Friday, March 13, 2020
hard times essays
hard times essays    Hard Times, by Charles Dickens, was a representation of his time.     Times were hard for children and adults alike. People who questioned     what they were taught, often went through struggles and "hard times."     Eventually, the people who were looked down were the ones who really     helped those in need. Throughout the book, there are many ironic     Thomas Gradgrind was a man built on the idea that facts and statistics     were the only truth in life and all that was needed to have a healthy and     productive life. The only truth to him was his very own vision of the     truth. Simple put, Thomas Gradgrind strived for perfection. He strived to     be perfect, which is what his philosophy was based on, and he strived to     make his children perfect and not to wonder. He raised his children     never to wonder, never to doubt facts and to never entertain any vice or     fancy. As soon as Gradgrind's children were old enough to absorb, he     was feeding giving more lessons than they could hold. His children were     brought up only knowing one way to live and that was the idea that if it is     not fact, then it is false. He was emotionaless as were his children     because they were brought up only knowing what they were taught by     him. Eventually, as Gradgrind's children became older, what they were     taught began to turn sour in their minds. Tom, Grandgrind's son, began to     despise his father and all he was taught and thus began to rebel. He took     to smoking and gambling, which eventually led to his downfall. Tom had     grown up to become a sycophantic, self-absorbed parasite. He had     turned out the exact opposite as hoped.     Thomas Gradgrind had raised his children never to wonder, but     wondering intrigued them. Gradrgind had observed his children peeking     into a circus tent because they were curious as to what was inside. The     children were scolded for being curious, but seeds were planted into     their minds of how there was more to life than what t...     
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)