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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ A Book of Remarkable Criminals, by H.B. Irving
+ </title>
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+
+Project Gutenberg's A Book of Remarkable Criminals, by H. B. Irving
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Book of Remarkable Criminals
+
+Author: H. B. Irving
+
+Release Date: November 28, 2009 [EBook #446]
+Last Updated: January 26, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BOOK OF REMARKABLE CRIMINALS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mike Lough, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ A BOOK OF REMARKABLE CRIMINALS
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By H.B. Irving
+ </h2>
+ <h4>
+ TO MY FRIEND <br /> <br /> E. V. LUCAS
+ </h4>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ "For violence and hurt tangle every man in their toils, and for the most
+ part fall on the head of him from whom they had their rise; nor is it
+ easy for one who by his act breaks the common pact of peace to lead a
+ calm and quiet life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretius on the Nature of Things.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <div class="mynote">
+ <p>
+ Transcriber's Note:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The upper outside corner of page 15 and 16 has been torn from the
+ hardcopy. The spots are marked with ?? and a best guess at missing words
+ is in brackets. Footnotes have been moved from end of page to end of
+ paragraph positions, sequentially numbered.
+ </p>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>A BOOK OF REMARKABLE CRIMINALS</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <br />
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_INTR"> Introduction </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> The Life of Charles Peace </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> The Career of Robert Butler </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> M. Derues </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> Dr. Castaing </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> Professor Webster </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> The Mysterious Mr. Holmes </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> The Widow Gras </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> Vitalis and Marie Boyer </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> The Fenayrou Case </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> Eyraud and Bompard </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ A BOOK OF REMARKABLE CRIMINALS
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Introduction
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "The silent workings, and still more the explosions, of human passion
+ which bring to light the darker elements of man's nature present to the
+ philosophical observer considerations of intrinsic interest; while to the
+ jurist, the study of human nature and human character with its infinite
+ varieties, especially as affecting the connection between motive and
+ action, between irregular desire or evil disposition and crime itself, is
+ equally indispensable and difficult."&mdash;<i>Wills on Circumstantial
+ Evidence</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I REMEMBER my father telling me that sitting up late one night talking
+ with Tennyson, the latter remarked that he had not kept such late hours
+ since a recent visit of Jowett. On that occasion the poet and the
+ philosopher had talked together well into the small hours of the morning.
+ My father asked Tennyson what was the subject of conversation that had so
+ engrossed them. "Murders," replied Tennyson. It would have been
+ interesting to have heard Tennyson and Jowett discussing such a theme. The
+ fact is a tribute to the interest that crime has for many men of intellect
+ and imagination. Indeed, how could it be otherwise? Rob history and
+ fiction of crime, how tame and colourless would be the residue! We who are
+ living and enduring in the presence of one of the greatest crimes on
+ record, must realise that trying as this period of the world's history is
+ to those who are passing through it, in the hands of some great historian
+ it may make very good reading for posterity. Perhaps we may find some
+ little consolation in this fact, like the unhappy victims of famous
+ freebooters such as Jack Sheppard or Charley Peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But do not let us flatter ourselves. Do not let us, in all the pomp and
+ circumstance of stately history, blind ourselves to the fact that the
+ crimes of Frederick, or Napoleon, or their successors, are in essence no
+ different from those of Sheppard or Peace. We must not imagine that the
+ bad man who happens to offend against those particular laws which
+ constitute the criminal code belongs to a peculiar or atavistic type, that
+ he is a man set apart from the rest of his fellow-men by mental or
+ physical peculiarities. That comforting theory of the Lombroso school has
+ been exploded, and the ordinary inmates of our prisons shown to be only in
+ a very slight degree below the average in mental and physical fitness of
+ the normal man, a difference easily explained by the environment and
+ conditions in which the ordinary criminal is bred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A certain English judge, asked as to the general characteristics of the
+ prisoners tried before him, said: "They are just like other people; in
+ fact, I often think that, but for different opportunities and other
+ accidents, the prisoner and I might very well be in one another's places."
+ "Greed, love of pleasure," writes a French judge, "lust, idleness, anger,
+ hatred, revenge, these are the chief causes of crime. These passions and
+ desires are shared by rich and poor alike, by the educated and uneducated.
+ They are inherent in human nature; the germ is in every man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Convicts represent those wrong-doers who have taken to a particular form
+ of wrong-doing punishable by law. Of the larger army of bad men they
+ represent a minority, who have been found out in a peculiarly
+ unsatisfactory kind of misconduct. There are many men, some lying,
+ unscrupulous, dishonest, others cruel, selfish, vicious, who go through
+ life without ever doing anything that brings them within the scope of the
+ criminal code, for whose offences the laws of society provide no
+ punishment. And so it is with some of those heroes of history who have
+ been made the theme of fine writing by gifted historians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Basil Thomson, the present head of the Criminal Investigation
+ Department, has said recently that a great deal of crime is due to a
+ spirit of "perverse adventure" on the part of the criminal. The same might
+ be said with equal justice of the exploits of Alexander the Great and half
+ the monarchs and conquerors of the world, whom we are taught in our
+ childhood's days to look up to as shining examples of all that a great man
+ should be. Because crimes are played on a great stage instead of a small,
+ that is no reason why our moral judgment should be suspended or silenced.
+ Class Machiavelli and Frederick the Great as a couple of rascals fit to
+ rank with Jonathan Wild, and we are getting nearer a perception of what
+ constitutes the real criminal. "If," said Frederick the Great to his
+ minister, Radziwill, "there is anything to be gained by it, we will be
+ honest; if deception is necessary, let us be cheats." These are the very
+ sentiments of Jonathan Wild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crime, broadly speaking, is the attempt by fraud or violence to possess
+ oneself of something belonging to another, and as such the cases of it in
+ history are as clear as those dealt with in criminal courts. Germany
+ to-day has been guilty of a perverse and criminal adventure, the outcome
+ of that false morality applied to historical transactions, of which
+ Carlyle's life of Frederick is a monumental example. In that book we have
+ a man whose instincts in more ways than one were those of a criminal, held
+ up for our admiration, in the same way that the same writer fell into
+ dithyrambic praise over a villain called Francia, a former President of
+ Paraguay. A most interesting work might be written on the great criminals
+ of history, and might do something towards restoring that balance of moral
+ judgment in historical transactions, for the perversion of which we are
+ suffering to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime we must be content to study in the microcosm of ordinary
+ crime those instincts, selfish, greedy, brutal which, exploited often by
+ bad men in the so-called cause of nations, have wrought such havoc to the
+ happiness of mankind. It is not too much to say that in every man there
+ dwell the seeds of crime; whether they grow or are stifled in their growth
+ by the good that is in us is a chance mysteriously determined. As children
+ of nature we must not be surprised if our instincts are not all that they
+ should be. "In sober truth," writes John Stuart Mill, "nearly all the
+ things for which men are hanged or imprisoned for doing to one another are
+ nature's everyday performances," and in another passage: "The course of
+ natural phenomena being replete with everything which when committed by
+ human beings is most worthy of abhorrence, anyone who endeavoured in his
+ actions to imitate the natural course of things would be universally seen
+ and acknowledged to be the wickedest of men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is explanation enough for the presence of evil in our natures, that
+ instinct to destroy which finds comparatively harmless expression in
+ certain forms of taking life, which is at its worst when we fall to taking
+ each other's. It is to check an inconvenient form of the expression of
+ this instinct that we punish murderers with death. We must carry the
+ definition of murder a step farther before we can count on peace or
+ happiness in this world. We must concentrate all our strength on fighting
+ criminal nature, both in ourselves and in the world around us. With the
+ destructive forces of nature we are waging a perpetual struggle for our
+ very existence. Why dissipate our strength by fighting among ourselves? By
+ enlarging our conception of crime we move towards that end. What is
+ anti-social, whether it be written in the pages of the historian or those
+ of the Newgate Calendar, must in the future be regarded with equal
+ abhorrence and subjected to equally sure punishment. Every professor of
+ history should now and then climb down from the giddy heights of
+ Thucydides and Gibbon and restore his moral balance by comparing the acts
+ of some of his puppets with those of their less fortunate brethren who
+ have dangled at the end of a rope. If this war is to mean anything to
+ posterity, the crime against humanity must be judged in the future by the
+ same rigid standard as the crime against the person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The individual criminals whose careers are given in this book have been
+ chosen from among their fellows for their pre-eminence in character or
+ achievement. Some of the cases, such as Butler, Castaing and Holmes, are
+ new to most English readers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles Peace is the outstanding popular figure in nineteenth-century
+ crime. He is the type of the professional criminal who makes crime a
+ business and sets about it methodically and persistently to the end. Here
+ is a man, possessing many of those qualities which go to make the
+ successful man of action in all walks of life, driven by circumstances to
+ squander them on a criminal career. Yet it is a curious circumstance that
+ this determined and ruthless burglar should have suffered for what would
+ be classed in France as a "crime passionel." There is more than a
+ possibility that a French jury would have found extenuating circumstances in the
+ murder of Dyson. The fate of Peace is only another instance of the wrecking a strong man's
+ career by his passion for a woman. In Robert Butler we have the criminal by
+ conviction, a conviction which finds the ground ready prepared for its
+ growth in the natural laziness and idleness of the man's disposition. The
+ desire to acquire things by a short cut, without taking the trouble to
+ work for them honestly, is perhaps the most fruitful of all sources of
+ crime. Butler, a bit of a pedant, is pleased to justify his conduct by
+ reason and philosophy&mdash;he finds in the acts of unscrupulous monarchs
+ an analogy to his own attitude towards life. What is good enough for
+ Caesar Borgia is good enough for Robert Butler. Like Borgia he comes to
+ grief; criminals succeed and criminals fail. In the case of historical
+ criminals their crimes are open; we can estimate the successes and
+ failures. With ordinary criminals, we know only those who fail. The
+ successful, the real geniuses in crime, those whose guilt remains
+ undiscovered, are for the most part unknown to us. Occasionally in society
+ a man or woman is pointed out as having once murdered somebody or other,
+ and at times, no doubt, with truth. But the matter can only be referred to
+ clandestinely; they are gazed at with awe or curiosity, mute witnesses to
+ their own achievement. Some years ago James Payn, the novelist, hazarded
+ the reckoning that one person in every five hundred was an undiscovered
+ murderer. This gives us all a hope, almost a certainty, that we may reckon
+ one such person at least among our acquaintances.(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The author was one of three men discussing this subject in a London
+club. They were able to name six persons of their various acquaintance
+who were, or had been, suspected of being successful murderers.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Derues is remarkable for the extent of his social ambition, the daring and
+ impudent character of his attempts to gratify it, the skill, the
+ consummate hypocrisy with which he played on the credulity of honest folk,
+ and his flagrant employment of that weapon known and recognised to-day in
+ the most exalted spheres by the expressive name of "bluff." He is
+ remarkable, too, for his mirth and high spirits, his genial buffoonery;
+ the merry murderer is a rare bird.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Professor Webster belongs to that order of criminal of which Eugene Aram
+ and the Rev. John Selby Watson are our English examples, men of culture
+ and studious habits who suddenly burst on the astonished gaze of their
+ fellowmen as murderers. The exact process of mind by which these hitherto
+ harmless citizens are converted into assassins is to a great extent hidden
+ from us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps Webster's case is the clearest of the three. Here we have a
+ selfish, self-indulgent and spendthrift gentleman who has landed himself
+ in serious financial embarrassment, seeking by murder to escape from an
+ importunate and relentless creditor. He has not, apparently, the moral
+ courage to face the consequences of his own weakness. He forgets the
+ happiness of his home, the love of those dear to him, in the desire to
+ free himself from a disgrace insignificent{sic} in comparison with that
+ entailed by committing the highest of all crimes. One would wish to
+ believe that Webster's deed was unpremeditated, the result of a sudden
+ gust of passion caused by his victim's acrimonious pursuit of his debtor.
