It’s the birthday of Charles Dickens, born in Portsmouth, England (1812), who had a relatively happy childhood until his father’s debts sent the Dickens family into poverty. At the age of 12, Charles was pulled out of school and had to work in a factory pasting the labels onto containers of shoe polish, while his younger siblings lived with his parents in debtors’ prison. In some of his most famous novels, Oliver Twist (1837-38), Nicholas Nickleby (1838-39), and A Christmas Carol (1843), he revealed the plight of England’s poor. After he became one of the most famous men in England, Dickens used his wealth and influence to convince the upper classes to give to the poor. He was also opposed to capital punishment and worked internationally for prison reform, helped set up a halfway house for former prostitutes, and promoted public education and better sanitation systems throughout England.
- Writer's Almanac
Saturday, February 07, 2015
We ought to Celebrate Dickens in Woonsocket RI
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment