Short Stories by PJ

Household Words (a screen play)


Copyright © 1988 by PJ

SYNOPSIS

This screen play portrays Catherine Hogarth Dickens, the unsung wife of the celebrated Charles Dickens, 19th-century novelist and journalist, who during the 1850's edited a weekly entitled Household Words. Catherine Dickens was the wife of his youth. Although her story encompasses some thirty-five years, the time of the script's frame is brief: June 13 and June 14, 1870, when Dickens' casket arrived for funeral ceremonies at Westminster Abbey. Four of the author's ten children were in England and attended those services. His estranged wife Catherine received no encouragement to attend. She passed the day in her London home on Gloucester Crescent, where she had lived since her separation from her world-famous husband and where only one of the former circle of friends came to call on her. Since 1858 and, for all purposes, many years before that, she yielded her place as mother and hostess to her younger sister Georgina. Her husband's affections belonged to Ellen Ternan, the young actress, his attentions to whom had precipitated the collapse of the marriage. Catherine's story, told in flashbacks to her meeting with the youthful Dickens in those first days when he wrote for her editor father, to the recognizing of her husband's overwhelming popularity, to the showing forth of all the trials and triumphs of a perfectionistic husband with a household of children, an unending procession of needy relatives, and a bevy of visitors that included such remarkable personalities as Hans Christian Anderson, and, finally, to the demanding of her own respect and dignity as a person in an era and environment that granted no legal status to a married woman, reveals a woman who cannot be pushed aside by a husband who is tired of her and attracted to a woman some twenty years her junior. Catherine had the temerity to demand her own place in history. Of the choices available to her she took the hardest one, speaking out in the confines of a family circle awestruck by the powers of her husband. Yes, she was fat and red-faced and clumsy. Her conversation was not brilliant and she never shone in society, but Catherine inspired the fun of Pickwick and Nickleby: she had the best of the heart of Dickens and cannot be forgotten.

SCENES

Editor's Note: The scenes listed below don't seem to precisely match the text of the screen play.

Establish publication title HW

Show  Vict.  homes receiving publication,  family reading Child's
History

D  reads June 12m 1858 pronouncement to Wills,  puts it on  front
page--Wills questions 

Death  - Luke Fildes with him and Georgina,  girls  away. 
The dining room had crimson upholstery.
Credits roll

Servants at Catherine's -- Gloucester Cresent, June 13, 1870

D's Ghost and Catherine

Feb. 7, 1834--meeting - pale brick court of Furnival's
  Include Forster's description of D--p. 187
Dash to Exeter and political reporting--late '34

Est. Kensal Lodge and Ainsworth--'34
 D as Boz
2nd B'day party

C's jealousy concerning Maria

D's work and widening circle at Kensal Lodge

D dealing with Cath's moods

Cath. and the D's

D and the Hogarths

The  wedding and wedding  party--Apr.  2,  1836,  St.  Luke's  in
Chelsea, Macrone and Beard only ones outside family.  Est. family
at wedding breakfast at Hogarths

Honeymoon at Chalk--chance to walk, look back at Chatham

Work on Pickwick--Mary moves to be with them at Furnival's Inn

Late '36--D meets Forster at Kensal Lodge--pp.185-87

D's assumption of editorship of Bentley's

Cath's confinement with Charlie, inability to nurse--Mary's care
Charlie  at 12th night child--see p.  188--Mary had to stay  with
grandfather   because  2  grandmothers  took  all  the  room   at
Furnival's--Jan. 6, 1837

Move to Doughty St. -- Begins OT Feb, 37 while still completing
        P'wick
Completion of Pickwick

Mary's death--May 7, 1837

Miss Coutts

Cath preg.

New house (Cath and servants)

D's writer's block, depression, Cath's help
        Mary b. Mar. 6, 1838
        **George Hogarth a contributor to Bentley's
        Katey b. Oct. 29, 39
        Move to Devonshire Terr.  late '39
Cath. arranging an early party--Show Forster with D family
        Walter b. Feb. 1841         
        D's jealousy of Forster and pact about loving another
Journey to Edinburgh--June, 1841

Family at Broadstairs, resting

Georgina joins family--1842
        Anne will accompany family to America
Leave for America -- Jan, 1842

Visit of Thomsons and D's less than enthusiastic reception

American trip--Leave Jan. 42
        Mesmerism of Kate in Pittsburgh
        Birth of Francis in '44
        Italian visit 9/44 -6/45
Mme. De La Rue--1845
        In Genoa D. dreams for last time of Mary
        Redecoration of Devonshire Terr.
Family attends Unitarian Church
        Alfred b. Oct. 28, 1845
painful delivery of Sydney--Apr. '47, p. 614
        Christening in C. of England
Charlie's Birthday and magic--Jan.' 49
        D likens Charley's lassitude to Cath's
Use  of  anesthetic in childbirth--Henry Fielding,  1-15-49  (8th
child)
Isle of Wight -- p. 667 (children played with Swinburne) S'49
Decision Dora must die in DC -- May, 1850
        Outgrowing Dev. Terr., move to Tavistock, 51
Autobiographical Fragment in which he recalls Blacking House??
        Annie b. 1850
Death of Annie and breakdown--1851
        D. still youthful looking in photos 1850-52
Georgina's assumption of control rivaled by Forster's
        Miss Coutts and D set about reform of prostitutes
Inspection of girls' room
        Plorn b. 1852
        D. begins to look older 53-54, grows beard
        Growing cynicism--father's death and left Mother
Feb. 1855--Maria Beadnell, now Mrs. Winter visits--p.835

June, 1855--Hans Christian Anderson visits
        Concludes  purchase  of Gad's Hill (1700# and another  90
        for the shrubbery across the road which owner  Mrs.  Lynn
        Linton,  one  of  contributors to HW valued  separately--
        Mar. 14, 1856  Looked into Valley of the Medway, only an
        hour  and a quarter from London by Rail.   To Crown  all,
        the  sign of the Sir John Falstaff is over  the  way--had
        known the house since a child
        Bags under eyes, heavy moustache
Dickens on stage--the Frozen   Deep - by '56 a short beard, girls
        acted in play at home, but he wouldn't have them on stage
        in public--Hired Mrs. Ternan, Ellen and Maria

Boarding up bedroom -- 57

Walk home after finding Hogarths at Tavistock-Apr.'58

The bracelet meant for Ellen arrives at Tavistock
        Cath. must visit Ellen
Rejection of Mary's suitor

Kate's marriage
        Cath. encourages Charley's career and marriage
Charlie's son following his wedding

Walter's death 64
        Cath's mother died in 66
Harry's triumphs - saw his mother a great deal before leaving for
        Cambridge
        Plorn  leaves  for  Auist.   at  16--Sept  26,   67,   to
        Paddington,  then Plymouth, C. asks that he write her the
        smallest detail
        D.  pain  in  left foot,  wore  elastic  stocking,  built
        conservatory at Gad's Hill for light and air
        Recurring  pain in side--since young man.   Froze foot at
        one time??

        Cath's father died Feb., 1870; he'd broken bones in Jan.
Mary's incipient alcoholism
        D's stroke June 9, Kate dispatched
Catherine awakes June 14, 1870

Coffin leaves Gad's Hill at 6 A. M.

Groaning  table  at lunch with Mrs.  Hogarth and Helen,  both  in
mourning--Servants again

        Ferns at head,  red and white roses down sides of coffin,
        wreath of white roses on flags at feet

Miss  Coutts visit--"God knows an English home presents the  most
formidable of obligations" --an English teatime  "poor, dear Mrs.
        Dickens

Catherine's  request that Kate preserve the letters to  show  D.
loved her--tells Coutts she'll make on deathbed
        Shots of crypt, shoes of public mourners
Ending displays letters in BM
THE SCREENPLAY
FADE IN

INT - PRINTING OFFICE - DAY

TWO PRINTERS attend presses while workers bundle journals
for   distribution.

CLOSE  UP

establishes title of journal:  HOUSEHOLD  WORDS.   The title
page announces "A  Weekly Journal"  conducted  by  Charles
Dickens and includes a quotation from Shakespeare:  "Familiar in
their Mouths as HOUSEHOLD WORDS."

CUT TO

EXT - VICTORIAN HOME - NIGHT

CUT TO

INT - VICTORIAN  DRAWING  ROOM - NIGHT

Stern,  paternalistic  Victorian father addresses several
of his children,  ages four to about thirteen.   He shows
them his copy of HOUSEHOLD WORDS.  Behind him a hearth
fire glows.

                        VICTORIAN FATHER

          Give me your careful attention,
          all of you.  I'm reading from Mr.
          Dickens's history of England.  He
          has put down this history  with
          his young audience in mind.

Faces of children move by.   CLOSE ON especially earnest,
neatly groomed lad of about nine.

CUT TO

INT - PRINTING OFFICE - DAY

PRINTER inspects page from press.  Presses clatter.
      
CLOSE UP reveals front page of HOUSEHOLD WORDS June 12, 1858. 

NEW ANGLE

DICKENS reads from first page of publication.  His managing
editor WILLS watches in disapproval.
 
                        DICKENS (V.O.)  
                 (above clatter of printing)
          "Three-and-twenty years have
          passed since I entered on my
          present relations with the
          Public....
          I have tried to be as faithful
          to the public as they have been
          to me....
          Some domestic trouble of mine,
          of longstanding....
                        DICKENS (CONT.)
                 (words lost to clatter)
          I most solemnly declare,  then--
          and this I do, both in my
          own  name  and in my wife's name--
          that all the  lately whispered
          rumours  touching  the  trouble 
          at which  I have  glanced, 
          are abominably false.   And
          that whosoever repeats one of
          them  after this  denial,  will 
          lie  as wilfully and as foully 
          as  it  is possible for any
          false witness to lie, before
          Heaven and earth."

DICKENS  shows his printed work
to  his managing editor WILLS, whose face registers his
disapproval.

                        DICKENS
          And I have signed my name to it.
          Charles Dickens.  I want the public
          to understand my side of things.
          Catherine and I have not got along
          for years.  Do you understand?

                        WILLS
          And who will print Mrs. Dickens'
          side of things?  Who will speak for
          her?

                        DICKENS
          Catherine has sworn she will keep her
          silence.  I have especially warned her
          mother and her sister Helen not to air
          their particular ridiculous accusations.
          Damn them.

                        WILLS
          Then it is your wish that Mrs. Dickens'
          story not be told?

In response DICKENS folds his arms against his chest and snorts.

ZOOM TO NEW ANGLE

Continue to see all-over action in print shop.

                        SOPRANO (V.O.)
          Take back the heart that thou gavest,
          What is mine anguish to thee!
          Take back the freedom thou cravest,
          Leaving the fetters to me.....
       
TITLE:  HOUSEHOLD WORDS
       
The credits roll.

                        SOPRANO  (V. O.)
          Take back the vows thou hast spoken,
          Fling them aside and be free;
          Smile o'er each pitiful token,
          Leaving the sorrow for me...

In  background  printing establishment is shown  at  work
with intermittent shots of Dickens at his writing desk.
Occasional titles go by:  A TALE OF TWO CITIES, GREAT
EXPECTATIONS, OUR MUTUAL FRIEND.  At last we see Dickens
at work on THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD.
       
The credits end.

CUT TO

INT - DINING ROOM, GAD'S HILL PLACE -EVENING

GEORGINA expresses alarm over DICKENS' pallor.

                        GEORGINA
          Are you well?  Shouldn't you lie down?

                        DICKENS
          Yes...on the ground.

DICKENS collapses at GEORGINA'S feet.

CUT TO

GEORGINA  HOGARTH,  KATEY  and CHARLEY DICKENS are in  the
doorway of the dining room.   Behind them a doctor shakes
his  head over Dickens's lifeless body that now rests  on
the couch.   MAMIE sits motionless in a chair across  the
room.  She holds a glass of wine.

                        GEORGINA
          Katey, you must go to your mother.
          You must tell her that he is not
          expected to live...
          Go at once.

                        KATEY
          Oh, Aunt Georgy....

                        GEORGINA
          And Charley, you are the eldest.
          Stay by his side.  Perhaps...

                        CHARLEY
          I'll do as you say, Aunt
          Georgy.  I'll do as you say.

                        KATEY
          Can our surgeon Mr. Steele do
          nothing?  Nothing at all?      
          Oh, Aunt Georgina...

The two women embrace.  KATEY is sobbing.
          
CUT TO

EXT - CATHERINE'S HOME, LONDON - NIGHT
       
LEGEND:  70 Gloucester Crescent, London

CUT TO

INT - CATHERINE'S KITCHEN - NIGHT

A  hand  grips a stiff-bristled brush and  fiercely
polishes  an already  gleaming, high-buttoned, very black
boot suitable for  a Victorian lady. Fitted onto some
second unseen hand, the boot  is turned first one way and
then another.  Only the steady sweep of bristles sounds.
We see a man's arm, and on it a black band.

CUT TO

Dressed in accordance with mid-19th century codes, FRANK, a
serving  man in his fifties sits surveying the one
polished boot.  Apparently satisfied,  he  sets that
right boot beside a left  boot  on  the floor.

                        FRANK
                 (to himself)
           It's not as if she's going
           anywhere.

At one side of an English kitchen/keeping room Frank and
his  wife  Sarah  are at work  by  lamplight.   Sarah  is
working on black lace, rubbing her eyes.

                        SARAH
                 (pausing in her work)
          We've done what we can.
                 (and looking at Frank)
          Frank, what did you say?

                        FRANK
                 (raising his voice somewhat)
          I said she wasn't going anywhere.

                      SARAH
          It's  not  kind to talk about her,
          poor dear.  

                        FRANK
                 (shaking his head)
           She'll have a husband at rest
           in Westminster Abbey.  But she
           won't be one to see the coffin
           lowered.  Nor get the comforts
           of the service.
                 (standing, crossing to cabinet)

                        SARAH
                 (watching Frank put away
                  the polish and brush)
          She'll hear about it from Mrs.
          Katey and her husband.  
          Katey   and  Mr.   Charley...
          they've  stood  by  her.   

                        FRANK
                 (closing cabinet door)
          Eight children left her now.
          Only four of them in England.
          Only two who dare to come see her.

                        SARAH
                 (re-threading her needle with difficulty) 
          Somehow she should be got to the
          grave to look at him.

                        FRANK
          Ah, just look at this lamp.
          That  new  little  maid  isn't
          doing a  good  job. I'll speak
          to her.  
          It's  history,  you  understand.
          He'll be in  the Poet's Corner
          with the best of them.

                        SARAH
          Yes,  and  he'd pass it off with
          a bit of whimsy, that one.

                        FRANK     
          Oh,  he seemed pleasant enough.
          I remember he'd give a wave  and
          a  wink  when he  saw  me  coming 
          courting.
          Pleasant enough....

Sarah's needle takes tiny, even stitches.

                        SARAH
          That  smile....   But after knowing
          him, I've doubts about a sense of humor. 
          I've heard him tell her she had
          no sense of humor. 
          "Born in Edinburgh," he'd say,
           rolling his eyes.
    
                        FRANK
          No, no.  A pleasant enough man.
          He liked entertainment.

                        SARAH
                 (rubbing her eyes)
          All his smart ways and getting
          on...his poking fun at some
          of our finest English customs...
                 (putting down the black silk,
                  wiping a tear)

                        FRANK
          She's in a bit of luck to have
          us, that's all I can say.
          We keep her house as proper as any
          in London.  She's a proud woman.

                        SARAH
          Tomorrow won't be easy.

                        FRANK                         
          Sarah, put that away.  Black's
          nothing to work on at night.

                        SARAH
          She's still in mourning for
          her dear father.

                        FRANK
          Put that away for now.
          Mister Charley made it clear
          that his father did not want
          mourning  worn.   Put  it in
          his  will...some  bit  of
          cleverness  ...   not wanting
          anyone to wear black  bows  or
          some such.  Oh my, I don't have
          his way with words.

                        SARAH
                 (putting down her sewing)
          Mister Charley said that his father
          called our English way of  mourning,
          a  "revolting  absurdity."

                        FRANK
          It don't surprise me.
                 (taking Sarah's hand)
          We've done what we can.

                        SARAH
                 (folding  the  lace and pointing
                 her needle in the spool of black
                 thread)
          She should be there tomorrow.
                 (again touching the black shawl)
          She'll wrap up in all this black
          as if it's cold outside. 

SARAH folds the shawl.

                        SARAH
          I don't think anyone ever thought
          he'd be the first to go.  It's
          almost like...

                        FRANK
          What?  Say it to me.

                        SARAH
                 (lowering her voice)
           All right.  Like she'd won.
 
                        FRANK
          If surviving is winning...
          If it is...  I'm not sure.
          We'll see.  God bless her.

Frank turns down the lamp.

CUT TO

INT - HALLWAY - NIGHT

FRANK'S hand puts boots before Catherine's bedroom door.

CUT TO

INT - CATHERINE'S BEDROOM - NIGHT         
       
Catherine  sleeps  in a large room bursting with  ruffles
and flounces.  Heavy draperies. Her bed is a four-poster. 
A  pale man sits in a boudoir chair at a small  draped  table
to the other end of the room. 
He  is  in shadows.  One hand presses his  forehead;  the
other grips a quill. He rises slowly, walks to a window,
pushing aside the drapes, trying to open the window.

                        GHOST OF DICKENS
                 (grunting with exertion )
          It can't be any hotter in hell.

CLOSE UP:  CATHERINE in her night cap. Heavy face.  Sound
asleep.  A snore or two.  She stirs briefly.

                        CATHERINE
          Charles?

The thin male figure returns to the boudoir chair
and picks up an ornately framed picture which he
scrutinizes.

CUT TO

The  miniature  of Dickens in his early twenties,
a painting  he commissioned for his engagement
present to  Catherine, was presented in 1835.
He was 23 at the time.

                        GHOST
                 (Groaning and putting down
                  the picture)
          What dreams I had!
                 (passing hand across face)
          And what an
          unblemished countenance.

CLOSE UP
The painting of early Dickens, the romantic young
writer, his idealism evident

CATHERINE sits up, yawning, stretching, arranging her pillows behind
her.  She drinks from water at the night stand.

                        CATHERINE
          How warm it is!

                        GHOST
          You could leave a window open
          somewhere.

                        CATHERINE
                 (Still half asleep)
          I've  always  hated  to sleep
          with  the  window  open.
          It's my habit to sleep with
          the window closed.

                        GHOST
          Of course.  It's the business of
          life that people who always sleep
          with  the window closed marry
          people who  never shut them.

                       CATHERINE
          Charles?  It is you.  I haven't
          seen you since you called on
          me before your last trip to
          America.

                        GHOST
          This is the last you'll see of me.
          You can be sure of that. It is
          stifling tonight.

                        CATHERINE
                 (leaning toward him, squinting)
          Will you be at the funeral tomorrow?

                        GHOST
          That hasn't been decided.
                 (looking wistfully at his pen)
          You'd think I'd have been allowed
          to finish that tale about Drood.

                        CATHERINE
          How long it's been since you
          talked to me about your writing.

Plumps her pillows and leans back smiling.

                        CATHERINE
          How petulant you look!  Like
          little Plorn when you denied
          him some sweet.

                        GHOST
                 (Snapping at her)
          That's easy for you to say.
          You always found time for
          leisure. How can someone like
          me put away all his work?
          Think of what has been left
          undone....

                        CATHERINE
          Can't you, even now, admit to
          weariness?  Poor Charles!

The  PALE VISITOR stands up and walks in a crooked
circle,  still clasping his quill pen.
    
                        GHOST
          All I've known is hard work!
          You've won, Catherine. Do you
          know how I envied your stories
          of your comforts in Edinburgh?
          Your father a responsible,
          persevering and frugal Scotsman.
          My father was imprisoned for
          debt.  I was put to work in a
          blacking factory!

                        CATHERINE
          I'm glad to hear you say some
          good of Scots.  We're a decent
          people.

                        GHOST
          That I might have parted with
          you and the members of your
          family with the warmth and
          good wishes I felt for each
          of you.  Your father...my
          mentor...a good man, one to
          take an interest in the career
          of an ambitious young man.

                        CATHERINE
          And  one to make sure
          that young man got properly
          introduced to his daughter of
          nineteen....

CUT TO

LEGEND:   FEBRUARY 7, 1835...

CUT TO

EXT - LONDON STREET - NIGHT

A  carriage  plunges through the confusion of  carts  and
horses and carriages.   Even in the cold we are aware  of
the street people.   They huddle around fires.   They sit
wrapped   together   against  the  sides  of   buildings. 
Passers-by occasionally offer coins.  Small children lean
against gaunt women,  aged far beyond their  years.   The
occasional  bonfires of the destitute provide more  light
than  the dim gaslights.   Melting snow and ice refreeze. 
The  streets are filthy with dung and refuse and  limited
visibility prevents the emergence of any whole scene.
CLOSE ON one face watching the carriage go by.   Rheumy
eyes betray hopelessness.

CUT TO

INT  LONDON CARRIAGE - NIGHT

MR.  AND MRS GEORGE HOGARTH,  their son ROBERT, and their
daughters CATHERINE and MARY pull wraps around themselves
as they ride.   They are faintly illumined.   Momentarily
they  emerge  from shadows in a flare of light  from  the
flames  of some bonfire they pass by.  These are  genteel
people,  dressed with modest decorum.  Their garments are
cut from plain fabric of excellent quality.  The HOGARTHS
exude respectability.  Their manners are firmly planted in
the traditions of the middle class.   He is a man of  52;
his  wife  is ten years his junior.   CATHERINE is  their
eldest, a slow, shy, and lovely girl of 19.  Her long and
rich  dark  hair  sets  off  a  snow-white,  rosy-cheeked
complexion,  slightly turned up nose, large, heavy-lidded
blue eyes.   ROBERT,  a year younger than  CATHERINE,  is
considerably larger than she.  He is more animated in his
speech  and  a  good deal taller and  bigger  boned;  his
youthful face looks young atop his man's body. In profile 
MARY  has  an  aquiline nose and  faintly  receding  chin
imparting  a maturity beyond her 15  years;  her  lilting
voice  projects her sanguine disposition,  a  temperament
not  so  subject  to ups and downs as that of  her  older
sister.   Decidedly,  the speech of the Hogarths  retains
the vowel sounds of their Scottish origins.

                        ROBERT
                 (jokingly)
          Once we've met this paragon of
          accomplishment, I'll be put upon,
          I suppose, to show off as well.

