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The Stocks

The Stocks.jpg Punishment for Insolence to a superiorThumbnailsThe Scarlet letterPunishment for Insolence to a superiorThumbnailsThe Scarlet letterPunishment for Insolence to a superiorThumbnailsThe Scarlet letterPunishment for Insolence to a superiorThumbnailsThe Scarlet letterPunishment for Insolence to a superiorThumbnailsThe Scarlet letterPunishment for Insolence to a superiorThumbnailsThe Scarlet letterPunishment for Insolence to a superiorThumbnailsThe Scarlet letter

In England, petty thieves, unruly servants, wife-beaters, hedge-tearers, vagrants, Sabbath-breakers, revilers, gamblers, drunkards, ballad-singers, fortune-tellers, traveling musicians and a variety of other offenders, were all punished by the stocks. Doubtless the most notable person ever set in the stocks for drinking too freely was that great man, Cardinal Wolsey. About the year 1500 he was the incumbent at Lymington, and getting drunk at a village feast, he was seen by Sir Amyas Poulett, a strict moralist, and local justice of the peace, who humiliated the embryo cardinal by thrusting him in the stocks.