The Slang Dictionary Etymological, Historical and Andecdotal

- By John Camden Hotten
Font Size
English bibliophile, lexicographer, and publisher (1832–1873) This article's lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points. Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article. (May 2020) John Camden Hotten (12 September 1832, Clerkenwell – 14 June 1873, Hampstead) was an English bibliophile and publisher. He is best known for his clandestine publishing of numerous erotic and pornographic titles. Life[edit] Hotten was born John William Hotten in Clerkenwell, London to a family of Cornish origins. His father was William Hotten of Probus, Cornwall, a master carpenter and undertaker; his mother was Maria Cowling of Roche, Cornwall. At the age of fourteen Hotten was apprenticed to the London bookseller John Petheram, where he acquired a taste for rare and unusual books. He spent the period from 1848 to about 1853 in America but by mid-1855 had opened a small bookshop in London at 151a Piccadilly and went on to found the publishing business under his own name which after his death became Chatto & Windus.[1] Grave of John Camden Hotten in Highgate Cemetery Hotten was a member of the Ethnological Society of London, which he joined in 1867.[2] His literary knowledge and intelligence brought him a large circle of acquaintances. He died in Hampstead, 14 June 1873, and was buried on the eastern side of Highgate Cemetery. His publishing business was subsequently bought from his widow by Chatto & Windus.[3] Author[edit] Hotten was a compiler of an English language dictionary of slang, first published in 1859 under the title A dictionary of modern slang, cant, and vulgar words.[4] The book was reissued posthumously in 1874[3] and reprinted numerous times. Other works bearing his imprint followed, in the composition of nearly all of which he took some part; many he wrote himself. His most laborious and least-known compilation was the Handbook of Topography and Family History of England and Wales (1863).[3] Hotten contributed weekly articles of literary news to the Literary Gazette during its last year (1862); to George Godwin's short-lived Parthenon (1862–3); and to the London Review (1863–6). He was author of minor biographies of Thackeray (under the name of Theodore Taylor), 1864, and Dickens, 1870, 1873; the History of Signboards (with Jacob Larwood) (1867); Literary Copyright, Seven Letters Addressed to Earl Stanhope (1871); and The Golden Treasury of Thought. A Gathering of Quotations (1874). Hotten also undertook several translations of Erckmann-Chatrian's works, and edited among many other titles, Sarcastic Notices of the Long Parliament (1863), The Little London Directory of 1677 (1863), and The Original List of Persons who went from Great Britain to the American Plantations, 1600–1700 (1874), which remains important for genealogists today, and was reprinted in 1938, 1962, and 2012.[3][5] A supplemental list edited by James C. Brandow was published in 1982 under the (shortened) title Omitted Chapters from Hotten's Original Lists…: Census Returns, Parish Registers, and Militia Rolls from the Barbados Census of 1679/80.[6] Hotten's last work was Macaulay the Historian (1873), which was published eight days after his death.[3] Publisher[edit] Hotten's perseverance established him among the best-known publishers, and he moved to a larger shop. In 1866, the publisher Moxon issued Algernon Charles Swinburne's Poems and Ballads, which brought a charge of indecency and forced Moxon to withdraw the work from circulation.[3][7] Hotten offered himself as the poet's publisher, and issued the volume in dispute as well as Swinburne's response to his critics.[8] Cecil Lang claims in his preface to Swinburne's Letters that Hotten had effectively blackmailed Swinburne into providing him with pornographic verse.[9] Hotten subsequently published Swinburne's Song of Italy (1867) and William Blake: a Critical Essay (1868).[6] Hotten was also a collector, author and clandestine publisher of erotica such as The Romance of Chastisement, Exhibition of Female Flagellants and the erotic comic opera Lady Bumtickler's Revels, some in a series entitled The Library Illustrative of Social Progress.[10] Rachel Potter and others claim these are not erotic but pornographic.[11] Hotten was the first publisher to introduce into England the humorous and other works of American writers, including James Russell Lowell's Biglow Papers, Second Series (1862); Artemus Ward, His Book (1865); Oliver Wendell Holmes's Wit and Humour: Poems (1867 and 1872);[12] Walt Whitman's Poems (1868); Charles Godfrey Leland's Hans Breitmann's Barty and other Ballads (1869); Bret Harte's Lothaw and Sensation Novels (1871); Mark Twain's The Innocents Abroad (1870), Burlesque Autobiography (1871), Eye Openers (ca. 1871), Screamers: a Gathering of Scraps of Humour, Delicious Bits, & Short Stories (1872),[13] and Choice Humorous Works of Mark Twain (1874); and Ambrose Bierce's Nuggets and Dust: Panned Out in California (1872).[3][6] Family[edit] Around 1859, Hotten married Charlotte Stringer, by whom he had three daughters. Notes[edit] ^ Eliot, Simon (2004). "Hotten, John Camden (1832–1873)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/13859. Retrieved 6 November 2013. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) ^ The Journal of the Ethnological Society of London. Trübner. 1869. p. xxi. Retrieved 3 April 2013. ^ a b c d e f g Lee, Sidney, ed. (1891). "Hotten, John Camden" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 27. London: Smith, Elder & Co. ^ Hotten, John Camden Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine at GetCited ^ Library of Congress Online Catalog at http://catalog.loc.gov/ Archived 5 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine. The full title is The Original List of Persons of Quality, Emigrants, Religious Exiles, Political Rebels, Serving Men Sold for a Term of Years, Apprentices, Children Stolen, Maidens Pressed, and Others, who went from Great Britain to the American Plantations, 1600–1700. With their Ages, the Localities where they Formerly Lived in the Mother Country, the Names of the Ships in which they Embarked, and Other Interesting Particulars. From MSS. Preserved in the State Paper Dept. Of Her Majesty's Public Record Office, England. ^ a b c Library of Congress Online Catalog at http://catalog.loc.gov/ Archived 5 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine ^ Prins, Yopie (1999). Victorian Sappho. Princeton University Press. p. 153. ISBN 0-691-05919-5. ^ Kendrick, Walter M. (1996). The secret museum: pornography in modern culture. University of California Press. p. 168. ISBN 0-520-20729-7. ^ Allison Pease, "Modernism, mass culture, and the aesthetics of obscenity", Cambridge University Press, 2000, ISBN 0-521-78076-4, p.203 ^ Thomas, Donald Serrell (1969). A long time burning: the history of literary censorship in England. Routledge & Kegan Paul. p. 270. ^ Rachel Potter, "Obscene Modernism and the Trade in Salacious Books", Modernism/modernity, Volume 16, Number 1, January 2009, pp.87-104 doi:10.1353/mod.0.0065 [1] ^ Holmes, Oliver Wendell (1872). Wit and humour: poems; with an introduction by J.C. Hotten{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) ^ Twain, Mark (1871). Screamers. London: John Camden Hotten. References[edit] John Sutherland, "The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction", Stanford University Press, 1990, ISBN 0-8047-1842-3, p. 307. Simon Eliot, "Hotten: Rotten: Forgotten? An Apologia for a General Publisher", Book History 3 (2000) 61-93 doi:10.1353/bh.2000.0007 Attribution  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Lee, Sidney, ed. (1891). "Hotten, John Camden". Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 27. London: Smith, Elder & Co. External links[edit] Oxford DNB entry for John Camden Hotten Works by John Camden Hotten at Project Gutenberg Works by or about John Camden Hotten at Internet Archive Slang Dictionary: Etymological, Historical, and Anecdotal By John Camden Hotten. 1874 ed. at Internet Archive John Camden Hotten at Library of Congress, with 51 library catalogue records Authority control databases International FAST ISNI VIAF National France BnF data Germany Israel United States Netherlands Poland Vatican People Trove Other SNAC IdRef
