[The Shadow of a Crime by Hall Caine]@TWC D-Link book
The Shadow of a Crime

CHAPTER XXVIII
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He surrendered himself to justice, and stood mute at the bar, and, in order to secure his estates to his surviving child, he had the resolution to die under the dreadful punishment of _peine forte_." "What is that, lawyer ?" "Death by iron weights laid on the bare body until the life is crushed out of it." "Dreadful! And did he secure his estates to his child by suffering such a death ?" "He did.

He stood mute at the bar, and let judgment go against him without trial.

It is all in black and white.

The Crown cannot confiscate a man's estate until he is tried and condemned." "What of an outlaw ?" asked Ralph somewhat eagerly.
"A man's flight is equal to a plea of guilty." "I had a comrade once," said Ralph with some tremor of voice; "he fled from judgment and was outlawed, and his poor children were turned into the road.

Could he have kept his lands for his family by delivering his body to that death you speak of ?" "He could.


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