00:00:00
in 1786 a sudden rash of robberies broke
00:00:05
out in a city event the offender was no
00:00:09
gun of the middle cat burglar
00:00:11
[Music]
00:00:12
William deacon Brodie was a legendary
00:00:15
sociopath a remorseless liar living a
00:00:19
secret life by night Brody was a
00:00:25
compulsive gambler sex addict
00:00:29
[Music]
00:00:32
by day he was a gentleman a respectable
00:00:36
citizen with wealth and power a hundred
00:00:41
years later
00:00:42
Brodie's double life inspired a young
00:00:44
author with demons of his own in 1886
00:00:50
Robert Louis Stevenson wrote a
00:00:52
best-selling book
00:00:54
a terrifying story of the power of
00:00:57
addiction and the monsters that lurk
00:00:59
within us all this is the true story of
00:01:04
dr. Jekyll
00:01:09
and mr. Hyde
00:01:18
in 1886 robert louis stevenson's
00:01:22
jekyll-and-hyde changed the face of
00:01:25
horror
00:01:27
the whole tradition of horror literature
00:01:29
up till that time embodied the evil in
00:01:32
an objective character a vampire a
00:01:35
monster a creature but this was much
00:01:38
much more sinister the evil was hidden
00:01:40
inside someone
00:01:47
Henry Jekyll a respected doctor concoct
00:01:51
a potion to release his inner evil
00:01:54
and becomes mr. Hyde a ruthless monster
00:01:59
it appeared to be suggesting that if you
00:02:02
remove all constraints inevitably evil
00:02:05
will not only emerge but will be
00:02:09
victorious that in a straight fight
00:02:12
between good and evil evil will always
00:02:14
win it is a book surrounded in mystery
00:02:19
Jekyll and Hyde was penned by Robert
00:02:21
Louis Stevenson charming author have
00:02:24
beloved children's stories
00:02:31
what could this mild-mannered man know
00:02:34
about the power of evil
00:02:35
[Music]
00:02:38
since childhood he was obsessed at one
00:02:42
of Scotland's most notorious Psychopaths
00:02:45
William Brody
00:02:54
1784 editor William Brody was heir to a
00:02:59
family fortune and ran a lucrative
00:03:02
business his firm fashioned everything
00:03:10
from Edinburgh struggied prison gallows
00:03:12
to the most delicate cabinetry the Brody
00:03:19
was known to all as the Deakin admira's
00:03:22
head tradesman and a powerful City
00:03:24
politician Cody's life of prestige merit
00:03:38
the character he inspired in the words
00:03:42
of dr. Jekyll I was born to a large
00:03:45
fortune fond of the respect of the wise
00:03:48
and good and thus with every guarantee
00:03:51
of a distinguished future
00:03:54
the deacon had the social standing in
00:03:56
dr. Jekyll but he had the appearance of
00:03:59
mr. Hyde
00:04:01
[Music]
00:04:02
Brodie was a very very slender
00:04:05
individual he's quite odd in appearance
00:04:07
he had a scar across his nose he was
00:04:10
very short in stature he was only five
00:04:12
feet four although he just very very
00:04:14
splendid he kind of looked someone like
00:04:16
a chicken with his skinny legs and he
00:04:18
would strut along on the streets and I'm
00:04:20
sure behind his back if not to his face
00:04:22
people would be mocking someone like
00:04:24
that behind his public facade Brody's
00:04:31
inner evil was screaming to get out
00:04:42
[Music]
00:04:44
[Applause]
00:04:49
[Music]
00:04:56
by night Brody disappeared into flesh
00:04:58
markets clothes to indulge enough of
00:05:01
bidden pleasure
00:05:03
[Applause]
00:05:12
[Music]
00:05:15
[Applause]
00:05:31
their roadie rebel his dark side
00:05:37
I suspect that he was probably that
00:05:40
ridiculed by friends maybe criticized by
00:05:42
parents who's to know but he had a sense
00:05:44
of being less than and when he acted out
00:05:47
