Notes and Queries, Number 193, July 9, 1853 by Various

(11 User reviews)   2552
By Amanda Torres Posted on Apr 1, 2026
In Category - The Open Room
Various Various
English
Okay, hear me out. I just found this weird little time capsule from 1853. It's not a novel at all—it's an issue of an old Victorian magazine called 'Notes and Queries,' which was basically the Google of its day. People wrote in with the most random, burning questions: 'Is it true that swallowing a spider cures a fever?' 'What's the origin of the phrase "raining cats and dogs"?' 'Can anyone identify this strange family crest I found carved into my fireplace?' Then, other readers from across Britain would write back with answers, theories, and even more questions. It’s a chaotic, wonderful snapshot of what kept people up at night before the internet. The main 'mystery' isn't one story—it's the collective, charmingly earnest puzzle of a whole society trying to make sense of its own history, folklore, and weird daily life. Reading it feels like eavesdropping on a massive, sprawling conversation from 170 years ago.
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Forget everything you know about a typical book. Notes and Queries, Number 193, July 9, 1853 isn't a story with a plot. It's a single weekly issue of a Victorian periodical that acted as a public forum. Think of it as a printed, postal version of a crowdsourced knowledge base or a very slow, very polite Reddit thread.

The Story

There's no narrative arc. Instead, you open it to find a list of numbered 'Queries' sent in by readers. One person asks about the superstition of planting rosemary for remembrance. Another needs help translating a Latin epitaph on a tomb. Someone else wants to trace the history of a local custom involving 'sin-eating.' Following these, you get the 'Replies'—answers from other subscribers. These range from definitive citations from old texts to personal anecdotes ('My grandmother always said...') to pure speculation. The 'story' is the back-and-forth itself, the collective effort to pin down facts, folklore, and phrases before they were lost.

Why You Should Read It

I love this because it's history without the filter. You're not getting a historian's polished thesis on Victorian life; you're getting the raw, unfiltered curiosity of the people living it. The questions reveal what they valued (family history, local traditions, word origins) and what they feared (odd medical remedies, fading customs). It’s surprisingly intimate. You start to picture these individuals, taking the time to write a letter, buy a stamp, and send their puzzle off to London, hoping a stranger somewhere has the key. It humanizes the past in a way grand historical narratives often don't.

Final Verdict

This is a niche but delightful read. It's perfect for history buffs who want to step beyond kings and battles, for lovers of language and folklore, or for anyone with a magpie mind that enjoys odd facts and detours. Don't read it straight through—dip in and out. Let yourself get lost in a question about the correct way to play a forgotten Christmas game or a debate over a proverb's origin. It's not a page-turner; it's a curiosity cabinet in print form, and it’s absolutely fascinating.



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Patricia Jackson
8 months ago

Loved it.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (11 User reviews )

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