• 3.02: The titled swindlers bait their trap! — Also, a super-saucy supper-club song about a "dildoe," plus some early-Victorian "dad jokes"! (A Twopenny Terrible Demi-Hour episode)
    2025/08/19

    A "spicy" (-ish) Tuesday Twopenny Terrible minisode IN WHICH —

    0:08:45: MYSTERIES OF LONDON, Ch. 6, IN WHICH —:

    • Richard Markham meets Diana Arlington and is utterly smitten. Then a short, stout, vulgar-looking man enters the room. This is Augustus Talbot, and he is truly crass. He keeps trying to steer the conversation round to the subject of a corn he’s afflicted with on his little toe. Chichester and Harborough are clearly worried that Talbot might spoil their chances of making a favorable impression on Richard; why would they be so concerned? It’s increasingly obvious that they’re playing a game, and he’s a mark. Is Mr. Talbot another mark? What IS their game, anyway?
    • Then a new guest arrives: Apparently another prospective mark, whom they met at the opera the previous week: Mr. Walter Sydney … an effeminate-looking well-dressed youth … whom we last saw being pitched down through the floor of a thieves’ crib into the Fleet River. But he’s different. He seems wise in a way nobody else is. Who is he? What game is he playing? We’ll see …


    0:28:25: A SALACIOUS SALOON SONG:

    • "The Dildoe! Or, The Amorous Maids," a frisky supper-club song from the 1830s, sung lustily by, um, gentlemen when there were no ladies about. This rather explicit one describes the amorous adventure of Giles, the country lad, upon learning his three maidenly neighbors were starved for male carnal attention.


    Join host Finn J.D. John. for a half-hour-long spree through the scandal-sheets and story papers of old London! Grab a decanter and top off your glass, unload your stumps, and let's go!

    GLOSSARY OF FLASH TERMS USED IN THIS EPISODE:

    • Beau traps: Well-dressed fortune hunters or swindlers (we more than a little suspect Hon. Arthur Chichester and Sir Rupert Harbrough to be such!)
    • Fly angelics: Knowing or wise young women.
    • Fly to the fakement: Aware of the tricks.
    • Mace-man: Swindler.
    • Cutish: Clever.
    • Knight of the brush and moon: Drunken fellow wandering amok in fields and ditches trying to stagger home.
    • Chaffing: Talking and bantering while taking a glass or two.
    • Crib: House, room, or chamber (modern equivalent is "joint"). Originally and still also used to refer to a prostitute's bedroom.
    • Pippin: A funny fellow (of either sex); also a friendly way of greeting: How are you, my pippins?
    • Bolt the moon: Fly by night
    • Beaks: Magistrates, law enforcement authorities
    • The tippy: The very best
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    35 分
  • 3.01: Rose SHANKS her would-be murderer! — The ghost of the 'hanging judge.' — Astrology is just for fun ... or is it?
    2025/08/18

    Episode One of Season Three! — A Sunday-evening full episode IN WHICH —

    0:04:10: TERRIFIC REGISTER ARTICLE:

    • We hear of a spooky coincidence (or is it?): John Dryden, the poet and playwright who became England's first Poet Laureate in 1668, was an astrology buff, and pulled the charts for his newborn son Charles. They were not good news ... but that astrology stuff is just for fun, right? —right?


    0:09:10: ROSE MORTIMER; or, THE BALLET-GIRL'S REVENGE:

    • SUMMARY OF OUR STORY SO FAR: A Cliff's Notes version to bring new listeners up to speed on the events of Chapter 1-5.
    • CHAPTER 6 (starts at 18:50): Rose isn’t out of the woods yet. She’s in this strange house, with this ruffian and his haggish mother, and she can’t help wondering if she’s jumped out of one frying pan and into another. The hag orders her to go upstairs and get some rest. She’d love to … but something tells her these two are not to be trusted, and her host keeps staring covetously at the costume-jewelry bracelet she’s wearing. Is she in danger? (Spoiler: Yes.) How will she escape from their clutches? (Spoiler: By — just kidding! Tune in and you'll soon find out!)


