English wayfaring life in the middle ages : (xivth century) / by J.J. Jusserand ... tr. from the French by Lucy Toulmin Smith.
- Jean Jules Jusserand
- Date:
- 1889
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: English wayfaring life in the middle ages : (xivth century) / by J.J. Jusserand ... tr. from the French by Lucy Toulmin Smith. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![cry on the said Henry and put upon him that he had robbed him [Thomas] of his chattels to the value of j^ioo.” They were be- lieved ; “ the said Henry was taken and imprisoned in Gloucester castle for a long time,” waiting for the coming of the justices, exactly as the statute said. Henry recovered his liberty in the end, and obtained a writ against his enemies; but they brought force and came to meet their victim, “and beat the said Henry in the tovvn of Gloucester, that is they bruised his two arms, both his thighs, and both his legs, and his head on both sides, and quite wrecked and vilely treated his body, so that he barely escaped death.” The king’s reply is not satisfactory : “If the husband be alive, the plaint is his, if he be dead the wife’s plaint is nothing.” (“Rolls of Parliament,’’ vol. ii. p. 35, a.d. 1330.)](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b24857440_0177.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)