2013-11-082013-11-08184100002025939635http://bibdig.biblioteca.unesp.br/handle/10/6809Volumes 10 a 14The Penny Magazine, published every Saturday, was aimed at the working class. It was part of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge's program for liberal reform. for its reader, however, it was a source of information on subjects of general interest: everyday things like tea and coffee, well-known places in England, a series on animals and birds of Britain, descriptions of prsent-day manufacturing, even an American alaman and a serial of a personal account of an immigrant's problems. Poetry was published, too, and there are several illustrations in each issue.PeriĆ³dico semanalenPeriĆ³dicos ingleses antigosThe Penny Magazine of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful KnowledgeLivro/storage/bd/cedem/livros/the-penny-magazine-of-the-society-for-the-diffusion-of-useful-knowledge/vol-x/storage/bd/cedem/livros/the-penny-magazine-of-the-society-for-the-diffusion-of-useful-knowledge/vol-xi/storage/bd/cedem/livros/the-penny-magazine-of-the-society-for-the-diffusion-of-useful-knowledge/vol-xii/storage/bd/cedem/livros/the-penny-magazine-of-the-society-for-the-diffusion-of-useful-knowledge/vol-xiii/storage/bd/cedem/livros/the-penny-magazine-of-the-society-for-the-diffusion-of-useful-knowledge/vol-xiv