Mysteries of London Vol. III

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George W. M. Reynolds 1847
English
  • The Travelling Carriage
  • Tom Rain and Old Death
  • Bow Street
  • Esther de Medina
  • The Appeal of Love
  • Dr. Lascelles
  • The Beautiful Patient
  • Seven Dials
  • A Death Scene -- Lock's Field
  • A Scene at the House of Sir Christopher Blunt
  • The Two Thousand Pounds -- Torrens Cottage
  • Adelais and Rosamond
  • The Elopement
  • Lady Hatfield and Dr. Lascelles -- Esther de Medina
  • The Opiate
  • The Lover and the Uncle
  • The Mysterious Letter -- Jacob
  • The Lovers
  • Mr. Frank Curtis's Pleasant Adventure
  • Happiness -- The Diamond Merchant
  • The Oath
  • The Alarm -- The Letter
  • Old Death
  • Castle Street, Long Acre
  • Matilda, the Country-Girl
  • The Lady's-Maid
  • London on a Rainy Evening -- A Scene in a Post-Chaise
  • Tom Rain's Lodgings in Lock's Field
  • The Mysteries of Old Death's Establishment
  • The Store Rooms
  • Another Deed of Infamy Brought to Light
  • Rainford in the Subterranean
  • Mrs. Martha Slingsby
  • The Pious Lady
  • Mr. Sheepshanks
  • The Baronet and his Mistress
  • Tom Rain and Jacob
  • The History of Jacob Smith Part 1
  • The History of Jacob Smith Part 2
  • Continuation of the History of Jacob Smith
  • Conclusion of the History of Jacob Smith
  • Fresh Alarms
  • The Paragraph in the Newspaper
  • Lord Ellingham and Tom Rainford
  • Mr. Frank Curtis Again
  • Mr. Dykes and his Myrmidons
  • Explanations
  • Farther Explanations
  • Lord Ellingham and Tom Rain
  • A Painful Interview
  • The Lawyer's Office
  • Lord Ellingham in the Dungeon
  • Lord Ellingham's Exertions
  • The Execution
  • Galvanism
  • The Laboratory -- Esther de Medina
  • A History of the Past Part 1
  • A History of the Past Part 2
  • A Father
  • The Resuscitated
  • The Jew's Family
  • Sir Christopher Blunt's Domestic Hearth
  • Captain O'Blunderbuss
  • Frank's Embarrassments
  • The Meeting in Battersea Fields
  • Old Death and his Friend Tidmarsh
  • The Examination
  • Mrs. Slingsby and the Baronet Again
  • The Marriage -- Rosamond
  • Dr. Wagtail -- Rosamond Torrens
  • Misery and Vice
  • Tim the Snammer
  • The History of Tim the Snammer Part 1
  • The History of Tim the Snammer Part 2
  • The History of Tim the Snammer Part 3
  • Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
  • Captain O'Blunderbuss Again
  • Three Months After Marriage
  • The Knight and the Captain
  • Tim the Snammer and Josh Pedler out on Business
  • The Father and Daughter
  • Retribution
  • The Earl of Ellingham and Lady Hatfield Again
  • Mrs. Slingsby and Mr. Torrens
  • Rosamond at Home
  • The Forged Cheque
  • The Reward of Crime
  • Old Death's Party
  • The History of a Livery Servant Part 1
  • The History of a Livery Servant Part 2
  • Conclusion of the History of a Livery Servant Part 1
  • Conclusion of the History of a Livery Servant Part 2
  • The Blackamoor
  • Scenes at the Blackamoor's House
  • The Surprise -- Jeffreys and Old Death
  • The New Justice of the Peace
  • Captain O'Blunderbuss Again -- Another Strange Visitor
  • The Confession
  • Newgate
  • 'The Stout House'
  • Clarence Villiers and his Aunt
  • Sir Christopher Blunt a Hero
  • Carlton House
  • An Acquittal and a Sentence
  • The Condition of the Working Classes
  • The Earl of Ellingham and Esther de Medina
  • The Blackamoor's Strange Adventure
  • A State of Siege
  • The Surprise -- A Change of Scene
  • The Visit -- Habeas Corpus
  • The King's Bench Prison
  • A Farther Insight into the King's Bench Prison
  • A Tale of Sorrow Part 1
  • A Tale of Sorrow Part 2
  • Conclusion of the Tale of Sorrow
  • The Prisoners
The Mysteries of London was a best-selling novel in mid-Victorian England, published in four volumes. This is the third volume. Initially serialized in weekly installments, they were the forerunners of today's soap operas. Known as "Penny Dreadfuls", they had no claim to literary brilliance but offered readers entertainment and excitement in the form of vice, poverty, wealth, virtue, mystery, romance and scandal in every combination and reached a mass audience. - Summary by Lynne Thompson

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