    0:34:50: A GHOSTLY SHORT STORY, to wit —

    • AN ACCOUNT OF SOME STRANGE DISTURBANCES IN AUNGIER STREET, by J. Sheridan Le Fanu, from 1851. This is Part 1 of 3 parts (Part 2 will come next Sunday).


    PLUS —

    • We learn a new Flash song (starting around 0:31:30): "Moll Spriggins," full of fun highway-robber slang (see below). — And ...
    • We read a satirical letter proposing a New System of Poetry in Punch, the comedy magazine of the 1840s (starting around 0:57:20). — And ...
    • We learn a few more Victorian "dad jokes" from good old Joe Miller!


    Join host Finn J.D. John. for a one-hour-long spree through the scandal-sheets and story papers of old London! Grab a flicker of blue ruin, unload your stumps, and let's go!


    FLASH TERMS USED IN THIS EPISODE:

    From intro and outro patter:

    • GNOSTIC: Knowing one
    • OUT-AND-OUTER: Excellent young person of high spirits
    • FLYERS: Shoes
    • DEW-BEATERS: Feet
    • LUGS: Ears
    • BEAKS: Magistrates and judges
    • TOWN TABBY: Dowager lady of quality
    • PIKE OFF: Flee to avoid being caught
    • RED WAISTCOAT: Uniform of the Bow-street Runners, London's first police force
    • KNIGHT OF THE BRUSH AND MOON: Drunken fellow wandering amok in fields and ditches trying to stagger home

    From comedy article in Punch Magazine:

    • SNOB: A shoemaker's helper, also known as a Knight of the Awl
    • QUARTERN: A quarter pint, usually of gin


    From Flash poem, "Moll Spriggins":

    "To the hundreds of Drury I write": Drury-lane was notorious for prostitutes in the early 1800s

    "To those who are down in the whit": Whit means prison

    "Rattling their darbies with pleasure": Darbies are handcuffs or manacles.

    "Who laugh at the rum culls they've bit": Culls are prostitutes' customers.

    "And now they are snacking the treasure": Snacking means divvying up.

    "The harman is at the Old Bailey": A harman is a constable or beadle.

    "For if that they twig ye, they'll nail ye": To twig mean to notice or get wise to.

    "She tipt such a jorum of diddle": Diddle was gin.

    "Garnish is the prisoner's delight": Garnish was a "fee" charged to new prisoners. This means they made Moll share her gin.

    "Her fortune at diving did fail": Diving was pickpocketing.

    "The nubbing cull pops from the pit": Nubbing means hanging (nub meant neck).

    "O then to the tree I must go": The gallows, as in "Tyburn tree." Not a literal tree.

    "And then comes the gownsmen you know": Gownsmen were clergymen or priests.

    "The ladder shoves off — then we morris": To morris off meant to depart; it's a reference to being hanged, though, and the "morris dance" done after the drop.


    EPISODE ART is the cover art from the original 1867 publication of Rose Mortimer; or, The Ballet-girl's Revenge. It has, of course, been cleaned up and colored.

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    1 時間 7 分
  • 2.17: The sailor's revenge! — The grim story of the Haddington Murders. — History of punishment by hand amputation.
    2025/08/15

    TRIGGER WARNING: This is a Ha'penny Horrid 'Hursday episode. "Horrid" as in "horror." Thursday is the day we do all the grimdark, grisly, horrifying stories. If murders, war crimes, parricides, and other awful stuff are not something you are interested in hearing about, even 200 years later — feel free to skip this episode and circle back this coming Sunday for the regular Penny Dreadful Variety Hour, when this podcast will be back to being a bright, sunny romp through Penny Dreadful stories!


    A half-hour- long 'Hursday Horrid Minisode IN WHICH —

    0:03:45: TERRIBLE TIDBIT OF THE DAY for August 7:

    • A melancholy account of a young girl who, convinced she would be happier in Heaven, murdered her baby niece, on Aug. 14, 1850.


