How To Use Dickens In A Sentence

  • Dickens'works are also characterized by a mingling of humor and pathos.
  • Nothing that we do, is done in vain. I believe, with all my soul, that we shall see triumph. Charles Dickens 
  • Blindly, unwittingly, erringly as Dickens often urged them, these ideals mark the whole tendency of his fiction, and they are what endear him to the heart, and will keep him dear to it long after many a cunninger artificer in letters has passed into forgetfulness. Literature and Life (Complete)
  • Poetry makes life what lights and music do the stage. Charles Dickens 
  • There is nothing in the world so irresistibly contagious as laughter and good humor. Charles Dickens 
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • By contrast, Dickens's second protagonist, Oliver Twist, experiences what seems set to be his climacteric in an intensely fraught boyhood.
  • We are asked by the author, a biographer not only of Charles Dickens but of London too, to contemplate the novelist unbuttoned, in peep-show dishabille.
  • This is why MGM was the echt Hollywood studio of the first half of the century, its scripts adapted from nineteenth-century novels by Tolstoy and Dickens, its gowns by Adrian, and its sets by Cedric Gibbons.
  • Although a skillful flatterer is a most delightful companion if you have him all to yourself, his taste becomes very doubtful when he takes to complimenting other people. Charles Dickens 
  • In "Hard Times," Dickens dismisses the claim of the utilitarian social scientists to understand man's fate through statistics, as if the quantifiable were the only real "fact" about our lives. 'The Inimitable'
  • But what the dickens is the story behind the hands-on-chest cake? Otherwise Engaged
  • No one savaged the law's delays and inequities more energetically than Dickens, yet no one worried more about the results of revolution and lawlessness.
  • The progression of the story is somewhat episodic, as is characteristic of many of Dickens' tales.
  • Coming as it did from cowsheds in London and from the surrounding countryside; it “proved," in the eyes of Charles Dickens Jr, "often the source of, or rather, perhaps, the means of spreading, serious epidemics of typhoid, diphtheria, and scarlatina.” Archive 2007-12-01
  • So why then is a government supposedly devoted to fostering British science still insisting on forcing some of its leading researchers into Dickens's ‘perplexed and troublous valley of the shadow of the law’?
  • In the above, semi-comic account, Dickens omits to mention his own heroic conduct in aiding the injured and dying.
  • Dickens then visits a workroom, featuring coloured prints, a china shepherdess on the mantelshelf, carpets, stuffed chairs and an open fire. Bedlam
  • Dickens was lauded for his social and moral sensitivity.
  • The old image of Dickens, fostered by his surviving family, as a benign paterfamilias and as a man piously wedded to Victorian domestic virtues was thus tarnished.
  • Dickens painted a grim picture of Victorian life.
  • He also had a Dickensian gift for evoking the same feeling in others. Times, Sunday Times
  • Enneywai, long tiem bak in dis fred ai waz also thinkin “Dickens” an a pikshur of mai kittehs, i wanned to sho u it: Iz called a tail. - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • The plates used to make Browne's illustrations for "David Copperfield" are here, as are Dickens's traveling inkwell and an ivory seal given to him by his best friend and future biographer, John Forster. The Best of Dickens's Life and Times
  • In Siena, Gissing worked on the Dickens study, and no sooner had he finished it, than he headed south to Naples.
  • The 13-part drama, entitled Newgate, is said to feature a Sopranos style storyline set in the London of 1720 and filming is to start at Dickens World, Chatham, Kent, on 12 July. The Sopranos - Dickens style
  • She likes Charles Dickens' novels - Nicholas Nickleby is her favourite - and after choosing her specialist subject she then had a fortnight to swot up on the writer.
  • What may seem to prejudice a reader's full and appreciative view of her as a key figure amongst Dickens's women characters is her determined eccentricity.
  • The term “sensation novels” emerges as a profoundly apt encapsulation of the qualities of strangeness this process of abjection is locked onto (and one that is a precursor of “genre fiction” and comparable with “coloured people” in its disregard for the sensationalist content of writers like Charles Dickens, Thomas Hardy, Emily Brontë and countless others in the canon). What is Literary Fiction?
  • But the horror which writers such as Dickens expressed at the cruelty of his times was prompted by no such knowledge.