                        MARY
          Robert, Brother, we love you
          for yourself.

                        MR. HOGARTH
                 (speculatively)
          Perhaps Mr. Dickens works too
          hard.  I am very fortunate to
          have him as a writer on the
          Evening Chronicle, but
          such intensity....

                        CATHERINE
                 (demurely)         
          Continue, Father.  We have your
          word for it that this Mr.
          Dickens, who writes voluminously
          and wondrously, will prove
          interesting.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
                 (smiling)
          Yet we're hearing some creeping
          reservations in your  voice.
          We all know that voice.   It's
          the voice that booms, "The new
          cook is all very well, but...."
          How old is Mr. Dickens who has
          with such munificence invited us
          and all children we choose to
          bring with us to celebrate his
          birthday?

                        MR. HOGARTH
                 (with grave composure)
          He's but 23 today.  And already
          he's been a law clerk, a fine
          parliamentary reporter--taught
          himself shorthand--and his
          sketches are now receiving even
          more attention than does his
          fine political reporting.

                        ROBERT
          But?

CATHERINE  especially  peers  at her father to  hear  his
answer.  Her blue eyes are steady and questioning.

                        MR. HOGARTH
                 (reluctantly)
          The problem's nothing to do
          with Mr. Dickens himself.  It's
          his father.  I've had the
          opportunities to deal with him
          and he's quite another matter.
          It's a question of reliability
          and...  Oh, he's talented enough,
          that John Dickens.  He can't
          keep himself out of debt. I
          know Charles must help out.

CUT TO

CATHERINE'S face relaxes.  We see her interest in Charles
Dickens has not been disappointed.

                        CATHERINE
                 (softly)
          Your Mr. Dickens sounds all the
          better for what you have now
          revealed to us.

                        MARY
          (sweetly, as if enthralled)
          Indeed.

CUT TO

EXT - FURNIVAL'S INN - NIGHT

The courtyard is laid out inside walls of pale brick.
The HOGARTHS cross the courtyard.

CUT TO

INT - STEEP UNLIGHTED STAIRWELL - NIGHT

THE HOGARTHS climb the stairs slowly.  HOGARTH leading the way and
MARY and ROBERT close behind.

                        MR. HOGARTH
          He  warned that the climb to his
          third-floor apartment was not easy and
                 (laughing)
          laughed when he cautioned that perhaps
          we should not bring the little ones.
   
MARY and ROBERT manage to stay behind their father on the
stairwell. 
CATHERINE and MRS.  HOGARTH have paused for breath at the
second  landing.   They have thrown back their cloaks  so
that  we see the care they have taken with  their  simple
hairstyles.    The   mother  retains  something  of   her
daughter's  beauty.  They  eyeball  each other  and  join
hands.   Catherine's full bosomed figure is revealed when
she unbuttons her coat.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
                 (breathing with some difficulty)
                            Gracious,
          George, do go more slowly.

                        CATHERINE
                 (pausing again and inspecting
                  her shoe, stooping to adjust
                  the heel)
          Somehow I caught my foot on that
          last stair.  I almost fell. 
          I did want to wear
          my prettiest shoes tonight.

Above  the  Hogarths a door opens  widely.   Talking  and
laughter and light fill the stairwell.  The young CHARLES DICKENS
and his teen-aged younger brother FREDERICK with a lantern appear.
FREDERICK holds the lantern high to light the stairwell.
DICKENS bounds toward  the  Hogarths  from  the  landing.    His
shoulder-length  chestnut-brown hair frames an  energetic
face.   His clothes are very modish,  velvet trimmed and
colorful,  in flamboyant contrast to the quiet  wardrobes
of   the  Hogarths.    His  lithe  body  races  down  the
stairwell,  past Mr. Hogarth, where he puts his arm under
that of Mrs.  Hogarth,  whom he draws effortlessly,  seemingly,
up the stairs.

                        MR. HOGARTH
          You're in the nick of time, Dickens.
          Mrs.  Hogarth and I have brought
          our  three  eldest  children  to
          your celebration.  
          That's of course Mrs. Hogarth
          you are so admirably assisting. 

MR.  HOGARTH puts a hand on first the shoulder of  ROBERT
and then MARY's.

                        MR. HOGARTH
          Our Mary and Robert.
                 (Hogarth indicates Catherine)

          Last is my eldest child Catherine.

DICKENS  turns  to CATHERINE two steps below her  mother. 
Their  eyes  meet,  and their  looks  reveal  spontaneous
attraction.  DICKENS insinuates himself between MRS. HOGARTH
and her daughter crooking his other elbow to CATHERINE.


                        DICKENS
          May I have the honor?

Tentatively  she  lays her hand upon his arm.   Then  she
slips her arm through his arm.  Their eyes remain locked.
      
CUT TO

INT  -  DICKENS'S  APARTMENT - NIGHT

About fifteen people crowd the small, sparsely furnished,
living area.  It is warmed by a fireplace and two lamps.  The young
men sit on the floor.  A small table holds punch fixings, and
a tea kettle hisses on the fire.  DICKENS pours punch for the
new arrivals.

CUT TO

HOGARTH and JOHN DICKENS nod in recognition of each other.
DICKENS draws the others in the HOGARTHS' party to where his
parents sit.

                        DICKENS
          I want you to meet my parents, John
          and Elizabeth Dickens.  You may
          hold them responsible for all this.

MR  AND MRS.  JOHN DICKENS take an obvious pride in their
son.  They sit hand in hand.

                        JOHN DICKENS
                 (taking charge)
          Son,  sing one of those songs  I
          taught you when you were a lad.
                 (to the company at large)
          I used to take him about with me
          to let others hear him sing.
          What a favorite of any convivial
          gathering he's always been.

CUT TO

DICKENS is standing to one side of the hearth.   He  has
put  on  his accordion and adjusts it  before  playing  a
scale or two.   When he starts to sing, his voice betrays
the vestigial accents of country speech.

          "When  the  heart  of a  man  is
          depressed with care,
          The clouds are dispersed when  a
          woman appears."

He plays a few flourishes.

          "Like  the  notes of  a  fiddle,
          she....

CUT TO

Individual faces appear in the soft firelight.  The older
DICKENSES.  All  the HOGARTHS. THREE YOUNG MEN of  about
Dickens's age.  FREDERICK.  A YOUNG COUPLE sitting  very  close
together,  the  woman  twisting  her  unfamiliar
wedding band.

DICKENS  loosens  his cravat,  teasing  his
adoring  audience  with scales and sour notes.
Then he picks up his song again.

                        DICKENS
          "Like  the notes of a fiddle she
          sweetly, sweetly
          Raises  our spirits  and  charms
          our fears.
          Roses   and  lilies  her  cheeks
          disclose."

He  pauses  again.    This  time  he  looks  directly  at
Catherine.   Her cheeks flush more vividly than they  did
with the warm fire and the punch.

                        DICKENS
          But  her  bright lips  are  more
          sweet than those.
          Press  her,   caress  her,  with
          blisses her kisses
          Persuade us to pleasure and soft
          repose."

MR.  AND  MRS.  HOGARTH exchange concerned looks and both
look at their daughter CATHERINE.

CATHERINE sits with lips slightly parted.  She can't take
her  eyes  off DICKENS.   One of her prettily  shod  feet
peeps from beneath her skirt; demurely she conceals it.

DISSOLVE TO

INT - DRAWING ROOM - NIGHT

A MONTAGE presents scenes of DICKENS and CATHERINE dancing,
talking, having tea, suggesting the passing of time since the
first meeting.

CLOSE ON couple in earnest conversation, committed.

CUT TO

EXT - KENSAL LODGE - EVENING

In the fading light appears Kensal  Lodge  near  village  of
Willesden; it is  a spacious English country home with grounds.
       
INT - DRAWING ROOM - NIGHT

Several MEN and ONE WOMAN converse and drink sherry in groups of
two or three.  DICKENS speaks with a man somewhat
older.  He is WILLIAM HARRISON AINSWORTH--small,
handsome, jeweled and dressed as a dandy.  A third
man joins them;  this is the publisher JOHN MACRONE.

                        MACRONE
          Ainsworth, please introduce me to
          this young man.  I know him only by
          his growing reputation.

                        AINSWORTH
          John Macrone, I have the
          pleasure of introducing you to my
          recent acquaintance, Charles Dickens.

                        MACRONE
          All of us will no doubt profit from
          your acquaintance.

                        AINSWORTH
          Ah, you are thinking of adding one
          more name to your list of popular
          authors, I can tell.

                        MACRONE
          Now Ainsworth, you need not fear the
          world will ever forget the name of
          William Harrison Ainsworth and his
          brilliant historical novels.

The   three  men  laugh  and  continue  in   conversation,
Ainsworth moving on to speak with other guests.

CUT TO

While DICKENS and MACRONE still talk, MACRONE nods
toward the only woman in the room.
                
                        MACRONE
          Have you met Ainsworth's cousin?
 
CUT TO

MRS. TOUCHET, a woman of middle age, pleasant appearance.  She pours
sherry for one of guests.

CUT TO

MACRONE speaks in a low voice to DICKENS

                        MACRONE
          She's a widow, keeps house for Ainsworth
          since he and his wife separated.

                        DICKENS
          Separated?  Ah, that's a pity.  Yes, he
          introduced me to his cousin.  Mrs. Touchet,
          if I remember.  Separated, indeed?  Are there children?

CUT TO

INT - HOGARTH'S DRAWING ROOM - NIGHT

HOGARTH and MRS. HOGARTH have drawn chairs together.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          But Catherine sees so little of him.
          I know she is very disappointed that he
          didn't accompany her to the musicale last night.

                        HOGARTH
          His work is important.  He plans a wonderful
          future for both of them.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          I do want her happiness.

CUT TO

INT - DICKENS' FLAT - NIGHT

Swirling skirts of dancer.   Again,  we see  CATHERINE'S
prettily shod feet.
                 
                        CATHERINE
                 (Her voice rising in alarm)
          Oh, please, Charles.   Not  so fast!

CHARLES  holds CATHERINE'S waist with  both  hands. 
Face flushed, she holds tightly to his shoulders.
Surrounding them are voices.  A fiddler plays.

                        CATHERINE
          I've never danced so fast!  What
          a demon you can be.

He is laughing and pressing her to him.

                        CHARLES
          I'll  let  you sit  down  for  a
          little while but you must promise
          hours more dancing.
          Tonight is very special.

                        CATHERINE
            (looking into his eyes)
          Always  your  birthdays will  be
          special.

CUT TO

Show a room  not  unlike the  former  Dickens'  apartment  at
Furnival's Inn but larger, with more windows and a marble
mantlepiece  above the hearth.   People hold punch cups.
A large crate of books sits by the doorway.
On the table silver trays hold sandwiches and petit fours.
A small pile of books rests there as well.

CLOSE UP reveals  the  books cover:  Sketches by Boz by
Charles Dickens.

CUT TO

Among the party goers MR. HOGARTH stands.

                        MR. HOGARTH
          Fill your cups once again!  Let's have
          one more toast.

DICKENS stands  at punch table.   CATHERINE is  ladling
punch into each of the cups that is extended.
The party-goers have gathered about Mr. HOGARTH

                        MR. HOGARTH
                 (Indicating Dickens)
          Last year we were gathered on
          February 7 to wish our friend
          well on his birthday.  Once
          again we salute him.

All laugh and some put their cups to their mouths.

                        MR. HOGARTH
                 (lifting his hand)
          Hold!  There is more.  More of
          this young man I am so soon to
          call my son.  To his birthday
          as before...to his fine new
          flat...to the publication
          of his new book...to continued
          success and happiness.

All raise their glasses and drink to  CHARLES  including
CATHERINE  in their salutes because DICKENS has moved  to
put  his  arm about her.  The bagpipes play some  rousing
warrior's song.   Groups form.   The din of voices  fills
the room, uncarpeted and undraped.
       
CUT TO

CHARLES assists CATHERINE in sitting down in a  straight
chair.

                        CHARLES
          You may stay with these dear
          friends of mine for only a
          short while, Catherine.
          Believe nothing they tell
          you of me.

Catherine smiles radiantly.

CUT TO

INT - BEDROOM - SAME NIGHT

CATHERINE howls piteously.    
MARY and MRS. HOGARTH attend her.

                        MARY
          Please, dear sister. 

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          Once again, Catherine.  There now.
          Oh, do try.  Do try to modulate
          this grief.  We must be rational.

                        CATHERINE
                 (sobbing)
          R-r-rational?  Reason has deserted
          me, dear Mama.  Sister, how
          sorry I am.  I don't want to
          hurt you.  But composure?
                 (she renews her sobbing)

                        MRS. HOGARTH
                 (patiently)
          Catherine, say again what it was
          you heard at the party.
          Charles and the Beadnell girl
          ...What was her name?

                        CATHERINE
          M-M-Maria.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
                 (Bending toward Catherine)
          And you were told that some
          time ago Charles was very much
          in love with her?

                        CATHERINE
          I think that--oh, Mama--he
          wanted so much to m-m-marry
          her and, and....

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          Dear Kate, I'm sure
          after you and Charles are
          married this whole matter....

                        CATHERINE
          Her Papa wouldn't have it.  Her
          Papa didn't like Charles.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          I still can't see, my Catherine,
          what any of this has to do with
          you?  Your father has said he'll
          be proud to have Charles as his
          son-in-law.  Your Papa thinks
          so highly of Charles....

                        CATHERINE     
                 (dabbing at her eyes)
          But Charles was in love with her.
          Sh-she broke his heart.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
                 (pulling away from Catherine)
          He doesn't appear to be a man with
          a broken heart at the present time.

                        MARY
                 (hesitantly and softly)
          Charles now looks at nobody but you.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          Mary is right, Catherine.

                        CATHERINE
                 (Pensively)
          Oh, I have been so happy.
          This past year.  So happy.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
                 (With concern)
          I think we can all put this
          behind us now.
          But, Catherine, if learning
          about Maria Beadnell makes any
          difference about your feelings
          for Charles, then....

A vanity mirror reflects CATHERINE'S profile.

                        CATHERINE
                 (Her blue eyes see the future)
          Oh, Mama...Mary, there is nothing
          that could change my feelings
          for Charles.

CLOSE ON MRS. HOGARTH'S displeasure.

CUT TO

INT - HOGARTH DRAWING ROOM - DAY

This  is  the  drawing  room of  the  Hogarths'  home  in
Chelsea.   At  one end of the room CHARLES and  CATHERINE
have  pulled two straight backed chairs together and  are
engaged in a conversation that betrays serious concern.

CLOSE UP

CATHERINE looks intensely into the face of her betrothed. 
Something akin to fright begins to work upon her.

                        CHARLES
          I must speak of this matter.  It
          touches all outlook of our future.
          If we are to be together...and I
          pray that we may be, as we have
          planned so steadfastly.

                        CATHERINE
                 (very faintly)
          And I...

                        DICKENS
                 (like a parent)
          Then there'll be no more of
          sullen moods, Catherine. 
          You want to change.

                 (admonishingly)
          You must change all that, not only
          for me, but also for yourself.

                        CATHERINE
                 (in a child-like voice)
          I want nothing more than to please
          you, Charles.

                        CHARLES
                 (his face relaxing)
          Do you know how much your moods affect me?
          Your coldness with me took hold of
          our last two meetings.  Though
          I bundle up against the wind I
          leave your presence with a chilly
          heart.  I want my wife to be as cheerful
          as a bird.

                        CATHERINE
                 (mollified, almost adult-like)
          Oh, I am sorry to have distressed
          you. I want to bring you joy.
          We will be so happy together, so
          happy, will we not?

                        DICKENS
          You are my sweetheart. You
          will be as cheerful as a bird.

CUT TO

INT - DRAWING ROOM OF OLDER DICKENS - DAY

In the drawing room of JOHN AND ELIZABETH DICKENS nothing
like  the comfortable furnishings of the  Hogarths'  home
presents itself.   Only one ugly table sits at the center
of the room, and an armchair looks especially worn.  JOHN
DICKENS  stands  to  one  side  while  MRS.  DICKENS  and
CATHERINE unfold an embroidered table cloth.

                        MRS. DICKENS
                 (Decisively)
          It will do nicely for your teatimes
          and entertainments.

                        CATHERINE
          Mrs. Dickens, how thoughtful you
          have been to take this trouble
          with our linens.
          What beautiful work...
          Mr. Dickens, how can I thank
          both of you enough?

                        JOHN DICKENS
                 (Proudly)
          My wife is a Barrow, you know.
          The Barrows have had a place in
          the world.  They may not take
          kindly to an in-law who has had
          his shares of the troubles of
          this world, but...

                        MRS. DICKENS
          Stop.  Stop now.  Miss Hogarth
          need hear nothing of our family's
          troubles.
                 (turning to Catherine)
          Please pay him no attention.
          It's my brother who is at
          fault.  I choose to make no
          mind.

MR.  DICKENS at first steps back as if ready to make some
new verbal onslaught but seems,  upon further thought, to
let the women alone.  He rolls his eyes.

                        MR. DICKENS
                 (almost apologetically)
          I can see the two of you have
          no need of my opinions.  I'll
          just step outside and wait
          till Charles arrives.

                        MRS. DICKENS
                 (turning to him and patting him)
          After I show Miss Hogarth these
          linens I've put together, we'll
          have tea. 
                 (consolingly)
          We've made those lemon tarts you like
          so much.

MR.  DICKENS leaves the room very slowly as if wanting to
catch  any words the two women may yet have for him...and
for each other.

                        CATHERINE
                 (attending to the table cloth)
          It's Irish linen, is it not?

                        MRS. DICKENS
          Yes, and had so cheaply.  Such
          lovely work.  I hate to think
          what little wages those Irish
          girls receive.
            (brightening)
          But then this is England.

                        CATHERINE
          We'll let the men take on the
          troubles of the world.  What
          tiny stitches!

                        MRS. DICKENS
                 (almost whispering)
          Catherine, you must know my
          people will not welcome my
          husband, Mr. Dickens, to their
          house.  It has been a special
          grief to me for many years.
          My good husband does try....

                        CATHERINE
                 (consolingly)
          He is the kindest of men.

                        MRS. DICKENS
                 (hopefully)
          Things will be better for us.
          We've turned the corner now.
          How could we be more pleased
          with Charles's choice of a
          bride?  Oh, my dear, Miss
          Hogarth, already you have
          brought us happiness.
                        CATHERINE
                 (Catching her brightening)
          How wonderful all of you have
          been to me.  We will join our
          two families.  I know as time
          goes by, we will grow closer.
          But how can that be...?
          Already....

                        MRS. DICKENS
                 (With great pride)
          I think, though you may laugh
          at me, that Charles will make
          a capital husband.  He's been
          such a dependable sort since
          he was a little boy.

                        CATHERINE
                 (off Mrs. Dickens's reaction)
          My father thinks highly of his
          future.

                        MRS. DICKENS
          You'll have your own carriage,
          Catherine.

                        CATHERINE
          What do I care?  I have no need
          for wealth and fine things.

                        MRS. DICKENS
          But Charles is ambitious, my dear.

                        CATHERINE
          Oh, I hope he will not always work
          so hard.

                        MRS. DICKENS
          But he loves his work.  When he
          was only a little boy...  When
          we had our troubles...
          We kept him out of school.  He
          worked and gave his little sums
          to his father....

                        CATHERINE
          He's told me nothing of such times....
          Why has he not talked of all this?

                        MRS. DICKENS
                 (touching Catherine's arm)
          Say nothing of this to him, not
          ever. He hates the memory.  He
          hated his little job.  I never
          understood how much he hated it.

                        CATHERINE
          Whatever did he do?

                        MRS. DICKENS
          I cannot say.  Oh, don't ask me.
          But I wanted him to keep on with
          his working.  Do you understand?
          We so much needed every pence he
          brought to us.  Oh, do you
          understand?

                        CATHERINE
          Poor Charles.  Oh, I am sorry for
          both of you!
                 (emotionally she hides her face)

CUT TO
       
INT - HOGARTH DRAWING ROOM - DAY

THE HOGARTHS are settled in their drawing room.   MR. AND
MRS  HOGARTH are seated in chairs drawn up to  catch  the
light from French windows to one side of the room.  He is
reading a paper and she is working at needlepoint.  Young
ROBERT  works at the table and holds pen in  hand.   MARY
and  CATHERINE   are on straight chairs.   MARY  holds  a
skien   of  yarn  which  CATHERINE  works  into  a  ball. 
GEORGINA (age 9)  is knitting a white square,  and  YOUNG
GEORGE  (15)  sits  in  a lounge chair  pushed  into  the
corner.

                  MRS. HOGARTH
            (putting down her needlepoint)
       George, it's much too dark over there
       for reading.  Do come over here where
       it's light.

                  YOUNG GEORGE
            (looking up from his book)
       I won't.  You know how Papa humphs
       when he's reading.  And you always
       want to know what it is I'm chuckling
       about.  I like it over here.

                  MRS. HOGARTH
       But I know what you're reading. It's
       Boz, and you've read all that
       before, haven't you?

                     GEORGE
       There you go, Mums.  Do let me be.  I
       want to look at this sketch of Augustus
       Minns again.  Do you remember?

                  MRS. HOGARTH
       Another of those bachelors Mr. Dickens
       likes to portray?

                     GEORGE
       Don't you like the piece?

                  MRS. HOGARTH
       It's all right in its way, I suppose.
       Mr. Minns loses his umbrella, does
       he not?

                     GEORGE
       Yes.  And do you know I feel a little
       sorry for him?  Poor chap...the order
       of his life is his very refuge.

                  MRS. HOGARTH
       Indeed.  We English do dote on routine.

CLOSE UP

ROBERT  is  practicing  writing shorthand  symbols  in  a
copybook.  He struggles with his penmanship, blotting and
scratching out many of his marks.

                        ROBERT
          Now all of you make it difficult
          for me to work.  I'm not as far
          along in my studies of shorthand
          as that wizard of a teacher would
          like.  I know he'll be here for
          tea and inspect my work, wanting
          to see more and more.

                      MARY
          Mr. Dickens has told all of us
          what rapid progress you are
          making, Robert.

CATHERINE displays some petulance.

                        CATHERINE
          He has spent a great deal of his
          time supervising his studies. 
          And his time...
      
                 (she widens her eyes)
          I might wish that he spent a bit
          more of it with me.

