A Book of Scoundrels

An ironic history of British criminals, mostly pre-Victorian pickpockets, highwaymen and thieves. Here we meet Moll Cutpurse the Queen of thieves, Jonathan Wild the Thief-taker General, Captain Hind the gallant highwayman and many others. The book begins with an essay on the artistic achievements of thievery followed by a sequence of short biographies.


By : Charles Whibley (1859 - 1930)

00 - Introduction - Part 1



01 - Introduction - Part 2



02 - Captain Hind



03 - Moll Cutpurse and Jonathan Wild - Part 1, Moll Cutpurse



04 - Moll Cutpurse and Jonathan Wild - Part 2, Jonathan Wild



05 - Moll Cutpurse and Jonathan Wild - Part 3, A Parallel



06 - Ralph Briscoe



07 - Gilderoy and Sixteen-string Jack - Part 1, Gilderoy



08 - Gilderoy and Sixteen-string Jack - Part 2, Sixteen-string Jack



09 - Gilderoy and Sixteen-string Jack - Part 3, A Parallel



10 - Thomas Pureney



11 - Sheppard and Cartouche - Part 1, Jack Sheppard



12 - Sheppard and Cartouche - Part 2, Louis-Dominique Cartouche



13 - Sheppard and Cartouche - Part 3, A Parallel



14 - Vaux



15 - George Barrington



16 - The Switcher and Gentleman Harry - Part 1, The Switcher



17 - The Switcher and Gentleman Harry - Part 2, Gentleman Harry



18 - The Switcher and Gentleman Harry - Part 3, A Parallel



19 - Brodie and Peace - Part 1, Deacon Brodie



20 - Brodie and Peace - Part 2, Charles Peace



21 - Brodie and Peace - Part 3, A Parallel



22 - The Man in the Grey Suit



23 - Monsieur L'Abbé


There are other manifestations of greatness than to relieve suffering or to wreck an empire. Julius Cæsar and John Howard are not the only heroes who have smiled upon the world. In the supreme adaptation of means to an end there is a constant nobility, for neither ambition nor virtue is the essential of a perfect action. How shall you contemplate with indifference the career of an artist whom genius or good guidance has compelled to exercise his peculiar skill, to indulge his finer aptitudes? A masterly theft rises in its claim to respect high above the reprobation of the moralist. The scoundrel, when once justice is quit of him, has a right to be appraised by his actions, not by their effect; and he dies secure in the knowledge that he is commonly more distinguished, if he be less loved, than his virtuous contemporaries.

While murder is wellnigh as old as life, property and the pocket invented theft, late-born among the arts. It was not until avarice had devised many a cunning trick for the protection of wealth, until civilisation had multiplied the forms of portable property, that thieving became a liberal and an elegant profession. True, in pastoral society, the lawless man was eager to lift cattle, to break down the barrier between robbery and warfare. But the contrast is as sharp between the savagery of the ancient reiver and the polished performance of Captain Hind as between the daub of the pavement and the perfection of Velasquez.

So long as the Gothic spirit governed Europe, expressing itself in useless ornament and wanton brutality, the more delicate crafts had no hope of exercise. Even the adventurer upon the road threatened his victim with a bludgeon, nor was it until the breath of the Renaissance had vivified the world that a gentleman and an artist could face the traveller with a courteous demand for his purse. But the age which witnessed the enterprise of Drake and the triumph of Shakespeare knew also the prowess of the highwayman and the dexterity of the cutpurse. Though the art displayed all the freshness and curiosity of the primitives, still it was art. With Gamaliel Ratsey, who demanded a scene from Hamlet of a rifled player, and who could not rob a Cambridge scholar without bidding him deliver an oration in a wood, theft was already better than a vulgar extortion. Moll Cutpurse, whose intelligence and audacity were never bettered, was among the bravest of the Elizabethans. Her temperament was as large and as reckless as Ben Jonson's own. Neither her tongue nor her courage knew the curb of modesty, and she was the first to reduce her craft to a set of wise and imperious rules. She it was who discovered the secret of discipline, and who insisted that every member of her gang should undertake no other enterprise than that for which nature had framed him. Thus she made easy the path for that other hero, of whom you are told that his band was made up 'of several sorts of wicked artists, of whom he made several uses, according as he perceived which way every man's particular talent lay.' This statesman—Thomas Dun was his name—drew up for the use of his comrades a stringent and stately code, and he was wont to deliver an address to all novices concerning the art and mystery of robbing upon the highway. Under auspices so brilliant, thievery could not but flourish, and when the Stuarts sat upon the throne it was already lifted above the level of questioning experiment...

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