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第20章

a book of scoundrels(流浪之书)-第20章

小说: a book of scoundrels(流浪之书) 字数: 每页4000字

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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 most highly renowned exploit was
performed at St。 Denis; and the record of France's humiliation is still
treasured。  The great church was packed with ladies of fashion and their
devout admirers。  Richelieu attended in state; the king himself shone
upon the assembly。  The strange Scotsman; whom no man knew and all
men wondered at; attracted a hundred eyes to himself and his magnificent
equipment。  But it was not his to be idle; and at the very moment whereat
Mass was being sung; he contrived to lighten Richelieu's pocket of a purse。
The king was a delighted witness of the theft; Gilderoy; assuming an air of
facile intimacy; motioned him to silence; and he; deeming it a trick put
upon Richelieu by a friend; hastened; at the service…end; to ask his
minister if perchance he had a purse of gold upon him。  Richelieu
instantly discovered the loss; to the king's uncontrolled hilarity; which was
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mitigated when it was found that the thief; having emptied the king's
pocket at the unguarded moment of his merriment; had left them both the
poorer。                                                
     Such were Gilderoy's interludes of gaiety; and when you remember the
cynical ferocity of his earlier performance; you cannot deny him the credit
of versatility。  He stayed in France until his ominous reputation was too
widely spread; whereupon he crossed the Pyrenees; travelling like a
gentleman; in a brilliant carriage of his own。  From Spain he carried off a
priceless collection of silver plate; and he returned to his own country;
fatigued; yet unsoftened; by the grand tour。  Meanwhile; a forgetful
generation had not kept his memory green。  The monster; who punished
Scotland a year ago with fire and sword; had passed into oblivion; and
Gilderoy was able to establish for himself a new reputation。  He departed
as far as possible from his ancient custom; joined the many cavaliers; who
were riding up and down the country; pistol in hand; and presently proved
a dauntless highwayman。  He had not long ridden in the neighbourhood
of Perth before he met the Earl of Linlithgow; from whom he took a gold
watch; a diamond ring; and eighty guineas。  Being an outlaw; he naturally
espoused the King's cause; and would have given a year of his life to meet
a Regicide。  Once upon a time; says rumour; he found himself face to
face with Oliver Cromwell; whom he dragged from his coach; set
ignominiously upon an ass; and so turned adrift with his feet tied under the
beast's belly。  The story is incredible; not only because the loyal
historians of the time caused Oliver to be robbed daily on every road in
Great Britain; but because our Gilderoy; had he ever confronted the
Protector; most assuredly would not have allowed him to escape with his
life。                                                  
     Tired of scouring the highway; Gilderoy resolved upon another
enterprise。  He collected a band of fearless ruffians; and placed himself at
their head。  With this army to aid; he harried Sutherland and the North;
lifting cattle; plundering homesteads; and stopping wayfarers with a
humour and adroitness worthy of Robin Hood。  No longer a lawless
adventurer; he made his own conditions of life; and forced the people to
obey them。  He who would pay Gilderoy a fair contribution ran no risk of
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losing his sheep or oxen。  But evasion was impossible; and the smallest
suspicion of falsehood was punished by death。  The peaceably inclined
paid their toll with regret; the more daring opposed the raider to their
miserable undoing; the timid satisfied the utmost exactions of Gilderoy;
and deemed themselves fortunate if they left the country with their lives。
     Thus Scotland became a land of dread; the most restless man within
her borders hardly dare travel beyond his byre。  The law was powerless
against this indomitable scourge; and the reward of a thousand marks
would have been offered in vain; had not Gilderoy's cruelty estranged his
mistress。  This traitressPeg Cunningham was her nameless for avarice
than in revenge for many insults and infidelities; at last betrayed her
master。  Having decoyed him to her house; she admitted fifty armed men;
and thus imagined a full atonement for her unnumbered wrongs。  But
Gilderoy was triumphant to the last。  Instantly suspecting the treachery of
his mistress; he burst into her bed…chamber; and; that she might not enjoy
the price of blood; ripped her up with a hanger。  Then he turned defiant
upon the army arrayed against him; and killed eight men before the others
captured him。                                          
     Disarmed after a desperate struggle; he was loaded with chains and
carried to Edinburgh; where he was starved for three days; and then
hanged without the formality of a trial on a gibbet; thirty feet high; set up
in the Grassmarket。  Even then Scotland's vengeance was unsatisfied。
The body; cut down from its first gibbet; was hung in chains forty feet
above Leith Walk; where it creaked and gibbered as a warning to evildoers
for half a century; until at last the inhabitants of that respectable quarter
petitioned that Gilderoy's bones should cease to rattle; and that they should
enjoy the peace impossible for his jingling skeleton。  
     Gilderoy was no drawing…room scoundrel; no villain of schoolgirl
romance。  He felt remorse as little as he felt fear; and there was no crime
from whose commission he shrank。  Before his death he confessed to
thirty…seven murders; and bragged that he had long since lost count of his
robberies and rapes。  Something must be abated for boastfulness。  But
after all deduction there remains a tale of crime that is unsurpassed。  His
most admirably artistic quality is his complete consistence。  He was a
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ruffian finished and rotund; he made no concession; he betrayed no
weakness。  Though he never preached a sermon against the human race;
he practised a brutality which might have proceeded from a gospel of hate。
He spared neither friends nor relatives; and he murdered his own mother
with as light a heart as he sent a strange widow of Aberdeen to her death。
His skill is undoubted; and he proved by the discipline of his band that he
was not without some talent of generalship。  But he owed much of his
success to his physical strength; and to the temperament; which never
knew the scandal of hesitancy or dread。                
     A born marauder; he devoted his life to his trade; and; despite his
travels in France and Spain; he enjoyed few intervals of merriment。  Even
the humour; which proved his redemption; was as dour and grim as
Scotland can furnish at her grimmes: and dourest。  Here is a specimen
will serve as well as another: three of Gilderoy's gang had been hanged
according to the s

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