    0:05:10: THE TERRIFIC REGISTER:

    • Story of a sailor who drew a knife and dove overboard to retrieve the legs of his dead mess-mate, which the shark had bitten off, and avenge his death.
    • A summary of all the times, in medieval England, that a convict was sentenced to have a hand cut off.
    • A slightly-less-horrid account of a child, thought to be dead, who revived on the mortuary slab.


    0:17:40: THE CRIME, CONFESSION AND EXECUTION OF ROBERT EMOND, THE HADDINGTON MURDERER (a broadsheet ballad).

    • Jealous and angry in the wake of a business setback, Robert Emond murdered his sister-in-law, then bludgeoned her daughter to death to keep her quiet. He was hanged for the crimes on March 17, 1830.


    Join host Finn J.D. John. for a half-hour-long spree through the darkest and loathliest stories seen on the streets of early-Victorian London! Grab a flicker of blue ruin, switch off your mirror neurons, and let's go!

    GLOSSARY OF FLASH TERMS USED IN THIS EPISODE:

    • Hop merchant: Dancing-teacher.
    • Rum buffer: Jolly host.
    • Tears o' the tankard: Strong ale.
    • Scandal-broth: Tea.
    • Cat lap: Tea.
    • Scragging: Hanging.
    • Kiddies and kiddiesses: Flash lads and lasses
    • Sherry off: To leave, in a tolerable hurry. A corruption of "sheer off."
    • Flats: Suckers.
    • Chaffing: Talking and bantering while taking a glass or two.
    • Knight of the brush and moon: Drunken fellow wandering amok in fields and ditches trying to stagger home.
    続きを読む 一部表示
    29 分
  • 2.16: Sweeney Todd murders his way out of a tight spot. — A pair of salacious cock-and-hen-club songs! (A Twopenny Terrible Demi-Hour episode)
    2025/08/13

    A "spicy" (-ish) Tuesday Twopenny Terrible Minisode IN WHICH —

    0:02:00: SWEENEY TODD, Ch. 55:

    • In which: The usurer, John Mundel, begins to realize that Sweeney Todd, the humble barber he has hired to prepare him for his visit to court, is the same man who pretended to be a duke and took him for £8000 with the string of pearls! What will he do? How will Todd get out of this one? We’ll find out today (but there's a pretty strong hint in the title to this episode!)


    0:17:00: TWO SALACIOUS SALOON SONGS:

    • "The Squire's Thingumbob and Kitty's Whatchamacallit," a frisky supper-club song from the 1830s, sung lustily by gentlemen when there were no ladies about. This rather explicit one describes the amorous adventure of one Squire Ticklecock with a friendly damsel named Kitty.
    • "Rum Old Mog," a festive song about a spunky hard-punching doxy and her flash fancy-man. Loaded with flash terms (see below).


    Join host Finn J.D. John. for a half-hour-long spree through the scandal-sheets and story papers of old London! Grab a decanter and top off your glass, unload your stumps, and let's go!

    GLOSSARY OF FLASH TERMS USED IN THIS EPISODE:

    • Hellcats: Women who hang out in gambling hells.
    • Lively kiddies: Funny fellows
    • Knight of the brush and moon: Drunken fellow wandering amok in fields and ditches trying to stagger home.
    • Chaffing: Talking and bantering while taking a glass or two.
    • Crib: House, room, or chamber (modern equivalent is "joint"). Originally and still also used to refer to a prostitute's bedroom.
    • Cunny: 1840s slang for a lady's vulva. The modern slang equivalent is "pussy."
    • Pippin: A funny fellow; also a friendly way of greeting: How are you, my pippins?
    • Bolt the moon: Fly by night
    • Beaks: Magistrates, law enforcement authorities
    • The tippy: The very best


    In addition, here are the flash definitions from "Rum Old Mog":

    • Rum old Mog was a leary flash mot (wide-awake, on-the-ball underworld girl)
    • And she was plump and fat (meaning pleasantly plump and buxom, not obese),
    • With twangs in her shoes, a wheelbarrow too,
    • And an oil-skin round her hat.
    • A blue bird’s eye (bandanna pattern) decked her dairies (boobs) fine
    • As she mizzled (hurried off) through Temple Bar
    • Of which side of the way I cannot say,
    • But she boned (stole) it from a tar (sailor).


