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a book of scoundrels(流浪之书)-第31节

小说: a book of scoundrels(流浪之书) 字数: 每页4000字

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adornment; and the worthy Writer to the Signet; who prepared the work
for the Press; would have asked three times the space to record one…half
the adventures。  ‘I sunk upon it with my forks and brought it with me';
‘We obtained thirty…three pounds by this affair'is there not the stalwart
flavour of the epic in these plain; unvarnished sentences?
     His other accomplishments are pallid in the light of his brilliant left
hand。  Once; at Derryhe attended a cock… fight; and beguiled an interval
by emptying the pockets of a lucky bookmaker。  An expert; who watched
the exploit in admiration; could not withhold a compliment。  ‘You are the
Switcher;' he exclaimed; ‘some take all; but you leave nothing。'  And it is
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as the Switcher that Haggart keeps his memory green。   

                             II GENTLEMAN HARRY        
     ‘DAMN ye both! stop; or I will blow your brains out!'  Thus it was
that Harry Simms greeted his victims; proving in a phrase that the heroic
age of the rumpad was no more。  Forgotten the debonair courtesy of
Claude Duval!  Forgotten the lightning wit; the swift repartee of the
incomparable Hind!  No longer was the hightoby…gloak a ‘gentleman' of
the road; he was a butcher; if not a beggar; on horseback; a braggart
without the courage to pull a trigger; a swashbuckler; oblivious of that
ancient style which converted the misery of surrender into a privilege。
Yet Harry Simms; the supreme adventurer of his age; was not without
distinction; his lithe form and his hard…ridden horse were the common
dread of England; his activity was rewarded with a princely treasure; and
if his method were lacking in urbanity; the excuse is that he danced not to
the brilliant measure of the Cavaliers; but limped to the clumsy fiddle…
scraping of the early Georges。                         
     At Eton; where a too…indulgent grandmother had placed him; he
ransacked the desks of his school…fellows; and avenged a birching by
emptying his master's pockets。  Wherefore he lost the hope of a polite
education; and instead of proceeding with a clerkly dignity to King's
College; in the University of Cambridge; he was ignominiously
apprenticed to a breeches…maker。  The one restraint was as irksome as the
other; and Harry Simms abandoned the needle; as he had scorned the
grammar; to go upon the pad。  Though his early companions were
scragged at Tyburn; the light…fingered rascal was indifferent to their fate;
and squandering such booty as fell to his share; he bravely ‘turned out' for
more。  Tottenham Court Fair was the theatre of his childish exploits; and
there he gained some little skill in the picking of pockets。  But a spell of
bad trade brought him to poverty; and he attempted to replenish an empty
pocket by the childish expedient of a threatening letter。
     The plan was conceived and executed with a futility which ensured an
instant capture。  The bungler chose a stranger at haphazard; commanding
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                                       A BOOK OF SCOUNDRELS
him; under penalty of death; to lay five guineas upon a gun in Tower
Wharf; the guineas were cunningly deposited; and the rascal; caught with
his hand upon the booty; was committed to Newgate。  Youth; and the
intercession of his grandmother; procured a release; unjustified by the
infamous stupidity of the trick。  Its very clumsiness should have sent him
over sea; and it is wonderful that from a beginning of so little promise; he
should have climbed even the first slopes of greatness。  However; the
memory of gaol forced him to a brief interlude of honesty; for a while he
wore the pink coat of Colonel Cunningham's postillion; and presently was
promoted to the independence of a hackney coach。       
     Thus employed; he became acquainted with the famous Cyprians of
Covent Garden; who; loving him for his handsome face and sprightly
gesture; seduced him to desert his cab for an easier profession。  So long
as the sky was fair; he lived under their amiable protection; but the
summer having chased the smarter gentry from town; the ladies could
afford him no more than would purchase a horse and a pair of pistols; so
that Harry was compelled to challenge fortune on the high road。  His first
journey was triumphantly successful。  A post…chaise and a couple of
coaches emptied their wealth into his hands; and; riding for London; he
