Page:Farmer - Slang and its analogues past and present - Volume 4.pdf/394

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English synonyms. Abram-man (or -cove); bawdy-basket; Bedlam-beggar; blue-gown (old Scots'); cadator; cadger; canter; croaker; curtail; durry-nacker; dry-land sailor; filer; frater; goose-shearer; Irish toyle; keyhole whistler; master of the black art; maunder; milestone-monger; moucher; mud-plunger; mugger; mumper; munger; needy-mizzler; niffler; overland-mailer (or -man); palliard; paper-worker; pikey; ruffler; scoldrum; shivering James (or Jemmy); shyster; skipper-bird; skitting-dealer; silver-beggar; street-ganger; strolling-mort; sundowner; swag-man; tinkard; Tom of Bedlam; traveller; turn-pike; uhlan; upright man; wash-man; whip-jack.

For foreign synonyms see Shyster.

1665. R. Head, English Rogue, Pt. I. ch. v. p. 50 (1874). Mumpers gentile [genteel] beggars.

1690. Durfey, Collin's Walk, C. I. p. 27. That even Vagabonds and mumpers, Have from my bounty had full Bumpers.

1690. Crowne, English Friar, ii. 1. My lady is . . . rather a mumper; she has begg'd the backhouse, the gardens, to lay herself and her goods in.

1693. Congreve, Old Batchelor. Lucy. Hang thee—Beggar's cur!—Thy master is but a mumper in love, lies canting at the gate.

1694. Poor Robin [Nares]. Since the king of beggars was married to the queen of sluts, at Lowzy-hill, near Beggars-bush, being most splendidly attended on by a ragged regiment of mumpers.

1703. Ward, London Spy, pt. I. p. 7. He is one of those gentile mumpers, we call Cadators; he goes a Circuit round England once a year, and under Pretence of a decay'd gentleman, gets both Money and Entertainment at every good House he comes at.

1705. Hudibras Redivivus, pt. 4. Here, said I, take your mumper's fee, Let's see one; thank you, sir, said she.

1712. Spectator, No. 509. The mumpers, the halt, the blind, and the lame.

1748. T. Dyche, Dictionary (5th ed.) Mumpers (S.) among the Gipsy Crew, is called the 47th order of canters or genteel beggars, who will not accept of victuals, but only money or cloaths.

1754. The World, No. 64. I was at his door by nine; where, after the fashion of mumpers, I gave but one single knock for fear of disturbing him.

1755. Johnson, Eng. Dict. (1814), s.v. Mumper. In cant language. A beggar.

1777. Bailey, Eng. Dict., s.v. Mumper, a genteel beggar.

1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v. Mumper, originally beggars of the genteel kind, but since used for beggars in general.

1830. Scott, Doom of Devorgoil, ii. 2. The courtier begs a riband or a star, And like our gentler mumpers, is provided With false certificates of health and fortune Lost in the public service.

1834. W.H. Ainsworth, Rookwood, p. 130 (ed. 1864). 'Ha, ha! Are you there, my old death's head on a mopstick?' said Turpin, with a laugh. 'Ain't we merry mumpers, eh? Keeping it up in style. Sit down, old Noah; make yourself comfortable, Methusalem.'

1849. Macaulay, Hist. Eng., iii. A Lincoln's Inn mumper was a proverb.

1859. Matsell, Vocabulum, s.v.

1868. Temple Bar, xxiv. 537. When he can't go on in that racket he'll turn mumper.

1876. Hindley, Adventures of a Cheap Jack, p. 64. A big mumper, that is a half-bred gipsey.


Mumper's-hall, subs. (old).—A hedge tavern; a beggar's alehouse.

1785. Grose, Vulg. Tongue, s.v.


Mumping, subs. and adj. (old).—Begging.