登陆注册
14830800000014

第14章 CAPITAL PUNISHMENT(6)

executed. The commitments for murder during the latter long period, with 17 executions, were more than one half fewer than they had been in the former long period with exactly double the number of executions. This appears to us to be as conclusive upon our argument as any statistical illustration can be upon any argument professing to place successive events in the relation of cause and effect to each other. How justly then is it said in that able and useful periodical work, now in the course of publication at Glasgow, under the name of the Magazine of Popular Information on Capital and Secondary Punishment, 'the greater the number of executions, the greater the number of murders; the smaller the number of executions, the smaller the number of murders. The lives of her Majesty's subjects are less safe with a hundred executions a year than with fifty; less safe with fifty than with twenty-five.'"

Similar results have followed from rendering public executions more and more infrequent, in Tuscany, in Prussia, in France, in Belgium.

Wherever capital punishments are diminished in their number, there, crimes diminish in their number too.

But the very same advocates of the punishment of Death who contend, in the teeth of all facts and figures, that it does prevent crime, contend in the same breath against its abolition because it does not! "There are so many bad murders," say they, "and they follow in such quick succession, that the Punishment must not be repealed."

Why, is not this a reason, among others, for repealing it? Does it not go to show that it is ineffective as an example; that it fails to prevent crime; and that it is wholly inefficient to stay that imitation, or contagion, call it what you please, which brings one murder on the heels of another?

One forgery came crowding on another's heels in the same way, when the same punishment attached to that crime. Since it has been removed, forgeries have diminished in a most remarkable degree. Yet within five and thirty years, Lord Eldon, with tearful solemnity, imagined in the House of Lords as a possibility for their Lordships to shudder at, that the time might come when some visionary and morbid person might even propose the abolition of the punishment of Death for forgery. And when it was proposed, Lords Lyndhurst, Wynford, Tenterden, and Eldon--all Law Lords--opposed it.

The same Lord Tenterden manfully said, on another occasion and another question, that he was glad the subject of the amendment of the laws had been taken up by Mr. Peel, "who had not been bred to the law; for those who were, were rendered dull, by habit, to many of its defects!" I would respectfully submit, in extension of this text, that a criminal judge is an excellent witness against the Punishment of Death, but a bad witness in its favour; and I will reserve this point for a few remarks in the next, concluding, Letter.

The last English Judge, I believe, who gave expression to a public and judicial opinion in favour of the punishment of Death, is Mr.

Justice Coleridge, who, in charging the Grand Jury at Hertford last year, took occasion to lament the presence of serious crimes in the calendar, and to say that he feared that they were referable to the comparative infrequency of Capital Punishment.

It is not incompatible with the utmost deference and respect for an authority so eminent, to say that, in this, Mr. Justice Coleridge was not supported by facts, but quite the reverse. He went out of his way to found a general assumption on certain very limited and partial grounds, and even on those grounds was wrong. For among the few crimes which he instanced, murder stood prominently forth. Now persons found guilty of murder are more certainly and unsparingly hanged at this time, as the Parliamentary Returns demonstrate, than such criminals ever were. So how can the decline of public executions affect that class of crimes? As to persons committing murder, and yet not found guilty of it by juries, they escape solely because there are many public executions--not because there are none or few.

But when I submit that a criminal judge is an excellent witness against Capital Punishment, but a bad witness in its favour, I do so on more broad and general grounds than apply to this error in fact and deduction (so I presume to consider it) on the part of the distinguished judge in question. And they are grounds which do not apply offensively to judges, as a class; than whom there are no authorities in England so deserving of general respect and confidence, or so possessed of it; but which apply alike to all men in their several degrees and pursuits.

