A Set of Rogues
  • CHAPTER I. Of my companions and our adversities, and in particular from our getting into the stocks at Tottenham Cross to our being robbed at Edmonton.
  • CHAPTER II. Of our first acquaintance with the Senor Don Sanchez del Castillo de Castelana, and his brave entertaining of us.
  • CHAPTER III. Of that design which Don Sanchez opened to us at the Bell.
  • CHAPTER IV. Of the several parts that we are appointed to play.
  • CHAPTER V. Don Sanchez puts us in the way of robbing with an easy conscience.
  • CHAPTER VI. Moll is cast to play the part of a fine lady; doubtful promise for this undertaking.
  • CHAPTER VII. Of our journey through France to a very horrid pass in the Pyraneans.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How we were entertained in the mountains, and stand in a fair way to have our throats cut.
  • CHAPTER IX. Of the manner in which we escaped pretty fairly out of the hands of Senor Don Lopez and his brigands.
  • CHAPTER X. Of our merry journeying to Alicante.
  • CHAPTER XI. Of our first coming to Elche and the strangeness of that city.
  • CHAPTER XII. How Don Sanchez very honestly offers to free us of our bargain if we will; but we will not.
  • CHAPTER XIII. A brief summary of those twelve months we spent at Elche.
  • CHAPTER XIV. Of our coming to London (with incidents by the way), and of the great address whereby Moll confounds Simon, the steward.
  • CHAPTER XV. Lay our hands on six hundred pounds and quarter ourselves in Hurst Court, but stand in a fair way to be undone by Dawson, his folly.
  • CHAPTER XVI. Prosper as well as any thieves may; but Dawson greatly tormented.
  • CHAPTER XVII. How Dawson for Moll's good parts company with us, and goes away a lonely man.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. Of our getting a painter into the Court, with whom our Moll falls straightway in love.
  • CHAPTER XIX. Of the business appointed to the painter, and how he set about the same.
  • CHAPTER XX. Of Moll's ill humour and what befel thereby.
  • CHAPTER XXI. Of the strange things told us by the wise woman.
  • CHAPTER XXII. How Moll and Mr. Godwin come together and declare their hearts' passion, and how I carry these tidings to Dawson.
  • CHAPTER XXIII. Don Sanchez proposes a very artful way to make Mr. Godwin a party to our knavery, etc.
  • CHAPTER XXIV. I overcome Moll's honest compunctions, lay hold of three thousand pounds more, and do otherwise play the part of rascal to perfection.
  • CHAPTER XXV. A table of various accidents.
  • CHAPTER XXVI. How Moll Dawson was married to Mr. Richard Godwin; brief account of attendant circumstances.
  • CHAPTER XXVII. Of the great change in Moll, and the likely explanation thereof.
  • CHAPTER XXVIII. Moll plays us a mad prank for the last time in her life.
  • CHAPTER XXIX. Of the subtile means whereby Simon leads Mr. Godwin to doubt his wife.
  • CHAPTER XXX. How we are discovered and utterly undone.
  • CHAPTER XXXI. Moll's conscience is quickened by grief and humiliation beyond the ordinary.
  • CHAPTER XXXII. How we fought a most bloody battle with Simon, the constable, and others.
  • CHAPTER XXXIII. We take Moll to Greenwich; but no great happiness for her there.
  • CHAPTER XXXIV. All agree to go out to Spain again in search of our old jollity.
  • CHAPTER XXXV. How we lost our poor Moll, and our long search for her.
  • CHAPTER XXXVI. We learn what hath become of Moll; and how she nobly atoned for our sins.
  • CHAPTER XXXVII. Don Sanchez again proves himself the most mannerly rascal in the world.
  • CHAPTER XXXVIII. How we hear Moll's sweet voice through the walls of her prison, and speak two words with her though almost to our undoing.
  • CHAPTER XXXIX. Of our bargaining with a Moorish seaman; and of an English slave.
  • CHAPTER XL. Of our escape from Barbary, of the pursuit and horrid, fearful slaughter that followed, together with other moving circumstances.
  • CHAPTER XLI. How Dawson counts himself an unlucky man who were best dead; and so he quits us, and I, the reader.
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