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There are 11 essays on Charles Dickens.
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Student Essays on Charles Dickens

from source:
 Essay Grade: 81%
The Signalman and the Red Room
2,538 words, approx. 9 pages
 The Signalman by Charles Dickens (written in 1865 and published in 1866) and The Red Room by H.G. Wells (written and published in 18940 provoke fear and tension in the heart of the reader.
from source:
 Essay Grade: 81%
Charles Dickens; and How He Depicts the Hard Lives of Children in His Novels
1,203 words, approx. 4 pages
 Charles Dickens shows the hard lives of children and how he knows what a child goes through.Great Expectations was written in the 1800s and has escalated to the point of being one of Dickens' most well-known novels. In the novel the main character, Pip, is a child whose parents had died when he was younger.
from source:
 Essay Grade: 96%
from source:
 Essay Grade: 98%
C. S. Lewis vs. Charles Dickens
892 words, approx. 3 pages
 Compares authors C.S. Lewis and Charles Dickens. Examines the works and lives of both men. Promotes Lewis as the better of the two based on his works and personal history.
from source:
 Essay Grade: 88%
Dickens's Inspiration for His Writing
831 words, approx. 3 pages
 A biography of English writer Charles Dickens and how his life experieces helped him develop characters he writes about in his novels. Includes information about Dickens's childhood and personal life.
from source:
 Essay Grade: 83%
The Imaginative Power of Charles Dickens
787 words, approx. 3 pages
 A biography of the life of Charles Dickens. Some focus is given to the degree to which his upbringing and life provided him with the imagination to produce some of his greatest literary works.
from source:
 Essay Grade: 86%
Marriage in Dickens and Austen
552 words, approx. 2 pages
 Analyzes two passages from Charles Dickens and Jane Austen. Explains how each author approaches female characters and marriage.
from source:
 Essay Grade: 82%
from source:
 Essay Grade: 88%
Charles Dickens Style of Writing
447 words, approx. 2 pages
 Charles Dickens frequently uses houses to symbolize the people who inhabit them. He utilizes vivd description, similes, metaphors, personification, and imagery to capture the essence of the character's personality and traits. A good example of this is Dickens' description of Mr. Jagger's office in his novel Great Expectations, which he uses in order to illustrate Mr. Jagger's dark, gloomy personality.
from source:
 Essay Grade: 83%
from source:
 Essay Grade: 83%
A Biography of Charles Dickens
293 words, approx. 1 pages
 The life of Charles Dickens, the most-popular novelist of Victorian England. He was born in poverty, but quickly discovered his ability as a novelist in his youth and became well-known and wealthy in his lifetime.
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