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  1. Charles Dickens By His Eldest Daughter (1885) My Father As I Recall Him (1896) Some or all works by this author were published before January 1, 1929, and are in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago. Translations or editions published later may be copyrighted.

  2. For his own, real-world children, Dickens used the name "Mary" for the first girl in the family, born 6 March 1838, just under a year after Mary Scott Hogarth's death. One may argue, as do both Slater and Ackroyd, that Dickens's obsession with his memories of Mary severely limited his capacity to understand and graph the female psyche.

  3. Charles Dickens, Jr. ("Charley" or Charles Culliford Boz, 1837-1896) was educated at Eton, worked for Baring's Bank and in the China trade before serving as subeditor of All the Year Round, becoming Editor after CD's death in 1870. 2. Mary Dickens ("Mamie" or "Mild Glos'ter," 1838-1896) wrote the Dickens biography My Father, As I Recall Him (1897).

  4. www.dickensmary.com › homeMary Dickens

    Caricatures by Mary. Home; About; Services; Contact; Mary Dickens

  5. Caricatures by Mary. Home; About; Services; Contact; Mary Dickens

  6. Dickens utilizó el nombre de “Mary” para sus propios hijos, en concreto para la primera chica de la familia, nacida el 6 de marzo de 1838, un año después de la muerte de Mary Scott Hogarth. Se puede argumentar como hacen tanto Slater como Ackroyd, que la obsesión de Dickens por las reminiscencias de Mary limitó severamente su capacidad para comprender y graficar la psicología femenina.

  7. Charles Dickens and his wife, Catherine, named their second child and eldest daughter Mary (known as "Mamie" in the family) after Catherine's beloved sister Mary Scott Hogarth, who died so suddenly at the age of eighteen — and, as family tradition has it, in Dickens's arms — on 7 May 1837.