Jack Sheppard: A Romance
Transcribers Note: Obvious typesetter errors from the original corrected in this etext. If they are not obvious errors, they are left as in the original.
Upon my word, friend, said I, you have almost made me long to try what a robber I should make. There is a great art in it, if you did, quoth he. Ah! but, said I, there's a great deal in being hanged.
Life and Actions of Guzman d'Alfarache.
On the night of Friday, the 26th of November, 1703, and at the hour of eleven, the door of a miserable habitation, situated in an obscure quarter of the Borough of Southwark, known as the Old Mint, was opened; and a man, with a lantern in his hand, appeared at the threshold. This person, whose age might be about forty, was attired in a brown double-breasted frieze coat, with very wide skirts, and a very narrow collar; a light drugget waistcoat, with pockets reaching to the knees; black plush breeches; grey worsted hose; and shoes with round toes, wooden heels, and high quarters, fastened by small silver buckles. He wore a three-cornered hat, a sandy-coloured scratch wig, and had a thick woollen wrapper folded round his throat. His clothes had evidently seen some service, and were plentifully begrimed with the dust of the workshop. Still he had a decent look, and decidedly the air of one well-to-do in the world. In stature, he was short and stumpy; in person, corpulent; and in countenance, sleek, snub-nosed, and demure.
Immediately behind this individual, came a pale, poverty-stricken woman, whose forlorn aspect contrasted strongly with his plump and comfortable physiognomy. She was dressed in a tattered black stuff gown, discoloured by various stains, and intended, it would seem, from the remnants of rusty crape with which it was here and there tricked out, to represent the garb of widowhood, and held in her arms a sleeping infant, swathed in the folds of a linsey-woolsey shawl.
Notwithstanding her emaciation, her features still retained something of a pleasing expression, and might have been termed beautiful, had it not been for that repulsive freshness of lip denoting the habitual dram-drinker; a freshness in her case rendered the more shocking from the almost livid hue of the rest of her complexion. She could not be more than twenty; and though want and other suffering had done the work of time, had wasted her frame, and robbed her cheek of its bloom and roundness, they had not extinguished the lustre of her eyes, nor thinned her raven hair. Checking an ominous cough, that, ever and anon, convulsed her lungs, the poor woman addressed a few parting words to her companion, who lingered at the doorway as if he had something on his mind, which he did not very well know how to communicate.
William Harrison Ainsworth
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English Library
JACK SHEPPARD A Romance
CONTENTS.
EPOCH THE FIRST.
JACK SHEPPARD.
The Widow and her Child.
The Old Mint.
The Master of the Mint.
The Roof and the Window.
The Denunciation.
FOOTNOTES:
The Storm.
Old London Bridge.
EPOCH THE SECOND.
CHAPTER I.
The Idle Apprentice.
CHAPTER II.
Thames Darrell.
The Jacobite.
Mr. Kneebone and his Friends.
CHAPTER V.
Hawk and Buzzard.
The first Step towards the Ladder.
Brother and Sister.
Miching Mallecho.
Consequences of the Theft.
Mother and Son.
The Mohocks.
Saint Giles's Round-house.
The Magdalene.
The Flash Ken.
The Robbery in Willesden Church.
Jonathan Wild's House in the Old Bailey.
The Night-Cellar.
How Jack Sheppard broke out of the Cage at Willesden.
Good and Evil.
EPOCH THE THIRD.
CHAPTER I.
The Return.
The Burglary at Dollis Hill.
Jack Sheppard's Quarrel with Jonathan Wild.
Jack Sheppard's Escape from the New Prison.
The Disguise.
Winifred receives two Proposals.
Jack Sheppard warns Thames Darrell.
Old Bedlam.
Old Newgate.
How Jack Sheppard got out of the Condemned Hold.
Dollis Hill revisited.
The Well Hole.
The Supper at Mr. Kneebone's.
CHAPTER XIV.
How Jack Sheppard was again captured.
How Blueskin underwent the Peine Forte et Dure.
CHAPTER XVI.
How Jack Sheppard's Portrait was painted.
The Iron Bar.
CHAPTER XVIII.
The Red Room.
The Chapel.
CHAPTER XX.
The Leads.
What befell Jack Sheppard in the Turner's House.
Fast and Loose.
The last Meeting between Jack Sheppard and his Mother.
The Pursuit.
How Jack Sheppard got rid of his Irons.
How Jack Sheppard attended his Mother's Funeral.
How Jack Sheppard was brought back to Newgate.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
What happened at Dollis Hill.
How Jack Sheppard was taken to Westminster Hall.
How Jonathan Wild's House was burnt down.
The Procession to Tyburn.
The Closing Scene.
THE END.