Under the Gaslight: A Casebook of Scandals
MTA
Investigative fiction chronicling five notorious erotic scandals that shook Victorian London
2nd Edition
*Under the Gaslight: A Casebook of Scandals* is an investigative chronicle that deconstructs five notorious erotic scandals of Victorian London, revealing the human tragedies hidden beneath sensationalized headlines. Written by journalist Julian Crichton, the book utilizes a "casebook" approach—relying on diaries, intercepted letters, and court transcripts—to expose how the era’s rigid moral codes and property laws were weaponized to punish personal autonomy. Each case illustrates a specific intersection of desire and power: an heiress’s secret marriage to a violinist is annulled to protect her fortune; a philanthropist’s patronage of a seamstress is branded as embezzlement; a politician’s divorce reveals a history of abuse and counter-blackmail; an actress brings down a corrupt magistrate; and a poet is imprisoned for "obscenity."
Through the lens of these five cases, Crichton exposes the hypocrisy of the Victorian establishment and the cynical role of the press in manufacturing moral panics. He demonstrates how institutions—the law, the church, and the Society for the Suppression of Vice—prioritized the preservation of the status quo over individual truth. In the "Locked Carriage" scandal, for instance, a mundane railway delay is transformed by journalists into a national outrage, while in the case of poet Julian Hesketh, the state effectively criminalizes intellectual honesty. These narratives prove that the victims of these scandals were often not guilty of immorality, but rather of defying the social and economic scripts written for their class and gender.
The book concludes with a poignant epilogue detailing the lasting "collateral damage" suffered by its subjects. Most of the protagonists face professional ruin, social exile, or psychological breaking, regardless of their legal innocence. By reassembling these "shattered narratives," Crichton invites the reader to serve as a quiet juror, judging not the individuals’ passions, but the systemic cruelty of a society that surveilled its citizens by day and tempted them by night. Ultimately, *Under the Gaslight* argues that the greatest scandal of Victorian London was the pervasive conspiracy of silence and the brutal price demanded for breaking it.
February 5, 2026
60,878 words
4 hours 16 minutes
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