"In truth there is no bodily or mental evil to which flesh is heir which this author cannot describe most feelingly—The evils consequent upon ever manufacturing or over population or both conjoined and acting as cause and effect—the misery and the hateful passions engendered by the love of gain and the accumulation of riches, and the selfishness and want of thought and want of feeling in master manufacturers are most admirably described and the consequences produced on the inferior class of employed or unemployed workmen are most ably shewn in action."
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Novelists from EnglandUnitariansShort story writers from EnglandPeople from LondonBiographers from England
Original Language: English
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Maria Edgeworth to Mary Holland after reading Mary Barton (27 December 1848), quoted in Ross D. Waller, 'Letters Addressed to Mrs. Gaskell by Celebrated Contemporaries', Bulletin of the John Rylands Library Manchester, Vol. 19, No. 1 (January 1935), p. 108
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Gaskell
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Elizabeth Gaskell
Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell (September 29 1810 – November 12 1865) was a British fiction-writer and biographer who witnessed and recorded the transformation of northern England by the Industrial Revolution. She was born Elizabeth Cleghorn Stevenson; her married name is often given in the form Mrs. Gaskell.
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