London Labour and the London Poor is a rare and fascinating insight into the lives and struggles of the 19th-century poor. Written by journalist and reformer Henry Mayhew, a founder and editor of the satirical magazine Punch, it collects hundreds of testimonials from the lower strata of Victorian society. We encounter street entertainers, ‘pure finders’, cabinetmakers, gingerbread sellers, ‘screeve-fakers’, swindlers and burglars. We hear accounts from toshers finding items in sewers, people attempting to train pigs to dance, and witness the sale of everything from gilt watches and chickweed to needles, dog collars and eel soup. It is a remarkable work, said to have inspired the socially conscious fiction of Charles Dickens and William Makepeace Thackeray, who described it as ‘a picture of human life so wonderful, so awful, so piteous and pathetic, so exciting and terrible, that readers of romances own they never read anything like to it’.
Sjarmen med tarmen
Giulia Enders
audiobookJohnson’s Life of London : The People Who Made the City That Made the World
audiobookLondon
Peter Ackroyd
audiobookLearn German
Dave Smith
bookThe Evolution of Modern Germany
William Harbutt Dawson
bookJohn Haslet’s World
David Price
audiobookInventing Equality
Michael Bellesiles
audiobookSeceding from Secession
Eric J. Wittenberg, Edmund A. Sargus, Penny L. Barrick
audiobookThe Road : A Story of Romans and Ways to the Past
Christopher Hadley
audiobookIn Search of a Kingdom : Francis Drake, Elizabeth I, and the Perilous Birth of the British Empire
Laurence Bergreen
audiobookIsolationism
Charles A. Kupchan
audiobookContinental Reckoning : The American West in the Age of Expansion
Elliott West
audiobook