One of the most
singular chapters in a history of vagabondism would
certainly be "An Account of the Hieroglyphic Signs used by Tramps and Thieves," and it
certainly would not be the least interesting. The reader may be startled to know that, in
addition to a secret
language, the wandering tribes of this country have
private marks and symbols with which to
score their successes, failures, and
advice to succeeding beggars; in
fact, there is no
doubt that the country is really dotted over with beggars' finger-posts and guide-stones. The
subject was not long since brought under the
attention of the Government by Mr. Rawlinson.[24] "There is," he says in his
report, "a sort of blackguards'
literature, and the initiated
understand each other by Slang [Cant] terms, by pantomimic signs, and by hieroglyphics. The
vagrant's mark may be seen in Havant, on corners of streets, on door-posts, on house-steps. Simple as these chalk-lines appear, they
inform the succeeding vagrants of all they
require to know; and a few white scratches may say, 'Be
importunate,' or 'Pass on.'"
Another very
curious account was taken from a
provincial newspaper, published in 1849, and forwarded to Notes and Queries,under the head of Mendicant Freemasonry. "Persons," remarks the writer, "
indiscreet enough to open their purses to the
relief of the
beggar tribe, would do well to take a readily-learned
lesson as to the
folly of that
misguided benevolence which encourages and perpetuates vagabondism. Every door or
passage is pregnant with
instruction as to the error
committed by the
patron of beggars; as the
beggar-marks show that a
system of freemasonry is followed, by which a
beggar knows whether it will be worth his while to call into a
passage or knock at a door. Let any one
examine the entrances to the passages in any town, and there he will find chalk marks,
unintelligible to him, but
significant enough to beggars. If a thousand towns are examined, the same marks will be found at every
passage entrance. The
passage mark is a cypher with a twisted tail; in some cases the tail projects into the
passage, in others outwardly;
thus seeming to
indicate whether the houses down the
passage are worth calling at or not. Almost every door has its marks; these are
varied. In some cases there is a
cross on the brickwork, in others a cypher; the Every person may for himself
test the
accuracy of these statements by the
examination of the brickwork near his own doorway-
thus demonstrating that mendicity is a regular
trade, carried out upon a
system calculated to save time, and
realize the largest profits." These remarks
refer mainly to
provincial towns, London being looked upon as the tramps' home, and therefore too "fly" or experienced to be duped by such means. The
title it obtains, that of "the Start," or first place in everything, is
significant of this.
Provincial residents, who are more
likely to view the foregoing with an eye of
suspicion than are those who live in a position to constantly watch for and
profit by evidences of the secret intercommunication indulged in by the
dangerous classes, should note, in favour of the given, how
significant is the
practice of tramps and beggars calling in unfrequented localities, and how
obvious it is that they are directed by a
code of signals at once
complete and
imperious. It is bad for a
tramp who is discovered disobeying secret orders. He is
marked out and subjected to all kinds of annoyance by means of
decoy hieroglyphs, until his life becomes a
burden to him, and he is compelled to
starve or-most
horrible of alternatives-go to work.
The only other
notice of the hieroglyphs of vagabonds worth remarking is in Mayhew's London Labour and the London Poor. Mayhew obtained his
information from two tramps, who stated that hawkers
employ these signs as well as beggars. One
tramp thus described the
method of "working" a small town. "Two hawkers go together, but
separate when they enter a
village, one taking one side of the road, and selling
different things, and so as to
inform each other as to the
character of the people at whose houses they call, they chalk
certain marks on their door-posts." Another informant stated that "if a 'patterer' has been '
crabbed'" (that is, offended by
refusal or
exposure) "at any of the 'cribs'" (houses), "he mostly chalks a
signal at or near the door." These hawkers were not of the
ordinary, but of the
tramp, class, who carried goods more as a
blind to their real designs than for the purposes of sale. They, in
fact, represented the worst kinds of the two classes. The law has comparatively recently improved these
nondescript gentry off the face of the country, and the hawker of the present day is generally a man more sinned against than sinning.
Another use is also made of hieroglyphs. Charts of
successful begging neighbourhoods are rudely drawn, and symbolical signs attached to each house to show whether
benevolent or
adverse. "In many cases there is over the kitchen
mantelpiece" of a tramps' lodging-house "a map of the
district, dotted here and there with memorandums of
failure or
success." A correct
facsimile of one of these
singular maps is given in this book. It was obtained from the patterers and tramps who supplied a great many words for this work, and who were employed by the
original publisher in collecting Old Ballads, Christmas Carols, Dying Speeches, and Last Lamentations, as materials for a History of Popular Literature. The reader will, no
doubt, be
amused with the drawing. The locality depicted is near Maidstone, in Kent; and it was
probably sketched by a wandering Screever in
payment for a night's lodging. The English
practice of marking everything, and scratching names on
public property, extends itself to the tribe of vagabonds. On the map, as may be seen in the left-hand
corner, some Traveller has drawn a favourite or noted female, singularly nicknamed Three-quarter Sarah. What were the
peculiar accomplishments of this lady to
demand so uncommon a name, the reader will be at a loss to
discover; but a patterer says it
probably refers to a shuffling dance of that name,
common in tramps' lodging-houses, and in which "¾ Sarah" may have been a
proficient. Above her, three beggars or hawkers have reckoned their day's earnings, amounting to 13s., and on the
right a tolerably correct
sketch of a low hawker, or cadger, is drawn. "To Dover, the
nigh way," is the
exact phraseology; and "hup here," a
fair specimen of the self-acquired
education of the draughtsman. No key or
explanation to the hieroglyphs was given in the
original, because it would have been
superfluous, when every
inmate of the lodging-house knew the marks from his cradle-or rather his mother's back.