Read The Covent Garden Ladies Online
Authors: Hallie Rubenhold
Tags: #History, #Social History, #Social Science, #Pornography
Mitchell, ‘Mother’ Elizabeth 216, 251
Mordaunt, Henry 292
Mossop, Henry 32
Murphy, Arthur 87
Murray, Fanny 49, 50, 64–5, 66, 88, 92, 166, 288
Nash, Richard ‘Beau’ 49, 227, 228
Needham, ‘Mother’ 126
Newgate prison 183, 186, 187, 283
Nocturnal Revels
22, 47, 88, 90, 91, 96, 99, 108, 195, 197, 210–211, 217–18, 219, 221, 251, 253–4
Oeconomy of Love
(John Armstrong) 220–1, 253
O’Kelly, Andrew Dennis 248, 251, 258–9, 268, 271, 275, 276
O’Kelly, ‘Mrs’ Charlotte (see Hayes, Charlotte)
O’Kelly Dennis 166, 167, 241, 250, 268
early years 190–91
physical description 190
rumours of marriage 191
in the Fleet 192–96
gambling 215, 190–2, 258
and Eclipse 243, 244, 245
Miss Swinbourne incident 245–6, 167
hospitality of 255–56
later years 272, 274
death and will 274–5
O’Kelly, Elizabeth 248, 271
O’Kelly Mary Charlotte 247, 248–50, 268, 271–2
O’Kelly Philip 244, 166, 272, 275, 276
‘Old’ Twigg 54
Oldys, Dr. William 84–5
Owen, Susannah 89
Pendergast, Sarah 251, 252
pimps/pimping
charges
‘Poundage’ 65
‘Tire money’ 65–6
‘Chair money’ 67
‘arranging a flier’ 68
‘humming fund’ 67
‘Whore’s club’ revenue 66
definition of 26
pimp’s lists (handwritten) 62–3, 64–5
Pitt, William 270
Place, Francis 46, 124, 281
posture molls 201–2
Powell, Harriet 209, 287
Pratt, Robert 88
Price, Chace 212, 221
Prostitution/Prostitutes 284–98
virginity 46–7
‘in keeping’ 47–8
professional names 48–9
and married women 59
Irish 60
training of 60, 208–9
‘the Whore’s Club’ 66, 69–70
brutalities and dangers of 95–6, 287, 288–91
arguments in favour of 120
social make-up 121–4, 287
routes into the profession 125–27, 210–11, 285
pregnancy 241–2
marriage to keepers 287
alcoholism 289–90
perceptions of 291, 294–8
relationships with other women 293–4
living arrangements 292–4
Queensborough, Duke of (‘Old Q’) 222
Quin, James 231, 232
Ranger, H. 114, 119, 122, 204, 280, 281, 282
rape 126–7, 292
Register Offices 58, 126, 210, 211
The Remonstrance of Harris
55, 60, 69, 183–6
Reynolds, Joshua 279
Rich, John 104
Richardson, Samuel 125
Roach, James 280–3
Roach, John 280–3
Roach, Margaret 281
Roach, Mrs 281
Roach, ‘Tiger’ 281
Rose Tavern 12–13, 95, 167, 201–4, 206
Ross, David 166
Rowlandson, Thomas 270
S—t—n, Miss ‘The beauty of Arlington Street’ 168
St James’s, Piccadilly 170, 199
St Leger, Lord Hayes 78
Sandwich, 4th earl of 217
Savage, Richard 75
Seaforth, 4th earl of 209, 287
Selwyn, George 211, 212, 220
Shakespear’s Head Tavern 12, 38, 39, 52–4, 70, 71, 80–1, 92, 95, 112, 181–82, 199, 200, 202, 203, 206
Shannon, 1st earl of 224, 226
Shelly, Miss 221
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley 203, 263, 264
Shuter, Ned 14, 52, 84, 131, 293
Smart, Christopher 84
Smith, Ann 45
Smollett, Tobias 69, 78, 79, 84, 93, 108–9
Soho 198
Southwell, Lord Thomas 224
Spencer, ‘The Honourable’ Charlotte 61–2, 165, 252
Spencer, Robert 61–2
Spilsbury, James 251
Star Tavern 68
Storace, Ann 276
Stott, Mrs Jane (see Lessingham, Jane)
Stott, Captain John 105
Strode, Edward 88
Strode, Lucy 88
Swift, Jonathan 28
Taylor, Dr. John 79, 102, 103, 104, 233
Thompson, Edward 50, 51
Temple, Fanny (see Hartford, Fanny)
Tighe, Elizabeth (
née
O’Kelly) 248
Timbs, John 24
Tomkins, Packington 53–4, 57, 63–4, 71, 111, 181, 182, 184–5, 200, 201, 202–3, 206,
Town and Country Magazine
93, 100, 231, 242
Tracy, Judge Robert 86
Tracy, Robert ‘Beau’ 86–91, 92–101, 189, 196, 231, 265
Uxbridge, 1st earl of 217
Vaughan, Thomas 124
Von la Roche, Sophie 121
Wales, George Prince of 217, 255
Walpole, Sir Robert 19
Ward, Charlotte (see Hayes, Charlotte)
Ward, Elizabeth 42–5, 46–7, 48, 89, 91, 100, 189, 196, 212
Ward, Ned 111
Warren, Emily 214, 209, 285
Watson, Thomas 201, 203
Weatherby, ‘Mother’ Elizabeth 49, 214
Welch, Justice Saunders 53, 121, 122, 123, 126, 178, 179, 180
Weyms, Betsy 292
Wildman, William 243
Wilkes, Thomas 225
Wilson, Tom 78, 233, 234
Windsor, ‘Mother’ Catherine 251
Woffington, Peg 35, 52, 84, 201
Wood, J.L. 281
Woodcock, Sarah 126
Wright, Justice 181, 182, 183
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Hallie Rubenhold
is a historian and expert in women’s lives in the eighteenth century. She is the author of the novel
Mistress of My Fate
, the first in the series of Confessions of Henrietta Lightfoot, a courageous Georgian courtesan. Also available is Hallie Rubenhold’s edited version of the original
Harris’s List
.
