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The
lagellation Source Sheet
Table of Contents
Fact Sheet Contents:
The Flogging Whores of Old London
Erotic flagellation is one of the earliest activities now
recognized as SM to emerge with a well-documented erotic
literature. Victorian pornography was full of it, and there
are clear records that in the bigger cities at least there
was a flourishing network of prostitutes catering to the
interest from at least the end of the 18th century. The
following is extracted from the 'Flagellation' entry in
Ashbee's Index of Forbidden Books Ashbee 1969:147-151),
written in late Victorian times. Unfortunately Ashbee
does not acknowledge the source of the quoted account of Mrs.
Berkley.
At
the early part of this century [the 19th], very sumptuously fitted-up
establishments, exclusively devoted to the administration of the birch,
were not uncommon in London; and women of the town served, as it were,
an apprenticeship in order to acquire the art of gracefully and
effectively administering the rod. It would be easy to form a very
lengthy list of these female flagellants, but I shall restrict myself
to mention a few only. Mrs. Collett was a noted whipper, and George
IV is known to have visited her; she had an establishment in
Tavistock Court, Covent Garden, whence she removed to the neighborhood
of Portland Place, and afterwards to Bedford Street, Russell Square,
where she died. She brought up her niece in the same line, who, as Mrs.
Mitchell, carried on a successful business in various places, among
others at No 22 (afterwards 44) Waterloo Road, and finally at St
Mary's Square, Kennington, where she died. Then came Mrs. James,
who had been maid in the family of Lord Clanricarde; she had a house
at No 7 Carlisle Street, Soho; she retired from business with a good
fortune, and dwelt at Notting Hill in luxury, her house being
decorated with pictures, and her person covered with jewels.
There were, further: Mrs. Emma Lee, real name Richardson, of No
50 Margaret Street, Regent Street; Mrs. Phillips, of No 11 Upper
Belgrave Place, Pimlico; Mrs. Shepherd, of No 25 Gilbert Street;
Mrs. Sarah Potter, alias Stewart, of various addresses, who died
in 1873; and, were it not indiscreet, I might add the names of one
or two other ladies who still carry on their calling. But the
queen of her profession was undoubtedly Mrs. Theresa Berkley,
of No 28 Charlotte Street, Portland Place; she was a perfect
mistress of her art, understood how to satisfy her clients,
and was, moreover, a thorough woman of business, for she
amassed during her career a considerable sum of money...
"Her instruments of torture were more numerous than those
of any other governess. Her supply of birch was extensive,
and kept in water, so that it was always green and pliant:
she had shafts with a dozen whip thongs on each of them;
a dozen different sizes of cat-o'-nine-tails, some with
needle points worked into them; various kinds of thin
bending canes; leather straps like coach traces; battle
doors, made of thick sole-leather, with inch nails run
through to docket, and currycomb tough hides rendered
callous by many years flagellation. Holly brushes, furze
brushes; a prickly evergreen, called butcher's bush; and
during the summer, a glass and China vases, filled with a
constant supply of green nettles, with which she often
restored the dead to life. Thus, at her shop, whoever went
with plenty of money, could be birched, whipped, fustigated,
scourged, needle-pricked, half-hung, holly-brushed, furze-brushed,
butcher-brushed, stinging-nettled, curry-combed, phlebotomized,
and tortured till he had a belly full.
"For those whose
lech
it was to flog a woman, she would herself submit to a certain
extent; but if they were gluttons at it, she had women in
attendance who would take any number of lashes the flogger
pleased, provided he forked out an ad valorem duty. Among
these were Miss Ring, Hannah Jones, Sally Taylor, One-eyed
Peg, Bald-cunted Pol, and a black girl, called Ebony Bet.
"A notorious machine was invented for Mrs. Berkley to flog
gentlemen upon, in the spring of 1828. It is capable of being
opened to a considerable extent, so as to bring the body to any
angle that might be desirable. There is a print in Mrs. Berkley's
memoirs, representing a man upon it quite naked. A woman is sitting
in a chair exactly under it, with her bosom, belly, and bush exposed:
she is
manualizing
his
embolon,
whilst Mrs. Berkley is birching his posteriors. The female acting as
frictrix,
was intended for Fisher, a fine, tall, dark-haired girl, all must
remember who visited Charlotte Street at that day, as well as the
good humored blonde, Willis; the plump, tight, frisky and merry assed
Thrulow; Grenville, with the enormous boobies; Bentine, with breadth
of hip and splendor of buttock; Olive, the gipsy, whose brown skin,
wicked black eye, and Medicean form, would melt an anchorite; the
mild and amiable Palmer, with luxuriant and
well-fledged
mount, from whose tufted honors many a noble lord had stolen a sprig;
and Pryce, the pleasing and complaisant, who, if birch was a question,
could both give and take.
"When the new flogging machine was invented, the designer told her
it would bring her into notice, and go by her name after her death;
and it did cause her to be talked of, and brought her a great deal
of business. She died in September, 1836, having funded ten thousand
pounds during the eight years she had been a governess. The
original horse is among the models of the Society of Arts at
the Adelphi, and was presented by Doctor Vance, her executor.
"Mrs. Berkley has also in her second floor, a hook and pulley
attached to the ceiling, by which she could draw a man up by
his hands. This operation is also represented in her memoirs." [...]
Shortly after her death, her brother, who had been a missionary
for 30 years in Australia, arrived in England, but when he
learned the source from which the property she had left him
had been derived, he renounced all claim, and immediately went
back to Australia. In default, the property was bequeathed to
Dr Vance, her medical attendant and executor; but he refused
to administer, and the whole was escheated to the crown. Dr
Vance came into possession of her correspondence, several boxes
full, which, I am assured by one who examined it, was of the most
extraordinary character, containing letters from the highest
personages, male and female, in the land. The whole was eventually
destroyed.
Many of these women, there can be little doubt, took an interest,
if not a pleasure, in their vocation. The following is extracted
from the correspondence of a gentleman still living, a passionate
devotee of the birch, and one who is worthy of all confidences in
matters connected to flagellation:
"In my experience I have known personally several ladies of high
rank who had an extraordinary passion for administering the rod,
and that too with merciless severity . I knew too the wife of a
clergyman, young and pretty, who carried the taste to excess. I
have known one only who liked receiving it, and she was quite of
the lowest order; when excited by drink, she would allow herself
to be birched until her bottom was utterly raw, and the rod
saturated with blood, she crying out during the operation
'harder! harder!' and blaspheming if it was not well laid
on. At the establishment I have named (existing at present
in London, but of which I suppress the name) there come twenty
young girls who go through all the phases of schoolmistress,
and whip fearfully severely. The programs sent by the pupils
are extraordinary - some like to be whipped as children on the
knee, some on the back of a servant, others to be strapped down."
It is a well-known fact that women are, and always have been,
even more fond of wielding the rod than men, and this passion
pervades the higher, rather than the lower classes.
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