was able to return the favours lavished upon him by Covent Garden。  At
the first touch of gold he was transformed to a finished blade。  He
purchased himself a silver…hilted sword; which he dangled over a discreet
suit of black velvet; a prodigious run of luck at the gaming…tables kept his
purse well lined; and he made so brilliant an appearance in his familiar
haunts that he speedily gained the name of ‘Gentleman Harry。'  But the
money; lightly won; was lightly spent。  The tables took back more than
they gave; and before long Simms was astride his horse again; flourishing
his irons; and crying:  ‘Stand and deliver'! upon every road in England。
     Epping Forest was his general hunting…ground; but his enterprise took
him far afield; and if one night he galloped by starlight across Bagshot
Heath; another he was holding up the York stage with unbridled insolence。
He robbed; he roared; he blustered with praiseworthy industry; and good
luck coming to the aid of caution; he escaped for a while the necessary
punishment of his crimes。  It was on Stockbridge Downs that he met his
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                                       A BOOK OF SCOUNDRELS
first check。                                           
     He had stopped a chariot; and came off with a hatful of gold; but the
victims; impatient of disaster; raised the county; and Gentleman Harry was
laid by the heels。  Never at a loss; he condescended to a cringing
hypocrisy: he whined; he whimpered; he babbled of reform; he plied his
prosecutors with letters so packed with penitence; that they abandoned
their case; and in a couple of days Simms had eased a collector at Eversey
Bank of three hundred pounds。  For this enterprise two others climbed
the gallows; and the robber's pride in his capture was miserably lessened
by the shedding of innocent blood。                     
     But he forgot his remorse as speedily as he dissipated his money; and
sentimentality neither damped his enjoyment nor restrained his energy。
Even his brief visits to London were turned to the best account; and;
though he would have the world believe him a mere voluptuary; his eye
was bent sternly upon business。  If he did lose his money in a gambling
hell; he knew who won it; and spoke with his opponent on the homeward
way。  In his eyes a fuddled rake was always fair game; and the stern
windows of St。 Clement's Church looked down upon many a profitable
adventure。  His most distinguished journey was to Ireland; whither he set
forth to find a market for his stolen treasure。  But he determined that the
road should bear its own charges; and he reached Dublin a richer man than
he left London。  In three months he was penniless; but he did not begin
trade again until he had recrossed the Channel; and; having got to work
near Chester; he returned to the Piazza fat with bank…notes。
     With success his extravagance increased; and; living the life of a man
about town; he was soon harassed by debt。  More than once he was
lodged in the Marshalsea; and as his violent temper resented the
interference of a dun; he became notorious for his assaults upon sheriff's
officers。  And thus his poor skill grew poorer: forgetting his trade; he
expected that brandy would ease his embarrassment。  At last; sodden with
drink; he enlisted in the Guards; from which regiment he deserted; only to
be pressed aboard a man…of…war。  Freed by a clever trick; he took to the
road again; until a paltry theft from a barber transported him to Maryland。
There he turned sailor; and his ship; The Two Sisters; being taken by a
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privateer; he contrived to scramble into Portugal; whence he made his way
back to England; and to the only adventure of which he was master。  He
landed with no more money than the price of a pistol; but he prigged a
prancer at Bristol horsefair; and set out upon his last journey。  The tide of
his fortune was at flood。  He crammed his pockets with watches; he was
owner of enough diamonds to set up shop in a fashionable quarter; of
guineas he had as many as would support his magnificence for half a year;
and at last he resolved to quit the road; and to live like the gentleman he
was。  To this prudence he was the more easily persuaded; because not
only were the thief…takers eager for his capture; but he was a double…dyed
deserter; whose sole chance of quietude was a decent obscurity。
     His resolution was taken at St。 Albans; and over a comfortable dinn

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