![]() ![]() Hillis Miller, author of Charles Dickens, The World of his Novels, observed that in writing Bleak House: ‘Dickens constructed a model in little of English society in his time. ![]() Unlike some of his other works, this novel contains no episodes that do not have a direct relevance to the main plot. ![]() It has an integrated plot which develops naturally, encompassing and involving the vast array of characters in a unified tale that Dickens brings forth from his fertile imagination. Keep out of Chancery… it’s like being ground to bits in a slow mill it’s like being roasted at a slow fire it’s being stung to death by single bees it’s being drowned by drops it’s going mad by grains.’ John Jarndyce, Bleak Houseīleak House (1851-53) is one of Dickens’ greatest novels. ![]()
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