Museum show will seek to illustrate extent and impact of fog then and draw parallels with air pollution now

In Our Mutual Friend, Charles Dickens described a day in London under a dark, heavy fog.

“Animate London, with smarting eyes and irritated lungs, was blinking, wheezing and choking; inanimate London was a sooty spectre, divided in purpose between being visible and invisible, and so being wholly neither.” The sun “was for a few moments dimly indicated through circling eddies of fog”, wrote Dickens in what would be his last completed novel before his death in 1870.

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