FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   483   484   485   486   487   488   489   490   491   492   493   494   495   496   497   498   499   500   501   502   503   504   505   506   507  
508   509   510   511   512   513   514   515   516   517   518   519   520   521   522   523   524   525   526   527   528   529   530   531   532   >>   >|  
l sticking up to the head. The first of his keepers who came in found him in this condition: yet alive, but sunk down and exhausted by his wounds. To make use of time, therefore, before he should die, they made haste to read his sentence; which having done, and he hearing that he was only condemned to be beheaded, he seemed to take new courage, accepted wine which he had before refused, and thanked his judges for the unhoped-for mildness of their sentence; saying, that he had taken a resolution to despatch himself for fear of a more severe and insupportable death, having entertained an opinion, by the preparations he had seen in the place, that they were resolved to torment him with some horrible execution, and seemed to be delivered from death in having it changed from what he apprehended. I should advise that those examples of severity by which 'tis designed to retain the people in their duty, might be exercised upon the dead bodies of criminals; for to see them deprived of sepulture, to see them boiled and divided into quarters, would almost work as much upon the vulgar, as the pain they make the living endure; though that in effect be little or nothing, as God himself says, "Who kill the body, and after that have no more that they can do;"--[Luke, xii. 4.]--and the poets singularly dwell upon the horrors of this picture, as something worse than death: "Heu! reliquias semiustas regis, denudatis ossibus, Per terram sanie delibutas foede divexarier." ["Alas! that the half-burnt remains of the king, exposing his bones, should be foully dragged along the ground besmeared with gore." --Cicero, Tusc. Quaes., i. 44.] I happened to come by one day accidentally at Rome, just as they were upon executing Catena, a notorious robber: he was strangled without any emotion of the spectators, but when they came to cut him in quarters, the hangman gave not a blow that the people did not follow with a doleful cry and exclamation, as if every one had lent his sense of feeling to the miserable carcase. Those inhuman excesses ought to be exercised upon the bark, and not upon the quick. Artaxerxes, in almost a like case, moderated the severity of the ancient laws of Persia, ordaining that the nobility who had committed a fault, instead of being whipped, as they were used to be, should be stripped only and their clothes whipped for them; and that whereas they were wont to tear off their hair, the
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   483   484   485   486   487   488   489   490   491   492   493   494   495   496   497   498   499   500   501   502   503   504   505   506   507  
508   509   510   511   512   513   514   515   516   517   518   519   520   521   522   523   524   525   526   527   528   529   530   531   532   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

sentence

 

exercised

 
people
 

quarters

 

whipped

 
severity
 

Cicero

 

besmeared

 
accidentally
 

happened


semiustas

 

reliquias

 

denudatis

 

ossibus

 
singularly
 

horrors

 

picture

 

terram

 

exposing

 

foully


dragged

 

remains

 

delibutas

 

divexarier

 

ground

 

ancient

 

moderated

 

Persia

 

ordaining

 
excesses

Artaxerxes

 

nobility

 

committed

 
clothes
 
stripped
 
inhuman
 

spectators

 

hangman

 
emotion
 

notorious


Catena

 
robber
 
strangled
 
feeling
 

miserable

 

carcase

 
follow
 

doleful

 

exclamation

 

executing