One of the most singular chapters in a history of vagabondism would certainly be "An Account of the Hieroglyphic Signs used by Tramps and Thieves," and it certainly would not be the least interesting. The reader may be startled to know that, in addition to a secret language, the wandering tribes of this country have private marks and symbols with which to score their successes, failures, and advice to succeeding beggars; in fact, there is no doubt that the country is really dotted over with beggars' finger-posts and guide-stones. The subject was not long since brought under the attention of the Government by Mr. Rawlinson.[24] "There is," he says in his report, "a sort of blackguards' literature, and the initiated understand each other by Slang [Cant] terms, by pantomimic signs, and by hieroglyphics. The vagrant's mark may be seen in Havant, on corners of streets, on door-posts, on house-steps. Simple as these chalk-lines appear, they inform the succeeding vagrants of all they require to know; and a few white scratches may say, 'Be importunate,' or 'Pass on.'"
Another very curious account was taken from a provincial newspaper, published in 1849, and forwarded to Notes and Queries,under the head of Mendicant Freemasonry. "Persons," remarks the writer, "indiscreet enough to open their purses to the relief of the beggar tribe, would do well to take a readily-learned lesson as to the folly of that misguided benevolence which encourages and perpetuates vagabondism. Every door or passage is pregnant with instruction as to the error committed by the patron of beggars; as the beggar-marks show that a system of freemasonry is followed, by which a beggar knows whether it will be worth his while to call into a passage or knock at a door. Let any one examine the entrances to the passages in any town, and there he will find chalk marks, unintelligible to him, but significant enough to beggars. If a thousand towns are examined, the same marks will be found at every passage entrance. The passage mark is a cypher with a twisted tail; in some cases the tail projects into the passage, in others outwardly; thus seeming to indicate whether the houses down the passage are worth calling at or not. Almost every door has its marks; these are varied. In some cases there is a cross on the brickwork, in others a cypher; the Every person may for himself test the accuracy of these statements by the examination of the brickwork near his own doorway-thus demonstrating that mendicity is a regular trade, carried out upon a system calculated to save time, and realize the largest profits." These remarks refer mainly to provincial towns, London being looked upon as the tramps' home, and therefore too "fly" or experienced to be duped by such means. The title it obtains, that of "the Start," or first place in everything, is significant of this.
Provincial residents, who are more likely to view the foregoing extract with an eye of suspicion than are those who live in a position to constantly watch for and profit by evidences of the secret intercommunication indulged in by the dangerous classes, should note, in favour of the extract given, how significant is the practice of tramps and beggars calling in unfrequented localities, and how obvious it is that they are directed by a code of signals at once complete and imperious. It is bad for a tramp who is discovered disobeying secret orders. He is marked out and subjected to all kinds of annoyance by means of decoy hieroglyphs, until his life becomes a burden to him, and he is compelled to starve or-most horrible of alternatives-go to work.
The only other notice of the hieroglyphs of vagabonds worth remarking is in Mayhew's London Labour and the London Poor. Mayhew obtained his information from two tramps, who stated that hawkers employ these signs as well as beggars. One tramp thus described the method of "working" a small town. "Two hawkers go together, but separate when they enter a village, one taking one side of the road, and selling different things, and so as to inform each other as to the character of the people at whose houses they call, they chalk certain marks on their door-posts." Another informant stated that "if a 'patterer' has been 'crabbed'" (that is, offended by refusal or exposure) "at any of the 'cribs'" (houses), "he mostly chalks a signal at or near the door." These hawkers were not of the ordinary, but of the tramp, class, who carried goods more as a blind to their real designs than for the purposes of sale. They, in fact, represented the worst kinds of the two classes. The law has comparatively recently improved these nondescript gentry off the face of the country, and the hawker of the present day is generally a man more sinned against than sinning.
Another use is also made of hieroglyphs. Charts of successful begging neighbourhoods are rudely drawn, and symbolical signs attached to each house to show whether benevolent or adverse. "In many cases there is over the kitchen mantelpiece" of a tramps' lodging-house "a map of the district, dotted here and there with memorandums of failure or success." A correct facsimile of one of these singular maps is given in this book. It was obtained from the patterers and tramps who supplied a great many words for this work, and who were employed by the original publisher in collecting Old Ballads, Christmas Carols, Dying Speeches, and Last Lamentations, as materials for a History of Popular Literature. The reader will, no doubt, be amused with the drawing. The locality depicted is near Maidstone, in Kent; and it was probably sketched by a wandering Screever in payment for a night's lodging. The English practice of marking everything, and scratching names on public property, extends itself to the tribe of vagabonds. On the map, as may be seen in the left-hand corner, some Traveller has drawn a favourite or noted female, singularly nicknamed Three-quarter Sarah. What were the peculiar accomplishments of this lady to demand so uncommon a name, the reader will be at a loss to discover; but a patterer says it probably refers to a shuffling dance of that name, common in tramps' lodging-houses, and in which "¾ Sarah" may have been a proficient. Above her, three beggars or hawkers have reckoned their day's earnings, amounting to 13s., and on the right a tolerably correct sketch of a low hawker, or cadger, is drawn. "To Dover, the nigh way," is the exact phraseology; and "hup here," a fair specimen of the self-acquired education of the draughtsman. No key or explanation to the hieroglyphs was given in the original, because it would have been superfluous, when every inmate of the lodging-house knew the marks from his cradle-or rather his mother's back.

