ABSTRACT

This volume examines the sub-topics on the use of the metaphor of hunger to describe the condition of women as well as to a sub-topic on invisible poverty and hunger after Chartism failed. As Disraeli noted, there were still two Englands "fed by a different food."

part 1|40 pages

Seeing the poor, seeing poverty

chapter 1|2 pages

Isaac Buchanan, The Crisis of Sir Robert Peel's Mission

(Greenrock, Scotland: Published at the Advertiser office, 1850), p. 31

chapter 2|6 pages

Alexandre Auguste Ledru-Rollin, The Decline of England

2nd edition (London: E. Churton, 1850), pp. 16–17, 110, 124–125, 167–169, 223, 292, 294–296, 323, 325–327

chapter 3|4 pages

Charles Broady Mingay Syder, ‘Glorious News for a Starving Nation’

Ed. George W. M. Reynolds, Reynolds's Political Instructor, Nos. 1–27, November 1849–May 1850 (1850; Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1970), p. 148

chapter 4|4 pages

Anon., ‘Who Lead the Millions?’

The Northern Star (22 March 1851), p. 171

chapter 5|3 pages

Anon., ‘American Anticipations of English Revolutions’

The Northern Star and National Trades' Journal (12 April 1851, from New York Weekly Herald), p. 204

chapter 7|3 pages

Anon., ‘Irish Landlordism vs. Red Republicanism’

The Northern Star and National Trades' Journal (26 April 1851), p. 4

chapter 8|3 pages

Anon., ‘Meeting of Spitalfields Weavers. Free Trade’

The Northern Star (28 June 1851), p. 7

chapter 9|2 pages

C. Edwards Lester, ‘Starvation Anthem for the Royal Christening’

In The Glory and the Shame of England (New York: Bartram & Lester, 1866), vol. 1, p. 240

chapter 10|4 pages

C. Edwards Lester, The Glory and The Shame of England

(New York: Bartram & Lester, 1866) vol. 1, pp. 37–39, 151, 298–299

chapter 11|1 pages

Henry Charles Carey, Principles of Social Science

(Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1859; 1873), vol. 1, pp. 31, 470; vol. 2, p. 103

part 2|42 pages

Seeing the poor, seeing poverty

chapter 12|3 pages

Joseph Barker, ‘Letter: Idleness and Improvidence’

In The People: Their Rights and Liberties, Their Duties and Their Interests, series 1, vol. 2, 1849–1850 (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1970), pp. 323–324

chapter 13|4 pages

Samuel Couling, Our Labouring Classes: Their Intellectual, Moral, and Social Condition Considered

(London: Partridge and Oakey, 1851), pp. 63–66

chapter 15|3 pages

Anon., ‘Pauperism and Production’

The Leader and Saturday Analyst, 3 (27 March 1852), p. 298

chapter 16|5 pages

Anon., ‘Charity, Noxious and Benevolent’

Westminster Review, 59 (1853), pp. 62–88, on pp. 64–65, 70–73, 75, 77–79, 81, 88

chapter 17|5 pages

Charles Dickens, ‘Houseless and Hungry’

Household Words, 13 (1856), pp. 121–126, on pp. 122–123, 125–126

chapter 19|3 pages

Mrs. M. A. Denison, ‘The Wages of Starvation’

Reynolds's Miscellany and Art, 23 (1859), p. 278

chapter 20|3 pages

Anon., ‘Want and Woe in London’

The Leisure House: A Family Journal of Instruction and Recreation, 642 (1864), pp. 252–254, on pp. 252–253

chapter 21|3 pages

‘J. P.’, ‘The Destitute: An East London Lyric in December, 1867’

The Standard (13 December 1867), p. 3

chapter 22|4 pages

William Stanley Jevons, ‘Inaugural Address on the Work of the Society in Connection with the Questions of the Day’ (10 November 1869)

Transactions of the Manchester Statistical Society, Session 1869–70, (Manchester: J. Roberts, 1870), pp. 4, 7, 12, 13

part 3|54 pages

Seeing the Poor, Seeing Poverty

chapter 23|5 pages

Anon., ‘Dean Close and The Cotton Famine’

The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science, and Art, 14 (1862), pp. 186–187

chapter 24|4 pages

Anon., ‘What Has Lancashire Done for Lancashire?’