gambling or with drinking that sense of
00:05:51
inferiority have not been good enough I
00:05:53
suspect disappeared form his gambling
00:05:56
instincts was not for the gain of money
00:05:59
because he had lots of money it was for
00:06:02
the mere pleasure of discovering this
00:06:04
other personality to find his real self
00:06:09
the noise people shouting the violence
00:06:13
blood bright colors all would be very
00:06:17
powerful triggers to his brain to this
00:06:20
rise in adrenaline that the junkie would
00:06:22
be looking for like dr. Jekyll Brody had
00:06:29
found a potion that made him brash and
00:06:31
powerful
00:06:35
[Music]
00:06:37
during a fight adrenaline rushes into
00:06:39
the blood stream leaving Brodie
00:06:41
energized and ecstatic
00:06:44
[Music]
00:06:47
then euphoria as blood cells released
00:06:51
serotonin a soothing neurotransmitter
00:06:59
[Music]
00:07:00
each night after the blood and booze at
00:07:04
the cockfight
00:07:04
Brody slipped into his upper class home
00:07:07
through the back door of his workshop
00:07:13
his secret comings and goings are echoed
00:07:15
in the Boogie inspired in Jekyll and
00:07:21
Hyde the house is actually divided into
00:07:24
a rather beautiful front entrance where
00:07:26
society dr. Jekyll goes in and a very
00:07:29
shabby back entrance where Mr Hyde goes
00:07:31
in and that's an outward and visible
00:07:32
sign of the dark secret which is mr.
00:07:35
Hyde which he hides from everybody
00:07:38
[Music]
00:07:51
nearly a hundred years later a cabinet
00:07:55
built in Brody's workshop stood in the
00:07:57
bedroom of seven-year-old Robert Louis
00:07:59
Stevenson
00:08:00
[Music]
00:08:09
Simenson grew up in an upper room in
00:08:13
Edinburgh which had a cupboard designed
00:08:17
by William Brodie and he wove as a child
00:08:20
all sorts of fantasies about the man
00:08:22
that made this cabinet because there
00:08:24
were all sorts of urban myths and
00:08:25
legends about Deakin Brody
00:08:28
Stevenson was intelligent and precocious
00:08:30
born into a wealthy Victorian family but
00:08:35
he was a sensitive and sickly child
00:08:36
plagued by nightmares and lung disease
00:08:41
he was raised by his nurse a god-fearing
00:08:45
spinster Allison Cunningham known
00:08:48
affectionately to all as [ __ ]
00:08:51
[Music]
00:08:57
she administered what became a lifelong
00:09:00
regime of drugs to help young Stevenson
00:09:03
[Music]
00:09:09
but kami also attended to the boys
00:09:12
spiritual health staunchly Calvinist she
00:09:17
regaled him with stories about what
00:09:21
happened to naughty little boys and
00:09:24
petrified him as a small boy become II
00:09:32
William Brody's life was a cautionary
00:09:35
tale
00:09:42
these stories nourished his tendency for
00:09:47
feverish nightmares
00:09:48
I suspect it's quite likely that Brody
00:09:51
himself walked in Stevenson's dreams
00:09:53
when he was a small boy Kamiya story is
00:10:11
about the deacon
00:10:12
planted the seeds of a dark obsession
00:10:29
as a teenager
00:10:31
the obsession grew in his first year of
00:10:41
classes at the University of Edinburgh
00:10:43
Stevenson set out to learn more about
00:10:45
the life of Deakin Brody
00:10:51
we've spent a great deal of this time
00:10:54
attending of what we were these days
00:10:57
described as the university of life on
00:11:01
the doorstep of the university was this
00:11:02
whole Edinburgh underworld which he was
00:11:07
fascinated by because of all these
00:11:09
stories that he grew up with dressed up
00:11:14
like Brody in a velvet vest and a long
00:11:17
tail coat Stevenson inched his way
00:11:20
closer to creating dr. Jekyll and mr.
