5.23: The mob continues its vampire hunt in the local cemetery. — A ghostly warning for a fast-living publican. — A horrible disaster in a Scottish coal mine. (Segment 1 — The “Penny Dreadfuls.”) cover art

5.23: The mob continues its vampire hunt in the local cemetery. — A ghostly warning for a fast-living publican. — A horrible disaster in a Scottish coal mine. (Segment 1 — The “Penny Dreadfuls.”)

5.23: The mob continues its vampire hunt in the local cemetery. — A ghostly warning for a fast-living publican. — A horrible disaster in a Scottish coal mine. (Segment 1 — The “Penny Dreadfuls.”)

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SHOW NOTES for EPISODE 23 (Season 5)

(March 15, 2026)

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Join host Corinthian Finn, a.k.a. Finn J.D. John 18th Baron Dunwitch,* for a one-hour-long spree through the scandal-sheets and story papers of early-Victorian London!

Each segment is in its own sub-episode. The "Penny Dreadfuls" segment is in this main episode, followed by ...

The “Twopenny Torrids” minisode coming this Thursday evening;

The “Ha’penny Horrids” minisode coming next Sunday ; and finally—

The “Sixpenny Spookies” minisode coming next Thursday .

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* The Barony of Dunwitch is located in a deep forest glade west of Arkham (where, as H.P. Lovecraft put it, “the hills rise wild, and there are valleys with deep woods that no axe has ever cut; there are dark narrow glens where the trees slope fantastically, and where thin brooklets trickle without ever having caught the glint of sunlight.”) Actually it is a good 3,000 miles west of Arkham. It is not to be confused with Dunwich, the English seacoast town that fell house by house into the sea centuries ago, or Dunsany, the home until 1957 of legendary fantasy author Edward J.M.D. Plunkett, 18th Baron Dunsany.

For COMPLETE SHOW NOTES, including art and links to resources, see ⁠⁠pennydread.com/discord.⁠⁠

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IN TODAY'S "PENNY DREADFULS" SEGMENT:

  • 02:30: ON THIS DREADFUL DAY (March 15): The Victoria Pit Disaster of 1851 happened on this day, killing 61 men and boys who happened to be in the mine when it exploded.
  • 05:23: VARNEY THE VAMPYRE; or, THE FEAST OF BLOOD, Chapter 45-46: Just as the Rev. Mr. Leigh had got the crowd settled down and preparing to return home, Waggles the beadle recovered his senses and with a roar charged them, staff in hand. In the ensuing melee, the crowd rediscovered its enthusiasm for the job at hand, and started hunting for the graves of the recently inhumed….
  • 41:50: BROADSIDE BALLAD: Strange Warning to a Reprobate Publican! A “catchpenny,” that is, a phony story written to try and sell copies; in this case, it’s about a ghostly apparition that appeared to a debauched man and urged him to mend his evil ways. (1850s).

GLOSSARY OF EARLY-VICTORIAN SLANG USED IN THIS EPISODE:

  • ADELPHI AND ADELPHAI: Brothers and sisters. These are the Greek terms, more used by fancy-toff Flash canters like Pierce Egan’s famous Tom and Jerry.
  • CHICKSTER: A flame or a sweetheart, with the implication that she is a little edgy, possibly dangerous or disreputable.
  • CAPTAIN LUSHINGTONS: Spirited fellows who have had too much to drink.
  • KNIGHTS OF THE BRUSH AND MOON: Drunken fellows wandering amok in meadows and ditches, trying to stagger home.
  • CORINTHIAN: A fancy toff or titled swell. Used here as a reference to Corinthian Tom, the quintessential Regency rake depicted in Pierce Egan's "Life in London" (usually referred to as "Tom and Jerry").
  • CHAFFING-CRIB: A room where drinking and bantering are going on.
  • WAPSTRAWS: Country bumpkins.
  • TOWN TODDLERS: Easy marks, or suckers.
  • SNICKER OF MAX: Glass of gin.
  • WET YOUR OTHER EYE: Take another drink.
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