An international team of volunteers and amateur decoders have helped experts solve the enduring mystery of a letter written by celebrated novelist Charles Dickens in his own brand of adapted shorthand, which he called "The Devil’s Handwriting."
Now, on Dickens’s 210th birthday, the Dickens Code project – led by Dr. Claire Wood at the University of Leicester in collaboration with Professor Hugo Bowles at the University of Foggia in Italy – can reveal the true meaning behind the Tavistock Letter, written in his notoriously difficult-to-decode Brachygraphy shorthand.
The Morgan Library & Museum’s Tavistock Letter, written by Dickens on blue-headed notepaper, is a classic example of his shorthand and has remained undeciphered for more than 150 years – until now.
After an international call for help, volunteers from the UK, Italy, and as far-flung as North and South America, Spain, and Australia, helped the experts piece together a unique insight into Dickens’s life with more than 60% of the Brachygraphy outlines "solved."
Kelly McCay, a shorthand expert from Harvard and member of the judging panel, described shorthand deciphering as "a series of lightbulb moments that gradually come together into something coherent, and collaborating with others means a lot more lightbulbs."
Hugo Bowles, Professor at the University of Foggia and author of Dickens and the Stenographic Mind, said:
The idea that the Tavistock letter was an appeal by Dickens to someone to intervene over a rejected, but legal, advertisement took the researchers back to New York’s Morgan Library & Museum, which holds a manuscript of a letter to Dickens dated 9 May 1859 from Mowbray Morris, manager of The Times.
In the letter, Morris says that a "letter" from Dickens had been passed to him by J. T. Delane, the editor of The Times. He apologizes to Dickens for the rudeness of a clerk, who had rejected an "advertisement" of his because he had been afraid of its legal consequences. Dickens was already on friendly terms with Delane, so Morris’s letter indicates that the Tavistock letter was the letter that had been passed to Morris and that Delane was its addressee.
The advertisement was clearly urgent. May 1859 was a crucial month in Dickens’s publishing career: in addition to his work as a novelist, Dickens was co-owner and editor of a popular periodical called Household Words and after falling out with his publishers, Bradbury & Evans, over a dispute arising from his separation from his wife Catherine, Dickens had decided to dissolve the partnership and establish a new journal called All The Year Round. He would be the sole owner and editor, giving him complete control. His priority at this time was to make the transition between the two journals as smooth and immediate as possible while at the same time hanging on to the readership from Household Words. So a cancelled advertisement in The Times had come as a nasty surprise and needed to be rectified.
So on Friday 6 May, Dickens took up his pen and wrote the strongly-worded Tavistock letter to his friend Delane asking him to intervene at The Times, and kept a copy in shorthand, possibly for legal reasons. In the letter, he explains that his advertisement was perfectly legal and why the clerk at The Times had been wrong to reject it. He says that the wording on the advertisement - that Household Words was being "discontinued by him" - was precisely the form of words that the Master of the Rolls ("Romilly" in the letter) had ordered him to use in a previous court ruling (Bradbury and Evans v Dickens).
Delane duly passed on the Tavistock letter to Morris. In his reply to Dickens the following Monday (9 May), Morris blamed himself, saying that he had told his clerks as a matter of policy to reject any advertisement that might mislead the public and that the clerk had felt that that the words "discontinued by him" might give the misleading impression that Household Words was being completely shut down. He apologized for his clerk’s behavior and the advertisement ran from Wednesday "for three days," just as the Tavistock letter had requested.
Dr. Claire Wood, Lecturer in Victorian Literature at the University of Leicester, said:
Leon Litvack, Principal Editor of the Dickens Letters Project, added:
The overall winner of the Dickens Code competition, Shane Baggs, from San Jose USA, was one of 1,000 downloaders of the Tavistock Letter and transcribed more symbols than any other competitor, as well as managing to crack some of the note’s most complex symbols. He said:
The Dickens Code team also highlighted the work of solver Ken Cox, also from the USA, as a highly commended runner-up in the competition.
Philip Palmer, Curator, and Head of Literary and Historical Manuscripts at Morgan Library & Museum, added:
The Dickens Code project runs to February 2023. With the help of the public, the goal is to find full or partial solutions for all of the shorthand manuscripts that are currently undeciphered, focusing on the shorthand notebooks of Dickens’s pupil, Arthur Stone, at the Free Library of Philadelphia.
Dr. Wood added:
Find out more at le.ac.uk/dickens-code. A range of decoding resources and more on the Tavistock Letter can be found at dickenscode.org.