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قراءة كتاب Second Thoughts are Best: Or a Further Improvement of a Late Scheme to Prevent Street Robberies

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‏اللغة: English
Second Thoughts are Best: Or a Further Improvement of a Late Scheme to Prevent Street Robberies

Second Thoughts are Best: Or a Further Improvement of a Late Scheme to Prevent Street Robberies

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 8

subject.

Having, I hope, taken sufficient care of street-robbers, I proceed now to clear the roads from highwaymen, footpads, &c.

Let parties of horse be stationed at all the outgoings from the city of London; so that if a coach, wagon, &c., want a convoy, two, three, or more may be detached by the commanding officer; these shall be registered, and answerable for their charge; and for encouragement shall receive so much per mile, or in the whole, convoy money.

This may be likewise practised from town to town all over England, so that the roads will be as safe as the streets; and they who scruple the trifle of convoy money above proposed, merit not safety.

For those who walk on foot to the adjacent villages, parties of foot may be stationed in like manner; so that not only the subject will be free from danger, but the soldier employed and prevented from corrupt measures by this additional perquisite to his pay.

Nothing remains but that robbers be prosecuted at the public charge; the trials fixed to respective days, that prosecutors may not lose so much time, and the rewards paid in court without deduction or delay; nor should any robber be admitted an evidence after he is taken, or pardoned after conviction.



Transcriber's Notes

The transcriber made this change to the text to correct an obvious error:

1. p. 12,
   a watchman to every forty houses, twenty on
   it one side of the way, and twenty on the other; for
   is observable that a man cannot well see distinctly
   beyond the extent of twenty houses in a row;

   -->

   a watchman to every forty houses, twenty on
   one side of the way, and twenty on the other; for
   it is observable that a man cannot well see distinctly
   beyond the extent of twenty houses in a row;

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