Information for "Nicholas Nickleby"

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Display titleNicholas Nickleby
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Page imageNicholas Nickleby, (1875?) ""I must beseech you to contemplate again the fearful course to which you have been impelled."" (3986245915).jpg

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Page creatorprefix>Import Bot
Date of page creation21:27, 1 November 2013
Latest editorRobkelk (talk | contribs)
Date of latest edit13:03, 3 May 2021
Total number of edits11
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Charles Dickens' third novel, originally written in serial form, is about a young upper-middle-class man forced to support his mother and sister after his father's death and financial ruin. Grudgingly assisted by his uncle, Ralph Nickleby, the title character Nicholas finds work as a teaching assistant at Dotheboys Hall, possibly the most famous Boarding School of Horrors in the history of literature, and struggles with the moral dilemma of keeping his livelihood vs. standing up to injustice. Meanwhile, his sister Kate, working as a milliner and lady's companion, faces her own challenges in the form of demanding employers, jealous co-workers and unwanted male attention. Like many other Dickens novels, this story centers on the social conflicts of the time, especially child abuse and harsh working conditions, and relies on satire to get the point across; Wackford Squeers, the headmaster, seems too outrageous to be true until one remembers that Dickens based him on a real life Yorkshire schoolmaster named William Shaw.
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