Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 99, October 11, 1890

audiobook

Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 99, October 11, 1890

by Various Authors

EN·~1 hours·19 chapters

Chapters

19 total
1

PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI. - Vol. 99.

0:02
2

October 11, 1890.

0:01
3

MODERN TYPES. - (By Mr. Punch's own Type Writer.) - No. XX.—THE DIVORCÉE.

7:59
4

VERSES FOR A VIOLINIST.

1:03
5

THE TOURNEY.

1:28
6

A LAMB-LIKE GAMBOL.

4:34
7

ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.

2:45
8

HOW IT'S DONE. - A Handbook to Honesty. - No. I.—"I'M MONARCH OF ALL I SURVEY!"

4:33
9

STRANGER THAN FICTION! - (Postmarks—Leeds, Hull, and Elsewhere.)

3:49
10

AT THE THEATRE! - The Lyceum again. The Haymarket once more.

1:56

Description

A razor‑sharp satire takes aim at the newly minted Divorce Court, exposing its absurd double standards with a blend of wit and Victorian flair. The narrator sketches a legal arena where a husband’s infidelity is barely a blemish, yet a wife must prove cruelty or desertion to earn freedom, turning everyday mishaps into theatrical evidence. Through lively commentary, the piece lampoons the bureaucracy that pretends to champion morality while feeding society’s fascination with scandal.

At the heart of the sketch is the “beautiful Divorcée,” a figure both vilified and celebrated as she exits the courtroom, her reputation already inflamed by the press. Retreating to a stylish boutique flat, she reflects on the loss of a marriage she despised and the strange liberty that now lies before her. The tone remains playful, inviting listeners to relish the clever observations on gender, law, and the social theater of Victorian England.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (57K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Malcolm Farmer, William Flis, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.

Release date

2004-05-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

VA

Various Authors

This title brings together work by multiple contributors rather than a single writer. “Various authors” is a cataloging label often used for collections, anthologies, and other collaborative books.

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