▲ | moomin 15 hours ago | |
Smithfield features quite heavily in “Great Expectations”. Dickens hated the place. He subscribed to a theory that a city needed good circulation, which meant that things that obstructed traffic were considered bad, and Smithfield was hugely stationary and snarked up everything around it. Of course, he had no concept of the circulation of money as being interesting and important to the “health” of a city, but most economists since Marx do. |