Charles Dickens — "I am a man who has a good deal of respect for the law, but I have a good deal mo…"
I am a man who has a good deal of respect for the law, but I have a good deal more respect for justice.
I am a man who has a good deal of respect for the law, but I have a good deal more respect for justice.
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"Charity begins at home, and justice begins next door."
"I know enough of the world now, to have almost lost the capacity of being much surprised by anything."
"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 am a man who has always been very much in the habit of doing what he likes, and of not doing what he doesn't like."
"I am not a believer in the infallibility of any human institution."
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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