Abstract
Building from Raymond Williams' The Country and the City, this article examines the uses of urban smoke pollution as a symbol of the city, in particular of London. It argues that authors in early modern Britain used smoke as a metaphor for urban life, whether they found that
life to be characterised by greed and ambition or by sophistication and politeness. Because London burned a significant amount of mineral coal during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, its uniquely smoky skies allowed air pollution to symbolise the city and its people, manners and style.
The city was, as Williams argued, the indispensable counterpart to the country, and was often represented as abounding in the work that had been so carefully evacuated from writing about country life. Coal smoke helped define the city as the opposite of the country, as an unnatural space of
care and of labour.