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a book of scoundrels(流浪之书)-第22部分

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artistry。  Nor would he believe in the possibility of death。  To the very
last he was confirmed in the hope of pardon; but; pardon failing him; his
single consolation was that his procession from Westminster to Newgate
was the largest that London had ever known; and that in the crowd a
constable broke his leg。  Even in the Condemned Hole he was
unreconciled。  If he had broken the Castle; why should he not also evade
the gallows?  Wherefore he resolved to carry a knife to Tyburn that he
might cut the rope; and so; losing himself in the crowd; ensure escape。
But the knife was discovered by his warder's vigilance; and taken from
him after a desperate struggle。  At the scaffold he behaved with admirable
gravity: confessing the wickeder of his robberies; and asking pardon for
his enormous crimes。  ‘Of two virtues;' he boasted at the self…same
moment that the cart left him dancing without the music; ‘I have ever
cherished an honest pride: never have I stooped to friendship with
Jonathan Wild; or with any of his detestable thief…takers; and; though an
undutiful son; I never damned my mother's eyes。'       
     Thus died Jack Sheppard; intrepid burglar and incomparable artist;
who; in his own separate ambition of prison…breaking; remains; and will
ever remain; unrivalled。  His most brilliant efforts were the result neither
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                                       A BOOK OF SCOUNDRELS
of strength nor of cunning; for so slight was he of build; so deficient in
muscle; that both Edgworth Bess and Mistress Maggot were wont to bang
him to their own mind and purpose。  And an escape so magnificently
planned; so bravely executed as was his from the Strong Room; is far
greater than a mere effect of cunning。  Those mysterious gifts which
enable mankind to batter the stone walls of a prison; or to bend the iron
bars of a cage; were pre…eminently his。  It is also certain that he could not
have employed his gifts in a more reputable profession。
      II LOUIS…DOMINIQUE CARTOUCHE                     
     LOUIS…DOMINIQUE CARTOUCHE                         
      Of all the heroes who have waged a private and undeclared war upon
their neighbours; Louis…Dominique Cartouche was the most generously
endowed。  It was but his resolute contempt for politics; his unswerving
love of plunder for its own sake; that prevented him from seizing a throne
or questing after the empire of the world。  The modesty of his ambition
sets him below Csar; or Napoleon; but he yields to neither in the
genius of success: whatever he would attain was his on the instant; nor did
failure interrupt his career; until treachery; of which he went in perpetual
terror; involved himself and his comrades in ruin。  His talent of
generalship was unrivalled。  None of the gang was permitted the liberty
of a free…lance。  By Cartouche was the order given; and so long as the
chief was in repose; Paris might enjoy her sleep。  When it pleased him to
join battle a whistle was enough。                      
     Now; it was revealed to his intelligence that the professional thief; who
devoted all his days and such of his nights as were spared from
depredation to wine and women; was more readily detected than the valet…
de…chambre; who did but crack a crib or cry ‘Stand and deliver!' on a
proper occasion。  Wherefore; he bade his soldiers take service in the great
houses of Paris; that; secure of suspicion; they might still be ready to obey
the call of duty。  Thus; also; they formed a reconnoitring force; whose
vigilance no prize might elude; and nowhere did Cartouche display his
genius to finer purpose than in this prudent disposition of his army。  It
remained only to efface himself; and therein he succeeded admirably by
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                                       A BOOK OF SCOUNDRELS
never sleeping two following nights in the same house: so that; when
Cartouche was the terror of Paris; when even the King trembled in his bed;
none knew his stature nor could recognise his features。  In this shifting
and impersonal vizard; he broke houses; picked pockets; robbed on the pad。
One night he would terrify the Faubourg St。 Germain; another he would
plunder the humbler suburb of St。 Antoine; but on each excursion he was
companioned by experts; and the map of Paris was rigidly apportioned
among his followers。  To each district a captain was appointed; whose
business it was to apprehend the customs of the quarter; and thus to
indicate the proper season of attack。                  
     Ever triumphant; with yellow…boys ever jingling in his pocket;
Cartouche lived a life of luxurious merriment。  A favourite haunt was a
cabaret in the Rue Dauphine; chosen for the sanest of reasons; as his
Captain Ferrand declared; that the landlady was a femme d'esprit。  Here
he would sit with his friends and his women; and thereafter drive his
chariot across the Pont Neuf to the sunnier gaiety of the Palais…Royal。  A
finished dandy; he wore by preference a grey…white coat with silver
buttons; his breeches and stockings were on a famous occasion of black
silk; while a sword; scabbarded in satin; hung at his hip。
     But if Cartouche; like many another great man; had the faculty of
enjoyment; if he loved wine and wit; and mistresses handsomely attired in
damask; he did not therefore neglect his art。  When once the gang was
perfectly ordered; murder followed robbery with so instant a frequency
that Paris was panic…stricken。  A cry of ‘Cartouche' straightway ensured
an empty street。  The King took counsel with his ministers: munificent
rewards were offered; without effect。  The thief was still at work in all
security; and it was a pretty irony which urged him to strip and kill on the
highway one of the King's own pages。  Also; he did his work with so
astonishing a silence; with so reasoned a certainty; that it seemed
impossible to take him or his minions red…handed。      
     Before all; he discouraged the use of firearms。  ‘A pistol;' his
philosophy urged; ‘is an excellent weapon in an emergency; but reserve it
for emergencies。  At close quarters it is none too sure; and why give the
alarm against yourself?'  Therefore he armed his band with loaded staves;
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                                       A BOOK OF SCOUNDRELS
which sent their enemies into a noiseless and fatal sleep。  Thus was he
wont to laugh at the police; deeming capture a plain impossibility。  The
traitor; in sooth; was his single; irremediable fear; and if ever suspicion
was aroused against a member of the gang; that member was put to death
with the shortest shrift。                              
     It happened in the last year of Cartouche's supremacy that a lily…
livered comrade fell in love with a pretty dressmaker。  The indiscretion
was the less pardonable since the dressmaker had a horror of theft; and
impudently tried to turn her lover from his trade。  Cartouche; discovering
the backslider; resolved upon a public exhibition。  Before the assembled
band he charged the miscreant with treason; and; cutting his throat;
disfigured his face beyond recognition。  Thereafter he pinned to the corse
the following inscription; that others might be warned by so monstrous an
example:  ‘Ci git Jean Rebti; qui a eu le traitement qu'il m
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