Author(s): Mayhew, Henry
Reader(s): Timson, David
Label: Naxos AudioBooks
Genre: Classic Fiction
Catalogue No: NA0319
Barcode: 9781781981542
Release Date: 09/2018

MAYHEW, H.: London Labour and the London Poor (Unabridged)

London Labour and the London Poor is a rare and fascinating insight into the lives and struggles of the 19th-century poor. Written by journalist and reformer Henry Mayhew, a founder and editor of the satirical magazine Punch, it collects hundreds of testimonials from the lower strata of Victorian society. We encounter street entertainers, ‘pure finders’, cabinetmakers, gingerbread sellers, ‘screeve-fakers’, swindlers and burglars. We hear accounts from toshers finding items in sewers, people attempting to train pigs to dance, and witness the sale of everything from gilt watches and chickweed to needles, dog collars and eel soup. It is a remarkable work, said to have inspired the socially conscious fiction of Charles Dickens and William Makepeace Thackeray, who described it as ‘a picture of human life so wonderful, so awful, so piteous and pathetic, so exciting and terrible, that readers of romances own they never read anything like to it’.

Tracklist

Disc 1
Mayhew, Henry - Author
Timson, David (Reader)
1London Labour and the London Poor06:38
Timson, David (Reader)
21: Street-folk01:36
Timson, David (Reader)
3Street-folk Of wandering tribes in general09:32
Timson, David (Reader)
4Wandering tribes in this country02:35
Timson, David (Reader)
5Of the number of costermongers and other street-folk10:35
Timson, David (Reader)
6Of the varieties of street-folk in general, and costermongers in particular06:03
Timson, David (Reader)
7Habits and amusements of costermongers10:52
Timson, David (Reader)
8The other amusements of this class of the community are the theatre and the penny concert09:54
Timson, David (Reader)
9Gambling of costermongers12:32
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 2
1The 'Vic. Gallery'10:59
Timson, David (Reader)
2The politics of costermongers - policemen05:09
Timson, David (Reader)
3Marriage and concubinage of costermongers04:31
Timson, David (Reader)
4Religion of costermongers04:15
Timson, David (Reader)
5Of the uneducated state of costermongers07:14
Timson, David (Reader)
6Language of costermongers02:30
Timson, David (Reader)
7Of the nicknames of costermongers01:23
Timson, David (Reader)
8Of the education of costermongers' children01:46
Timson, David (Reader)
9The literature of costermongers03:18
Timson, David (Reader)
10Of the costermongers' capital01:45
Timson, David (Reader)
11Of the 'slang' weights and measures04:00
Timson, David (Reader)
12Of the boys of the costermongers, and their bunts04:45
Timson, David (Reader)
13Education of the 'coster-lads'06:55
Timson, David (Reader)
14The life of a coster-lad07:06
Timson, David (Reader)
15Of the 'penny gaff'04:33
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 3
1The visitors, with a few exceptions, were all boys and girls14:39
Timson, David (Reader)
2Of the coster-girls11:58
Timson, David (Reader)
3The life of a coster-girl10:53
Timson, David (Reader)
4Of the homes of the costermongers12:40
Timson, David (Reader)
5Of the dress of the costermongers08:35
Timson, David (Reader)
6Of the diet and drink of costermongers03:08
Timson, David (Reader)
7Of the earnings of costermongers10:00
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 4
1Of the capital and income of the costermongers01:33
Timson, David (Reader)
2Of the providence and improvidence of costermongers05:20
Timson, David (Reader)
3Of the costermongers in bad weather and during the cholera03:07
Timson, David (Reader)
4Of the costermongers' raffles02:32
Timson, David (Reader)
5Of the tricks of costermongers04:37
Timson, David (Reader)
62: Minorities01:11
Timson, David (Reader)
7Minorities: Of the street Irish05:08
Timson, David (Reader)
8Of the causes which have made the Irish turn costermongers07:41
Timson, David (Reader)
9How the street Irish displanted the Jews in the orange trade07:24
Timson, David (Reader)
10Of the religion of the street-Irish09:56
Timson, David (Reader)
11Of the education, literature, amusements and politics of the street-Irish03:07
Timson, David (Reader)
12The homes of the street-Irish13:14
Timson, David (Reader)
13Irish lodging-houses for immigrants04:13
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 5
1In one of the worst class of lodging-houses09:23
Timson, David (Reader)
2Of the diet, drink and expense of living of the street-Irish11:31
Timson, David (Reader)
3Of the resources of the street-Irish as regards stock money, sickness, burials, &c.05:34
