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The first of these three tracts, Awdeley's Fraternitye of Vacabondes, has been treated by many hasty bibliographers, who can never have taken the trouble to  Short account of Thomas Harman‎: ‎vii.
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The Vagabonds

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As recorded or possibly invented by Thomas Dekker in the pamphlet O Per Se O , London, Thou shalt my true Brother be, keeping thy faith to thy other Brothers as to my self if any such thou have. Thou shalt keep my counsel, and all other my brothers, being known to thee. Thou shalt take part with me, and all other my brothers in all matters.

And surely no doubt on the point will remain in his mind, though, if needed, a few more confirmations could be got, as. We may conclude, then, certainly, that Awdeley did not plagiarize Harman; and probably, that he first published his Fraternitye in The tract is a mere sketch, as compared with Harman's Caueat , though in its descriptions p. The edition of being the only one accessible to us, our trusty Oxford copier, Mr George Parker, has read the proofs with the copy in the Bodleian. Let no one bring a charge of plagiarizing Awdeley, against Harman, for the latter, as has been shown, referred fairly to Awdeley's ' small breefe ' or ' old briefe of vacabonds ,' and wrote his own "bolde Beggars booke" p.

Harman's Caueat is too well-known and widely valued a book to need description or eulogy here.

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It is the standard work on its subject,—'these rowsey, ragged, rabblement of rakehelles' p. No copy of the first edition seems to be known to bibliographers.


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It was published in or ,—probably the latter year, [4] —and must I conclude have contained less than the second, as in that's 'Harman to the Reader,' p. The edition called the second [5] , also bearing date in , is known to us in two states, the latter of which I have called the third edition. This alone settles the priority of the Bodley edition, as no printer, having an index alphabetical, would go and muddle it all again, even for a lark. Moreover, the other collations confirm this priority.

King of the vagabonds: - The Limited Times

The colophon of the Bodley edition is dated A. The second state of the second edition—which state I call the third edition—is shown by the copy which Mr Henry Huth has, with his never-failing generosity, lent us to copy and print from. It omits 'the eight of January,' from the colophon, and has 'Anno Domini ' only. Like the 2nd edition or 2 A , this 3rd edition or 2 B has the statement on p. Anno domini. The 4th edition, so far as I know, was published in , and was reprinted by Machell Stace says Bohn's Lowndes in From that reprint Mr W.

Wood has made a collation of words, not letters, for us with the 3rd edition.


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The chief difference of the 4th edition is its extension of the story of the 'dyssembling Cranke,' Nycholas Genings, and 'the Printar of this booke' Wylliam Gryffith p. We were obliged to reprint this from Stace's reprint of , as our searchers could not find a copy of the 4th edition of in either the British Museum, the Bodleian, or the Cambridge University Library. Thus much about our present edition. I now hark back to the first, and the piracies of it or the later editions, mentioned in Mr J.

Collier's Registers of the Stationers' Company , i. Middleton's impression of It was the forerunner of various later works of the same kind, some of which were plundered from it without acknowledgment, and attributed to the celebrated Robert Greene. Copies of two editions in , by Griffith, are extant, and, in all probability, it was the first time it appeared in print: Griffith entered it at Stationers' Hall, as above, in , in order that he might publish it in Harman's work was preceded by several ballads relating to vagabonds, the earliest of which is entered on p.

King of the vagabonds:

On a subsequent page is inserted a curious entry regarding 'the boke of Rogges,' or Rogues. For Takynge of Fynes as foloweth. The next item may show that Gerard Dewes had also printed the book, no doubt without license, but the memorandum was crossed out in the register. The fact is, the book was so interesting that it made its readers thieves, as 'Jack Sheppard' has done in later days. The very wood-cutter cheated Harman of the hind legs of the horse on his title, prigged two of his prauncer's props p. To know the keen inquiring Social Reformer, Thomas Harman, the reader must go to his book.

He lived in the country p. He did not, though, confine his intercourse with vagabonds to talking, for he says of some, p. I haue diuers tymes taken a waye from them their lycences, of both sortes, viii wyth suche money as they haue gathered, and haue confiscated the same to the pouerty nigh adioyninge to me. Our author also practically exposed these tricks, as witness his hunting out the Cranke, Nycholas Genings, and his securing the vagabond's 13 s. But he fed deserving beggars, see p.

