Journey To The Western Isles Of Scotland By Samuel Johnson




























































































 -   To this general temper of
the government was added the peculiar form of the country, broken
by mountains into many - Page 118
Journey To The Western Isles Of Scotland By Samuel Johnson - Page 118 of 212 - First - Home

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To This General Temper Of The Government Was Added The Peculiar Form Of The Country, Broken By Mountains Into Many Subdivisions Scarcely Accessible But To The Natives, And Guarded By Passes, Or Perplexed With Intricacies, Through Which National Justice Could Not Find Its Way.

The power of deciding controversies, and of punishing offences, as some such power there must always be, was intrusted to the Lairds of the country, to those whom the people considered as their natural judges.

It cannot be supposed that a rugged proprietor of the rocks, unprincipled and unenlightened, was a nice resolver of entangled claims, or very exact in proportioning punishment to offences. But the more he indulged his own will, the more he held his vassals in dependence. Prudence and innocence, without the favour of the Chief, conferred no security; and crimes involved no danger, when the judge was resolute to acquit.

When the chiefs were men of knowledge and virtue, the convenience of a domestick judicature was great. No long journies were necessary, nor artificial delays could be practised; the character, the alliances, and interests of the litigants were known to the court, and all false pretences were easily detected. The sentence, when it was past, could not be evaded; the power of the Laird superseded formalities, and justice could not be defeated by interest or stratagem.

I doubt not but that since the regular judges have made their circuits through the whole country, right has been every where more wisely, and more equally distributed; the complaint is, that litigation is grown troublesome, and that the magistrates are too few, and therefore often too remote for general convenience.

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