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  1. Walter Savage Landor Dickens (8 February 1841 – 31 December 1863) was the fourth child and second son of English novelist Charles Dickens and his wife Catherine. He became an officer cadet in the East India Company 's Presidency armies just before the Indian Rebellion of 1857.

  2. 31 de dez. de 2019 · Looking for Walter Landor Dickens. By Dickens Society Blog. December 31, 2019. 1 Comment. Con­tributed by Chris­tian Leh­mann, Bard High School, Early Col­lege. On his 52 bi­rthday (7 Feb­rua­ry, 1864) Char­les Di­ckens re­ceived word that his son, Walt­er Lan­dor, had died in India on 31 De­cemb­er 1863. A few days ...

  3. Imaginary Conversations is Walter Savage Landor's most celebrated prose work. Begun in 1823, sections were constantly revised and were ultimately published in a series of five volumes. The conversations were in the tradition of dialogues with the dead , a genre begun in Classical times that had a popular European revival in the 17th ...

    • Walter Savage Landor
    • 1882
  4. Walter Landor Dickens (8 de Fevereiro de 1841 – 1861); Francis Jeffrey Dickens (15 de Janeiro de 1844 – 1886); Alfred D'Orsay Tennyson Dickens (28 de Outubro de 1845 – 1912); Sydney Smith Haldimand Dickens (18 de Abril de 1847 – 1872); Henry Carl Potchovesk Dickens Molovei (15 de Janeiro de 1849 – 1933);

  5. Contributed by Christian Lehmann, Bard High School, Early College On his 52 birthday (7 February, 1864) Charles Dickens received word that his son, Walter Landor, had died in India on 31 December 1863. A few days later Dickens described the circumstances of Walters death in...

  6. Walter Savage Landor (1775-1864) was another of those eminent Victorians whom Dickens attempted to absorb into his family's orbit by naming one of his children after him. A fervid supporter of liberal causes such as Giuseppe Garibaldi's campaigns for the reunification of Italy, Landor was imbued with the young Dickens's passion for liberal and ...

  7. Walter Savage Landor was born at Warwick in 1775. As a writer he was highly regarded by a few, but was known to most of his contemporaries as a ‘character’: an impetuous and headstrong man (caricatured as Boythorn by Dickens in Bleak House) holding in his youth extreme radical views. He left Oxford without a degree after being involved in a ...