+ But there are circumstances in the case which tell powerfully against such
+ a view. The character of the murderer seems curiously contradictory; both
+ cunning and simplicity mark his proceedings; he makes a determined attempt
+ to escape from the horrors of his situation and shows at the same time a
+ curious insensibility to its real gravity. Webster was a man of refined
+ tastes and seemingly gentle character, loved by those near to him, well
+ liked by his friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mystery that surrounds the real character of Eugene Aram is greater,
+ and we possess little or no means of solving it. From what motive this
+ silent, arrogant man, despising his ineffectual wife, this reserved and
+ moody scholar stooped to fraud and murder the facts of the case help us
+ little to determine. Was it the hope of leaving the narrow surroundings of
+ Knaresborough, his tiresome belongings, his own poor way of life, and
+ seeking a wider field for the exercise of those gifts of scholarship which
+ he undoubtedly possessed that drove him to commit fraud in company with
+ Clark and Houseman, and then, with the help of the latter, murder the
+ unsuspecting Clark? The fact of his humble origin makes his association
+ with so low a ruffian as Houseman the less remarkable. Vanity in all
+ probability played a considerable part in Aram's disposition. He would
+ seem to have thought himself a superior person, above the laws that bind
+ ordinary men. He showed at the end no consciousness of his guilt. Being
+ something of a philosopher, he had no doubt constructed for himself a
+ philosophy of life which served to justify his own actions. He was a
+ deist, believing in "one almighty Being the God of Nature," to whom he
+ recommended himself at the last in the event of his "having done amiss."
+ He emphasised the fact that his life had been unpolluted and his morals
+ irreproachable. But his views as to the murder of Clark he left
+ unexpressed. He suggested as justification of it that Clark had carried on
+ an intrigue with his neglected wife, but he never urged this circumstance
+ in his defence, and beyond his own statement there is no evidence of such
+ a connection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Revd. John Selby Watson, headmaster of the Stockwell Grammar School,
+ at the age of sixty-five killed his wife in his library one Sunday
+ afternoon. Things had been going badly with the unfortunate man. After
+ more than twenty-five years' service as headmaster of the school at a
+ meagre salary of L400 a year, he was about to be dismissed; the number of
+ scholars had been declining steadily and a change in the headmastership
+ thought necessary; there was no suggestion of his receiving any kind of
+ pension. The future for a man of his years was dark enough. The author of
+ several learned books, painstaking, scholarly, dull, he could hope to make
+ but little money from literary work. Under a cold, reserved and silent
+ exterior, Selby Watson concealed a violence of temper which he sought
+ diligently to repress. His wife's temper was none of the best. Worried,
+ depressed, hopeless of his future, he in all probability killed his wife
+ in a sudden access of rage, provoked by some taunt or reproach on her
+ part, and then, instead of calling in a policeman and telling him what he
+ had done, made clumsy and ineffectual efforts to conceal his crime.
+ Medical opinion was divided as to his mental condition. Those doctors
+ called for the prosecution could find no trace of insanity about him,
+ those called for the defence said that he was suffering from melancholia.
+ The unhappy man would appear hardly to have realised the gravity of his
+ situation. To a friend who visited him in prison he said: "Here's a man
+ who can write Latin, which the Bishop of Winchester would commend, shut up
+ in a place like this." Coming from a man who had spent all his life buried
+ in books and knowing little of the world the remark is not so greatly to
+ be wondered at. Profound scholars are apt to be impatient of mundane
+ things. Professor Webster showed a similar want of appreciation of the
+ circumstances of a person charged with wilful murder. Selby Watson was
+ convicted of murder and sentenced to death. The sentence was afterwards
+ commuted to one of penal servitude for life, the Home Secretary of the day
+ showing by his decision that, though not satisfied of the prisoner's
+ insanity, he recognised certain extenuating circumstances in his guilt.(2)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (2) Selby Watson was tried at the Central Criminal Court January, 1872.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In Castaing much ingenuity is shown in the conception of the crime, but
+ the man is weak and timid; he is not the stuff of which the great criminal
+ is made; Holmes is cast in the true mould of the instinctive murderer.
+ Castaing is a man of sensibility, capable of domestic affection; Holmes
+ completely insensible to all feelings of humanity. Taking life is a mere
+ incident in the accomplishment of his schemes; men, women and children are
+ sacrificed with equal mercilessness to the necessary end. A consummate
+ liar and hypocrite, he has that strange power of fascination over others,
+ women in particular, which is often independent altogether of moral or
+ even physical attractiveness. We are accustomed to look for a certain
+ vastness, grandeur of scale in the achievements of America. A study of
+ American crime will show that it does not disappoint us in this
+ expectation. The extent and audacity of the crimes of Holmes are proof of
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To find a counterpart in imaginative literature to the complete criminal
+ of the Holmes type we must turn to the pages of Shakespeare. In the number
+ of his victims, the cruelty and insensibility with which he attains his
+ ends, his unblushing hypocrisy, the fascination he can exercise at will
+ over others, the Richard III. of Shakespeare shows how clearly the poet
+ understood the instinctive criminal of real life. The Richard of history
+ was no doubt less instinctively and deliberately an assassin than the
+ Richard of Shakespeare. In the former we can trace the gradual temptation
+ to crime to which circumstances provoke him. The murder of the Princes,
+ if, as one writer contends, it was not the work of Henry VII.&mdash;in
+ which case that monarch deserves to be hailed as one of the most
+ consummate criminals that ever breathed and the worthy father of a
+ criminal son&mdash;was no doubt forced to a certain extent on Richard by
+ the exigencies of his situation, one of those crimes to which bad men are
+ driven in order to secure the fruits of other crimes. But the Richard of
+ Shakespeare is no child of circumstance. He espouses deliberately a career
+ of crime, as deliberately as Peace or Holmes or Butler; he sets out
+ "determined to prove a villain," to be "subtle, false and treacherous," to
+ employ to gain his ends "stern murder in the dir'st degree." The character
+ is sometimes criticised as being overdrawn and unreal. It may not be true
+ to the Richard of history, but it is very true to crime, and to the
+ historical criminal of the Borgian or Prussian type, in which fraud and
+ violence are made part of a deliberate system of so-called statecraft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shakespeare got nearer to what we may term the domestic as opposed to the
+ political criminal when he created Iago. In their envy and dislike of
+ their fellowmen, their contempt for humanity in general, their callousness
+ to the ordinary sympathies of human nature, Robert Butler, Lacenaire,
+ Ruloff are witnesses to the poet's fidelity to criminal character in his
+ drawing of the Ancient. But there is a weakness in the character of Iago
+ regarded as a purely instinctive and malignant criminal; indeed it is a
+ weakness in the consistency of the play. On two occasions Iago states
+ explicitly that Othello is more than suspected of having committed
+ adultery with his wife, Emilia, and that therefore he has a strong and
+ justifiable motive for being revenged on the Moor. The thought of it he
+ describes as "gnawing his inwards." Emilia's conversation with Desdemona
+ in the last act lends some colour to the correctness of Iago's belief. If
+ this belief be well-founded it must greatly modify his character as a
+ purely wanton and mischievous criminal, a supreme villain, and lower
+ correspondingly the character of Othello as an honourable and high-minded
+ man. If it be a morbid suspicion, having no ground in fact, a mental
+ obsession, then Iago becomes abnormal and consequently more or less
+ irresponsible. But this suggestion of Emilia's faithlessness made in the
+ early part of the play is never followed up by the dramatist, and the
+ spectator is left in complete uncertainty as to whether there be any truth
+ or not in Iago's suspicion. If Othello has played his Ancient false, that
+ is an extenuating circumstance in the otherwise extraordinary guilt of
+ Iago, and would no doubt be accorded to him as such, were he on trial
+ before a French jury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most successful, and therefore perhaps the greatest, criminal in
+ Shakespeare is King Claudius of Denmark. His murder of his brother by
+ pouring a deadly poison into his ear while sleeping, is so skilfully
+ perpetrated as to leave no suspicion of foul play. But for a supernatural
+ intervention, a contingency against which no murderer could be expected to
+ have provided, the crime of Claudius would never have been discovered.
+ Smiling, jovial, genial as M. Derues or Dr. Palmer, King Claudius might
+ have gone down to his grave in peace as the bluff hearty man of action,
+ while his introspective nephew would in all probability have ended his
+ days in the cloister, regarded with amiable contempt by his bustling
+ fellowmen. How Claudius got over the great difficulty of all poisoners,
+ that of procuring the necessary poison without detection, we are not told;
+ by what means he distilled the "juice of cursed hebenon"; how the strange
+ appearance of the late King's body, which "an instant tetter" had barked
+ about with "vile and loathsome crust," was explained to the multitude we
+ are left to imagine. There is no real evidence to show that Queen Gertrude
+ was her lover's accomplice in her husband's murder. If that had been so,
+ she would no doubt have been of considerable assistance to Claudius in the
+ preparation of the crime. But in the absence of more definite proof we
+ must assume Claudius' murder of his brother to have been a solitary
+ achievement, skilfully carried out by one whose genial good-fellowship and
+ convivial habits gave the lie to any suggestion of criminality. Whatever
+ may have been his inward feelings of remorse or self-reproach, Claudius
+ masked them successfully from the eyes of all. Hamlet's instinctive
+ dislike of his uncle was not shared by the members of the Danish court.
+ The "witchcraft of his wit," his "traitorous gifts," were powerful aids to
+ Claudius, not only in the seduction of his sister-in-law, but the
+ perpetration of secret murder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The case of the murder of King Duncan of Scotland by Macbeth and his wife
+ belongs to a different class of crime. It is a striking example of dual
+ crime, four instances of which are given towards the end of this book. An
+ Italian advocate, Scipio Sighele, has devoted a monograph to the subject
+ of dual crime, in which he examines a number of cases in which two persons
+ have jointly committed heinous crimes.(3) He finds that in couples of this
+ kind there is usually an incubus and a succubus, the one who suggests the
+ crime, the other on whom the suggestion works until he or she becomes the
+ accomplice or instrument of the stronger will; "the one playing the
+ Mephistophelian part of tempter, preaching evil, urging to crime, the
+ other allowing himself to be overcome by his evil genius." In some cases
+ these two roles are clearly differentiated; it is easy, as in the case of
+ Iago and Othello, Cassius and Brutus, to say who prompted the crime. In
+ others the guilt seems equally divided and the original suggestion of
+ crime to spring from a mutual tendency towards the adoption of such an
+ expedient. In Macbeth and his wife we have a perfect instance of the
+ latter class. No sooner have the witches prophesied that Macbeth shall be
+ a king than the "horrid image" of the suggestion to murder Duncan presents
+ itself to his mind, and, on returning to his wife, he answers her question
+ as to when Duncan is to leave their house by the significant remark,
+ "To-morrow&mdash;as he proposes." To Lady Macbeth from the moment she has
+ received her husband's letter telling of the prophecy of the weird
+ sisters, murder occurs as a means of accomplishing their prediction. In
+ the minds of Macbeth and his wife the suggestion of murder is originally
+ an auto-suggestion, coming to them independently of each other as soon as
+ they learn from the witches that Macbeth is one day to be a king. To
+ Banquo a somewhat similar intimation is given, but no foul thought of
+ crime suggests itself for an instant to his loyal nature. What Macbeth and
+ his wife lack at first as thorough-going murderers is that complete
+ insensibility to taking human life that marks the really ruthless
+ assassin. Lady Macbeth has the stronger will of the two for the commission
+ of the deed. It is doubtful whether without her help Macbeth would ever
+ have undertaken it. But even she, when her husband hesitates to strike,
+ cannot bring herself to murder the aged Duncan with her own hands because
+ of his resemblance as he sleeps to her father. It is only after a deal of
+ boggling and at serious risk of untimely interruption that the two
+ contrive to do the murder, and plaster with blood the "surfeited grooms."
