This appears to be the laws established for their presence in south east England.
Again good proper sense and well worth comparing to other efforts.
The purpose of spiritual striving is well spoken here and this is not well understood even today. As observed, this community appears well instructed back in the earliest bronze Age and surely from materials and traditions handed down that were antediluvian.
Again good proper sense and well worth comparing to other efforts.
The purpose of spiritual striving is well spoken here and this is not well understood even today. As observed, this community appears well instructed back in the earliest bronze Age and surely from materials and traditions handed down that were antediluvian.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
THE LAWS OF MALFIN
May your souls be enlightened by the Central
Light. May all you who assemble between the great pillars at the appointed times be cared for by The Supreme
Spirit, as you care for His earthly affairs. May He keep you, as you keep His laws. May you receive the grace of
enlightetmient from the centre of the Sacred Circle and may an eternal fountain open for you, from which your
souls may drink and be refreshed. May you receive the gift of everlasting regeneration.
[ i suspect this is the real reason for meditation. arclein ]
These are the laws of the outsiders, which you have to obey, and they can be justly added to those you have, for right recognises no origin. They are in two parts: those which are to be wholly yours and those which govern you among the outsiders.
These are the laws of the outsiders, which you have to obey, and they can be justly added to those you have, for right recognises no origin. They are in two parts: those which are to be wholly yours and those which govern you among the outsiders.
If one whose position requires him to bear
witness to a transaction give false evidence concerning it, so that an outsider is at a loss, he is to be bound and
given over to the outsiders. If an outsider suffer loss the one causing it is to be deprived of his rights and made to
labour in the place of captivity, until the loss is made good and twice the amount has been paid to the council. He must
not be re-established in his rights.
Only a man of good repute having no interest in
the things being judged, can witness to it with immunity. If he accept a payment his voice is not to be heard.
No one who gambles or lends money, or who buys
to sell, or collects payments or taxes may sit in judgement.
Neither may a man whose house is in turmoil or who has been condemned in judgement.
No one may sit in judgement on a kinsman, a friend or an enemy, unless no other judge can be found.
No one may attend upon a judge in the absence of those who oppose him, so that he may gain favour.
The words of a lying witness are to be disregarded, unless otherwise proven.
If voices be raised in anger before the seat of
judgement, or anyone behave unseemingly, the matter is to be left until the morrow. When sitting in judgement a
judge must remember that it is more wicked for a rich man to steal than for a poor man. Or for the wellborn
to act basely than for the lowly to act likewise. It is more wicked for the strong to strike unjustly than for the
weak to do so.
If anyone by boisterous behaviour cause damage
within the grounds of a man's dwelling place, or injure anyone, he shall go to the place of captivity until the
damage or injury is made good, and the same amount is to be paid to the council.
Every landowner must have his land hedged in and
if it is not hedged, or the hedges are broken, he will have no claim for any damage caused there by strayed
animals, but they must be driven out without hurt or harm. If anyone damage a hedge or fence he will be
responsible for anything happening through the damage. If anyone damage any property or cause harm to an animal
belonging to the outsiders, he will be handed over to them.
If a man find a beast straying upon his land, he may secure it and demand a payment in compensation for loss or damage.
If anyone offend against the laws of the
outsiders, he will be given over to them for judgement under the laws of the outsiders. No one is to be given over to the
outsiders until he has been heard by his own judges. If anyone is to be judged by the outsiders a man from the
council is to sit with him.
If a man draw a weapon in an assembly of people
he shall surrender the weapon to anyone who ranks above him. If he refiise to do so he shall be seized
and brought before the judges for punishment. He may not recover the weapon except by payment of its value. If
anyone threaten another with a weapon, it is to be taken from him and may not be recovered without payment of its
value to the council.
Men are entitled to the privacy of their wives,
men to the privacy of men and women to the privacy of women. A family is entitled to the privacy of a family.
Anyone who commands another in his power to do a
deed shall stand as though he did it himself.
