登陆注册
19664300000019

第19章 MOLL CUTPURSE AND JONATHAN WILD(5)

Thus she declined into old age,attended,like Queen Mary,by her maids,who would card,reel,spin,and beguile her leisure with sweet singing.Though her spirit was untamed,the burden of her years compelled her to a tranquil life.She,who formerly never missed a bullbaiting,must now content herself with ticktack.

Her fortune,moreover,had been wrecked in the Civil War.Though silver shells still jingled in her pocket,time was she knew the rattle of the yellow boys.But she never lost courage,and died at last of a dropsy,in placid contentment with her lot.

Assuredly she was born at a time well suited to her genius.Had she lived today,she might have been a `Pioneer';she might even have discussed some paltry problem of sex in a printed obscenity.

In her own freer,wiser age,she was not man's detractor,but his rival;and if she never knew the passion of love,she was always loyal to the obligation of friendship.By her will she left twenty pounds to celebrate the Second Charles's restoration to his kingdom;and you contemplate her career with the single regret that she died a brief year before the red wine,thus generously bestowed,bubbled at the fountain.

II

JONATHAN WILD

JONATHAN WILD

WHEN Jonathan Wild and the Count La Ruse,in Fielding's narrative,took a hand at cards,Jonathan picked his opponent's pocket,though he knew it was empty,while the Count,from sheer force of habit,stacked the cards,though Wild had not a farthing to lose.And if in his uncultured youth the great man stooped to prig with his own hand,he was early cured of the weakness:so that Fielding's picture of the hero taking a bottlescrew from the Ordinary's pocket in the very moment of death is entirely fanciful.For `this Machiavel of Thieves,'as a contemporary styled him,left others to accomplish what his ingenuity had planned.His was the high policy of theft.If he lived on terms of familiar intimacy with the millkens,the bridleculls,the buttockandfiles of London,he was none the less the friend and minister of justice.He enjoyed the freedom of Newgate and the Old Bailey.He came and went as he liked:he packed juries,he procured bail,he manufactured evidence;and there was scarce an assize or a sessions passed but he slew his man.

The world knew him for a robber,yet could not refuse his brilliant service.At the Poultry Counter,you are told,he laid the foundations of his future greatness,and to the Poultry Counter he was committed for some trifling debt ere he had fully served his apprenticeship to the art and mystery of bucklemaking.There he learned his craft,and at his enlargement he was able forthwith to commence thiefcatcher.His plan was conceived with an effrontery that was nothing less than genius.

On the one side he was the factor,or rather the tyrant,of the crosscoves:on the other he was the trusted agent of justice,the benefactor of the outraged and the plundered.Among his earliest exploits was the recovery of the Countess of Gdn's chair,impudently carried off when her ladyship had but just alighted;and the courage wherewith he brought to justice the murderers of one Mrs.Knap,who had been slain for some trifling booty,established his reputation as upon a rock.He at once advertised himself in the public prints as ThiefCatcher General of Great Britain and Ireland,and proceeded to send to the gallows every scoundrel that dared dispute his position.

His opportunities of gain were infinite.Even if he did not organise the robbery which his cunning was presently to discover,he had spies in every hole and corner to set him on the felon's track.Nor did he leave a single enterprise to chance:`He divided the city and suburbs into wards or divisions,and appointed the persons who were to attend each ward,and kept them strictly to their duty.'If a subordinate dared to disobey or to shrink from murder,Jonathan hanged him at the next assize,and happily for him he had not a single confederate whose neck he might not put in the halter when he chose.Thus he preserved the union and the fidelity of his gang,punishing by judicial murder the smallest insubordination,the faintest suspicion of rivalry.

Even when he had shut his victim up in Newgate,he did not leave him so long as there was a chance of blackmail.He would make the most generous offers of evidence and defence to every thief that had a stiver left him.But whether or not he kept his bargainthat depended upon policy and inclination.On one occasion,when he had brought a friend to the Old Bailey,and relented at the last moment,he kept the prosecutor drunk from the noble motive of selfinterest,until the case was over.And so esteemed was he of the officers of the law that even this interference did but procure a reprimand.

His meanest action marked him out from his fellows,but it was not until he habitually pillaged the treasures he afterwards restored to their grateful owners for a handsome consideration,that his art reached the highest point of excellence.The event was managed by him with amazing adroitness from beginning to end.