The Examiner, 2860 (1862), p. 738

chapter 25|5 pages

Anon., ‘The Lancashire Crisis—Men, Masters, and Cotton’

Dublin University Magazine, 30 (1862), pp. 744–762, on pp. 744–748, 752, 760–762

chapter 26|2 pages

John Hollingshead, ‘The Cotton Famine’

Good Words, 3 (1862), pp. 593–600, on pp. 593–595

chapter 27|4 pages

Anon., ‘The Distress in Lancashire, and Present Modes of Relief’

Macmillan's Magazine, 7 (1862), pp. 153–159 on pp. 153–156, 159

chapter 30|6 pages

William Torrens McCullagh Torrens, Lancashire's Lesson; or, the Need of a Settled Policy in Times of Exceptional Distress

(London: Trübner, 1864), pp. 1–10, 13–15, 28–31, 33, 36–37, 44–45, 50, 67, 84–85, 114–115, 132–133

chapter 31|5 pages

R. A. Arnold, The History of the Cotton Famine: From the Fall of Sumter to the Passing of the Public Works Act

(London: Saunders, Otley 1864), pp. 1–3, 7–8, 25–26, 44, 47–48, 63, 95, 109, 133, 160, 162, 272, 309, 350, 549–550

chapter 32|5 pages

John Watts, The Facts of the Cotton Famine

(London: Simpkin, Marshall, 1866), pp. 114–115, 117–120, 130–131, 158, 230–232

chapter 33|2 pages

Anon., ‘The Cotton Famine Fund’

The People's Messenger (August 1894), p. 7

chapter 34|2 pages

Anon., ‘Bread Supply in Time of War’

(CAB 37/60, 1902), No. 29, pp. 1, 10, 13

chapter 35|2 pages

J. Cornelius Wheeler, ‘The British Navy’

The British Empire Series, Vol. 5 (London: Kegan, Paul, Trench, Trübner, 1902), pp. 169–172

part 4|34 pages

Seeing famine

chapter 37|2 pages

Mr. Westland, Acting Deputy Commissioner, Memo (19 March 1866), Papers and Correspondence Relative to Famine in Bengal and Orissa

Hansard, HC (1866), Volume 51, No. 326, Image 305 of George Campbell et al., ‘Report of the Commissioners Appointed to Inquire into the Famine in Bengal and Orissa in 1866’, Images 213–332

part 5|28 pages

Seeing the famine

part 6|26 pages

Seeing famine

chapter 61|6 pages

MP Mr. Henry Danby Seymour, Speech, Commons sitting

Hansard, HC (2 August 1867), Volume 51, cols. 773–785

chapter 62|3 pages

MP Alexander Smollett, Speech, Commons sitting

Hansard, HC (2 August 1867), Volume 51, cols. 785–788

chapter 63|4 pages

MP Mr. Bruce, Speech, Commons sitting

Hansard, HC (2 August 1867), Volume 51, cols. 788–794

chapter 64|2 pages

MP Lord William Hay, Speech, Commons sitting

Hansard, HC (2 August 1867), Volume 51, Images, cols. 794–797

chapter 65|2 pages

MP Mr. James Fergusson, Speech, Commons sitting

Hansard, HC (2 August 1867), Volume 51, cols. 799–800

chapter 66|2 pages

MP Mr. Stansfeld, Speech, Commons sitting

Hansard, HC (2 August 1867), Volume 51, cols. 801–808

chapter 67|3 pages

MP Viscount Cranborne, Speech, Commons sitting

Hansard, HC (2 August 1867), Volume 51, cols. 808–814

chapter 68|2 pages

MP Sir Stafford H. Northcote, Speech, Commons sitting

Hansard, HC (2 August 1867), Volume 51, cols. 817–818

part 7|40 pages

Seeing famine

chapter 69|2 pages

Anon., ‘Indian Famines and Their Remedies’

The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science and Art, 11 (1851), p. 522

chapter 71|3 pages

Anon., ‘The Bombay Mail’

The Morning Post (4 September 1866), p. 6

chapter 72|3 pages

Anon., ‘The Famine in Bengal’

Illustrated London News, 49 (1866), pp. 245–246

chapter 73|3 pages

Anon., ‘The Overland Mail: India’

The Morning Post (15 October 1866), p. 6

chapter 74|4 pages

‘An Old Indian’, ‘Famine-Stricken’

The Argosy: a Magazine of Tales, Travels, Essays, and Poems, 2 (1866), pp. 469–477, on pp. 469–471, 475–477

chapter 75|6 pages

Anon., ‘ART. VIII-1. Review: Three Unpublished Tours Through Famine-Stricken Districts in India in 1866 and Other Publications’

The North British Review (1867), pp. 242–276, on pp. 248, 252, 255–256, 258–259, 269, 272–276

chapter 76|2 pages

Anon., ‘Indian and Irish Famines’

The Examiner, 3104 (1867), p. 467

chapter 77|5 pages

Anon., ‘The Famine in Orissa’

Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country, 76 (1867), pp. 373–382, on pp. 373, 375–382

chapter 78|2 pages

‘Monitor’, ‘The Truth About the Orissa Famine. To the Editor of the “Asiatic”’

In ‘A Hindu’, ‘The Grievances of India’, Dark Blue, 3 (May 1872), pp. 324–341, on p. 327

chapter 79|2 pages

Edward B. Eastwick, ‘Lord Lawrence’

The Gentleman's Magazine, 254 (1883), pp. 513–529, on pp. 527–528

chapter 80|4 pages

A. Elley Finch, ‘The Famine in India: A Malthusian Object Lesson’

In Malthusiana: Illustrations of Nature's Law of the Increase of Human Life, Discovered and Verified by Malthus (London: G. Standring, 1904), pp. 68–72