"oliver twist" - читать интересную книгу автора (Cliff Notes)

Although his readers didn't know this, poverty had personally scarred Dickens. His family had been quite comfortable when he was born in Portsmouth in 1812, but his parents weren't very skilled at managing money. When he was about 12 years old, his family was confined to debtors' prison, in London, an experience he later wrote about in Little Dorrit. Only the money left by his grandmother when she died bailed them out. His knowledge of prison gave Dickens a lifelong obsession with prisoners and inhumane institutions. The hunger and loneliness that tortures Oliver Twist while he is a ward of the parish were very real to Dickens during his own family crisis. For young Dickens, the lowest point of his life occurred while his family was in prison. For six dreadful months, he was forced to work as an apprentice in a bootblacking factory, pasting labels on bottles of shoe polish. Not only was the work exhausting, the experience was humiliating. In Oliver Twist he included a brief episode condemning the apprenticeship system, but it was not until later, in David Copperfield, that he could face writing about the factory in detail. While Oliver Twist is not as autobiographical as David Copperfield, many other incidents in the novel reflect Dickens' experiences. He deeply regretted not having had more schooling and suggests that in Oliver's eagerness to learn. In May 1837, his beloved 17-year-old sister-in-law, Mary Hogarth,
died, and many readers of Oliver Twist think he based the characters of Rose and Nancy on Mary, as a way of working out his intense grief. While Rose survives a dangerous illness, Nancy dies a brutal death. Dickens himself felt Mary had deserted him; similarly, Oliver is terrified that Rose will die and leave him. Dickens was haunted by dreams about Mary, just as Sikes is haunted by a vision of Nancy's eyes after he has killed her. The criminal underworld of Fagin, Nancy, and Sikes in Oliver Twist was as well-known to Dickens as the workhouses and debtors' prisons. As a court reporter and journalist, he had seen the seamy side of urban life. He had met hardened criminals like Sikes and women like Nancy. He had little sympathy for criminals like Fagin, who abuse and corrupt others, yet he knew that there were others--like Nancy and Charley Bates--who were criminals only because of their environment, and who might still be reformed. Later he became actively involved with Urania Cottage, a refuge for homeless women, including prostitutes. Knowing they had led rough lives, Urania Cottage was set up as an environment where they could feel at home and prepare themselves for a better life. Dickens' sympathy for Nancy is clear in Oliver Twist. Typically, he was motivated to get involved, to try to change conditions for girls like her before it was too late. The 1830s were a time of growing concern about social issues and energetic reform. As a popular writer and public personality, Dickens had a power to do good. He could reach a vast