Authors: Neil McKenna
306 ‘the most sensational’ –
Daily Telegraph
, 10 May 1871.
306 ‘roars of laughter’ –
ibid
.
307 ‘Do you think’ –
ibid
.
308 ‘acquitted’ – Solomon to Swinburne, 15 May 1871, in LeBourgeois, ‘Swinburne and Simeon Solomon’.
28 A Rout
309 ‘The conception’
– The Times
, 25 July 1871.
311 ‘What is that book’ – Trial testimony of Dr James Paul.
313 ‘Just attend to me’ –
ibid
.
314 ‘any Magistrate’s order’ –
ibid
.
315 ‘You should be more careful’ –
ibid
.
315 ‘getting up evidence’ – Deposition of George Smith.
316 ‘pay him’ – Trial testimony of George Smith.
316 ‘a situation’ –
The Times
, 14 May 1870.
316 ‘I have watched them’ –
Daily Telegraph
, 30 April 1870.
317 ‘the unemployed’ – Letter Book of the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, MEPO 1/48, The National Archives.
317 ‘Maladministration’ –
ibid
.
317 ‘Mr Bradlaugh’ –
ibid
.
317 ‘young Mr Boulton’ – Opening address of Mr Digby Seymour, Trial.
319 ‘679 – Dec 1870’ – Treasury Solicitor’s Account Books, TS 40 14, The National Archives.
319 ‘492 – Dec 1870’ –
ibid
.
320 ‘rewards’ – Opening speech of Mr Digby Seymour, Trial.
29 ‘This Terrible Drama of Vice’
321 ‘She watches’ – Fanny Fales (Mrs Frances Elizabeth Swift),
Voices of the Heart
(Boston, 1853).
322 ‘own beloved Child’ – Mary Ann Boulton to Ernest Boulton, Letters.
322 ‘wanted strength’ –
ibid
.
322 ‘Are you the mother’ – Trial testimony of Mary Ann Boulton.
322 ‘Exactly so’ –
ibid
.
324 ‘a retentive memory’ –
ibid
.
326 ‘Ernest has been’ –
ibid
.
328 ‘We know as a fact’ – Closing speech of Mr Digby Seymour, Trial.
328 ‘a friend’ – Trial testimony of Mary Ann Boulton.
330 ‘nothing indecent’ – Closing speech of Mr Digby Seymour, Trial.
330 ‘My son sent me’ – Trial testimony of Mary Ann Boulton.
331 ‘You would expect’ – Closing speech of Mr Digby Seymour, Trial.
‘Ernest Boulton’ –
ibid
.
331 ‘vile and wicked’ –
ibid
.
332 ‘Dr Paul’ –
ibid
.
332 ‘morbidly sensible’ – Opening address of Mr Digby Seymour, Trial.
332 ‘the most exquisite torture’ –
ibid
.
332 ‘Surely, Gentlemen’ – Closing speech of Mr Digby Seymour, Trial.
334 ‘capable of plunging’ –
ibid
.
335 ‘Gentlemen’ –
Lloyd’s Weekly Newspaper
, 21 May 1871.
30 Clouds and Sunshine
336 ‘Rose of the garden’ – Fricker, ‘Fading Away’.
336 ‘MR ERNEST BOULTON’ –
Reynolds’s Newspaper
, 6 August 1871, quoting from the
Era
, late July 1871.
337 ‘his Drawing-Room Entertainment’ –
Liverpool Mercury
, 14 November/21 November 1871.
337 ‘Mr Boulton displayed’ –
Liverpool Mercury
, 9 September 1873.
338 ‘PORTLAND HALL’ –
Hampshire Telegraph and Sussex Chronicle
, 29 May 1872.
338 ‘The beauty’ –
Hampshire Telegraph and Sussex Chronicle
, 5 June 1872.
339 ‘This so-called’ –
Hampshire Advertiser
, 15 June 1872.
