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Acknowledgments
Introduction
Elizabeth Gaskell: A Brief Chronology
A Note on the Text
Mary Barton
Appendix A: The Composition of the Novel
1. Excerpts from Gaskell's Letters
2. Parable of Dives and Lazarus
Appendix B: Contemporary Reviews of the Novel
1. Athenaeum (21 October 1848)
2. Examiner (4 November 1848)
3. Christian Examiner (March 1849)
4. Edinburgh Review (April 1849)
5. Fraser's Magazine (April 1849)
Appendix C: Social Commentary about Industrialization
1. Carlyle, Chartism
2. Leon Faucher, Manchester in 1844
3. Ralph Barnes Grindrod, The Slaves of the Needle
4. Engels, The Condition of the Working Class in England
5. Kingsley, Appeal to the Chartists
6. Norton, Letters to the Mob
Appendix D: Related Fiction and Poetry
1. Brontë, Shirley
2. Dickens, Hard Times
3. Eliot, Felix Holt
Appendix E: Chartism and Free Trade
Select Bibliography
--MANCHESTER SONG.
Overview
About the AuthorGaskell was born Elizabeth Cleghorn Stevenson on September 29, 1810. Her family lived in Chelsea (now Cheyne Walk.) After her mother died when Gaskell was still a toddler, her father, William, took her to North England to stay with an aunt. He remarried, and didn’t see her again until she was twelve years old, causing her to feel abandoned. At twenty, she married William Gaskell, a Unitarian minister like her father, and moved to 1 Dover Street, Manchester. She had four daughters, and worked as a pastor’s wife among the young girls who labored long hours in the city’s cotton mills. A frequent traveler, the nature of her foreign ...