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A doorway into a vanished drawing room of ideas, where every page couples wit with wonder and the everyday with the extraordinary. Chambers' Journal Of Popular Literature, Science, And Art, No. 690 (March 17, 1877) gathers a lively tapestry of popular literature essays, science and art sketches, and illustrated periodical content that speaks directly to the Victorian England era. This comprehensive literary miscellany invites the general reader to roam from brisk sketches of contemporary science to gentle courtship with artistic endeavour, all framed by an accessible, anthology-style cadence.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
A doorway into a vanished drawing room of ideas, where every page couples wit with wonder and the everyday with the extraordinary. Chambers' Journal Of Popular Literature, Science, And Art, No. 690 (March 17, 1877) gathers a lively tapestry of popular literature essays, science and art sketches, and illustrated periodical content that speaks directly to the Victorian England era. This comprehensive literary miscellany invites the general reader to roam from brisk sketches of contemporary science to gentle courtship with artistic endeavour, all framed by an accessible, anthology-style cadence. For families and curious minds alike, the issue offers fertile ground for quiet afternoons and lively conversations, a true companion for 1870s British reading. Historically significant as a trusted weekly voice of its time, the issue reflects broad interests-from science to history to art-within a format that felt intimate yet ambitious. It rewards both casual readers and classic¿literature collectors with its vivid voices, clear storytelling, and the ambience of a well-curated periodical. This edition is more than a reprint: it is restored for today's and future generations, a complete issue access that stands as a collector's item and a cultural treasure. Out of print for decades, Alpha Editions brings this indispensable piece of Victorian culture back into thoughtful hands, where it can illuminate the past while enriching present reading alike.
Autorenporträt
Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse. The stocking was hung by the chimney with care, In the that St. Nicholas soon would be there. The children were nestled all snug in their beds, While visions of sugar plums danced in their heads. And mamma in her kerchief, and I in my cap, Had just settled our brains for a long winter's nap;