Dickens' Attitude Towards Charity in Oliver Twist

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How does Dickens portray his attitude to charity in the

Opening chapters of Oliver Twist

The novel Oliver Twist was written by Charles Dickens in the mid

1930’s. Society in the mid 1800’s had a huge gulf between the rich and

the poor, This was because before 1834, the cost of looking after the

poor was growing more expensive every year. This cost was paid by the

middle and upper classes in each town through their local taxes. There

was a real suspicion amongst the middle class and upper classes that

they were paying the poor to be lazy and avoid work. This made a

divide between the rich and the poor, this was because the middle and

upper class people did not want to be paying for the lower class

people with there hard earned money to sit around all day and just be

given a home and food for nothing, while they have to work all day and

pay out for the lower class people,when they would mush rather be

using their money on their own families.

The poor law was a burden of the parishes top care for the poor

through alms and taxes. The poor was the main form of charity around

at the time. After 1834 these laws where supposedly changed so that

the poor law provided aid and assistance to impoverished people.

However the system had serious flaws.The New Poor Law was really a

series of measures enacted in 1834. It was deisgned that the

workhouses would not be pleasant places. This was thought that it

would provide added incentive for people to be self sufficient.

Charles Dickens used Oliver Twist to point out truths about Victorian

England that polite society tried to ignore.

Parishes were bounded together into unions by the new poor law. Each

unoin had a workhouse, and all those seeking relief were requir...

... middle of paper ...

...it worked. He wants to show his

reader, his feelings on how people, where treated in relation to their

backgrounds. He basically wanted to tell people how he felt about the

charity’s and the way they were run. I think Charles Dickens, did not

think of the poor law as a charity, more of a prison, for people who

were not as well off as others. You follow the life of a young boy

Called Oliver, through his life in the workhouse and out of it, and

how badly mistreated he was because of what he was.

Even the people who were said to be helping the poor, were just there

for the money, they didn’t care what happened to any of these people.

Charles Dickens is attempting to say that, the poor law was no such

charity, charity starts at home and those less fortunate to not have

one were taken to workhouses were they were treated like they had done

something wrong.

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