  • There is prodigious strength in sorrow and despair. Charles Dickens 
  • Spring is the time of year when it is summer in the sun and winter in the shade. Charles Dickens 
  • What the dickens is the government trying to do to the US? CBO: Health reform bills won't reduce costs
  • Dickens and Gaskell were writing about big issues set in the dawning of the industrial age.
  • By 2015, academics had coined the phrase "urban neo-Victorian dystopia" to describe the dramatic social and spatial changes in the city they had begun to compare, with only a little exaggeration, with the London described by Charles Dickens 160 years earlier. The Guardian World News
  • This mechanical and repetitive work was certainly uncongenial, but so in a different way was the company that Dickens was obliged to keep.
  • Dickens's rage against the New Poor Law, which precluded able-bodied paupers from relief, is underplayed.
  • But not the villagers who rush around madly in Dickensian mode. Times, Sunday Times
  • Dickens's relatively healthful exuberance
  • For example, Dickens is fond of parenthetical constructions which allow the generalizing authorial voice to interrupt the narrative flow.
  • The words are also haunted by Dickens's fear of a reprise of a violent social revolution akin to that experienced in France in the last decade of the eighteenth century.
  • I wish you to know that you have been the last dream of my soul. Charles Dickens 
  • The bathrooms in this hotel are positively Dickensian - no hot water and grime everywhere.
  • the dickens you say
  • Of all my pet hates, people who claim to have read all of Dickens by the age of 15 rank as number one.
  • Living conditions can be Dickensian, and grueling six-day work weeks leave little time for anything else but sleeping, eating and doing the laundry.
  • Regrettably, this means that the following people are dunces: the editorial board of the Oxford English Dictionary, John Milton [cited in OED], Charles Dickens [in Martin Chuzzlewit], and John Bunyan [in Pilgrim's Progress]. What’s the deal with further and farther? « Motivated Grammar
  • Dine on a menu of pickled rollmops, grilled gurnard fillet and ginger three ways pudding, then toast Charles Dickens with a heady alcoholic punch. Evening Standard - Home
  • Of course, the rest of the nation — or, perhaps, most of it — was laughing at the Cowboys, hoping they'd plunge to 0-16 and owner Jerry Jones wound be found, like Dickens's Miss Havisham, wandering his $1.1 billion stadium barefoot in tailored Neiman Marcus pajamas, muttering gibberish about Tex Schramm and the NFL's collective bargaining agreement. In Dallas, Stars Are Again Aligned
  • Have a heart that never hardens, and a temper that never tires, and a touch that never hurts. Charles Dickens 
  • The school was made famous by its association with Charles Dickens.
  • Nothing that we do, is done in vain. I believe, with all my soul, that we shall see triumph. Charles Dickens 
  • Respite comes, as one might expect with Dickens, in equally phonemic terms, floated upon (in that same paragraph) the sibilant, assonant, and iambic bonding of "inseparable and blessed" to describe the union of the title figure and Arthur Clennam, the man whose fetishistic vision of her impoverishment has seen her until now as a Phonemanography: Romantic to Victorian
  • It was also to be a vehicle for Dickens as an essayist, both as a fanciful observer and as an earnestly satiric social critic.
  • They frequently published pirated serialisations of Dickens's novels, garnering extra sales for their papers without paying him a cent.
  • Once or twice Mr. Dickens has taken the place of circuit judge when the King's Bench roll has been repleted. Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, October 31, 1917
  • Eliot's admixture of praise and sharp criticism of Dickens's work first surfaced publicly in the essay on realism that she published in the Westminster Review in July 1856.
  • Mr. Dickenson let me get up and I drowsily stumbled over to my bed on the ground.
  • Dickens had humorously suggested a special service of intercession at St. Paul's Cathedral
  • He gave a seamless performance of the miserly Dickens character.
  • After all the dramatic books I seem to have been reading lately, this one is a quiet, gentle gem of a novel, narrated from the perspective of Dickenson’s younger sister, Lavinia. Reading Notes « Tales from the Reading Room
  • I love these little people; and it is not a slight thing when they, who are so fresh from God, love us. Charles Dickens 
  • Although a skillful flatterer is a most delightful companion if you have him all to yourself, his taste becomes very doubtful when he takes to complimenting other people. Charles Dickens 
  • A Launceston City Council alderman yesterday welcomed a move by Mayor Janie Dickenson to stop taking her son to council meetings.
