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The Pillory

The Pillory.jpg François René De ChateaubriandThumbnailsThree hundred dollars for that gownFrançois René De ChateaubriandThumbnailsThree hundred dollars for that gownFrançois René De ChateaubriandThumbnailsThree hundred dollars for that gownFrançois René De ChateaubriandThumbnailsThree hundred dollars for that gownFrançois René De ChateaubriandThumbnailsThree hundred dollars for that gownFrançois René De ChateaubriandThumbnailsThree hundred dollars for that gownFrançois René De ChateaubriandThumbnailsThree hundred dollars for that gown

It would be impossible to enumerate the offences for which Englishmen were pilloried: among them were treason, sedition, arson, blasphemy, witch-craft, perjury, wife-beating, cheating, forestalling, forging, coin-clipping, tree-polling, gaming, dice-cogging, quarrelling, lying, libelling, slandering, threatening, conjuring, fortune-telling, “prigging,” drunkenness, impudence. One man was set in the pillory for delivering false dinner invitations; another for a rough practical joke; another for selling an injurious quack medicine. All sharpers, beggars, impostors, vagabonds, were liable to be pilloried.