+ In thus putting suspicion on the servants of Duncan the assassins
+ cunningly avert suspicion from themselves, and Macbeth's killing of the
+ unfortunate men in seeming indignation at the discovery of their crime is
+ a master-stroke of ingenuity. "Who," he asks in a splendid burst of
+ feigned horror, "can be wise, amazed, temperate and furious, loyal and
+ natural in a moment?" At the same time Lady Macbeth affects to swoon away
+ in the presence of so awful a crime. For the time all suspicion of guilt,
+ except in the mind of Banquo, is averted from the real murderers. But,
+ like so many criminals, Macbeth finds it impossible to rest on his first
+ success in crime. His sensibility grows dulled; he "forgets the taste of
+ fear"; the murder of Banquo and his son is diabolically planned, and that
+ is soon followed by the outrageous slaughter of the wife and children of
+ Macduff. Ferri, the Italian writer on crime, describes the psychical
+ condition favourable to the commission of murder as an absence of both
+ moral repugnance to the crime itself and the fear of the consequences
+ following it. In the murder of Duncan, it is the first of these two states
+ of mind to which Macbeth and his wife have only partially attained. The
+ moral repugnance stronger in the man has not been wholly lost by the
+ woman. But as soon as the crime is successfully accomplished, this
+ repugnance begins to wear off until the King and Queen are able calmly and
+ deliberately to contemplate those further crimes necessary to their peace
+ of mind. But now Macbeth, at first the more compunctious of the two, has
+ become the more ruthless; the germ of crime, developed by suggestion, has
+ spread through his whole being; he has begun to acquire that indifference
+ to human suffering with which Richard III. and Iago were gifted from the
+ first. In both Macbeth and Lady Macbeth the germ of crime was latent; they
+ wanted only favourable circumstances to convert them into one of those
+ criminal couples who are the more dangerous for the fact that the
+ temptation to crime has come to each spontaneously and grown and been
+ fostered by mutual understanding, an elective affinity for evil. Such
+ couples are frequent in the history of crime. Eyraud and Bompard, Mr. and
+ Mrs. Manning, Burke and Hare, the Peltzer brothers, Barre and Lebiez, are
+ instances of those collaborations in crime which find their counterpart in
+ history, literature, drama and business. Antoninus and Aurelius, Ferdinand
+ and Isabella, the De Goncourt brothers, Besant and Rice, Gilbert and
+ Sullivan, Swan and Edgar leap to the memory.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (3) "Le Crime a Deux," by Scipio Sighele (translated from the Italian),
+Lyons, 1893.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the cases of Eyraud and Bompard, both man and woman are idle, vicious
+ criminals by instinct. They come together, lead an abandoned life, sinking
+ lower and lower in moral degradation. In the hour of need, crime presents
+ itself as a simple expedient for which neither of them has any natural
+ aversion. The repugnance to evil, if they ever felt it, has long since
+ disappeared from their natures. The man is serious, the woman frivolous,
+ but the criminal tendency in both cases is the same; each performs his or
+ her part in the crime with characteristic aptitude. Mrs. Manning was a
+ creature of much firmer character than her husband, a woman of strong
+ passions, a redoubtable murderess. Without her dominating force Manning
+ might never have committed murder. But he was a criminal before the crime,
+ more than suspected as a railway official of complicity in a considerable
+ train robbery; in his case the suggestion of murder involved only the
+ taking of a step farther in a criminal career. Manning suffered from
+ nerves almost as badly as Macbeth; after the deed he sought to drown the
+ prickings of terror and remorse by heavy drinking Mrs. Manning was never
+ troubled with any feelings of this kind; after the murder of O'Connor the
+ gratification of her sexual passion seemed uppermost in her mind; and she
+ met the consequences of her crime fearlessly. Burke and Hare were a couple
+ of ruffians, tempted by what must have seemed almost fabulous wealth to
+ men of their wretched poverty to commit a series of cruel murders. Hare,
+ with his queer, Mephistophelian countenance, was the wickeder of the two.
+ Burke became haunted as time went on and flew to drink to banish horror,
+ but Hare would seem to have been free from such "compunctious visitings of
+ Nature." He kept his head and turned King's evidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the case of the Peltzer brothers we have a man who is of good social
+ position, falling desperately in love with the wife of a successful
+ barrister. The wife, though unhappy in her domestic life, refuses to
+ become her lover's mistress; marriage is the only way to secure her. So
+ Armand Peltzer plots to murder the husband. For this purpose he calls in
+ the help of a brother, a ne'er-do-well, who has left his native country
+ under a cloud. He sends for this dubious person to Europe, and there
+ between them they plan the murder of the inconvenient husband. Though the
+ idea of the crime comes from the one brother, the other receives the idea
+ without repugnance and enters wholeheartedly into the commission of the
+ murder. The ascendency of the one is evident, but he knows his man, is
+ sure that he will have no difficulty in securing the other's co-operation
+ in his felonious purpose. Armand Peltzer should have lived in the Italy of
+ the Renaissance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crime was cunningly devised, and methodically and successfully
+ accomplished. Only an over-anxiety to secure the fruits of it led to its
+ detection. Barre and Lebiez are a perfect criminal couple, both young men
+ of good education, trained to better things, but the one idle, greedy and
+ vicious, the other cynical, indifferent, inclined at best to a lazy
+ sentimentalism. Barre is a needy stockbroker at the end of his tether,
+ desperate to find an expedient for raising the wind, Lebiez a medical
+ student who writes morbid verses to a skull and lectures on Darwinism. To
+ Barre belongs the original suggestion to murder an old woman who sells
+ milk and is reputed to have savings. But his friend and former
+ schoolfellow, Lebiez, accepts the suggestion placidly, and reconciles
+ himself to the murder of an unnecessary old woman by the same argument as
+ that used by Raskolnikoff in "Crime and Punishment" to justify the killing
+ of his victim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all the cases here quoted the couples are essentially criminal couples.
+ From whichever of the two comes the first suggestion of crime, it falls on
+ soil already prepared to receive it; the response to the suggestion is
+ immediate. In degree of guilt there is little or nothing to choose between
+ them. But the more interesting instances of dual crime are those in which
+ one innocent hitherto of crime, to whom it is morally repugnant, is
+ persuaded by another to the commission of a criminal act, as Cassius
+ persuades Brutus; Iago, Othello. Cassius is a criminal by instinct. Placed
+ in a social position which removes him from the temptation to ordinary
+ crime, circumstances combine in his case to bring out the criminal
+ tendency and give it free play in the projected murder of Caesar. Sour,
+ envious, unscrupulous, the suggestion to kill Caesar under the guise of
+ the public weal is in reality a gratification to Cassius of his own
+ ignoble instincts, and the deliberate unscrupulousness with which he seeks
+ to corrupt the honourable metal, seduce the noble mind of his friend, is
+ typical of the man's innate dishonesty. Cassius belongs to that particular
+ type of the envious nature which Shakespeare is fond of exemplifying with
+ more or less degree of villainy in such characters as Iago, Edmund, and
+ Don John, of which Robert Butler, whose career is given in this book, is a
+ living instance. Cassius on public grounds tempts Brutus to crime as
+ subtly as on private grounds Iago tempts Othello, and with something of
+ the same malicious satisfaction; the soliloquy of Cassius at the end of
+ the second scene of the first act is that of a bad man and a false friend.
+ Indeed, the quarrel between Brutus and Cassius after the murder of Caesar
+ loses much of its sincerity and pathos unless we can forget for the moment
+ the real character of Cassius. But the interest in the cases of Cassius
+ and Brutus, Iago and Othello, lies not so much in the nature of the
+ prompter of the crime. The instances in which an honest, honourable man is
+ by force of another's suggestion converted into a criminal are
+ psychologically remarkable. It is to be expected that we should look in
+ the annals of real crime for confirmation of the truth to life of stories
+ such as these, told in fiction or drama.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The strongest influence, under which the naturally non-criminal person may
+ be tempted in violation of instinct and better nature to the commission of
+ a crime, is that of love or passion. Examples of this kind are frequent in
+ the annals of crime. There is none more striking than that of the Widow
+ Gras and Natalis Gaudry. Here a man, brave, honest, of hitherto
+ irreproachable character, is tempted by a woman to commit the most cruel
+ and infamous of crimes. At first he repels the suggestion; at last, when
+ his senses have been excited, his passion inflamed by the cunning of the
+ woman, as the jealous passion of Othello is played on and excited by Iago,
+ the patriotism of Brutus artfully exploited by Cassius, he yields to the
+ repeated solicitation and does a deed in every way repugnant to his normal
+ character. Nothing seems so blinding in its effect on the moral sense as
+ passion. It obscures all sense of humour, proportion, congruity; the
+ murder of the man or woman who stands in the way of its full enjoyment
+ becomes an act of inverted justice to the perpetrators; they reconcile
+ themselves to it by the most perverse reasoning until they come to regard
+ it as an act, in which they may justifiably invoke the help of God;
+ eroticism and religion are often jumbled up together in this strange
+ medley of conflicting emotions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A woman, urging her lover to the murder of her husband, writes of the
+ roses that are to deck the path of the lovers as soon as the crime is
+ accomplished; she sends him flowers and in the same letter asks if he has
+ got the necessary cartridges. Her husband has been ill; she hopes that it
+ is God helping them to the desired end; she burns a candle on the altar of
+ a saint for the success of their murderous plan.(4) A jealous husband
+ setting out to kill his wife carries in his pockets, beside a knife and a
+ service revolver, a rosary, a medal of the Virgin and a holy image.(5)
+ Marie Boyer in the blindness of her passion and jealousy believes God to
+ be helping her to get rid of her mother.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (4) Case of Garnier and the woman Aveline, 1884.
+
+ (5) Case of the Comte
+de Cornulier: "Un An de Justice," Henri Varennes, 1901.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A lover persuades the wife to get rid of her husband. For a whole year he
+ instils the poison into her soul until she can struggle no longer against
+ the obsession; he offers to do the deed, but she writes that she would
+ rather suffer all the risks and consequences herself. "How many times,"
+ she writes, "have I wished to go away, leave home, but it meant leaving my
+ children, losing them for ever.. that made my lover jealous, he believed
+ that I could not bring myself to leave my husband. But if my husband were
+ out of the way then I would keep my children, and my lover would see in my
+ crime a striking proof of my devotion." A curious farrago of slavish
+ passion, motherly love and murder.(6)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (6) Case of Madame Weiss and the engineer Roques. If I may be permitted
+the reference, there is an account of this case and that of Barre and
+Lebiez in my book "French Criminals of the Nineteenth Century."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There are some women such as Marie Boyer and Gabrielle Fenayrou, who may
+ be described as passively criminal, chameleon-like, taking colour from
+ their surroundings. By the force of a man's influence they commit a
+ dreadful crime, in the one instance it is matricide, in the other the
+ murder of a former lover, but neither of the women is profoundly vicious
+ or criminal in her instincts. In prison they become exemplary, their crime
+ a thing of the past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabrielle Fenayrou during her imprisonment, having won the confidence of
+ the religious sisters in charge of the convicts, is appointed head of one
+ of the workshops. Marie Boyer is so contrite, exemplary in her behaviour
+ that she is released after fifteen years' imprisonment. In some ways,
+ perhaps, these malleable types of women, "soft paste" as one authority has
+ described them, "effacees" in the words of another, are the most dangerous
+ material of all for the commission of crime, their obedience is so
+ complete, so cold and relentless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are cases into which no element of passion enters, in which one will
+ stronger than the other can so influence, so dominate the weaker as to
+ persuade the individual against his or her better inclination to an act of
+ crime, just as in the relations of ordinary life we see a man or woman led
+ and controlled for good or ill by one stronger than themselves. There is
+ no more extraordinary instance of this than the case of Catherine Hayes,
+ immortalised by Thackeray, which occurred as long ago as the year 1726.
