About This Book
The author offers a series of newspaper-born sketches documenting urban poverty in late 19th-century London, moving through slum streets, lodging-houses, and cellar dwellings to detail overcrowded, squalid housing, makeshift furniture, and precarious daily earnings. He describes the pay-by-day furnished rooms, the daily scramble to meet rent, widespread hunger and unemployment, and the role of gin-shops and alcohol as both refuge and ruin. Interspersed are observations on sanitation, disease, and moral consequences, with an implicit appeal for improved housing and social attention. Chapters combine reportage, anecdote, and social commentary.
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