Difference between revisions 121782363 and 121782364 on dewiki

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[[Image:GrubStreet-London 300dpi.jpg|250px|thumb|alt=People congregate at the entrance to a narrow street, overlooked by two four-storey buildings.  Each floor of the right-most building projects further over the street than the floor below.  At the corner of each building, shops advertise their wares.  A cart is visible down the street, and one man appears to be carrying a large leg of meat.|19th-century ''Grub Street'' (latterly Milton Street), as pictured in ''(contracted; show full)

==Legacy==
As Grub Street became a metaphor for the commercial production of printed matter, it gradually found use in early 18th-century [[United States|America]].  Early publications such as handwritten ditties and squibs were circulated among the [[gentry]] and taverns and coffee-houses.  As in England, many were directed at politicians of the day.<ref>{{Harvnb|Bonomi|2000|p=120}}</ref>

==See also==

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* [[List of eighteenth-century British periodicals]]
* ''[[New Grub Street]]'' — a novel by [[George Gissing]], set in late-19th-century London—which contrasts a pragmatic journalist with an impoverished writer and examines the tension between commerce and art in the literary world.
* [[The Grub Street Opera]]
* [[Ernest Bramah]] — a Grub Street author.
* [[Tobias Smollett]]
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==References==
;Notes
{{reflist|colwidth=25em}}

;Bibliography
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{{Coord|51|31|13|N|0|05|27|W|type:landmark_region:GB|display=title}}

[[Category:History of literature]]
[[Category:Phrases]]
[[Category:Streets in the City of London]]

[[ml:ഗ്രബ് സ്ട്രീറ്റ്]]