Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

The Cricket on the Hearth

133. MA 949, fol. 65v
134. MA 949, fol. 66r
135. MA 949, fol. 66v
136. MA 949, fol. 67r
137. MA 949, fol. 67v
138. MA 949, fol. 68r
139. MA 949, fol. 68v
140. MA 949, fol. 69r
141. MA 949, fol. 69v
142. MA 949, fol. 70r
143. MA 949, fol. 70v
144. MA 949, fol. 71r

Dickens vented his social and political concerns in A Christmas Carol and, particularly, The Chimes, but, as he wrote to Angela Burdett-Coutts, The Cricket on the Hearth “is very quiet and domestic.” In this story of a husband’s suspicion of his younger wife, Dickens explored private morality rather than larger social questions. While several critics dismissed The Cricket on the Hearth as overly sentimental, public response was enthusiastic. Seventeen stage adaptations were running in London by the end of January 1846. Few of these dramatizations were authorized by Dickens, and he received very little income from stagings of his fiction. This digital facsimile presents the complete manuscript of The Cricket on the Hearth including the opening of the book and Dickens’s consideration of several alternate titles.