

One day a man was looking in a used art shop. 2015.Think a minute…You are not one person but three: The person you think you are, the person others think you are, and the person you truly are. “Victorian Google Maps.” Victorian Google Maps. Walter Thornbury, ‘London Bridge’, in Old and New London: Volume 2 (London, 1878), pp.
#The lost masterpiece trial#
Old Bailey Proceedings Online (version 7.2, 05 September 2015), July 1894, trial of WILLIAM BAVINGTON (50) (t18940723-626). “A Lost Masterpiece.” The Yellow Nineties Online. Additionally, she describes her thoughts as ‘running’, which further reinforces the theme of movement.Įgerton, George. The language she uses to describe her thoughts are also tied to movement, she is “touching a hundred vagrant things with the magic of imagination, making a running comment on the scenes we passed.” By transitioning to using the word ‘we’ instead of the word ‘I’ as she frequently does in the beginning, the narrator has moved from an outsider in London to part of the London dwellers she describes. She declares, “I was simply an interested spectator of a varied panorama.” As the keen observer, she is capturing images of several different kinds of Londoners as she herself becomes part of this inner city movement. It also represents the movement occurring within London itself, which the narrator observes as she simultaneously acknowledges her role in the scheme of things. The travel from West to East along the Thames could be a symbol for the migration of individuals from the country to the city. Physical mobility is also represented by the steamer the narrator boards at Chelsea and London Bridge. The narrator herself establishes this by stating she had come in from the countryside because she was bored with life there and missed the excitement of London and all the inspiring material it presented for her literary endeavors. The narrator in “A Lost Masterpiece,” states that she “boarded a river steamer bound for London Bridge.” There is a theme of social mobility present in London society at this time which is why so many people came in from the countryside for the opportunities London had. The movement of time as well as modern movement is important to understand Victorian texts. It has a dark history its transformation into one of the main trade centers in London makes it a perfect place to examine in the context of “A Lost Masterpiece.” London was still advancing technologically and socially before the turn of the century when this short story takes place. In Old and New London¸ writer Walter Thornbury states that London Bridge “was a battle-field and a place of religious worship, a resort of traders and a show-place for traitors’ heads.” During the Tudor reign, it was regularly used to showcase the heads of those convicted of treason. London Bridge was an especially busy place with a very rich history.
#The lost masterpiece full#
Not much else is noted about the individual who was injured and brought charges against the bargeman but modern readers can almost picture such a bustling waterway full of commerce and life but also conflict. One case I found in the Old Bailey Proceedings that occurred in the summer of 1894 documents a case in which a bargeman pulled a gun and fired at a group of boys that were noted to have been seen throwing stones at boats from the London Bridge (. There was everything from pocket picking to assaults. The bridges of London are crossroads of international commerce and markets but they are also a place for crime especially during the Victorian Era.