00:11:23
Hyde
00:11:25
at 17 he headed out on the town to live
00:11:30
the life of deacon Brodie Stevenson was
00:11:41
exploring the old haunts of deacon
00:11:43
Brodie
00:11:51
Illume that almost a century before the
00:11:54
deacon came to these pumps to indulge in
00:11:57
yet another vice
00:12:07
[Applause]
00:12:12
[Music]
00:12:15
rody was a regular client of a Edinburgh
00:12:18
brothels in a number of relationships to
00:12:26
hear a continuing compulsion to act out
00:12:29
this behavior and three he continued the
00:12:32
behavior despite negative consequences
00:12:33
personal and financial and east of the
00:12:36
Cardinal diagnostic features of
00:12:37
addiction he was a sex addict
00:12:48
sexual activity changes the electrical
00:12:51
circuitry deep in produce brain
00:12:55
arousal causes the release of dopamine a
00:12:58
neurotransmitter that helps electrical
00:13:01
signals jump from one nerve cell to the
00:13:03
next
00:13:05
soon the brain is supercharged blood
00:13:12
pressure spikes body temperature
00:13:14
increases and nerve endings become more
00:13:18
sensitive it's a sensation Brody chased
00:13:21
the gain at the game
00:13:31
besides haunting the old town brothels
00:13:34
Brody kept three mistresses and fathered
00:13:37
four illegitimate children Brody had
00:13:40
multiple relationships none of whom knew
00:13:42
boteler's and the secrets lies the
00:13:44
sickness he must have had to keep secret
00:13:47
the fact he was having a relationship
00:13:49
with another woman from the moment he
00:13:50
was worth right now and that again is
00:13:54
classical of addictive behavior he was
00:13:56
keeping secrets
00:14:03
a century later in the very taverns
00:14:06
Brody haunted Stevenson was keeping
00:14:08
secrets of his owner he had what they
00:14:12
called then bohemian way of life long
00:14:14
hair long coats getting drunk a lot
00:14:17
taking opium to help himself sleep at
00:14:19
night and generally throwing off the
00:14:21
shackles of his rather oppressive
00:14:23
childhood roaming the dank wines of the
00:14:27
old town Stevenson discovered that like
00:14:29
the Deakin Edinboro had a split
00:14:32
personality Robert Louis Stevenson grew
00:14:41
up in a city that was in two halves
00:14:43
there was the old town the medieval town
00:14:45
when its recurrence and it spooky alleys
00:14:47
and that's where the lower-class is
00:14:49
lived and the other side of the tracks
00:14:54
there was uptown where the middle
00:14:56
classes lived the professional classes
00:14:58
Stevenson's family but engineers clerics
00:15:01
teachers lawyers he called it this city
00:15:04
has two personalities
00:15:09
Stevenson was haunted by the memory of
00:15:11
deacon protein the one man daring enough
00:15:14
to walk in both worlds I think one of
00:15:22
the things that Stevenson admired and
00:15:24
Brodie was his sheer spirit of
00:15:27
responding to a challenge of knowing
00:15:33
that he could do something and get away
00:15:35
with it there's something about that
00:15:37
that challenge to authority that
00:15:40
subversiveness that appeals to to
00:15:42
Stevenson it Stevenson did more than
00:15:45
admire the Deacons rebellious streak he
00:15:49
followed Brody's lead and wound up in
00:15:52
the same hometown brothels
00:15:57
this is the era that some middle-class
00:15:59
households actually put little coverings
00:16:01
on piano legs because they didn't want
00:16:04
their legs in their living room I mean
00:16:05
we're talking about a repressed Society
00:16:07
and one of the great I'm actually laws
00:16:09
was sex unmentionable art Stevenson
00:16:15
boasted about his sexual prowess he
00:16:19
claimed that he never had to pay him for
00:16:21
sex
00:16:22
he does the impression that the
00:16:25
prostitutes that he encountered took
00:16:26
almost a kind of mataró
00:16:28
interest in this young man Stevenson was
00:16:33
living the life of deacon Brodie but he
00:16:36
refused to live in secrecy
00:16:40
his feeling was that he was being driven
00:16:43
into a life of hypocrisy and he