Find out more about the author and her works at
www.hallierubenhold.com
, and about the series of novels, Confessions of Henrietta Lightfoot, at
www.henriettalightfoot.co.uk
.
Read on for an extract from
Mistress of My Fate
by Hallie Rubenhold
5th March 1835
MY DEAR READER, how pleased I am that you have purchased this volume! It warms my heart that you have requested it from your bookseller; that he has wrapped it carefully in brown paper and string and handed it to you. How happy I am that you have taken it home with you to read in the quiet of your sitting room or library. Now you may know the truth, and nothing gives me greater relief than this.
I have no doubt that many of you have come to this work out of curiosity. You have heard so much about me, most of which is pure fabrication. Now that you have torn off the packaging and cut the pages, you can begin to read my story and to know who I am. You see, for some time a relation of mine has been attempting to discredit me in the most reprehensible manner. I have no doubt that he too sent a servant to his local bookseller to collect a copy of this work. As you read this, so does he. His eyes are scanning every word, searching every syllable. He is among you, taking in my story alongside you.
To him I say, Lord Dennington, do not think I have written these memoirs because of you. Do not flatter yourself. You are only part of the reason. There is much I need to say on the matter of my life and I have grown weary of your slander. Whomever you have hired to do your disgraceful deeds, whether it is those shameless scribes who will print anything for a crust of bread, or that unscrupulous little spy you planted among my loyal staff, they are not capable of telling the truth. You pay them and so they will say anything. Certainly, a man who has seen as much of the world as you should know this.
Now it is my turn to pick up my pen, to clear my name, to scrub away the lies with which you have stained it. I must commend you for the amusement you have provided for me and my friends. We laughed heartily at your accusations – that I had been a circus performer, that I worked as a charlatan attempting to revive the dead and, worse still, that I murdered a ship of sailors. Really, this is quite absurd.
No, sir, as you will come to realize, these memoirs are not written solely because of you. I write because it is time for the public to hear my story, because for as long as I have been called Mrs Lightfoot, great men and women have asked for it. The world wants my confession yet, until this moment, I refused to honour that request. I wished to keep my life and my adventures quiet. Like you, my lord, discretion was one of the virtues I was taught as a child.
As for my other readers, whose sensibilities I wish to protect, I feel the need to issue a warning. In these pages I set out to tell the absolute truth. If you take offence easily, if you are faint of heart or of a delicate nature, there is much here that you are likely to find objectionable. It is necessary for you to understand why I have, in the past, refused to discuss these private matters. My story is not an easy one to relay, nor is it likely to be short.
I shall begin by telling you what I remember most vividly: an early morning in late October. I was but seventeen and so unprepared for the world that I hardly knew how to dress myself, let alone judge character or transact the business of ordinary life. I sat on the floor of my bedchamber in the darkness, entirely unaware of the hour. There was no fire in my grate, nor would there be anyone coming to light it. I shivered, from both the cold and a complete terror of that which I knew I must do.
For most of the night I had sobbed. I had lain outstretched on the floor, like a condemned prisoner, unable to move or think, able only to ache. My life as I had known it was now about to end. But, as any good Christian will tell you, with death there also comes resurrection and the possibility of a better existence elsewhere. I knew this in my heart, and that rebirth was the sole path open to me. I had only to muster the courage to grab for it and, in doing so, let go of all that tied me to the girl I had been.
So I did this, while the moon threw its dim cast across my window sill. I worked without so much as a candle to guide me, rummaging through the most essential of my belongings: linens, stockings, skirts, a petticoat and, most importantly, the few small items of value that I as a young lady owned. Of all a woman’s possessions, jewels will get her the furthest and mine, on several occasions, have saved me from experiencing the grossest of depredations. At the time, I had but two trinkets: a gold and pearl cross, which I always wore upon my person; and a pair of simple pearl eardrops. I was too young for diamonds. Those are for married women, and in any case, owing to my precarious position within their family, Lord and Lady Stavourley saw no need to adorn me so lavishly.
I wrapped my bundle as a servant would, in a sheet. I had never before carried my own belongings and I did not even know how to tie them up securely. However, I found that soft packet offered me some comfort as I clutched it to my breast. It calmed my trembling.
I dressed for the road, but not without some struggle, sliding on my sturdiest shoes and fumbling with the buttons of my grey riding habit. Around my shoulders I threw my blue cape, the hood of which rested atop my black hat. I hoped to look respectable for my journey without drawing attention to myself. In truth, I knew that most people would be able to guess my circumstances. It is not usual to see a well-dressed young lady with spotless white gloves and a quivering expression travelling unchaperoned.
It was not until after I had attired myself and gathered my belongings that my mind, like a lamp, flickered out. My lungs and heart and legs took over. My breathing was so harsh that I feared all of Melmouth could hear my gasps as I carefully navigated the treacherous steps of the back stairs. The chill within the stony walls turned my breath to steam. I was like an animal, clambering through the darkness. I stole through the narrow corridor near the kitchens, passing by the doors of servants, still sunk deeply into their warm straw mattresses. In an hour, the first light of morning would wake them and, with so many pairs of eyes on guard, my flight would have been impossible. You must understand that, by then, they hated me. They would have set upon me like a pack of slavering dogs.