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Henry Mayhew - London Labour and the London Poor, Vol. 1

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In the html version of this eBook images with blue borders are linked to - photo 1
In the html version of this eBook, images with blue borders are linked to higher-resolution versions of the illustrations.
HENRY MAYHEW.
[From a Daguerreotype by Beard .]
LONDON LABOUR
AND THE LONDON POOR
A Cyclopdia of the Condition and Earnings
OF
THOSE THAT WILL WORK
THOSE THAT CANNOT WORK, AND
THOSE THAT WILL NOT WORK
BY
HENRY MAYHEW
THE LONDON STREET-FOLK
COMPRISING
STREET SELLERS STREET BUYERS STREET FINDERS
STREET PERFORMERS STREET ARTIZANS STREET LABOURERS
WITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS FROM PHOTOGRAPHS
VOLUME ONE
First edition1851
(Volume One only and parts of Volumes Two and Three)
Enlarged edition (Four volumes)1861-62
New impression1865
CONTENTS
OF
VOLUME I.
THE STREET-FOLK.
PAGE
Wandering Tribes in General
Wandering Tribes in the Country
The London Street-Folk
Costermongers
Street Sellers of Fish
Street Sellers of Fruit and Vegetables
Stationary Street Sellers of Fish, Fruit, and Vegetables
The Street Irish
Street Sellers of Game, Poultry, Rabbits, Butter, Cheese, and Eggs
Street Sellers of Trees, Shrubs, Flowers, Roots, Seeds, and Branches
Street Sellers of Green Stuff
Street Sellers of Eatables and Drinkables
Street Sellers of Stationery, Literature, and the Fine Arts
Street Sellers of Manufactured Articles
The Women Street Sellers
The Children Street Sellers
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
London CostermongerPage
The Coster Girl
The Oyster Stall
The Orange Mart (Dukes Place)
The Irish Street-Seller
The Wall-Flower Girl
The Groundsell Man
The Baked Potato Man
The Coffee StallTo face page
Coster Boy and Girl Tossing the Pieman
Doctor Bokanky, the Street-Herbalist
The Long Song Seller
Illustrations of Street Art, No. I.
No. II.
The Hindoo Tract Seller
The Kitchen, Fox Court
Illustrations of Street Art, No. III.
The Book Auctioneer
The Street-Seller of Nutmeg-Graters
The Street-Seller of Dog-Collars
The Street-Seller of Crockeryware
The Blind Boot-Lace Seller
The Street-Seller of Grease-Removing Composition
The Lucifer-Match Girl
The Street-Seller of Walking-Sticks
The Street-Seller of Rhubarb and Spice
The Street-Seller of Combs
Portrait of Mr. Mayhew
PREFACE.
The present volume is the first of an intended series, which it is hoped will form, when complete, a cyclopdia of the industry, the want, and the vice of the great Metropolis.
It is believed that the book is curious for many reasons:
It surely may be considered curious as being the first attempt to publish the history of a people, from the lips of the people themselvesgiving a literal description of their labour, their earnings, their trials, and their sufferings, in their own unvarnished language; and to pourtray the condition of their homes and their families by personal observation of the places, and direct communion with the individuals.
It may be considered curious also as being the first commission of inquiry into the state of the people, undertaken by a private individual, and the first blue book ever published in twopenny numbers.
It is curious, moreover, as supplying information concerning a large body of persons, of whom the public had less knowledge than of the most distant tribes of the earththe government population returns not even numbering them among the inhabitants of the kingdom; and as adducing facts so extraordinary, that the traveller in the undiscovered country of the poor must, like Bruce, until his stories are corroborated by after investigators, be content to lie under the imputation of telling such tales, as travellers are generally supposed to delight in.
Be the faults of the present volume what they may, assuredly they are rather short-comings than exaggerations, for in every instance the author and his coadjutors have sought to understate, and most assuredly never to exceed the truth. For the omissions, the author would merely remind the reader of the entire novelty of the taskthere being no other similar work in the language by which to guide or check his inquiries. When the following leaves are turned over, and the two or three pages of information derived from books contrasted with the hundreds of pages of facts obtained by positive observation and investigation, surely some allowance will be made for the details which may still be left for others to supply. Within the last two years some thousands of the humbler classes of society must have been seen and visited with the especial view of noticing their condition and learning their histories; and it is but right that the truthfulness of the poor generally should be made known; for though checks have been usually adopted, the people have been mostly found to be astonishingly correct in their statements,so much so indeed, that the attempts at deception are certainly the exceptions rather than the rule. Those persons who, from an ignorance of the simplicity of the honest poor, might be inclined to think otherwise, have, in order to be convinced of the justice of the above remarks, only to consult the details given in the present volume, and to perceive the extraordinary agreement in the statements of all the vast number of individuals who have been seen at different times, and who cannot possibly have been supposed to have been acting in concert.
The larger statistics, such as those of the quantities of fish and fruit, &c., sold in London, have been collected from tradesmen connected with the several markets, or from the wholesale merchants belonging to the trade specifiedgentlemen to whose courtesy and co-operation I am indebted for much valuable information, and whose names, were I at liberty to publish them, would be an indisputable guarantee for the facts advanced. The other statistics have been obtained in the same mannerthe best authorities having been invariably consulted on the subject treated of.
It is right that I should make special mention of the assistance I have received in the compilation of the present volume from Mr. Henry Wood and Mr. Richard Knight (late of the City Mission), gentlemen who have been engaged with me from nearly the commencement of my inquiries, and to whose hearty co-operation both myself and the public are indebted for a large increase of knowledge. Mr. Wood, indeed, has contributed so large a proportion of the contents of the present volume that he may fairly be considered as one of its authors.
The subject of the Street-Folk will still require another volume, in order to complete it in that comprehensive manner in which I am desirous of executing the modern history of this and every other portion of the people. There still remainthe
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