


Wordsworth, 'Daffodils'

Jane Austen letter

Guide to fashion and etiquette

Alphabet books

Soldier's letter: Battle of Waterloo

Jane Austen, Persuasion

P B Shelley, 'Ozymandias'

Sir Walter Scott, Rob Roy

Mary Shelley, Frankenstein

Coleridge's notes on Shakespeare

Keats, 'Ode to a Nightingale'

Lord Byron, Don Juan

Confessions of an English Opium-Eater

Grammar for children

Yorkshire dialect

Punctuation for children

Anti-slavery poem

Diary description of London

Execution of a 12 year old boy

Modern Flash Dictionary

Dickens, Oliver Twist

London dialect in Dickens

Dickens, Nicholas Nickleby

Browning, Dramatic Lyrics

Dickens, A Christmas Carol

Lear's Book of Nonsense

Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre

Emily Bronte, Wuthering Heights

The Communist Manifesto

'How do I love thee?'

Poverty and the workhouse

Poor Letter H

'The Charge of the Light Brigade'

Get your ‘air cut!

Cookery for the poor

Mary Seacole's autobiography

Mary Seacole newspaper article

Nursery rhymes

Florence Nightingale letter

Coal mining

The Woman in White

Mrs Beeton

Mrs Beeton's Christmas

Melodrama: East Lynne

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

The Queen's English

Letter from Charles Darwin

Text message poetry

George Eliot, Middlemarch

Music Hall

Victorian fashion

Freakshow posters

Street sellers

Invention of the telephone

Illusionists and conjurers

Oxford English Dictionary

Afrikaans novel

Mark Twain, Huckleberry Finn

Anglo-Indian dictionary

Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde

Circus poster

Jack the Ripper murders

Match Girls Strike

Babu English

Hardy, Tess of the D'Urbervilles

Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest

H G Wells, The Time Machine

English 'down under'
When you have no prospect of a earning a proper wage - if sickness or disability or market forces prevent you from working - what are you to do? Throughout this period, workhouses housed those who had no means to support themselves. Inmates of the workhouses were often forced into hard labour, and had to follow strict rules of behaviour. This government document from 1852 lists the jobs carried out by inmates in workhouses around the country.
The sentence of hard labour applied equally to all male inmates. A clerk, reduced to the workhouse because he was unable to find a job, was set to work breaking granite rocks with a heavy hammer, in an open shed with no protection from frost or heat, when he may never have held anything heavier than a pen. Another occupation was oakum-picking: unravelling lengths of tarred rope, for use in sealing the seams of battleships. For all this, the pay was only enough for an allowance of coarse bread: 4 pounds a week if he was married, plus 2 pounds for each child.
Shelfmark: Parliamentary papers, 1860.