It was the first Jack the Ripper experience for Melanie, accompanying her brother, Simon, out-of-work actor and part-time London Walks guide. She’d enjoyed his Sherlock Holmes and Charles Dickens walks, but this one was creepier: it was autumn, twilight had already turned to night, and the yellow fog that rubs its back upon the window-panes of the Whitechapel buildings was similar to that of November 1888.
At first, Melanie had stuck to Simon like a limpet, but the group was large, tourists had questions, and she lagged behind, lost in the backstreets and the sudden pea souper.
It was an echoing whistle that spooked her, an old music hall song. Pulling her collar up around her neck, she quickened her pace, only to collide with a man in a black stove hat.
‘I’ve been looking for you,’ he said.
Simon twirled his false moustache.
Kim M. Russell, 15th September 2025

Björn is our host for Prosery today at the dVerse Poets Pub, and the line he has chosen is from the poem ‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, by T.S. Elliot: “The yellow fog that rubs its back upon the window-panes”, which we must include in our 144-word piece of prose.
Kim I felt goosebumps creeping up the back of my neck as she fell farther behind. What a chiller. I’m glad she’s ok.
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Thank you, Lisa. Those walks can be quite scary.
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You’re welcome. Have never been on one and probably never will!
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We have ghost walks in Norwich, which are really good. Lots of historical stuff too.
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We don’t have ghost walks here, but we have haunted houses around Halloween. Never been to one of those either 🙂
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I love how the yellow fog pulled you inte a London Scene like that… What a relief in the end… a tourguide has to be responsible for his clients (even his sister)
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Thanks Björn. I remember those pea souper fogs from the 1960s, before there were stricter rules in London.
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I remember we learned about them in school… but I also remember yellow fog during cold winter days in the 80s before there were stricter rules in Sweden.
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This sounds like a good British mystery, Kim. I remember the fog in England in the late 70s. We had to use a coal fireplace to heat the bungalow we lived in. When the fog settled, it literally looked like pea soup!
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Thank you, Colleen. Where did you live? We still heat with solid fuel in a burner, although we have storage heaters, but they don’t work so well.
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I was stationed at RAF Lakenheath in East Anglia. We lived in Lakenheath, in a tiny bungalow near the base. Whew. It was a cold winter. I don’t remember yellow fog. I’ll have to get creative.
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Lakenheath is only sixty odd miles from us.
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I wish I lived in England now! I hated to leave.
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OMG
what happens next??? How could you leave us in suspense.like that
much♡love
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Thanks Gillena, and much love to you.
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I love the limpet metaphor. Very cool. my sister went on a Jack the Ripper tour in London when she was an undergraduate. She loved it. What a cool story! Thank you so much for posting it.
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Thank you, Aaron. I’ve always been interested in Jack the Ripper.
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OOh, I love the danger hovering throughout like a London fog. Have just watched a Lucy Worsley programme about Jack the Ripper and I could really picture the tour – Jae
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Thank you, Jae. I love Lucy Worsley, watch all her programmes and listen to her podcast ‘Ladykillers’ on BBC Sounds.
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I think you have thriller there. Intense
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Thank you, Truedessa.
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Very nicely done, Kim!
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Thanks Dwight!
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You are welcome.
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A masterful tale of suspense told with prosery economy, Kim…
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Thanks Andrew!
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Nicely done. Gave me the shivers. 👏🏽
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Thank you, Selma.
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Very nice. I love the way you incorporated the line from the poem. And there is an overall creepiness to the story. Well done!
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Thank you, Stew!
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Love this, Kim! All the details, London in autumn, the Jack the Ripper walk around the back streets, cosily atmospheric 🙂
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Thank you, Nina!
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What an excellent way to use the quote! I loved this!
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Thank you, Violet!
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Ooooh, tingles, this hooked me right in. Stands perfectly as is, but could even be expanded ….
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I’m glad you enjoyed it, Paul.
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Great read indeed.
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