It's a curious study sociologically, economically, historically and in all manner of ways worth studying, but the best part for me was Dickens's satire. He wittily cuts away at the underbelly of London life with subtlety and great literary flare. For example, in the sketch 'The Streets - Morning', Dickens describes an empty street, hollow and bizarre - the world as few know it: before the sun rises - which is only populated by a "rakish-looking cat" who "stealthily" runs home and descends to his hiding place as though "his character depended on [his actions] the preceding night escaping public attention." This is a wonderfully subtle play on the dark and unspoken aspects of London life, which included opium dens, rife prostitution and rampant crime - much of which was indulged in by seemingly "respected" men. It tells us a lot about the city life of the age and also about the way it would feel to wander the city streets. An unexpected realisation is that little has changed in some ways. That's a curious thought and one that begs the
It's a curious study sociologically, economically, historically and in all manner of ways worth studying, but the best part for me was Dickens's satire. He wittily cuts away at the underbelly of London life with subtlety and great literary flare. For example, in the sketch 'The Streets - Morning', Dickens describes an empty street, hollow and bizarre - the world as few know it: before the sun rises - which is only populated by a "rakish-looking cat" who "stealthily" runs home and descends to his hiding place as though "his character depended on [his actions] the preceding night escaping public attention." This is a wonderfully subtle play on the dark and unspoken aspects of London life, which included opium dens, rife prostitution and rampant crime - much of which was indulged in by seemingly "respected" men. It tells us a lot about the city life of the age and also about the way it would feel to wander the city streets. An unexpected realisation is that little has changed in some ways. That's a curious thought and one that begs the