'The Elizabethan Underworld', is a helter skelter read that mainly features life amongst London's 16th century criminal classes. Salgado takes the reader by the hand and leads you through the streets of London, to show something that will make you change your mind...four hundred years before Ralph McTell.
The author uses a large selection of primary sources that brings the Elizabethan street slang to life as well as extracts from the playwrights, Shakespeare, Jonson, Dekker and Middleton and divers other documentary sources. The descriptive guide through the capital cities streets, market places, main thoroughfares (The Strand and Cheapside), London Bridge and St.Pauls are just so realistic. When Highgate and St.Giles were still villages and Hampstead was a real Heath and the M25 of the day was the river. Aldersgate,Cripplegate,Moorgate,Bishopsgate,Aldgate,Ludgate and Newgate were real gates of the city defences, closed shut at nightfall. However, it's the people that are vividly brought to life here, not the usual Elizabethan personalities, but the underclass, criminals, con-men, whores, strolling players, minstrels, alchemists and astrologers. All on the look-out for some likely out of town 'gull' from whom to beg, borrow or steal the odd groat or two.
The slang is excellent. My favourite is 'stampers' for shoes. Others have travelled well, like 'beak' for magistrate and 'booze' for booze and 'duds' for clothes, some have changed, like 'punk' for prostitute. All in all, methinks, quite an interesting and enjoyable book.