登陆注册
19664300000023

第23章 RALPH BRISCOE(1)

A SPARE,lean frame;a small head set forward upon a pair of sloping shoulders;a thin,sharp nose,and ratlike eyes;a flat,hollow chest;shrunk shanks,modestly retreating from their snuffcoloured hosethese are the tokens which served to remind his friends of Ralph Briscoe,the Clerk of Newgate.As he left the prison in the grey air of morning upon some errand of mercy or revenge,he appeared the least fearsome of mortals,while an awkward limp upon his left toe deepened the impression of timidity.So abstract was his manner,so hesitant his gait,that he would hug the wall as he went,nervously stroking its grimy surface with his long,twittering fingers.But Ralph,as justice and the Jug knew too well,was neither fool nor coward.His character belied his outward seeming.A large soul had crept into the case of his wizened body,and if a poltroon among his ancestors had gifted him with an alien type,he had inherited from some nameless warrior both courage and resource.

He was born in easy circumstances,and gently nurtured in the distant village of Kensington.Though cast in a scholar's mould,and very apt for learning,he rebelled from the outset against a career of inaction.His lack of strength was never a check upon his high stomach;he would fight with boys of twice his size,and accept the certain defeat in a cheerful spirit of dogged pugnacity.Moreover,if his arms were weak,his cunning was as keenedged as his tongue;and,before his stricken eye had paled,he had commonly executed an ample vengeance upon his enemy.Nor was it industry that placed him at the top of the class.A ready wit made him master of the knowledge he despised.

But he would always desert his primer to follow the hangman's lumbering cart up Tyburn Hill,and,still a mere imp of mischief,he would run the weary way from Kensington to Shoe Lane on the distant chance of a cockfight.He was present,so he would relate in after years,when Sir Thomas Jermin's man put his famous trick upon the pit.With a hundred pounds in his pocket and under his arm a dunghill cock,neatly trimmed for the fray,the ingenious ruffian,as Briscoe would tell you,went off to Shoe Lane,persuaded an accomplice to fight the cock in Sir Thomas Jermin's name,and laid a level hundred against his own bird.So lofty was Sir Thomas's repute that backers were easily found,but the dunghill rooster instantly showed a clean pair of heels,and the cheat was justified of his cunning.

Thus Ralph Briscoe learnt the first lessons in that art of sharping wherein he was afterwards an adept;and when he left school his head was packed with many a profitable device which no book learning could impart.His father,however,still resolute that he should join an intelligent profession,sent him to Gray's Inn that he might study law.Here the elegance of his handwriting gained him a rapid repute;his skill became the envy of all the leansouled clerks in the Inn,and he might have died a respectable attorney had not the instinct of sport forced him from the inkpot and parchment of his profession.Ill could he tolerate the monotony and restraint of this clerkly life.In his eyes law was an instrument,not of justice,but of jugglery.Men were born,said his philosophy,rather to risk their necks than ink their fingers;and if a bold adventure puts you in a difficulty,why,then,you hire some strawsplitting attorney to show his cunning.Indeed,the study of law was for him,as it was for Falstaff,an excuse for many a bout and merrymaking.He loved his glass,and he loved his wench,and he loved a bullbaiting better than either.It was his boast,and Moll Cutpurse's compliment,that he never missed a match in his life,and assuredly no man was better known in Paris Garden than the intrepid Ralph Briscoe.

The cloistered seclusion of Gray's Inn grew daily more irksome.

There he would sit,in mute despair,drumming the table with his fingers,and biting the quill,whose use he so bitterly contemned.Of winter afternoons he would stare through the leaded windowpanes at the gaunt,leafless trees,on whose summits swayed the cawing rooks,until servitude seemed intolerable,and he prayed for the voice of the bearward that summoned him to Southwark.And when the chained bear,the familiar monkey on his back,followed the shrill bagpipe along the curious street,Briscoe felt that blood,not ink,coursed in his veins,forgot the tiresome impediment of the law,and joined the throng,hungry for this sport of kings.Nor was he the patron of an enterprise wherein he dared take no part.He was as bold and venturesome as the bravest ruffler that ever backed a dog at a baiting.When the bull,cruelly secured behind,met the onslaught of his opponents,throwing them off,now this side,now that,with his horns,Briscoe,lost in excitement,would leap into the ring that not a point of the combat should escape him.

So it was that he won the friendship of his illustrious benefactress,Moll Cutpurse.For,one day,when he had ventured too near the maddened bull,the brute made a heave at his breeches,which instantly gave way;and in another moment he would have been gored to death,had not Moll seized him by the collar and slung him out of the ring.Thus did his courage ever contradict his appearance,and at the dangerous game of whipping the blinded bear he had no rival,either for bravery or adroitness.He would rush in with uplifted whip until the breath of the infuriated beast was hot upon his cheek,let his angry lash curl for an instant across the bear's flank,and then,for all his halting foot,leap back into safety with a smiling pride in his own nimbleness.