  • Charles Dickens story" niggled away at me and gradually the notion evolved that maybe I could write something from the point of view of the scorned wife, a woman about whose thoughts and feelings relatively little is known. A Conversation with Gaynor Arnold, author of Girl in a Blue Dress
  • Even Charles Dickens, God love him, has a writing style that seems dated and can inspire more arduousness than avidness. Archive 2009-10-01
  • Much as I'm a fan of Victoriana, I draw the line at Dickensian chops.
  • In our Fund," Dickens was saying to the crowded hall of actors, "the word exclusiveness is not known. The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed
  • For example, Dickens is fond of parenthetical constructions which allow the generalizing authorial voice to interrupt the narrative flow.
  • Musically upbeat and swinging, the song works as a kind of hallucinogenic collage of advertising detritus think Mad Men meets The Magic Roundabout, with the vocal, narrated by Mitch Benn with Tim Dickenson as Greggery, drawn from 1950s marketing diction. London Sinfonietta/Collon – review
  • Get through that London, Michaelmas Term lately over, and the Lord's Chancellor sitting in the mud on the streets with a megalosaurus creeping up on him or something and see how far I get with this year's Dickens of a Read. Let Christmas begin.
  • It is the one great weakness of Dickens as a great writer, that he did try to make that sudden sadness, that abrupt pity, which we call pathos, a thing quite obvious, infectious, public, as if it were journalism or the measles. Appreciations and Criticisms of the Works of Charles Dickens
  • Zemeckis has made strides to overcome that problem with Disney's A Christmas Carol, the hubristically titled new version of Charles Dickens 'classic story. Movie Review: Disney's A Christmas Carol
  • Without any hesitation for Chesterton, 'Pickwick Papers' is Dickens 'finest achievement, which is a pleasant enough problem if we happen to remember that he also wrote' David Copperfield. ' Gilbert Keith Chesterton
  • If there were no bad people, there would be no good lawyers. Charles Dickens 
  • It is a dangerous place, a place where vagrants live, where "lost boys" roam the catacombs, and where the dark figure of Drood and his two steersmen usher Dickens on a gondola to the deepest recesses of Underworld. Archive 2010-01-01
  • Speaking with a Dickensian cockney brogue is pushing things a bit.
  • Every man thinks his own geese swans. Charles Dickens 
  • It is true that Atkinson portrays an auld Edinburgh filtered through the works of Sir Walter Scott, with a dash of Dickens thrown in for good measure.
  • Ms. Wicke calls all this "a corporealization of Dickens 'texts," but we've shortened that to branding. Madison Ave Journal
  • If Janeites tend towards punctiliousness, Dickensians have a penchant for the jocose.
  • One of the book's more intriguing detours is its passage on nineteenth-century novels: Fielding, Thackeray, Dickens. The Status-tician
  • a little too much to be drawing for Dickens and that the footlights are the illumination of his scenic world, has so remarkable a sense of Picture and Text 1893
  • Dickens, we are told, happily danced a half dozen quadrilles and thanked his hosts for their ‘affectionate’ greeting.
  • Nobody likes Micawber less for his follies; and Dickens liked his father more, the more he recalled his whimsical qualities. Criticisms and Interpretations. II. By John Forster
  • She delayed agreeing to his suggestions and changes and thereby caused considerable vexation both to Dickens and to his sub-editor.
  • The first real test is that of spending a long and arduous evening in the alehouses and outer purlieus of London, and here it has to be in the company of Dickens and nobody else. The Dark Side of Dickens
  • Fresh of face and louche of manner, they are equal parts Dickensian urchins and Wildean dandies.
  • ‘It's good to know that I've had two solid preseasons, and people around the league feel I can play,’ Dickenson says.
