The Man Who Laughs


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V.  
James II. tolerated the Comprachicos for the good reason that he made  
use of them; at least it happened that he did so more than once. We do  
not always disdain to use what we despise. This low trade, an excellent  
expedient sometimes for the higher one which is called state policy, was  
willingly left in a miserable state, but was not persecuted. There was  
no surveillance, but a certain amount of attention. Thus much might be  
useful--the law closed one eye, the king opened the other.  
Sometimes the king went so far as to avow his complicity. These are  
audacities of monarchical terrorism. The disfigured one was marked with  
the fleur-de-lis; they took from him the mark of God; they put on him  
the mark of the king. Jacob Astley, knight and baronet, lord of Melton  
Constable, in the county of Norfolk, had in his family a child who had  
been sold, and upon whose forehead the dealer had imprinted a  
fleur-de-lis with a hot iron. In certain cases in which it was held  
desirable to register for some reason the royal origin of the new  
position made for the child, they used such means. England has always  
done us the honour to utilize, for her personal service, the  
fleur-de-lis.  
The Comprachicos, allowing for the shade which divides a trade from a  
fanaticism, were analogous to the Stranglers of India. They lived among  
themselves in gangs, and to facilitate their progress, affected somewhat  
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