Charles Dickens
In 1812, one of the greatest writers of all time, according to many, was
born to
the name of Charles John Huffman Dickens. Charles Dickens' family was
not well
to do, and was a lower-middle class family with eight children,
Charles being
the second. He had a painful personal life from growing up all
the way until his
later years, which was mostly due to the fact of being
poor. Dickens, however,
brought himself financial success in his later years.
Charles Dickens wrote all
kinds of literary works in the form of short
stories and novels. He also had
many great classics. Dickens is thought by
many to be the greatest English
novelist ever to have written a book. Charles
Dickens was born in Portsmouth,
England on February 7, 1812 to John and
Elizabeth Dickens. When he was two years
old, he and his family moved to
London where Charles went to school. When he was
twelve, he was taken out of
school and sent to work in a London factory pasting
labels on bottles of shoe
polish for a mere six shillings per week, paying for
part of the debt of the
family. This job lasted only a few months, but for
Dickens, it felt like
an eternity. Until he was fifteen, he attended school off
and on, and then
dropped out. In 1934, after studying shorthand for 18 months,
Dickens got
a job as a newspaper reporter for the Evening Chronicle. Two years
later,
Dickens had his first work published named Sketches by Boz, which
consisted
of his works from the Evening Chronicle and Monthly Magazine. The 24
year old
Charles Dickens then married Catherine Hogarth. Later that year, and
clear
through the next, Dickens had monthly writings, The Pickwick Papers,
which
brought his name to be commonplace in English households. After many
writings,
and ten children, in 1854, Catherin and Charles Dickens separated,
and Charles
continued to write novels and stories. On June 9, 1870, he died
of a stroke half
way through writing The Mystery of Edwin Drood. Dickens
wrote a total of 20
novels, and many other nonfiction books, his first being
Sketches by Boz. His
second (The Pickcick Papers) brought him great fame.
Oliver Twist was another
monthly writing (1837-1839). He then made Nicholas
Nickleby which was about
schools and teachers who taught nothing and treated
students poorly. All of
these books were great successes, until he then made
The Old Curiosity Shop,
which is not very well respected. Dickens then wrote
two nonfiction books one
Barnaby Rudge, the other Martin Chuzlewit. He
had many other writings, including
many novels and his 5 Christmas stories,
one being A Christmas Carol. After the
Christmas stories, he wrote other
work such as The Chimes, The Battle of Life,
The Haunted Man, The Cricket
on the Hearth, Dombey and Son, David Copperfield,
Bleak House, Hard
Times, and many others. These books took him from 1837-1848.
The works
Dickens made later in his life would turn out to be some of his
best.
Some of Charles Dickens' bests include A Christmas Carol, A Tale of
Two Cities,
and Great Expectations. A Christmas Carol takes place in 19th
century England
and it shows how Dickens hated greed. Ebenezer Scrooge, a
greedy workaholic, is
visited by three ghosts, and learns the error of his
ways by becoming a warm,
caring man. A Tale of Two Cities tells about the
rulers in England and of how
the French Revolution had an effect on them.
This book was written in weekly
installments in 1859. Great Expectations was,
without a doubt, the most popular
out of all of his works, and has stood the
test of time. This book tells of a
boy named Pip (in all his snobbishness)
and how he lives based on his values of
social standing and possessions.
Charles Dickens was one of the major influences
in English Literature today.
He wrote many novels and stories that continue to
impress us still today.
Since Dickens took is real life situations and
transformed them into
writings, many of his books were like autobiographies.
Dickens had a hard
life, but he made a huge impact on modern society. Some of
the best tales
came from him and his writing style will never be matched. The
stories of
Charles Dickens will continue to live on in our society forever.