The Charles Dickens Letters Project
To HENRY LEWIS SMALE,1 3 FEBRUARY 1843
MS University of Rhode Island Special Collections.
Devonshire Terrace | Friday Morning
Third February 1843
My Dear Sir
The months come round so fast, and this is such a short one,2 that I shall not be able to have the pleasure of coming to dine with you until my February work has had its throat cut: which laudable deed I shall perform with all convenient despatch. I was hurried away unexpectedly to Bath, in the beginning of my January leisure,3 and have since been reposing on some rheumatic laurels gathered on the Railway. I hear that while I was away, you saw the children; who were specially impressed by your manners and conversation. I beg to be remembered to all your house. And am
My Dear Sir | Faithfully Yours
CHARLES DICKENS
H. Smale Esquire
- 1. Henry Lewis Smale (baptised 1790), proctor and notary: see Pilgrim Letters 3, p. 437.
- 2. CD often complained of the extra pressure of deadlines: see e.g. Pilgrim Letters 1, pp. 405, 510 (“this most fraudulent month of eight and twenty days”).
- 3. After completing January’s stint on Martin Chuzzlewit (Pilgrim Letters 3, p. 425), CD was in Bath for a “few days” between 21 and 25 Jan; the purpose of his visit not known (Pilgrim Letters 3, pp. 429n, 431).