Thursday, August 27, 2020

Introduction on Charles Dickens :: English Literature

Presentation on Charles Dickens He was conceived in 1812, his family were poor, his dad who was a assistant in the Royal Navy situated in Portsmouth, when he was five years old his family moved to Chatham which at the time was a major Dockyard. At nine years old he moved again however this time it was to London, since his family were so poor they couldn't bear to send Charles to class so he educated himself. Charles began work at 11 years old in a blacking processing plant helped and instructed what to do by a companion named Bob Fagin (who is in Oliver Turn). Because of being so poor his dad went to indebted individuals jail, since his mom couldn't bear the cost of things she went along with him going to jail the bailiffs removed all there assets. His Grandmother kicked the bucket and left cash to the family and because of this they escaped jail. Charles at that point went to class as a day kid in Hampstead where he had a 'stick cheerful' director called Mr Jones. Charles at that point found an office line of work for papers and magazines doing news reports from parliament and Law courts, not long after he began composing short stories for magazines, he then passed on in 1870 at an age of 58. Oliver Twist was written in 1839 by Charles Dickens and was distributed in month to month issues in magazines and papers. The first run through Oliver Turn was made into a book was in 1850 this was when Charles Dickens was thirty - eight years of age. This book depended on his history and about the poor who lived in London. A few characters in the book are from his history, for example, Fagin who was his old cherished companion or Mr. Blunder who was Dickens Headmaster. The Book Oliver Twist is a vagrant who was conceived in a workhouse. After an miserable apprenticeship, Oliver flees to London where he falls in with criminals, headed by Fagin a contemptible 'Jew '. Mr Brownlow salvages him however the pack grabs him back. Oliver finds the personality of his folks. The posse that Fagin runs are uncovered. This would be like the workhouse Oliver would have burned through 10 long periods of his life in. Part VIII We get familiar with a great deal about the manner in which individuals lived then from the way Dickens depicted it. In part eight Oliver flees from the workhouse and from Mr Sowerberry and heads off to London. As Oliver left the workhouse he was taking cover behind the supports on the grounds that the dread of him being 'sought after had overwhelmed'. He saw a

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