Timson, David (Reader)
4Of the history of some Irish street-sellers09:33
Timson, David (Reader)
5Of the Irish refuse-sellers06:14
Timson, David (Reader)
6The street-Jews02:36
Timson, David (Reader)
7Of the trades and localities of the street-Jews09:12
Timson, David (Reader)
8Of the Jew old-clothes men12:21
Timson, David (Reader)
9Of a Jew street-seller03:45
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 6
1Of the Jew-boy street-sellers08:51
Timson, David (Reader)
2Of the pursuits, dwellings, traffic, etc., of the Jew04:36
Timson, David (Reader)
3Of the street Jewesses and street Jew-girls05:32
Timson, David (Reader)
4Of the synagogues and the religion of the street - and other Jews07:33
Timson, David (Reader)
5Of the politics, literature, and amusements of the Jews05:54
Timson, David (Reader)
6Of the charities, schools, and education of the Jews13:38
Timson, David (Reader)
7The Negro crossing-sweeper, who had lost both his legs10:29
Timson, David (Reader)
8The loss of my limbs is bad enough11:44
Timson, David (Reader)
9The Negro cook04:34
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 7
13: Voices of the poor: The Employed and the Destitute01:18
Timson, David (Reader)
2Voices of the poor: Street-sellers of 'wet' fish02:05
Timson, David (Reader)
3Street-sellers of 'wet' fish07:21
Timson, David (Reader)
4Street-sellers of sprats07:13
Timson, David (Reader)
5Street-sellers of shell-fish07:25
Timson, David (Reader)
6Street sellers of fruit and vegetables01:16
Timson, David (Reader)
7Superior or -aristocratic- vegetable sellers06:38
Timson, David (Reader)
8Of the character of the street-stalls01:42
Timson, David (Reader)
9A fruit-stall keeper08:37
Timson, David (Reader)
10The London flower-girls00:51
Timson, David (Reader)
11Of two orphan flower-girls09:29
Timson, David (Reader)
12Of the life of a flower-girl [who had kept 'loose' company]03:35
Timson, David (Reader)
13The street-sellers of fried fish01:12
Timson, David (Reader)
14Fishy' the trader in fried fish11:52
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 8
1The street-sellers of baked potatoes01:07
Timson, David (Reader)
2A baked potato vendor05:45
Timson, David (Reader)
3The cats'-and dogs'- meat dealers00:51
Timson, David (Reader)
4A cats'-meat carrier03:51
Timson, David (Reader)
5Street-sellers of drinkables (coffee)01:08
Timson, David (Reader)
6A coffee-vendor in a small way of business08:16
Timson, David (Reader)
7Sellers of hot-cross buns04:02
Timson, David (Reader)
8The muffin man05:16
Timson, David (Reader)
9Street-orators01:07
Timson, David (Reader)
10Of running patterers03:06
Timson, David (Reader)
11The street-buyers01:15
Timson, David (Reader)
12Street-buyers of rags and bones00:41
Timson, David (Reader)
13The rag-and-bone man07:25
Timson, David (Reader)
14Street-sellers of second-hand articles01:00
Timson, David (Reader)
15Seller of second-hand metal-wares07:06
Timson, David (Reader)
16The 'pure'-finders01:26
Timson, David (Reader)
17A female pure finder11:29
Timson, David (Reader)
18The mud-larks00:54
Timson, David (Reader)
19A child mud-lark05:42
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 9
1The experiences of a juvenile mud-lark10:29
Timson, David (Reader)
2Scavengers00:47
Timson, David (Reader)
3A 'regular scavager'11:02
Timson, David (Reader)
4Omnibus drivers and conductors01:23
Timson, David (Reader)
5An omnibus driver05:06
Timson, David (Reader)
6An omnibus conductor05:47
Timson, David (Reader)
7Carmen and porters01:20
Timson, David (Reader)
8Van driver03:12
Timson, David (Reader)
9Crossing-sweepers01:28
Timson, David (Reader)
10The old dame who supports a pensioner03:48
Timson, David (Reader)
11Mary, who had been a serving-maid07:05
Timson, David (Reader)
12At Christmas, I think I took about eleven shillings05:20
Timson, David (Reader)
13Gander, 'captain' of the boy crossing-sweepers07:38
Timson, David (Reader)
14I wasn't working in a gang then, but all by myself07:25
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 10
1The street where the boy-sweepers lodged06:14
Timson, David (Reader)
2The boy sweepers' room02:30
Timson, David (Reader)
3Flushermen00:29
Timson, David (Reader)
4The flusherman who had been a seaman07:27
Timson, David (Reader)
5Cesspool-sewermen01:07
Timson, David (Reader)
6A cesspool-sewerman's statement04:40
Timson, David (Reader)
7Chimney-sweeps01:09
Timson, David (Reader)
8A 'knuller' or 'querier'06:19
Timson, David (Reader)
9Ballast-heavers and coal-whippers01:47
Timson, David (Reader)
10The meeting of the ballast-heavers' wives07:30
