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  1. ‘Harry’ was the ninth of Dickens’s children, born 15 January 1849, shortly before the serialisation of David Copperfield began. A tenth child, Dora, was born the following year, but died in her infancy, so Henry Dickens and his younger brother Edward (‘Plorn’) effectively grew up as the babies of the family.

  2. Henry Fielding Dickens. A cabinet card portrait of Henry Fielding Dickens (1849-1933), later Sir Henry Dickens, the eighth of ten children born to British author Charles Dickens and his wife Catherine. The most successful of all of Dickens's children, he was a barrister, a KC and Common Serjeant of London, a senior legal office that he held for ...

  3. Henry Fielding ( Glastonbury, 22 april 1707 - Lissabon, 8 oktober 1754) was een Engels roman- en toneelschrijver. Fielding bezocht de public school in Eton en studeerde klassieke talen in Leiden. Na zijn terugkeer begon hij te schrijven voor het theater. De blijspelen die hij produceerde ( Tom Thumb, 1730 en Pasquin, 1736) waren satirisch van ...

  4. Henry Fielding Dickens. Henry, known sometimes as Harry, was the eighth child born to the Dickens. He is often cited as the most successful of the ten. He spent his life as a sportsman and was appointed a Knight Bachelor in 1922. He worked as a barrister and Common Serjeant of London. He outlived the rest of the Dickens children, dying in 1933.

  5. Henry Fielding Dickens was the last surviving son of Charles Dickens. He was named after Henry Fielding, a favourite author of his father. He was educated at Wimbledon and at Boulogne-sur-Mer and entered Trinity Hall, Cambridge, in 1868. He graduated in mathematics and subsequently studied law. In 1873 he was called to the bar.

  6. Sir Henry Fielding Dickens, Q. C. ("Harry," 1849-1933), a Cambridge graduate, sportsman, and lawyer; father of novelist Monica Dickens. 9. Dora Annie Dickens (1850-1851), named after the first wife of David Copperfield, died in infancy on 14 April 1851. 10. Edward Bulwer Lytton Dickens

  7. (1) Henry Fielding Dickens, The Recollections of Sir Henry Dickens (1934) Sydney went into the Navy, and died on his way home on sick leave in May, 1872, and was buried in the Indian Ocean. He was the boy who, in his childhood days, went by the name of "the Ocean Spectre," from a strange little weird, yet most attractive, look in his large wondering eyes.