About This Book
A compendium of London street cries traces the origins, phrasing, and transformation of vendors' calls from earlier to later periods, pairing historical notes with engraved illustrations and printed examples. It catalogs individual cries and sellers, offers anecdotes from prints and woodcuts, and examines the role of street literature, ballads, and printers in preserving popular oral culture. The work highlights stylistic variations, regional influences, and changing urban commerce, while collecting illustrative art and documentary fragments to show how public trade and the city's audible landscape evolved.
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