同类推荐
  • 经律戒相布萨轨仪

    经律戒相布萨轨仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 黥

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说仁王护国般若波罗蜜经疏神宝记

    佛说仁王护国般若波罗蜜经疏神宝记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • A Monk of Fife

    A Monk of Fife

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 诫初心学人文

    诫初心学人文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 番社采风图考

    番社采风图考

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 玄奘西行记

    玄奘西行记

    前一段时间,看了专题片《大国的崛起》,深受启发。那几个在历史上曾经辉煌的大国,无一不是从走出自己的国土开始的,他们到了外面,呼吸了新鲜的空气,输入了新鲜的血液,借鉴和包容了别人的文化,从而使自己壮大起来。于是,我想起了一千多年前的大唐盛世,想起了玄奘。
  • 狂戮之魂

    狂戮之魂

    转眼间,由人类统治的青铜时代即将步入尾声。在这风云变幻之际,人类内部守旧派和激进派的对抗日趋激烈,各方势力也纷纷蠢蠢欲动,意图趁此机会达成目的。我们的主角洛克在机缘巧合之下,也踏入了这场时代的浪潮之中。而直到最后他才发现,似乎一切冥冥中早已注定……PS:本书为西方魔幻的世界观,所以为了和设定搭调,人物名字只能使用了外国的命名方式_(:3」∠)_
  • 有爱有英雄联盟

    有爱有英雄联盟

    这是一个充满英雄的联盟,也是一个充满逗比的联盟...
  • 上校的博士妻

    上校的博士妻

    刚拿到毕业证书就被家人送来了结婚证书,虽然已经拿到博士证书,但是她今年才22岁好不好呀,怎么就嫁人了呢,她美妙的人生还没开始就已经进入个坟墓了,对方还姓公羊?据说还是大校?特种部队的精锐!虽说有点突然,不过看上去这个老公还不错吖!
  • 北远之颠沛流离

    北远之颠沛流离

    北远是一部小说系列,它讲述的是在异大陆上发生的故事,每个故事的时间,年代都不一样,总的来说是分为,蛮荒时代,诸神时代,大修武时代,战国时代,大航海时代,神迹时代等。我想以小故事的方式,向大家完美的展现出北远异大陆的事情。颠沛流离是发生在北远大陆战国时代中期的故事,里面可能不会涉及到太多的修炼等等,但会出现一些奇特的物种以及兽类,还有天文现象,以及地理奇观。颠沛流离的基调是以战争时代人要活着和活下去为依据,人性的描写可能占的也不会太多,主要是描述各大战场和计谋。北远系列的故事估计在20W到30W之间,但故事会很多,我想将这部系列小说写成类似于我们的世界史或则中国史那样的著作。
  • 毕业那年,适逢花开

    毕业那年,适逢花开

    吕蔚涯和林乐知是同一所大学不同专业的大四学生,他们一个青春热烈,一个清冷淡漠,本无交集的两人却在毕业那年邂逅于夜晚的操场,就像炙热火光与寂寥冰雪的碰撞,这次相遇震颤着各自的心弦。多年前车祸留下的生死之迷深深埋藏在蔚涯心中,让她陷入寻找和等待的深渊。林乐知的出现让她尘封的心开始苏醒,毕业晚会后一次误会让原本就内心矛盾的蔚涯选择了逃离。三年时光转瞬即逝,当寻找成为赎罪的方式,她渐渐走出过去。她重返故地,终于鼓足勇气推开爱情的门,林乐知却已有了未婚妻,她只得又一次逃跑。朋友的背叛、闺蜜的死亡、林家的落败、那个人的归来……他们的爱情面临着一次又一次的考验,他们能否解开误会,幸福牵手?
  • 弗罗姆行为研究讲稿(世界大师思想盛宴)

    弗罗姆行为研究讲稿(世界大师思想盛宴)

    本书介绍了人性的弱点、爱与思维、生存与竞争、热情与勇气、自信与安全感、独断与自信、信念与政治、天才的本质、动物行为、拥挤与侵犯、人的天性、貌似侵犯等等。
  • 明月诸天

    明月诸天

    本来一直想过幸福的生活,可惜老天总喜欢玩玩弄。好吧!既然不想被天玩弄,只好把天诸了。嗯嗯!有个性,就是任性。嘻嘻!
  • 御天命地

    御天命地

    命运不公,一朝修仙,逆天改命;天道不公,一夕闻道,御天命地。