  • These Dickensian references merely underline a streak of contrivance in the plot. Times, Sunday Times
  • Every man thinks his own geese swans. Charles Dickens 
  • To use a burning consciousness of one’s own misery, of the shackles that cut one’s own limbs, to quicken one’s sense of life in general, as Dickens did, to shape out of the murk which has surrounded one’s childhood some resplendent figure such as Micawber or Mrs. Gamp, is admirable: but to use personal suffering to rivet the reader’s sympathy and curiosity upon your private case is disastrous. The Common Reader, Second Series
  • They knew that, like the Dickensian waif, a good wash and new clothes would reveal an angelic face.
  • The Dickensian committee system needs overhauling, as it can inhibit staff from doing their work. Times, Sunday Times
  • Dickens himself was probably aware of a tutelary presence informing that new mood of Tennyson's early Victorian poetry.
  • It is a dangerous place, a place where vagrants live, where “lost boys” roam the catacombs, and where the dark figure of Drood and his two steersmen usher Dickens on a gondola to the deepest recesses of Underworld. Archive 2009-02-01
  • For Dickens, the civilizing mission of imperialism meant European colonization.
  • You know, when -- when Don taught me how to ask a tough question and go after him, they would look at me as, like, you know, what the dickens is the matter with you? CNN Transcript Dec 25, 2006
  • Whether the Notes were written by the Editor or by Jacob Henry Burn, who annotated Dickens's "Grimaldi," is a point which I have raised An Apology for the Life of Mr. Colley Cibber, Volume I
  • Dickens made good use of the 29 shillings he received for The Pickwick Papers by marrying Catherine Hogarth, a daughter of a newspaper editor. Bill Lucey: Remembering Our Mutual Friend, Charles Dickens, on his 200th Birthday
  • It was one of those March days when the sun shines hot and the wind blows cold: when it is summer in the light, and winter in the shade. Charles Dickens 
  • Charles Dickens' novel "A Tale of Two Cities" is set at the time of the French Revolution.
  • There are a few classist calamities in the comments over yonder ( "it's a real turn-off for me, particularly since she seems a well educated and well-brought-up girl", Charles Dickens never swore, etc.). Intertribal: we only just met, but I think you oughta know: I'm a murderer.
  • If there were no bad people, there would be no good lawyers. Charles Dickens 
  • Extracts from many of Miss Alcott's stories, the Cratchits 'Christmas dinner from Dickens' _Christmas Carol_, and many other delightful glimpses of home life can be read, or, better, dramatized, with little effort and with good results. Vocational Guidance for Girls
  • But who the dickens is it? said Tommy, after shaking hands heartily with Nat. Little Men: Life at Plumfield With Jo's Boys
  • Messrs. Chapman and Hall entertained the idea favourably, but opined that the plates would require illustrative letter-press; and casting about for some suitable author, bethought themselves of Dickens, whose tales and sketches had been exciting some little sensation in the world of journalism; and who had, indeed, already written for the firm a story, the “Tuggs at Ramsgate,” which may be read among the “Sketches.” Life of Charles Dickens
  • Theatre was much funnier in those days and (like the equally stage-struck Dickens) Bainbridge the novelist can't resist the essential absurdity of people pretending not to be themselves eight times a week.
  • In that case, we're left with little to say about Dante or, even more obviously, Dickens - both of whom made use of strongly sentiment-charged visual imaginations - and this long before the first bioscopes echoed our unified oohs and aahs.
  • I only need one volume to complete my set of Dickens's novels.
  • Dickens as no other undergraduate in the University knew that branch of polite literature, and passed an examination on the 'Pickwick Papers' which the author declared that he himself would have failed in. Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 4
  • What a dickens is the Woman always a whimpring about Murder for? The Beggar's Opera
  • The atmospherics are a very Dickensian prelude to some imminent human violence in Martin Chuzzlewit, published in 1844. Weatherwatch: A storm is brewing
  • Who the dickens is this guy?
  • Nor is it unhistorical; Turner was dead before Dickens wrote Hard Times, yet he not only became a major inspiration for Impressionism but in some ways went beyond it.
  • This historical whodunit is too good to miss, and recommended for fans of The Last Dickens by Matthew Pearl and A Beautiful Blue Death by Charles Finch. October 2009
  • The trait is so naturelike and Dickens-like, no American -- no living soul but a peppery, crotchety, good-hearted, mellow old John Bull -- could have done such a thing. Authors and Friends
  • Together they exposed the plight of the elderly, the grinding poverty experienced by the urban underclass and the Dickensian horrors of the conditions in some mental hospitals. Times, Sunday Times
  • Walker was in the 24-15 winning rink skipped by Scarborough's Dickens.