+ This singular woman by her artful insinuations, by representing her
+ husband as an atheist and a murderer, persuaded a young man of the name of
+ Wood, of hitherto exemplary character, to assist her in murdering him. It
+ was unquestionably the sinister influence of Captain Cranstoun that later
+ in the same century persuaded the respectable Miss Mary Blandy to the
+ murder of her father. The assassin of an old woman in Paris recounts thus
+ the arguments used by his mistress to induce him to commit the crime: "She
+ began by telling me about the money and jewellery in the old woman's
+ possession which could no longer be of any use to her"&mdash;the argument
+ of Raskolnikoff&mdash;"I resisted, but next day she began again, pointing
+ out that one killed people in war, which was not considered a crime, and
+ therefore one should not be afraid to kill a miserable old woman. I urged
+ that the old woman had done us no harm, and that I did not see why one
+ should kill her; she reproached me for my weakness and said that, had she
+ been strong enough, she would soon have done this abominable deed herself.
+ 'God,' she added, 'will forgive us because He knows how poor we are.'"
+ When he came to do the murder, this determined woman plied her lover with
+ brandy and put rouge on his cheeks lest his pallor should betray him.(7)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (7) Case of Albert and the woman Lavoitte, Paris, 1877.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There are occasions when those feelings of compunction which troubled
+ Macbeth and his wife are wellnigh proof against the utmost powers of
+ suggestion, or, as in the case of Hubert and Prince Arthur, compel the
+ criminal to desist from his enterprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man desires to get rid of his father and mother-in-law. By means of
+ threats, reproaches and inducements he persuades another man to commit the
+ crime. Taking a gun, the latter sets out to do the deed; but he realises
+ the heinousness of it and turns back. "The next day," he says, "at four
+ o'clock in the morning I started again. I passed the village church. At
+ the sight of the place where I had celebrated my first communion I was
+ filled with remorse. I knelt down and prayed to God to make me good. But
+ some unknown force urged me to the crime. I started again&mdash;ten times
+ I turned back, but the more I hesitated the stronger was the desire to go
+ on." At length the faltering assassin arrived at the house, and in his
+ painful anxiety of mind shot a servant instead of the intended victims.(8)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (8) Case of Porcher and Hardouin cited in Despine. "Psychologie
+Naturelle."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In a town in Austria there dwelt a happy and contented married couple,
+ poor and hard-working. A charming young lady, a rich relation and an
+ orphan, comes to live with them. She brings to their modest home wealth
+ and comfort. But as time goes on, it is likely that the young lady will
+ fall in love and marry. What then? Her hosts will have to return to their
+ original poverty. The idea of how to secure to himself the advantages of
+ his young kinswoman's fortune takes possession of the husband's mind. He
+ revolves all manner of means, and gradually murder presents itself as the
+ only way. The horrid suggestion fixes itself in his mind, and at last he
+ communicates it to his wife. At first she resists, then yields to the
+ temptation. The plan is ingenious. The wife is to disappear to America and
+ be given out as dead. The husband will then marry his attractive
+ kinswoman, persuade her to make a will in his favour, poison her and, the
+ fortune secured, rejoin his wife. As if to help this cruel plan, the young
+ lady has developed a sentimental affection for her relative. The wife goes
+ to America, the husband marries the young lady. He commences to poison
+ her, but, in the presence of her youth, beauty and affection for him,
+ relents, hesitates to commit a possibly unnecessary crime. He decides to
+ forget and ignore utterly his wife who is waiting patiently in America. A
+ year passes. The expectant wife gets no sign of her husband's existence.
+ She comes back to Europe, visits under a false name the town in which her
+ faithless husband and his bride are living, discovers the truth and
+ divulges the intended crime to the authorities. A sentence of penal
+ servitude for life rewards this perfidious criminal.(9)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (9) Case of the Scheffer couple at Linz, cited by Sighele.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Derues said to a man who was looking at a picture in the Palais de
+ Justice: "Why study copies of Nature when you can look at such a
+ remarkable original as I?" A judge once told the present writer that he
+ did not go often to the theatre because none of the dramas which he saw on
+ the stage, seemed to him equal in intensity to those of real life which
+ came before him in the course of his duties. The saying that truth is
+ stranger than fiction applies more forcibly to crime than to anything
+ else. But the ordinary man and woman prefer to take their crime
+ romanticised, as it is administered to them in novel or play. The true
+ stories told in this book represent the raw material from which works of
+ art have been and may be yet created. The murder of Mr. Arden of Faversham
+ inspired an Elizabethan tragedy attributed by some critics to Shakespeare.
+ The Peltzer trial helped to inspire Paul Bourget's remarkable novel,
+ "Andre Cornelis." To Italian crime we owe Shelley's "Cenci" and Browning's
+ "The Ring and the Book." Mrs. Manning was the original of the maid
+ Hortense in "Bleak House." Jonathan Wild, Eugene Aram, Deacon Brodie,
+ Thomas Griffiths Wainewright have all been made the heroes of books or
+ plays of varying merit. But it is not only in its stories that crime has
+ served to inspire romance. In the investigation of crime, especially on
+ the broader lines of Continental procedure, we can track to the source the
+ springs of conduct and character, and come near to solving as far as is
+ humanly possible the mystery of human motive. There is always and must be
+ in every crime a terra incognita which, unless we could enter into the
+ very soul of a man, we cannot hope to reach. Thus far may we go, no
+ farther. It is rarely indeed that a man lays bare his whole soul, and even
+ when he does we can never be quite sure that he is telling us all the
+ truth, that he is not keeping back some vital secret. It is no doubt
+ better so, and that it should be left to the writer of imagination to
+ picture for us a man's inmost soul. The study of crime will help him to
+ that end. It will help us also in the ethical appreciation of good and
+ evil in individual conduct, about which our notions have been somewhat
+ obscured by too narrow a definition of what constitutes crime. These
+ themes, touched on but lightly and imperfectly in these pages, are rich in
+ human interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so it is hardly a matter for surprise that the poet and the
+ philosopher sat up late one night talking about murders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ The Life of Charles Peace
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "Charles Peace, or the Adventures of a Notorious Burglar," a large volume
+ published at the time of his death, gives a full and accurate account of
+ the career of Peace side by side with a story of the Family Herald type,
+ of which he is made the hero. "The Life and Trial of Charles Peace"
+ (Sheffield, 1879), "The Romantic Career of a Great Criminal" (by N.
+ Kynaston Gaskell, London 1906), and "The Master Criminal," published
+ recently in London give useful information. I have also consulted some of
+ the newspapers of the time. There is a delightful sketch of Peace in Mr.
+ Charles Whibley's "Book of Scoundrels."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I HIS EARLY YEARS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles Peace told a clergyman who had an interview with him in prison
+ shortly before his execution that he hoped that, after he was gone, he
+ would be entirely forgotten by everybody and his name never mentioned
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Posterity, in calling over its muster-roll of famous men, has refused to
+ fulfil this pious hope, and Charley Peace stands out as the one great
+ personality among English criminals of the nineteenth century. In Charley
+ Peace alone is revived that good-humoured popularity which in the
+ seventeenth and eighteenth centuries fell to the lot of Claude Duval, Dick
+ Turpin and Jack Sheppard. But Peace has one grievance against posterity;
+ he has endured one humiliation which these heroes have been spared. His
+ name has been omitted from the pages of the "Dictionary of National
+ Biography." From Duval, in the seventeenth, down to the Mannings, Palmer,
+ Arthur Orton, Morgan and Kelly, the bushrangers, in the nineteenth
+ century, many a criminal, far less notable or individual than Charley
+ Peace, finds his or her place in that great record of the past
+ achievements of our countrymen. Room has been denied to perhaps the
+ greatest and most naturally gifted criminal England has produced, one
+ whose character is all the more remarkable for its modesty, its entire
+ freedom from that vanity and vaingloriousness so common among his class.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only possible reason that can be suggested for so singular an omission
+ is the fact that in the strict order of alphabetical succession the
+ biography of Charles Peace would have followed immediately on that of
+ George Peabody. It may have been thought that the contrast was too
+ glaring, that even the exigencies of national biography had no right to
+ make the philanthropist Peabody rub shoulders with man's constant enemy,
+ Peace. To the memory of Peace these few pages can make but poor amends for
+ the supreme injustice, but, by giving a particular and authentic account
+ of his career, they may serve as material for the correction of this grave
+ omission should remorse overtake those responsible for so undeserved a
+ slur on one of the most unruly of England's famous sons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the literary point of view Peace was unfortunate even in the hour of
+ his notoriety. In the very year of his trial and execution, the Annual
+ Register, seized with a fit of respectability from which it has never
+ recovered, announced that "the appetite for the strange and marvellous"
+ having considerably abated since the year 1757 when the Register was first
+ published, its "Chronicle," hitherto a rich mine of extraordinary and
+ sensational occurrences, would become henceforth a mere diary of important
+ events. Simultaneously with the curtailment of its "Chronicle," it ceased
+ to give those excellent summaries of celebrated trials which for many
+ years had been a feature of its volumes. The question whether "the
+ appetite for the strange and marvellous" has abated in an appreciable
+ degree with the passing of time and is not perhaps keener than it ever
+ was, is a debatable one. But it is undeniable that the present volumes of
+ the Annual Register have fallen away dismally from the variety and human
+ interest of their predecessors. Of the trial and execution of Peace the
+ volume for 1879 gives but the barest record.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles Peace was not born of criminal parents. His father, John Peace,
+ began work as a collier at Burton-on-Trent. Losing his leg in an accident,
+ he joined Wombwell's wild beast show and soon acquired some reputation for
+ his remarkable powers as a tamer of wild animals. About this time Peace
+ married at Rotherham the daughter of a surgeon in the Navy. On the death
+ of a favourite son to whom he had imparted successfully the secrets of his
+ wonderful control over wild beasts of every kind, Mr. Peace gave up
+ lion-taming and settled in Sheffield as a shoemaker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at Sheffield, in the county of Yorkshire, already famous in the
+ annals of crime as the county of John Nevison and Eugene Aram, that Peace
+ first saw the light. On May 14, 1832, there was born to John Peace in
+ Sheffield a son, Charles, the youngest of his family of four. When he grew
+ to boyhood Charles was sent to two schools near Sheffield, where he soon
+ made himself remarkable, not as a scholar, but for his singular aptitude
+ in a variety of other employments such as making paper models, taming
+ cats, constructing a peep-show, and throwing up a heavy ball of shot which
+ he would catch in a leather socket fixed on to his forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The course of many famous men's lives has been changed by what appeared at
+ the time to be an unhappy accident. Who knows what may have been the
+ effect on Charles Peace's subsequent career of an accident he met with in
+ 1846 at some rolling mills, in which he was employed? A piece of red hot
+ steel entered his leg just below the knee, and after eighteen months spent
+ in the Sheffield Infirmary he left it a cripple for life. About this time
+ Peace's father died. Peace and his family were fond of commemorating
+ events of this kind in suitable verse; the death of John Peace was
+ celebrated in the following lines:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "In peace he lived;
+ In peace he died;
+ Life was our desire,
+ But God denied."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Of the circumstances that first led Peace to the commission of crime we
+ know nothing. How far enforced idleness, bad companionship, according to
+ some accounts the influence of a criminally disposed mother, how far his
+ own daring and adventurous temper provoked him to robbery, cannot be
+ determined accurately. His first exploit was the stealing of an old
+ gentleman's gold watch, but he soon passed to greater things. On October
+ 26, 1851, the house of a lady living in Sheffield was broken into and a
+ quantity of her property stolen. Some of it was found in the possession of
+ Peace, and he was arrested. Owing no doubt to a good character for honesty
+ given him by his late employer Peace was let off lightly with a month's
+ imprisonment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After his release Peace would seem to have devoted himself for a time to
+ music, for which he had always a genuine passion. He taught himself to
+ play tunes on a violin with one string, and at entertainments which he
+ attended was described as "the modern Paganini." In later life when he had
+ attained to wealth and prosperity the violin and the harmonium were a
+ constant source of solace during long winter evenings in Greenwich and
+ Peckham. But playing a one-stringed violin at fairs and public-houses
+ could not be more than a relaxation to a man of Peace's active temper, who
+ had once tasted what many of those who have practised it, describe as the
+ fascination of that particular form of nocturnal adventure known by the
+ unsympathetic name of burglary. Among the exponents of the art Peace was
+ at this time known as a "portico-thief," that is to say one who contrived
+ to get himself on to the portico of a house and from that point of vantage
+ make his entrance into the premises. During the year 1854 the houses of a
+ number of well-to-do residents in and about Sheffield were entered after
+ this fashion, and much valuable property stolen. Peace was arrested, and
+ with him a girl with whom he was keeping company, and his sister, Mary
+ Ann, at that time Mrs. Neil. On October 20, 1854, Peace was sentenced at
+ Doncaster Sessions to four years' penal servitude, and the ladies who had
+ been found in possession of the stolen property to six months apiece. Mrs.
