Charles Dickens
Something about Charles Dickens and his ability to take his reader to unbelievable places with his imaginative powers allows him the honor of being the most popular English novelist of the 19th century. Dickens has thrilled his readers for many years with his down-to-earth stories about real people forced into real situations. Charles Dickens has the ability to tell his stories from personal experiences. He fine-tuned his ability to tell his own story through the life of another character or cast of characters. Born on the evening of February 7, 1812, Charles Dickens was the second child of his parents, John and Elizabeth Dickens.. Although he was a solitary child, Dickens was observant and good natured . Looking back on this period of his life, Dickens thought of it as the golden age (Carey 6). In the first novel that he wrote, The Pickwick Papers, Dickens tries to bring back the good old times as he remembers them with their picturesque nature. Gary Carey believes that this novel displays the happiness of innocence and the playful spirit of the youth during the time of Dickens's youthful days (7). Overtaken by financial difficulties, the Dickens family was forced to move into a
From his early Pickwick Papers to his one of his last pieces The Mystery of Edwin Drood Dickens never ceased to develop his writing abilities and skill, establishing himself as the major and primary Victorian novelist (Bloom 189). He recalls the beautiful world of the Peggottys when he says, "It seems to me at this hour that I have never seen such sunlight as on those bright April afternoons, that I have never seen such a sunny little figure as I used to see, sitting in the doorway of the old boat. As the scene moves from place to place in the story each move also represents a critical step in David's spiritual journey to manhood. His stories invite readers to form an opinion and make decisions about a character's right or wrong actions. Dickens thought his many years of life experiences was able to use his talents as a writer to express to the everyday reader what the true meaning of life is. Shortly after Dickens started working in the factory his father was thrown into jail for failure to pay his debts, only to be released three months later. It would certainly be no error to say the events of the French Revolution, which make up so much of the setting in this novel, is what the theme of the novel really is (Carey 11). Whether the reader believes that the novel is about its characters, historical events or symbolism, it doesn't matter. David remembers the "olden" days and thinks of them as the "golden" days (Allen 28). Dickens helped readers understand themselves, those who are the common folk. From this time period come many of the major themes of his more popular novels. Dickens has written an excellent novel describing the troubles of growing up and the benefits of having a rough childhood. This move must have shown the family how good they had it back in Chatham. Here lays the help the younger generation of today needs to develop a "moral imagination.
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