00:16:47
expresses a desire to escape from it
00:16:55
Stevenson rebelled against his parents
00:16:59
[Music]
00:17:03
William Brodie was his battle cry
00:17:14
abandoned his studies rejected God and
00:17:17
decried the hypocrisy of Victorian life
00:17:23
[Music]
00:17:34
1872 Stevenson suffered a severe relapse
00:17:38
of respiratory illness almost overnight
00:17:42
is bohemian days were over if you're
00:17:47
feverish and spitting blood and unable
00:17:51
to eat then you can't really run around
00:17:54
and visit prostitutes or hang about with
00:17:57
the boys and just physically it's it's
00:18:01
not possible Stevenson spent months
00:18:05
confined to his bedroom dependent on his
00:18:08
father's money and an addictive cocktail
00:18:10
of drugs to keep him alive he could only
00:18:15
dream of living the Deacons life of
00:18:17
adventure
00:18:23
in 1785 Brody's life of adventure took a
00:18:28
new turn sex booze and gambling were no
00:18:34
longer enough Dory was turned on by
00:18:41
excitement he probably felt he never had
00:18:44
enough for the addict the drug of choice
00:18:46
is more crime inevitably was his next
00:18:52
step
00:18:58
one evening he broke into the home of a
00:19:01
neighbor where more than once the deacon
00:19:04
had been a trusted guest
00:19:05
[Music]
00:19:11
he would go into a home and he's smiling
00:19:14
and he's very very disarming too you
00:19:18
know to someone they may even tell him
00:19:20
where things are or talk about their
00:19:22
possessions and very freely because he
00:19:24
he's not what people expect criminals
00:19:27
should look like then cloaked and
00:19:31
incognito he betrayed the trust of an
00:19:34
old friend
00:19:36
[Music]
00:19:43
the ease of Brody's double life echoes
00:19:47
in Stevenson's book the safety was
00:19:50
complete think of it I did not even
00:19:52
exist whatever he had done Edward Hyde
00:19:56
would pass away like the stain of breath
00:19:57
upon a mirror and there and instead
00:20:00
would be Henry Jekyll
00:20:03
[Music]
00:20:07
by day Brodie resumed the life of the
00:20:10
gentlemen the Brody's double life came
00:20:14
at a cost you keep secrets she remains
00:20:28
SEC the whole idea of sharing secrets
00:20:31
with a human being is so that you begin
00:20:33
to feel better about yourself Brody had
00:20:36
none of the Deacons friends had no idea
00:20:42
there was a war raging inside him like
00:20:49
dr. Jekyll it was only a matter of time
00:20:52
before Brody succumbed completely to his
00:20:56
evil laugh
00:20:57
[Music]
00:21:01
once Stevenson lived the Defiant light
00:21:04
for deacon Brodie but his wild days
00:21:07
appeared to be over at the age of 30 he
00:21:12
married Fanny Haws born an American
00:21:14
divorcee nine years his senior in spite
00:21:24
of chronic anxiety and lung disease
00:21:26
Stevenson had become an acclaimed author
00:21:30
he penned some of the most delightful
00:21:33
children's stories of all time beneath
00:21:45
his respectable image darkness still
00:21:48
lurked inside him
00:21:54
at the age of 35 the deccan burst out of
00:21:59
stevenson subconscious
00:22:05
[Music]
00:22:23
[Music]
00:22:32
Louis wake up God's sake why did you
00:22:39
wake me
00:22:39
I was dreaming a fighting bogey tail in
00:22:42
his journals Stevenson described the
00:22:45
dream that made literary history I
00:22:47
dreamed that one man pursued for some
00:22:49
crime was being pressed into a cabinet
00:22:51
when he swallowed a drug and changed
00:22:54
into another being
00:22:56
[Music]
00:23:01
in the room which I slept on a child in
00:23:04
Edna there was a cabinet from the hands
00:23:07
of the original he can broaden Evensen
00:23:19
mentions body as a genuine source of
00:23:22
inspiration for his novel his nightmare
00:23:27
inspired the most popular horror story
00:23:29
of all time
00:23:34
it was an instant success published in
00:23:37
dozens of languages the story soon
00:23:39
became known around the world
00:23:42
[Music]
00:23:46
in the confines of his basement lab dr.
