A Treatise On Civil Imprisonment in England With the History of Its Progress

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Fhall be out of Eng-- " land, to pay and allow weekly fucb a fum, not exceeding two u Jhillings and four pence, as any fuch court Jball think Jit, unto the " faid prifoner, to be paid every Monday in every week, fo long as any fuch prifouer (hall continue in prifon in execution at the " fuit of any fuch creditor or creditors: and in every fucb cafe every fuch prifoner and prifoners'^ (after having done every thing poflible for the fatisfaftion of creditors) " /hall be re- v manded tack to the p...rifon or gaol from whence he, Jke, or they " was or luerefo brought up, there to continue in execution" The reader ON CIVIL IMPRISONMENT. Iu reader {hall look in vain, throughout all the different provisions in this aft, for any poflible means by which fuch honelt and un- fortunate prifoners can be refcued from perpetual imprifonment. If their weekly pittances are regularly paid they are com- pletely forlorn.
To torture the companion of friends (as Lord Mansfield emphatically exprefies it) and by that means extort pay- ment from thofe who are not bound for the debt, is pro- bably the general objeft of fo grofs a proceeding.


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