The Charles Dickens Letters Project

Period: 
1836-1840
Theme(s): 
friends
travel
family

To THOMAS MITTON,1 [17 AUGUST 1840]

MS Lawrence McMillan. Address: Private | Thomas Mitton Esquire | 23 Southampton Buildings. Date: probably the day before To Mitton, 18 Aug and the day before he had intended to go to Broadstairs.

Devonshire Terrace. / Monday

My Dear Mitton.

I find that if I would have a house at Broadstairs, I must go there and get one. With this view I shall start tomorrow morning,a and return next day. Will you run down with me? If so say ‘yes’, and come and sleep here tonighta if you can, and dine at 6 – and stretch a point to do it. Don’t tell Smithsons2 where3 I am going, in case anybody should kindly volunteer to accompany me; but you might say that we have received no satisfactory account of any houses – with Kate’s love to Mrs S.  

Faithfully always

 CD.

Thomas Mitton Esquire.

With regard to Elliotson4 – your seeing him on Thursday, would do as well as on Tuesday. 

  • 1. Thomas Mitton (1812-78), solicitor, one of CD’s closest friends. Son of Thomas Mitton, publican, of Battle Bridge (the district now known as King's Cross), where the Mitton and Dickens families may at some time have been neighbours – perhaps in The Polygon, where the Dickenses were living 1827-8. In recollections given to the Evening Times when she was 95, Mitton's sister Mary Ann claimed to have known CD well as a small girl. Mitton and CD were clerks together for a short time during 1828-9 in Charles Molloy's office, 8 New Square, Lincoln's Inn, where Mitton served his articles. He acted as CD’s solicitor for twenty years.
  • 2. The law firm of Smithson, Dunn & Mitton; Charles Smithson (1804-44) had married T. J. Thompson’s sister, Elizabeth, and the Smithsons spent holidays in Broadstairs in 1840.
  • 3. Written above the line.
  • 4. John Elliotson, MD (1791-1868; Dictionary of National Biography), physician and mesmerist; he was CD’s doctor for many years: see Pilgrim Letters 1, p. 461.