At  this  moment  three of the younger  children  of  the
Hogarths  march  into the room from one door and out  the
other.   Then they quickly return.  They are two boys and
a girl,  carrying mops and brooms as if they were muskets
on their shoulders.   Their expressions are  disciplined. 
A tiny drummer, tugging now and then at his pants follows
them.   They  all exit by the door they entered after two
turns about the room.

                        MR. HOGARTH
          I didn't know girls were being
          conscripted into the service
          of King George.

GEORGINA  has finished knitting her square and places  it
with another.  She takes up another ball of yarn.

                        GEORGINA
          Mother, do you wish me to assist
          Nurse in getting the little ones
          ready for tea?

CATHERINE, pouting a bit, looks toward GEORGINA.

                        CATHERINE               
          Georgina knits so well.  We'll
          not be able to ready my trousseau
          without her. She knits much
          faster than I.  Georgina
          never loses a stitch.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          But she is so wonderful with
          the little ones, and Nurse
          apparently does need some
          help this afternoon.  Georgina
          will be....

CUT TO

Dickens  dressed as a sailor opens the window behind  the
older Hogarths and jumps into the room.   He is whistling
a hornpipe and dances a hornpipe.   Then as quickly as he
finishes he jumps out.

CUT TO

YOUNG  GEORGE puts down his book,  crosses the  room  and
looks  out the window.   He looks up and down the  garden
and  shrugs  his shoulders when he turns to look  at  the
other members of his family who are in the room.

CUT TO

GEORGINA has a tight little countenance that slowly gives
way to the very faintest smile.

CUT TO

MR.  HOGARTH  folds his paper carefully,  putting it down
on  a small table beside him.   He removes his spectacles
and takes out a handkerchief to wipe his brow.

CUT TO

MRS. HOGARTH purses her lips and stabs her needle into an
almost finished piece of work.

CLOSE UP

Needlepoint  cushion  cover that advises "God  Bless  Our
Happy Home."  The m and e remain unfinished.

CUT TO

MARY,  who draws a hand from the skien of yarn to smooth
her   hair,   exchanges  a  glance  with  CATHERINE   and
suppresses a smile.

                        CATHERINE
                 (sighing)
          It's his sense of humor.

                        MR. HOGARTH
                 (speculatively)
          He does get altogether carried
          away, don't you think?

                        GEORGINA
                 (rising from her chair)
          I'll go see about the little ones,
          Mother.  I think I hear crying.

                      MARY
                 (slowly)
          They'd so have liked the
          hornpipe.

CUT TO

YOUNG GEORGE, who continues to stand in the middle of the
room as if not knowing what to do next, puts his hands in
his pockets and scowls.

                     GEORGE
                 (to Catherine)
          There's a side to Charles
          Dickens that none of us will              
          ever understand.

A knock at the door interrupts whatever else GEORGE might
have said.  He closes his mouth, biting his lip, and goes
to answer the door.
The  occupants of the drawing room listen attentively.

                        DICKENS
          Good afternoon, George.  Is
          everyone well?

                        GEORGE
          Good afternoon to you.  We've
          been expecting you.  Come into
          the drawing room....

DICKENS  enters  the drawing room as if everything is  as
usual.   He is dressed in his normal Sunday clothes.  The
Hogarths sit in astonishment,  waiting for him to  speak. 
Their faces betray great wonderment.

Suddenly DICKENS bursts out with uproarious laughter.  He
is  obviously delighted with his wild and spirited  joke. 
The  HOGARTHS look back and forth at one another and one-by-one
they register a muted amusement.  The fun of their
visitor is infectious, at last.

CUT TO

EXT - ST. LUKE'S CHURCH IN CHELSEA -DAY

Superimpose date:  April 2, 1836

DICKENS and CATHERINE emerge from church as man and wife. 
She is not dressed in elaborate bridal clothes,  and  the
wedding  party that follows is small.   A carriage  waits
for  them  and they step inside followed by children  and
adults of wedding party.

CUT TO

INT - CARRIAGE - DAY

DICKENS embraces CATHERINE.

                     DICKENS
       Now it is always, my darling.

                    CATHERINE
       Always.

CUT TO

INT - HOGARTH DINING ROOM - DAY

Establish   table  set  at  wedding  breakfast   at   the
Hogarths'.   Only two men who are not family members take
part in festivities.  CATHERINE  stoops to allow the many
children  to look at her bouquet and to feel the satin of
her dress.   She is radiant.  Before everybody is seated,
DICKENS attempts to orient his publisher JOHN MACRONE, an
older  man than Dickens.   The other outsider  is  THOMAS
BEARD,  of Dickens' own age.  He lays a hand on MACRONE'S
shoulder and indicates various family members. 

                     DICKENS
       My friend Mr. Beard, of course, has
       made the acquaintances of this
       constellation of people, all now
       related to that writer you chose to
       introduce to the world...one Boz, I
       speak of.  In truth, Boz was my
       family name given me by that rogue
       my brother Frederick...

Frederick,  smiling,  converses with Mary  Hogarth;
both are sixteen.

                     DICKENS
       I can't remember whether you've met
       my older sister Fanny, but you have
       heard her sing now.

FANNY  is  a very frail young woman.   At 26 she  is  two
years  older  than Charles but looks several years  older
than he.

                     MACRONE
       She is very talented.  What an agreeable
       voice for your wedding ceremony.  Yes,
       I have met her.

CUT  TO DICKENS who is still pointing out each person  he
names.

                     DICKENS
       My other sister is Letitia, only 20.

LETITIA,  animated,  rosier  cheeked  than FANNY  and  of
taller,  sturdier build.   She will be the only immediate
member of Dickens' family to survive him.

MACRONE appears to try to put all this large family  into
his memory.

                     MACRONE
       Ah, she is on your side of the family
       then? 

DICKENS,  smiling  and helpful,   continues to nod  to
others at the wedding breakfast, patting the younger ones
on the head as they approach, bestowing hugs and kisses.

                     DICKENS
       My friend Henry Austin calls on her.
       Our family may soon have other
       nuptials.
                 (he pauses, then gestures)
       My father John Dickens you have met.
       That is my mother next to him.  She
       and Catherine have become very close.
       I tell them they think alike.

CUT TO

JOHN  DICKENS   is everywhere.   He is  obviously  beside
himself  with elation.   He raps children's heads,  shakes
hands, laughs merrily, hugs MRS. DICKENS exuberantly.

CUT TO

MACRONE, laughing at John Dickens.

                     MACRONE
       Now I know where you get all that
       energy.  Oh, I like your family
       very much.

MRS.  HOGARTH works with two young maids to place food
on the table.

CUT TO

MRS. HOGARTH speaks with MR. HOGARTH.

                  MRS. HOGARTH
            (softly)
       We must get people to the table while
       things are still warm.

CUT TO

MR. HOGARTH taking charge of separating the children from
CATHERINE.

                   MR. HOGARTH
            (Above the din of voices)
       Let's sit down.  All of us.

            (to the children)

       Now I want all of you at that far end
       of the table.

            (to Charles' guests)

       Mr. Macrone and Mr. Beard, will you
       be able to manage?  Now do seat yourselves
       near Catherine and Charles.

            (to Georgina)
       Georgina, do help the little ones.

CUT TO

GEORGINA efficiently begins seating the young Dickens and
Hogarths.

CUT TO

DICKENS  nods again to MACRONE. 

                     DICKENS
       I'll see to it that you know each
       and every Hogarth family member.  But
       do let's eat first.

            (his eyes search out Catherine)

       Oh, Catherine, we'll be together with
       our parents.  May all our holidays be
       so joyous.

CUT TO

MR. AND MRS. HOGARTH exchange smiles.

CUT TO

CATHERINE's  white satin wedding shoes peep from  beneath
her skirts as she moves toward her new husband.

CUT TO

EXT - HONEYMOON   COTTAGE  - EVENING

GATHERING COASTAL FOG

CUT TO

INT - CHALK HONEYMOON COTTAGE - EVENING

CHARLES  and CATHERINE are in front of  small  fieldstone
hearth.   He is working bellows to catch kindling.   When
he is assured that fire will go well,  he pulls Catherine
to  the hearth rug so that when she is sitting he may lie
down and put his head in her lap.

                     CHARLES
            I hope that girl does more
            beef for us tonight.  That walk
            gave me a great appetite.

                    CATHERINE
       When we talked, she said she had meat
       pie in mind.  I hope that will please
       you as well.  I wish I'd  a better
       idea of such things myself....

                     CHARLES
       Nonsense.  Your head will be busy with
       other matters.  And...Mary will be with
       us to help you.

                    CATHERINE
       You and Mary have become such great
       friends.  It pleases me.  Of all my
       family she has been the closest to my
       heart.  Of all...until I met you.

                     CHARLES
       I'd wanted something grander in London
       than Furnival's.  It won't be long till
       we have our separate house.  With a fine
       room for Mary...  And... others,
       my darling.

                    CATHERINE
            (laughing, putting her hands to her
            ample breasts, unconsciously)
       Many others.

                     CHARLES
            (With a playful concern that grows
            more serious)
       There now.  Three or four others. 
       If you please.

CUT TO

CATHERINE,  smiling,  as if she will let "three or  four"
pass for the moment.  She smoothes his hair.

                    CATHERINE
       That was the longest walk I've
       ever taken.
       Do you always walk so far?

                     CHARLES
       You're joking.  Not for me.
       You'll grow accustomed to my jaunts.
       I want you to be the companion of
       my little journeys.  Your legs
       will grow stronger.

                    CATHERINE
       I've liked the smell of the sea.
       It is lovely here at Chalk.  And
       to hear you tell of your boyhood
       in Chatham....

                     CHARLES
       My happiest time ...  And isn't
       the cathedral at Rochester splendid?
       Someday we'll have a country home.
       We can come to smell the sea
       whenever all that smoke and grime
       of London dims our spirits.

Flames  of well kindled fire engulf the logs and the wood
curls and snaps.

CUT TO

Marble fireplace at Furnival's,  a more subdued fire from
coals on the grate.

CUT TO

EXT -  FURNIVAL'S INN.  ESTABLISHING.

CUT TO

Dickens  entering Inn's courtyard and walking across  the
courtyard.   A bush or two flower.   Spring flowers  line
the walkway.

CUT TO

Dickens enters his large apartment at Furnival's.  Seated
before the fire are Mary, Catherine, and Dickens' younger
brother Frederick.  They all turn to welcome Dickens.

                        CATHERINE
          Frederick has come by for a visit.

                        FREDERICK
          I've wanted to move my things
          out of the way sooner. 
          I'll take a few more.

                        DICKENS
           Oh, they're not in the way. 
          I'll try to find some time to
          help you.  It will take time
          to get settled.

                        CATHERINE
          I'd worried that you might be
          late to tea.

                        DICKENS
          Not at all.  As a matter of fact,
          I'm expecting a visitor.

                        CATHERINE
          A visitor?

                        DICKENS
          That dour Seymour I've spoken of...

            (to Frederick)

          The one who would have drawn my
          Mr. Pickwick skinny and spoiled
          his commodious nature...

FREDERICK laughs with his brother.
DICKENS is suddenly all business and unsmiling.

                        DICKENS
          I've invited Seymour over,
          ostensibly for teatime and
          to meet my new wife.

                 (he pauses as if choosing words)

          But give me some time alone               
          with him.  I've business with
          him as well.

CUT TO

INT - DRAWING ROOM - LATE AFTERNOON

DICKENS  and older man - SEYMOUR,  the illustrator of the
beginnings of Pickwick Papers,  a moody man with years of
experience, sit alone.  Dickens butters a remnant of toast 
from  the despoiled teatime and pours a last half cup  of
tea  when  Seymour declines further  refreshment  with  a
raised hand.

                        DICKENS
          I know I shall always keep a
          firmer hand on the illustrations
          of my works than others might. 
          And, of course, we'll learn to
          work with each other's  uh,
          sensitivities. Your experience
          wins you respect.

                 (he looks to see what              
                 effect his words
                 have upon his visitor,
                 but Seymour's face keeps
                 an unreadable expression)
          And my rising reputation will             
          do no little part in carrying
          our mutual effort to every well
          deserved success.
                 (Dickens chuckles alone.)
          Indeed your execution of the
          furnishings of the room in
          which you place my "dying
          clown" is superb!  But don't
          you think the woman can look
          a bit younger and that
          miserable man be rendered more
          sympathetic in his appearance?

A  stony appearance sets into SEYMOUR'S face. 
He waits to answer.

                        SEYMOUR
                 (Distantly)
          I made my reputation in the time
          of the troubles between King
          George and Queen Caroline.

                        DICKENS
                 (Chuckling)
          Indeed you did.  Oh, sir, you did.

Unfathomable emotion clouds SEYMOUR's face.
                        SEYMOUR
          The idea of the gentlemen's
          club was mine, you must
          remember. The idea behind
          PICKWICK PAPERS was all mine.
      
CUT TO

INT - DRAWING ROOM - NIGHT
      
DICKENS, MARY, CATHERINE are before the fire, DICKENS
reading.

                        DICKENS
          So it's here that Mr. Pickwick
          and Mr. Wardle meet a character
          I've given the name Sam Weller.
          They offer him money for
          information and he says...
          But let me read it...
          "...What the devil do you want
          with me, as the man said when
          he sees the ghost."

MARY and CATHERINE laugh with appreciation.

                        DICKENS
          But you see, when he's asked
          who's present at the Inn where
          he's employed to clean and shine
          the shoes, he answers, according
          to his trade:
          "There's a wooden leg in number
           six; there's a pair of Hessians
           in thirteen..."  And so on. 
          Do you understand?

The little audience nods.

                        DICKENS
          "...and a pair o' lady's shoes in
          number five."

 MARY  claps her hands as if she does not have to have
 those shoes identified.

                        MARY
          And those shoes belong to Miss Rachel!

                        DICKENS
          Indeed they do....

They laugh  merrily  and  Dickens bends his  head  to
read  some more....
      
 CUT TO      

 INT - DICKENS' BEDROOM - EARLY MORNING

 SOUNDS OF KNOCKING
 Both DICKENS in bed.  CHARLES is opening eyes and
 struggling to figure out why.  A louder knock causes
 him to rise.  CATHERINE awakes.

                        CATHERINE     
          What is it?

                        DICKENS
                 (drawing on dressing gown)
          Someone at the door.  This early.

CUT TO

INT - ENTRY - SAME MORNING
       
DICKENS  opens  door.   MARY has entered the room  fast
behind him.
FREDERICK appears in the hallway.  He carries a package.

                        FREDERICK
                 (taking in Mary and eyeing
                 his brother)
          Charles, do step outside.  I've
          something to tell you.
                 (attempting to smile)
          Good morning, Mary.

The brothers step into hallway,  and Frederick pulls  the
door shut behind them.  He taps Charles with his package.

                        CHARLES
                 (off his brother's emotion
                 and taking package)
          What is this?  How strangely
          you act.  And at such a time...

                        FREDERICK
          It's Seymour.

                        CHARLES
          This is his drawing then?  But
          whyever?  What is it?

                        FREDERICK
          Seymour has done his last work.
          He's blown out his brains.

                        CHARLES
          What are you saying?

                        FREDERICK
         Last night.  With his fowling
         piece.

MARY and CATHERINE open the door behind them.

                        CATHERINE
          Charles, do come inside.  Why do
          you and Frederick stand there?

The brothers exchange glances, and then CHARLES looks at
the women.

                        CHARLES
          There's been an accident.

CUT TO

INT - CATHERINE is in drawing room.   She is looking at
Seymour's drawing.

                        CATHERINE
          It's exactly as Charles wanted
          it done.

Tears  well  from her brimming eyes.   MARY  attempts  to
comfort her.

                        MARY
          He was a very moody man.

                        CATHERINE
                 (As if to herself)
          Moody.           

CUT TO

EXT - KENSAL  LODGE - LATE AFTERNOON

BEARD  AND DICKENS WALK THROUGH GROUNDS TO DOOR.   IT  IS
LATE IN THE YEAR,  AND LEAVES HAVE FALLEN.  NO SUN, STILL
SOME  GRAY DAYLIGHT.   THEY WALK BRISKLY AND ARE  BUNDLED
AGAINST THE COLD.
       
                        DICKENS
          I agree.  This year has gone by
          all too quickly.

                        BEARD
          I'd hoped we'd get out here to
          Ainsworth's before this.  Ah, I
          can't compare the pace of my
          life with that of yours.

                        DICKENS
          Seemingly with each new pleasure
          there's some responsibility.  I
          could not be more fortunate, of
          course.

                        BEARD
          But you occasionally envy that
          freedom you perceive in your
          still unmarried associates.

                        DICKENS
          Hmm.  You won't betray me?

Both men laugh as they knock at the massive front door of
Kensal Lodge.

CUT TO 

INT - DRAWING ROOM - SAME EVENING
    
A  SERVING MAN HELPS DICKENS AND BEARD WITH  THEIR
WRAPS WHICH HE GIVES TO A HOUSEMAID BEFORE USHERING  THEM
INTO  AINSWORTH'S  DRAWING  ROOM.  CAMERA  FOLLOWS  THEM. 
AINSWORTH AND JOHN FORSTER ARE IN CONVERSATION AS DICKENS
AND  BEARD ENTER.   OTHER GUESTS GATHER ABOUT AINSWORTH'S
COUSIN  WHO IS POURING TEA.   THE ROOM  IS  TRADITIONALLY
FURNISHED  AND  A WIDE HEARTH WARMS THE ROOM AND  INVITES
OCCASIONAL GUESTS TO WARM THEMSELVES.             

                        AINSWORTH
                 (raising a hand to greet the
                  new arrivals)
          How pleased I am to see both of
          you!  I'd hoped you'd find my
          home before now, I might add.
            
                        DICKENS AND BEARD
          As we did.  Absolutely.  How fine
          to be here once again.

                        AINSWORTH
          Macrone will be along later.  I
          assume you know John Forster.

                        DICKENS
                 (smiling and extending
                 both his hands)
          But no.  We have somehow never
          met.

FORSTER, as was his habit, dramatically puts his
hand upon his heart and sententiously quotes from
Diogenes.  He is Dickens's age but with considerably
more girth.  He is dark skinned, extravagant in his
gestures, passionate in his opinions.         

                        FORSTER
          I am seeking a man.

His allusion is not lost on DICKENS, who returns
with lines from Shakespeare.

                        DICKENS
          But man, proud man,
          Drest in a little brief authority,
          Most ignorant of what he's most assur'd,
          His glassy essence, like an angry ape,
          Plays such fantastic tricks before high heaven,
          Aa make the angels weep.

BEARD and AINSWORTH join in the resulting merriment.                               
                        AINSWORTH
          Now that you've met, you'll get
          along famously.  I don't know
          where you may find a more
          devoted admirer of your Mr.
          Pickwick, Mr. Dickens, than is
          John Forster.

                        FORSTER
                 (vigorously agreeing)
          And of your Sam Weller.  Never
          let go of that one.  Oh,
          remember how we meet him at
          that inn before Pickwick
          took him as his serving man?

                        DICKENS
                 (with evident sincerity)
          I can't thank you enough for
          your kindest of reviews in the
          Examiner.

                        AINSWORTH
          It was those reviews that led
          me to believe you were the best
          of friends.

                        DICKENS
          I do believe we shall be.

CUT TO

The   three  men  join  two  others  who  linger   beside
Ainsworth's cousin.   While tea is being poured for them,
MACRONE at last enters the room.  All exchange greetings.

CUT TO

MACRONE  sipping tea deliberately and taking the  measure
of Dickens.

                        MACRONE
          How is Catherine?

                        DICKENS
          Fine.  Oh, just fine.  And her
          delightful sister Mary takes
          the best of care of both of us.
          I don't see how we could have
          this baby without her.

CUT TO

AINSWORTH evidences surprise about the coming baby.

                        AINSWORTH
          What is this I hear?  Is it
          decently time for a baby,
          old man?  When is this offspring
          of such a remarkable father
          due?

They all laugh.                                         

                        DICKENS
                 (with unaccustomed
                  embarrassment)
          In January.  The baby will
          arrive in January if all goes
          well.

                        MACRONE
                 (with amusement)
          And to dispel any prurient
          speculation, Mr. Dickens and
          his beautiful wife will have
          been married nine months by
          that time.
         
Broad  shot  catches  guests'  amused  reaction.   Camera
catches  CLOSE  UP of face-by-face,  DICKENS raising  his
teacup as if hiding behind it.   CLOSE on  FORSTER.   His
face is round and plump, smiling like a complacent baby's
face.

CUT TO

INT - DICKENS'S BEDROOM - DAY

Newborn baby's howling, contorted face.

CATHERINE is in bed surrounded by DICKENS,  MRS. HOGARTH,
and  MRS.  DICKENS.   MARY is putting the infant into his
lavish cradle and soothing him.

                        CATHERINE 
          He sounds as if he's starving.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          Now, Catherine dear, don't you
          worry.  Your milk will come by
          tomorrow.  That baby will be
          fine.

                        DICKENS
          He is wonderfully strong and
          healthy.

                        MRS. DICKENS
                 (She has a silly smile)
          We're going to take such good
          care of both of you.

                        CATHERINE
          I do want to be the best of
          mothers.  And I feel so very
          weak.

                        MRS. DICKENS
          Of course, you do.  That's the
          way it is.  You need your family
          at a time like this.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          Both Charles's mother and I will
          stay tonight.

                        CATHERINE
          But what of Mary?

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          She'll be with your father for
          a brief time.  Then you'll all
          manage splendidly.

                        DICKENS
          I'll take care of getting Mary
          back and forth.  Now you must
          get some sleep.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          You heard what the doctor said.

Baby begins crying again.  DICKENS looks first at
his  wife  and  then  at his  new  son,  apparently  only
beginning  to realize how changed his life  will  become. 
He  alone is very sober when the others smile to reassure
CATHERINE.

                        CATHERINE
                 (beginning to look very
                  pleased with herself)
          How can I not sleep well knowing
          that all of you are near?  The
          baby then is perfect, is he not?

CATHERINE  smooths  her hair as if to make  herself  more
attractive.   Her eyes are especially lovely.  She begins
to  beam upon all of them blissfully and relax among  her
pillows.

CHARLES watches her obvious enjoyment of their  attention
as if he has never seen her before.  The baby cries more
lustily.

                        DICKENS
          How loudly he cries!

CUT TO

EXT - DOUGHTY ST. - DAY

BROAD  SHOT - DICKENS,  MARY with baby in her arms hugged
to  her,  CATHERINE stand in front of what will be  their
new  home.   This  house  is the only  one  of  the  many
Dickens' residences now open to the public.

