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p1033 Itbtitfs32tultlang2057tlangfe1033tlangnp2057 Bleak Housetpar SItf62tfs32tlang2057tlangfe1033tlangnp2057 -Charles Dickens-tpar SItbtitfs32tultlang2057tlangfe1033tlangnp2057 tpar Stpard tqj tfi720tli0tri0tidctlpartfaautotadjustrighttrin0tli
n0titap0 Itlang2057tlangfe1033tlangnp2057 Charles Dickens as born on February 7, 1812 at Lamport, Portsmouth, being the second of the eight children of John Dickens, a clerk in the Naval Pay Office.tpar John Dickenstrquote ork took him from place to place, so that Charles spent his childhood in Portsmouth, London and Chatham. In 1823 the family moved to London, faced ith financial disaster. To help his family, Charles began to ork before he as telve.tpar His first ork, t93Sketches by Bozt94, appeared in magazines soon after he as tenty-one, and in a volume after three years. In 1834 Dickens joined the reporting staff of the t93Morning Chroniclet94.tpar All the years beteen 1837 t93The Posthumous Papers of the Pickick Clubt94 and 1865 t93Our Mutual Friendt94 ere intensely creative for the author of telve of the best knon novels in English literature t93The Posthumous Papers of the Pickick Clubt941837, t94Oliver Tistt941838, t93Nicholas Nicklebyt941838-1839, t93Martin Chuzzleitt941843-1844, t93Dombey and Sont941846-1848, t93David Copperfieldt941849-1850, t93Bleak Houset941852-1853, t93Hard Timest941854, t93Little Dorritt941855-1857, t93Great Expectationt941860-1861, and t93Our Mutual Friendt941864-1865.tpar Charles Dickens died on June 9, 1870, after he had suffered a stroke at the end of a full daytrquote s ork.tpar Most of Charles Dickenstrquote novels are centered around a character, seen from his childhood to his maturity. t93Bleak Houset94 is different because, although it has a great number of characters, it centers around an institution, the High Court of Chancery, the delays and costs of hich bring misery and ruin to its suitors.tpar The novel opens ith a description of London in November. Fog appears both actual in the London streets and symbolic in the bleak building hich houses the Court of Chancery, an institution hich is the very opposite of a real court, here order and justice are the key ords. Instead, the ords used by Dickens ith reference to the city and the court are t93fogt94 and t93mudt94.tpar London is covered ith fog and mud, the sun has died. Everything is dark and the people move automatically, like dummies, through mud and fog. Fog covers everything the city, the people, the hole country. There is no escape from this cold, dark, hich penetrates even the Court of Chancery. The intensity of the groping atmosphere is at its highest point there are numerous layers and petitioners and, above all, the Lord High Chancellor ith t93foggy glory round his headt94.tpar But the Court of Chancery is not only an obscure and gloomy institution, it is also a netork of relations among various people at all levels of the society hich t93has its decaying houses and lands in every district hich has its lunatic in every madhouse and its dead in every churchyard hich has its ruined suitor, borroing and begging through the round of every mantrquote s acquaintancet85t94tpar Reading this fragment e may observe the quality of the ords and the arrangement of the sentences. The first paragraph contains sentences ithout a predicate, ords denoting objects, forms and colours the author used them to create a static, descriptive image. Repetition, either lexical or syntactical, is largely used, for the sake of emphasis. Thus the 2SItlang2057tlangfe1033tsupertlangnp2057 ndSItlang2057tlangfe1033tlangnp2057 paragraph is based on reiteration of the ord t93fogt94 , hich becomes the main symbol of the passage the idea is that there is not escape from it. The 3SItlang2057tlangfe1033tsupertlangnp2057 rdSItlang2057tlangfe1033tlangnp2057 and 4SItlang2057tlangfe1033tsupertlangnp2057 thSItlang2057tlangfe1033tlangnp2057 paragraphs begin ith repetitions of the same syntactical patterns SItitlang2057tlangfe1033tlangnp2057 rat85raestSItlang2057tlangfe1033tlangnp2057 , SItitlang2057tlangfe1033tlangnp2057 denset85densestSItlang2057tlangfe1033tlangnp2057 , etct85 and SItitlang2057tlangfe1033tlangnp2057 never can there comet85SItlang2057tlangfe1033tlangnp2057 , hich emphasize the authortrquote s feelings toards the foggy eather and respectively the t93foggyt94 Court of Chancery.tpar e can observe a certain gradation also. Fog is mentioned hen London is described fog penetrates every place in the country up the river, don the river, on the Essex marshes, on the Kentish heights, on the yards, over the bridges and suffocates everybody the angry captain, the little tlquote prentice boy, the ancient pensioners.tpar The last paragraph contains an enumeration of the destructive effects hich the activity of that legal institution has upon the litigants it ends ith a arning, hich reminds us of the Dantean ords ritten above the entrance of the Inferno t93Abandon all hope, ye ho come.t94tpar tpar tpar SS...
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