+ Neil did not long survive her misfortune. She would seem to have been
+ married to a brutal and drunken husband, whom Peace thrashed on more than
+ one occasion for ill-treating his sister. After one of these punishments
+ Neil set a bulldog on to Peace; but Peace caught the dog by the lower jaw
+ and punched it into a state of coma. The death in 1859 of the unhappy Mrs.
+ Neil was lamented in appropriate verse, probably the work of her brother:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "I was so long with pain opprest
+ That wore my strength away;
+ It made me long for endless rest
+ Which never can decay."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On coming out of prison in 1858, Peace resumed his fiddling, but it was
+ now no more than a musical accompaniment to burglary. This had become the
+ serious business of Peace's life, to be pursued, should necessity arise,
+ even to the peril of men's lives. His operations extended beyond the
+ bounds of his native town. The house of a lady living in Manchester was
+ broken into on the night of August 11, 1859, and a substantial booty
+ carried away. This was found the following day concealed in a hole in a
+ field. The police left it undisturbed and awaited the return of the
+ robber. When Peace and another man arrived to carry it away, the officers
+ sprang out on them. Peace, after nearly killing the officer who was trying
+ to arrest him, would have made his escape, had not other policemen come to
+ the rescue. For this crime Peace was sentenced to six years' penal
+ servitude, in spite of a loyal act of perjury on the part of his aged
+ mother, who came all the way from Sheffield to swear that he had been with
+ her there on the night of the crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was released from prison again in 1864, and returned to Sheffield.
+ Things did not prosper with him there, and he went back to Manchester. In
+ 1866 he was caught in the act of burglary at a house in Lower Broughton.
+ He admitted that at the time he was fuddled with whisky; otherwise his
+ capture would have been more difficult and dangerous. Usually a temperate
+ man, Peace realised on this occasion the value of sobriety even in
+ burglary, and never after allowed intemperance to interfere with his
+ success. A sentence of eight years' penal servitude at Manchester Assizes
+ on December 3, 1866, emphasised this wholesome lesson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst serving this sentence Peace emulated Jack Sheppard in a daring
+ attempt to escape from Wakefield prison. Being engaged on some repairs, he
+ smuggled a small ladder into his cell. With the help of a saw made out of
+ some tin, he cut a hole through the ceiling of the cell, and was about to
+ get out on to the roof when a warder came in. As the latter attempted to
+ seize the ladder Peace knocked him down, ran along the wall of the prison,
+ fell off on the inside owing to the looseness of the bricks, slipped into
+ the governor's house where he changed his clothes, and there, for an hour
+ and a half, waited for an opportunity to escape. This was denied him, and
+ he was recaptured in the governor's bedroom. The prisons at Millbank,
+ Chatham and Gibraltar were all visited by Peace before his final release
+ in 1872. At Chatham he is said to have taken part in a mutiny and been
+ flogged for his pains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his liberation from prison Peace rejoined his family in Sheffield. He
+ was now a husband and father. In 1859 he had taken to wife a widow of the
+ name of Hannah Ward. Mrs. Ward was already the mother of a son, Willie.
+ Shortly after her marriage with Peace she gave birth to a daughter, and
+ during his fourth term of imprisonment presented him with a son. Peace
+ never saw this child, who died before his release. But, true to the family
+ custom, on his return from prison the untimely death of little "John
+ Charles" was commemorated by the printing of a funeral card in his honour,
+ bearing the following sanguine verses:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Farewell, my dear son, by us all beloved,
+ Thou art gone to dwell in the mansions above.
+ In the bosom of Jesus Who sits on the throne
+ Thou art anxiously waiting to welcome us home."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whether from a desire not to disappoint little John Charles, for some
+ reason or other the next two or three years of Peace's career would seem
+ to have been spent in an endeavour to earn an honest living by picture
+ framing, a trade in which Peace, with that skill he displayed in whatever
+ he turned his hand to, was remarkably proficient. In Sheffield his
+ children attended the Sunday School. Though he never went to church
+ himself, he was an avowed believer in both God and the devil. As he said,
+ however, that he feared neither, no great reliance could be placed on the
+ restraining force of such a belief to a man of Peace's daring spirit.
+ There was only too good reason to fear that little John Charles' period of
+ waiting would be a prolonged one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1875 Peace moved from Sheffield itself to the suburb of Darnall. Here
+ Peace made the acquaintance&mdash;a fatal acquaintance, as it turned out&mdash;of
+ a Mr. and Mrs. Dyson. Dyson was a civil engineer. He had spent some years
+ in America, where, in 1866, he married.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toward the end of 1873 or the beginning of 1874, he came to England with
+ his wife, and obtained a post on the North Eastern Railway. He was a tall
+ man, over six feet in height, extremely thin, and gentlemanly in his
+ bearing. His engagement with the North Eastern Railway terminated abruptly
+ owing to Dyson's failing to appear at a station to which he had been sent
+ on duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was believed at the time by those associated with Dyson that this
+ unlooked-for dereliction of duty had its cause in domestic trouble. Since
+ the year 1875, the year in which Peace came to Darnall, the domestic peace
+ of Mr. Dyson had been rudely disturbed by this same ugly little
+ picture-framer who lived a few doors away from the Dysons' house. Peace
+ had got to know the Dysons, first as a tradesman, then as a friend. To
+ what degree of intimacy he attained with Mrs. Dyson it is difficult to
+ determine. In that lies the mystery of the case Mrs. Dyson is described as
+ an attractive woman, "buxom and blooming"; she was dark-haired, and about
+ twenty-five years of age. In an interview with the Vicar of Darnall a few
+ days before his execution, Peace asserted positively that Mrs. Dyson had
+ been his mistress. Mrs. Dyson as strenuously denied the fact. There was no
+ question that on one occasion Peace and Mrs. Dyson had been photographed
+ together, that he had given her a ring, and that he had been in the habit
+ of going to music halls and public-houses with Mrs. Dyson, who was a woman
+ of intemperate habits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peace had introduced Mrs. Dyson to his wife and daughter, and on one
+ occasion was said to have taken her to his mother's house, much to the old
+ lady's indignation. If there were not many instances of ugly men who have
+ been notably successful with women, one might doubt the likelihood of Mrs.
+ Dyson falling a victim to the charms of Charles Peace. But Peace, for all
+ his ugliness, could be wonderfully ingratiating when he chose. According
+ to Mrs. Dyson, Peace was a demon, "beyond the power of even a Shakespeare
+ to paint," who persecuted her with his attentions, and, when he found them
+ rejected, devoted all his malignant energies to making the lives of her
+ husband and herself unbearable. According to Peace's story he was a
+ slighted lover who had been treated by Mrs. Dyson with contumely and
+ ingratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether to put a stop to his wife's intimacy with Peace, or to protect
+ himself against the latter's wanton persecution, sometime about the end of
+ June, 1876, Dyson threw over into the garden of Peace's house a card, on
+ which was written: "Charles Peace is requested not to interfere with my
+ family." On July 1 Peace met Mr. Dyson in the street, and tried to trip
+ him up. The same night he came up to Mrs. Dyson, who was talking with some
+ friends, and threatened in coarse and violent language to blow out her
+ brains and those of her husband. In consequence of these incidents Mr.