Timson, David (Reader)
11An infirm woman, approaching fifty years of age07:48
Timson, David (Reader)
12Asylum for the Houseless Poor00:41
Timson, David (Reader)
13The Asylum for the Houseless Poor03:16
Timson, David (Reader)
14A homeless painter05:35
Timson, David (Reader)
15A homeless carpenter05:29
Timson, David (Reader)
16A homeless tailor08:02
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 11
14: The london labour market and the casual labour problem01:24
Timson, David (Reader)
2The london labour market and the casual labour problem: Casual labour10:03
Timson, David (Reader)
3A tall Irishman of about 34 or 3510:09
Timson, David (Reader)
4These several causes, then, which could only exist09:51
Timson, David (Reader)
5Of over-work, as regards excessive labour09:42
Timson, David (Reader)
6Almost all who work by the day, or for a fixed salary08:15
Timson, David (Reader)
7Concerning this 'strapping' system09:58
Timson, David (Reader)
8One great promoter of the decrease of manual labour10:48
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 12
1Formerly throughout the kingdom09:58
Timson, David (Reader)
2My employer was a journeyman10:16
Timson, David (Reader)
3In the winter, by this means09:46
Timson, David (Reader)
4On the table was a bundle of crape and bombazine08:43
Timson, David (Reader)
5I am a native of Pesth10:02
Timson, David (Reader)
6The annual rate of increase among the population has been 0.9 per cent09:52
Timson, David (Reader)
71831: Annual average number of criminals commited11:09
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 13
1We have now, I believe, exhausted the several causes of that vast national evil04:16
Timson, David (Reader)
2Of the casual labourers among the rubbish carters12:32
Timson, David (Reader)
3The effects of casual labour in general09:00
Timson, David (Reader)
4Of the scurf trade among the rubbish-carters11:00
Timson, David (Reader)
5Boy labour or thief labour11:30
Timson, David (Reader)
6The last mentioned of the several modes of cheapening labour10:47
Timson, David (Reader)
7There is, moreover, the cheaper labour of apprentices11:26
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 14
1Skilled and unskilled00:30
Timson, David (Reader)
2Garret-masters'09:31
Timson, David (Reader)
3The decline which has taken place within the last twenty years09:02
Timson, David (Reader)
4But not only is it true that over-work makes under-pay07:47
Timson, David (Reader)
5Scavengers etc.00:32
Timson, David (Reader)
6Scavengers09:06
Timson, David (Reader)
7There is only one mode of payment for the above labours10:17
Timson, David (Reader)
8Casual hands' among the scavengers09:55
Timson, David (Reader)
9In the city the men have to work very long hours08:17
Timson, David (Reader)
10When a scavager is out of employ, he seldom or never applies to the parish08:35
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 15
1Coal-heavers and dock labourers00:31
Timson, David (Reader)
2Coal-heavers and -whippers09:23
Timson, David (Reader)
3My informant tells me that he has frequently seen as many as 10011:06
Timson, David (Reader)
4The machine is a large coal-scuttle or wooden box13:43
Timson, David (Reader)
5Dock labourers06:27
Timson, David (Reader)
6The London Dock09:35
Timson, David (Reader)
7At trucking each man is said to go on an average thirty miles a-day11:08
Timson, David (Reader)
8At last the landlord flung the door wide open11:21
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 16
1I have said that at one of the docks alone07:13
Timson, David (Reader)
2The man himself gives the following explanation08:53
Timson, David (Reader)
3The problem of low wages00:31
Timson, David (Reader)
4Review of the problem of low wages10:32
Timson, David (Reader)
5The indirect modes of remedying low wages08:53
Timson, David (Reader)
6This enumeration is as comprehensive as my knowledge will enable me to make it05:49
Timson, David (Reader)
75: Sights of london00:47
Timson, David (Reader)
8Sights of london: Of the orange and nut market09:34
Timson, David (Reader)
9Of London street-markets on a Saturday night09:11
Timson, David (Reader)
10The Sunday morning markets03:44
Timson, David (Reader)
11Of Covent-garden market05:26
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 17
1Inside the market all is bustle and confusion05:56
Timson, David (Reader)
2Of the Old Clothes Exchange10:13
Timson, David (Reader)
3The London Dock07:38
Timson, David (Reader)
4The West India Docks05:49
Timson, David (Reader)
5The St Katherine's Dock11:39
Timson, David (Reader)
66: Culture and belief01:51
