Difference between revisions of "Pistol"
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'''Pistol''' is a member of [[Falstaff's Gang|Falstaff's gang.]] | '''Pistol''' is a member of [[Falstaff's Gang|Falstaff's gang.]] | ||
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+ | ==History== | ||
+ | Pistol was a member of [[Falstaff|John Oldcastle]]'s original gang along with [[Harry Monmouth]]. Together, the three of them pulled jobs all over [[Sydney]]. | ||
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+ | When Oldcastle (now calling himself Falstaff) was recruited by the [[Illuminati]], Pistol joined his old boss and several new recruits in guarding the secret society's treasury on [[Eastcheap Isle]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Characteristics== | ||
==Appearances== | ==Appearances== |
Revision as of 03:41, 22 October 2009
Pistol is a member of Falstaff's gang.
History
Pistol was a member of John Oldcastle's original gang along with Harry Monmouth. Together, the three of them pulled jobs all over Sydney.
When Oldcastle (now calling himself Falstaff) was recruited by the Illuminati, Pistol joined his old boss and several new recruits in guarding the secret society's treasury on Eastcheap Isle.
Characteristics
Appearances
Real-world Background
Pistol is named after a character in Shakespeare's play Henry IV Part Two, who reappears in The Merry Wives of Windsor and Henry V. Falstaff's old ensign (standard-bearer), Pistol is a braggart who talks in a comically overblown fashion (many of his speeches are parodies of lines from the plays of Christopher Marlowe, one of Shakespeare's rival dramatists). In Henry V, Pistol marries Mistress Quickly, and enlists in Henry V's army for the French war, as do many of Falstaff's other former followers; he fights in the Battle of Agincourt, successfully capturing a French soldier there, and quarrels with a Welsh officer named Fluellen (who finally gets the better of Pistol, making him eat a leek). The last of Falstaff's associates to survive, he returns to England when the war is over to become a beggar and thief.