Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Crime: Its Amount, Causes and Remedies
Periodic examinations Provision for moral and religious instruction Importance of visits by chaplain in private Separation ought not to extend to chapel Beneficial in?uence of music Mr. Clay's Selection from Liturgy Voluntary assistance in instruction of prisoners Prison libraries. Prisoners should be examined 1n what they read Indirect instruction in prisons. Intercourse with relatives Under judicious regulation highly salutary Ordinary rule on subject Punishments Few 1n Scottish prisons Number 1n some English prisons Principles which should regulate punishments Rewards Like punishments, should be natural and not artificial Moral tendency of cheerfulness.
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