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  1. 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.

  2. On the death of Sir Henry Fielding Dickens in 1933, his will provided that, if the majority of his family were in favour of publication, The Life of Our Lord should be given to the world. By majority vote, Sir Henry's widow and children decided to publish the book in London.

  3. Henry Fielding (* 22. April 1707 in Sharpham Park bei Glastonbury, Somerset; † 8. Oktober 1754 in Lissabon) war ein berühmter englischer Romanautor, Satiriker, Dramatiker, Journalist und Jurist in der Zeit der Aufklärung .

  4. Or George Gordon Byron: ‘There now are no Squire Westerns as of old.’ William Makepeace Thackeray called him ‘Harry’ Fielding, like some friendly compatriot, and for all who wrote about the novelists of the eighteenth century it was Fielding who stood as the truest historian of that England.

  5. Sarah Fielding, John Fielding. Henry Fielding (22 April 1707 – 8 October 1754) was an English writer and magistrate known for the use of humour and satire in his works. [1] His 1749 comic novel The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling was a seminal work in the genre. Along with Samuel Richardson, Fielding is seen as the founder of the ...

  6. Sir Henry Fielding Dickens K.C., (1849 – 1933) was the sixth son of Charles Dickens. He was named after one of the 18th-century writers whom Charles most admired, Henry Fielding. He read Mathematics at Trinity Hall (1868 -1872), and after a year, he was awarded a scholarship from Trinity Hall worth £50 a year.