  • If you're a glutton for Dickens and you'll need to be, with the BBC already stuffing its schedules with the forthcoming bicentenary of his birth, jolly spoofery abounds in The Bleak Old Shop of Stuff, which features Robert Webb as an upstanding Victorian retailer of nonsense items thrown into sudden penury by bewhiskered evil Stephen Fry in a stovepipe hat. Phil Hogan's Christmas TV highlights
  • The British Council programme, marking the bicentenary of Dickens' birth, which falls on 7 February 2012, will include film, performance, talks and debates in countries from Azerbaijan to Zimbabwe. Charles Dickens goes global in British Council's bicentenary festival
  • Dickens was lauded for his social and moral sensitivity.
  • Dickens was not articled, but worked as a humble ‘writing clerk’, a position which did not necessarily promise a radiant future in the legal profession.
  • It's worth a look if only for its very British, near-Dickensian combo of squalor, social comment and comic grotesquerie.
  • If there were no bad people, there would be no good lawyers. Charles Dickens 
  • Dickens was replaced on the ten pound note by an equally hirsute Charles Darwin in 2000 (beards being reputed to be a deterrent to would-be forgers).
  • The characteristic trait of the later Dickens is that the fantastication leads to grim visionary perception, metaphor carrying him to unanticipated depths.
  • Dickens was a famous English writer.
  • One of the fore - runners of the American modern poetry, Dickenson is the pioneer of Imagist Poetry.
  • Settle, then, which -- plant or ivy -- Dickens supposed the reader to know least about, and which, therefore, Dickens was telling him about; and you settle which word -- _plant_ or _ivy_ -- is the subject. Higher Lessons in English A work on english grammar and composition
  • Settle, then, which -- plant or ivy -- Dickens supposed the reader to know least about, and which, therefore, Dickens was telling him about; and you settle which word -- _plant_ or _ivy_ -- is the subject. Higher Lessons in English A work on english grammar and composition
  • My only disappointment in Bayard's writing was that at times the dialect seemed too British, particularly early in the book and when relating the comments of lower-class characters (e.g., at one point a character complains of being “peached” – informed upon – which to me sounds more like Dickens than Dumas). Reader reviews of The Black Tower by Louis Bayard.
  • The humor of this passage is also typically "Dickensian": observant, tolerant of eccentricities, and devastating all at the same time. Canonical Writers
  • Such are aural resources that a Tennysonian syllabic ironist like Dickens can elsewhere mobilize, and in the context of epochal dissonance rather than the restorative harmony of Little Dorrit, when, in describing the roar of a locomotive in Dombey and Phonemanography: Romantic to Victorian
  • An idea that could be revived as third world countries need revenue and cost of feeding is way down, so pay that country a small fee, it beats the Dickens era and the rotting hulk scheme. “Two Years” for Jon Harper Killer « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • Edinburgh's cobbled streets and wynds were perfect for scenes in the Julia Roberts-starring Jekyll and Hyde variation Mary Reilly, and were the setting for ITV's Dickensian Christmas extravaganza, Micawber, starring David Jason.
  • Dickens' 'A Tale of Two Cities'
  • The school was made famous by its association with Charles Dickens.
  • That I cannot allow," said the doctor, "it would make your head ache, but I have no objection to someone reading to you some nice, amusing novel, Dickens's" Pickwick Papers, "for instance, or a story of The Poor Plutocrats
  • As a writer of fiction, Dickens generally remained distinctly unawed by its phenomena.
  • Gilling's ability to teeter between fantasy and plausibility recalls Dickens.What he imagines is equal to anything Prospero might have conjured.
  • In an obvious departure from Dickens these stores always included quanta of Americana.
  • I have cards from aintesduck, wanderlustlover, calluna, vandonovan, chlorrel and thebratqueen. davegodfrey bought me a hot water bottle which I am using like the Dickens. Help help I am stuck in a rut
  • The trick is to make out that the tradition is popular, subliterary, and that gifted novelists, like Hogg, or Dickens, are too good to be Gothic. Ladies in Distress
  • A merry Christmas to everybody! A happy New Year to all the world! Charles Dickens 
  • Charles Dickens was a well known.
