Read Ace, King, Knave Online

Authors: Maria McCann

Ace, King, Knave (61 page)

Uncle
   pawnbroker
Upright Man
   gang leader
wap
   fuck
ware hawk!
   look sharp!
ware trap
   watch out for the police
warm(er)
   (more) sexually explicit/arousing
whelp
   young man (literally ‘puppy’)
whipping culls
   customers seeking flagellation
Wilkes, John
   republican, political writer and libertine
wiper
   handkerchief
wolf
   cancerous tumour
wrapper
   1) dress made by winding fabric about the body 2) a dressing-gown
Zedland
   the West Country
Select bibliography

To acknowledge one’s sources is not to present oneself as a historian.

 

Arnold, Catherine   
City of Sin
Ashton, John   
The History of Gambling in England
Baines, Paul   
The Long Eighteenth Century
Boswell, James   
Journals
Boswell, James   
The Life of Johnson
Brumwell, S. and Speck, W. A.   
Cassell’s Companion to Eighteenth-Century Britain
Burnett, John   
A History of the Cost of Living
Cahill, Katherine   
Mrs Delany’s Menus, Medicines and Manners
Clarke, Norma   
Queen of the Wits
Cockayne, Emily   
Hubbub
Colquhoun, Kate   
Taste
Cruickshank, Dan   
The Secret History of Georgian London
Cunnington, C. W. and P. C.   
Handbook of English Costume in the Eighteenth Century
Douglas, Alfred   
The Tarot
Equiano, Olaudah   
The Interesting Narrative
George, M Dorothy   
London Life in the Eighteenth Century
Grose, Francis   
Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue
Harvey, A. D.   
Sex in Georgian England
Horn, Pamela   
Flunkeys and Scullions
Jacobs, Harriet   
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
Moore, Wendy   
Wedlock
Olsen, Kirstin   
Daily Life in Eighteenth-Century England
Peakman, Julie   
Lascivious Bodies
Picard, Liza   
Dr Johnson’s London
Porter, Roy   
London: A Social History
Porter, Roy   
English Society in the Eighteenth Century
Rubenhold, Hallie   
Harris’s List of the Covent Garden Ladies
Rubenhold, Hallie   
The Covent Garden Ladies
Russell, Gillian   ‘Faro’s Daughters’ (article) Sands, Mollie   
Invitation to Ranelagh
Sitwell, Edith   
Bath
Smith, Virginia   
Clean
Thomas, Hugh   
The Slave Trade
Vickery, Amanda   
Behind Closed Doors
Vickery, Amanda   
The Gentleman’s Daughter
Wardroper, John   
Lovers, Rakes and Rogues
Warner, Jessica   
Craze
White, Jerry   
London in the Eighteenth Century
Wroth, W. W. and A. E.   
The London Pleasure Gardens of the Eighteenth Century

 

The story of Fortunate’s capture and enslavement draws upon the account given in Olaudah Equiano’s
The Interesting Narrative
. That the word ‘fortunate’ is one possible translation of ‘Olaudah’ is pure coincidence, since my character took shape, complete with name, long before I came across that book. The coincidence itself seemed fortunate, so I have left the name as it is.

Betsy-Ann’s songs ‘Sometime I am a butcher bold’ (chapter 4) and ‘Moll of the Wood’ (chapter 15) are authentic; the other songs are of my own invention.

Acknowledgements

Thanks are due to my agent Annette Green (as ever) and to all at Faber, particularly my editor Sarah Savitt whose clarity has been invaluable.

An earlier incarnation of this book included much more material on both folk music and gambling. I am grateful to C. J. Bearman who patiently answered my queries on Cecil Sharp, and to Professor Gillian Russell of the Australian National University who responded generously to an email from an unknown writer, supplying me with useful materials on eighteenth-century women gamblers. Historical errors and deliberate distortions are of course my own responsibility.

My friends and fellow writers of the RABS group are an unending source of support, encouragement and the occasional bucket of cold water when I need it. My thanks and love to you all.

Lastly I should like to thank Ruth Borthwick of the Arvon Foundation, whose offer of work at a crucial time enabled me to complete this novel. May Arvon go from strength to strength.

About the author

Maria McCann is the author of
As Meat Loves Salt
(Fourth Estate, 2001) which was an
Economist
Book of the Year and
The Wilding
(Faber, 2010) which was longlisted for the Orange Prize and chosen for the Richard and Judy Book Club. She has also contributed to various anthologies, most recently to
Why Willows Weep
(2011) and
Beacons
(2013).

By the same author

As Meat Loves Salt

The Wilding

First published in 2013
by Faber and Faber Ltd
Bloomsbury House
74–77 Great Russell Street
London WC1B 3DA
This ebook edition first published in 2013
All rights reserved
© Maria McCann, 2013
The right of Maria McCann to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with Section 77 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights, and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly
ISBN 978–0–571–29760–3

Table of Contents

Title page

Table of Contents

Dedication

Note on Language

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49

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51

Glossary

Select bibliography

Acknowledgements

About the author

By the same author

Copyright

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