The Literary Fund Anniversary Festival

Description

Speech at the Literary Fund Anniversary Festival (3 May 1837).

Creator

Dickens, Charles

Date

Bibliographic Citation

Dickens, Charles. 'The Literary Fund Anniversary Festival' (3 May 1837). Dickens Search. Eds. Emily Bell and Lydia Craig. Accessed [date]. https://dickenssearch.com/speeches/1837-05-03_Speech_Literary-Fund-Anniversary-Festival.

Summary

He spoke unaffectedly, he said, when he declared that his feelings were overpowered by receiving such an honour from such a company. He felt peculiarly embarrassed in acknowledging the toast, from the language in which it was couched. Wherever he looked around him he saw many more distinguished for ability than he could ever hope to be, to whom that honour might with far more justice have been awarded. He was proud to receive so friendly a shake of the hand from the old stagers, who sought to raise him up to their own level. The great discrepancy in the toast that had been drunk would have been in coupling them with ‘the rising authors of the day’. Now, the difference was that they had risen, while he at the most was only rising.

He hoped that the rising authors would all feel it an honour to be connected with that institution, and that should he ever leave any literary work that should carry his name to posterity (a circumstance the least likely to happen) that it would also be known that the flattering encouragement he had that night received from his literary brethren had nerved him to future exertions, smoothed his path to the station he had gained, and animated his endeavour not to do other than justice to their kind praise.

Location

Collection

Citation

Dickens, Charles, “The Literary Fund Anniversary Festival,” Dickens Search, accessed May 4, 2024, https://dickenssearch.com/speeches/1837-05-03_Speech_Literary-Fund-Anniversary-Festival.

Geolocation