同类推荐
  • The Major

    The Major

    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。
  • 明真破妄章颂

    明真破妄章颂

    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。
  • 本草分经

    本草分经

    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。
  • 书解篇

    书解篇

    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。
  • 问远师

    问远师

    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。
热门推荐
  • 天虚戒

    天虚戒

    神秘古老的传承,看似普通的戒指,命运的齿轮在慢慢转动,命运,随之改写。本想一心求仙问道,奈何因果绕身,索性与天地争锋,最后更是登向未知之路……
  • 重生之掳妻

    重生之掳妻

    因为同父异母妹妹的嫉妒,订婚典礼的那天她被毁容夺夫,穷冬烈风中她被抛掷于冰水中,最后她带着一身的鲜血淋漓离开了这座城市。三年之后,她以崭新的面貌重新出现在他们面前。身边有一个男人,高贵,儒雅,权势滔天……最重要的是,宠她如命!
  • 师尊独宠:霸爱小萌仙

    师尊独宠:霸爱小萌仙

    她,夏绾绾,于三千年成为仙。却一生步步沦为他人棋子,看着所爱,所亲之人亡去。在最后,却也死在了下棋之人手中,不得善终。似乎乾坤逆转,在世重生。她必定要将前世所害她之人,得到应有的惩罚。重生一世,不再为仙
  • 星星上的花2

    星星上的花2

    一场预谋中的医闹,让风安堂和封信陷入了千人所指的危机。彦景城,姚姚,封老爷子,何欢……还有封信的师弟慕成东,都纷纷卷入了这场纠纷。而疯狂的漩涡中心,封信的寂静与孤独,让安之在疼痛中渐渐深入了这个当年惊艳了她的青春的白衣少年的内心。只是,爱一个人,若只有殉葬之勇,却无探宝之慧,怎能伴他走到永远?小圈圈的失踪,彦一的觉醒,姚姚的阴谋,慕成东的秘密,若素的危机,长辈的担心……那些看似的死结,终将一一解开。月光依然明亮,桂树飘满清香,这世间惟有初心会一直闪光。而终于成为他最重要的人后,她终于发现,原来他们的缘起,从更早已经开始。
  • 源无之武魂霸天

    源无之武魂霸天

    编写此书以致唐家三少的小说对我的启发和对创作的热情......源无帝国大皇子因性情暴戾,做事极端被源无大帝--唐瑾轩打下三千天外天,以望其能修心境满。至此,大皇子--唐雨轩在混沌之下的尊武位面开始了一段扮猪吃老虎的伟大旅程......
  • 造化神主

    造化神主

    两世为人,都是孤苦伶仃,许是天注定?不,我偏要逆天改命!天不予我,我就自己去取!从此之后,一切幸福我都要紧紧的攥在手里,谁也不能夺去!
  • 中国灾害通史·明代卷

    中国灾害通史·明代卷

    本书内容包括:明代自然灾害总论、明代自然灾害概况、明代自然灾害频繁的原因、明代救灾制度、明代的灾害思想等。
  • 抗日兵王

    抗日兵王

    1937年的那段时期,百姓居无定所,任人欺凌!日寇侵我国土,占我河山,令人痛恨!但他,横空出世,却扭转了这个局面!日寇一提他,闻风丧胆,吓得屁滚尿流。百姓一提他,说的比神仙还邪乎。而他的身边也涌现出了各式各样的美女,楼兰后裔,甜美护士,女大学生,共同演绎了一段美女配英雄的佳话……
  • 万法成空

    万法成空

    一朝穿越,附身他人,本应死亡的叶枫平白比别人多得了一世的命,只是……情况似乎有些不太妙啊?这个世界的武道未免也太高了点吧?这让自己这个华夏武术大师情何以堪啊!!!害我的,我将永记,辱我的,我绝不会忘!我叶枫从来都不是一个大度的人,就性格而言,不论的大仇还是小怨,我都不会放过。还是那句话,想要弄死我,就要有先被我弄死的觉悟!
  • 没关系,我爱你

    没关系,我爱你

    叶青承在5岁时经历一件大事,患上“癔症”,直到遇到张静怡这一缕阳光,才重拾自我。张静怡自出生以来一直活在自己的理想中。终有一日,恍然发现,妈妈得了重病,父母经营的制衣厂岌岌可危,面临一堆债务。在无路可走的时候,张静怡找到初中同学叶青承,希望他能够提供帮助。而他,面对自己的暗恋对象,提出了结婚的协议……