Meet the people who haunt Victorian pages: vivid, ironic, often moral. Sharp, humane sketches of character. E. Cobham Brewer's Character sketches of romance, fiction and the drama (Volume IV) assembles concise portraits and brisk critical notes drawn from both novel and stage, a victorian literary anthology that pairs social observation with theatrical imagination. The tone shifts from intimate domestic scene to satirical observation, so these classic character sketches function as both a romance fiction collection and a set of dramatic character studies: brisk introductions to types of heart, habit and hypocrisy. Brevity does not mean slightness; the pieces reward careful reading and frequent rereading, exposing the social themes in fiction that preoccupied nineteenth-century minds and illuminating manners and motive within a recognisable victorian england setting. Placed within the sweep of nineteenth-century literature, this volume is useful to readers curious about period manners and to scholars tracing the era's moral and theatrical preoccupations. It sits comfortably alongside works by charles dickens contemporaries and will attract readers who value the moral attention of george eliot style, while remaining immediate and readable for general readers. As a literature students resource and a lively book club collection, it supplies compact prompts for discussion and comparative study of nineteenth-century drama, narrative form and social critique. Collectors and curators will appreciate its relevance to period studies and to private libraries; casual readers will notice Brewer's lively ear for speech and his compact, essayistic approach to character. Teachers can use the sketches as starting points for close reading exercises, or as a companion to courses on theatre and social history. The lively contrasts between comic folly and moral seriousness offer a concise reflection of the era's debates and contradictions without lapsing into antiquarianism. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure.