The life and adventures of Ambrose Gwinett apprentice to an attorney at law. Who for a murder which he never committed, was tried, condemned, executed, and hung in chains, in old England: yet lived many years afterwards, and in his travels found the man in the West Indies actually alive; for the supposed murder of whom he had been really executed. : Demonstratively proving, that condemnations upon circumstantial evidence are injurious to innocence, incompatible with justice, and therefore ought always to be discountenanced, especially in cases of life and death : Demonstratively proving, that condemnations upon circumstantial evidence are injurious to innocence, incompatible with justice, and therefore ought always to be discountenanced, especially in cases of life and death
von: Bickerstaff, Isaac
Veröffentlicht: (1786)