If in company with a man whom many come to take and slay or injure unlawfully, then draw your weapon in his defence. If anyone use the language of slaves in your presence, it is not sufficient to remain silent. If you do not rebuke him because he is powerful, then depart from his company. To do nothing is wrong, for men are told not to remain passive before the face of evil.
The scandalmonger and scaremonger may both be
delivered to the place of captivity to requite the harm done. If no harm is done the liar is still a person
without repute and his punishment is that he will not be believed even when he speaks truthfully.
Hypocrites are two-tongued loathsome creatures
who, like grass snakes, cannot be grasped in the hands. If any establish themselves as hypocrites, drive them
out and let them afflict the outsiders.
There are punishments prescribed for wrongdoing
and much advice given to prevent it. Punishment is only acknowledgement of failure. Wrongdoing arises
from failure to deal with weaknesses, failure in upbringing, failure in teaching, failure in establishing
rules of conduct and failure in discipline, whether imposed by self or others. When a man comes before the judges for
punishment they do more than half their duty when they condemn him. They should also enquire within
themselves, "Wherein have the people failed with this man? Was he guided rightly or wrongly, and have we no
responsibility towards him?" Punishing a wrongdoer without seeking out the cause of his deeds is
hypocritical justice. If a man walk in darkness and stumble into a pit, is he to blame? If a light guide falsely or be too
feeble to keep men from stumbling, it is of no value. Therefore, if a brother fall into a pit by the wayside the
bearers of light cannot be guiltless.
These things are recorded unto you, so that in
the day of freedom you may not be without law. That day will come as surely as
the sunrise. Never fear because your numbers diminish. One wise man is better
than a pack of fools, and a stave of solid oak better than a pillar of reeds.
The man who supplies weapons to another who uses
them in a wrongful deed is not guiltless himself. If he knew their use he is no
less guilty. Anyone possessing things wrongfially taken is not without guilt,
and if taken knowingly is no less guilty. One who is not yet a man in age
cannot be equally guilty in robbery or violence.
Neither can a simpleton, a madman or a woman.
If anyone bind another unlawfully or cause
anyone to lose his freedom, he shall requite the harm done and may be delivered
to the place of captivity. Everyone has the right to solitude and privacy, and
those who deny him it are not without guilt.
If anyone destroy the hair of a woman he must requite the harm to the limit of fullness.
If anyone come upon a thief in his deed, or upon someone about an unlawful deed and slay or injure him because of his resistance, no wrong is done.
If he submit to capture and is slain or injured unlawfully, those who do the deed must bear the guilt.
If a man come upon his wife in adultery and slay
both he has done no wrong.
If a man come upon another dealing wrongfully with his son or daughter or another child and he slay him, he has done no wrong.
If a man slay a thief in the night or one who seeks to injure him, he does no vwong.
If a man find another with his wife behind bolted doors and slay the man, he has done no wrong. If he come upon them in a secret place and slay the man, he has done no wrong.
If a man commit a deed unlawfully, in lust, so that he may be lawfully slain, he may be casfrated instead.
If a man lay his hand in any way upon a virgin, without her consent, he is not guiltless.
If two men quarrel and one bear insult with forbearance, the other must requite him for the insult. A brother, a father or a son coming upon his kinswoman in adultery or behind bolted doors, is to stand as though he were her husband.
If a man slay another who provoked him in fair contest, he does so in self-defence. The guilt of a deed done while drunk is not lessened. If anyone become drunk so that he cannot stand upon a stool, he is not guiltless.
If anyone desfroy a tree belonging to the outsiders and not on common land he must requite the outsiders its value. If anyone destroy the tree of another he will stand as though he stole it.
The man who is betrothed to a woman, coming upon
her in fornication or behind bolted doors, is to stand as though he were her
husband. If he come upon her in a secret place he is to stand as her husband.
If anyone, knowing a woman to be unchaste, permit a man to marry her beheving
her to be chaste, he shall bear the guilt and may be called upon to requite the
husband.