It is certain that men contract a general liking for those things which they have studied at great cost of time and intellect, and their proficiency in which has led to their becoming distinguished and successful. It is certain that out of this feeling arises, not only that passive blindness to their defects of which the example given by my Lord Tenterden was quoted in the last letter, but an active disposition to advocate and defend them. If it were otherwise; if it were not for this spirit of interest and partisanship; no single pursuit could have that attraction for its votaries which most pursuits in course of time establish. Thus legal authorities are usually jealous of innovations on legal principles. Thus it is described of the lawyer in the Introductory Discourse to the Description of Utopia, that he said of a proposal against Capital Punishment, "'this could never be so established in England but that it must needs bring the weal-public into great jeopardy and hazard', and as he was thus saying, he shaked his head, and made a wry mouth, and so he held his peace". Thus the Recorder of London, in 1811, objected to "the capital part being taken off"

from the offence of picking pockets. Thus the Lord Chancellor, in 1813, objected to the removal of the penalty of death from the offence of stealing to the amount of five shillings from a shop.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天内奇缘

    天内奇缘

    天内奇缘,如梦如幻。我有王松,主修召唤。横扫千军,风云雷电。强行隐身,以一敌万。无职业的网游,有多大的自由?没工作的青年,有多大的机缘?是毁灭冲击波?还是冥王连环斩?五湖四海任我游,魔神挥手头不留。
  • 灵界修行实录

    灵界修行实录

    随手写写自己的回忆,感谢人生给我丰富的内涵
  • 复仇公主遇到他

    复仇公主遇到他

    她,因为妹妹陷害而被逐出家门。她,被姐姐推下大海,不见了。她,走丢了,却被姐姐说她死了。他,白手起家,成了七大家族的第二。他,黑道传奇,却不及她。他,花心,可之后唯独对她好。敬请期待(?˙ー˙?)
  • 霸道凯爷的拽丫头

    霸道凯爷的拽丫头

    他是红遍了半边天的TFBOYS少年组合中的王俊凯,但是性格高冷……她从小并没有在中国,也不关注娱乐圈的一些事情,17岁的她,被迫回到国内上学…一个活泼女主一个高冷男神,其实小时候就认识的他们因为一场车祸……
  • 混黑道的学生

    混黑道的学生

    有着黑道大哥的老爸,自己和兄弟打天下。有着黑道的血光也有校园的柔情。也错不过那甜美幸福的一幕。可以为我抗刀的才是我真正的兄弟,同样也是值得我为他抗刀的人。樱井菱是我应该用命去珍惜的女孩。我不要做你生命中的瞬间,而是要做那完美的结局。宁少QQ:1009869485.小说Q群:29270939.
  • 末日小村长

    末日小村长

    末日突临,丧尸横行,科技产品报废,秩序崩坏,可这只是众神赌博的游戏。张斌成为参赛者,通过一个突然出现在大街上的村庄,拥有了召唤人类和丧尸成为士兵的能力。过上了怀抱各色美女,争霸天下的日子。一场宏伟的冷兵器战争开启,狂暴征伐的旋律,铁与血的赞歌!书友群:243015276
  • 绝世少女的校草美男

    绝世少女的校草美男

    在那一天,从一个人踏进校门的时候,什么都已经改变了……她对旁人冷酷无情,但对朋友倾尽所有!可直到遇到他们,她感觉自己越来越不像自己了……不过她确定她喜欢现在的自己,她慢慢放不下他们了……
  • 传习录(传世名著百部第50卷)

    传习录(传世名著百部第50卷)

    王守仁是明代中叶的著名哲学家。他的心学思想,以一种“活泼泼”的自我意识和主体精神,冲破了数百年来中国思想界为程朱理学所垄断的沉闷局面,风靡晚明,启迪近代,影响至今。在《传习录》中,王守仁对程朱理学以外在于主体的“理”为本体的思路进行了抨击,指出:“朱子所谓‘格物’云者,在即物而穷其理也。即物穷理,是就事事物物上求其所谓定理者也。是以吾心而求理于事事物物之中,析‘心’与‘理’而为二矣。
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 寻仙斩魂

    寻仙斩魂

    固守万年的仙界早就化为废墟,乌有之界大举入侵。身处末法时代修士们浑然不知,冥府、古院、仙墟、灵庙,机缘巧合下身世成谜的孤儿苏尘成为各方势力角逐的关键......感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持