登陆注册
37639900000108

第108章

I will assume, my benevolent friend and present reader, that you yourself are virtuous, not from a fear of punishment, but from a sheer love of good: but us you and I walk through life, consider what hundreds of thousands of rascals we must have met, who have not been found out at all.In high places and low, in Clubs and on 'Change, at church or the balls and routs of the nobility and gentry, how dreadful it is for benevolent beings like you and me to have to think these undiscovered though not unsuspected scoundrels are swarming! What is the difference between you and a galley-slave? Is yonder poor wretch at the hulks not a man and a brother too? Have you ever forged, my dear sir? Have you ever cheated your neighbor? Have you ever ridden to Hounslow Heath and robbed the mail? Have you ever entered a first-class railway carriage, where an old gentleman sat alone in a sweet sleep, daintily murdered him, taken his pocket-book, and got out at the next station? You know that this circumstance occurred in France a few months since.If we have travelled in France this autumn we may have met the ingenious gentleman who perpetrated this daring and successful coup.We may have found him a well-informed and agreeable man.I have been acquainted with two or three gentlemen who have been discovered after--after the performance of illegal actions.What? That agreeable rattling fellow we met was the celebrated Mr.John Sheppard? Was that amiable quiet gentleman in spectacles the well-known Mr.Fauntleroy? In Hazlitt's admirable paper, "Going to a Fight," he describes a dashing sporting fellow who was in the coach, and who was no less a man than the eminent destroyer of Mr.William Weare.Don't tell me that you would not like to have met (out of business) Captain Sheppard, the Reverend Doctor Dodd, or others rendered famous by their actions and misfortunes, by their lives and their deaths.They are the subjects of ballads, the heroes of romance.A friend of mine had the house in May Fair, out of which poor Doctor Dodd was taken handcuffed.There was the paved hall over which he stepped.That little room at the side was, no doubt, the study where he composed his elegant sermons.Two years since Ihad the good fortune to partake of some admirable dinners in Tyburnia--magnificent dinners indeed; but rendered doubly interesting from the fact that the house was that occupied by the late Mr.Sadleir.One night the late Mr.Sadleir took tea in that dining-room, and, to the surprise of his butler, went out, having put into his pocket his own cream-jug.The next morning, you know, he was found dead on Hampstead Heath, with the cream-jug lying by him, into which he had poured the poison by which he died.The idea of the ghost of the late gentleman flitting about the room gave a strange interest to the banquet.Can you fancy him taking his tea alone in the dining-room? He empties that cream-jug and puts it in his pocket; and then he opens yonder door, through which he is never to pass again.Now he crosses the hall: and hark! the hall-door shuts upon him, and his steps die away.They are gone into the night.They traverse the sleeping city.They lead him into the fields, where the gray morning is beginning to glimmer.He pours something from a bottle into a little silver jug.It touches his lips, the lying lips.Do they quiver a prayer ere that awful draught is swallowed? When the sun rises they are dumb.

I neither knew this unhappy man, nor his countryman--Laertes let us call him--who is at present in exile, having been compelled to fly from remorseless creditors.Laertes fled to America, where he earned his bread by his pen.I own to having a kindly feeling towards this scapegrace, because, though an exile, he did not abuse the country whence he fled.I have heard that he went away taking no spoil with him, penniless almost; and on his voyage he made acquaintance with a certain Jew; and when he fell sick, at New York, this Jew befriended him, and gave him help and money out of his own store, which was but small.Now, after they had been awhile in the strange city, it happened that the poor Jew spent all his little money, and he too fell ill, and was in great penury.And now it was Laertes who befriended that Ebrew Jew.He fee'd doctors; he fed and tended the sick and hungry.Go to, Laertes! I know thee not.It may be thou art justly exul patriae.But the Jew shall intercede for thee, thou not, let us trust, hopeless Christian sinner.

Another exile to the same shore I knew: who did not? Julius Caesar hardly owed more money than Cucedicus: and, gracious powers!

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 重生之倾世妖娆

    重生之倾世妖娆

    沐忆晨,一个集万千荣誉于一身的天之骄女,却被同父异母的妹妹害死,死后还落得声名狼籍。幸得老天眷顾,重生到三年前。抢饭碗,打小三,晋影后,她从头开始,华丽逆袭!一边是霸气的影帝一边是腹黑的集团总裁是要我娶,还是嫁?
  • 全能系统之升级狂人

    全能系统之升级狂人

    小青年楚阳穿越异界,觉醒无限升级系统,修炼变成了一场游戏,打怪就能长经验,还有系统任务给的逆天奖励。这下爽爆了,瓶颈?修炼天花板?不存在!无限升级,畅通无阻,神魔又如何,不过就是我升级路上的垫脚石!
  • 独宠初夏

    独宠初夏

    霸道总裁倒追平凡姑娘,小麻雀飞上枝头变凤凰。
  • 征服太空之路丛书:载人航天器的故事

    征服太空之路丛书:载人航天器的故事

    载人航天器是绕地球轨道或外层空间按受控飞行路线运行的载人的飞行器。载人航天器家族中有三个成员:宇宙飞船、航天飞机和空间站,人类就是乘坐它们飞出地球,摘星揽月的。刘芳主编的《载人航天器的故事》是“征服太空之路丛书”之一。《载人航天器的故事》内容涉及太空世界的各个侧面,文字浅显易懂,生动活泼。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 诡案追凶

    诡案追凶

    不做亏心事,不怕鬼敲门,任何人在内心深处都住着一个恶魔,重要的是,你什么时候把他释放出来,又有多少念头想封印他。开启恶魔封印的或许是你自己,又或许是别人。但最终不管是谁,只要开启了这个恶魔,你就离不开恶鬼找到你敲门的那一天。我的职业是一名行为分析师,我要从每个人的蛛丝马迹中找出他们心中的诡异。
  • 斗罗之宇智波崛起

    斗罗之宇智波崛起

    一位缺个富的逗比高富帅携带着自己设计的火影游戏角色纵横斗罗大陆,将宇智波的力量在新的世界再次高举于王座,你们还想起舞么?
  • 穿书了如何解

    穿书了如何解

    江乐穿越了,以为自己是在另一个时空,不料竟然是一本书
  • 我要当配角

    我要当配角

    叶信儿误入游戏系统,在游戏世界中以自己的身份当主角,却意外接到任务为配角让位,几个让位任务接踵而至,叶信儿开始了漫长的让位之旅。