
This work opens a window onto the shadowy world of professional gamblers and their accomplices, a sub‑culture that has thrived in every major city from ancient times to the modern age. It traces how these “polite sharpers” begin with modest schemes, gradually weaving themselves into respectable circles while preying on the hopeful and the naïve. Their tactics—false titles, flattering introductions, and the promise of quick riches—are laid out with meticulous detail, showing how a single wager can become a gateway to ruin.
The narrative then turns to a particularly notorious Parisian operator, a man of many faces who ran dozens of faro tables night after night. Through vivid anecdotes of elegant soirées, secret meetings, and clever legal maneuvers, the author—a seasoned barrister and former military instructor—reveals the delicate balance between charm and cruelty that sustains such enterprises. Listeners will come away with a richer understanding of how gambling once intertwined with society’s upper echelons, and how its victims were both lured and betrayed.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (482K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Mike Lough, and David Widger
Release date
1996-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
1816–1877
A 19th-century barrister and prolific nonfiction writer, he explored subjects that ranged from Jesuits and duelling to Japan and the culture of gambling. His books promise a lively mix of firsthand experience, wide reading, and strong opinions.
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