  • Heaven knows we need never be ashamed of our tears, for they are rain upon the blinding dust of earth, overlying our hard hearts. Charles Dickens 
  • The overall impression, though, would make a cult novel: a picaresque trip through a neo-Dickensian netherworld of rogues and romance.
  • This time around, the legendary composer is searching for a "diamond in the rough" to play Nancy in his West End revival of Oliver!, based on the Dickens classic Oliver Twist. Tonight's TV Hot List: Wednesday, Oct. 27, 2010
  • We won't accuse Dickens of gadzookery ( "the bane of historical fiction," as historical novelist John Vernon called it in Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day
  • I was suddenly transported back to a Dickensian world of Fagin and footpads.
  • Never close your lips to those whom you have already opened your heart. Charles Dickens 
  • It was one of those March days when the sun shines hot and the wind blows cold: when it is summer in the light, and winter in the shade. Charles Dickens 
  • My advice is to never do tomorrow what you can do today. Procrastination is the thief of time. Charles Dickens 
  • Dickens was contemporary with Thackeray.
  • We know the title Angela's Ashes, his wonderful book about surviving deprivation and poverty of a scale we associate with Dickens 'London a century and a half ago. Bill Cunningham: The End of Literacy?
  • All our talk of the middle class these days is fine, but Dickens knew the higher and the lower, the much lower: the mudlark, the wasting orphan, the prison child, the crossing sweeper, the dun, the dustman, the shabby clerk, the street philosopher. Slate Articles
  • Charles Dickens was a well known.
  • Topography, yarbography, bugology and the dickens knows wot ology. A Dream of Empire Or, The House of Blennerhassett
  • Despite the Cotswold stone, Dickensian shopfront and flagstone floors, the books spilling out from every corner will bring you right back to the present. Independent bookshops in south-west of the UK
  • There is nothing in the world so irresistibly contagious as laughter and good humor. Charles Dickens 
  • In Martin Chuzzlewit Charles Dickens provides anecdotal literary evidence of young Victorian Britons seeking their fortune in America before returning home to settle prosperously in the shires, but there is hard documentation that large numbers of the early 20th-century immigrants from southern and eastern Europe were transient industrial workers with little intention to settle permanently in the U.S. Home, Temporary, Home
  • When Charles Dickens visited America, our people testified their admiration of his homely genius by going mad, receiving him with frantic acclamations of delight, dining him, and suppering him, and going through the 'pump-handle movement' with him. The Continental Monthly, Vol. 2, No 3, September, 1862 Devoted to Literature and National Policy.
  • If Charles Dickens had created a bestiary, it might have resembled this one: It's positively jovial with oddity.
  • The Anubis Gates. Tim Powers. A modern scholar gets caught up in time travel, body- swapping, swashbuckling, and sorcery in London, circa 1810. Thing Charles Dickens meets Indiana Jones.
  • Spring is the time of year when it is summer in the sun and winter in the shade. Charles Dickens 
  • The school was made famous by its association with Charles Dickens.
  • Photography: Metin Tilki Rents in Cannes soar during the Monaco Grand Prix Ms. Dove, who has built up an £80 million fortune and a property empire that includes the former homes of Robert Louis Stevenson and Charles Dickens, says the idea of short-term buy-to-let in what real estate agents call "prime London" is already popular with Middle Eastern property buyers, partly because the dinar has been strong against the pound. Live and Let High
  • How the dickens is a fellow to get to sleep while you're playing Punch and Judy in there? Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 101, December 26, 1891
  • I knew what a " darkmans-budge " was — defined here as " one that slides into a House in the dusk, to let in more Rogues to rob " — simply by having read Dickens ' s " Oliver Twist " back in high school. When Sounds Make Sense
  • Their names become adjectives: Dickensian, Shavian, Kafkaesque. The Nightmare Of Real Things
  • I have been bent and broken, but - I hope - into a better shape. Charles Dickens 
  • But, if we follow Schwarzbach, Dickens's description of the street mire in Holborn is, if anything, understated - ‘mud’ is not hyperbole, but litotes.