00:23:49
jeckyl experiments with a potion that
00:23:51
releases his evil half mr. Hyde
00:23:55
before long he is dangerously hooked you
00:24:00
can plot Jekyll's decline as the decline
00:24:03
of an addict he starts getting addicted
00:24:05
to the transformation then the
00:24:07
transformation takes over he doesn't
00:24:09
need to take the drugs anymore he's a
00:24:10
completely dependent personality by them
00:24:12
and in a way that can be taken as an
00:24:14
allegory of addiction that it starts off
00:24:16
with him in control he gets less in
00:24:18
control and suddenly the thing itself
00:24:20
takes him over
00:24:22
[Music]
00:24:26
like dr. Jekyll Brody had lost him from
00:24:29
crime was his drugs and now he too
00:24:32
needed a stronger dose he began lose
00:24:39
interest in just being a loan thief
00:24:41
would go into its friends houses and
00:24:43
steal their their money he decided to go
00:24:46
in with three Rascals who nothing to
00:24:50
lose Smith grossa Tremont and [ __ ]
00:25:01
Andrew Ainsley shoemaker simpleton and
00:25:07
John Brown murderer thief and convict on
00:25:12
the run
00:25:14
Brody elected himself as gang leader he
00:25:18
was a man of power and privilege and a
00:25:21
criminal with a special talent Bernie
00:25:25
had the technical skills he was able to
00:25:27
make these keys he was a locksmith so it
00:25:30
was a perfect setup it was an age of
00:25:33
innocence when shopkeepers hung their
00:25:36
keys in plain sight he can't snatch the
00:25:39
keys he'll be missing the keys the
00:25:42
elderly woman is not not looking he can
00:25:44
easily make an impression of this key
00:25:48
and no one was the wiser in the privacy
00:25:58
of his workshop an imprint soon became a
00:26:01
duplicate key Brodie passed through
00:26:12
doorways like a ghost Edinboro was his
00:26:15
but the taking in 1784 he led his band
00:26:22
of thieves on a crime spree they pulled
00:26:28
off 12 robberies
00:26:32
[Music]
00:26:35
what happens to them psychologically all
00:26:37
of them is that they really feel
00:26:39
invincible law enforcement police
00:26:41
they're incapable of catching that
00:26:43
because they are so adept and skilled in
00:26:45
their in their trade and as a result
00:26:48
they they don't slow down dr. Jekyll to
00:26:54
me is a more courageous man in the guise
00:26:56
of mr. Hyde we know that when we have
00:27:10
the adrenaline going we are more
00:27:12
vigilant we are more receptive to
00:27:14
stimuli we do feel stronger and more
00:27:17
powerful
00:27:23
[Music]
00:27:28
but with each robbery
00:27:30
Brody's behavior became more bizarre
00:27:42
[Music]
00:27:49
drunk on a potent makes of portent power
00:27:51
he become a danger to his men and to
00:27:55
himself after a silk shop was robbed of
00:28:02
a small fortune in rare fabrics a pardon
00:28:05
and a reward was offered to the crook
00:28:07
who ratted on his partners in crime the
00:28:12
Deacon was walking a thin line
00:28:15
[Music]
00:28:24
the Stevenson Brody's dangerous double
00:28:26
life was the basis of his novel
00:28:29
[Music]
00:28:35
it is still relevant to people today
00:28:37
because we have a large population
00:28:38
Society or living secret lives we have
00:28:41
men having affairs we have we have women
00:28:43
drinking sherry in the kitchen before
00:28:45
the family come home we have a whole
00:28:47
bunch of folks that are doing behaviors
00:28:49
that the intuitive Leonor might but they
00:28:51
can't share and they can't change the
00:28:56
success of jekyll-and-hyde thrust Robert
00:28:58
Louis Stevenson into the limelight and
00:29:01
people started asked Jones was Stevenson
00:29:05
the wholesome nice writer of the child's
00:29:08
garden of verses and Treasure Island
00:29:10
wholesome children's book author or was
00:29:13
he the dark tortured gothic writer of
00:29:16
Jekyll and Hyde Stevenson's dr. Jekyll
00:29:23
describes his experiments and graphic
00:29:25
detail the most rocking pangs succeeded
00:29:29
a graining in the bones deadly nausea
