
Transcribed from the [1897] Roxburghe Press edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
A spirited guide to the world that sprang from Dickens’s beloved Pickwick Club, this work blends lively humor with meticulous observation. The author’s keen eye captures the bustling streets, quirky inns, and colourful characters that populated the novel, turning each reference into a doorway to the past. Readers will enjoy the witty commentary that treats the original story as a living museum, inviting both longtime fans and newcomers to wander through its pages with a smile.
Beyond the laughs, the book serves as a vivid snapshot of a vanished England. It details everything from the disappearance of debtor prisons and bustling taverns to the fading of horse‑drawn hackney coaches and the rise of new technologies. By juxtaposing the old customs with modern changes, it offers a clear picture of how society transformed over the nineteenth century, making it an engaging companion for anyone curious about the manners, travel, and everyday life that once defined the era.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (113K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2007-06-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1834–1925
A lively Victorian man of letters, he moved easily between fiction, biography, criticism, and the arts. His long career also stretched beyond books, taking in law, journalism, painting, and sculpture.
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