Confessions of a Thug, Volume 3R. Bentley, 1839 |
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Page 10
... poor lads of yours on to Indoor with you ? why not send them back from the stage we are now approaching ? I and my men are ample pro- tection to you ; and as you will belong to the same service as myself , there can be no harm in your ...
... poor lads of yours on to Indoor with you ? why not send them back from the stage we are now approaching ? I and my men are ample pro- tection to you ; and as you will belong to the same service as myself , there can be no harm in your ...
Page 28
... poor Miriam , my mother as I had used to call her ; beyond this , though hard did I endeavour , I could recollect nothing . It was only in after times , as I have told you , and during a long imprisonment of twelve years , that my ...
... poor Miriam , my mother as I had used to call her ; beyond this , though hard did I endeavour , I could recollect nothing . It was only in after times , as I have told you , and during a long imprisonment of twelve years , that my ...
Page 45
... poor , which we have decided on as our place of meeting , as the zemindar is friendly to us and assists us in many ways . I will introduce you to my associates , and you will be initiated as a Thug in the usual manner . " Thus , Sahib ...
... poor , which we have decided on as our place of meeting , as the zemindar is friendly to us and assists us in many ways . I will introduce you to my associates , and you will be initiated as a Thug in the usual manner . " Thus , Sahib ...
Page 58
... poor a wretch as he ? " point- ing to the body ; " did I not tell you he was a coward ? Yet I am proud of you now , my son , and you have shamed us all . See ! " continued he to the whole assembly , " our faces are black- ened this day ...
... poor a wretch as he ? " point- ing to the body ; " did I not tell you he was a coward ? Yet I am proud of you now , my son , and you have shamed us all . See ! " continued he to the whole assembly , " our faces are black- ened this day ...
Page 60
... poor . I need not tell you how today's exploit will raise you in the eyes of your future com- panions . Already have I despatched intelli- gence of our purposed departure tomorrow , and some account of today's affair , enough only to ...
... poor . I need not tell you how today's exploit will raise you in the eyes of your future com- panions . Already have I despatched intelli- gence of our purposed departure tomorrow , and some account of today's affair , enough only to ...
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Common terms and phrases
adventure Ameer Ameer Ali arms asked Azima band beautiful bhil Bhowanee Bhudrinath body booty Brij Lall bunij camp Char Minar Cheetoo cloth coss cried dare Dullal durbar Dussera eyes fate father favour fear Feringhees followed Ganesha Ghuffoor Khan give hand head hear heard heart Hindoo Hindostan hookah Hoosein horse hundred rupees Hyderabad Inshalla Ismail Jemadar Jhalone jungle Junglee Kafir killed knew Kumal laughed leader look Lughaees matchlock Meer Sahib Moola morning Motee Nagpoor never night noble noble Khan Nuwab omens party passed Peer Khan person Pindharee plunder poor reached ready replied rest road Rokurreas roomal Saees Sahoukar seen sent slave soldiers soon speak spot Surfuraz Khan sword Syud tell tent thee thou thought thousand rupees Thuggee Thugs tion told town travellers village whole words wretch zenana Zora
Popular passages
Page 318 - My conscience hath a thousand several tongues, And every tongue brings in a several tale, And every tale condemns me for a villain. Perjury, perjury, in the high'st degree; Murder, stern murder in the dir'st degree; All several sins, all us'd in each degree, Throng to the bar, crying all, 'Guilty, guilty!
Page 341 - So farewell hope, and with hope farewell fear, Farewell remorse : all good to me is lost ; Evil, be thou my good : by thee at least Divided empire with heaven's King I hold, By thee, and more than half perhaps will reign ; As man ere long and this new world shall know.
Page 151 - And my poor fool is hang'd! No, no, no life! Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life, And thou no breath at all? Thou'lt come no more, Never, never, never, never, never!
Page 58 - I am one, my liege, Whom the vile blows and buffets of the world Have so incensed that I am reckless what I do to spite the world.
Page 136 - A token true of Bosworth field ; His eyebrow dark, and eye of fire, Show'd spirit proud, and prompt to ire ; Yet lines of thought upon his cheek Did deep design and counsel speak.
Page 65 - I will say nothing more than this," said my father, " that you will be thrown much into the society of Hindoos, all of good caste, and you will find them as faithful and as worthy of your friendship as any Moosulman; such, at least, has been my experience of them.
Page 400 - ... scene, the scene of death, for I verily believed I should be led to instant execution : why should the mockery of a trial be given to one so steeped in crime as I was ? A short time after our arrival at the town, I was conducted, closely guarded, to the officer who was employed by the English Government to apprehend Thugs. A tall, noble-looking person he was, and from the severe glance he cast on me I thought my hour was come, and that ere night I should cease to exist.
Page 183 - Where is the man existing who can iay a word against Ameer Ali's honour, which ever has been and ever will remain pure and unsullied ? Have I ever broken a social tie ? ever been unfaithful or unkind to a comrade ? ever failed in my duty or in my trust ? ever neglected a rite or ceremony of my religion? I tell you, sahib, the man breathes not who could point his finger at me on any one of these points. And if you think on them, they are those which, if rigidly kept, gain for a man esteem and honour...
Page xiii - ... the lines of road that pass by and branch off from them, with the knowledge and connivance of the two landholders by whose ancestors these groves had been planted ; I should have thought him a fool or a madman : and yet, nothing could have been more true. The bodies of a hundred travellers lie buried in and...
Page iv - ... horrible work, and consequently the most dangerous and destructive. "Travellers seldom hold any communication with the towns through which they pass, more than for the purchase of the day's provisions : they sometimes enter them, but pitch their tents or lie under the trees which surround them; to gain any intelligence of a person's progress from village to village is therefore almost impossible. The greatest facilities of disguise among thieves and Thugs exist in the endless divisions of the...