00:29:32
and horror of the spirit that cannot be
00:29:34
exceeded at the hour of birth or death
00:29:37
and something strange in my sensations a
00:29:40
heady recklessness a solution of the
00:29:42
bonds of obligation an unknown freedom
00:29:45
of the soul
00:29:46
[Music]
00:29:52
how did this respectable author of
00:29:55
children's stories know so much about
00:29:57
the agony and ecstasy of drug addiction
00:30:02
since childhood drugs were a part of
00:30:05
Stevenson's life as a student at
00:30:09
Edinburgh University Stevenson admitted
00:30:11
to taking opium to blast his mind
00:30:13
because he had such bad dreams
00:30:14
subsequently he was on a whole cocktail
00:30:17
of you know his bathroom is there's like
00:30:19
a distillery and all these drugs because
00:30:21
he had these long complains he didn't
00:30:23
sleep well he kept having coughing
00:30:25
attack so he took all sorts of things
00:30:27
[Music]
00:30:29
ether morphine chloroform Stevenson had
00:30:33
access to them all but his drug of
00:30:37
choice was laudanum a cocktail of opium
00:30:41
and alcohol still manufactured for
00:30:43
medical use today
00:30:48
opium particles pass through the stomach
00:30:51
lining into the bloodstream and enter
00:30:53
the brain producing a rush of euphoria
00:30:55
and a blissful calm
00:31:00
but during drug withdrawal spikes in
00:31:03
blood pressure take their toll on the
00:31:05
fragile vessels in the brain
00:31:10
opium use was putting stephenson at risk
00:31:13
of a deadly stroke
00:31:20
Stephenson's first-hand knowledge of
00:31:22
drugs is woven into the torturous life
00:31:25
of dr. Jekyll there's a huge part of
00:31:29
himself in that story and one can
00:31:31
speculate the Stevenson was writing
00:31:33
Jekyll and Hyde in a way of cathartic
00:31:35
and a way of of baring his own soul
00:31:38
remember in the secret lies a sickness
00:31:41
he felt the need to tell the story so as
00:31:43
fast and even to speculate that Jaclyn
00:31:45
Hyde indeed was a a confessional for
00:31:48
Stevenson's own drug use
00:31:51
Stevenson continued living the reclusive
00:31:53
life of a writer trying to keep his dark
00:31:56
side and his addiction under control but
00:32:01
in 1788 the Deacon was showing no sign
00:32:05
of slowing down
00:32:06
he was planning a crime that would place
00:32:09
his name firmly in the history books
00:32:13
Brody had his sights set on the National
00:32:16
excise office a holding place for every
00:32:19
penny of tax money collected in
00:32:20
Edinburgh for two hours every night
00:32:23
the building lay quiet had unguarded it
00:32:27
was all the time Brody needed to relieve
00:32:30
the government of thousands of pounds in
00:32:32
cash and the youngins for the cabinets
00:32:43
in the cashier
00:32:47
Aynsley will sit here and drink his
00:32:50
eagle eye on the 4th and entry from the
00:32:52
kolosov Inslee I hear your whistle blows
00:32:57
thrice I'm gonna welcome our guests with
00:32:59
a tight embrace clear then hey buddy
00:33:07
cletus hogg lumen I the excess office
00:33:13
well it's like all being the Bank of
00:33:15
England I'm in it was high risk because
00:33:18
of the punishment I mean you could be
00:33:20
put to death for stealing 12 pounds
00:33:26
[Music]
00:33:31
on a cold spring night Brody set in
00:33:35
motion one of the most daring robberies
00:33:37
in Scottish history
00:33:39
[Music]
00:33:47
Brodie's planned to rob the Scottish
00:33:49
excise office got off to a bad start he
00:33:55
showed up late and drunk Brodie took his
00:34:12
watch position inside the outer door
00:34:18
Smith and Brown could find nothing at a
00:34:21
few poultry hands
00:34:22
[Music]
00:34:29
then an uninvited guest an employee had
00:34:36
returned unexpectedly for some papers
00:34:42
[Music]
00:34:45
Ainsley had no time to sound the alarm
00:34:51
caught by surprise Brody showed his true
00:34:54
colors when Brody fled his flame to save
00:34:59
himself he has no loyalty to his
00:35:01
accomplices so typically as a psychopath
