Charles John Huffman Dickens a prominent known British author during the 1800s had dreadful experiences throughout his life. These experiences made him reflect in his future this motivated him to keep going with his aspirations as a young journalist and leave the catastrophic memories of his past in his books. The hostile experiences took away his innocence at a young age so he didn’t have much of a childhood because his family was depending on him to take them out of their misery. His childhood was deprived from him at the age of nine when he was taken out of school and forced to work at warren’s blacking boot factory. Two of his books were inspired based upon the better known novels “David Copperfield “and “the great expectations “at the …show more content…
Dickens proceeded to marry Catherine Hogarth on April 2, 1836, and during the same year he became editor of Bentley's Miscellany, published in December the second series of Sketches by Boz, and met John Forster, who would become his closest friend and confidant as well as his first biographer. As Charles would say “Suffering has been stronger than all other teaching, and has taught me to understand what your heart used to be. I have been bent and broken, but I hope into a better shape “(great expectations). Some of his early works In 1842 Dickens, who was as popular in America as he was in England, went on a five-month lecture tour of the United States, speaking out strongly against slavery and in support of other …show more content…
They had been for many years "temperamentally unsuited" to each other. Dickens, appealing and brilliant though he was, was also fundamentally insecure emotionally, and must have been astonishingly challenging to live with. The Dickens family had taken up residence at Gad's Hill. Dickens, throughout a period of retrospection, charred many personal letters, and re-read his own David Copperfield, the most autobiographical of his novels, before beginning Great Expectations, which appeared weekly until August 1861. Later that same year in 1861 found Dickens embarking upon another series of public readings in London, readings which would continue through the next year. In 1863, he did public readings both in Paris and London, and reconciled with his rival author. In 1865, an incident in which disturbed Dickens greatly, both psychologically and physically: Dickens and Ellen Ternan, returning from a Paris holiday, were badly shaken up in a railway accident in which a number of people were wounded (victorianweb.org.com). Dickens was now really unwell but carried on, compulsively, against his doctor's