                        DICKENS
          It is the house I wanted for us
          when we were first married.  I
          agree with the agents that it
          will be perfect for us.  Now
          we'll have twelve rooms instead
          of three.

                        CATHERINE
          How well you have done!  How
          wisely you have chosen!  But
          so much room!

                        DICKENS
          Don't you think Frederick will
          find room here?

                        CATHERINE
          Of course.  How splendid!  We
          will all live happily ever after.
          It is truly like a fairy tale.

DICKENS steps back to admire his new house and puts
one arm about CATHERINE and the other about MARY and
the smiling baby.

                        DICKENS
          It is what we all have wanted.

CUT TO

INT - DOUGHTY ST. DRAWING ROOM - NIGHT

FANNY and her husband HENRY BURNETT are visiting.   FANNY
has  put  on  some  weight  and  appears  very  cheerful. 
FREDERICK and MARY play at cards together.  CATHERINE has
propped herself against many pillows on the  couch.   She
is eating a little cake and laughing.

                        FREDERICK
                 (gleefully boisterous, his
                 excited voice rising)
          There!  That's the third trick
          I've won from you, Mary.  One
          more, and I'll have a kiss as
          well.

                        MARY
                 (screeching delightedly)
          You won't!

                        CATHERINE
          Frederick, do behave yourself!
          You'll disturb your brother and
          he must stay at his writing.

                        FANNY
          Does Charles work all the time?


                        FREDERICK
          Oh, he stops to take us all to
          church on Sunday.

                        FANNY
                 (wryly)
          You know I don't believe that.

                        CATHERINE
          He started a new book last
          month.

                        MARY
                 (thoughtfully)
          It's not so jolly as Pickwick.
         
                        CATHERINE
                 (brushing crumbs from
                 her lips)
          But it's very good all the same.
          We can't wait for each new
          chapter.  The new book is
          called Oliver Twist.

                        MARY
          That's the poor orphan's name.
CUT TO

INT - DICKENS'S  STUDY - SAME NIGHT 

DICKENS  is at his work table in a small upstairs  rooms. 
He  raises  his  head to listen after  Frederick's  voice
stops his pen.   He rises and opens the door to listen to
the  voices.   Then he returns and gathers his paper  and
pen and ink and leaves the room.

CUT TO

From  perspective of hallway,  we look over Dickens 
into  drawing  room.   Dickens  stands for  some  moments
before speaking.  His eyes take in Catherine reaching for
another cake,  Frederick and Mary at their card game once
again,  Fanny in hushed and enraptured conversation  with
her new husband.   CLOSE on CATHERINE's pleasure with her
bite of cake.
                
                        DICKENS
          You are all here!

                        CATHERINE
                 (with dismay)
          Have we disturbed you?  We don't
          want our fun to keep you from
          your work.

                        DICKENS
                 (always enjoying company)
          Nonsense!  I can work the better
          with all of you to console me.
          Frederick, help me set up that
          small table in the library.  We
          can set it up out here in the
          hallway.  I don't want to miss
          anything.

FREDERICK rises from the game table.

CUT TO

EXT - ST. JAMES THEATRE - NIGHT
       
It is a Saturday night in early May.  DICKENS, FREDERICK,
CATHERINE,  MARY are climbing into a carriage.   They are
laughing and obviously all in high spirits.

                        DICKENS
                 (the last to enter)
          Driver, our home is at No. 48
          Doughty St., just north of
          Gray's Inn.

CUT TO

INT - LONDON CARRIAGE - NIGHT
       
The four members of the theater party remain animated.

                        CATHERINE
          However did the magician get
          the cooperation of that little
          dog?

                        FREDERICK
          Wouldn't I like to own that mutt
          that did tricks for the clown!

                        DICKENS
          Indeed, I'm going to take up
          magic.  I'll make a fine figure
          on the stage.

                        FREDERICK
          You used to promise you'd be in
          the theater some day.  It would
          suit you, I believe.

                        CATHERINE
          There's definitely a theatrical
          streak in the Dickens family.

                        MARY
          I love to hear Fanny sing.

                        DICKENS
          And what of the singer that we
          heard tonight?

                        MARY
                 (almost mystically)
          When I heard her, I thought I
          sat very detached from this
          earth, as if on a cloud that
          seemed to be....

                        DICKENS
          Go on.

                        MARY
          It was as if I were in the glow
          of heaven looking down on all
          of you.

They are all quieted by her speech and keep a momentary
silence.

                       CATHERINE
                 (breaking the silence)
          Mary, what a strange thing!  It
          does grow late.  I hope Charley
          has slept soundly while we've
          been gone.

                        MARY
          Charley is the best of babies.

                        DICKENS
          And you, Mary, are the best of
          sisters.

                        FREDERICK
                 (dispelling the calm
                 of the group with his
                 good-natured teasing)
          Even if you are not the best of
          card players.

CUT TO

EXT - DOUGHTY ST. - SAME NIGHT

Carriage  arrives  at gated private  Doughty  St.
where the Dickens party is waved on by porter.

CUT TO                 

INT - Hallway in DICKENS home - SAME NIGHT

MARY  removes her bonnet and with her handkerchief  blots
perspiration from her forehead.   CATHERINE watches  MARY
while removing her own bonnet.  CATHERINE'S head gives no
appearance of moisture.

                        CATHERINE
          Mary, how rosy your cheeks are.

                        MARY
          I used no color on them, Sister.

                        CATHERINE
          Oh, I did not mean...  I was a
          bit concerned about you, that's
          all.

                        DICKENS
                 (taking Catherine's hand)                 
          Like a good mother. 

                        CATHERINE
          I do believe Mary's cheeks are
          flushed.

                        MARY
          You have no cause to worry. 
          After a good night's sleep,
          I'll be fine.  Wake me early.
          I'll take care of Charley's
          changing.

MARY  climbs the stairs rather slowly and mid-way reaches
out a hand to support herself.

                        CATHERINE
          Good night.

                        DICKENS
          Good night, Mary.  Do sleep
          well.
                 (he puts an arm around
                 Catherine, and they move
                 up the stairs)

                        DICKENS (CONT.)
          You're right, Catherine.  Mary's
          cheeks are flushed.  Where is
          that Frederick?

                        CATHERINE
                 (laughing)
          No worry about that one.  He's
          down in the kitchen feasting on
          the roast lamb cook saved for
          ragout tomorrow.

                        DICKENS
                 (again merry)
          That rascal!

From upstairs they hear a muffled cry.

CUT TO

INT - Mary's bedroom - SAME NIGHT
       
MARY  lies  gasping for breath on the floor.   Her  hands
press her chest as if trying to contain her heart.

CUT TO

INT - STAIRWAY - SAME NIGHT

DICKENS bolts up the stairs two at a time.

CUT TO

INT - Mary's room - SAME NIGHT

DICKENS  has  lifted Mary in his arms and  cradles  her
against his chest as CATHERINE enters the door.   MARY is
barely conscious but manages a faint smile.

                        CATHERINE
                 (with anguish)
          Oh, Mary!  My Sister!  Charles,
          what is wrong.

                        DICKENS
                 (achieving composure with
                 difficulty)
          She is gravely ill.  We must send
          Frederick for the doctor at once.

CATHERINE rushes out the door.   DICKENS stands listening
to her hysterical crying.

                        CATHERINE
                 (her voice clearly heard in
                 Mary's room)
          Frederick!  Frederick!  Do come here
          at once.

DICKENS carries MARY to her bed and lays her down gently.

                        MARY
                 (scarcely able to speak)
          Dear Brother...dear Charles.

CUT TO

INT - Mary's  room - NEXT MORNING
  
DICKENS and CATHERINE enter  with MRS. HOGARTH.
MARY is breathing with great difficulty.
MRS.  HOGARTH registers her recognition that she has been
brought to Mary's deathbed.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          My God, My God, is this my own
          Mary.  My little girl...

MRS.  HOGARTH  puts her hand upon  Mary's  forehead,  now
appearing  cool  and pale.   She kneels down and
throws her arms around Mary's almost lifeless body.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          Oh, my God.

MRS. HOGARTH collapses at Mary's bedside.

CUT TO

INT - Another bedroom at Doughty St. - SAME DAY

CATHERINE sits now at her mother's bedside.  Frederick
stands beside her.  The mother is crying softly but seems
conscious.

                        CATHERINE
                 (to Frederick)
          She'll come around.

                        FREDERICK
          Papa will be here soon.

CUT TO

INT - MARY'S ROOM - SAME DAY

DICKENS  sits at Mary's bedside.   His eyes are closed in
meditation,  and one hand clasps Mary's right  hand.   He
opens his eyes to watch her.   MARY exhales a long,  last
breath.   At first, DICKENS shows no emotion.  Then tears
begin to flow.   He picks up the small hand he holds.  On
her ring finger is a small gold ring.   DICKENS slips off
this  ring,  and  we  see it blurred through  his  tears. 
After  he turns the ring first one way and then  another,
he  puts it on the little finger of his right  hand.   He
holds out his hand to look at the ring.

                        DICKENS
          Mary.

CUT TO

EXT - CEMETERY  ON  HARROW  ROAD - DAY

MEMBERS   OF  DICKENS  FAMILY  AND  HOGARTHS  DRESSED  IN
MOURNING  DISPERSING  FROM FUNERAL CEREMONIES  FOR  MARY. 
BEAUTIFUL SPRING DAY.

Both CATHERINE and DICKENS weep openly.

                        CATHERINE
                 (leaning on Charles's arm)
          Mary always loved the springtime.
          Charles, you chose well to bury
          her here.

                        DICKENS
                 (depressed)
          I want for myself the grave at
          our sister's side.

                        CATHERINE
                 (clearly upset, looking
                 back at her father)
          We must...  Mary would want us,
          Charles, to live.  We have
          Charley.  And...another...

                        DICKENS
                 (his depression unshaken)
          I should be stronger.  I will
          be more responsible.

                        CATHERINE
          Our memories of happiness make
          our loss the harder to bear.
 
CATHERINE stumbles slightly as they walk from the grave.
She puts her hand to her head.

                        DICKENS
          Are you well?

                        CATHERINE
          I will be well and strong.

MR. HOGARTH between YOUNG GEORGE and ROBERT follows
behind.  Only ROBERT wipes away a tear.  The other two
men are dry-eyed, almost expressionless in their grief.                                 
                        MR. HOGARTH
          I'll bring your mother out here
          when she has recovered.

                        ROBERT
          Ah, she'll  come around, Papa.
          It is beautiful here.  Charles
          did choose well.

                        MR. HOGARTH
          It was his friend Ainsworth's
          suggestion.  Charles had passed
          this way when he visited Kensal
          Lodge.

                        ROBERT
          And he has promised to write
          Ainsworth so that arrangements
          can be made with the gardener.

                        MR. HOGARTH
          There'll be a rose tree to
          shade her small grave.

                        YOUNG GEORGE
          I'll miss Mary very much.

CATHERINE is leaning heavily upon DICKENS.   The  Hogarth
men catch up with the young couple.

CLOSE UP

CATHERINE  is  grimacing as if in pain.   She unties  her
bonnet and holds it to her abdomen.

CLOSE UP

MR. HOGARTH is reacting with alarm.

                        MR. HOGARTH
          Catherine, what is it?

                        CATHERINE
                 (obviously in pain)
          Oh, father...  Charles...
          My baby...

CUT TO

INT - BEDROOM - DAY

MRS.  HOGARTH  and CATHERINE are in a bedroom where  MRS.
HOGARTH  is propped in a chair.   CATHERINE  is  spooning
soup into her mouth patiently.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          Catherine, you must not take up
          all your time with nursing me.
          I promise I'll be stronger in
          no time. 

                        CATHERINE
          Mother, I want you to take all
          care of yourself.  How could
          you be of any trouble?

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          But in your condition, Catherine...

                        CATHERINE
                 (Calmly)
          Mother, I must tell you now.  I
          have lost the baby.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
                 (gasps)
          No!  Oh, my dearest girl.

                        CATHERINE
                 (with some new strength
                 and confidence)
          I am fine, Mother.  Please
          believe me when I tell you I
          am fine.  Charles and I will
          have other babies.

CUT TO

INT - DICKENS'S STUDY - DAY

DICKENS talks with FREDERICK.

                        DICKENS
          I can't say how long.

                        FREDERICK
          But I am to say that you can do
          no work for the time being?  No
          work on either "PICKWICK" or
          "OLIVER TWIST"?

                        DICKENS
                 (in a deep depression,
                 covering his face with
                 his hands)
          I may never finish either work.
          I cannot write.  This last
          week...
                 (gesturing hopelessly)

FREDERICK  sits  beside  his brother and  neither  speak. 
After  their long silence a knock at the door sounds  and
CATHERINE enters the room without waiting for permission. 
She is carrying sherry and biscuit.

                        CATHERINE
                 (with sympathy)
          I've brought you both something.
          Please, Charles, do try to
          eat. Frederick?  But you are
          always with appetite!

                        DICKENS
                 (without emotion)
          Frederick will tell my publishers
          I cannot write.  We'll go away.
          The  country will be good for
          us.

                        CATHERINE
                 (looking at him with concern)
          Yes, the country.  I'll take such
          care of you in the country.

She sets down the small tray and pours sherry.
DICKENS'S  hand accepts glass of sherry from  CATHERINE'S
hand.

CUT TO

EXT - KENSAL  LODGE  - AUTUMN DAY

DICKENS  AND  BEARD  ON HORSEBACK.
DICKENS'S FACE STILL SHOWS SOMETHING OF DEPRESSION.

                        DICKENS
          Beard, I do appreciate your
          riding with me to the little
          grave.  My heart is buried
          there, you know.

CLOSE UP - BEARD OFF DICKENS'S REACTION SHOWS PUZZLEMENT.
  
                        BEARD            
          You're still not yourself, my
          friend.

                        DICKENS
          Who am I indeed?  And what is
          life itself?  Answer me that
          riddle, if you will.
                
BROAD  SHOT  frames  both men on horseback in  the  vivid
colors of autumn leaves.

                        BEARD
          You are twenty-five years old,
          Charles Dickens.  You are young.

Camera ZOOMS  to distance men so that they are mere
specks in autumn landscape.

CUT TO

EXT - DOUGHTY  ST.  - WINTER'S DAY.

DEEP  SNOW.   ONE FINE CARRIAGE MAKES ITS WAY PAST PORTER
TO PRIVATE STREET.

CUT TO

INT - SITTING ROOM OF DOUGHTY RESIDENCE - SAME DAY
 
CATHERINE  AND  HER MOTHER ARE AT  TEA.   WHEN  CATHERINE
RISES TO PULL A ROPE SUMMONING HER SERVANT, WE SEE SHE IS
ABOUT SIX MONTHS PREGNANT.

                        CATHERINE
                 (thoughtfully)
          I've had the strangest letter
          from my husband.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          Can you tell me what is strange
          about it, Catherine?

                        CATHERINE
          Mother, he is troubled.  You
          know we all of us will never
          shake our memories of Mary.                   

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          Catherine, how strong you have
          been these many months.  And
          Charles?

                        CATHERINE
          He describes the dreams he has
          of Mary.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          He dreams of her often?

                        CATHERINE
          The poor man dreams of her every
          night.  He gets no rest.  I fear
          for his mind.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          You have kept us all together.
          Charles and I have much to
          thank you for.

A rap at the door stops her.

                        CATHERINE
          Enter.

Flustered face of MAID appears in door.  The delivery of
her message is with smiles and excitement.
                       
                        MAID
          Oh, excuse me.  I couldn't get
          right up for the tea things.
          Because...oh, there's a very
          rich lady 'as come to call.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
                 (impatiently)
          And what is her name?

                        MAID
                 (giggling)
          Miss Coutts, M'am.

                        CATHERINE
                 (rising as if from
                 surprise)
          Miss Coutts?  Show her up
          immediately.

CATHERINE AND HER MOTHER LOOK ABOUT ANXIOUSLY.

                        CATHERINE
          Oh, never mind, Annie.  Take the
          tea things.  I'll go down myself.
          Do bring fresh tea for Miss Coutts.

CUT TO

INT - SITTING ROOM - SAME DAY

Sitting room as before, but MISS COUTTS sits in best
chair  finishing  her  tea primly.   CATHERINE  works  at
needlepoint,  and  MRS.  HOGARTH hems a  baby's  garment. 
Apparently, they have been busy with their hands while
MISS COUTTS has done all the talking.

                        MISS COUTTS
          And so I hope you'll both forgive
          me for not having  called  sooner.
          I know how upset  Mr. Dickens was
          by your younger daughter's death.
          And, Mrs. Dickens, I have so
          wanted to meet you.
                 (she drinks tea thoughtfully)

                        MISS COUTTS (CONT.)
          But how our lives have all
          changed this past year!  We have
          our charming new queen.

                        CATHERINE
          Oh, Charles declares he is in
          love with Queen Victoria.
                 (she laughs)
          But I remind him he is no longer
          free.

                        MISS COUTTS
          Indeed!  You are a merry wife
          for Mr. Dickens.  But Victoria,
          I am sure, reads his stories and
          with all England rejoiced when he
          came round again, finishing the
          tale of Mr. Pickwick, taking us
          on with Oliver Twist.

                        CATHERINE
          We do appreciate your visit.  My
          mother is with me during Charles's
          absence.  He has business in York-
          shire, but will return soon.

                        MISS COUTTS
          Ah, he is a one for business.
          And I have hopes, you must know,
          that he will help me.

                        CATHERINE
          I am sure he will always be glad
          to help you, Miss Coutts.

                        MISS COUTTS
          I need his assistance as an
          almoner.  It is not easy to
          be charitable.

                        CATHERINE
          An almoner?

                        MISS COUTTS
          I have been placed by my inheritance
          most fortunately in life.
          It is my wish to leave the world
          a better place as best I can, do
          you understand?

                        CATHERINE
                 (nodding her head)
          My husband has always had great
          concern for the less fortunate.

                        MISS COUTTS
                 (to both Catherine and
                 her mother)
          He will become a wealthy man in
          his own right.  Mark my words.

CATHERINE and MRS. HOGARTH pause in their handiwork to
give MISS COUTTS serious attention as MISS COUTTS drains
her teacup with apparent satisfaction.

CUT TO
               
INT - DICKENSES' BEDROOM - NIGHT

DICKENS  IS ON HIS KNEES,  HIS HEAD IN  CATHERINE'S  LAP. 
SHE  IS LARGE WITH HER CHILD.   HE PUTS HIS HEAD  AGAINST
HER WOMB TENDERLY.

                        DICKENS
          I hear the little heart.  How
          strong it sounds.  And there
          a perceptible kick...  Do you
          feel pain when the baby kicks?

                        CATHERINE
                 (laughing and smoothing
                 his hair)
          I feel great joy.

                        DICKENS
                 (rising and sitting beside
                 her)
          My darling, how I looked forward
          to my return here.  You and
          Doughty Street are ever in my
          heart.

                        CATHERINE
          Your letters were my solace.

                        DICKENS
          For me your letters were the
          return of all comfort.  How
          well I slept once I could tell
          my Catherine of my troubling
          dreams.  My sweetest Kate...

                        CATHERINE
          We have both done well through
          these trying months.

                        DICKENS
                 (sighing)
          And I suppose we are the stronger.

                        CATHERINE
          I know this baby will be a girl.
          We will call her Mary, and she
          will bring us great happiness.

                        DICKENS
          Kate, you give me more than I
          dreamed life had to offer.

They embrace.  CATHERINE looks especially confident and
serene.

                        CATHERINE
          You must always tell me your
          dreams.  You must always sleep
          well.

CUT TO

EXT - WINTER LANDSCAPE OF DOUGHTY ST. MERGING TO SPRING
      AND WINTER AGAIN - DAYS AND NIGHTS
 
FINALLY  WE  SEE  FURNITURE BEING CARRIED TO A MOVING VAN
IN FRONT  OF  THE  HOUSE.

CUT TO

INT - SPLENDID LIBRARY - DAY

AT  MANSION  ON DEVONSHIRE TERRACE WHERE  DICKENS  FAMILY
MOVED  IN  LATE '39,   BUTLER IS SHOWING NEW  MAID  SARAH
THROUGH THE HOUSE.  SARAH IS NOT QUITE TWENTY.

                        BUTLER
          You have some work experience,
          Sarah?

                        SARAH
          Five years now, Sir.  The family
          I was last wi' is moving to
          Canada, and I'm 'fraid to go
          wi' 'em.

                        BUTLER
          I see.  And do you know what
          family this is? 

                        SARAH
          Oh, I do that.  It's Mr. Dickens's
          family.  I'm a great one for
          reading.  I read every word of
          Nicholas Nickleby.

                        BUTLER
          We must never disturb Mr. Dickens
          when he is at work.

                        SARAH
          Oh, no, sir.  How hard he must
          work.

                        BUTLER
          He wants his library well kept.
          You will dust all these books.

                        SARAH
                 (taking measure of the
                 impressive new shelves and
                 the rows of beautifully
                 bound books)
          I'll 'andle his books with great
          care.  It's the first time
          I've seen so many fine books.
                 (she runs a hand along
                 one shelf in admiration)

                        BUTLER
                 (almost smiling)
          You should do nicely, Sarah.
          We will need more and more help.
          The Dickenses do entertain.

CUT TO

INT - Nursery - DAY

SARAH  and  CATHERINE are with MAMIE,  a toddler,  and  a
baby, KATIE, only a few weeks old.

                        SARAH
                 (indicating Mamie)
          I've a brother that's this one's
          size.  Don't want to leave your
          Mum, do you, little one?

                        CATHERINE
                 (finishing changing the
                 infant and returning her
                 to bassinet)
          I'm glad, Sarah, that you are
          experienced with children.  You
          can see I need help.  We have
          a regular nurse, but...

                        SARAH
          I understand. 

                        CATHERINE
          And the little ones must not
          bother Mr. Dickens when he's
          at his work.

                        SARAH
                 (putting out a hand to Mamie)
          And what's your name?

MAMIE studies SARAH.

                        CATHERINE
          Her Christian name is Mary.  She
          was named after my dear sister
          Mary who died before she was
          born.

                        SARAH
          I'm sorry about your sister,
          Ma'am.

                        CATHERINE
                 (softly)
          But we can't call her Mary.
          We've always called her Mamie.

