In mid-September 1857, Charles Dickens went with
Wilkie Collins to
Doncaster to see Ellen Ternan perform in
The Pet of the Petticoats at the Theatre Royal. At the time, he had written to
John Forster that his relationship with his wife was disintegrating; 'Poor Catherine and I are not made for each other [-] What is now befalling I have seen steadily coming'. Dickens was 45 years old when he met Ternan. She was 18 at the time, only 6 months older than his youngest daughter
Katey. In two books published in 1935 and 1936, Thomas Wright alleged that they had an affair, stating that he had heard it from Canon Benham, who claimed that Ternan had confessed all. If so, Dickens kept his affair with Ternan secret from the general public. There is little evidence pertaining to the nature of Charles Dickens and Ellen Ternan's relationship because neither Dickens, Ternan, nor Ternan's sisters left any account of the relationship, and they destroyed most correspondence relevant to the relationship. We "simply do not know", asserts Michael Slater, the professor of Victorian literature with a special interest in Charles Dickens, in his 2009 biography of Dickens. On the "many speculations about the exact relationship between Dickens and Ellen in this period" biographer
Peter Ackroyd writes, "it has to be said at once that no evidence has been found for any of these more dramatic possibilities." Writers prior to the scholarship of Ackroyd and Slater have largely assumed the truth of Wright's and other authors' assertions that Ternan was Dickens's mistress. In 2021, the Irish author of historical fiction
Cora Harrison suggested that Ternan might be Dickens's illegitimate daughter, rather than his mistress. In 2025, Ruck published a book, ''Charles Dickens's Secret Lovechild: An Untarnished Portrait of Ellen Ternan'', giving more detailed reasoning to support this alternative explanation of the relationship between Dickens and Ternan. Helena Kelly questioned this theory in her 2023 book. Ternan was clever, charming, a force of character, and interested in literature and the theatre. Dickens referred to Ternan as his "magic circle of one." According to a "gossipy tale", matters came to a head in 1858 when Catherine Dickens opened a packet delivered by a London jeweller. It contained a gold bracelet meant for Ternan, with a note written by her husband. Charles and Catherine Dickens separated that May, after 22 years of marriage. . Ternan left the stage in 1860, and was financially supported by Dickens from that point onward. She sometimes travelled with him, which was the case in the event of the
Staplehurst rail crash in
Kent on 9 June 1865 as they and Ternan's mother were returning from a visit to France. Allegedly, he abandoned a plan to take her on his visit to America in 1867 for fear that their relationship would be publicized by the American press. Ternan and her mother lived in houses Dickens took under false names at
Slough in
Berkshire and later at
Nunhead in
Southwark. There has been speculation that Ternan gave birth to a son who died in infancy. However, biographer Peter Ackroyd asserts that it is "inconceivable" that theirs was "in any sense a 'consummated' affair". Ackroyd's strength of feeling on this point is taken up by Harrison. A subplot of her 2020 fiction,
Summer of Secrets, featuring Ternan, her mother, and Dickens, reveals her fictional Charles Dickens as the secret father of Ellen Ternan. Dickens left a legacy of £1,000 to Ternan in his will on his death in 1870, precisely the same amount as to his unmarried daughter, and sufficient income from a trust fund to ensure that she would never have to work again. == Later life and marriage ==