    • Moll’s flash man was a Chick-lane cove (Chick-lane was a street in the Smithfield neighborhood notorious for criminal activities)
    • And he gartered a-low his knee,
    • He was three times lagged (transported to Australia) and very near scragged (hanged)
    • But he 'scaped it by going to sea;
    • With his click (punch) in his fib (fist) and his ranting out
    • In his 'Very prime taters' cry (he's a costermonger, selling baked potatoes from a pushcart)
    • For the cove of the ken (landlord of the pub or saloon) he valied (cared) not,
    • As he’d ridge (money) within his cly (pocket).

    • On a donkey they rode to a cock and hen club (a supper club where men and women ate, drank, and sang risque songs together)
    • At the sign of the Mare and Stallion,
    • There sure was such a squad ne'er to be had
    • As Moll and her flash companions;
    • But Moll being down to (aware of) some loving stuff
    • 'Tween her flash man and Poll Sly,
    • She peeled off her togs (stripped off her clothes), and when in her buff,
    • She blacked the covess’s (woman's) eye.


    • But a milling cove (prizefighter), a friend of Poll’s,
    • Tipt Moll's fancy-man a blow,
    • Which soon knocked up a general fight,
    • O Lord what a gallows row! (A gallows row was a knock-down-drag-out fierce enough to get someone sent to the gallows.)
    • Some had eyes black'd, some noses crack'd,
    • And some had broken bones.
    • But the row being over, they lushed in clover (the fight being over, they all relaxed and drank together)
    • Then staggered to their homes.
    続きを読む 一部表示
    27 分
  • 2.15: A midnight secret wedding! — Lucas Clavering's secret wealth. — Recovery of a woman hanged for murder!
    2025/08/11

    A Sunday-evening full episode IN WHICH —

    0:05:00: TERRIFIC REGISTER ARTICLE:

    • We hear of an event in which a woman hanged for the murder of her child recovered miraculously, as if God Himself was vouching for her innocence.


    0:09:10: BLACK BESS (DICK TURPIN), Ch. 17:

    • IN WHICH: Dick withdraws into the shadows to watch the beadle, Solomon Goggs, preparing the church for what looks like it’s going to be a midnight wedding. And as we’ll see, that’s exactly what’s intended. We’ll soon find out who is marrying whom, by dark of night, one of them eager and the other extremely reluctant; but, if you’d like to learn a little more about the actual historical context of this chapter, do yourself the favor of looking up “Elizabeth Pierrepont” on Wikipedia. It’ll be 15 minutes well spent!


    0:24:50: THE BLACK BAND, Ch. 17:

    • IN WHICH: we cut to a new scene. A heavily veiled woman is meeting a usurer named Mr. Lucas to borrow money. But something is going on; she’s clearly not what she seems. Then we learn that this usurer is Lucas Clavering, Ellen Clavering’s father, who has not heard a word from Ellen in six months and, feeling betrayed by her, no longer cares if he lives or dies. Which is good, because it’s soon obvious that the woman is an agent of the Companions of Midnight, and Colonel Bertrand is this night planning his destruction …


    PLUS —

    • We learn a new Flash song (starting around 0:22:25): "Cadgers' Holiday," full of fun highway-robber slang (see below). — And ...
    • We read a satirical cover letter for the position of Literary Critic for Punch, the comedy magazine of the 1840s. — And ...
    • We learn a few more Victorian "dad jokes" from good old Joe Miller!


    Join host Finn J.D. John. for a one-hour-long spree through the scandal-sheets and story papers of old London! Grab a flicker of blue ruin, unload your stumps, and let's go!

