#CharlesDeekins #DirtyHouse #Great Heritage
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00:00 Introduction
01:16 Charles Dickens' main characteristics: humor, wit, wit, positivity.
02:06 "You speak like Shakespeare."
02:54 "I've added folly to folly so far..."
04:10 The nightmare Dickens suffered all his life.
05:40 Full-fledged social criticism began through "The Waste House."
07:38 A court that resembles the fog and mud that covers London.
12:53 A massive collection of 67 novels.
15:23 Esther, the heroine, is a good character wrapped in the secret of her birth.
18:47 Why are you coming out of there?
19:57 Mrs. Dedlok's runaway
21:06 Charles Dickens is Dostoevsky's teacher-like author.
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Many writers left many works. Charles Dickens is also a well-known author. But it doesn't seem to be very common for the best work to be read most widely among the many works left by the artist. Just thinking of James Joyce and Marcel Proust right now shows that situation quickly. Thomas is no exception. It's not easy to guess that Thomas Mann's readers would have read it the most just because his representative work is Mount Ma. Things don't seem to be much different for Charles Dickens' "The House of Dastity." Even if this great novel is much less read than many other works by Charles Dickens, it should be taken lightly for now. Even though it's hard to shake the sense that the reader's passion for reading is inversely related to the great value of this work.
Charles Dickens' main characteristics can be summarized as 'humor and wit and wit and positivity'. In the history of literature, Shakespeare was the author who reached the peak of this characteristic. For this reason, Charles Dickens is often compared to Shakespeare. If Shakespeare, a poet, playwright, and actor, gave off his overflowing passion and literary talent in poetry, Dickens, a novelist and full of passion and temperament for the actor, told stories that constantly spring into his head through novels.
The next conversation that he secretly talked about in "The House of Disappointment" was nothing short of referring to the author himself.
"Hmm! You speak as well as Shakespeare!"
Even in the novel, he was rhythmical in the 'repeated chorus' like a poet. It didn't matter whether it was a character's conversation or a foreground or background description. So behind his back there's always a sense of a glimpse of Shakespeare, and sometimes beyond that there's a shadow of ancient Greek tragic poets. For example, the conversation that Esther Somerson, the main character in "The House of Disastrous," had when she finally met Mrs. Dadeulock, who was revealed to be her birth mother.
"Mother, have you already made up your mind?"
"I've decided. I've lived so far, adding stupidity to stupidity, adding pride to pride, adding contempt to contempt, adding conceit to conceit, and adding even greater vanity to great vanity. If I can, I might overcome this crisis well and be safe until I die. I'm surrounded by danger. Just as Chesney World is surrounded by this deep forest. But I'll walk in it forever. There's only one, only one way I can walk."
Charles Dickens is widely known as a writer who went through an unusually unhappy childhood. The despair and humiliation of being abandoned by his parents and dropped into a humble status, an emotion he experienced as a child, left him with a deep scar that could not be erased throughout his life. Although the experience instilled in the writer a firm determination, a desire for improvement, and a desire for success.
The sorrow and humiliation of this thought permeated my entire personality, so I sometimes dream until now when I became famous and praised and happy. In that dream, I forget that I have a wife and children I love, or that I have become an adult, and I wander through those days alone and return.'
Because of this artist's experience, there are many orphans, poor people, tramps, and people of humble status in his works. Oliver Twist, Pip from The Great Legacy, David Copperfield, Louisa from The Hard Times, Esther Somerson, Aider Clare, Richard Caston, and Buranga Joe.
David Copperfield (1849-1850) was the work that finally freed the artist with a very painful past from the past. The brilliant autobiographical novel, which depicts all the memories of life from the beginning of the world to the end of success as a writer, was a work like "My Dear Child" that was completely satisfying to the author. On the other hand, "David Copperfield" was also a work that helped him break away from the "ghost of the past" that constantly held and held the author.
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