Hard Times was underrated in Dickens's lifetime but is now one of his most discussed works. What we may see as its flaws and ambiva-lences are historically revealing and are one of the reasons for the attention it has commanded in recent years. It is unusually interesting among his novels, an attempt to do something he had never done before, to construct a tight and concentrated attack upon theories and attitudes prevailing in his time - and still in ours. Dickens's protagonist in Hard Times is the heart ofindusttial society. He wrote in a letter to a ftiend a few months after finishing that the idea for the novel had 'laid hold of me by the throat in a very violent manner' (PL, vii, 453); and it is this well-focused fire, what Orwell called Dickens's 'generous anger',that gives Hard Times its immense power.
Unusually for Dickens, Hard Times is set, not in London,but in the imaginary mid-Victorian Northern industrial town of Coketown with its blackened factories, downtrodden workers and polluted environment. This is the soulless domain of the strict utilitarian Thomas Gradgrind and the heartless factory owner Iosiah Bounderby. However,human joy is not excluded thanks to 'Mr Sleary's Horse-Riding' circus, a gin-soaked and hilarious troupe of open-hearted and affectionate people who act as an antidote to all the drudgery and misery endured by the ordinary citizens of Coketown.
Macaulay attacked Hard Times for its 'sullen socialism',but 20th-century critics such as George Bernard Shaw and F.R. Leavis have praised this book in the highest terms,while readers the world over have found inspiration and enjoyment from what is both Dickens' shortest completed novel and also one of his important statements on Victorian society.
INTRODUCTION
BOOK THE FIRST -- SOWING
I The One Thing Needful
II Murdering the Innocents
III A Loophole
IV MrBounderby
V The Key-Note
VI Sleary's Horsemanship
VII Mrs Sparsit
VIII Never Wonder
IX Sissy's Progress
V Stephen Blackpool
VI No Way Out
XII The Old Woman
VIII Rachael
VIV The Great Manufacturer
XV Father and Daughter
XVI Husband and Wife
BOOK THE SECOND -- REAPING
I Effects in the Bank
II Mr James Harthouse
III The Whelp
IV Men and Brothers
V Men andMasters
VI Fading Away
VII Gunpowder
VIII Explosion
VXX Hearing the Last of It
X Mrs Sparsit's Staircase
XI Lower and Lower
XII Down
BOOK THE THIRD -- GARNERING
I Another Thing Needful
II Very Ridiculous
III Very Decided
IV Lost
V Found
VI The Starlight
VII Whelp-Hunting
VII Philosophical
IX Final
ILLUSTRATIONS
Stephen and Rachad in the sick-room
Mr Harthouse dining at the Bounderbys
Mr Harthouse and Tom Gradgrind in the garden
Stephen Blackpool recovered from the Old Heft Shaft