Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Dickens, Charles Hard Times for These Times - Monroe Engel (essay date 19S9)


Dickens, Charles Hard Times for These Times - Monroe Engel (essay date 19S9)

Monroe Engel (essay date 19S9)

SOURCE: "Addenda: The Sports of Plenty," in The Maturity of Dickens, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1959, 169-89.

[In the following excerpt, Engel favorably appraises Hard Times, focusing upon its economy of presentation and emphasis upon the need for imaginationnot utility aloneto make life bearable and full.]

The recent marked increase in the reputation of Hard Times has come at the expense of Dickens' general reputation. Satisfaction with this one sport of his genius has been used as a basis on which to denigrate that genius in its more characteristic manifestations. Hard Times satisfies the modern taste (in the arts alone) for economy—in Action, for spare writing and clearly demonstrable form. Dickens was capable of both, but they were not natural or congenial to him, and he chose to employ them only under the duress of limited space....

[The entire page is 1226 words long]

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