+ Dyson took out a summons against Peace, for whose apprehension a warrant
+ was issued. To avoid the consequences of this last step Peace left Darnall
+ for Hull, where he opened an eating-shop, presided over by Mrs. Peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he himself was not idle. From Hull he went to Manchester on business,
+ and in Manchester he committed his first murder. Entering the grounds of a
+ gentleman's home at Whalley Range, about midnight on August 1, he was seen
+ by two policemen. One of them, Constable Cock, intercepted him as he was
+ trying to escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peace took out his revolver and warned Cock to stand back. The policeman
+ came on. Peace fired, but deliberately wide of him. Cock, undismayed, drew
+ out his truncheon, and made for the burglar. Peace, desperate, determined
+ not to be caught, fired again, this time fatally. Cock's comrade heard the
+ shots, but before he could reach the side of the dying man, Peace had made
+ off. He returned to Hull, and there learned shortly after, to his intense
+ relief, that two brothers, John and William Habron, living near the scene
+ of the murder, had been arrested and charged with the killing of Constable
+ Cock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Dysons thought that they had seen the last of Peace, they were soon
+ to be convinced to the contrary. Peace had not forgotten his friends at
+ Darnall. By some means or other he was kept informed of all their doings,
+ and on one occasion was seen by Mrs. Dyson lurking near her home. To get
+ away from him the Dysons determined to leave Darnall. They took a house at
+ Banner Cross, another suburb of Sheffield, and on October 29 moved into
+ their new home. One of the first persons Mrs. Dyson saw on arriving at
+ Banner Cross was Peace himself. "You see," he said, "I am here to annoy
+ you, and I'll annoy you wherever you go." Later, Peace and a friend passed
+ Mr. Dyson in the street. Peace took out his revolver. "If he offers to
+ come near me," said he, "I will make him stand back." But Mr. Dyson took
+ no notice of Peace and passed on. He had another month to live.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever the other motives of Peace may have been&mdash;unreasoning
+ passion, spite, jealousy, or revenge it must not be forgotten that Dyson,
+ by procuring a warrant against Peace, had driven him from his home in
+ Sheffield. This Peace resented bitterly. According to the statements of
+ many witnesses, he was at this time in a state of constant irritation and
+ excitement on the Dyson's account. He struck his daughter because she
+ alluded in a way he did not like to his relations with Mrs. Dyson. Peace
+ always believed in corporal chastisement as a means of keeping order at
+ home. Pleasant and entertaining as he could be, he was feared. It was very
+ dangerous to incur his resentment. "Be sure," said his wife, "you do
+ nothing to offend our Charley, or you will suffer for it." Dyson beyond a
+ doubt had offended "our Charley." But for the moment Peace was interested
+ more immediately in the fate of John and William Habron, who were about to
+ stand their trial for the murder of Constable Cock at Whalley Range.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trial commenced at the Manchester Assizes before Mr. Justice (now
+ Lord) Lindley on Monday, November 27. John Habron was acquitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The case against William Habron depended to a great extent on the fact
+ that he, as well as his brother, had been heard to threaten to "do for"
+ the murdered man, to shoot the "little bobby." Cock was a zealous young
+ officer of twenty-three years of age, rather too eager perhaps in the
+ discharge of his duty. In July of 1876 he had taken out summonses against
+ John and William Habron, young fellows who had been several years in the
+ employment of a nurseryman in Whalley Range, for being drunk and
+ disorderly. On July 27 William was fined five shillings, and on August 1,
+ the day of Cock's murder, John had been fined half a sovereign. Between
+ these two dates the Habrons had been heard to threaten to "do for" Cock if
+ he were not more careful. Other facts relied upon by the prosecution were
+ that William Habron had inquired from a gunsmith the price of some
+ cartridges a day or two before the murder; that two cartridge percussion
+ caps had been found in the pocket of a waistcoat given to William Habron
+ by his employer, who swore that they could not have been there while it
+ was in his possession; that the other constable on duty with Cock stated
+ that a man he had seen lurking near the house about twelve o'clock on the
+ night of the murder appeared to be William Habron's age, height and
+ complexion, and resembled him in general appearance; and that the boot on
+ Habron's left foot, which was "wet and sludgy" at the time of his arrest,
+ corresponded in certain respects with the footprints of the murderer. The
+ prisoner did not help himself by an ineffective attempt to prove an alibi.
+ The Judge was clearly not impressed by the strength of the case for the
+ prosecution. He pointed out to the jury that neither the evidence of
+ identification nor that of the footprint went very far. As to the latter,
+ what evidence was there to show that it had been made on the night of the
+ murder? If it had been made the day before, then the defence had proved
+ that it could not have been Habron's. He called their attention to the
+ facts that Habron bore a good character, that, when arrested on the night
+ of the murder, he was in bed, and that no firearms had been traced to him.
+ In spite, however, of the summing-up the jury convicted William Habron,
+ but recommended him to mercy. The Judge without comment sentenced him to
+ death. The Manchester Guardian expressed its entire concurrence with the
+ verdict of the jury. "Few persons," it wrote, "will be found to dispute
+ the justice of the conclusions reached." However, a few days later it
+ opened its columns to a number of letters protesting against the
+ unsatisfactory nature of the conviction. On December 6 a meeting of some
+ forty gentlemen was held, at which it was resolved to petition Mr. Cross,
+ the Home Secretary, to reconsider the sentence. Two days before the day of
+ execution Habron was granted a respite, and later his sentence commuted to
+ one of penal servitude for life. And so a tragic and irrevocable
+ miscarriage of justice was happily averted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peace liked attending trials. The fact that in Habron's case he was the
+ real murderer would seem to have made him the more eager not to miss so
+ unique an experience. Accordingly he went from Hull to Manchester, and was
+ present in court during the two days that the trial lasted. No sooner had
+ he heard the innocent man condemned to death than he left Manchester for
+ Sheffield&mdash;now for all he knew a double murderer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a question whether, on the night of November 28, Peace met Mrs.
+ Dyson at an inn in one of the suburbs of Sheffield. In any case, the next
+ morning, Wednesday, the 29th, to his mother's surprise Peace walked into
+ her house. He said that he had come to Sheffield for the fair. The
+ afternoon of that day Peace spent in a public-house at Ecclesall,
+ entertaining the customers by playing tunes on a poker suspended from a
+ piece of strong string, from which he made music by beating it with a
+ short stick. The musician was rewarded by drinks. It took very little
+ drink to excite Peace. There was dancing, the fun grew fast and furious,
+ as the strange musician beat out tune after tune on his fantastic
+ instrument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At six o'clock the same evening a thin, grey-haired, insignificant-looking
+ man in an evident state of unusual excitement called to see the Rev. Mr.
+ Newman, Vicar of Ecclesall, near Banner Cross. Some five weeks before,
+ this insignificant-looking man had visited Mr. Newman, and made certain
+ statements in regard to the character of a Mr. and Mrs. Dyson who had come
+ to live in the parish. The vicar had asked for proof of these statements.
+ These proofs his visitor now produced. They consisted of a number of
+ calling cards and photographs, some of them alleged to be in the
+ handwriting of Mrs. Dyson, and showing her intimacy with Peace. The man
+ made what purported to be a confession to Mr. Newman. Dyson, he said, had
+ become jealous of him, whereupon Peace had suggested to Mrs. Dyson that
+ they should give her husband something to be jealous about. Out of this
+ proposal their intimacy had sprung. Peace spoke of Mrs. Dyson in terms of
+ forgiveness, but his wrath against Dyson was extreme. He complained
+ bitterly that by taking proceedings against him, Dyson had driven him to
+ break up his home and become a fugitive in the land. He should follow the
+ Dysons, he said, wherever they might go; he believed that they were at
+ that moment intending to take further proceedings against him. As he left,
+ Peace said that he should not go and see the Dysons that night, but would
+ call on a friend of his, Gregory, who lived next door to them in Banner
+ Cross Terrace. It was now about a quarter to seven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peace went to Gregory's house, but his friend was not at home. The lure of
+ the Dysons was irresistible. A little after eight o'clock Peace was
+ watching the house from a passageway that led up to the backs of the
+ houses on the terrace. He saw Mrs. Dyson come out of the back door, and go
+ to an outhouse some few yards distant. He waited. As soon as she opened
+ the door to come out, Mrs. Dyson found herself confronted by Peace,
+ holding his revolver in his hand. "Speak," he said, "or I'll fire." Mrs.
+ Dyson in terror went back. In the meantime Dyson, hearing the disturbance,
+ came quickly into the yard. Peace made for the passage. Dyson followed
+ him. Peace fired once, the shot striking the lintel of the passage
+ doorway. Dyson undaunted, still pursued. Then Peace, according to his
+ custom, fired a second time, and Dyson fell, shot through the temple. Mrs.
+ Dyson, who had come into the yard again on hearing the first shot, rushed
+ to her husband's side, calling out: "Murder! You villain! You have shot my
+ husband." Two hours later Dyson was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After firing the second shot Peace had hurried down; the passage into the
+ roadway. He stood there hesitating a moment, until the cries of Mrs. Dyson
+ warned him of his danger. He crossed the road, climbed a wall, and made
+ his way back to Sheffield. There he saw his mother and brother, told them
+ that he had shot Mr. Dyson, and bade them a hasty good-bye. He then walked
+ to Attercliffe Railway Station, and took a ticket for Beverley. Something
+ suspicious in the manner of the booking-clerk made him change his place of
+ destination. Instead of going to Beverley that night he got out of the
+ train at Normanton and went on to York. He spent the remainder of the
+ night in the station yard. He took the first train in the morning for
+ Beverley, and from there travelled via Collingham to Hull. He went
+ straight to the eating-house kept by his wife, and demanded some dinner.
+ He had hardly commenced to eat it when he heard two detectives come into
+ the front shop and ask his wife if a man called Charles Peace was lodging
+ with her. Mrs. Peace said that that was her husband's name, but that she
+ had not seen him for two months. The detectives proposed to search the
+ house. Some customers in the shop told them that if they had any business
+ with Mrs. Peace, they ought to go round to the side door. The polite
+ susceptibility of these customers gave Peace time to slip up to a back
+ room, get out on to an adjoining roof, and hide behind a chimney stack,
+ where he remained until the detectives had finished an exhaustive search.
+ So importunate were the officers in Hull that once again during the day
+ Peace had to repeat this experience. For some three weeks, however, he
+ contrived to remain in Hull. He shaved the grey beard he was wearing at
+ the time of Dyson's murder, dyed his hair, put on a pair of spectacles,
+ and for the first time made use of his singular power of contorting his
+ features in such a way as to change altogether the character of his face.
+ But the hue and cry after him was unremitting. There was a price of L100
+ on his head, and the following description of him was circulated by the
+ police:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Charles Peace wanted for murder on the night of the 29th inst. He is thin
+ and slightly built, from fifty-five to sixty years of age. Five feet four
+ inches or five feet high; grey (nearly white) hair, beard and whiskers. He
+ lacks use of three fingers of left hand, walks with his legs rather wide
+ apart, speaks somewhat peculiarly as though his tongue were too large for
+ his mouth, and is a great boaster. He is a picture-frame maker. He
+ occasionally cleans and repairs clocks and watches and sometimes deals in
+ oleographs, engravings and pictures. He has been in penal servitude for
+ burglary in Manchester. He has lived in Manchester, Salford, and Liverpool
+ and Hull."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This description was altered later and Peace's age given as forty-six. As
+ a matter of fact he was only forty-four at this time, but he looked very
+ much older. Peace had lost one of his fingers. He said that it had been
+ shot off by a man with whom he had quarrelled, but it was believed to be
+ more likely that he had himself shot it off accidentally in handling one
+ of his revolvers. It was to conceal this obvious means of identification
+ that Peace made himself the false arm which he was in the habit of
+ wearing. This was of gutta percha, with a hole down the middle of it into
+ which he passed his arm; at the end was a steel plate to which was fixed a
+ hook; by means of this hook Peace could wield a fork and do other
+ dexterous feats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marked man as he was, Peace felt it dangerous to stay longer in Hull than
+ he could help. During the closing days of the year 1876 and the beginning
+ of 1877, Peace was perpetually on the move. He left Hull for Doncaster,
+ and from there travelled to London. On arriving at King's Cross he took
+ the underground railway to Paddington, and from there a train to Bristol.
+ At the beginning of January he left Bristol for Bath, and from Bath, in
+ the company of a sergeant of police, travelled by way of Didcot to Oxford.
+ The officer had in his custody a young woman charged with stealing L40.
+ Peace and the sergeant discussed the case during the journey. "He seemed a
+ smart chap," said Peace in relating the circumstances, "but not smart
+ enough to know me." From Oxford he went to Birmingham, where he stayed
+ four or five days, then a week in Derby, and on January 9th he arrived in
+ Nottingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Peace found a convenient lodging at the house of one, Mrs. Adamson, a
+ lady who received stolen goods and on occasion indicated or organised
+ suitable opportunities for acquiring them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She lived in a low part of the town known as the Marsh. It was at her
+ house that Peace met the woman who was to become his mistress and
+ subsequently betray his identity to the police. Her maiden name was Susan
+ Gray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was at this time about thirty-five years of age, described as "taking"
+ in appearance, of a fair complexion, and rather well educated. She had led
+ a somewhat chequered married life with a gentleman named Bailey, from whom
+ she continued in receipt of a weekly allowance until she passed under the
+ protection of Peace. Her first meeting with her future lover took place on
+ the occasion of Peace inviting Mrs. Adamson to dispose of a box of cigars
+ for him, which that good woman did at a charge of something like thirty
+ per cent. At first Peace gave himself out to Mrs. Bailey as a hawker, but
+ before long he openly acknowledged his real character as an accomplished
+ burglar. With characteristic insistence Peace declared his passion for
+ Mrs. Bailey by threatening to shoot her if she did not become his. Anxious
+ friends sent for her to soothe the distracted man. Peace had been drowning
+ care with the help of Irish whiskey. He asked "his pet" if she were not
+ glad to see him, to which the lady replied with possible sarcasm: "Oh,
+ particularly, very, I like you so much." Next day Peace apologised for his
+ rude behaviour of the previous evening, and so melted the heart of Mrs.
