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1 - The highwayman: power, grace, and money at command

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2012

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Summary

He ask'd him, What Friends he had? To which he answer'd, That his Friends were but few, and that he depended upon his Fingers Ends for a Livelihood. …then the Prisoner at the Bar said, If he'd venture with him, and do as he did, he should live like a King, and never want Money; and that he'd teach him a better way to get Money, than by going to Service.

Truth of the Case of Palmer (1708), pp. 13–14

Honey, says Plunket I thought … thou hadst Spirit and Resolution, with some Knowledge of the World. A brave Man cannot want; he has a Right to live, and need not want the Conveniences of Life while the dull, plodding, busy Knaves carry Cash in their Pockets … ; there is scarce Courage necessary, all we have to deal with are such mere Poltroons.

John Taylor, Ordinary Account, 3 October 1750

Jack if thou wilt live with me thou shalt have money at comand or any thing thou wantest.

No Jest like a True Jest (1657)

They told me he was the captain of the gang, and that he had committed so many robberies that Hind, or Whitney, or the Golden Farmer were fools to him.

Daniel Defoe, Moll Flanders (1722), ed. G. A. Starr, p. 281

The actualities of Hind's life were mythologized even before his capture. Ultimately, with more than fifty of his confraternity, he would take his place in that compendium of “most Secret and Barbarous Murders, Unparalleled Robberies, Notorious Thefts, and Unheard-of- Cheats,” Captain Alexander Smith's Lives of the Highwaymen.

Type
Chapter
Information
Turned to Account
The Forms and Functions of Criminal Biography in Late Seventeenth- and Early Eighteenth-Century England
, pp. 6 - 20
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1987

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