    FLASH TERMS USED IN THIS EPISODE:

    • SCAMP FOOT: Street robber
    • OLI CAMPOLI: Rogue of the canting crew
    • TOGGERY: Clothing
    • OLD TOM: Good gin
    • PIPKIN: Head
    • FLAT: A con man's mark, a sucker
    • HAMLET: High constable
    • RUM QUOD CULL: A jailer (quod = jail or prison, cull = disparaging reference to a man)
    • CADGERS: Beggars and petty thieves
    • MAUNDER: To beg
    • PECK AND BOOZE: Food and drink
    • DOXIES: High-spirited, possibly disreputable ladies
    • PIKE OFF: Flee to avoid being caught
    • RED WAISTCOAT: Uniform of the Bow-street Runners, London's first police force
    • KNIGHT OF THE BRUSH AND MOON: Drunken fellow wandering amok in fields and ditches trying to stagger home


    EPISODE ART: A portrait of Elizabeth Chudleigh Hervey Pierrepont, the "bigamous duchess who was also a countess," as a young lady. She appears in today's chapter of Dick Turpin's story.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    59 分
  • 2.14: A bride murdered at the altar! — A fake ghost, and a real consequence. —
    2025/08/08

    TRIGGER WARNING: This is a Ha'penny Horrid 'Hursday episode. "Horrid" as in "horror." Thursday is the day we do all the grimdark, grisly, horrifying stories. If murders, war crimes, parricides, and other awful stuff are not something you are interested in hearing about, even 200 years later — feel free to skip this episode and circle back this coming Sunday for the regular Penny Dreadful Variety Hour, when this podcast will be back to being a bright, sunny romp through Penny Dreadful stories!


    A half-hour- long 'Hursday Horrid Minisode IN WHICH —

    0:02:00: TERRIBLE TIDBIT OF THE DAY for August 7:

    • A melancholy account of four small children who in 1855 fell in the River Tame, the swift current of which ill-named river swept them mercilessly away. Only three were saved.


    0:03:15: THE MARINE SPECTRE (from The Terrific Register):

    • Eager to teach his friend the folly of supernatural dread, a man faked his own death so that he could return, wrapped in a bedsheet, and play ghost. What could possibly go wrong?


    0:10:10: THE LAST MOMENTS OF JOHN A. SIMPSON, FOR MURDERING HIS SWEETHEART (a broadsheet ballad).

    • John Simpson, 21, had gotten his girlfriend, Annie Ratcliffe, pregnant; and the couple had agreed to get married. On her wedding morning, in a public house, John reached into his pocket for a straight razor, and ....


    0:16:40: HORRORS OF A GUILTY CONSCIENCE (from the Terrific Register).

    • A short account of the experience of Joseph Le Bon in both meting out and receiving what passed for justice during the French Revolution.


    Join host Finn J.D. John. for a half-hour-long spree through the darkest and loathliest stories seen on the streets of early-Victorian London! Grab a flicker of blue ruin, switch off your mirror neurons, and let's go!

    GLOSSARY OF FLASH TERMS USED IN THIS EPISODE:

    • High gloak: A well-dressed highwayman.
    • Arch doxy: High-ranking female canter, gypsy-band leader, or criminal mastermind
    • Tears of the tankard: Strong ale.
    • Scandal-broth: Tea.
    • Cat lap: Another term for tea.
    • Scragging: Hanging.
    • Kiddies and kiddiesses: Flash lads and lasses
    • Sherry off: To leave, in a tolerable hurry. A corruption of "sheer off."
    • Flats: Suckers.
    • Chaffing: Talking and bantering while taking a glass or two.
    • Knight of the brush and moon: Drunken fellow wandering amok in fields and ditches trying to stagger home.
    続きを読む 一部表示
    25 分
  • 2.13: The vampyre comes looking for a fight! Will he get one? — "The Female Pawnbroker," a spicy drinking-song. A Twopenny Terrible Tuesday half-hour episode!
    2025/08/06

    A "spicy" (-ish) Tuesday Twopenny Terrible Minisode IN WHICH —

    0:02:20: VARNEY THE VAMPYRE, Ch. 16:

    • In which: The visitor in the garden does indeed turn out to be Sir Francis Varney, the vampire! He has come to the house to see the portrait that resembles him, or so he claims. But he behaves with very provoking coolness and seems like he is trying to get up a quarrel somehow, maybe with an eye toward fighting a duel with Charles Holland, whom he has literally just met. Will he succeed? And why on Earth would he do that?


