Island
End Time: 2025-02-02T12:32:55.000Z
Shipping Cost: 4.63 USD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Special Attributes: Over 85 years old.
Modified Item: No
Subject: Literature & Fiction
Topic: Christmas Story , Goblins Spirits
Region: Europe
Country/Region of Manufacture: United Kingdom
Binding: Hardcover
Original/Facsimile: Original
Language: English
Author: Charles Dickens
Publisher: Thomas Y. Crowell Co.
Character Family: Christmas Fairy Tale , Dickens