Joseph Bazalgette knew about things people did, like pooh and to that very end he built the great sewer which apart from moving the pooh also alleviated London from the stink of the rich as well as the poor.
On the engineers seat in the House on Greek street he drew up his plans to do away with bed pans as he laboured alone in the night.
Thomas Crapper came to fame and hardly because of his laughable name, but his name became his fortune and in the music halls of London town people were soon to put a penny down to spend a penny in the lavvy, a savvy lad was Tom.
And they made old Joe a knight for funneling waste out of Londoner's sight, they even had street lights that ran on the gas that floated down tunnels through which the waste had to pass on its way to the sea.
It was a jolly good show and a spiffing great plan carried out quite imaginatively, I can imagine the man and his men way back then were flushed to be a part of London's lavatory story.