London's Great Exhibition
In 1851, Charlotte Bronte visited the Great Exhibition at London's Crystal Palace and was struck by the incredible array of human industry on display. The exhibition was a showcase of the latest innovations from around the world. Charlotte Bronte was a renowned Victorian novelist best known for her work Jane Eyre, which was published in 1847.
Yesterday I went for the second time to the Crystal Palace. We remained in it about three hours, and I must say I was more struck with it on this occasion than at my first visit. It is a wonderful place – vast, strange, new and impossible to describe. Its grandeur does not consist in one thing, but in the unique assemblage of all things. Whatever human industry has created you find there, from the great compartments filled with railway engines and boilers, with mill machinery in full work, with splendid carriages of all kinds, with harness of every description, to the glass-covered and velvet-spread stands loaded with the most gorgeous work of the goldsmith and silversmith, and the carefully guarded caskets full of real diamonds and pearls worth hundreds of thousands of pounds. It may be called a bazaar or a fair, but It seems as if only magic could have gathered this mass of wealth from all the ends of the earth – as if none but supernatural hands could have arranged it this, with such a blaze and contrast of colours and marvellous power of effect.
Charlotte Bronte on visiting London's Great Exhibition in 1851
Question 1
Describe one perspective about visiting the Great Exhibition of 1851 expressed in the excerpt.
Question 2
Identify one economic trend that made the Great Exhibition of 1851 possible.
Question 3
Explain one way in which the Great Exhibition of 1851 reflected Britain's status as the world's industrial leader.
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