00:35:04
it's it's a big eye and a little wee and
00:35:08
meaning that it's all me and forget
00:35:10
about you Brody's selfish behavior Mira
00:35:15
dr. Jekyll's addicted to his potion and
00:35:20
obsessed with his experiments Jekyll is
00:35:22
a secretive and solitary Selene I think
00:35:28
things just trying to tell us that a
00:35:31
certain kind of single-mindedness a
00:35:35
certain kind of obsession if you like is
00:35:38
more likely to flourish in a situation
00:35:41
where the normal social controls and
00:35:43
social relationships aren't in existence
00:35:47
[Music]
00:35:48
Mike Jekyll Brody was accountable to no
00:35:52
one not even his partners in crime at
00:36:00
the excise office the official collected
00:36:02
his papers and left suspecting nothing
00:36:07
[Music]
00:36:14
[Music]
00:36:19
they aborted their mission missing 600
00:36:23
pounds that lay hidden in a desk drawer
00:36:31
the next day Brody and his band of
00:36:34
thieves met to parcel out their earnings
00:36:36
a meager 16 pounds you run away scared
00:36:42
it did me as the true of the 7 subsonic
00:36:46
force a little whistle I remember
00:36:51
exactly tears neither here nor there
00:36:53
lives
00:36:57
shall we divide up the riches you're mad
00:37:04
a good deacon you place me in harm's way
00:37:07
again
00:37:12
[Music]
00:37:21
[Music]
00:37:23
Brown rats on his mates swapping his
00:37:25
partners freedom for a pardon and a
00:37:28
reward Ainsley and Smith were arrested
00:37:32
that afternoon doesn't mention Brody's
00:37:37
name hoping he can bribe the deacon word
00:37:44
of the Excise heist spread through
00:37:46
Edinburgh like wildfire
00:37:49
Brody knew his days were numbered and
00:37:52
fled town after the Deacons
00:37:58
disappearance Ainsley named Brody as
00:38:01
gang leader
00:38:06
police searched Brody's workshop and
00:38:08
found incriminating evidence pistols and
00:38:18
dark lamps were hardly the tools of a
00:38:20
master cabinet maker by leaving the area
00:38:25
it aroused too much suspicion and it
00:38:28
really it indicted in him but there was
00:38:30
no need for him to leave unless he was
00:38:32
responsible for the crime Brody was now
00:38:36
a wanted man
00:38:38
[Music]
00:38:43
his fate echo dr. Jekyll's the moment de
00:38:48
Fora had been safe of all men's respect
00:38:50
wealthy beloved and now I was common
00:38:53
quarry of mankind hunted houseless
00:38:55
thrall to the gobbles
00:38:57
[Music]
00:39:00
two months later police followed Brody's
00:39:04
tracks overseas and arrested him in an
00:39:06
Amsterdam hotel room on July the 17th
00:39:18
Brody was back in Edinburgh there he
00:39:26
took up a new residence as an inmate at
00:39:29
the toll booth prison
00:39:33
Brody's sentencing was Swift you William
00:39:39
Brody cannot but know that your advices
00:39:42
have been a source of your room the
00:39:44
Lords of the judiciary hereby rule that
00:39:47
you shall be hanged by the neck on a jib
00:39:50
it until you are dead
00:39:59
[Music]
00:40:02
October the first 1788 this Brodie's day
00:40:07
of judgment
00:40:07
[Applause]
00:40:12
at 8:00 a.m. he was led to a gallons he
00:40:15
remembered of me tomorrow the Deacon was
00:40:20
the first Scott to design and craft a
00:40:23
drop hatch gibbet he was hanged on a
00:40:33
gallows of his own design is the only
00:40:35
craftsman in history he was actually
00:40:37
literally hoist by his own petard
00:40:41
[Applause]
00:40:43
[Music]
00:40:49
but Brodie had cooked up an elaborate
00:40:52
scheme to beat the very machine he built
00:40:56
because of his influence because of the
00:40:59
money that he has he can pay off people
00:41:01
and so even though he's going to face
00:41:03
the gallows he had a little side deals
00:41:06
working he's even to the very end
00:41:11
Brodie had the hangman on his payroll
00:41:18
[Music]
00:41:24
while he waited for his hanging Brody
00:41:27
received a special guest dr. Dogra ver
00:41:33
was a French surgeon from Paris he was a
00:41:39