  • There were illiterates in Dickens and George Eliot.
  • As in Dickens, these are gorgons you love to hate: You laugh at how they appall you.
  • Go back to Dickensian times with this immersive theatre experience. Times, Sunday Times
  • If you're a glutton for Dickens and you'll need to be, with the BBC already stuffing its schedules with the forthcoming bicentenary of his birth, jolly spoofery abounds in The Bleak Old Shop of Stuff, which features Robert Webb as an upstanding Victorian retailer of nonsense items thrown into sudden penury by bewhiskered evil Stephen Fry in a stovepipe hat. Phil Hogan's Christmas TV highlights
  • If there were no bad people, there would be no good lawyers. Charles Dickens 
  • Poor Beaucourt, he was "inconsolable" when he and Dickens finally parted three years afterwards -- for twice again did the latter occupy a house, but not this same house, on "the property. Life of Charles Dickens
  • The happiness he gives is quite as great, as if it cost a fortune. Charles Dickens 
  • The greatest evil is not done in those sordid dens of evil Dickens loved to paint but in clear, carpeted, warmed, well-lighted offices, by quiet men with white collars and cut fingernails and smooth-shaven cheeks who do not need to raise their voices.
  • A loving heart is the truest wisdom. Charles Dickens 
  • Or the works of Charles Dickens sandwiched between a well-thumbed leather-bound edition of the Romantic poets and three volumes of philosophy.
  • We now have a two - volume first edition of Wilkie Collins's AFTER DARK (1856), which in appearance is rather close to a bibliopegic wreck; but pasted on the inside front covers are labels reading: From the Library of CHARLES DICKENS, Gadshill Place, June, 1870. In The Queens' Parlour
  • The place was teeming with life in all its clamorous glory, and it seemed I had stumbled upon a picaresque underworld where everyone had escaped from a Dickens yarn.
  • Then there are always the enormous old classics that you haven't got around to reading and that are staring at you reproachfully from the shelf, like the rest of Dickens or the rest of Balzac.
  • It is not even the Lord Mayor of the whole of London, merely some corporate lawyer chappy called David Wootton, "an ambassador for the City and financial services," according to commentator Paul Dickenson. Lord Mayor's Show is a bit of an own goal for BBC
  • I will honor Christmas in my heart, and try to keep it all the year. Charles Dickens 
  • The film has been called "Dickensian" -- and freely borrows from Indian film traditions, right down to its closing dance number.
  • The Mission, aimed at pulling India's 63 cities out of their dilapidation, which is somewhat reminiscent of Dickensian London, is conditional upon a bunch of mandatory reforms. Hindustan Times News Feeds 'Views'
  • Even more of Dickens's characters are what became known as "shabby-genteel": people who are keeping up appearances despite precarious finances, as the Dickens family once was. Our Dickens
  • The Darling River, up which Plorn Dickens first came by paddle steamer, is these days depleted by too much irrigation. Travel: Dickens down under
  • The doyen of modern Dickens studies, Michael Slater, envisaged him in "Charles Dickens" 2009 as the kind of writer whose every private experience is hitched to the lurching tumbrel of his creative imagination. Snapshots of 'Boz'
  • Never close your lips to those whom you have already opened your heart. Charles Dickens 
  • Eisner's introduction and postscript are the perfect frames for this remix story: in the intro, he talks about his naive use of black stereotypes in his 1950s comic The Spirit, while the postscript is an accessible but learned discussion of the stereotyping that Dickens fell prey to. Boing Boing: July 23, 2006 - July 29, 2006 Archives
  • Charles Dickens, the 19th- century author of David Copperfield and Oliver Twist, displayed his self-importance with his large signature underlined with a flourish.
  • If we turn to the faithful OED, the word is said to date back to the eighteenth century and was used by the great literates of Swift and Dickens.
  • This happens often in sparring and can hurt like the dickens when knees or shins meet. Kee Yah!!
  • Let's take any writer, say Dickens ...
  • For Dickens, history has both an inexorability and an arbitrariness.
  • This might be because Dickens is trying to tell us that society should be close-knit one and not isolated into different units.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy