"'Even the lives of scoundrels play some part in portraying an
age...'"
Our interest in all things Victorian - in the seamy side of the
era especially - is ageless and undimmed. Giles St. Aubyn's
"Infamous Victorians," first published in 1971, stands as a
brilliant illumination of two dark stories of the time, replete
with sinister elements of iniquity and hypocrisy.
In the first fifty years of Victoria's reign two doctors were
hanged after being found guilty of murder at the Central Criminal
Court. Both men were 32 years old, both poisoners, both murdered
for money. Dr William Palmer was a notorious figure, tried for a
single murder though he almost certainly killed others. Dr George
Lamson was a morphia addict convicted of killing his crippled young
brother-in-law at Blenheim House school. Giles St. Aubyn restores
them to life on the page, examines their careers and assesses their
guilt.
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