Sunday, August 18, 2019
To show how Charles Dickens presents Good and Evil characters Essay
To show how Charles Dickens presents Good and Evil characters    In the beginning of the Victorian period many children (orphans) were  forced to turn to crime mainly because the children in the workhouse  were mistreated and abused. Another reason is many people were  migrating, which resulted to a growth in the population, which left  many children homeless. Charles Dickens has based his novel, 'Oliver  Twist' on this. He compares Oliver with what life was like for boys in  the 18th Century. Throughout the story Oliver encounters many evil  characters and a few virtuous characters. The evil characters try to  persuade him to lead the life of crime while as the good characters  save him and enable Oliver and the reader to learn that a life of  crime does not pay. Charles Dickens uses the novel to criticise how  children during Victorian times were forced to turn to crime when laws  did not protect them.     Dickens main character, Oliver, is presented as the 'hero' of the  story; he learns that goodness triumphs over evil. The incident in the  story where Oliver's goodness is shown is when Bill Sikes forces him  to rob Rose Maylie's house:    "Despite the threat, Oliver decided to warn the people in the house"    Even though Oliver is threatened to act out this evil deed, he chooses  to do the right thing by warning the owners of the house and risking  his own life. In doing so, Dickens shows that Oliver is a good  character through the choices Oliver makes.    Charles Dickens presents Mr Bumble as an evil character. At the start  of the story Dickens describes him as a "fat healthy man". While as  all the orphans are being starved, he is never going without. When  Oliver asks for more food, Mr Bumble:    "Aimed a blow at Oliver'...              ...liver (Monks was another  member of the gang) and began to weep saying:    'Please miss, don't come to any harm! I'd give my own life to save him.  Honest I would!'    Dickens has tried to emphasise the fact that in the Victorian Times  there weren't very strict laws, which meant there were a lot of very  bad people round at that time, but still some good left, and even  though Nancy was around very dangerous people she was a good person at  heart (that's why you have the proverb, 'don't judge a book by its  cover!). It also illustrates how good Nancy was, for her to tell Rose  everything, she must have been a very brave soul and must have loved  Oliver dearly to do such a kind thing. She knew Oliver didn't deserved  a better life ad didn't need to be pulled into a life as insecure as  her own. Dickens presents Nancy as a good person through her emotions  and actions.                      
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