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her guard; she had even hinted confession of her crime; and nothing but intrigue could have saved her gentle neck from the gallows。 Briscoe; hungry for her money…bags; promised assistance。 He bribed; he threatened; he cajoled; he twisted the law as only he could twist it; he suppressed honest testimony; he procured false; in fine; he weakened the case against her with so resistless an effrontery; that not the Hanging Judge himself could convict the poor innocent。
At the outset he had agreed to accept a handsome bribe; but as the trial approached; his avarice increased; and he would be content with nothing less than the lady's hand and fortune。 Not that he loved her; his heart was long since given to Moll Cutpurse; but he knew that his career of depredation was at an end; and it became him to provide for his declining years。 The victim repulsed his suit; regretting a thousand times that she had stabbed her ancient lover。 At last; bidden summarily to choose between Death and the Clerk; she chose the Clerk; and thus Ralph Briscoe left Newgate the richest squire in a western county。 Henceforth he farmed his land like a gentleman; drank with those of his neighbours who would crack a bottle with him; and unlocked the strange stores of his memory to bumpkins who knew not the name of Newgate。 Still devoted to sport; he hunted the fox; and made such a bull…ring as his youthful imagination could never have pictured。 So he lived a life of country ease; and died a churchwarden。 And he deserved his prosperity; for he carried the soul of Falstaff in the shrunken body of Justice Shallow。
GILDEROY AND THE SIXTEEN… STRING JACK
I GILDEROY
GILDEROY
HE stood six feet ten in his stockinged feet; and was the tallest ruffian that ever cut a purse or held up a coach on the highway。 A mass of black hair curled over a low forehead; and a glittering eye intensified his villainous aspect; nor did a deep scar; furrowing his cheek from end to end; soften the horror of his sudden apparition。 Valiant men shuddered at his approach; women shrank from the distant echo of his name; for fifteen years he terrorised Scotland from Caithness to the border; and the most partial chronicler never insulted his memory with the record of a good deed。
He was born to a gentle family in the Calendar of Monteith; and was celebrated even in boyhood for his feats of strength and daring。 While still at school he could hold a hundredweight at arm's…length; and crumple up a horseshoe like a wisp of hay。 The fleetest runner; the most desperate fighter in the country; he was already famous before his name was besmirched with crime; and he might have been immortalised as the Hercules of the seventeenth century; had not his ambition been otherwise flattered。 At the outset; though the inclination was never lacking; he knew small temptation to break the sterner laws of conduct。 His pleasures were abundantly supplied by his father's generosity; and he had no need to refrain from such vices as became a gentleman。 If he was no drunkard; it was because his head was equal to the severest strain; and; despite his forbidding expression; he was always a successful breaker of hearts。 His very masterfulness overcame the most stubborn resistance; and more than once the pressure of his dishonourable suit converted hatred into love。 At the very time that he was denounced for Scotland's disgrace; his praises were chanted in many a dejected ballad。 ‘Gilderoy was a bonny boy;' sang one heart…broken maiden:
Had roses till his shoon; His stockings were of silken soy; Wi' garters hanging doon。
But in truth he was admired less for his amiability than for that quality of governance which; when once he had torn the decalogue to pieces; made him a veritable emperor of crime。
His father's death was the true beginning of his career。 A modest patrimony was squandered in six months; and Gilderoy had no penny left wherewith to satisfy the vices which insisted upon indulgence。 He demanded money at all hazards; and money without toil。 For a while his more loudly clamant needs were fulfilled by the amiable simplicity of his mother; whom he blackmailed with insolence and contempt。 And when she; wearied by his shameless importunity; at last withdrew her support; he determined upon a monstrous act of vengeance。 With a noble affectation of penitence he visited his home; promised reform at supper; and said good…night in the broken accent of reconciliation。 No sooner was the house sunk in slumber than he crawled stealthily upstairs in order to forestall by theft a promised generosity。 He opened the door of the bed…chamber in a hushed silence; but the wrenching of the cofferlid awoke the sleeper; and Gilderoy; having cut his mother's throat with an infamous levity; seized whatever money and jewels were in the house; cruelly maltreated his sister; and laughingly burnt the house to the ground; that the possibility of evidence might be destroyed。
Henceforth his method of plunder was assured。 It was part of his philosophy to prevent detection by murder; and the flames from the burning walls added a pleasure to his lustful eye。 His march across Scotland was marked by slaughtered families and ruined houses。 Plunder was the first cause of his exploits; but there is no doubt that death and arson were a solace to his fierce spirit; and for a while this giant of cruelty knew neither check nor hindrance。 Presently it became a superstition with him that death was the inevitable accompaniment of robbery; and; as he was incapable of remorse; he grew callous; and neglected the simplest precautions。 At Dunkeld he razed a rifled house to the ground; and with the utmost effrontery repeated the performance at Aberdeen。 But at last he had been tracked by a company of soldiers; who; that justice might not be cheated of her prey; carried him to gaol; where after the briefest trial he was condemned to death。
Gilderoy; however; was still master of himself。 His immense strength not only burst his bonds; but broke prison; and this invincible Samson was once more free in Aberdeen; inspiring that respectable city with a legendary dread。 The reward of one hundred pounds was offered in vain。 Had he shown himself on the road in broad daylight; none would have dared to arrest him; and it was not until his plans were deliberately laid; that he crossed the sea。 The more violent period of his career was at an end。 Never again did he yield to his passion for burning and sudden death; and; if the world found him unconquerable; his self…control is proved by the fact that in the heyday of his strength he turned from his unredeemed brutality to a gentler method。 He now deserted Scotland for France; with which; like all his countrymen; he claimed a cousinship; and so profoundly did he impose upon Paris with his immense stature; his elegant attire; his courtly manners (for he was courtesy itself; when it pleased him); that he was taken for an eminent scholar; or at least a soldier of fortune。
Prosperity might doubtless have followed a discreet profession; but Gilderoy must still be thieving; and he reaped a rich harvest among the unsuspicious courtiers of France。 His