Crescente malitia, crescere debuit et pcena;" yet neither will the King exceed the usual punishment of law, nor invent any new torture or torment for them*, but is graciously pleased to afford them as well an ordinary course of trial as an ordinary punishment,... Report of the Committee of the Society for the Improvement of Prison ... - Page 104by Society for the Improvement of Prison Discipline and for the Reformation of Juvenile Offenders (London, England) - 1824 - 32 pagesFull view - About this book
| Basil Montagu - Capital punishment - 1809 - 338 pages
...his majesty in his admirable clemency and moderation, will not invent any new tortures or lorments for them ; but hath been graciously pleased to afford...is the treatment by law provided and appointed for high-treason. " For first, the traitor shall be drawn to the place of execution, as not being worthy... | |
| Basil Montagu - Capital punishment - 1816 - 340 pages
...weight, if his harangue had been rather after conviction, than before. f State Trials, vol. ip 235. " These traitors have exceeded all others their predecessors...is the treatment by law -provided and appointed for high-treason. " For first, the traitor shall be drawn to the place of execution, as not being worthy... | |
| Thomas Bayly Howell - Trials - 1816 - 760 pages
...tlie king exceed the usual punishment of law, nor invent any new torture or torment for them ; but is graciously pleased to afford them as well an ordinary course of trial, ns an ordinary punishment, much interior to their offence. And surely worthy of observation и the... | |
| Lucy Aikin - Great Britain - 1822 - 472 pages
...the king exceed the usual punishment of law., nor invent any new torture or torment for them ; but is graciously pleased to afford them as •well an ordinary...punishment, much inferior to their offence*. " And this was the idea of the power and prerogative of a king of England which the greatest lawyer of his... | |
| Lucy Aikin - Great Britain - 1822 - 468 pages
...the king exceed the usual punishment of law, nor invent any new torture or torment for them ; but is graciously pleased to afford them as well an ordinary...ordinary punishment, much inferior to their offence a." And this was the idea of the power and prerogative of a king of England which the greatest lawyer... | |
| Lucy Aikin - Great Britain - 1822 - 472 pages
...punishment of law, nor invent any new torture or torment for them ; but is graciously pleased to aiVord them as well an ordinary course of trial, as an ordinary punishment, much inferior to their offence il." And this was the idea of the power and prerogative of a king of England which the greatest lawyer... | |
| David Jardine - Great Britain - 1835 - 440 pages
...the King exceed the usual punishment of law, nor invent any new torture or torment for them*, but is graciously pleased to afford them as well an ordinary...their offence. And surely worthy of observation is the punishment by law provided and appointed for high treason; for first, after a traitor hath had his... | |
| David Jardine - Great Britain - 1835 - 452 pages
...the King exceed the usual punishment of law, nor invent any new torture or torment for them*, but is graciously pleased to afford them as well an ordinary...their offence. And surely worthy of observation is the punishment by law provided and appointed for high treason ; for first, after a traitor hath had his... | |
| William Harrison Ainsworth - 1841 - 400 pages
...the king exceed the usual punishment of law, nor invent any new torture or torment for them, but is graciously pleased to afford them as well an ordinary...their offence. And surely worthy of observation is the punishment by law provided and appointed for high treason: for first, after a traitor bath had his... | |
| Thomas Barlow - Gunpowder Plot, 1605 - 1850 - 228 pages
...graciously pleased to afford them for as well an ordinary course of trial as an ordiigt Treason. nar y punishment, much inferior to their offence. And surely worthy of observation is the punishment by law provided and appointed for high treason, which we call crimen lessce majestatis.... | |
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