Bővebb ismertető
PREFACE
Ik April, 1840, I issued the first number of a new weekly publication, price three pence, called Master Humphrey's Clock. It was intended to consist, for the most part, of detached papers, but was to include one continuous story, to be resumed, from time to time, with such indefinite intervals between each period of resumption as might best accord with the exigencies and capabilities of the proposed Miscellany.
The first chapter of this tale appeared in the fourth number of Master Humphrey's Clock, when I had already been made uneasy by the desultory character of that work, and when, I believe, my readers had thoroughly participated in the feeling. The commencement of a story was a great satisfaction to me, and I had reason to believe that my readers participated in this feeling too. Hence, being pledged to some intei-ruptions and some pursuit of the original design, I set cheerfully about disentangling myself from those impediments as fast as I could ; and, that done, from that time until its completion The Old Curiosity Shop was written and published from week to week, in weekly parts.
When the story was finished, that it might be freed from the incumbrance of associations and interruptions with which it had no kind of concern, I caused the few sheets of Master Humphrey's Clock, which had been printed in connexion with it, to be cancelled ; and, like the unfinished tale of the windy night and the notary in ''The Sentimental Journey," they became the property of the trunkmaker and the butter-man. I was especially unwilling, I confess, to enrich those respectable trades with the opening paper of the abandoned design, in which Master Humphrey described himself and