Notes and Queries, Number 177, March 19, 1853 by Various
Forget everything you know about a typical book. Notes and Queries isn't a story with a beginning, middle, and end. It's a snapshot of a conversation. Published in March 1853, it's a single issue of a weekly periodical that acted as a public forum. People from all over would send in their questions—called 'Queries'—about history, folklore, language, and literature. Other readers, experts, or enthusiasts would then respond with their 'Notes,' providing answers, theories, or even more questions.
The Story
There is no plot, but there is a wonderful sense of discovery. One page might have a query asking for the origin of the phrase "cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey." (Yes, really!). The next might feature a note correcting a date in a published history of a local church. You'll find discussions on everything from the proper identification of a rare plant in an old poem to debates about medieval superstitions. It's a chaotic, charming, and deeply human collection of everything that puzzled or interested the educated Victorian mind.
Why You Should Read It
I love this because it's history without the filter. You're not reading a historian's polished summary of the era; you're reading the raw, curious thoughts of the people living in it. The questions reveal what they didn't know and wanted to understand. The answers show how they pieced together knowledge from books, local memory, and deduction. It's incredibly grounding. It reminds you that people have always been nerdy, always sought connections, and always loved a good mystery, even if that mystery is just figuring out where a weird saying came from.
Final Verdict
This is a perfect book for history buffs who want to move beyond dates and battles, for lovers of odd trivia, and for anyone who enjoys the quiet thrill of research. It's also great for dipping in and out of—you can read just one query and note per day and have a little nugget of thought to chew on. It won't give you a sweeping narrative, but it will give you a genuine, intimate, and often surprising connection to the past. Think of it as the 1853 version of a really smart, eclectic internet forum, printed on paper.
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David Moore
1 year agoWhile browsing through various academic sources, the way it challenges the status quo is both daring and well-supported. Well worth the time invested in reading it.
Barbara Martin
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Christopher White
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Susan Jones
2 months agoGreat value and very well written.