Three Days of Dying
Foul Play: A Historical True Crime Podcast
Shane L. Waters, Wendy Cee, Gemma Hoskins
4.5 • 992 Ratings
🗓️ 17 March 2026
⏱️ 20 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Content Warning
This episode contains detailed descriptions of poisoning and prolonged death. Support resources are listed at the end of these notes.
This Episode
Season 39: The Balham Mystery. For seventy-two hours, Charles Bravo lay dying at The Priory while doctors—including Queen Victoria's own physician—watched helplessly. He suffered. He convulsed. He said almost nothing about who poisoned him.
One woman claims she heard a confession. No one else heard a word. Was it truth, or a convenient lie to make murder look like suicide?
The Victim
Charles Bravo had three days to name his killer—and chose silence.
From April 18th to April 21st, 1876, the thirty-year-old barrister endured unimaginable suffering at The Priory in Balham. The antimony that had entered his system through his bedside water destroyed him methodically—causing relentless vomiting, organ failure, and slow collapse.
Throughout his ordeal, Charles remained lucid for extended periods. He could speak. He could understand questions. Yet when doctors pressed him about what he had taken, he mentioned only rubbing laudanum on his gums for a toothache. When they begged him to name anyone who might have harmed him, he said nothing useful.
The Crime
The parade of physicians began within hours of Charles's collapse. Dr. Joseph Moore arrived first, administering mustard water to induce vomiting—standard treatment for suspected poisoning. By morning, Charles's condition had deteriorated so drastically that Florence summoned reinforcements.
Dr. George Harrison came from London. Dr. Royes Bell, a specialist in internal medicine, examined the patient. None could identify the poison or stop its progress. Charles vomited until nothing remained. His body rejected water, medicine, even champagne.
On April 20th, Sir William Gull arrived—the physician to Queen Victoria herself. His verdict was grim: Charles was beyond saving. Whatever poison he had ingested, the damage was irreversible.
The Investigation
The alleged confession came from Jane Cannon Cox, Florence's companion. According to Mrs. Cox, Charles turned to her in the sickroom and whispered: "I took poison. Don't tell Florence."
Five words that could explain everything—or nothing at all.
But the housemaid Mary Ann Keeber was present in that room for much of the ordeal. She heard no such statement. The doctors who questioned Charles directly received no confession. Only Mrs. Cox, alone and uncorroborated, claimed to hear Charles take responsibility for his own death.
Sir William Gull made his own attempt. "Did you take anything to cause this illness?" he asked. Charles reportedly answered: "I took nothing intentionally."
Nothing intentionally. The words of a man who did not know how poison entered his body? Or a man protecting someone else?
Historical Context
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Charles Bravo took three days to die. |
| 0:06.0 | For 72 hours, the 30-year-old barrister lay in his bed at the priory. |
| 0:13.0 | His body consumed by a poison that doctors could not identify. |
| 0:18.0 | He vomited until there was nothing left. He convulsed until his muscles gave out. |
| 0:25.4 | And through it all, he said almost nothing about how it happened. |
| 0:31.0 | Hello, friend. Welcome to Fowl Play. I'm Shane Waters, and this is episode three of our season on the Bala Mystery, |
| 0:41.9 | the poisoning of Charles Bravo in April 1876. If you haven't heard episodes one and two, |
| 0:50.0 | I encourage you to go back. This case builds on itself, and you'll want the full picture. |
| 0:57.3 | When we left off, Charles had collapsed in his bedroom after drinking from his bedside water jug, |
| 1:04.4 | screaming for hot water, before falling unconscious. |
| 1:09.2 | His wife Florence rushed upstairs to find him vomiting violently. |
| 1:15.2 | His face, ashen, his body already beginning to fail. |
| 1:21.2 | Tonight we follow Charles through those final three days. |
| 1:26.0 | We'll witness the parade of doctors summoned to the priory, |
| 1:30.4 | including Queen Victoria's own physician, Sir William Gull. We'll hear the one statement |
| 1:37.4 | Charles allegedly made about his condition, a statement that would become the most contested piece of evidence in the |
| 1:45.9 | entire case. And we'll watch as this initial inquest reaches a verdict that satisfies absolutely |
| 1:53.9 | no one. What we won't hear is the truth, because Charles Bravo, even as his organs shut down and his life slipped away, |
| 2:05.6 | refused to say who poisoned him. Or perhaps, he genuinely didn't know. The first doctor arrived at |
| 2:16.7 | the priory within the hour. Dr Joseph Moore, the family physician, |
| 2:21.1 | had been summoned from his home nearby. He found Charles in severe distress, vomiting continuously, |
| 2:27.6 | pulse weak and rapid, skin cold and clammy. The symptoms suggested poisoning, but of what kind? |
... |
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