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Tuesday, November 21, 2017

'Compare and Contrast - Oliver Twist and A Christmas Carol'

'During the dainty while, capital of the United Kingdom was over-populated and had forgetful living conditions, with a huge snap between the despicable and the rich. It was also at a date when capital of the United Kingdom became rattling stable and had vauntingly improvements in their industry. Charles daemon was whizz of the superlative writers of the Victorian season; he wrote Oliver good turn and A Christmas warble, to display the real affable problems of London. There were dozens of issues portrayed in these both myths such as poverty, detestation and the using of children. However, the two stories explained the problems in actually different ways. In the novel Oliver flexure, Charles devil was trying to portend the social problems of nineteenth century London during the Industrial whirling from the perspective of the poor. Oliver Twist was living in a workhouse in poor condition. In the workhouse, Oliver Twist asked one of the workers for more food, Sir, pot I swallow some more?. This statement clear shows how miserable childrens lives were in the workhouse and how they were ill fed. Later, he was bought by the undertaker Sowerberry for solo five pounds. Sowerberry say to Bumble when he was buying Oliver They represent more to affirm than theyre worth (pg.11). This understandably shows that the children were treated resembling an object, not a human being. When Oliver break loose to London, he was manipulated by the mischievous adult, Fagin and was involved in roadway crime. This suggests how serious victimization of children was at that magazine and how miserable and stark the city was for complimentary children to live by themselves. There was lashings of criminal act because of unemployment and violence towards women. In the novel, Charles Dickens tries to reveal that the Victorian Era might had been the palmy of times for London, that for the poor, it was a very dangerous and rattling(a) time.\nA Chris tmas Carol is a novel that tries to tell the social problems of Victorian London from the wealthy persons view. ... '

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