From the fog-bound coastal marshes of Kent in Great Expectations and the frostbitten streets of London in A Christmas Carol to the austere brutality of the workhouse in Oliver Twist, Charles Dickens left us some of the most enduring portraits of life in Victorian Britain. The vast majority of his best-known characters were born and bred in Britain and lived their lives in backdrops and cityscapes that were unmistakably British.
Yet, for all that, Dickens was not a man whose horizons ended at Britain's borders. Here was an author who spent a great deal of his adult life engaged in foreign travel. And these travels would not only give Dickens a fresh, international perspective on his homeland, but also inform his novels.
Dickens lived in a period when, thanks to advances in industrialisation, travel was entering the orbit of more and more middle and upper-class Victorians. "The world," he is reported as remarking "was so much smaller than we thought it; we were all so connected... without knowing it; people supposed to be far apart were so constantly elbowing each other."
And he was determined to explore this "smaller" world for himself. That wanderlust drew him, inevitably, to continental Europe. Dickens crossed the Channel multiple times in the 1840s and 50s, training his sharp eye for the vagaries of the human condition on the residents of France, Italy and Switzerland.
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