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Listen to nineteenth century London at its loudest.Pavement voices caught in print.Curiosities Of Street Literature gathers a large and curious assortment of street-drolleries, catchpennies, squibs, comic tales in prose and verse, ballads on a subject, broadsides on the royal family, political litanies, dialogues, catechisms, acts of Parliament and the dying speeches and confessions that once circulated from stall to stall. As a british ballad anthology and a historical broadsides collection rolled into one, it captures the rhythm of public argument, persuasion and entertainment. Expect political satire pamphlets elbowed by ribald humour; royal family histories beside moral tracts; cheap sheet prints that read like a penny dreadful compendium. The contributions sit squarely within the field of victorian street literature and form an indispensable snapshot of london street culture - lively, idiosyncratic and often surprisingly candid, part of the living archive of charles hindley works and the popular press of nineteenth century England.Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Its value is both literary and documentary: casual readers will be drawn to the humour and immediacy of comic prose and verse, social history researchers will find primary-source evidence of working-class opinion and print markets, and collectors of rare books will appreciate the breadth of material and its curatorial recovery. The book’s mix of satire and sentiment supplies a unique tone - raw rhetoric, vernacular humour and lay sermon combine on cheap sheets to reveal how ideas were sold as much as argued. For historians of popular print, students of political pamphleteering and anyone intrigued by the noise of the street, this compilation maps how news, gossip and satire moved through public life. It is a curiously entertaining, often trenchant window onto public sentiment in a bustling metropolis.