339 ‘notoriety’ –
Birmingham Daily Post
, 17 June 1872.
339 ‘Beams of the morning’ – Fricker, ‘Fading Away’.
340 ‘the impudence’ –
Pall Mall Gazette
, 18 October 1873.
341 ‘comedian’ –
New York Clipper
, 9 April 1881.
341 ‘Ernest Byne’ –
New York Clipper
,
11 April 1874.
341 ‘Two gentlemen’ –
ibid
.
342 ‘ERNEST BYNE, pronounced’ –
New York Clipper
, 25 April 1874.
342 ‘Your airs’ – quoted in Laurence Senelick,
The Changing Room: Sex, Drag and Theatre
(London, 2000).
343 ‘Lord Arthur Clinton’ –
Reynolds’s Newspaper
, 20 October 1872.
343 ‘at the Installation’ –
Morning Post
, 30 January 1878.
343 ‘My Lord Arthur Clinton’ –
Clarence and Richmond Examiner and New South Wales Advertiser
, 25 February 1879.
344 ‘Elegant Parisian Clothes’ –
Era
, 24 June 1877.
344 ‘Songs, Eccentricities’ –
Era
, 10 March 1878.
344 ‘a most marvellous’ –
Era
, 24 June 1877.
344 ‘The Bynes are’ –
Era
, 22 July 1877.
344 ‘AN INDIGNANT NONCONFORMIST’ –
Western Mail
, 14 April 1879.
344 ‘actor’ – Census of 1881.
344 ‘Spring’s fairest blossoms’ – Fricker, ‘Fading Away’.
346 ‘How
dare
you’ –
Evening Standard
, 2 May 1870.
346 ‘
N’importe
’ – Frederick Park to Lord Arthur Clinton, 21 November 1868, Letters.
346 ‘I give, devise’ – Last Will and Testament of Frederick William Park, 17 July 1878.
347 ‘Song of the wild-bird’ – Fricker, ‘Fading Away’.
347 ‘Society absurdity’ –
Era
, 22 December 1891.
348 ‘The performer’ –
Era
, 13 June 1891.
348 ‘The Brothers Blair’ –
Belfast News-Letter
, 13 June 1896.
350 ‘Hope’s fairy promise’ – Fricker, ‘Fading Away’.
350 ‘But there’s a land’ –
ibid
.
Epilogue
354 ‘a professional Mary-Ann’ – Statements of Jack Saul to Inspector Abberline.
354 ‘Lord Euston’ –
ibid
.
354 ‘uttering a fictitious cheque’ –
Hampshire Telegraph and Sussex Chronicle
, 25 January 1873.
354 ‘congestion’ – Death certificate of Amos Westropp Gibbings, 29 March 1890.
355 ‘I invented’ – Oscar Wilde to the Editor of the
Pall Mall Gazette
, 1 October 1894, in Merlin Holland and Rupert Hart-Davis,
The Complete Letters of Oscar Wilde
(London, 2000).
357 ‘For I’ve got a Peep-Show’ – C. J. Pavitt, ‘I’ve Got a Peep-Show’ (
c
.1875).
357 ‘allowed any cloud ’ – Trial testimony of Mary Ann Boulton.
358 ‘large and beautiful garden’ – unsigned autobiographical essay by John Safford Fiske,
History of the Class of 1863 Yale College
(New Haven, Connecticut, 1905), in Jonathan Ned Katz,
Love Stories: Sex Between Men Before Homosexuality
(Chicago, 2001).
358 ‘passed through his hands’ –
Wirksworth Parish Magazine
, October 1936, in Derek Wain,
The Hurts of Derbyshire
(Ashbourne, Derbyshire, 2002).
359 ‘my uncle’ – Will of the Most Noble Henry Pelham Archibald Douglas Duke of Newcastle, 1927.
359 ‘His charming manner’ –
Hampshire Chronicle
, 19 February 1940.
Index