                        SARAH
                 (not daring to look
                 at Catherine)
          Hello, Mamie.

CUT TO

INT - DINING ROOM - DAY

Dining  table is crowded with faces all turned  to  watch
Dickens at work carving a large Christmas turkey.   Holly
berries  decorate the immense room where most members  of
Hogarth and Dickens family are comfortably seated.

                        DICKENS
          Ah, Catherine, this most tasty
          bit of white meat for you.  Will
          you have some sauce?

CUT TO

JOHN  DICKENS  and ELIZABETH are seated down  table  from
DICKENS.   BEARD sits between them and their son.


                        BEARD
          How splendid that you remain in
          London for the holidays.
          Christmas will always be family.
       
                        JOHN DICKENS
                 (with a bit of quaver)
          Isn't all time for family then?

                        BEARD
          Why, of course.

                        ELIZABETH
          Now, John.

                        JOHN DICKENS
          I have such prospects in
          London, young man.  There are
          those who know the merits of
          my work.

                        ELIZABETH
          We have our pension.  Charles
          helps so much.  Now, John...

                        JOHN
          But to leave London....

                        ELIZABETH
          We'll do well in Exeter.  It's
          Charles's decision.

                        BEARD
                 (consolingly)
          Exeter is a capital place.
CUT TO

CHARLEY  is  in his high chair.   CATHERINE  holds 
MAMIE on her lap.  She is a loving mother, sharing
bits  of her turkey with CHARLEY.   She hugs  the
small boy proudly.  But he has eyes only for his
father's operation with the Christmas turkey.

                        CHARLEY
          Daddy.  See Daddy.

CUT TO

JOHN DICKENS is looking at his portion of turkey.

                        JOHN DICKENS
          I'd like a bit more of the white
          meat than Charles gave me.

                        MRS. DICKENS
          There are so many of us, John.

                        JOHN DICKENS
          We won't see the wedding of
          our Queen Victoria in Exeter.

                        MRS. DICKENS
                 (with resignation)
          I'll hate to miss the excitement
          of the royal wedding.

CATHERINE  picks  up  something of the  elder  Dickenses'
conversation and smiles at them across the table.

                        CATHERINE
          How wonderful that we can all
          be together for the holidays.

As she speaks the maid SARAH appears behind her  carrying
an infant of only two months.

                        SARAH
          'Scuse me, Ma'am.  Little Katie
          is making an awful fuss.

                        CATHERINE
           Oh, my poor darling.  Mother
          Dickens, do take my chair and
          look after Charley.

Before  excusing  herself,   CATHERINE  gives  Charley  a
reassuring hug.  She wipes a bit of gravy from her mouth,
and  a  strand of hair has come loose to fall across  her
forehead.  BEARD rises to give her a hand as she departs.

CUT TO

CHARLES  DICKENS watches his wife leave the table without
speaking.  At first, his face shows no emotion, but CLOSE
on an unrepressed expression of displeasure.

CUT TO

CHARLEY  mashing  potatoes  between  his  fingers  as  he
watches his father.

                        CHARLEY          
          Daddy.

CUT TO

INT - FASHIONABLE DRAWING ROOM - DAY

Two  ladies  of  fashion, LADY HOLLAND and her SISTER,
dawdle  over  an  expensive  tea setting.        
       
                        LADY HOLLAND
                 (superciliously)
          That is your opinion, Sister?

                        SISTER
          All London agrees.  Mr. Dickens
          is most charming.  A bit of the
          countryside, I suppose.

                        LADY HOLLAND
          But attractive?

                        SISTER
          Ah, a very attractive addition
          to the London social scene, I
          must say.

                        LADY HOLLAND
          And intelligent?

                        SISTER
          Already his wit has made itself
          known.  Oh, he is most desirable.
          Elected to the Athenaeum after
          the publication of only two
          books.  Remarkable.  Then
          there's Dickens at home...

                        LADY HOLLAND
          Your gossip never fails to amuse
          me.  Do continue.

                        SISTER
          There's a Mrs. Dickens.

                        LADY HOLLAND
          A pity.  But well-born, I'm told.
          Her father knew Sir Walter Scott.

                        SISTER
          She's Scottish.  Oh, highly
          presentable.

                        LADY HOLLAND
          And quite pretty?

                        SISTER
          I've never seen her.  The men
          say she is pretty enough.

                        LADY HOLLAND
          And the gossips say she will
          never grace a fine soiree?

                        SISTER
                 (slowly)
          It takes more than Scottish
          manners.  She has little ability
          to hold her own in our drollery.
          Her husband's wit but serves to
          make her own appear the duller.

                        LADY HOLLAND
          He's free to move about without
          her, I gather.  For he is often
          in company now.  He is invited
          everywhere.

                        SISTER
          Everywhere.  And he must go
          without her.  She's always in
          a family way, besides.

                        LADY HOLLAND
                 (laughing merrily)
          Oh, I hear there are already
          many children.  How unkind you
          are!  Any soiree would be the
          better for turning attention
          to procreation and the care
          and feeding of infants.

Both women laugh with great enjoyment of their joke.

CUT TO

INT - THE  DRAWING ROOM AT DEVONSHIRE TERRACE - DAY

ABOUT  FIFTEEN  PEOPLE  ARE  GATHERED.   CATHERINE  GIVES
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO JOHN FORSTER.

                        CATHERINE
          Mr. Forster, I want you to sit
          here.

CHARLEY  is  watching  his  mother's  party  arrangements
carefully  and  impedes  the  movement  of  chairs.   His
rockinghorse sits to one side of the room.

                        JOHN FORSTER
          Oh, thank you, Mrs. Dickens.
          Do let me help you.  I think
          we want to arrange some chairs
          to take advantage of the music,
          don't you?

FORSTER  demonstrates  the  take-charge  manner  he  will
assume  in  the Dickens household.   After making  a  few
decisions about where furnishings should be,  he picks up
CHARLEY  and  carries him to the  rockinghorse.   CHARLEY
sits  soberly  upon  his  horse  and  rocks  with  little
enthusiasm. 

CUT TO

INT - DRAWING ROOM - LATER IN DAY

The  party  has  been  in  progress  for  some  time  and
listeners are intent upon the last words of Fanny Dickens
Burnett's song.

                        FANNY
                 (appearing in delicate health)
          "I sent thee late a rosy wreath,
          Not so much honoring thee,
          As giving it a hope that there
          It could not withered be;
          But thou thereon didst only breathe
          And send'st it back to me;
          Since when it grows and smells I swear,
          Not of itself but thee."

The  little company applauds  supportively,  for  Fanny's
voice  remains beautiful,  but some show concern when the
frail little lady sits down, taking a slight child on her
lap.  She is pregnant once again.

CUT TO

FREDERICK  has  CHARLEY  on  his  knee  and  appears   in
excellent  spirits.   He  sits with  the  Burnetts.   The
elder DICKENS are not among the company.

                        FREDERICK
          Fanny, it's been some months
          since you've sung for us.  How
          beautiful your voice is.

                        FORSTER
          Very beautiful.

                        DICKENS
          Who is to be next?  I have
          already played three numbers
          on my accordion.

                        BURNETT
          I've never heard Kate's story
          about the Scottish lady.

                        CATHERINE
          Oh, surely you have.

                        DICKENS
          Then it is time, Catherine, for
          your story about the Scottish
          lady.

                        FREDERICK
          Stand up.  Stand up.

                        CATHERINE
                 (standing and clearing her throat)
          If you will--
                 (hesitantly)
          This Scottish woman had a verrry
          religious friend who came to see
          her one day.  Now mind you, my
          Scottish woman is not
          irreligious.

                        FREDERICK
          We couldn't tolerate that.

The company laughs with FREDERICK.

                        CATHERINE
          Oh, Frederick. 
                 (still hesitant)
          But the religious friend did
          go on so about poor Eve and
          described on and on that
          treacherous snake and the
          beauties of the Garden of
          Eden. 

                        FREDERICK
          You must tell us about the
          Garden of Eden.

                        CATHERINE
          Oh, do bae still.
          That friend, too, gave a long
          discourse on temptation.
          The apple in particular.

                        DICKENS
          There may be an idea for my
          next novel here.

                        CATHERINE
                 (tossing her head)
          You all have such fun with me.

                        DICKENS
          And tell us what the Scottish
          lady said.

                        CATHERINE
          At last that lady said with
          all certainty--
          "Weel--all I can say is that
          it wouldna be nae temptation
          tae me to go rinnin' aboot a
          gairden stairk naked, 'ating
          green apples!"

Applause and laughter conclude her story.  CATHERINE sits
down looking both flustered and pleased with herself.

CUT TO

INT - DICKENSES' bedroom - NIGHT

CATHERINE,  still flushed and lovely with excitement,  is
letting down her beautiful dark hair.   She sits before a
triple-mirrored  dressing table,  her firm breasts barely
captured  by her corseting when DICKENS steps  up  behind
her.  Their eyes meet in the mirroring.

                        DICKENS
          No prince ever had a princess
          so clever and delectable.

                        CATHERINE
          You have been reading fairy
          tales again.

                        DICKENS
          But they are true.  The prince
          and the princess live happily.

                        CATHERINE
          In a palace.  With many happy,
          healthy children.

                        DICKENS
          And many friends.

                        CATHERINE
          Yes, good and kind friends.

                        DICKENS
          Catherine, what do you think
          of John Forster.

CATHERINE off his sudden seriousness.

                        CATHERINE
          He is your true friend.

                        DICKENS
          But do you find him attractive?

                        CATHERINE
          Attractive?  In what way?  Oh,
          Charles...  Silly Charles...

He becomes even more serious.

                        DICKENS
          Will you promise me something?

                        CATHERINE
          I'd promise you anything.

                        DICKENS
          If either of us ever is to fall
          in love with another, that one
          must tell the other.  Do you
          promise?

All the fun drains from her face,  which matches his  now
in seriousness.

                        CATHERINE
          How strangely you speak.

                        DICKENS
          Do you promise?

                        CATHERINE
          If you wish...                                         

CUT TO

INT - Large  banquet hall in Edinburough - NIGHT

It  is June,  1841,  and DICKENS is receiving honors from
Scottish  literary establishment.   CATHERINE is  at  his
side.  As they enter the hall, the band plays "Charlie is
My Darling."

                        CATHERINE
          I never thought I'd return to
          Edinborough with such pomp.

                        DICKENS
          A mother of four children
          deserves every attention.

                        CATHERINE
          Oh, I've never seen you in
          such spirits.

They are escorted across the hall.

CUT TO

One banquet guest talks to another.

                        GUEST
          They've turned seventy people
          away.

                        OTHER GUEST
          Mr. Dickens's popularity exceeds
          that of Earl Gray's.

                        GUEST
          And Edinborough may be proud
          indeed.  This is Mrs. Dickens's
          birthplace.  What a charming
          couple they make.  She is
          radiant.

CUT TO

Dignitaries are officiously seating the DICKENSES at the
speaker's table.

CUT TO

EXT - The beach at Broadstairs - DAY
 
Summertime.  In  a beach chair CATHERINE sits looking out
to the English Channel.   She holds her baby boy  Walter,
born Feb.  8,  1841, and she is cooing to him and rocking
him.  She hums with contentment.  Along the shore CHARLEY
and  MAMIE solemnly step in and out of the wash from  the
waves.   They  are barefoot,  chubby and happy  children. 
With  them  is fourteen-year-old GEORGINA  HOGARTH.   She
assists CHARLEY when he tires of the waves and begins  to
build a castle in the sand.
       
CUT TO

CLOSE UP of castle in the sand.

CUT TO

BROAD  SHOT that shows coastline and Dickens  approaching
At CATHERINE'S side KATEY'S blissful slumber continues in
spite of the loud cries of overhead gulls.
DICKENS  appears  to  take  in scene  with  the  greatest
satisfaction.  He smiles.

DICKENS bends to whisper to CATHERINE.

                        DICKENS
          How beautiful all of you are.

                        CATHERINE
                 (starting)
          Charles!

DICKENS kisses both CATHERINE and small WALTER.

                        DICKENS
                 (indicating KATEY)
          What dreams she must have here
          at Broadstairs.  The sea air
          is good for all of us.

                        CATHERINE
                 (laughing)
          I think of our honeymoon.  But
          there are so many of us now.

                        DICKENS
                 (becoming serious)
          And Georgina?  Do you find her
          helpful with the little ones?

                        CATHERINE
          Georgina has always been a
          mother's best little helper.
          She is only fourteen, but
          both Charley and Mamie mind
          her every word.  Look at them.

DICKENS   and  CATHERINE  watch  the  little  ones   with
GEORGINA.  The sand castle is immense.

CUT TO

GEORGINA shows CHARLIE and MAMIE how to pack the wet sand
and shape a turret.

DICKENS is nodding his head.

CUT TO

INT - Servants'  quarters - NIGHT

The maid Sarah and another maid ANNE are speaking.

                        SARAH
          You are the brave one, you are.

                        ANNE
          I'll go.  I want to see something
          of the world for myself.

                        SARAH
          Oh, I'd never go to sea, I'd
          never.  To get all tossed
          around.  Oh, you are a brave
          one.

                        ANNE
          We'll leave in January.

                        SARAH
          It will be cold in the States.

                        ANNE
          It will be cold, but I'm from
          the north country.  I'm a
          strong country girl.

                        SARAH
          You are indeed.

                        ANNE
          Of course, you will stay with
          the children.

                        SARAH
          We're all to go to the Macreadys.

                        ANNE
          How the children will miss their
          pets--the guinea pigs and rabbits.

                        SARAH
          And that noisy raven.

                        ANNE
          Oh, I won't miss the raven.

                        SARAH
          They'll pine for their parents.
          They dote on their father's
          foolish stories.

                        ANNE
          And their mother's abiding love.
          Their mother will shed many a
          tear for them.

                        SARAH
          If the truth be known, she wants
          to go no more than I do.

                        ANNE
          She's a good wife.       

CUT TO

PHOTO MONTAGE of the American tour that CHARLES and  
CATHERINE make in 1842.   CATHERINE is terrified and sick
in  her  ship cabin.   DICKENS is taken up by the  Boston
Brahmins.   He  is  appalled by American  roads  and  the
habit American men have of spitting in public.   He takes
long   hikes  that  wear  out  American  hosts.    He  is
tirelessly  at the lectern.

CUT TO

EXT - ESTABLISHING SHOT -- PITTSBURGH, PA. - DAY

CUT TO

INT - American Hotel Room - NIGHT

CATHERINE  is  in  the bedroom of the  suite.   ANNE  is
turning  down  the bed.   CATHERINE goes to  her  bedside
table and picks up a framed portrait.

CLOSE UP

Portrait of Charley,  Mamie,  Katey, and Walter in their
mother's hands.
CATHERINE wipes away tears as she looks at the children.

                        CATHERINE
          My poor darlings.  Will I ever
          see them again?

                        ANNE
                 (pausing in her work)
          I'm sure the return voyage will
          be easier.

                        CATHERINE
          But will be safe as we carry
          on the tour?  We are going very
          far west.  To St. Louis.  It
          is a mistake.

                        ANNE
                 (plumping the pillows)
          I'm hoping the worst is behind
          us.  The storms....

                        CATHERINE
                 (absorbed in the children)
          The Macreadys write regularly.
          The children remain well.  My
          baby has a new tooth.

                        ANNE
          Try to sleep tonight.  Do try.

                        CATHERINE
          I will.  I will try.  And you,
          Anne.  Do go along to your rest
          and don't pay attention to my
          nerves.  You have been such a
          comfort.

                        ANNE
          Thank you, ma'am.  Good night.

As  ANNE leaves the bedroom by the door to the  hallway,
DICKENS  enters from the sitting room.   He is in  night
attire.

                        DICKENS
          Anne is right, Catherine.  You
          must sleep.  We have so far to
          go, so much left to do.

 CATHERINE  tries  to  hide her tears  by  turning  away. 
 DICKENS  goes to her and takes her in his arms,  turning
 her face toward him with concern.

                        DICKENS
          I need you with me, Kate.  I
          need you.

CATHERINE throws her arms around him, sobbing wildly.

                        CATHERINE
          I mustn't be a fool.

They  stand  together while she seems  to  pull  herself
together.

                        CATHERINE
          Charles...

                        DICKENS
          What is it?

                        CATHERINE
          You know what an interest you've
          taken in Dr. Elliotson's ideas.

                        DICKENS
          I believe strongly in the power
          of mesmerism.  Yes.

                        CATHERINE
          Have you tried your own powers?

                        DICKENS
          No.  I will.  I've read a great
          deal.  I've heard so much of
          Thackeray's praise of Elliotson.
          Catherine...should I try all
          that with you?

DICKENS  draws together two chairs and  is  looking
intently  at  CATHERINE.   She obviously goes  under  his
spell but suddenly becomes hysterical.

                        CATHERINE
                 (laughing and crying
                 wildly)
          My babies!  All of them forsaken.
          Their parents heading into
          a place of...savages.  And...
          slavers.  My God!  Who has
          been to Missouri?

                        DICKENS
                 (calmly determined)
          Ah, there you go, Kate.  Get it
          all out.

                        CATHERINE
                 (still wildly)
          I miss them all.  Even...ah,
          even that raven in the
          garden.

                        DICKENS
                 (chuckling, in spite
                 of himself)
          Even the raven?  Oh, my Kate,
          look at me.

Their eyes lock as he places his face closer to hers.
We see DICKENS struggle to fix CATHERINE's gaze with his
own.   At last,  her face relaxes.   Her eyes close.  He
assists her to the bed.

CUT TO

INT - ANNE's SLEEPING QUARTERS - SAME NIGHT

ANNE is on her knees at the side of her narrow bed.   She
prays earnestly.

CUT TO
         
INT - Nursery at Devonshire Terrace - NIGHT

The DICKENS are hugging CHARLEY,  MAMIE,  AND KATEY in a
joyful  reunion.   They have brought them  beaded  Indian
moccasins.

                        DICKENS
          I had to go out into the wilds.
          Your mother remained at the
          hotel in St. Louis.  But I was
          captured by Indians and tied to
          a stake with a leather thong.

                        CATHERINE
          Oh, tell the truth, the truth...

CHARLEY is caught up in paroxysms of delight and  rolls
on his bed with near delirium.

                        CATHERINE
          He is beside himself.  It is
          too much.  Oh, promise that the
          next time we take such a trip
          the little ones may go along.

DICKENS  has caught up CHARLEY and holds the  five-year-
old in his arms.

                        CATHERINE
          Promise me.

                        DICKENS
          We'll take the children next
          time.

CUT TO

EXT - A  postman is delivering a letter  to  Devonshire Terrace.

CUT TO

INT - Sitting room at Devonshire Terrace.

DICKENS  is folding the letter.   CATHERINE is  directing
questioning look at him.

                        DICKENS
          Six thousand copies of my
          Christmas Carol sold the
          day of publication.

                        CATHERINE
          I am not surprised.  It is the
          finest of your family stories.

When CATHERINE rises from her chair,  we see that she is
again pregnant.

                        DICKENS
          I am indeed a family man.

CUT TO          

INT - DICKENS'S STUDY

DICKENS is alone in his study.   He folds  another letter.

DICKENS muses on his reply to letter.

DICKENS talks to himself as he writes.

                 DICKENS
          My friends would have me to
          dine at Richmond.  How can I
          say no to Forster and Maclise?
          And why would I say no?

DICKENS  finishes  his  writing and  reads  the  results aloud.

                        DICKENS
          Nurses, wet and dry; apothecaries;
          mothers-in-law; babies; with all
          the sweet (and chaste) delights
          of private life; these, my country-
          men, are hard to leave.  But
          you have called me forth, and
          I will come.

After he reads, he buries his face in his hands.

                        DICKENS
          My fifth child...  There are
          many unpaid bills.  I must
          provide for so many.                 

CUT TO

EXT - Parish Church of Church of England - DAY

CUT TO

INT - ST. PANCRAS - DAY

DICKENS,  CATHERINE,  HOGARTHS  at  baptismal fount  for
traditional Church of England christening

                        RECTOR
          In the name of the Father, the
          Son, and the Holy Ghost, I
          christen thee Francis Jeffrey
          Dickens...

CUT TO

EXT - Devonshire Terrace - DAY

CUT TO

INT - Parlours  at  Devonshire  Terrace.

Members  of christening party are enjoying refreshment.
DICKENS is in  conversation  with FORSTER and  FREDERICK.
In  the background  we  see  GEORGINA with  CHARLEY  and  KATEY. 
MAMIE is at the side of CATHERINE and MRS. HOGARTH.

CUT TO

INT - KITCHEN

The COOK is holding up a trifle, which
the BUTLER, ANNE, and SARAH pause to admire.

                        BUTLER
          It is a work of art.

CUT TO

ANNE and SARAH have their heads together.

                        ANNE
          They christened the baby in
          the Church of England then?

                        SARAH
          Indeed.  I went along.

                        ANNE
          It's all very well.  You're
          high church yourself.  I'm
          a Methodist.  And I know
          Mr. Dickens is much struck                               
          by the Unitarians.

                        SARAH
          Unitarians?  Is there such
          a church.

                        ANNE
          Mr. Forster is one of them.
          And Mr. Dickens has taken
          the family to the church
          at Portland Place.

                        SARAH
          And what do Unitarians
          believe.

                        ANNE
                 (whispering)
          They believe there's some
          question about
          the virgin birth.

SARAH  reacts with surprise and horror as she takes  the
trifle  from  the  cook.   She tosses  ANNE  a  look  of
disapproval as she disappears through kitchen door.   We
hear the cries of praise for the trifle.

CUT TO

EXT - PALAZZO PESCHIERE IN GENOA - DAY

Gardens,  terraces,  fountains,  orange  groves,  view of 
mountains and sea.
IMPOSE DATE ON VIEW:  NOVEMBER, 1844
Show DICKENS entourage arriving -- FOUR CHILDREN, ages 
three to seven,  TWO NURSES, A MAID. GEORGINA HOGARTH who 
is   about  seventeen  and  efficiently   gathering   the 
CHILDREN'S cast-off garments.   The CHILDREN run back and 
forth across the gardens.  They have burst from carriage.  
Show  KATEY  admiring  the  late flowers.    Close  on 
CATHERINE taking it all in.

                        CATHERINE
                 (inhaling a long breath)
          This will be the most beautiful
          of times.  See how glad the
          children are to be with us.

