Charles Dickens — "My advice is, never do to-morrow what you can do to-day. Procrastination is the …"
My advice is, never do to-morrow what you can do to-day. Procrastination is the thief of time.
My advice is, never do to-morrow what you can do to-day. Procrastination is the thief of time.
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"It is a most extraordinary, and at the same time a most natural, thing, that a man should be able to look back upon his life and see it as a whole."
"I think the English people are a very narrow-minded people."
"I am not a very religious man, in the common acceptation of the term."
"I have a great contempt for all forms of religious bigotry."
"The English are, so far as I know, the hardest worked people on whom the sun shines. Be content if in their wretched intervals of leisure they read for amusement and do no worse."
English novelist whose Oliver Twist (1838), A Christmas Carol (1843), and Bleak House (1852) made Victorian poverty inescapable for the British middle class. Closely associated with William Makepeace Thackeray (Vanity Fair rival and contemporary serial novelist) and George Eliot (later Victorian giant who built on Dickens's social-realism foundation). For an intellectual contrast, see Jeremy Bentham, founder of utilitarianism (1748-1832) — Mr. Gradgrind in Hard Times (1854) is a direct caricature of Bentham-style social calculation — 'Facts, sir, nothing but Facts!' is the most-cited literary attack on utilitarianism's reduction of human life to measurable units. Dickens's serialized social-novel form is itself a rebuke of utilitarian abstraction.
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