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Not What You Meant?  There are 3 definitions for Hard Time.


Charles Dickens: Letter by John Ruskin

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Charles Dickens
About 1 pages (323 words)
Hard Times Summary

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SOURCE: A letter to Charles Eliot Norton on June 19, 1870, in Letters of John Ruskin to Charles Eliot Norton, Vol. II, Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1904, pp. 4-6.

Ruskin was an English critic, essayist, historian, poet, novella writer, autobiographer, and diarist. Endowed with a passion for reforming what he considered his "blind and wandering fellow-men" and convinced that he had "perfect judgment" in aesthetic matters, he was the author of over forty books and several hundred essays and lectures that expounded his theories of aesthetics, morality, history, economics, and social reform. In the following excerpt from a letter written shortly after Dickens's death, he summarizes the achievement of Dickens, citing Hard Times as the single exception to his depicting the Dickensian hero as an "iron-master. "

This is a free excerpt of 126 words. There are 323 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Charles Dickens: Letter by John Ruskin from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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