CUT TO

INT - NURSERY IN PALAZZO - MORNING

Three-year-old  WALTER  is  crying  as  DICKENS 
enters  room.   The older children have set up  a  puppet 
theater.   CHARLEY holds a Punch and MAMIE a Judy.  KATEY 
practices  drawing  the  curtains of the  small  theater.  
SARAH and a second nurse BETTY appear breathlessly behind 
DICKENS.

                        SARAH
          We're terribly sorry, Sir.  We
          left for only a minute.

                        DICKENS
          I heard them in my study.

                        SARAH AND BETTY
          It won't happen again.

                        DICKENS
          Walter, what is it?  Tell 
          Daddy.
          Charley, why is your brother
          crying?

                        CHARLEY
          He's just a baby.  He cries
          all the time.

                        DICKENS
          That's not fair.  He wants
          to play with all of you.  Ah,
          let me see that Punch.
                 (he inspects the
                 puppet with mock dismay)

                        DICKENS (CONT)                  
          What a mean face that one has.
          Are these the only puppets you
          could find?

                        CHARLEY
          And I make him sound even worse
          than he looks. He is just awful
          to be around.  Will you come
          to our performance?
                 
                        MAMIE
          And Judy has a shrill voice.
          You'll hate it.
                 (imitating the voice)
                        MAMIE (CONT)
          What are you plotting, you
          devil?

DICKENS  hands  back the puppet.   He looks  at  all  the 
children and puts his hands on his hips.

                        DICKENS
          I'll attend your show only if 
          you find a part for Walter.

                        KATEY
          Perhaps he can help me.  But
          not if he cries.
          
                        MAMIE
          Or if he's very good, he can be
          the dog.

                        DICKENS
          The dog?

WALTER  has  stopped  crying and stuffed a hand  in  his 
mouth.   He  looks  meaningfully at his brother  and  two 
sisters.

                        CHARLEY
          Don't be a baby, Walter.  Or
          next time we go somewhere
          you'll have to stay home.

CATHERINE enters the room, looking dismayed.

                        CATHERINE
          Oh, the children have taken
          you from your work.  Whatever
          has happened?

                        DICKENS
                 (coldly)
          We've settled the matter.

DICKENS  turns  abruptly  and  leaves  the  room,  giving 
Catherine  a  look  that  puts  the  disturbance  on  her 
shoulders.  She watches him go.

CATHERINE  betrays  at first anger  and  then,  with  the 
suppression   of   anger,    rejection.    Fighting   off 
depression,  she  forces herself to smile at the children 
and their nurses.

                        CATHERINE
          Charley, can Mother count on 
          you to come as fast as you can
          when Walter needs me?

                        CHARLEY
          I'll help you, Mother.

CLOSE ON CHARLEY'S EYES, ROUND AND SYMPATHETIC.

CUT TO

INT - SITTING ROOM

DICKENS and CATHERINE are at  tea.  
CATHERINE  is  pouring tea into his cup and listening  to 
his conversation intently.

                        DICKENS
          Why, I met the couple while I 
          was walking.  They are our
          neighbors here.  He's Swiss,
          but his wife is English-born.
          He's a printer, I believe.
          His business is in Geneva.

                        CATHERINE
          And you are to call upon them
          and try your magnetic powers?

                        DICKENS
          It's agreed.  I'll go to their
          apartments tomorrow.  She is
          in such a state of confusion.

                        CATHERINE
          Why don't they just go home to
          Switzerland?

                        DICKENS
          You don't understand at all.
          Her doctors have prescribed
          the climate here. 

                        CATHERINE
          But, Charles, I always thought
          that it was because we are so
          close that you could exercise
          your powers over me.  That when
          you were able to soothe my
          fears...

                        DICKENS
          Dear, Catherine...  Is it a
          bit of jealousy I hear?  Do let
          me help this unfortunate woman.
          I won't be gone long.

                        CATHERINE
          How do you know you will be able
          to help?

                        DICKENS
          Oh, as for that...  Sometimes
          one's magnetic powers work with
          another and sometimes not.  I
          can't be at all sure.  It will
          be only a trial.

                        CATHERINE
          What is the family name of this
          couple?

                        DICKENS
          It is De la Rue.  That's it.
          A French name.  But both speak
          English.  We can practice our
          French with them.  But then you
          learned the language as a girl.
          She is troubled by a phantom, he
          tells me.  

                        CATHERINE
          Is she very young and pretty?

                        DICKENS
                 (throwing his head back
                 and laughing)
          Catherine, how could she be so
          young and pretty as you appear?
          Indeed, I scarcely noticed.

CUT TO

CLOSE UP

CATHERINE studies her husband.

CUT TO

EXT - BALCONY OVERLOOKING GENOA - DAY

DE LA RUE and DICKENS converse.  They stand together 
on a balcony looking out across Genoa to sea. DE LA RUE
is older than DICKENS.

                        DICKENS
          She is perceptibly better.  I
          believe the magnetism will be
          effective.

                        DE LA RUE                         
          How extraordinary that we should
          have met.  I've known nothing
          of mesmerism.

                        DICKENS
          It is used in Paris now, you
          can be sure.

                        DE LA RUE
                 (shrugging his shoulders)
          Ah, in Paris...  But how good
          you have been to us.  You must
          not interrupt your work.  Your
          books have made you a famous
          man all over the world.

CUT TO

INT - FINE HOTEL DINING ROOM - NIGHT

The DICKENS and the  DE LA RUES are seated at table.   
Mme De La Rue wears a wide brimmed hat and some side 
veiling.  In the shadows of her hat  her face appears 
to be that of a woman much  younger than her husband.   
Her face is thin and mysterious.  She is dark eyed, 
fragile limbed.

                        DE LA RUE
          How fortunate we are that you
          could find time to dine with
          us before you leave for Rome.

                        DICKENS
          Catherine and I will be gone
          for at least two months.  We
          are leaving the children here
          with their nurses and their
          doting Aunt Georgina.

                        CATHERINE
          We will see Rome and go to
          Naples as well.

                        DICKENS
          I am eager to see Rome at
          carnival time.

                        DE LA RUE
          Mr. Dickens, Rome at carnival
          will stagger even your renowned
          imagination.  
          Ah, Rome at Carnival time...

                        DICKENS
          We do not have such sights in
          London.

                        DE LA RUE
          Nor do we in Geneva.  My wife
          was brought up in the church
          of John Calvin.

                        CATHERINE
          We do have Queen Victoria.

                        DE LA RUE
          And Prince Albert.

                        DICKENS
          And a new prince or princess
          annually.

The waiter pours wine as they laugh together.

CUT TO

EXT - ESTABLISHING SHOT OF BAY OF NAPLES - DAY

A cloudless day bathes the bay in morning sun.

CUT TO
  
EXT - HOTEL BALCONY - DAY 

DICKENS stands on hotel balcony with  spyglass  in 
hand.  He is looking toward harbor area.

CUT TO

VIEW  AS  IF THROUGH TELESCOPE.   We see mail  packet  in 
harbor and workers unloading mail bags.

CUT TO

DICKENS looking through spyglass excitedly.                  

                        DICKENS
          The mail is arriving.

CUT TO

INT - HOTEL ROOM - DAY 

CATHERINE  sits inside doors to balcony where  she 
has a view of Naples Bay while she works at needlepoint.

                        CATHERINE
          We should have a letter from
          Georgina.

                        DICKENS
          Didn't we hear from her two
          days ago?  All was well in
          Genoa.

                        CATHERINE
          Perhaps Forster has written.
          His letters are so droll and
          tell so much.  It must be very
          cold in England.

CUT TO

VIEW OF HARBOR AS THROUGH TELESCOPE.

CUT TO

DICKENS continues to peer through spyglass.

                        DICKENS
          I hope to hear from De La Rue.
          He has promised me to join us
          in Rome should there be some
          complications in his wife's
          case.

CUT TO

CATHERINE  stabs  her needle through the  material.   The 
stamped  pattern is of an Italian villa.   She stabs  the 
needle again.   It pierces a finger of her other hand and 
she cries out.   DICKENS immediately enters the room, his 
spyglass in hand.

                        DICKENS
          Catherine, what is it?  What
          have you done?

CUT TO

EXT - ROME AT CARNIVAL TIME - DAY   

SHOW GAUDY BALLOONS  AND FLOATS.  PICK UP MUSIC AND 
CROWDS ENJOYING CARNIVAL ATMOSPHERE. 
CLOSE ON CLOWNS WITH A PONY.

CUT TO

Find  CATHERINE and DICKENS in the crowd.   She is on his 
arm,  but  he  has eyes only for the  De  La  Rues.   His 
attention and that of Mr.  De La Rue focus on Mme.  De La 
Rue,   her  face  scarcely  visible  encompassed  in  her 
millinery  creation.   She leans heavily on her husband's 
arm.

                        CATHERINE
          Look, Charles.  How the children
          would enjoy the pony.

DICKENS draws CATHERINE closer to him but does not remove 
his eyes from Mme. De La Rue.

CUT TO

INT - HOTEL ROOM LOOKING ACROSS ROME - DAY

ST.  PETER IN  THE DISTANCE.   IT IS MORNING AND 
CATHERINE WEARS A NEGLIGEE.  DICKENS IS FULLY DRESSED.

                        DICKENS
          I must go immediately.  We can
          put off our sightseeing until
          this afternoon.  She needs me.

                        CATHERINE
          I need you.

                        DICKENS
          Catherine, you are glowing with
          health.

                        CATHERINE
          Have I no claim?

                        DICKENS
          How foolish you are!  And this
          behavior is quite unreasonable.
          I have said I'll try to help
          Mme. De La Rue, and I will.

                        CATHERINE
          You've helped her quite enough.
                        
                        DICKENS
          That will be enough on the
          subject.  You're not even
          dressed.  Get yourself ready.
          I'll have the courier call
          for us after lunch.

                        CATHERINE
                 (tearfully)
          This is what has become of our
          times together.  We have seen
          all the wonders of Rome and
          Naples and you have had eyes
          only for Madame De La Rue.
          
CATHERINE throws herself across the bed.

                        CATHERINE
          For me, it is the most wretched  
          of times.

CUT TO

EXT - DEVONSHIRE TERRACE - DAY

Dickens entourage arrives from trip abroad.
DICKENS assists CATHERINE from the carriage.

                        DICKENS
          I know we will be pleased with
          the redecoration that has taken
          place during our absence.

As  he  takes great care in assisting  CATHERINE,  it  is 
evident that he shows special concern for her.   When her 
feet are on the ground,  She straightens herself.   It is 
spring  all around her,  and she is starting to show with 
her sixth pregnancy.

                        CATHERINE
          England has never been more
          lovely.

CUT TO

INT - VESTRY AT PARISH CHURCH - DAY   

One  CLERGYMAN  assists ANOTHER with his surplice.

                        FIRST CLERGYMAN
          Is it true that Mr. Dickens
          attends church only when he has
          a new babe for christening.

                        SECOND CLERGYMAN
          It's well known he admires those
          Unitarians.  Thank God he has
          decency to provide the children
          with the blessings of the
          Church of England.

CUT TO

INT - BAPTISMAL FOUNT - DAY 

We see DICKENS and HOGARTHS and godfather ALFRED TENNYSON
and COUNT D'ORSAY.

CUT TO

CLERGYMAN intones ritual of baptism.

                        CLERGYMAN
          In the name of God the Father,
          the Son, and the Holy Ghost, I 
          baptize you ALFRED D'ORSAY
          TENNYSON DICKENS.... 

CUT TO

INT - DRAWING ROOM - DAY

DICKENS and CATHERINE are dressed for company.  KATEY 
enters excitedly.

                        KATEY
          Miss Toots is here.

SARAH enters behind KATEY.

                        SARAH
          Miss Coutts has arrived.

DICKENS quickly rises.

                        DICKENS
          Do show her in.  Miss Toots indeed.

CATHERINE takes KATEY'S hand.

                        CATHERINE
          It's Miss Coutts, dear.  Miss
          Coutts.

MISS COUTTS enters and KATIE puts her fingers in her 
mouth.

                        DICKENS
          Katey, say "good morning" to
          Miss Coutts.

KATEY shakes her head.  MAMIE and WALTER enter the room.

                        DICKENS
          Catherine.  The children...

CATHERINE rises to extend her arms to the children and to 
MISS COUTTS.

                        CATHERINE
          Good morning, Miss Coutts.

                        MISS COUTTS
          Good morning, Catherine.

                        CATHERINE
          All of you, come along.  Your
          father and Miss Coutts don't 
          want to be disturbed.

CUT TO

INT - HALLWAY - MOMENTS LATER, SAME DAY

CATHERINE has her arms around the children:  MAMIE, 
WALTER, AND KATEY

                        MAMIE
          I know.  They are planning to
          talk about how to help women who
          have fallen down and hurt
          themselves.

                        CATHERINE
          Fallen women, my dear.
                  (then sorry she's spoken)
          Oh, do forget I've told you!

CUT TO  

INT - DICKENS' STUDY - DAY

DICKENS sits at his study desk covering his  ears.  
In  the  background we hear CATHERINE'S  terrible  cries.  
There is a knock on the door.

                        DICKENS
          Come in.  Don't stand on
          ceremony.

MRS HOGARTH is in the doorway.   She is quite flushed and 
worn looking.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          The baby is almost here.  It
          has not been easy for her.

                        DICKENS
          Her cries have been beyond what
          I remember.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          Yes, the doctor says it is a
          very difficult delivery...
          Perhaps next time.

                        DICKENS
          Next time.

He puts down his quill pen.

                        DICKENS
          Is there nothing we can do?
                                
CUT TO

INT - BAPTISMAL FOUNT - DAY

Medium   shot  of BABY  and  fingers  of  CLERGYMAN   
sprinkling christening waters    

                        CLERGYMAN
          Sydney Smith Haldimand Dickens.

CUT TO

INT - DRAWING ROOM AT DEVONSHIRE TERRACE - NIGHT

DICKENS is wearing top hat, carries enameled wand,
and has set up all the paraphernalia   of  a  magician.
JOHN  FORSTER  is  his assistant.  DICKENS removes his 
hat, shows it around, puts it on the table beside him.

                        DICKENS
          Our birthday celebrant being now 
          twelve years old, somewhat educated,
          and an Etonian, we perform all our
          illusion in his honor and for his
          pleasure.  Once again, Young Charles,
          your bow for the company.

CHARLEY wearing a cardboard crown stands up and bows.  He 
sits  down and watches his father as if  enchanted.   The 
camera takes in the crowd,  The other Dickens  children--
MAMIE,  KATEY,  WALTER,  FRANK,  ALFRED, even the toddler 
SYDNEY  who  wanders about instead  of  sitting--cousins.  
Close  on  CATHERINE who is in a very advanced  state  of 
pregnancy.

                        DICKENS
          Mr. Forster, how could I manage all 
          this without your able assistance?
          Please look in that hat.  What do you
          find there.

                        FORSTER
                 (covering his eyes)
          My eyes deceive me.  How has this
          come about?

The  camera  takes in the audience.   Only baby  SYDNEY'S 
attention wanders.

                        FORSTER
                 (reaching into hat)
          It is indeed a rabbit.  

A rabbit's ear appears over the brim of the hat.

                        DICKENS
                 (deftly pulling the rabbit
                 from the hat)                  
          Let's have a look at him.

The  children  cry out.   SYDNEY  is  wide-eyed;  nothing 
distracts his attention from the magician's work now.
Camera closes on KATIE.

                        KATIE
          That's my rabbit.  See.  That's
          Bunny with his black spot.  How
          he trembles.

                        DICKENS
          There, there.  If you say it is
          Bunny, you must know.  Come take
          the little beast.  I have no idea
          how he got into my top hat.

KATIE retrieves her rabbit and the children pet him while 
bunny nestles in her lap.

                        DICKENS
          You have seen, my audience, many
          things of wonder here tonight.  But
          we need one thing more.  'Tis
          Twelfth Night, I believe.  And
          my wife has not steamed us our
          plum pudding.

CUT TO

CATHERINE speaks up from her straight chair.

                        CATHERINE
          Indeed I have.  Georgina and I
          have done a fine plum pudding.
          And we cannot find it anywhere.

CUT TO

GEORGINA is in party clothes but, unlike CATHERINE, still
wears her apron.  At 22, she has the poise and confidence 
she lacked when she first lived with the family.

                        GEORGINA
          I have concluded that some mean
          and contemptuous person has made
          off with our pudding.  And what a
          shame.  Our Charley so likes a
          pudding on his Twelfth Night
          Birthday.

                        DICKENS
          And he shall have his pudding!  Mr.
          Forster, do you have the eggs and
          flour.

CUT TO

FORSTER  sets out eggs and butter and suet and flour  and 
spices on the magician's table.  Solemnly DICKENS watches 
him, taking each ingredient into account.


                        DICKENS
          You have done well.  We are ready.

Ceremoniously,  DICKENS  puts all these ingredients  into 
his top hat.   At last, he breaks the eggs one by one and 
adds  them.   The children make faces at each  other  and 
roll their eyes.   They giggle.  Little SYDNEY won't move 
from his sister KATIE and her rabbit.

                        FORSTER
          How long must we wait for this
          steaming process?

                        DICKENS
          It will be no time.  No time at
          all.  Pray, look into the hat
          this very minute.

                        FORSTER
                 (peering into hat)
          Another moment, please.

FORSTER hushes the audience.  All eyes are on the hat.

                        DICKENS
          My powers tell me our delectable
          dessert has cooked long enough.
          Charley, do be a good boy and 
          come look in this hat.

CHARLEY leaves his chair and walks up to look in the hat.  
We see a big smile on his face.

                        DICKENS
          Is there not a pudding?

                        CHARLEY
          Oh, there's a fine pudding!

All  gasp as an enormous plum pudding is pulled from the top hat.

CUT TO

INT - DICKENS' STUDY - DAY

DICKENS in his study with wife's doctor.  DICKENS is very 
serious in demeanor.

                        DICKENS
          I can understand your reluctance,
          not having delivered a baby in
          this manner, but her pain....

                        DOCTOR
          I'm afraid my first consideration
          is for the babe, Mr. Dickens.

                        DICKENS
          I will not have Catherine in
          such pain with this one.  It
          was all she could bear that
          last time with Sydney.  Surely,
          in a civilized country...

                        DOCTOR
          If, sir, you will take all
          responsibility for the use of
          this anesthetic that you so
          want...

                        DICKENS
          I'll take that responsibility.
          Modern medicine has provided
          such means for us to use.

                        DOCTOR
          I am never the first to take on
          some new fashion in medical
          practice.  The tried and true
          is more to my liking.

                        DICKENS
          I have found an assistant for
          you, Doctor.  He is a young
          medical man but has had by
          now quite adequate experience
          administering this comfort 

                        DOCTOR
          With women, dear sir, nature's
          way is always best.

                        DICKENS
                 (sighing)
          I sometimes fear women and
          nature have conspired against
          me.

CUT TO

INT - BAPTISMAL FOUNT - DAY

Baptismal fount.  The same two CLERGYMEN preside.  The
BABY is presented.  FAMILY and GODPARENTS stand ready.
Haughty  face  of CLERGYMAN seems to loom above  DICKENS' 
displeasure   and   delight  in   slow   enunciation   of 
trinitarian doctrine and pause before continuing.

                        CLERGYMAN
          In the name of the Father, and
          the Son, and the Holy Ghost

CUT TO

Some  fine displeasure flits across the face of  DICKENS, 
still Unitarian in his belief.

CUT TO

                        CLERGYMAN
          I christen thee Henry Fielding
          Dickens.
        
CUT TO

CLERGYMAN and DICKENS are shaking hands.

                        CLERGYMAN
          Henry looks as if he'll grow to
          be a fine lad.

                        DICKENS
                 (drawing Catherine to him)
          He's given his mother no trouble as yet.

CUT TO 

BROAD SHOT OF ALL FAMILY PARTY.  GEORGINA CARRIES
THE BABY.

                        GEORGINA
          I think this one looks the most
          like his father.

                        CLERGYMAN
          How many are there now?  I've
          lost count, I fear.

                        DICKENS
          Henry makes the eighth.

                        CLERGYMAN
          Indeed?  The eighth?

CUT TO
           
EXT - DOCKSIDE - DAY

CLOSE UP - SIGN - WELCOME TO THE ISLE OF WIGHT

BROAD  SHOT  - Ferry  being tied to dock  and  passengers 
disembarking.

CLOSE   UP:  supercilious  man   observing   passengers 
disembarking.   Man  (the novelist THACKERAY) stands  with 
small valise and is very trimly together.   He  obviously 
considers  himself a cut above the crowd.   Then his face 
reveals that he spots someone he knows.   He suppresses a 
sneer  and  smiles.   Then he shows  genuine  warmth  and 
friendliness, stretching out his hand.  We hear sounds of 
cargo unloaded, voices, greetings.

                        THACKERAY                  
          Mr. Dickens, what a pleasure to
          see you.

                        DICKENS
          Ah, Thackeray.  How are you?  You
          know my wife and sister-in-law.

                        THACKERAY
          Good day to all of you.  Ah, and
          you've brought the entire family
          I see.

BROAD  SHOT  - Thackeray looks upon all the children  who 
appear something of a motley crew as do the older members 
of  the  party as well.   Their faces  are  flushed  with 
excitement, hats askew, etc.  They look quite healthy.

                        THACKERAY (CONT)
          Mr. Dickens, I want you to know
          how much I'm enjoying that new
          novel of yours.  David Copperfield
          is one of your best by all means.

                        DICKENS
          Why, thank you, Mr. Thackeray.
          I'm hoping to continue work on
          it while we vacation here.  Are
          you bound for London this
          morning?

                        THACKERAY
          Oh yes.  But I've enjoyed my
          stay here very much.  The
          weather is cool, to my liking.

                        DICKENS
          I'm sorry we won't see more of
          you.

CUT TO

BROAD SHOT - A man of their age is making his way through
the crowds.  It is JOHN LEECH.

                        LEECH
          Dickens, there you are.  I'm
          so sorry I was delayed.  I've
          rounded up all the conveyances
          we'll need to get all of you
          to that place you've rented--
          Winterbourne, it is.  You'll
          like it here.

                        DICKENS
          I fell in here with Thackeray
          who is only just leaving.  Have
          you two met?  Mr. Thackeray,
          Mr. Leech, the illustrator.

The  two men shake hands.

                        THACKERAY AND LEECH
          Oh, of course, of course.  We
          fall into each other's company
          now and then.