    0:29:15: A CHAUNT OF THE FEMALE PAWNBROKER:

    • A frisky supper-club song from the 1830s, sung lustily by gentlemen when there were no ladies about, in tribute to the tribe of nymphs du pave.


    PLUS —

    • A miscellany of flash-cant words and other tidbits of late-Regency and early-Victorian life!


    Join host Finn J.D. John. for a half-hour-long spree through the scandal-sheets and story papers of old London! Grab a decanter and top off your glass, unload your stumps, and let's go!

    GLOSSARY OF FLASH TERMS USED IN THIS EPISODE:

    • Angelics: Pretty young unmarried women.
    • Corinthians: Sporting men of rank and fashion.
    • Bolt the Moon: Fly by night.
    • Beaks: Magistrates, judges, etc.
    • Chaffing: Talking and bantering while taking a glass or two.
    • Knight of the brush and moon: Drunken fellow wandering amok in fields and ditches trying to stagger home.
    • Under-standing: Slang reference to a man's erection visibly distending his trousers. Modern equivalent: Pitching a tent.
    • Up the spout: Pawned.
    • Put-in: As a compound noun, a vague slang term for sex.
    • Thing: In context, a reference to a penis.
    • Pippin: A funny fellow; also a friendly way of greeting: How are you, my pippins?
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    34 分
  • 2.12: Evil Count Lerno makes his move! — The titled hustlers move in on Richard Markham. — The door-knocker pirates at play! — And sundry flash terms, spicy songs, etc.etc.
    2025/08/04

    A Sunday-evening full episode IN WHICH —

    0:04:35: TERRIFIC REGISTER ARTICLE:

    • We hear of a miraculous intervention to spare the life of a father condemned to die at the hands of his own son.


    0:06:50: ROSE MORTIMER, Ch. 5:

    • IN WHICH: We see Rose Mortimer as a rising star in the ballet. Her great triumph is as Goddess of Morning in a Christmas show, after which Count Lerno approaches her, telling her he has a message from her father and offering to take her to him. She hesitates, distrusting him; then Jack Halliday comes into view. So the count seizes her, bundles her into the carriage, and gallops away with her into the night! Is he really taking her to her father? Or has he something more sinister in mind? What will happen to her? Will she escape the Fate Worse Than Death at the hands of this cruel villain?


    0:36:40: THE KNOCKER HUNT (Parody of a fox-hunting article):

    • A humourous article from the July 4, 1841, issue of Punch Magazine, a breathless account of a pack of young upper-class "hounds" racing about London on the scent of a snazzy door knocker to steal and bear home in triumph. (Door-knocker theft was a lark for rich sports in the late Regency period.)


    0:49:15: MYSTERIES OF LONDON, Ch. 5:

    • IN WHICH: Richard Markham’s father dies of a broken heart, leaving him the estate at the tender age of 19. We follow him to London, where, in Hyde Park, he meets a wealthy, well-dressed man-about-town (or is he perhaps a man-upon-town? We have our suspicions) who introduces himself as Arthur Chichester. Richard’s new friend invites him to dine with a friend that night. But is Arthur Chichester all that he appears? He’s a little too brassy, almost as if playing a role; and he sure can hold a lot of liquor. So, how much trouble is our naïve young friend in?


    PLUS —

    • We learn a new Flash song (starting around 1:08:00) "Bill Bounce, the Swell Cove Out O' Luck." Could Bill Bounce be a close relative of Major Bounce, Mrs. Lovett's oily admirer from Sweeney Todd? — And ...
    • Learn the meaning of "nabobs," "rum droppers," "schickery," and a few other words of highway-robber slang.


    Join host Finn J.D. John. for a one-hour-long spree through the scandal-sheets and story papers of old London! Grab a flicker of blue ruin, unload your stumps, and let's go!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    1 時間 14 分