Of his gang, forty were in the service of Mllede...
Of his gang, forty were in the service of Mllede Montpensier, who
A BOOK OF SCOUNDRELS was already in Spain; while two obeyed the Duchesse de Ventadour as valets-de-pied His confession, in brief, was so dangerous a document, it betrayed the friends and servants of so many great houses, that the officers of the Law found safety for their patrons in its destruction, and not a line of the hero's testimony remains The trial of his comrades dragged on for many a year, and after Cartouche had been cruelly broken on the wheel, not a few of the gang, of which he had been at once the terror and inspiration, suffered a like fate Such the career and such the fitting end of the most distinguished marauder the world has known Thackeray, with no better guide than a chap-book, was minded to belittle him, now habiting him like a scullion, now sending him forth on some petty errand of cly-faking But for all Thackeray's contempt his fame is still undimmed, and he has left the reputation of one who, as thief unrivalled, had scarce his equal as wit and dandy even in the days when Louis the Magnificent was still a memory and an example III A PARALLEL (SHEPPARD AND CARTOUCHE)
A PARALLEL (SHEPPARD AND CARTOUCHE) IF the seventeenth century was the golden age of the hightobyman, it was at the advent of the eighteenth that the burglar and chanel 2.55 street-robber plied their trade with the most distinguished success, and it was the good fortune of both Cartouche and Sheppard to be born in the nick of time Rivals in talent, they were also near contemporaries, and the Scourge of Paris may well have been famous in the purlieus of Clare Market before Jack the Slip-String paid the last penalty of his crimes As each of these great men harboured a similar ambition, so their careers are closely parallel Born in a humble rank of life, Jack, like Cartouche, was the architect of his own fortune; Jack, like Cartouche, lived to be flattered by noble dames and to claim the solicitude of his Sovereign; and each owed his pre-eminence rather to natural genius than to a sympathetic training But, for all the Briton's artistry, the Frenchman was in all points save one the superior Sheppard's brain carried him not beyond the wants of to-day and the extortions of Poll Maggot
A BOOK OF SCOUNDRELS Who knows but he might have been a respectable citizen, with never a chance for the display of his peculiar talent, had not hunger and his mistress's greed driven him upon the pad? History records no brilliant robbery of his own planning, and so circumscribed was his imagination that he must needs pick out his own friends and benefactors for depredation His paltry sense of discipline permitted him to be betrayed even by his brother and pupil, and there was no cracksman of relojes omega his time over whose head he held the rod of terror Even his hatred of Jonathan Wild was the result not of policy but of prejudice Cartouche, on the other hand, was always perfect when at work The master of himself, he was also the master of his fellows There was no detail of civil war that he had not made his own, and he still remains, after nearly two centuries, the greatest captain the world has seen Never did he permit an enterprise to fail by accident; never was he impelled by hunger or improvidence to fight a battle unprepared His means were always neatly fitted to their end, as is proved by the truth that, throughout his career, he was arrested but once, and then not by his own inadvertence but by the treachery of others Yet from the moment of arrest Jack Sheppard asserted his magnificent superiority If Cartouche was a sorry bungler at prison-breaking, Sheppard was unmatched in this dangerous art The sport of the one was to break in, of the other to break out True, the Briton proved his inferiority by too frequently placing himself under lock and key; but you will forgive his every weakness for the unexampled skill wherewith he extricated himself from the stubbornest dungeon Cartouche would scarce have given Sheppard a menial's office in his gang How cordially Sheppard would have despised Cartouche's solitary experiment in escape! To be foiled by a dog and a boxmaker's daughter! Would not that have seemed contemptible to the master breaker of those unnumbered doors omega constellation and walls which separate the Castle from the freedom of Newgate roof? Such, then, is the contrast between the heroes Sheppard claims our admiration for one masterpiece Cartouche has a sheaf of works, which shall carry him triumphantly to the remotest future And when you forget a while professional rivalry, and consider the
A BOOK OF SCOUNDRELS delicacies of leisure, you will find the Frenchman's greatness still indisputable At all points he was the prettier gentleman Sheppard, to be sure, had a sense of finery, but he was so unused to grandeur that vulgarity always spoiled his effects When he hied him from the pawnshop, laden with booty, he must e'en cram what he could not wear into his pockets; and doubtless his vulgar lack of reticence made detection easier Cartouche, on the other hand, had an unfailing sense of proportion, and was never more dressed than became the perfect dandy He was elegant, he was polished, he was joyous He drank wine, while the other soaked himself in beer; he despised whatever was common, while his rival knew but the coarser flavours of life The one was distinguished by a boisterous humour, a swaggering pride in his own prowess; the wit of the other might be edged like a knife, nor would he ever appeal for a spectacle to the curiosity of the mob Both were men of many mistresses, but again in his conduct with women Cartouche showed an honester talent Sheppard was at once the prey necklace pearl chanel and the whipping-block of his two infamous doxies, who agreed in deformity of feature as in contempt for their lover Cartouche, on the other hand, chose his cabaret for the wit of its patronne, and was always happy in the elegance and accomplishment of his companions One point of likeness remains The two heroes resembled each other not only in their profession, but in their person Though their trade demanded physical strength, each was small and slender of build `A little, slight-limbed lad,' says the historian of Sheppard `A thin, spare frame,' sings the poet of Cartouche Here, then, neither had the advantage, and if in the shades Cartouche despises the clumsiness and vulgarity of his rival, Sheppard may still remember the glory of Newgate, and twit the Frenchman with the barking of the boxmaker's dog But genius is the talent of the dead, and the wise, who are not partisans, will not deny to the one or to the other the possession of the rarer gift DRELS
TO Haggart, who babbled on the Castle Rock of Willie Wallace and was only nineteen when he danced without the music; to Simms, alias Gentleman Harry, who showed at Tyburn how a hero could die; to George Barrington, the incomparably witty and adroit--to these a full meed of honour has been paid Even the coarse and dastardly Freney has achieved, with Thackeray's aid (and Lever's) something of a reputation But James Hardy Vaux, despite his eloquent bid for fame, has not found his white chanel bag rhapsodist