As the Gypsies were mounting their horses, I heard the dusty
phantom exclaim -
'Brother, you are an
arrant ring-maker and a horse-breaker; you'll
make a hempen ring to break your own neck of a horse one of these
days.'
They pressed their horses' flanks, again leaped over the ditches,
and
speedily vanished,
amidst the whirlwinds of dust which they
raised upon the road.
The words of the
phantom Gypsy were
ominous. Gypsy Will was
eventually executed for a murder committed in his early youth, in
company with two English labourers, one of whom confessed the fact
on his death-bed. He was the head of the clan Young, which, with
the clan Smith, still haunts two of the eastern counties.
SOME FURTHER PARTICULARS RESPECTING THE ENGLISH GYPSIES
It is difficult to say at what period the Gypsies or Rommany made
their first appearance in England. They had become, however, such
a
nuisance in the time of Henry the Eighth, Philip and Mary, and
Elizabeth, that Gypsyism was denounced by various royal statutes,
and, if persisted in, was to be punished as felony without benefit
of
clergy; it is
probable, however, that they had overrun England
long before the period of the earliest of these monarchs. The
Gypsies
penetrate into all countries, save poor ones, and it is
hardly to be
supposed that a few leagues of intervening salt water
would have kept a race so
enterprising any
considerable length of
time, after their
arrival on the
continent of Europe, from
obtaining a
footing in the fairest and richest country of the West.
It is easy enough to
conceive the manner in which the Gypsies lived
in England for a long time
subsequent to their
arrival: doubtless
in a half-savage state, wandering about from place to place,
encamping on the uninhabited spots, of which there were then so
many in England, feared and hated by the population, who looked
upon them as
thieves and foreign sorcerers,
occasionally committing
acts of brigandage, but depending
chiefly for
subsistence on the
practice of the 'arts of Egypt,' in which
cunning and dexterity
were far more necessary than courage or strength of hand.
It would appear that they were always divided into clans or tribes,
each
bearing a particular name, and to which a particular district
more especially belonged, though
occasionally they would exchange
districts for a period, and, incited by their
characteristic love
of wandering, would travel far and wide. Of these families each
had a sher-engro, or head man, but that they were ever united under
one Rommany Krallis, or Gypsy King, as some people have insisted,
there is not the slightest ground for supposing.
It is possible that many of the original Gypsy tribes are no longer
in
existence: disease or the law may have made sad havoc among
them, and the few survivors have incorporated themselves with other
families, whose name they have adopted. Two or three instances of
this
description have occurred within the
sphere of my own
knowledge: the heads of small families have been cut off, and the
subordinate members, too young and
inexperienced to continue
Gypsying as independent
wanderers, have been adopted by other
tribes.
The
principal Gypsy tribes at present in
existence are the
Stanleys, whose grand haunt is the New Forest; the Lovells, who are
fond of London and its
vicinity; the Coopers, who call Windsor
Castle their home; the Hernes, to whom the north country, more
especially Yorkshire, belongeth; and
lastly, my brethren, the
Smiths, - to whom East Anglia appears to have been allotted from
the beginning.
All these families have Gypsy names, which seem, however, to be
little more than attempts at
translation of the English ones:- thus
the Stanleys are called Bar-engres (11), which means stony-fellows,
or stony-hearts; the Coopers, Wardo-engres, or wheelwrights; the
Lovells, Camo-mescres, or amorous fellows the Hernes (German
Haaren) Balors, hairs, or hairy men; while the Smiths are called
Petul-engres, signifying
horseshoe fellows, or blacksmiths.
It is not very easy to determine how the Gypsies became possessed
of some of these names: the reader, however, will have observed
that two of them, Stanley and Lovell, are the names of two highly
aristocratic English families; the Gypsies who bear them perhaps
adopted them from having, at their first
arrival, established
themselves on the estates of those great people; or it is possible
that they translated their original Gypsy appellations by these
names, which they deemed synonymous. Much the same may be said
with respect to Herne, an ancient English name; they probably
sometimes officiated as coopers or wheelwrights,
whence the
cognomination. Of the term Petul-engro, or Smith, however, I wish
to say something in particular.
There is every reason for believing that this last is a genuine
Gypsy name, brought with them from the country from which they
originally came; it is compounded of two words, signifying, as has
been already observed,
horseshoe fellows, or people whose trade is
to manufacture
horseshoes, a trade which the Gypsies ply in various
parts of the world, - for example, in Russia and Hungary, and more
particularly about Granada in Spain, as will
subsequently be shown.
True it is, that at present there are none
amongst the English
Gypsies who manufacture
horseshoes; all the men, however, are
tinkers more or less, and the word Petul-engro is
applied to the
tinker also, though the proper meaning of it is
undoubtedly what I
have already stated above. In other
dialects of the Gypsy tongue,
this cognomen exists, though not exactly with the same
signification; for example, in the Hungarian
dialect, PINDORO,
which is
evidently a
modification of Petul-engro, is
applied to a
Gypsy in general,
whilst in Spanish Pepindorio is the Gypsy word
for Antonio. In some parts of Northern Asia, the Gypsies call
themselves Wattul (12), which seems to be one and the same as
Petul.
Besides the above-named Gypsy clans, there are other smaller ones,
some of which do not
comprise more than a dozen individuals,
children included. For example, the Bosviles, the Browns, the
Chilcotts, the Grays, Lees, Taylors, and Whites; of these the
principal is the Bosvile tribe.
After the days of the great
persecution in England against the
Gypsies, there can be little doubt that they lived a right merry
and
tranquil life, wandering about and pitching their tents
wherever
inclination led them: indeed, I can scarcely
conceive any
human condition more enviable than Gypsy life must have been in
England during the latter part of the seventeenth, and the whole of
the eighteenth century, which were
likewise the happy days for
Englishmen in general; there was peace and plenty in the land, a
contented population, and everything went well. Yes, those were
brave times for the Rommany chals, to which the old people often
revert with a sigh: the poor Gypsies, say they, were then allowed
to SOVE ABRI (sleep abroad) where they listed, to heat their
kettles at the foot of the oaks, and no people grudged the poor
persons one night's use of a
meadow to feed their cattle in.
TUGNIS AMANDE, our heart is heavy, brother, - there is no longer
Gypsy law in the land, - our people have become negligent, - they
are but half Rommany, - they are divided and care for nothing, -
they do not even fear Pazorrhus, brother.
Much the same complaints are at present made by the Spanish
Gypsies. Gypsyism is certainly on the decline in both countries.
In England, a superabundant population, and, of late, a very
vigilant police, have done much to modify Gypsy life;
whilst in
Spain, causes widely different have produced a still greater
change, as will be seen further on.
Gypsy law does not
flourish at present in England, and still less
in Spain, nor does Gypsyism. I need not explain here what Gypsyism