+ Bailey that she consented to become his mistress, and from that moment
+ discarding the name of Bailey is known to history as Mrs. Thompson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Life in Nottingham was varied pleasantly by burglaries carried out with
+ the help of information supplied by Mrs. Adamson. In the June of 1877
+ Peace was nearly detected in stealing, at the request of that worthy, some
+ blankets, but by flourishing his revolver he contrived to get away, and,
+ soon after, returned for a season to Hull. Here this hunted murderer, with
+ L100 reward on his head, took rooms for Mrs. Thompson and himself at the
+ house of a sergeant of police. One day Mrs. Peace, who was still keeping
+ her shop in Hull, received a pencilled note saying, "I am waiting to see
+ you just up Anlaby Road." She and her stepson, Willie Ward, went to the
+ appointed spot, and there to their astonishment stood her husband, a
+ distinguished figure in black coat and trousers, top hat, velvet
+ waistcoat, with stick, kid gloves, and a pretty little fox terrier by his
+ side. Peace told them of his whereabouts in the town, but did not disclose
+ to them the fact that his mistress was there also. To the police sergeant
+ with whom he lodged, Peace described himself as an agent. But a number of
+ sensational and successful burglaries at the houses of Town Councillors
+ and other well-to-do citizens of Hull revealed the presence in their midst
+ of no ordinary robber. Peace had some narrow escapes, but with the help of
+ his revolver, and on one occasion the pusillanimity of a policeman, he
+ succeeded in getting away in safety. The bills offering a reward for his
+ capture were still to be seen in the shop windows of Hull, so after a
+ brief but brilliant adventure Peace and Mrs. Thompson returned to
+ Nottingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, as the result of further successful exploits, Peace found a reward
+ of L50 offered for his capture. On one occasion the detectives came into
+ the room where Peace and his mistress were in bed. After politely
+ expressing his surprise at seeing "Mrs. Bailey" in such a situation, one
+ of the officers asked Peace his name. He gave it as John Ward, and
+ described himself as a hawker of spectacles. He refused to get up and
+ dress in the presence of the detectives who were obliging enough to go
+ downstairs and wait his convenience. Peace seized the opportunity to slip
+ out of the house and get away to another part of the town. From there he
+ sent a note to Mrs. Thompson insisting on her joining him. He soon after
+ left Nottingham, paid another brief visit to Hull, but finding that his
+ wife's shop was still frequented by the police, whom he designated freely
+ as "a lot of fools," determined to quit the North for good and begin life
+ afresh in the ampler and safer field of London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II PEACE IN LONDON
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peace's career in London extended over nearly two years, but they were
+ years of copious achievement. In that comparatively short space of time,
+ by the exercise of that art, to his natural gifts for which he had now
+ added the wholesome tonic of experience, Peace passed from a poor and
+ obscure lodging in a slum in Lambeth to the state and opulence of a
+ comfortable suburban residence in Peckham. These were the halcyon days of
+ Peace's enterprise in life. From No. 25 Stangate Street, Lambeth, the
+ dealer in musical instruments, as Peace now described himself, sallied
+ forth night after night, and in Camberwell and other parts of South London
+ reaped the reward of skill and vigilance in entering other people's houses
+ and carrying off their property. Though in the beginning there appeared to
+ be but few musical instruments in Stangate Street to justify his reputed
+ business, "Mr. Thompson," as he now called himself, explained that he was
+ not wholly dependent on his business, as Mrs. Thompson "had money."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So successful did the business prove that at the Christmas of 1877 Peace
+ invited his daughter and her betrothed to come from Hull and spend the
+ festive season with him. This, in spite of the presence of Mrs. Thompson,
+ they consented to do. Peace, in a top hat and grey ulster, showed them the
+ sights of London, always inquiring politely of a policeman if he found
+ himself in any difficulty. At the end of the visit Peace gave his consent
+ to his daughter's marriage with Mr. Bolsover, and before parting gave the
+ young couple some excellent advice. For more reasons than one Peace was
+ anxious to unite under the same roof Mrs. Peace and Mrs. Thompson. Things
+ still prospering, Peace found himself able to remove from Lambeth to Crane
+ Court, Greenwich, and before long to take a couple of adjoining houses in
+ Billingsgate Street in the same district. These he furnished in style. In
+ one he lived with Mrs. Thompson, while Mrs. Peace and her son, Willie,
+ were persuaded after some difficulty to leave Hull and come to London to
+ dwell in the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Greenwich was not to the taste of Mrs. Thompson. To gratify her wish,
+ Peace, some time in May, 1877, removed the whole party to a house, No. 5,
+ East Terrace, Evelina Road, Peckham. He paid thirty pounds a year for it,
+ and obtained permission to build a stable for his pony and trap. When
+ asked for his references, Peace replied by inviting the agent to dine with
+ him at his house in Greenwich, a proceeding that seems to have removed all
+ doubt from the agent's mind as to the desirability of the tenant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This now famous house in Peckham was of the ordinary type of suburban
+ villa, with basement, ground floor, and one above; there were steps up to
+ the front door, and a bow window to the front sitting-room. A garden at
+ the back of the house ran down to the Chatham and Dover railway line. It
+ was by an entrance at the back that Peace drove his horse and trap into
+ the stable which he had erected in the garden. Though all living in the
+ same house, Mrs. Peace, who passed as Mrs. Ward, and her son, Willie,
+ inhabited the basement, while Peace and Mrs. Thompson occupied the best
+ rooms on the ground floor. The house was fitted with Venetian blinds. In
+ the drawing-room stood a good walnut suite of furniture; a Turkey carpet,
+ gilded mirrors, a piano, an inlaid Spanish guitar, and, by the side of an
+ elegant table, the beaded slippers of the good master of the house
+ completed the elegance of the apartment. Everything confirmed Mr.
+ Thompson's description of himself as a gentleman of independent means with
+ a taste for scientific inventions. In association with a person of the
+ name of Brion, Peace did, as a fact, patent an invention for raising
+ sunken vessels, and it is said that in pursuing their project, the two men
+ had obtained an interview with Mr. Plimsoll at the House of Commons. In
+ any case, the Patent Gazette records the following grant:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "2635 Henry Fersey Brion, 22 Philip Road, Peckham Rye, London, S.E., and
+ John Thompson, 5 East Terrace, Evelina Road, Peckham Rye, London, S.E.,
+ for an invention for raising sunken vessels by the displacement of water
+ within the vessels by air and gases."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the time of his final capture Peace was engaged on other inventions,
+ among them a smoke helmet for firemen, an improved brush for washing
+ railway carriages, and a form of hydraulic tank. To the anxious policeman
+ who, seeing a light in Mr. Thompson's house in the small hours of the
+ morning, rang the bell to warn the old gentleman of the possible presence
+ of burglars, this business of scientific inventions was sufficient
+ explanation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Socially Mr. Thompson became quite a figure in the neighbourhood. He
+ attended regularly the Sunday evening services at the parish church, and
+ it must have been a matter of anxious concern to dear Mr. Thompson that
+ during his stay in Peckham the vicarage was broken into by a burglar and
+ an unsuccessful attempt made to steal the communion plate which was kept
+ there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Thompson was generous in giving and punctual in paying. He had his
+ eccentricities. His love of birds and animals was remarkable. Cats, dogs,
+ rabbits, guinea-pigs, canaries, parrots and cockatoos all found
+ hospitality under his roof. It was certainly eccentricity in Mr. Thompson
+ that he should wear different coloured wigs; and that his dark complexion
+ should suggest the use of walnut juice. His love of music was evinced by
+ the number of violins, banjoes, guitars, and other musical instruments
+ that adorned his drawing-room. Tea and music formed the staple of the
+ evening entertainments which Mr. and Mrs. Thompson would give occasionally
+ to friendly neighbours. Not that the pleasures of conversation were
+ neglected wholly in favour of art. The host was a voluble and animated
+ talker, his face and body illustrating by appropriate twists and turns the
+ force of his comments. The Russo-Turkish war, then raging, was a favourite
+ theme of Mr. Thompson's. He asked, as we are still asking, what
+ Christianity and civilisation mean by countenancing the horrors of war. He
+ considered the British Government in the highest degree guilty in
+ supporting the cruel Turks, a people whose sobriety seemed to him to be
+ their only virtue, against the Christian Russians. He was confident that
+ our Ministers would be punished for opposing the only Power which had
+ shown any sympathy with suffering races. About ten o'clock Mr. Thompson,
+ whose health, he said, could not stand late hours, would bid his guests
+ good night, and by half-past ten the front door of No. 5, East Terrace,
+ Evelina Road, would be locked and bolted, and the house plunged in
+ darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not that it must be supposed that family life at No. 5, East Terrace, was
+ without its jars. These were due chiefly to the drunken habits of Mrs.
+ Thompson. Peace was willing to overlook his mistress' failing as long as
+ it was confined to the house. But Mrs. Thompson had an unfortunate habit
+ of slipping out in an intoxicated condition, and chattering with the
+ neighbours. As she was the repository of many a dangerous secret the
+ inconvenience of her habit was serious. Peace was not the man to hesitate
+ in the face of danger. On these occasions Mrs. Thompson was followed by
+ Peace or his wife, brought back home and soundly beaten. To Hannah Peace
+ there must have been some satisfaction in spying on her successful rival,
+ for, in her own words, Peace never refused his mistress anything; he did
+ not care what she cost him in dress; "she could swim in gold if she
+ liked." Mrs. Thompson herself admitted that with the exception of such
+ punishment as she brought on herself by her inebriety, Peace was always
+ fond of her, and treated her with great kindness. It was she to whom he
+ would show with pride the proceeds of his nightly labours, to whom he
+ would look for a smile when he returned home from his expeditions, haggard
+ and exhausted
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through all dangers and difficulties the master was busy in the practice
+ of his art. Night after night, with few intervals of repose, he would
+ sally forth on a plundering adventure. If the job was a distant one, he
+ would take his pony and trap. Peace was devoted to his pony, Tommy, and
+ great was his grief when at the end of six months' devotion to duty Tommy
+ died after a few days' sickness, during which his master attended him with
+ unremitting care. Tommy had been bought in Greenwich for fourteen guineas,
+ part of a sum of two hundred and fifty pounds which Peace netted from a
+ rich haul of silver and bank-notes taken from a house in Denmark Hill.
