<P> Past and Present (1843) was written as a response to the economic crisis which began in the early 1840s . This book, like its predecessor Chartism and The Latter - Day Pamphlets (1850), presents a further analysis of the condition of England question . Carlyle contrasted the medieval past and the turbulent Victorian present of the 1830s and 1840s . For him, the latter was a time of uncontrolled industrialisation, worship of money, exploitation of the weak, low wages, poverty, unemployment and riots, which would bring England to self - destruction . Carlyle expresses his critical opinion about the present Condition of England in an elevated, prophetic language . Despite England's abundant resources, the poor classes are living in deprivation . He shows a depressing picture of the daily life of the workers, many of whom and are unable to find meaningful work . </P> <P> Carlyle's solution was the same as that proposed in Sartor Resartus (1832)--a spiritual rebirth of both the individual and society . The two sections of the book show the contrasting visions of the past and the present . His idealised vision of the past is based on the chronicle of the English monk Jocelyn de Brakelond (died 1211), who described the life of the abbot Samson of Tottington and his monks of Bury St. Edmund's monastery . Carlyle shows the organisation of life and work of the medieval monks as an authentic idyll, whereas he finds contemporary life increasingly unbearable due to the lack of true leadership . </P> <P> Carlyle argues that a new "Aristocracy of Talent" should take the lead in the country, and the English people must themselves choose true heroes and not sham - heroes or quacks . In the third chapter of the fourth book of Past and Present, Carlyle makes three practical suggestions for the improvement of social conditions in England . He calls for the introduction of legal hygienic measures, improvement of education and promotion of emigration . Although the first two proposals were soon adopted, the third proposal affected mainly the Irish and Scottish people, and, in a smaller degree, the English population . </P>

Write a note on the condition of england in the victorian era