Timson, David (Reader)
7Culture and belief: Punch11:47
Timson, David (Reader)
8They ain't whistles, but calls, or unknown tongues10:15
Timson, David (Reader)
9Punch talk00:38
Timson, David (Reader)
10Scene with two Punchmen01:32
Timson, David (Reader)
11The Punchman at the theatre02:09
Timson, David (Reader)
12The history of Punch04:19
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 18
1Guy Fawkes00:33
Timson, David (Reader)
2Guy Fawkes (man)10:40
Timson, David (Reader)
3They always reckon me to be about the first hand in London at building a guy07:39
Timson, David (Reader)
4Silly Billy09:48
Timson, David (Reader)
5Then the doctor turns to the crowd, and says06:31
Timson, David (Reader)
6Of the experience of a street-bookseller06:13
Timson, David (Reader)
7Street-vocalists00:20
Timson, David (Reader)
8Street negro serenaders07:49
Timson, David (Reader)
9Statement of another Ethiopian serenader07:52
Timson, David (Reader)
10Did you ever see her broder Biller09:24
Timson, David (Reader)
11A standing patterer02:28
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 19
1The wooden-legged sweeper09:25
Timson, David (Reader)
2Street-seller of saws05:03
Timson, David (Reader)
37: The poor at home: Poverty and the domestic economy01:13
Timson, David (Reader)
4The poor at home: Questionnaire of street orderlies10:25
Timson, David (Reader)
5Did their wives work?09:46
Timson, David (Reader)
6Had they a change of dress?07:05
Timson, David (Reader)
7Mayhews survey of the inmates of a lodging-house10:53
Timson, David (Reader)
8Knowing that this lodging-house might be taken as a fair sample09:52
Timson, David (Reader)
9After obtaining this information07:27
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 20
1The question that I put to them after this was06:50
Timson, David (Reader)
2Of the life of a street-seller of dog-collars12:07
Timson, David (Reader)
3The home comforts of a cats'-meat carrier02:57
Timson, David (Reader)
4Street-seller of cutlery12:38
Timson, David (Reader)
58: Paupers and criminals00:46
Timson, David (Reader)
6Paupers and criminals: London vagrants08:29
Timson, David (Reader)
7The cause of the greater amount of vagrancy being found12:25
Timson, David (Reader)
8Characteristics of the various classes of vagrants11:35
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 21
1Of the original occupations or trades of the vagrants08:50
Timson, David (Reader)
2My father,' he said, 'was a bricklayer in Shoreditch parish'07:09
Timson, David (Reader)
3Statement of a returned convict08:30
Timson, David (Reader)
4I was sentenced to 14 years' transportation06:59
Timson, David (Reader)
5Lives of the boy inmates of the casual wards of the London workhouses10:33
Timson, David (Reader)
6Of the character of the vagrants frequenting the unions in the centre of the metropolis08:41
Timson, David (Reader)
79: Classification of the workers and non-workers00:57
Timson, David (Reader)
8Classification of the workers and non-workers10:15
Timson, David (Reader)
9Now, from the above it will appear, that there are four distinct classes of workers10:32
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 22
110: Answers to correspondents09:48
Timson, David (Reader)
2Money donated for the London Poor08:28
Timson, David (Reader)
3A journeyman on coconuts01:09
Timson, David (Reader)
4The library of a model dwelling-house03:24
Timson, David (Reader)
5Free-trade and the working man02:49
Timson, David (Reader)
6A draper on surveying his trade04:22
Timson, David (Reader)
7The causes of prostitution07:59
Timson, David (Reader)
8The Coal-Whippers' Journal08:09
Timson, David (Reader)
9A letter from a bricklayers labourer00:36
Timson, David (Reader)
10A debate about labour and capital between F.B.B. and Henry Mayhew06:55
Timson, David (Reader)
11The population question, in which F. B. B. goes 'the whole hog'07:51
Timson, David (Reader)
12Rosemary O'Day Introduction: i: London Labour and the London Poor in the context of Mayhew's work10:14
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 23
1Mayhew's brief in the letters to the Morning Chronicle09:10
Timson, David (Reader)
2Breakdown by marital status11:54
Timson, David (Reader)
3The bias towards the skilled worker06:45
Timson, David (Reader)
4ii: Mayhew and the framework for an analysis of poverty10:43
Timson, David (Reader)
5iii: Mayhew and Utilitarianism11:02
Timson, David (Reader)
6iv: Journalism03:04
Timson, David (Reader)
7v: Social inquiry and social reform13:36
Timson, David (Reader)
8vi: The Selection04:32
Timson, David (Reader)

Total Playing Time: 27:12:57