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The Seamstress; or, The White Slave of England by Reynolds, George W. M. (George William MacArthur), 1814-1879
Public domain · digitally restored by comicbooks.com
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The Seamstress; or, The White Slave of England

Reynolds, George W. M. (George William MacArthur), 1814-1879 · 1853

# The Seamstress; or, The White Slave of England

This serial novel by G.W.M. Reynolds, illustrated by Henry Andelay, introduces Virginia Mordaunt, an impoverished eighteen-year-old seamstress living in a squalid attic on Tavistock Street in London. The narrative provides extensive physical description of Virginia—her pale complexion, delicate features, modest demeanor, and air of "virginal artlessness"—emphasizing her orphaned status and uncontaminated virtue despite her exposure to harsh circumstances.

The story establishes Virginia's desperate labor: she has been entrusted with expensive materials worth nearly £40 (eighteen yards of velvet at one guinea per yard, silk lining, and white Brussels lace for trimmings) to construct a superb dress. Working from five in the morning until one the following morning—twenty hours with only brief breaks—Virginia labors with feverish intensity, pushing herself toward physical collapse. The OCR text ends as she continues near completion of her task, her health visibly deteriorating from exhaustion.

About this artifact

Creator
Reynolds, George W. M. (George William MacArthur), 1814-1879
Date
1853
Rights
Public domain — free to view, share, and reuse.
Restoration
Digitally restored and hosted by comicbooks.com.

Part of our mission to preserve and restore the public-domain heritage of the medium.