The children are twisting and impatient.
THACKERAY shakes  hands  all around and  starts  up  the 
gangplank finally free of arriving passengers.

CUT TO

EXT - SWINBURNE ESTATE GARDENS - DAY
 
ESTABLISHING  SHOT - The gardens at the Swinburne estate.  
The  tea  table is set out under  the  trees.   Both  the 
DICKENS  FAMILY and LEECH FAMILY are at tea.   The adults 
are sipping tea, and the children rush about the garden.

CHARLEY  and his sisters KATIE AND MEMIE are in  a  small 
group  with  the smaller,  less robust  ALGERNON  CHARLES 
SWINBURNE.

                        CHARLEY
          Algernon, of course, attends
          Eton with me.  And how well he
          writes, twice as well as I ever
          will, I fear.

                        ALGERNON
          The muses have been kind to me.
          You've said nothing of the fine
          looks your sisters present.
          I'll not only write fine poems
          in my maturity.  I will crave
          all life's experiences.

The DICKENS children step back  and  show 
some alarm. This is the kind of talk they haven't heard.

                        KATEY
                 (bravely)
          We've been to Italy and France,
          to France many times.

                        MAMIE
                 (not to be outdone)
          And we like Switzerland very
          much.

                        CHARLEY
          The Isle of Wight has something
          of Genoa in its coastline.

                        SWINBURNE
                 (with exaggerated sigh)
          Ah, young ladies, travel is not
          altogether the life experiences
          I have in mind.

CUT TO

We  see a uniformed maid  approaching  the 
cluster  of children.   There are younger boys and  girls 
who skip rope and play at tag close by.

CUT TO

CLOSE UP - Curious face of maid

                        MAID
          Master Swinburne, what are you
          about?  Your grandmother asks
          that you bring your friends for
          biscuit.  They may be hungry
          if you are not.

SWINBURNE has very red hair, is small, younger looking
than  his  twelve  years had he  not  such  a  disdainful 
expression  on his face.   He chooses not to  speak,  but 
puts  himself  between  KATIE and MAMIE  to  escort  them 
toward the adults at tea.

                        SWINBURNE
          I say, there's many a little
          Dickens, is there not?

                        MAMIE
                 (proudly)
          My papa and mama have eight of
          us now.

                        SWINBURNE
          And more to come?

The  three eldest  DICKENS  children  say 
nothing and look away.

                        SWINBURNE
          I have read some of the work
          of Francis Place.

                        MAMIE
          Who is Francis Place?

                        SWINBURNE
          Francis Place...

The  adults  have turned  from  their  tea 
drinking  to catch the drift of Algernon's  conversation.  
They  are at first frozen,  but then LADY SWINBURNE  half 
rises in her chair.

                        LADY SWINBURNE
          Algernon!  Algernon, that will
          be quite enough.

CUT TO

CLOSE   UP   - ALGERNON  maintains  a  look   of   proper 
righteousness as he faces the palpable adult disapproval.

CUT TO

INT - DICKENS' STUDY - DAY

DICKENS at work in a small study.   He  has 
his  back  toward door and does not acknowledge  a  first 
knock.  Then he turns to respond to a second knock.

                        DICKENS
          Oh, come in, if you must.

                        CATHERINE
          I'm sorry to bother you.  The
          surf's up today.  I'm afraid to
          let the children play along the
          shore, and I hear Leech has been
          knocked down and winded by one
          of the big breakers.

                        DICKENS
          Well, will he be all right?

                        CATHERINE
          The children say their mother
          is concerned.  That's all 
          we've heard.

                        DICKENS
          Give me another hour.  I'll
          need a walk then.  I'm not
          writing the way I'd like.  A
          few hundred words and that's
          it some days.

                        CATHERINE
          Charles, is there anything I
          can do.

                        DICKENS
                 (shrugging his shoulders)
          Close that door and mount a
          guard in front of it.  Put all
          the children in irons.

                        CATHERINE
          I'm sorry I bothered you.

                        DICKENS
          Oh, you did the right thing.
          I'll go 'round to call on the
          Leeches shortly.

                        CATHERINE
          I thought you'd want to know.

CATHERINE   closes  the door and DICKENS returns  to  his 
work.

CUT TO

EXT - HOME EXTERIOR - EVENING

ESTABLISHING  SHOT - DICKENS in late evening  approaches 
the entrance to the rented home on the Isle of Wight.  He 
pauses and coughs.
DICKENS  coughs and puts his hand to chest, grimacing.

CUT TO

INT - ENTRANCE HALL - EVENING

CATHERINE  is  taking  DICKENS' hat  and  hanging  it  on 
hallway hook.

                        CATHERINE
          It's very cool this evening.  Do
          you feel well?

                        DICKENS
          I'm all right.  My chest gives
          me trouble again.  It's the
          dampness here.

                        CATHERINE
          And John Leeds?

                        DICKENS
          He'll be fine.  I was able to
          get him to sleep.

                        CATHERINE
          Your magnetic powers?

                        DICKENS
          I'm thinking of putting up a
          sign:  25 guineas per nap.
                 (his laughing provokes
                 a coughing fit)

                        CATHERINE
          You're not well!

                        DICKENS
          Not at all.  It's the cool and
          all the dampness.  My old hip
          injury hurts.  My chest...
          I wish we were at Broadstairs.

Catherine takes him in her arms, and he rests his head
against hers.

CUT TO

EXT - BROADSTAIRS BEACH - DAY

DICKENS  looking  very red and chilled emerges  from  the
waves,  and LADY approaches.   At first her voice is lost
in the wind.

                        LADY
          Mr. Dickens!

DICKENS continues drying himself, hearing only the wind.

                        LADY
          Mr. Dickens!

DICKENS turns around, taking in both lady and dog with no
recognition.

                        LADY
          Mr. Dickens, I'd recognize you
          anywhere.  I'm taking that new
          magazine of yours.  Household
          Words. 

                        DICKENS
          Oh.

                        LADY
          And I'm waiting for those last
          installments of David Copperfield
          I've read most of your books.

                        DICKENS
                 (still shivering)
          Why, thank you.

                        LADY
          Is your family with you?

                        DICKENS
          No.  No, I've come here to work
          on the last of Copperfield.
          My wife just gave birth to a
          little girl, and the children
          are in London with her.

                        LADY
          A little girl?  What will you
          name her.

                       DICKENS
          Dora.  Dora Anne.  We call her
          Annie.

                        WOMAN
          After David's wife.  How sweet.
  
CUT TO

INT - SITTING ROOM AT DEVONSHIRE TERRACE - NIGHT

DICKENS reads to CATHERINE and GEORGINA.

                        DICKENS
          "We have been very happy, my
          sweet Dora."

                        CATHERINE
          But, Charles, it sounds as if
          Dora will die.  I thought that
          only Steerforth and Emily's
          tragedy would mar the brightness
          of David Copperfield.

                        DICKENS
          It's been hard to make up my
          mind to this.  But when I was
          at Broadstairs I resolved that
          Dora must die.

                        GEORGINA
          It's been clear to me that Dora
          somehow lacks adequate strength.

DICKENS returns to his reading.

                        DICKENS
          The dear girl says:  "I was
          very happy, very.  But, as
          years went on, my dear boy
          would have wearied of his
          child-wife.  She would have
          been less and less a
          companion...."

                        CATHERINE
          I can't bear to listen.

                        GEORGINA
          It's but fiction, dear sister.

                        CATHERINE
          Say what you will about fiction
          and illusion.  I don't want
          Dora to die.

CUT TO

INT - DINING ROOM AT DEVONSHIRE TERRACE - NIGHT

At  the dining table are  DICKENS,  CATHERINE,  GEORGINA,
FORSTER, and the clergyman JAMES WHITE.  All are solemn.

                        WHITE
          I am glad you wrote me of your
          concerns, Mrs. Dickens.

                        CATHERINE
          I cannot thank you enough for
          being here.  We do want our
          baby christened now.  We....

                        WHITE
          Now don't worry.  Probably your
          fears about her delicacy are
          unjustified.  I had other
          business in London to bring
          me from the Isle of Wight.

                        CATHERINE
          She does seem better but the
          little thing suffered so.

                        WHITE
          Mrs. Dickens, we will have a
          private baptism tonight.  Now
          worry no further, I beg you.

CUT TO

INT - DRAWING ROOM - NIGHT

REV.  WHITE  sprinkles  water  sparingly on  the  clothed
child.

                        WHITE
          I baptize thee Dora Anne Dickens
          in the name of the Father, and
          of the Son, and of the Holy
          Ghost.

CUT TO

INT - SITTING ROOM AT DEVONSHIRE TERRACE - NIGHT

DICKENS,  still  youthful looking,  is putting on  a  top
coat,  and CATHERINE, who is untidily dressed, watches in
evident anxiety.   She is overweight.  The baby is in her
arms.   GEORGINA  stays at CATHERINE'S side,  who appears
she  might  lose  her grasp on the  baby  and  things  in
general.

                        CATHERINE
          Must you leave us tonight?  You
          haven't been home one evening
          for weeks.  And you made a
          trip to Paris without me.

                        DICKENS
          Kate, you know we are in the
          middle of play rehearsals.
          I'll be at the Duke's.  Close
          by in Picadilly.

                        CATHERINE
          Our baby has been so sick.

                        GEORGINA
          Catherine, let me take the
          baby.

                        DICKENS
          The baby is recovering nicely.
          Let Georgina put her in her
          crib.
                 (a beat)
          It's you I'm concerned about.

CATHERINE'S  slippered  feet next to DICKENS'S well  shod
feet seem pathetic.

                        CATHERINE
          I'm tired.  I sleep so poorly.

                        DICKENS
                 (impatiently)
          I must go.  We are to give Lord
          Lytton's play for the Queen.
          You know she has accepted the
          Duke's invitation to attend
          a performance in April. 

DICKENS   leaves  and  GEORGINA  takes  the   baby   from
CATHERINE.

                        GEORGINA
          I'll have her asleep in no time.

CUT TO

INT - PARLORS AT DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE'S - NIGHT

DICKENS  stands  with his arms about two young women  who
look up to him with adoration.

                        DICKENS
          What splendid opportunities the
          theatrical life affords.  I
          thought seriously of taking
          up acting as a career myself.

The young women are enchanted.

CUT TO

INT - BEDROOM - NIGHT

In  their  shared  bed  CATHERINE  makes  obvious  sexual
overtures to DICKENS.

                        DICKENS
          Catherine?

His face tells it all:   What's going on?   I always make
the first moves,  don't I?   Is Catherine possessed?   He
does  not  respond  to  her advances,  and  her  pain  is
evident.

CUT TO

INT - BEDROOM AT DEVONSHIRE TERRACE - DAY

CATHERINE sits mutely in a chair.  She stares into space
as if oblivious of everything.  GEORGINA and ANNIE are
packing a valise.

                        GEORGINA
          Catherine, won't you want your
          lavender shawl?  The evenings
          will be chill.

CATHERINE'S face is expressionless.  GEORGINA sighs,
folds the lavender shawl and puts it in the valise.

Door to room opens and KATEY (11) enters.

                        KATEY
          Is Mommy going away?  Where is
          she going?  Mama, do speak to
          me.

CATHERINE does not speak.                

                       GEORGINA
          Your mother is very ill, Katey.
          She is going to Malvern.  Your
          father has found a doctor
          there.  He will help her.

KATEY  stands  beside  her mother  and  takes  her  hand. 
CATHERINE without speaking takes hold of the child's hand,
holding it to her face.  She begins to weep silently.

CUT TO

INT - FRONT ENTRY - DAY

DICKENS  and  FORSTER are waiting for a  carriage.   They
have  a large valise and a piece of hand  luggage.   From
time to time they look out the window.

                        DICKENS
          I'm sure Catherine will want
          her needlework in a few days.

                        FORSTER
          She'll come around in no time.

                        DICKENS
          How she has neglected all the
          children!  She doesn't even
          read to them.

                        FORSTER
          It won't be long.

                        DICKENS
                 (paying no attention)
          How they all enjoy Hans
          Christian Andersen's stories.
          I think Catherine wishes I
          wrote half so well.

                        FORSTER
          But Andersen doesn't try to end
          his stories happily the way
          you do.

                        DICKENS
          Stories do not always end
          happily, do they? 
                 (a beat)
          Poor Catherine.

                        FORSTER
          She worries about the baby, but
          the doctor gives you hope.

FORSTER puts a hand on DICKENS'S shoulder.

                        DICKENS
          I couldn't have managed without
          you and Georgy.

                        FORSTER
          Here is the carriage.

CUT TO

INT - DR. WILSON'S OFFICE AT MALVERN - DAY

DR.  WILSON  is  seated  at his  desk  and  listening  to
CATHERINE with keen interest.

                        DR. WILSON
          I'm glad you are feeling better.
          You tell me, Mrs. Dickens, the
          life story of a woman who is
          basically healthy.

                        CATHERINE
          You think that I am ...normal?

                        DR. WILSON
                 (laughing)
          For a woman of thirty-six you
          are in splendid condition.  And
          you have nine children?

                        CATHERINE
          Yes.  Nine.  The baby has been
          very sick.  I worry...

                        DR. WILSON
          And the best thing for that
          baby will be a strong, healthy
          mother, Mrs. Dickens.

                        CATHERINE
                 (unconvinced)
          Nothing I have told you?  My
          appetite?  My feelings?

                        DR. WILSON
                 (convincingly)
          Mrs. Dickens, God has given
          us those appetites and those
          feelings.  You are very normal.

It's what CATHERINE needs to hear.  She relaxes in her
chair.

                        CATHERINE
          I'm following all of your
          prescriptions...the diet, the
          water.  I've experienced the
          wrap.  The walks...

                        DR. WILSON
          Fine...fine...

CUT TO

EXT - MALVERN - DAY

CATHERINE  and DICKENS,  bundled up,  are walking briskly
together up the hill behind the Malvern clinic.   DICKENS
wears a black armband.

                        DICKENS
          Dr. Wilson says the next time
          I come I may take you back with
          me.  How quickly you have
          recovered.  How well you look.

                        CATHERINE
          I was afraid you would not visit
          me so soon after you buried your
          father.  Dear man.  I am sorry
          his last days were such a
          trial for all of you.

                        DICKENS
          I'll never believe he should
          have gone through the ordeal of
          that surgery.  It was butchery.
          He died soon afterwards.  I
          saw a man who had been, for
          all purposes, murdered.  Blood
          was everywhere.

                        CATHERINE
          I am so sorry.

                        DICKENS
          But enough of that.  How well
          you look.  Good Dr. Wilson...

                        CATHERINE
          Indeed.  His talks with me
          show his genuine concern.  I
          try all his suggestions for
          treatment.  If fresh air and
          exercise and cold water and
          diet could cure....

CATHERINE looks out across the hills wistfully instead of
finishing her sentence.
         
CUT TO

INT - NURSERY - NIGHT

DICKENS  bends  over crib of baby  ANNIE,  playing  "This
little pig" with her toes.  The baby sits up, cooing  and
laughing.  GEORGINA watches from foot of crib.

                        DICKENS
          She looks splendid.  How well
          you have cared for her, Georgy.

                        GEORGINA
          Katey and Mamie have been my
          helpers.  I hope your trip
          went well.

                        DICKENS
          Yes.  Kate appears much better.
          We'll bring her home soon.

                        GEORGINA
          The children will be pleased.

                        DICKENS
          Yes.  Well, I am sorry I
          cannot dine with them this
          evening.

                        GEORGINA
          They are accustomed to eating
          in the nursery.  Don't worry
          about them.

                        DICKENS
          I'm speaking on behalf of the
          General Theatrical Fund.  It
          is a worthy cause.

                        GEORGINA
          Of course.

CUT TO

From  the   doorway FORSTER and MARK LEMON  peer  out  as
DICKENS, who is at the head table, acknowledges applause.

                        FORSTER
          I must steel myself to tell
          him about the baby.  What a
          wonderful speech he gave, about
          how actors may come from scenes
          of death....  Yes, he plays out
          such scenes as they do.

                        LEMON
          The baby's death follows so
          closely upon that of his father.

                        FORSTER
          John Dickens is scarcely in
          his grave.
                 (he pauses)
          But I'll tell him now.

CUT TO

As DICKENS rises from his chair, FORSTER puts his arm on
his shoulder.  He takes him to the exit, maneuvering  him
past  all those who congratulate him and wish  him  well. 
The scene is festive.  Out the door FORSTER looks DICKENS
full in the face.

                        FORSTER
          My friend, I have some dreadful
          news for you.

                        DICKENS
                 (quietly)
          Is it the baby?

                        FORSTER
          I'm afraid so.

                        DICKENS
          Is she dead?

FORSTER nods his head.

                        DICKENS
          My God.  The little one is
          dead.

DICKENS  covers his face with his hands.   FORSTER  wards
off any who try to draw close.

CUT TO

INT - NURSERY - NIGHT

FORSTER  and  DICKENS sit beside the tiny corpse  in  its
crib.

                        FORSTER
          So suddenly....  She suffered
          terrible convulsions.  Then
          it was all over.  Oh, she was
          not in such pain as your
          father was.

                        DICKENS
          And I thought that I might write
          to Catherine that all was well.

 CUT TO
                                   
 EXT - MALVERN - DAY            

CATHERINE is bundled up and walking by herself as FORSTER
approaches. 

                        FORSTER
          Catherine!

She turns.   As he draws nearer, she can tell by his face
that he brings bad news.

                        CATHERINE
          What...what is it?  John?  Is
          that you?

                        FORSTER
          I've come with a letter from
          Charles.  And I am to take
          you home to Devonshire Terrace.

                        CATHERINE
          It is bad news.  The baby?

He hands her the letter which she opens with deliberation
and unfolds.  It is on mourning paper.

                        FORSTER
          I hope I have not startled you.

                        CATHERINE
                 (shaking her head,
                 reading again)
          He warns that I may find my
          little one dead when I
          arrive.

                        FORSTER
          We all so much wish it could
          be otherwise.

                        CATHERINE
          It is the kindest of letters.

CUT TO

INT - DR. WILSON'S OFFICE - DAY

CATHERINE and DR.  WILSON stand regarding each other with
concern.

                        CATHERINE
          You have helped me a great deal.

                        DR. WILSON
          I regret your leaving us under
          such circumstances.  You do
          look so much better. 
         
                        CATHERINE
          You have taught me to live with
          myself.  I like myself better.
          Thank you.

                        DR. WILSON
          You will take care of yourself?

                        CATHERINE
          I promise.

They  shake hands,  and he watches her with compassion as
she turns to leave.

CUT TO

INT - DICKENS'S STUDY - DAY

DICKENS  is seating FORSTER in his study.   Behind them a
SERVANT is dusting and packing books.

                        DICKENS
                 (to servant)
          Could you work somewhere else
          for now?  Mr. Forster and I
          don't wish to be disturbed.

                        SERVANT
          Yes, Sir.

Servant exits immediately.

                        DICKENS
                 (turning to Forster)_
          I think things will eventually
          be pieced together.  Kate has
          held up well.  She is different,
          surer of herself.

                        FORSTER
          I can understand her reluctance
          to remain in this house.

                        DICKENS
          She and the children will remain
          at Fort House in Broadstairs
          all summer.  There she will be
          as happy as possible.

                        FORSTER
          She has put that carriage mishap
          she suffered there a couple of
          years ago behind her?
         
                        DICKENS
          Oh, I think so.

                        FORSTER
          And she has taken on her full
          responsibilities with the
          household?

                        DICKENS
          As to that...  I am very much
          in doubt.

                        FORSTER
          But Georgina will do all that.
          And, of course, I'll assist with
          London arrangements.

                        DICKENS
          We'll sublet this grand old
          house for the summer and give
          it up forever in the fall when
          the lease expires.  It's been
          our home for twelve years.

                        FORSTER
          Your needs have changed.  I
          do feel concern for all of
          you.

                        DICKENS
          You are a true friend.

                        FORSTER
          Someday you know I must marry
          and take on responsibilities
          of my own.

                        DICKENS
          You have not been hasty.

                        FORSTER
                 (looking uncomfortable
                 and changing subject)
          But you feel you can now return
          to our play rehearsals?

                        DICKENS
          `The play's the thing.'  Our
          gracious Queen has consented
          to the postponement and will
          attend the performance on May
          16th.  What pleasure this play
          gives me.

DISSOLVE TO

INT - HALL AT DUKE'S DEVONSHIRE HOUSE - NIGHT

The  performance of Bulwer Lytton's Not So Bad as We Seem
is  in  progress.   PAN audience downstairs  and  in  the
gallery and CLOSE ON QUEEN VICTORIA and PRINCE ALBERT.

CUT TO

INT - BACKSTAGE - SAME NIGHT

DICKENS  and FORSTER survey the audience from behind  the
curtain.  They speak softly.

                        DICKENS
          By now I think we are safe from
          any intrusion by Rosina Bulwer
          Lytton.

                        FORSTER
          Edward and she should never
          have met.  They are such an
          unhappy couple.

                        DICKENS
          He was beside himself when she
          threatened to disguise herself
          as an orange girl and raise
          a terrible row.

                        FORSTER
          Their marriage is over.  Yet
          what a fine lad they had between
          them.  What a fine lad!

                        DICKENS
                 (finger to lips)
          Do you think we can see Her
          Majesty the Queen if we peer
          through the curtain over here?

DICKENS parts the curtain and looks out.

                        FORSTER
          Do you see her?

                        DICKENS
                 (sighing)
          She's grown so heavy.  And
          had so many babies.  O,
          Youth.  O, Beauty!

DISSOLVE TO

QUEEN VICTORIA smiles as she watches the play.

CUT TO

INT - GIRLS' BEDROOM AT TAVISTOCK - DAY

KATEY is straightening the ribbons in her top drawer, and
MAMY is seriously folding handkerchiefs.   Suddenly KATEY
begins  to  dance a kind of polka,  twirling the  ribbons
above her head.  There's a knock at the door.

                        MAMEY
                 (shocked)
          Is it Father?

                        KATEY
                 (flinging back door)
          We await you!

CATHERINE  looks  into  the  room  cautiously  and   then
questioningly.

                        KATEY
          Oh, Mother, it's you!

Both  the  girls  throw  themselves  on  their  big  bed,
giggling uncontrollably.

                        CATHERINE
          You know your father will
          inspect your room any time
          now.  I came to see whether
          you needed help.  He wants
          our new home here at Tavistock
          to be perfect.  Oh, don't
          upset him.

