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a book of scoundrels(流浪之书)-第18章

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day not easy to forget; a creature of Wild's spoke with fifty yards of lace;
worth 40; at his Captain's bidding; and Wild; having otherwise
disposed of the plunder; was charged on the 10th of March that he ‘did
feloniously receive of Katharine Stetham ten guineas on account and
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under colour of helping the said Katharine Stetham to the said lace again;
and did not then; nor any time since; discover or apprehend; or cause to be
apprehended and brought to Justice; the persons that committed the said
felony。'  Thus runs the indictment; and; to the inexpressible relief of
lesser men; Jonathan Wild was condemned to the gallows。
     Thereupon he had serious thoughts of ‘putting his house in order'; with
an ironical smile he demanded an explanation of the text:  ‘Cursed is
every one that hangeth on a tree'; but; presently reflecting that ‘his Time
was but short in this World; he improved it to the best advantage in Eating;
Drinking; Swearing; Cursing; and talking to his Visitants。'  For all his
bragging; drink alone preserved his courage: ‘he was very restless in the
Condemned Hole;' though ‘he gave little or no attention to the condemned
Sermon which the purblind Ordinary preached before him;' and which was;
in Fielding's immortal phrase; ‘unto the Greeks foolishness。'  But in the
moment of death his distinction returned to him。  He tried; and failed; to
kill himself; and his progress to the nubbing cheat was a triumph of
execration。  He reached Tyburn through a howling mob; and died to a
yell of universal joy。                                 
     The Ordinary has left a record so precious and so lying; that it must
needs be quoted at length。  The great Thief…Catcher's confession is a
masterpiece of comfort; and is so far removed from the truth as completely
to justify Fielding's incomparable creation。  ‘Finding there was no room
for mercy (and how could I expect mercy; who never showed any)'thus
does the devil dodger dishonour our Jonathan's memory!‘as soon as I
came into the Condemned Hole; I began to think of making a preparation
for my soul。 。 。 。  To part with my wife; my dear Molly; is so great an
Affliction to me; that it touches me to the Quick; and is like Daggers
entering into my Heart。'  How tame the Ordinary's falsehood to the
brilliant invention of Fielding; who makes Jonathan kick his Tishy in the
very shadow of the Tree!  And the Reverend Gentleman gains in unction
as he goes:  ‘In the Cart they all kneeled down to prayers and seemed
very penitent; the Ordinary used all the means imaginable to make them
think of another World; and after singing a penitential Psalm; they cry'd
Lord Jesus Christ receive our Souls; the cart drew away and they were all
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                                       A BOOK OF SCOUNDRELS
turned off。  This is as good an account as can be given by me。'  Poor
Ordinary!  If he was modest; he was also untruthful; and you are certain
that it was not thus the hero met his death。           
     Even had Fielding never written his masterpiece; Jonathan Wild would
still have been surnamed ‘The Great。'  For scarce a chap… book appeared
in the year of Jonathan's death that did not expose the only right and true
view of his character。  ‘His business;' says one hack of prison literature;
‘at all times was to put a false gloss upon things; and to make fools of
mankind。'  Another precisely formulates the theory of greatness insisted
upon by Fielding with so lavish an irony and so masterly a wit。  While it
is certain that The History of the Late Mr。 Jonathan Wild is as noble a
piece of irony as literature can show; while for the qualities of wit and
candour it is equal to its motive; it is likewise true that therein you meet
the indubitable Jonathan Wild。  It is an entertainment to compare the
chap…books of the time with the reasoned; finished work of art: not in any
spirit of pedantrysince accuracy in these matters is of small account; but
with intent to show how doubly fortunate Fielding was in his genius and in
his material。  Of course the writer rejoiced in the aid of imagination and
eloquence; of course he embellished his picture with such inspirations as
Miss Laetitia and the Count; of course he preserves from the first page to
the last the highest level of unrivalled irony。  But the sketch was there
before him; and a lawyer's clerk had treated Jonathan in a vein of heroism
within a few weeks of his death。  And since a plain statement is never so
true as fiction; Fielding's romance is still more credible; still convinces
with an easier effort; than the serious and pedestrian records of
contemporaries。  Nor can you return to its pages without realising that; so
far from being ‘the evolution of a purely intellectual conception;' Jonathan
Wild is a magnificently idealised and ironical portrait of a great man。

                                      III A PARALLEL   
                   (MOLL CUTPURSE AND JONATHAN WILD)   
     THEY plied the same trade; each with incomparable success。  By her;
as by him; the art of the fence was carried to its ultimate perfection。  In
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                                       A BOOK OF SCOUNDRELS
their hands the high policy of theft wanted nor dignity nor assurance。
Neither harboured a single scheme which was not straightway translated
into action; and they were masters at once of Newgate and the Highway。
As none might rob without the encouragement of his emperor; so none
was hanged at Tyburn while intrigue or bribery might avail to drag a half…
doomed neck from the halter; and not even Moll herself was more bitterly
tyrannical in the control of a reckless gang than the thin…jawed; hatchet…
faced Jonathan Wild。                                   
     They were statesmen rather than warriorshappy if they might direct
the enterprises of others; and determined to punish the lightest
disobedience by death。  The mind of each was readier than his right arm;
and neither would risk an easy advantage by a misunderstood or unwonted
sleight of hand。  But when you leave the exercise of their craft to
contemplate their character with a larger eye; it is the woman who at every
point has the advantage。  Not only was she the peerless inventor of a new
cunning; she was at home (and abroad) the better fellow。  The
suppression of sex was in itself an unparalleled triumph; and the most
envious detractor could not but marvel at the domination of her
womanhood。  Moreover; she shone in a gayer; more splendid epoch。
The worthy contemporary of Shakespeare; she had small difficulty in
performing feats of prowess and resource which daunted the intrepid
ruffians of the eighteenth century。  Her period; in brief; gave her an
eternal superiority; and it were as hopeless for Otway to surpass the master
whom he disgraced; as for Wild to o'ershadow the brilliant example of
Moll Cutpurse。                                         
     Tyran
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