Essay sample library > Dickens, Thurber, Andersen, London and Perseus

Dickens, Thurber, Andersen, London and Perseus

2023-01-15 20:14:51

Dickens, Server, Andersen, London, Perseus have been in my memory for a long time, and my ideas have always been thought and learned through association. My brain is imaginably related to something like a computer terminal, a bus terminal, an Indian reservation by checking a ticket, and a carpet packing machine by a carpet thief. Do not ask me why, but I'm fed up with ordinary human communication, then entering my fantasy world of imagination, Yakuti - Yak cable tabloid of night news, drama, and talk head I think it is more interesting.

In 1847, Danish writer Hans Christian Andersen introduced his literary icon, Charles Dickens, when he first arrived in England. These two became friendly and began responding accordingly. Ten years later, Andersen came to Dickens's mansion, Guard Hill Square for a two week visit. A fairy tale writer stayed for more than a month, his welcome disappeared, and it was said that a boring Dickens gang tears shed. When he finally moved, Dickens wrote a note in the mirror of the room "Hans Anderson slept in this room for 5 weeks - it's like an old man at home!" Anderson also enjoyed his entire experience in Kent. Time clearly has not noticed that his master was' angry

Charles John Huffam Dickens was born on Landport in Portsmouth on 7th February 1812. Charles is the second of the eight children of the Navy Payment Office official John Dickens (1786-1851) and his wife Elizabeth Dickens. (1789-1863) The Dickens family moved to London in 1814 and moved to Chatham State in Kent two years later, where Charles spent his childhood as a child. Because of economic difficulties, they returned to London in 1822, where they settled in Camden Town, a slum town in London.

In the days of Charles Dickens Victorian London was a city that was strongly emphasized by the people who lived there. In the days of Dickens, London was the largest city in the world, both due to population growth and city expansion caused by the influx of many people. In the heyday of the Victorian era, about 4 million inhabitants lived in the "big city." In about 30 years, this number has increased by nearly 3 million, but there are many problems with this explosive growth, and they are best known for Charles Dickens' life.