Saturday, February 4th, 2012
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1775 / London

Sops for Cerberus

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To enumerate all the varieties of punishment would be a useless, as well as an endless task. To enumerate the several parts of a man’s body in which he is liable to be made to suffer would be to give a complete body of anatomy. To enumerate the several instruments by the application of which he might be made to suffer would be to give a complete body of natural history. To attempt to enumerate the different manners in which those instruments may be applied to such a purpose would be to attempt to exhaust the inexhaustible variety of motions and situations.

Among the indefinite multitude of punishments of this kind that might be imagined and described, it will answer every purpose if we mention some of those which have been in use in this and other countries.

The most obvious method of inflicting this species of punishment, and which has been most commonly used, consists in exposing the body to blows or stripes. When these are inflicted with a flexible instrument, the operation is called whipping; when a less flexible instrument is employed, the effects are different, but the operation is seldom distinguished by another name.

In Italy, and particularly in Naples, there is a method, not uncommon, of punishing pickpockets, called the Strappado. It consists in raising the offender by his arms by means of an engine, like a crane, to a certain height and then letting him fall—but suddenly stopping his descent before he reaches the ground. The momentum which his body has acquired in the descent is thus made to bear upon his arms. To prevent the permanent evil consequences, a surgeon is then employed to reset them.

There were formerly in England two kinds of punishment of this class—discarded now even from the military code in which they were longest retained: the one called Picketing, which consisted in suspending the offender in such manner that the weight of his body was supported principally by a spike on which he was made to stand with one foot; the other, the Wooden Horse, as it was called, was a narrow ledge or board on which the individual was made to sit astride—and the inconvenience of which was increased by suspending weights to his legs.

Another species of punishment formerly practiced in this country but now rarely used consisted in subjecting the patient to frequent immersions in water, called ducking. The individual was fastened to a chair or stool called the ducking stool and plunged repeatedly. In this case, the punishment was not of the acute, but of the uneasy kind. The physical uneasiness arises partly from the cold, partly from the temporary stoppage of respiration. It has something of the ridiculous mixed with it and was most generally applied to scolding women whose tongues disturbed their neighbors. It is still occasionally resorted to when the people take the administration of the laws into their own hands and is not uncommonly the fate of the pickpocket who is detected at a fair or other place of promiscuous resort.

The powers of invention have been principally employed in devising instruments for the production of pain by those tribunals which have sought to extort proofs of his criminality from the individual suspected. They have been prepared for all parts of the body, according as they have wished to stretch, to distort, or to dislocate them. Screws for compressing the thumbs, straight boots for compressing the shins—with wedges driven in by a mallet, the rack for either compressing or extending the limbs—all of which might be regulated so as to produce every possible degree of pain.

Suffocation was produced by drenching and was practised by tying a wet linen cloth over the mouth and nostrils of the individual and continually supplying it with water—in such manner that every time the individual breathed he was obliged to swallow a portion of water till his stomach became visibly distended. In the infamous transactions of the Dutch at Amboyna, this species of torture was practised upon the English who fell into their power.

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Comments Post a Comment »

  • THOSE OLDIES BUT GOODIES

    Ah yes, *now* you get right down to it:

    This is the stuff, how refreshing and inspirational to read that somebody somewhere sometime had *got it right*.

    The unsalvageable *mutts and skells* of the criminal underclass understand/respect *one* thing and that one thing *only*: The Boot.

    Put it in, *deep*.

    Posted by Matthew H. Davidson on Thu 22 Apr 2010

  • The suffocation / water torture sounds fairly bad. It's amazing that human beings came up with such means to inflict pain on their own race..

    Trakai of Lithuania

    Posted by Trakai on Sun 10 Oct 2010

  • I have seen these methods in use. Its not pretty at all. Humans are Humanities greatest enemies. Egyptian Symbols

    Posted by Carl on Mon 29 Nov 2010

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Published In
Crimes & Punishments
About the Text

Jeremy Bentham, from Principles of Penal Law. Founder of the philosophy of utilitarianism, Bentham called the talk of universal rights during the French Revolution "nonsense upon stilts." He served as an intellectual mentor for the young John Stuart Mill and toward the end of his life became interested in how the dead could be of use to the living. He proposed that with the proper wax and embalming, notable figures could be interspersed with trees in public parks.

Let the punishments of criminals be useful. A hanged man is good for nothing, but a man condemned to public works still serves the country, and is a living person.
Voltaire, 1764
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