1 The Victorian Age The Reform Bill(改革法案)of 1832 gave the middle class the political power it needed to consolidate—and to hold—the economic position it had already achieved
Industry and commerce burgeoned
While the affluence of the middle class increased, the lower classes, throwing off their land and going into the cities to form the great urban working class, lived ever more wretchedly
The social changes were so swift and brutal that Godwinian utopianism rapidly gave way to attempts either to justify the new economic and urban conditions, or to change them
The intellectuals and artists of the age had to deal in some way with the upheavals in society, the obvious inequities of abundance for a few and squalor for many, and, emanating from the throne of Queen Victoria (1837–1901), an e