The  girls  sit  up on the edge of their bed and  try  to
regain some composure, occasionally lapsing into giggles.

                        KATEY
          Mother, you needn't have
          climbed all those stairs to
          tell us.  Aunt Georgy has
          already been here.  We'll
          behave ourselves.  Honestly.
          It's just that...

                        CATHERINE
          It's just that what?

                        KATEY
                 (boldly)
          Our friends' fathers don't
          inspect their drawers.
          Do they, Mamie?

                        MAMIE
          Indeed not!

                        CATHERINE
          Oh, my lovely ones, nobody is
          like your father.

DISSOLVE TO

INT - GIRLS' BEDROOM - SAME DAY

DICKENS  has entered the room and is  looking  critically
into KATEY'S top drawer. 

                        DICKENS
          Ah, Miss Lucifer Box, those
          ribbons have more order about
          them than they took on during
          my last visit.

                        KATEY
          Yes, Father.

Behind her back KATEY crosses her fingers.

CUT TO

INT - HALLWAY  AT TAVISTOCK HOUSE - DAY

DICKENS  welcomes  MRS.  HOGARTH  in the  entrance  hall,
greeting her and assisting her up the stairs.

                        DICKENS
          It's another boy, Mother Hogarth.
          Wait till you see him.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          I'm afraid Catherine wanted a
          little girl.

                        DICKENS
          Now don't worry about Catherine.
          She is resolved that this one is
          the finest baby she has ever
          seen.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          And she's well?

                        DICKENS
          I see no cause for worry.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          Do you have a name yet?

CUT TO

EXT - ST. PANCRAS CHURCH - DAY

The landscape is that of a late spring day.

CUT TO

INT - BAPTISMAL FOUNT - DAY

CLERGYMAN dips naked babe and intones.

                        CLERGYMAN
          Edward Bulwer Lytton Dickens

CUT TO

INT - TAVISTOCK DRAWING ROOM - NIGHT

DICKENS enters room where CATHERINE waits for him.  She
works at needlepoint by a lamp.

                        DICKENS
          I've come from the Carlyles.
          Jane Carlyle sends her best.

                        CATHERINE
          How is she?

                        DICKENS
          Still frail.  But an interesting
          woman.

                        CATHERINE
          And Carlyle?

                        DICKENS
          In as poor health as ever.  I
          wonder about him.  I've
          dedicated Hard Times to
          him, but I'm not at all sure
          the tale pleases him.

                        CATHERINE
          Oh?

                        DICKENS
          He wants great me portrayed in
          literature.  Great men take the
          world forward.

A beat.

                        CATHERINE
          And women?  Haven't women had
          some place in history?  Will
          they not play a part in the
          future?

                        DICKENS
          What's that?  Women?  Oh, I
          suppose they are, after all,
          the mothers of great men.  The
          wives of great men.

Off CATHERINE'S reaction.

CUT TO

INT  - TAVISTOCK DINING ROOM - NIGHT

DICKENS is at the head of the table with GEORGINA at  his
right  side.   CATHERINE  is  seated at the foot  of  the
table.   All are five years older than in previous scene. 
DICKENS  has grown a beard,  a thin,  scraggly  one  that
extends  to  a  point  below  the  middle  of  his  chin. 
CATHERINE  has grown very heavy.   The children range  in
age  from CHARLEY,  now 18,  to ALFRED,  who is  10,  the
younger ones not at table.

CUT TO

CLOSE  UP  - DICKENS is sipping wine.   He pats his  chin
with his napkin and begins to talk with GEORGINA.

                        DICKENS
          What a surprise I had today.

                        GEORGINA
          A surprise?

                        CATHERINE
          What is this about a surprise?
          I want to hear about it too.

                        DICKENS
                 (raising his voice a bit)
          I had a letter from an old
          friend.

                        CATHERINE
          From whom? 

                        DICKENS
                 (in the low voice)
          How strange that so many seem to
          enter only to pass through our
          lives.

                        CATHERINE
          I can't hear you.

                        CHARLEY
          I still see many of my friends
          from Eton.  I want never to
          lose them.

                        GEORGINA
          But tell us about this old friend.
          Someone from the CHRONICLE?

                        DICKENS
          This friend was a woman, now
          married.  Her name is Mrs.
          Winter

                        CATHERINE
          But what was her name before her
          marriage?

                        DICKENS
          You didn't know her, Catherine.
          Her name was Maria Beadnell.

                        CATHERINE
                 (off his reaction)
          Maria Beadnell?

                        DICKENS
          You see, I knew it would mean
          nothing to you.  Georgina and
          I will plan a dinner for Mr.
          and Mrs. Winter.  It will be
          pleasant to see her again.

CLOSE ON CATHERINE's stunned surprise.

DISSOLVE TO

INT. - TAVISTOCK DINING ROOM - NIGHT

CLOSE  UP - MARIA BEADNELL WINTER,  a small  woman,  very
fat and foolish,  who gives no one else a chance to say  a
word.   Her husband is the grim,  silent sort.   DICKENS,
GEORGINA,   and   CATHERINE  sit  in  wonder  at  Maria's
verbosity.   MARIA  is grossly flirtatious,  cocking  her
head this way and that and rolling her eyes coquettishly,
all   her  attention  focused  on  DICKENS,   who   looks
occasionally behind himself as if to flee.

                        MARIA
          Gracious, how Charles danced. 
          Is he still a dancer?  Oh, and
          he played the accordion as well.
          To my father's distraction.
                 (she laughs breathlessly)
          Let's see, dear Mrs. Dickens,
          how long have you been wed?
          It's been a long time for Mr.
          Winter and myself...

                        MR. WINTER
          A long time.

                        MARIA
          To have such a clever husband!

                        DICKENS
                 (shaking his head)
          Clever?

                        MARIA
          I've heard it said, Mrs.
          Dickens...oh, let me call
          you Catherine...I've heard
          that you've written a book.

                        CATHERINE
          I put together a little
          book of all our menus from
          the time we lived near Regents's
          Park at Devonshire Terrace.

                        MARIA
          What a pretty part of London!
          Regent's Park, dear.  Oh,
          Charles, did you think that
          once you'd live so grandly?

                        DICKENS
          Life has brought nothing but
          surprises.

                        CATHERINE
          Won't we be more comfortable in
          the drawing room?

DICKENS AND MR. WINTER assist MARIA and CATHERINE as they
rise from their chairs with some  difficulty.   GEORGINA,
who  has  also  been seated at table is still  agile  and
quick.   She summons a servant to clear the table  before
joining the others.

                        MARIA
          Now you must show me your little
          book, Catherine.  I hear it is
          most helpful to the wife who
          plans such dinners.  Your father
          writes too, does he not?

                        CATHERINE
          His history of music is much
          better known than my little
          treatise on entertaining.

                        MARIA
                 (foolishly)
          Oh, it isn't fair that such
          cleverness is gathered all into
          one family, is it, Dear?

MR.  WINTER nods mindlessly as he and DICKENS stand aside
to let the ladies precede them through the door.  DICKENS
looks down at the feet of the women.

CLOSE  UP - We see the feet of both women as DICKENS eyes
them.   Both  CATHERINE and MARIA have heavy ankles  that
sag over the tops of their shoes.

CUT TO

INT -STUDY AT TAVISTOCK - NIGHT

JOHN FORSTER and DICKENS sit  with sherry glasses.

                        DICKENS
                 (lifting his glass)
          Congratulate me.

                        FORSTER
                 (smilingly lifting glass)
          And for what reason?

                        DICKENS
          I have purchased that fine old
          mansion in Kent.  I am the new
          owner of Gad's Hill Place.

                        FORSTER
          I know the house.  In Higham.
          Across the road from that
          tavern named for Falstaff.

                        DICKENS
          Shakespeare set one of that
          knight's pieces of mischief at
          Gad's Hill.
                       
                        FORSTER
          And you knew the area as a
          boy.  You have told me that.

                        DICKENS
          My father told me if I worked
          hard, I might some day own it.

                        FORSTER
          Then I do congratulate you.

They lift their glasses.

DISSOLVE TO

EXT - Gad's Hill Place - NIGHT
       
Show view of entire facade.
       
CUT TO

INT  - GAD'S HILL DRAWING ROOM - NIGHT
       
CATHERINE with the younger  children --SYDNEY (8);
HARRY (6);  and PLORN (3)--in the  drawing
room at GAD'S HILL with their visitor HANS CHRISTIAN
ANDERSEN.

                        CATHERINE
          You are our first guest at Gad's
          Hill Place.  After my husband
          bought this home, which he has
          admired since he was a boy, he
          said, `Our first guest will be
          Hans Christian Andersen.'

                        ANDERSEN
                  (heavily accented)
          How I've looked forward to this
          visit!  I am sorry Mr. Dickens
          is so busy, though, but what
          charming company I have in you
          and the children, Mrs. Dickens.

                        CATHERINE
          These little ones have talked
          of nothing but your visit.  You
          wrote their favorite story.

                        ANDERSEN
          Not "The Little Mermaid"?

                        SYDNEY and HARRY
          "The Ugly Duckling"!

                        ANDERSEN
          Oh, you like happy endings, do
          you?

CUT TO

CLOSE UP of ANDERSEN addressing CATHERINE.

                        ANDERSEN
          How gracious a hostess you are!
          I'd heard you were known for
          the excellence of the tables
          you set, but it is you, Mrs.
          Dickens, that makes England
          enchanting.  You are all the
          kindest women in your husband's
          novels.

                        CATHERINE
          I'll always remember your visit.

CUT TO

INT  - HALLWAY - NIGHT

CATHERINE has her hand upon DICKENS'S SLEEVE.

                        CATHERINE
                 (almost whispering)
          You can't go out again, Charles.
          You have spent no time with
          Mr. Andersen.

                        DICKENS
          I must go.

                        CATHERINE
          But what can I say to him?

                        DICKENS
          I don't care.  Tell him I must
          visit a sick friend.

                        CATHERINE
          Charles...

                        DICKENS
          Damnit, let me be.  Can't you
          see how tiresome both of you
          are to me?  Can't you understand?

CATHERINE drops her hand and DICKENS slams out the door.

CLOSE ON CATHERINE watching after him.

CUT TO

INT - DICKENS' STUDY - NIGHT

DICKENS talks with FORSTER.

                        DICKENS
          Who else may I tell of my
          feelings?

                        FORSTER
          And how I value your confidence.
          But where is my cheerful friend
          of years gone by?

                        DICKENS
          Piled high with responsibilities.

                        FORSTER
          Like an untidy desk?  All
          England sees a happy family
          man.

                        DICKENS
          It's easy for you to say, John
          Forster.  You and your wife
          have money.

                        FORSTER
          But happiness...

                        DICKENS
                 (unhearing)
          My Mother, who was left to me
          when my father died (I never had
          anything left to me but relations)
          is in the strangest state of mind
          from senile decay....

                        FORSTER
          So you have said, but is that
          not nature?

                        DICKENS
          And the impossibility of getting
          her to understand what is the
          matter, combined with her desire
          to be got up in sables like a
          female Hamlet...

                        FORSTER
          Dear friend...

                        DICKENS
          You know that in temperament
          Catherine and I are not the
          same.  You have seen what the
          years have brought us.

                        FORSTER
          All these connections are the
          affirmation of your life.  It
          cannot all be sunshine.

                        DICKENS
          I need diversion.

CLOSE UP - FORSTER looks at DICKENS .

DICKENS won't look into  Forster's  eyes.

CUT TO

INT - GIRLS' BEDROOM - DAY

KATEY has tossed herself on the bed.  CATHERINE is in the
room.

                        KATEY
                 (wiping her eyes)
          It's not fair.

                        CATHERINE
          I'm sorry, but, of course, your
          father is right.  You may not
          appear in such a large theater
          as the one at Manchester.  It
          would not do.

                        KATEY
          I have a good voice.  I can
          project.  I know my lines.  If
          Mamie and Aunt Georgy do not
          want to go to Manchester, they
          may stay at home.  I've worked
          so hard.  I want to go.

                        CATHERINE
          You are much too young to go
          without Aunt Georgy.

                        KATEY
          Why Ellen Ternan is just my age.
          I heard Papa say so.

                        CATHERINE
          She goes on stage only when her
          mother and sister act as well.

                        KATEY
          It's not fair.  Everyone said
          how well I've done in all the
          performances here. 

                        CATHERINE
          Please, Katey, let's not upset
          your father further.  He has so
          much to do before taking the
          play to Manchester.

                        KATEY
          The Frozen Deep will be a
          big success, and I'll be left
          here in London.
                 (she weeps)

                        CATHERINE
          I'll be left in London as well.

CLOSE ON CATHERINE who repeats

                        CATHERINE
          I'll be left once again.

CUT TO

INT - Drawing Room at Tavistock House - DAY

DICKENS and CATHERINE are with MR.  and MRS. HOGARTH. 
DICKENS stands while the others are seated.  He moves
away from the hearth fire.
                       
                        DICKENS
          Yes, I do think Catherine looks
          pale and yes, I do believe the
          weather has been beastly this
          spring, and no, I will not try
          a little piece of the lovely
          cake baked from Kate's new
          recipe.

                        CATHERINE
          Charles.

                        DICKENS
          Yes, it is stuffy in here and
          yes, I will take myself out to
          Kent.

                        CATHERINE
          Not tonight.  The carriage can't
          be got ready tonight.

                        DICKENS
          No, the carriage can't be readied
          and yes, I'll walk and leave
          immediately.

                        CATHERINE
          It's over twenty miles.  It will
          rain.

                        DICKENS
          Yes, it will rain tonight, and
          yes, I will walk to Gad's Hill
          Place.

                        CATHERINE
          Your foot...  Your foot will
          give you trouble.  You will
          catch cold.

                        DICKENS
          Yes, I will leave now.  And
          yes, I am used to trouble.

                        CATHERINE
          Charles...

                        MR. HOGARTH
                 (rising from chair)
          Charles, does our visit trouble
          you?
                        DICKENS
                 (turning from Mr. Hogarth)
          Good night.

CLOSE ON CATHERINE'S eyes following him.

CUT TO

EXT - ENGLISH COUNTRYSIDE - DAY

Carriage approaches down country lane.

CUT TO

INT - CARRIAGE COMPARTMENT - DAY

DICKENS rides with ELLEN TERNAN, a nineteen-year-old
blonde. 

CUT TO

EXT  - Carriage disappears down lane.

CUT TO

INT  - Drawing room at Tavistock - DAY

DICKENS and CATHERINE stand close in confrontation.

                        DICKENS
          My decision to remove myself
          from your bedroom was not made
          suddenly.  I have given orders
          to the carpenter. 

                        CATHERINE
          We have always shared a bed,
          Charles.

                        DICKENS
          We will share one no longer.
          I'll sleep in my dressing
          room.  My little room will be
          boarded up so that I have a
          separate place.

                        CATHERINE
          And our marriage?

                        DICKENS
          If we are honest, we will admit
          it is a cause of dissatisfaction
          to both of us.  We are no
          longer happy together, Catherine.
          We are not suited to each other.
          We have known that for years.

                        CATHERINE
          We have had ten children with
          each other, Charles.  We have
          come a long way together.

                        DICKENS
          It is strange that you put it
          in those terms.  You who have
          never chosen to keep up with
          my pace.  You who have held
          me back and given your lassitude
          to my children.  I'll no
          longer bear your slowness.

                        CATHERINE
          I am no longer young, Charles.
          We have put on these years
          together.

                        DICKENS
          That's for you to say.  Go
          back to your lounge.  I'll not
          let the years sap my strength.
          I've a great many things to do
          with my life.  I won't put up
          with getting old.  I won't.

CLOSE UP of DICKENS'S contorted face.  Suddenly he is
seized by a coughing fit.

CLOSE ON CATHERINE's expression of alarm.

CUT TO

INT - DRAWING ROOM at Tavistock - DAY
    
CATHERINE sits with MR. AND MRS. HOGARTH.  All of them
act chilled. The fire on the hearth is out.

                        CATHERINE
          Mother, I know the room is cool.
          I've asked Donald to bring more
          wood for the fire.

For  a  moment  CATHERINE  covers  her eyes  as  if
composing  her thoughts.

                        CATHERINE
          Things are no better.  I fear
          they never will be.  I must
          stand by him.  He is not well.
          It must be his work on Little
          Dorrit.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          Your father and I are very
          concerned about you.

                        CATHERINE
          You must not worry.  I feel
          that my health has improved
          ever since my stay at Malvern.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          But your husband's manner....
                  
                        CATHERINE
          How unlike my father's dear
          consideration of all of us it is.
          Oh, Mother, Papa....

SARAH enters the room.  She carries a small package.

                        SARAH
          Ma'am, the jeweler's boy left
          this package.

                        CATHERINE
          Thank you, Sarah.

CATHERINE looks at the box, turning it before opening it.

                        MR. HOGARTH
          Charles has sent you jewels? 
          Then he tries to make amends.

                        MRS. HOGARTH
          How happy we are for you, Kate!
          Now things will be better for
          you.

CATHERINE  slowly  opens  the box and removes  a  jeweled
bracelet.   She  puts it to her wrist and holds  it  out. 
Then   she  turns  it  over  working  to  focus  on   the
inscription.

                        CATHERINE
                 (shrieking)
          It says 'For Ellen.'

CUT TO

INT - TAVISTOCK DRAWING ROOM - DAY

The hearth fire is very bright; flames leap and logs
crackle. DICKENS is holding the jeweler's box, and
CATHERINE stands pointing at it.

                        DICKENS
          I can't help it if the delivery
          boy made a foolish mistake.
          The whole thing is nothing to
          get excited about.

                        CATHERINE
          Excited?  No, Charles, I have
          at last collected my wits.

                        DICKENS
          I can rejoice in that.  Your
          wits, you say?

                        CATHERINE
          My wits, my soul, if you will.
          I want us at once to work out
          some terms of separation.  I
          do not choose to live with you
          as your wife.  I will live alone.

                        DICKENS
          I thought you said you had your
          wits.  Now you talk madness.
          However things are between us,
          I'd have you remain in my
          household.

                        CATHERINE
          I'll not.
         
                        DICKENS
          You will be here for the
          children.  You may not have
          them.  You know the child
          custody laws as well as I.
          Would you leave the children?

                        CATHERINE
          If I must...  My darlings...
        
                        DICKENS
          And you will be here as my
          hostess, will you not?

                        CATHERINE
          I will live separately.

                        DICKENS
          And what is the world to think?

                        CATHERINE
          I will live separately.

                        DICKENS
          This is madness.  Ellen and I
          are innocent, innocent.  We
          have done no wrong.

                        CATHERINE
          I will live separately.

                        DICKENS
          All right then.  But how
          unfair you are.  Do you not
          remember our little agreement?
          Have you no memory at all?

                        CATHERINE
          What agreement?

                        DICKENS
          Long ago we promised each to
          each that if we loved another,
          we would speak openly.

                        CATHERINE
          Are you telling me you are in
          love with Ellen Ternan?

                        DICKENS
          Yes, I am.  I am in love with
          Ellen.  She is the sweetest
          and most virtuous of women.

                        CATHERINE
          I will live separately.
 
                        DICKENS
          How warm that hearth fire is!
          It is stifling me. 
         
CUT TO

INT - CATHERINE'S BEDROOM - DAY

CATHERINE is sitting down, putting shoes on her swollen
feet.  She pauses in the task to wipe away tears.
KATEY comes to the door, looking in at her mother,
rushing in to put her arms around her.

                        KATEY
          Oh, Mama, what is it?

                        CATHERINE
          Your father insists that I call
          upon Ellen.  He feels my
          sus-suspicions are ruinous,
          that we part only because of
          incompatibilities between the
          two of us.

                        KATEY
          Mother, you need not go.  You
          need not.

                        CATHERINE
          Your father is stern in this
          request.  His reputation...

                        KATEY
          Mother!

                        CATHERINE
          So many are dependent on him
          for support.  You children....
          Dear Fanny's family.  His old
          mother.  He has always, always
          been generous.  I'll not put
          an end to his professional
          life.  We can't afford that.

                        KATEY
                 (hugging her)
          Mother, think of yourself.

                        CATHERINE
          Indeed I do think of myself.
          And all women.  I think of my
          two daughters.  That is why I
          must stand up as best I can,
          Katey.  I'll stand up to your
          father as best I can and hope
          the future makes being her own
          person a bit easier for an
          English woman.

                        KATEY
          Oh, I have always thought of
          you as such a special person.
          Remember the advice of foolish
          old Polonius:  `To thine own
          self be true.'

                        CATHERINE
          Katey, you have always had a
          mind of your own.  I will learn
          to become my own person by your
          example.

The two women embrace, both weeping.                 

CUT TO

EXT - FRONT DOOR TO ELLEN'S HOME - DAY

CATHERINE knocks at the door.  The door opens.  Then we
see only Ellen's young, questioning face, as if it is in
a fine mist.

                        ELLEN
          Mrs. Dickens?

                        CATHERINE
          Oh, Charles, Charles.  We have
          lost you...

DISSOLVE TO

INT - CATHERINE'S BEDROOM ON GLOUCESTER CRESCENT - DAY

We see through CATHERINE's eyes as she struggles to wake
up.  Sarah leans into her face.

                        SARAH
          Mrs. Dickens?  Mrs. Dickens,
          are you all right?

                        CATHERINE
          Oh, Sarah...  Yes, I'm fine.
          I...was dreaming...

CUT TO

EXT - RAILWAY STATION  AT HIGHAM, KENT - EARLY MORNING

Workers lift Dickens's casket into train that will bear
his body to London and burial at Westminster Abbey.  The
train door is pulled shut.

CUT TO

EXT - WESTMINSTER ABBEY - DAY

Three  carriages  follow the hearse to a stop before  the
abbey.

CUT TO

INT - CARRIAGE - DAY

We see KATEY and MAMIE, GEORGINA and CHARLEY.  They are
dressed simply, not wearing conventional articles of
mourning.  CLOSE ON resolute face of KATEY.

THE CREDITS ROLL

Superimpose  credits over the feet of the  London  public
passing  beside  the  casket  of  Dickens.    The  casket
remained  above  ground  for two days because  of  public
demand.   Then  it was lowered where it remains today  in
Westminster Abbey.   Catherine died nine years later  and
was  buried  in the family plot at Highgate Cemetery  in
Hampstead, famous as the resting place of Karl Marx.                                    
FADE OUT         
Short Stories by PJ