Current Page: 1

Word Lists:

Cadge : ask for or obtain (something to which one is not strictly entitled)

Tramp : walk heavily or noisily

Beggar : a person, typically a homeless one, who lives by asking for money or food.

Crabbed : (of handwriting) ill-formed and hard to decipher

Vagrant : a person without a settled home or regular work who wanders from place to place and lives by begging.

Nondescript : lacking distinctive or interesting features or characteristics

Vagabond : a person who wanders from place to place without a home or job.

Importunate : persistent, especially to the point of annoyance or intrusion

Facsimile : an exact copy, especially of written or printed material

Hieroglyphic : writing consisting of hieroglyphs

More...

Additional Information:

Rating: Words in the Passage: 1163 Unique Words: 506 Sentences: 42
Noun: 379 Conjunction: 110 Adverb: 47 Interjection: 0
Adjective: 82 Pronoun: 49 Verb: 188 Preposition: 178
Letter Count: 5,374 Sentiment: Positive Tone: Formal Difficult Words: 282
EdSearch WebSearch
Questions and Answers

Please wait while we generate questions and answers...

Ratings & Comments

Write a Review
5 Star
0
0
4 Star
0
0
3 Star
0
0
2 Star
0
0
1 Star
0
0
0

0 Ratings & 0 Reviews

Report an Error