Tyburn Tree. Alfred Marks
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Alfred Marks
Tyburn Tree
Its History and Annals
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066182540
Table of Contents
TYBURN TREE Its History and Annals
WHOM TO EXECUTE? WHO IS TO EXECUTE? HOW TO EXECUTE?
TORTURE AND PEINE FORTE ET DURE.
ORIGIN AND SITE OF THE TYBURN GALLOWS
PREFACE
How our fathers lived is a subject of never-failing interest: of some interest it may be to inquire how they died—at Tyburn. The story has many aspects, some noble, some squalid, some pathetic, some revolting. If I am reproached with dwelling on the horrors of Tyburn, I take refuge under the wing of the great Lipsius, who, in his treatise De Cruce, has lavished the stores of his appalling erudition on a subject no less terrible.
But the subject has an interest other than antiquarian. We are to-day far from the point of view of Shelley—
“Power like a desolating pestilence
Pollutes whate’er it touches.”
The general tendency is all towards extending the power of governments. Some would fain extend the sphere of the State’s activity so as to give to the State control over almost every action of our daily lives. It may therefore be not without use to recall how governments have dealt with the people in the past. The State never voluntarily surrenders anything of its power. Less than a hundred years ago, ministers stoutly defended their privilege of tearing out a man’s bowels and burning them before his eyes. The State devised and executed hideous punishments, sometimes made still more hideous by the ferocity of its instruments, the judges. All mitigation of these punishments has been forced on the State by “idealists.” The State dragged its victims, almost naked, three miles over a rough road. The hands of compassionate friars placed the sufferer on a hurdle—not without threats of punishment for so doing. In the end, the State adopted the hurdle. So it has always been. Not a hundred years ago, Viscount Sidmouth, the Home Secretary, could see no reason for altering the law which awarded the penalty of death to one who had stolen from a shop goods to the value of five shillings. To Romilly, though he did not live to see this result of his untiring labours in the cause of humanity, we may gratefully ascribe the abolition of the extreme penalty for this offence.
On this field, as on others, the victories of civilisation have been won by the individual in conflict with the community.
I desire to thank Mr. C. W. Moule, the Librarian of Corpus Christi College, and the College authorities, for permission, most courteously granted, to reproduce the drawing by Matthew Paris showing Sir William de Marisco being drawn to the gallows.
I am indebted to Mr. Herbert Sieveking for permission to reproduce, from a photograph taken for him, the print from the Gardner Collection showing an execution at Tyburn. I am in an especial degree obliged to him for calling my attention to Norden’s map of Middlesex, the subject of an article by him in the Daily Graphic of September 4, 1908.
ILLUSTRATIONS
THE REV. MR. WHITEFIELD PREACHING ON KENNINGTON COMMON | Frontispiece |
From a print in the Crowle Pennant, Print Room, British Museum, Part VIII., No. 242. Probable date, 1748, or somewhat later. The triangular gallows is probably that erected for the execution in 1746 of the rebels of 1745. The bodies on the gibbet are those of highwaymen or murderers. | |
FACING PAGE | |
THE FIRST KNOWN REPRESENTATION OF THE TRIPLE TREE | 62 |
A portion of a map of Middlesex engraved by John Norden for William Camden’s “Britannia,” edition of 1607. | |
THE TRIPLE TREE ABOUT 1614 | 64 |
The illustration reproduces the frontispiece of a book. The gallows is shown in the uppermost lozenge on the left. | |
THE RUINS OF FARLEIGH CASTLE | 66 |
From Sir Richard Colt Hoare’s “Hungerfordiana; or, Memoirs of the Family of Hungerford,” 1823. | |
THE TRIPLE TREE IN 1712 | 66 |
From a broadsheet published by the Rev. Paul Lorrain, the Ordinary of Newgate, containing an account of an execution at Tyburn, on September 19, 1712. | |
THE TRIPLE TREE IN 1746 | 68 |
Reduced from Rocque’s 24-sheet Map of London, etc., begun in March, 1737, and published in October, 1746. | |
THE SITE OF TYBURN |