We've some like you still, Thomas Harman, in our Victorian time. May their number grow! Thus much about Harman we learn from his book and his literary contemporaries and successors. If we now turn to the historian of his county, Hasted, we find further interesting details about our author: 1, that he lived in Crayford parish, next to Erith, the Countess of Shrewsbury's parish; 2, that he inherited the estates of Ellam, and Maystreet, and the manor of Mayton or Maxton; 3, that he was the grandson of Henry Harman, Clerk of the Crown, who had for his arms 'Argent, a chevron between 3 scalps sable,' which were no doubt those stampt on our Thomas's pewter dishes; 4, that he had a 'descendant,'—a son, I presume—who inherited his lands, and three daughters, one of whom, Bridget, married Henry Binneman—?

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Hasted in his description of the parish of Crayford, speaking of Ellam, a place in the parish, says:—. Henry VII. James I. William Harman held the manor of Mayton, alias Maxton, with its appurtenances, of the Lord Cheney, as of his manor of Chilham, by Knight's service.

Thomas Harman was his son and heir: Rot. One out of several statutes made for this purpose is the 3rd of Edw. And in the list of names given,—taken from Robinson's Gavelkind —twelfth from the bottom stands that of Thomas Harman. Edward VI. The rectory of the parish of Deal was bestowed by the Archbishop on Roger Harman in Hasted , vol. After speaking of those who are made 'beggers through other mens occasion,' and denouncing the grasping landlords 'who make them so, and wipe manie out of their occupiengs,' Harrison goes on to those who are beggars 'through their owne default' p.

Certes, I call these casuall meanes, not in respect of the originall of their pouertie, but of the continuance of the same, from whence they will not be deliuered, such [17] is their owne vngratious lewdnesse and froward disposition. The voluntarie meanes proceed from outward causes, as by making of corosiues, and applieng the same to the more fleshie parts of their bodies; and also laieng of ratsbane, sperewort, crowfoot, and such like vnto their whole members, thereby to raise pitifull [18] and odious sores, and mooue [16] the harts of [16] the goers by such places where they lie, to [19] yerne at [19] their miserie, and therevpon [16] bestow large almesse vpon them.

Which maketh me to thinke, that punishment is farre meeter for them than liberalitie or almesse, and sith Christ willeth vs cheeflie to haue a regard to himselfe and his poore members. Diuerse times in their apparell also [21] they will be like seruing men or laborers: oftentimes they can plaie the mariners, and seeke for ships which they neuer lost. Moreouer, in counterfeiting the Egyptian roges, they haue deuised a language among themselues, which they name Canting but other pedlers French —a speach compact thirtie yeares since of English, and a great number of od words of their owne deuising, without all order or reason: and yet such is it as none but themselues are able to vnderstand.

The first deuiser thereof was hanged by the necke,—a iust reward, no doubt, for his deserts, and a common end to all of that profession. A gentleman, also, of Thomas Harman. And among other things he setteth downe and describeth [25] three and twentie [25] sorts of them, whose names it shall not be amisse to remember, wherby ech one may [26] take occasion to read and know as also by his industrie [26] what wicked people they are, and what villanie remaineth in them.


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  8. What notable roberies, pilferies, murders, rapes, and stealings of yoong [28] children, [29] burning, breaking and disfiguring their lims to make them pitifull in the sight of the people, [29] I need not to rehearse; but for their idle roging about the countrie, the law ordeineth this maner of correction. The roge being apprehended, committed to prison, and tried in the next assises whether they be of gaole deliuerie or sessions of the peace if he happen to be conuicted for a vagabond either by inquest of office, or the testimonie of two honest and credible witnesses vpon their oths, he is then immediatlie adiudged to be greeuouslie whipped and burned through the gristle of the right eare, with an hot iron of the compasse of an inch about, as a manifestation of his wicked life, and due punishment receiued for the same.

    And this iudgement is to be executed vpon him, except some honest person woorth fiue pounds in the queene's books in goods, or twentie shillings in lands, or some rich housholder to be allowed by the iustices, will be bound in recognisance to reteine him in his seruice for one whole yeare. If he be taken the second time, and proued to haue forsaken his said seruice, he shall then be whipped againe, bored likewise through the other eare and set to seruice: from whence if he depart before a yeare be expired, and happen afterward to be attached againe, he is condemned to suffer paines of death as a fellon except before excepted without benefit of clergie or sanctuarie, as by the statute dooth appeare.