Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism


Dickens, Charles Hard Times for These Times | A. O. J. Cockshut (essay date 1961)

A. O. J. Cockshut (essay date 1961)

SOURCE: "Hard Times-Dickens's Masterpiece?" in The Imagination of Charles Dickens, Collins, 1961, p. 137-42.

[In the essay below, Cockshut seeks to demonstrate—contra F. R. Leavisthat Hard Times is not Dickens's masterpiece. He does, however, consider it a novel of high accomplishment. ]

Dr. Leavis has performed a valuable service by focusing attention on Hard Times, an important and neglected work. Those of us who do not quite agree with him about its quality are nevertheless grateful.

The leading idea of the book is proclaimed in the contrast between its subject, industrial society, and the titles of its three sections—Sowing, Reaping and Garnering. The intention, carried out at times with great subtlety and at times with a rather weary obviousness, was to show inherent life and growth conquering theory and calculation. This approach tends to...

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