Best of
Victorian

1980

Verity


Brenda Jagger - 1980
    She was a woman of 26 when she fell in love.Verity knew well why her handsome, womanizing cousin Joel Barforth wed her. She was heiress to a great Yorkshire weaving mill, and her husband lusted for wealth as keenly as he lusted for her.In return, Joel gave her all a nineteenth-century wife could expect -- a fine home, servants, children, even a growing knowledge of sensual pleasure. Then Verity met a man as different from Joel as day from night -- Crispin Aycliffe, bitter foe of all that her husband represented -- and in his arms she surrendered to the overwhelming, terrifying force of love.

A London Family, 1870-1900: A Trilogy


Molly Hughes - 1980
    A London Child of the 1870s, A London Girl of the 1880s, and A London Home of the 1890s are available here in a single paperback volume. The perceptive trilogy traces her early life through schooldays, studies, and travels abroad, to the closing years of the last century, when she was married and bringing up a family of her own, showing that Victorian children did not have such a dull time as is usually supposed.

The Heyday Of Natural History


Lynn Barber - 1980
    

The Maniac In The Cellar: Sensation Novels Of The 1860s


Winifred Hughes - 1980
    

Prostitution and Victorian Society: Women, Class, and the State


Judith R. Walkowitz - 1980
    Prostitution and Victorian Society makes a major contribution to women's history, working-class history, and the social history of medicine and politics. It demonstrates how feminists and others mobilized over sexual questions, how public discourse on prostitution redefined sexuality in the late nineteenth century, and how the state helped to recast definitions of social deviance.

The Optimists: Themes and Personalities in Victorian Liberalism


Ian Bradley - 1980
    Politicians of different parties are once again expounding the Gladstonian principles of public economy, elf-help, European unity and home rule for the constituent parts of the United Kingdom.This book examines the nature and development of these ideas. It traces their origins in the Romantic movement, the industrial revolution and the general European Liberal awakening of the mid-nineteenth century and charts their collapse in the face of the predominance of class attitudes and the increasingly bitter clash of capital and labour at the end of the century.During its heyday, from the mid-1850s to the mid-1880s, Liberalism attracted many eminent Victorians, including leading literary figures like Anthony Trollope, George Meredith and William Makepeace Thackeray, as well as philosophers and politicians like John Stuart Mill, Lord Acton, Richard Cobden, John Bright, T. H. Green, and, of course, W. E. Gladstone.using a mass of evidence, from novels, unpublished letters and autobiographical writings as well as from contemporary speeches and biographies, Ian Bradley has built up a picture of the complex and often conflicting forces which made men espouse the Gladstonian creed. He isolates the different strands in the Victorian Liberal Movement, the thrust and competitiveness of up-and-coming merchants and manufacturers, the love of liberty felt by rationalists and romantics alike, and the stern imperatives of the Nonconformist Conscience. He concludes that for all their differences and inconsistencies, Victorian Liberals were bound together by an all-pervasive sense of optimism and a fundamental faith in the goodness of man and the reality of progress.Ian Bradley was born in 1950 and educated at Tonbridge School and New College, Oxford, from where he graduated with a First Class Honours Degree in Modern History. He spent a further three years at New College as a research fellow and successfully completed a doctoral thesis on early nineteenth century history before moving into journalism. After brief periods with the B.B.C. and as a free-lance writer, he joined the Home News staff of The Times in 1977 and now writes for that paper mainly on political, historical and educational topics. He stood as Liberal candidate for Sevenoaks in the February 1974 General Election.

The Golden Calm: An English Lady's Life In Moghul Delhi: Reminiscences By Emily, Lady Clive Bayley, And By Her Father Sir Thomas Metcalfe; Edited By M. M. Kaye


Emily Bayley - 1980