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Saturday, February 16, 2019

Charles Dickens Exposes the Dangers and Horrors of Victorian London in

Charles fiend Exposes the Dangers and Horrors of dainty London in Oliver Twist All of Charles Dickens novels are pit in the period he wrote them in and contain certain points of tender and political beliefs that he highlighted with the desire to change his audiences views, on mainly the poor, exactly also all those that were treated unjustly because of honors and stereotypes. Oliver Twist is the story of a vernal orphan who is the illegitimate son of two good throng. It shows the attempts of a allurement of villainous characters to break his hereditary kind-heartedness and innocence. This is to benefit them through his considerable, unknown hereditary pattern that they have found out about. However, behind the story Dickens hides messages upbringing the issues of the terrible conditions of the workhouses and the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834, the abuse and exploitation of children, poverty, crime, inequality, prepossess towards different religio ns and nationalities and ignorance to the existence of some physical disabilities and mental illnesses. The poor law act was a typical example of a whig-benthamite reformation lawmaking of the Victorian period. That is to say it follows Benthams theory of segregation. It gained general parliamentary support and was passed with substantially less consideration and discussions as was normal when new laws are proposed. It ensured that conditions in the workhouses were as vile and uncomfortable as possible so that provided the truly destitute would even consider submitting. It also implied that the poor were barely in that state because they were lethargic and were therefore named the undeserving poor w... ...angry as he is ferocious by his crime. As his terror leads him to his rage he strikes out on the disfigured body. That description tells us that his emotions are out of his control. His temper is unlaced and he is liable to act in a way that r elieves his anxiety. With people like Sykes in London it is worrying to think what may happen. by and by studying Oliver Twist the reader gains understanding of the true horrors that exist in Victorian London. They discover key facts about the behaviour of the underworld inhabitants through Dickens techniques such as similes, pathos, adjectives, and choice of words. These techniques helped in showing the reader why life was so horrific in that time by mental synthesis up images so the reader can almost see and perfume and use other sense to understand the world that Dickens lived in.

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