At the frothing a man must pledge the father of
his befrothed, or the next of kin to her father, that he will maintain and
protect her. The bride price is to be paid seven days before the marriage and
it is to repay her father for bringing her up with all the womanly virtues.
Marriage by deceit or force is not valid. It
does not bind the victim but binds the other in every way, as though married.
If a man marry a woman by deceit he is not guiltless and must requite the
vvrong. If a man marry by force and she was a virgin, he is to stand as though
there were no marriage, but the woman has all the rights of a wife against his
possessions.
A husband may punish his wife for these things
fransgressing the law without being punished by the law: Talking freely with
men while her husband is absent. Cursing her husband or his house. Cursing her
own house.
Talking loudly, so that her voice carries to the
habitation of another. For slander and gossip. For lewdness or immodesty. For
betraying him in her talk. For being slothful or neglecting his children.
A wife is not wholly delivered into the hands of
her husband and he must provide all things for her wellbeing and treat her with
affection and consideration. He is to be tolerant of her shortcomings and
overlook her frailty as a woman. A man has a duty to see that an adulterous
wife is dealt with.
If a wife become mad or sick or injured she
cannot be put aside, even though she caimot be a wife to her husband. These
things are the dispensations of life and must be borne together.
No man may know the nakedness of his sister. No
man may lie with his wife except in a place of privacy. No one is to permit a
mad man or woman, a child or a simpleton to slay a beast, but a bird may be
slain by a woman for food. The one who permits the deed is not guiltless.
If the head is unclean it will lead to
blindness. If the garments worn are unclean it will lead to madness. If the
body is unclean it will lead to sores and sickness.
Eat to fill a third part of the stomach. Drink
to fill a third part and leave the rest empty. Eat only when hungry and drink
only when thirsty. Always sit to eat, taking two meals each day and three on
the seventh day. Do not overeat or oversleep, for body rust is not an unreal
thing.
The threshing place is not to be less than fifty
paces from a habitation. A grave is not to be within a hundred paces, a carcass
yard within a hundred paces, or a tannery within two hundred paces. The midden
is not be within fifty paces and hogs within thirty paces. The privy hole is to
be within twenty paces and is to be screened and covered. No beast except the
dog, the cat, the horse, the cow, the goat and the ass may come within the
dwelling enclosure. The bam must not adjoin the dwelling. Com for eating may be
kept below ground, but com for sowing must be kept above ground. Water should
not be drunk under a roof without herbs.
Roofs must not be thatched by bending the reeds
under a lath, but by laying them straight over an underpinning.
The middle and pillarpost should rise a third
part above the crossbeam and either rest upon itself or lie on the cumber. The
outer posts should be pegged and not boimd. Inner walls should be caulked with
moss and not with grass or bark. The roof should lie down over the outer wall
an armslength and the openwork of the wall should not be left unplastered. The
foundation should go down two cubits and rise one. The door is to turn upon
itself, either to the side or upward and should not be hung. The wall hangings
within should be of fibre or skin.
Overlay outside with wands of bethom.
Stones should not be pressed without heat and
their outer parts should be kept. The herb offerings must be bumt on each day
when the sun does not show its face. Flour must not be used to purify sharpened
metal. The offering log must be bumt at its hour.
A man must teach his sons to swim, to ride and
to hunt. The stranger is not to be denied a sleeping place and food at nightfall, but he may not remain during
the day without labour. Any man who deals with metal shall be as a brother. Anyone may come before the high
council for justice.
In all assemblies, opinions will be given first
by those of lower rank, so that their words are not influenced by those of more
knowledgeable men. In the lands of the outsiders you will abide by their law, but
you will keep your own law within theirs. Where laws conflict, let conscience,
duty and the Holy Writ be your guide.
(This is not the end, but the remaining writing
on three plates cannot be read.
It is transcribed in meaning and not in word.)
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