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THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD

CHARLES DICKENS was born in Portsmouth on 7 February 1812, the second of eight children. Dickens’s childhood experiences were similar to those depicted in David Copperfield. His father, who was a government clerk, was imprisoned for debt and Dickens was briefly sent to work in a blacking warehouse at the age of twelve. He received little formal education, but taught himself shorthand and became a reporter of parliamentary debates for the Morning Chronicle. He began to publish sketches in various periodicals, which were subsequently republished as Sketches by Boz. The Pickwick Papers was published in 1836–7 and after a slow start became a publishing phenomenon and Dickens’s characters the centre of a popular cult. Part of the secret of his success was the method of cheap serial publication he adopted; thereafter, all Dickens’s novels were first published in serial form. He began Oliver Twist in 1837, followed by Nicholas Nickleby (1838) and The Old Curiosity Shop (1840–41). After finishing Barnaby Rudge (1841) Dickens set off for America; he went full of enthusiasm for the young republic but, in spite of a triumphant reception, he returned disillusioned. His experiences are recorded in American Notes (1842). A Christmas Carol, the first of the hugely popular Christmas Books, appeared in 1843, while Martin Chuzzlewit, which included a fictionalized account of his American travels, was first published over the period 1843–4. During 1844–6 Dickens travelled abroad and he began Dombey and Son while in Switzerland. This and David Copperfield (1849–50) were more serious in theme and more carefully planned than his early novels. In later works, such as Bleak House (1853) and Little Dorrit (1857), Dickens’s social criticism became more radical and his comedy more savage. In 1850 Dickens started the weekly periodical Household Words, succeeded in 1859 by All the Year Round; in these he published Hard Times (1854), A Tale of Two Cities (1859) and Great Expectations (1860–61). Dickens’s health was failing during the 1860s and the physical strain of the public readings which he began in 1858 hastened his decline, although Our Mutual Friend (1865) retained some of his best comedy. His last novel, The Mystery of Edwin Drood, was never completed and he died on 9 June 1870. Public grief at his death was considerable and he was buried in the Poets’ Corner of Westminster Abbey.

DAVID PAROISSIEN was educated in England and in the United States. He received his Ph.D. from UCLA. He now lives in Oxford, where he has recently retired as Emeritus Professor of English after teaching at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, since 1968. He edits the Dickens Quarterly and works with Susan Shatto as co-editor of The Dickens Companions. He has contributed two volumes to this series, most recently The Companion to ‘Great Expectations’ (2000).

CHARLES DICKENS

THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD

with an Introduction and Notes by

DAVID PAROISSIEN

PENGUIN BOOKS

PENGUIN BOOKS

First published 1870
This edition published in Penguin Classics 2002
I

Introduction and Notes copyright © David Paroissien, 2002
A Dickens Chronology copyright © Stephen Wall, 1995
All rights reserved

The moral right of the editor has been asserted

Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser

CONTENTS

Acknowledgements

A Dickens Chronology

Introduction

Further Reading

A Note on the Text

THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD

Contents

List of Illustrations

Appendix 1: The ‘Sapsea Fragment’

Appendix 2: The Number Plans

Appendix 3: The Illustrations

Appendix 4: Rochester as Cloisterham

Map of Cloisterham

Appendix 5: Opium Use in Nineteenth-century England

Notes

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The fourteen illustrations by Luke Fildes have been reproduced from a set of the original six parts of The Mystery of Edwin Drood owned by Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts. I am most grateful to the Mortimer Rare Book Room of the William Allen Neilsen Library for permission to reproduce these images. I am also much indebted to Karen V. Kulik, Associate Curator of Rare Books, for the invaluable assistance she extended as I completed the final stage of my work for this edition.