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and goes insane on realizing his loss. Hardie's son Alfred loves Julia, Dodd's daughter. He detects his father's villainy, accuses him of it, and to insure his silence is consigned by his father to a private insane asylum. There he meets Dodd; a fire breaks out, and both escape. Dodd enlists and serves as a common seaman, appearing to be capable but half-witted, until a second cataleptic shock restores his reason, when he returns home. Alfred reaches his friends, and vindicates his sanity in a court of law. The receipt for the ÂŁ14,000 is found, and the money recovered from the elder Hardie. The book properly divides itself into two parts. One embraces the maritime adventures of Dodd with pirates, storms, shipwreck, and highwaymen, while bringing his money home; and his subsequent service as a half-witted foremast-hand until his restoration to reason. The other covers Alfred's thrilling experiences as a sane man among the insane. The author's analysis of all kinds of insanity is very thorough: with Alfred are contrasted
Captain Dodd and many asylum patients, introduced incidentally; also Maxley, a worthy man driven insane by the bank failure, and who kills Alfred's sister in a maniacal rage; Dr. Wycherley, the asylum manager, who has epileptic fits himself; Thomas Hardie, Alfred's uncle, who is weak-minded; and others. Dr. Sampson, the sturdy Scotch physician, who despises all regular practitioners, and comes to Alfred’s rescue at the crisis of the book, is one of Reade’s strongest and most original characters. The love scenes are tender and touching.
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from 28 March to 26 December 1863, but the magazine's family readers blanched at Reade's strong attacks on asylums, so it did not perform well and actually depressed sales of the periodical. Dickens appended a note to the last instalment noting that the opinions of the work should be attributed to
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is an alleged “exposure” of the abuses of private insane asylums in
England and of the statutes under which they were sheltered. The “Hard Cash” is the sum of £14,000, the earnings of years, of which Richard Hardie, a bankrupt banker, defrauds David Dodd, a sea-captain. Dodd has a cataleptic shock
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in
December 1863. Reade sought ÂŁ3,000 for the publishing rights, later accepted ÂŁ2,250 for a limited term of years, but eventually only sold it via commissions from the publisher. Publisher Edward Marston later commented that "Reade was an excellent man of business, and was very careful of the
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which relates the early history and marriage of
Captain and Mrs. Dodd. This book caused much lively public correspondence between the author and various asylum managers, who felt themselves aggrieved, but failed, according to Reade, to shake the facts and arguments put forward in this
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Reade's work did better when released (with some reordering and amendment of the text, less concerned with creating instalment cliffhangers) as
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Subsequent editions of the novel included some of the correspondence generated by physicians in response to the original publication.
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and was part of Reade's drive to reform and improve those institutions.
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Hard Cash (1863) Charles Reade – psychiatrists in 19th century fiction
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The novel was adapted to film three times in the silent film era.
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After Work: Fragments from the
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would be released in three volume form on 10 December 1863)
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In 1921, a
British silent-film was released, directed by
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In 1913, a 2-reel
American silent film was directed by
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Biographical
Dictionary and Synopsis of Books, Vol. 2
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The
Sensation Novel and the Victorian Family Magazine
441:Rex Ingram: Hollywood's Rebel of the Silver Screen
159:commodity which furnished the title of his book."
183:A late nineteenth-century synopsis of the novel:
162:In the United States, the book was serialised in
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300:Victorian Fiction: Writers, Publishers, Readers
454:The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film
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128:It was originally serialised under the title
187:This book, originally published in 1863, as
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651:Novels set in psychiatric hospitals
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319:No. 1884, p. 744 (advertisement by
101:Hard Cash, A Matter-of-Fact Romance
35:Hard Cash, A Matter-of-Fact Romance
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573:It Is Never Too Late to Mend
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198:Love me Little, Love me Long
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16:1863 novel by Charles Reade
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646:Novels by Charles Reade
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613:A Terrible Temptation
423:(15 September 1913).
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170:Harper & Brothers
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538:The Courier of Lyons
474:at Project Gutenberg
348:(26 December 1863).
229:Charles Stanton Ogle
104:is an 1863 novel by
636:1863 British novels
443:, pp. 269–74 (2013)
439:Gmuer, Leonhard H.
379:(24 January 1864).
311:(5 December 1863).
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565:Christie Johnstone
386:The New York Times
139:All the Year Round
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661:Sampson Low books
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206:Adaptations
156:Sampson Low
630:Categories
254:References
116:Background
22:Hard Cash
605:Foul Play
589:Hard Cash
471:Hard Cash
425:Hard Cash
414:, in IMDB
381:New Books
325:Hard Cash
285:Wynne D.
248:Dick Webb
194:Hard Cash
148:Hard Cash
67:(England)
61:Publisher
179:Synopsis
535:(1852)
616:(1871)
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548:Novels
541:(1854)
235:, and
43:Author
37:(1863)
525:Plays
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201:book.
90:Pages
56:Novel
53:Genre
223:for
154:by
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