History XIV Illustration and Summary

John Reynolds and unknown artist, The Triumphs of God’s Revenge […] (London: Printed for R. Gosling, and Sold by J. Osborn, 1726), 345 (excerpt).

God’s Revenge against the Crying and Execrable Sin of Murther.
A French History.
History XXIV. [History 24/30]
Pont  Chausey  kills La Roche in a Duel. Quatbrisson  causeth  Moncallier  (an Apothecary) to poyson his own Brother  Valfontaine.  Moncallier  after falls, and breaks his neck, from a pair of Stairs. Quatbrisson likewise  causeth  his  Father’s  Miller, Pierot, to murther and strangle Marieta in her Bed, and to throw her Body into the Mill-Pond. Pierot the Miller is broken alive on a Wheel, and Quatbrisson first beheaded, then burnt for the same.