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The Highwayman: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
[[File:43 9941.jpg|frame|'''The Highwayman''': Taking your money and your heart at gunpoint.]]
 
 
{{quote|''He'd a French cocked-hat on his forehead, a bunch of lace at his chin,''
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''His rapier hilt a-twinkle, under the jewelled sky.''|''[http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Highwayman_(Noyes) The Highwayman]''}}
 
A[[The highwaymanHighwayman]], put simply, is a guy who robs people on highways. The archetypal highwayman who is usually invoked by the word was found in Britain between, say, the years 1500 to 1800, although the same basic stuff went on elsewhere and elsewhen. They interrupt the journeys of rich people riding in coaches to say things like "your money or your life!" and "stand and deliver!". Standard gear seems to include a black outfit (possibly including a hat with a feather in it), a [[Sword and Gun|sword-and-gun combo]], and perhaps a [[Domino Mask]].
 
At times, highwaymen were seen as glamorous. For various reasons (including the fact that they often rode horses) they were considered a cut above common bandits. A proper highwayman, instead of being scruffy and furtive, was dashing and debonair - truly the [[Gentleman Thief]] of armed robbery. Some of them were built up as folk heroes ("...[[Just Like Robin Hood|just like Robin Hood!]]"), and they have also been stock [[Love Interests]] in romance novels (perhaps because [[All Girls Want Bad Boys]]?). In certain types of story, it's also quite likely that [[Secret Identity|secret identities]] will be involved - voluminous cloaks and nocturnal tendencies make it relatively easy for a prominent [[Rich Idiot With No Day Job]] to conceal who they are, or for a [[Sweet Polly Oliver|woman to avoid being known as such]]. Popular in [[The Cavalier Years]], where the English Civil War is often blamed for their being ''forced'' to take up the occupation.
 
Highwaymanning became less attractive as a career with the development of toll roads (which are [[Older Than They Think|older than some people realise]]), steam trains (which get robbed under [[Train Job|a different trope]]), and [[British Coppers|organised police forces]]. In works written recently, highwaymen tend to appear as [[Parody|parodies]] or [[deconstruction]]s more often than they are played straight.
 
{{examples}}
 
 
== Comic Books ==
* [[Hawkman]] foe the Gentleman Ghost was a highwayman before he was hanged (and became a ghost).
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** In the third series, Blackadder himself becomes a highwayman due to financial difficulties. One of the people he robs has a daughter who'd happily entertain the idea of being seduced by a dashing highwayman, but Blackadder isn't interested. Also featured is The Shadow, who gets the [[Just Like Robin Hood]] treatment from the population at large. The Shadow turns out to be a) a highway''[[Samus Is a Girl|woman]]''; and b) the {{spoiler|same person who the prince regent is preparing to marry}}.
* ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus]]'' has the highwayman Dennis Moore. It goes without saying that he isn't very good at it. Most of his efforts involve breaking into fancy parties and stealing flowers; after he works out what he is doing wrong he redistributes wealth in such a way as to turn the poor downtrodden people into the new rich overlords, after which he tries to equally divide up the belongings of the people he robs.
* ''[[Help Im A Teenage Outlaw|Help! I'm a Teenage Outlaw]]'' is a British show about three well-intentioned (but not necessarily competent) outlaws during the English Civil War.
* [[Dick Turpin]] (see Real Life) had a TV series in the 1970s starring the guy from ''[[Man About the House]]''.
* In ''[[Doctor Who]]'' episode "The Visitation", Richard Mace. He declares he is really an actor forced to this.
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But my past is far more gory,
I was no saint.
 
 
You think life is one big antic,
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Hate to be pedantic,
But it ain't.
 
 
I'm a vicious highwayman,
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I was no Prince Charming,
Nothing dandy about me. }}
 
 
== Music ==
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[[Category:Criminals]]
[[Category:The Highwayman]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Highwayman, The}}
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