I begin my search for Dickens in Virginia . . . |
Only a day or two after his visit ended, the Thornton’s 13-month-old son, Charles Irving Thornton (possibly named after Charles Dickens and Washington Irving) died of unknown cause. Dickens was in Ohio by then, but was summoned by the child’s doctor to write an epitaph for the young boy. As it turns out, this would be one of only two epitaphs which Dickens would write in his lifetime. The other was for his sister-in-law who died at age 17. That site in London is one of the many stops on the tour for his bicentennial celebration. I just hope those Englanders or other Dickens fans never come to Virginia to view the only-other epitaph he wrote. As an American, I would be terribly embarrassed by what they might find . . . or most probably, not find.
The site is located in the throes of what is now called Cumberland State Forest, a great place for fishing and hunting and camping. I’d already learned that the site was hard to find, though it was made an official Virginia Historic Landmark in 1980. I found someone with an official uniform who directed me to the site while turning and positioning his body in the manner of “as the bird flies.” I was to drive about six country miles down a single lane dirt road, look for a small sign for Oak Hill Lake, take that turn and drive another two or three miles. “When you see two old barns, park your car, walk across the field in front of you, you’ll see a grove of trees, and it’s somewhere in that grove of trees," he said. "But there’s no sign for it, so good luck finding it.” As I turned to walk away, he added, “It’s a good thing you’re here in February or you’d never find it . . . “ Then he mentioned ticks.
Somewhere in this grove of trees, he said. |
Sphagnum moss, my only clue |
The official site I had hoped to find |
This is the grave of a little child whom God in his goodness called to a bright eternity when he was very young. Hard as it is for human affection to reconcile itself to death in any shape and most of all, perhaps at first in this his parents, can even now believe that it will be a consolation to them throughout their lives and when they shall have grown old and grey always to think of him as a child in heaven.
-- Charles Dickens
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