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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume II

JACK OVET

An amorous Highwayman, who was executed at Leicester
in May, 1708

JACK OVET, a shoemaker by trade, was born at
Nottingham, where his abode was for four or five years
after he had served his apprenticeship. But being always of
a daring, audacious disposition, his unruly temper induced
him to keep very lewd and quarrelsome company, and
depending on his manhood, it inspired him with an inclina-
tion of laying aside his mechanical employment to translate
himself into a gentleman, by maintaining that quality on the
highway.
   Immediately equipping himself, as a highwayman ought,
with a good horse, hanger and pistols, he rode towards
London ; and on the road had the good success of robbing
a gentleman of twenty pounds, who, being one of great
courage, told Ovet that if he had not come upon him un-
awares, and surprised him at a disadvantage, he should have
given him some trouble before he would have parted with
his money. Quoth Ovet: " Sir, I have ventured my life once
already in committing this robbery; however, if you have
the vanity to think yourself a better man than me, I'll venture
once more. Here's your money again ; let it be betwixt us,
and whoever of us is the best man let him win it and wear
it." The gentleman very willingly accepted the proposal,

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and making use of their swords on foot, Jack Ovet had the
fortune to kill his antagonist on the spot.
   Not long after he killed another man in a quarrel at
Leicester; but flying from justice he still cheated the hang-
man of his due, and without any dread pursued his unlawful
courses to the highest pitch of villainy. One day, in particular,
meeting the pack-horses of one Mr Rogers, who went from
Leominster, in Herefordshire, to London, and being in great
want of money, he turned one of them out of the main road
into a narrow lane, where, cutting open the pack, he found
therein about two hundred and eighty guineas in gold,
besides three dozen of silver-hafted knives and forks and
spoons, which he carried off. The other pack-horses had
gone about two miles before Mr Rogers missed this; and
then making a strict search after it, he found it tied to a
tree, and the pack thrown off its back and rifled of what
was most valuable.
   Another time Jack Ovet, meeting with the Worcester
stage-coach on the road, in which were several young gentle-
women, robbed them all; but one of them being a very
handsome person, he entertained such a passion for her
exquisite charms that when he took her money from her
he said: " Madam, cast not your eyes down, neither cover
your face with those modest blushes; your charms have
softened my temper, and I am no more the man I was.
What I have taken from you (through mere necessity at
present) is only borrowed; for as no object on earth ever had
such an effect on me as you, assure yourself that if you please
to tell me where I may direct to you, I'll upon honour make
good your loss to the very utmost." The young gentlewoman
told him where he might send to her, and they parted.
It was not above a week after that before Jack sent the
following letter to the aforesaid gentlewoman, who had
gained such an absolute conquest over his soul that his
mind ran now as much upon love as robbing:-

MADAM,-These few lines are to acquaint you that
though I lately had the cruelty to rob you of twenty guineas,

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yet you committed a greater robbery at the same time in
robbing me of my heart; on which you may behold yourself
enthroned, and all my faculties paying their homage to
your unparalleled beauty. Therefore be pleased to propose
but the method how I may win your belief, and were the
way to it as deep as from hence to the centre, I will search
it out. For by all my hopes, by all those rites that crown
a happy union, by the rosy tincture of your checks, and
by your all-subduing eyes, I prize you above all the world.
Oh, then, my fair Venus, can you be afraid of Love? His
brow is smooth, and his face beset with banks full of delight;
about his neck hangs a chain of golden smiles. Let us taste
the pleasures which Cupid commands, and for that un-
merited favour I shall become another man, to make you
happy. So requesting the small boon of a favourable answer
to be sent me to Mr Walker's, who keeps an ale-house at
the sign of the Bell in Thornbury, in Gloucestershire, give
me leave to subscribe myself your most humble servant to
command for ever,
                                                              JOHN BURTON.

THE GENTLEWOMAN'S ANSWER

   SIR,-Yours I received with as great dissatisfaction as
when you robbed me, and admire at your impudence of
offering me yourself for a husband, when I am sensible
'twould not be long ere you made me a hempen widow.
Perhaps some foolish girl or another may be so bewitched
as to go in white to beg the favour of marrying you under
the gallows ; but indeed I should venture neither there nor
in a church to marry one of your profession, whose vows
are treacherous, and whose smiles, words and actions, like
small rivulets through a thousand turnings of loose passions,
at last arrive to the dead sea of sin. Should you therefore
dissolve your eyes into tears, was every accent a sigh in your
speech, had,you all the spells and magic charms of love, I
should seal up my ears that I might not hear your dissimula-
tion. You have already broken your word in not sending

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what you villainously took from me; but not valuing that,
let me tell you, for fear you should have too great a conceit
of yourself, that you are the first, to my remembrance, whom
I ever hated; and sealing my hatred with the hopes of
quickly reading your dying speech, in case you die in
London, I presume to subscribe myself yours never to
command,
                                                                         D. C.

   This was the end of Jack Ovet's warm amour, and he
was soon after as unsuccessful in his villainy as he was here
in love; for committing a robbery in Leicestershire, where
his comrade was killed in the attempt, he was closely pursued
by the country, apprehended, and sent to jail, At last, the
assizes being held at Leicester, he was condemned. Whilst
he was under sentence of death he seemed to have no re-
morse at all for his wickedness, nor in the least to repent of the
blood of two persons which he had shed; so being brought
to the gallows, on Wednesday, the 5th of May, 1708, he was
justly hanged in the thirty-second year of his age.

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Newgate Calendar Vol. II Table of Contents / The Complete Newgate Calendar