The groundworke of conny-catching, the manner of their pedlers-French, and the meanes to vnderstand the same with the cunning slights of the counterfeit cranke : therein are h[a]nd[l]ed the practises of the visiter, the fetches of the shifter and rufflar, the deceits of their doxes, the deuises of priggers, the names of the base loytering losels, and the meanes of euery blacke-art-mans shifts, with the reproofe of all the diuellish practises / done by a iustice of peace of great authoritie, who hath had the examining of diuers of them.
- Title
- The groundworke of conny-catching, the manner of their pedlers-French, and the meanes to vnderstand the same with the cunning slights of the counterfeit cranke : therein are h[a]nd[l]ed the practises of the visiter, the fetches of the shifter and rufflar, the deceits of their doxes, the deuises of priggers, the names of the base loytering losels, and the meanes of euery blacke-art-mans shifts, with the reproofe of all the diuellish practises / done by a iustice of peace of great authoritie, who hath had the examining of diuers of them.
- Author
- Harman, Thomas, fl. 1567.
- Publication
- [London :: Printed by John Danter for William Barley,
- 1592].
- Rights/Permissions
-
To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.
- Subject terms
- Rogues and vagabonds -- England -- Early works to 1800.
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A68139.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"The groundworke of conny-catching, the manner of their pedlers-French, and the meanes to vnderstand the same with the cunning slights of the counterfeit cranke : therein are h[a]nd[l]ed the practises of the visiter, the fetches of the shifter and rufflar, the deceits of their doxes, the deuises of priggers, the names of the base loytering losels, and the meanes of euery blacke-art-mans shifts, with the reproofe of all the diuellish practises / done by a iustice of peace of great authoritie, who hath had the examining of diuers of them." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A68139.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed December 11, 2024.
Contents
- title page
- To the gentle Readers Health.
- A new kind of shifting sleight, practised at this day by some of this Cony-catching crue, in Innes or vittailing houses but especially in Faires or Markets, which came to my hands since the im∣printing of the rest.
- TO THE READER.
- THE GROVNDWORKE of Conny-catching.
-
THE GROVND-WORKE of Conny-catching.
- A Rufflar.
- A Vpright man. cap. 2.
- A Hooker or Angler. Cap. 3.
- A Rogue. Cap. 4.
- A wilde Roge. Cap. 5.
- A Prigger of Prauncers. Cap. 6.
- A Palliard. Cap. 7.
- A Frater. Cap. 8.
- A Abraham man. Cap. 9.
- A Freshe Water Mariner or Whipiacke. Cap 10.
- A counterfet Cranke, cap. 11.
- A Dommerar. Cap. 12.
- A dronken Tinkar. Cap. 13.
- A Swadder oe Pedler. Cap. 14.
- A Iarkeman and a Patrico▪ Cap. 15.
- The ground-worke A Demaunder for glimmar. Cap. 16.
- The Baudy Basket. cap. 17.
- A Autem Mort.
- A walking Mort. cap. 19.
- A Doxe. Cap. 20.
- A Dell. Cap. 21.
- A Kinching Morte. Cap. 22.
- A Kinching Co. Cap. 23.
- Thei. vsage in the night. Cap. 24.