man with a special talent saving victims
00:41:43
from the gallows the grabber fitted
00:41:47
Brody with a special collar lined with
00:41:49
hooks to catch the noose the collar was
00:41:54
connected to steel chains running down
00:41:56
the length of Brody's body
00:42:01
with a hangman's help the rope was
00:42:04
fastened under the hooks inside Brody's
00:42:06
color everything has been set up here
00:42:08
his hands are free which is a little bit
00:42:11
unusual to the allows hands to be free
00:42:12
so when they put the noose around his
00:42:14
neck he's able to adjust that and write
00:42:16
the right position when the deccan
00:42:19
dropped through the platform and hit the
00:42:21
end of his tether the impact will be
00:42:24
distributed through the chains away from
00:42:26
his neck Brody was still playing the
00:42:36
odds
00:42:39
[Music]
00:42:42
at half-past eight William Brodie made
00:42:46
his final gamble
00:42:49
[Applause]
00:43:20
before his execution Brody was granted
00:43:23
an unusual request the Chief Justice
00:43:27
allowed his body to be released directly
00:43:30
after the hanging Brody knew he would
00:43:33
need immediate medical attention
00:43:38
bloodletting appeared to be having no
00:43:40
effect it looked like Brody had lost his
00:43:48
biggest gamble a disgrace to his family
00:43:54
he was buried in unmarked grave 22 in
00:43:57
patlu Parish churchyard Edinburgh add
00:44:03
years later churchyard repairs forced
00:44:06
officials to open Brody's grave someone
00:44:11
dug up the tomb they found nothing they
00:44:17
said well this man was never really
00:44:19
buried there witnesses reported seeing
00:44:23
Brody in New York and Pennsylvania
00:44:26
others claimed to see him strolling the
00:44:28
streets of Paris the Deacons story
00:44:35
became a legend did william Brody's
00:44:40
sidestepped justice
00:44:43
it evil prevail over good
00:44:51
[Music]
00:44:54
quoting evil only Jekyll pays the
00:44:58
ultimate price
00:44:59
I said shuddering and weeping in my
00:45:02
chair
00:45:03
no one has suffered such torment here
00:45:06
then I bring the life of that unhappy
00:45:08
Jekyll to an end
00:45:10
[Music]
00:45:16
the whole notion to subvert Authority
00:45:20
which was what Brody was up to it's very
00:45:24
appealing the public always likes to
00:45:26
believe that you can get away with it
00:45:29
but Stevenson was very deliberately
00:45:31
telling us what actually it's not really
00:45:33
like that
00:45:34
and that inevitably if you release evil
00:45:37
it's going to it's going to destroy
00:45:40
itself Jekyll and Hyde made Stevenson
00:45:46
fabulously rich two years after his book
00:45:50
was published he moved to a tropical
00:45:53
island in the South Pacific
00:45:57
he built a mansion and led a quiet life
00:46:00
of rest and writing in a strange twist
00:46:05
of fate Stevenson mimicked dr. Jekyll
00:46:09
and succumbed to drug addiction on a
00:46:13
peaceful day in his Samoan kitchen
00:46:15
tragedy struck
00:46:17
[Music]
00:46:31
luis decades of drug use had taken its
00:46:37
toll on Stevenson like many long-term
00:46:41
opium users a vital vessel in
00:46:44
Stevenson's brain finally ruptured he
00:46:47
had a sudden violent stroke
00:46:49
[Music]
00:46:54
within a matter of hours Stevenson was
00:46:57
dead he was 44 years old Stevenson
00:47:04
misusing laudanum on opiate during most
00:47:07
of his life and saw his stroke I'm sure
00:47:09
was contributed to my uncontrolled high
00:47:11
blood pressure which may well have been
00:47:13
contributed to by the use of laudanum in
00:47:18
1891 Robert Louis Stevenson was buried
00:47:20
in his tranquil Samoan garden
00:47:24
[Music]
00:47:31
he was a brilliant man and a tortured
00:47:33
soul whose greatest work was inspired by
00:47:37
a reckless Scot in love with the
00:47:40
wildlife
00:47:41
[Music]
00:47:43
and whether Brody lived or died that day
00:47:46
on the scaffold he lives on in the pages
00:47:50
of dr. Jekyll and mr. Hyde
00:47:54
[Music]
00:48:01
you
00:48:02
[Music]
00:48:25
you