+ Besides the pony and trap, Peace would take with him on these expeditions
+ a violin case containing his tools; at other times they would be stuffed
+ into odd pockets made for the purpose in his trousers. These tools
+ consisted of ten in all&mdash;a skeleton key, two pick-locks, a
+ centre-bit, gimlet, gouge, chisel, vice jemmy and knife; a portable
+ ladder, a revolver and life preserver completed his equipment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The range of Peace's activities extended as far as Southampton, Portsmouth
+ and Southsea; but the bulk of his work was done in Blackheath, Streatham,
+ Denmark Hill, and other suburbs of South London. Many dramatic stories are
+ told of his exploits, but they rest for the most part on slender
+ foundation. On one occasion, in getting on to a portico, he fell, and was
+ impaled on some railings, fortunately in no vital part. His career as a
+ burglar in London lasted from the beginning of the year 1877 until
+ October, 1878. During that time this wanted man, under the very noses of
+ the police, exercised with complete success his art as a burglar, working
+ alone, depending wholly on his own mental and physical gifts, disposing in
+ absolute secrecy of the proceeds of his work, and living openly the life
+ of a respectable and industrious old gentleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the while the police were busily seeking Charles Peace, the murderer
+ of Mr. Dyson. Once or twice they came near to capturing him. On one
+ occasion a detective who had known Peace in Yorkshire met him in
+ Farringdon Road, and pursued him up the steps of Holborn Viaduct, but just
+ as the officer, at the top of the steps, reached out and was on the point
+ of grabbing his man, Peace with lightning agility slipped through his
+ fingers and disappeared. The police never had a shadow of suspicion that
+ Mr. Thompson of Peckham was Charles Peace of Sheffield. They knew the
+ former only as a polite and chatty old gentleman of a scientific turn of
+ mind, who drove his own pony and trap, and had a fondness for music and
+ keeping pet animals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peace made the mistake of outstaying his welcome in the neighbourhood of
+ South-East London. Perhaps he hardly realised the extent to which his fame
+ was spreading. During the last three months of Peace's career, Blackheath
+ was agog at the number of successful burglaries committed in the very
+ midst of its peaceful residents. The vigilance of the local police was
+ aroused, the officers on night duty were only too anxious to effect the
+ capture of the mysterious criminal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About two o'clock in the morning of October 10, 1878, a police constable,
+ Robinson by name, saw a light appear suddenly in a window at the back of a
+ house in St. John's Park, Blackheath, the residence of a Mr. Burness. Had
+ the looked-for opportunity arrived? Was the mysterious visitor, the
+ disturber of the peace of Blackheath, at his burglarious employment?
+ Without delay Robinson summoned to his aid two of his colleagues. One of
+ them went round to the front of the house and rang the bell, the other
+ waited in the road outside, while Robinson stayed in the garden at the
+ back. No sooner had the bell rung than Robinson saw a man come from the
+ dining-room window which opened on to the garden, and make quickly down
+ the path. Robinson followed him. The man turned; "Keep back!" he said, "or
+ by God I'll shoot you!" Robinson came on. The man fired three shots from a
+ revolver, all of which passed close to the officer's head. Robinson made
+ another rush for him, the man fired another shot. It missed its mark. The
+ constable closed with his would-be assassin, and struck him in the face.
+ "I'll settle you this time," cried the man, and fired a fifth shot, which
+ went through Robinson's arm just above the elbow. But, in spite of his
+ wound, the valiant officer held his prisoner, succeeded in flinging him to
+ the ground, and catching hold of the revolver that hung round the
+ burglar's wrist, hit him on the head with it. Immediately after the other
+ two constables came to the help of their colleague, and the struggling
+ desperado was secured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little did the police as they searched their battered and moaning prisoner
+ realise the importance of their capture. When next morning Peace appeared
+ before the magistrate at Greenwich Police Court he was not described by
+ name&mdash;he had refused to give any&mdash;but as a half-caste about
+ sixty years of age, of repellant aspect. He was remanded for a week. The
+ first clue to the identity of their prisoner was afforded by a letter
+ which Peace, unable apparently to endure the loneliness and suspense of
+ prison any longer, wrote to his co-inventor Mr. Brion. It is dated
+ November 2, and is signed "John Ward." Peace was disturbed at the absence
+ of all news from his family. Immediately after his arrest, the home in
+ Peckham had been broken up. Mrs. Thompson and Mrs. Peace, taking with them
+ some large boxes, had gone first to the house of a sister of Mrs.
+ Thompson's in Nottingham, and a day or two later Mrs. Peace had left
+ Nottingham for Sheffield. There she went to a house in Hazel Road,
+ occupied by her son-in-law Bolsover, a working collier.(10)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (10) Later, Mrs. Peace was arrested and charged with being in possession
+of stolen property. She was taken to London and tried at the Old Bailey
+before Mr. Commissioner Kerr, but acquitted on the ground of her having
+acted under the compulsion of her husband.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was no doubt to get news of his family that Peace wrote to Brion. But
+ the letters are sufficiently ingenious. Peace represents himself as a
+ truly penitent sinner who has got himself into a most unfortunate and
+ unexpected "mess" by giving way to drink. The spelling of the letters is
+ exaggeratedly illiterate. He asks Mr. Brion to take pity on him and not
+ despise him as "his own famery has don," to write him a letter to "hease
+ his trobel hart," if possible to come and see him. Mr. Brion complied with
+ the request of the mysterious "John Ward," and on arriving at Newgate
+ where Peace was awaiting trial, found himself in the presence of his
+ friend and colleague, Mr. Thompson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime the police were getting hot on the scent of the identity
+ of "John Ward" with the great criminal who in spite of all their efforts
+ had eluded them for two years. The honour and profit of putting the police
+ on the right scent were claimed by Mrs. Thompson. To her Peace had
+ contrived to get a letter conveyed about the same time that he wrote to
+ Mr. Brion. It is addressed to his "dearly beloved wife." He asks pardon
+ for the "drunken madness" that has involved him in his present trouble,
+ and gives her the names of certain witnesses whom he would wish to be
+ called to prove his independent means and his dealings in musical
+ instruments. It is, he writes, his first offence, and as he has "never
+ been in prison before," begs her not to feel it a disgrace to come and see
+ him there. But Peace was leaning on a broken reed. Loyalty does not appear
+ to have been Susan Thompson's strong point. In her own words she "was not
+ of the sentimental sort." The "traitress Sue," as she is called by
+ chroniclers of the time, had fallen a victim to the wiles of the police.
+ Since, after Peace's arrest, she had been in possession of a certain
+ amount of stolen property, it was easier no doubt to persuade her to be
+ frank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In any case, we find that on February 5, 1879, the day after Peace had
+ been sentenced to death for the murder of Dyson, Mrs. Thompson appealed to
+ the Treasury for the reward of L100 offered for Peace's conviction. She
+ based her application on information which she said she had supplied to
+ the police officers in charge of the case on November 5 in the previous
+ year, the very day on which Peace had first written to her from Newgate.
+ In reply to her letter the Treasury referred "Mrs. S. Bailey, alias
+ Thompson," to the Home Office, but whether she received from that office
+ the price of blood history does not relate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The police scouted the idea that any revelation of hers had assisted them
+ to identify "John Ward" with Charles Peace. They said that it was
+ information given them in Peckham, no doubt by Mr. Brion, who, on learning
+ the deplorable character of his coadjutor, had placed himself unreservedly
+ in their hands, which first set them on the track. From Peckham they went
+ to Nottingham, where they no doubt came across Sue Thompson, and thence to
+ Sheffield, where on November 6 they visited the house in Hazel Road,
+ occupied by Mrs. Peace and her daughter, Mrs. Bolsover. There they found
+ two of the boxes which Mrs. Peace had brought with her from Peckham.
+ Besides stolen property, these boxes contained evidence of the identity of
+ Ward with Peace. A constable who had known Peace well in Sheffield was
+ sent to Newgate, and taken into the yard where the prisoners awaiting
+ trial were exercising. As they passed round, the constable pointed to the
+ fifth man: "That's Peace," he said, "I'd know him anywhere." The man left
+ the ranks and, coming up to the constable, asked earnestly, "What do you
+ want me for?" but the Governor ordered him to go on with his walk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was as John Ward, alias Charles Peace, that Peace, on November 19,
+ 1878, was put on his trial for burglary and the attempted murder of Police
+ Constable Robinson, at the Old Bailey before Mr. Justice Hawkins. His age
+ was given in the calendar as sixty, though Peace was actually forty-six.
+ The evidence against the prisoner was clear enough. All Mr. Montagu
+ Williams could urge in his defence was that Peace had never intended to
+ kill the officer, merely to frighten him. The jury found Peace guilty of
+ attempted murder. Asked if he had anything to say why judgment should not
+ be passed upon him, he addressed the Judge. He protested that he had not
+ been fairly dealt with, that he never intended to kill the prosecutor,
+ that the pistol was one that went off very easily, and that the last shot
+ had been fired by accident. "I really did not know," he said, "that the
+ pistol was loaded, and I hope, my lord, that you will have mercy on me. I
+ feel that I have disgraced myself, I am not fit either to live or die. I
+ am not prepared to meet my God, but still I feel that my career has been
+ made to appear much worse than it really is. Oh, my lord, do have mercy on
+ me; do give me one chance of repenting and of preparing to meet my God.
+ Do, my lord, have mercy on me; and I assure you that you shall never
+ repent it. As you hope for mercy yourself at the hands of the great God,
+ do have mercy on me, and give me a chance of redeeming my character and
+ preparing myself to meet my God. I pray, and beseech you to have mercy
+ upon me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peace's assumption of pitiable senility, sustained throughout the trial,
+ though it imposed on Sir Henry Hawkins, failed to melt his heart. He told
+ Peace that he did not believe his statement that he had fired the pistol
+ merely to frighten the constable; had not Robinson guarded his head with
+ his arm he would have been wounded fatally, and Peace condemned to death.
+ He did not consider it necessary, he said, to make an inquiry into Peace's
+ antecedents; he was a desperate burglar, and there was an end of the
+ matter. Notwithstanding his age, Mr. Justice Hawkins felt it his duty to
+ sentence him to penal servitude for life. The severity of the sentence was
+ undoubtedly a painful surprise to Peace; to a man of sixty years of age it
+ would be no doubt less terrible, but to a man of forty-six it was
+ crushing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not that Peace was fated to serve any great part of his sentence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With as little delay as possible he was to be called on to answer to the
+ murder of Arthur Dyson. The buxom widow of the murdered man had been found
+ in America, whither she had returned after her husband's death. She was
+ quite ready to come to England to give evidence against her husband's
+ murderer. On January 17, 1879, Peace was taken from Pentonville prison,
+ where he was serving his sentence, and conveyed by an early morning train
+ to Sheffield. There at the Town Hall he appeared before the stipendiary
+ magistrate, and was charged with the murder of Arthur Dyson. When he saw
+ Mrs. Dyson enter the witness box and tell her story of the crime, he must
+ have realised that his case was desperate. Her cross-examination was
+ adjourned to the next hearing, and Peace was taken back to London. On the
+ 22nd, the day of the second hearing in Sheffield, an enormous crowd had
+ assembled outside the Town Hall. Inside the court an anxious and expectant
+ audiience{sic}, among them Mrs. Dyson, in the words of a contemporary
+ reporter, "stylish and cheerful," awaited the appearance of the
+ protagonist. Great was the disappointment and eager the excitement when
+ the stipendiary came into the court about a quarter past ten and stated
+ that Peace had attempted to escape that morning on the journey from London
+ to Sheffield, and that in consequence of his injuries the case would be
+ adjourned for eight days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What had happened was this. Peace had left King's Cross by the 5.15 train
+ that morning, due to arrive at Sheffield at 8.45. From the very
+ commencement of the journey he had been wilful and troublesome. He kept
+ making excuses for leaving the carriage whenever the train stopped. To
+ obviate this nuisance the two warders, in whose charge he was, had
+ provided themselves with little bags which Peace could use when he wished
+ and then throw out of the window. Just after the train passed Worksop,
+ Peace asked for one of the bags. When the window was lowered to allow the
+ bag to be thrown away, Peace with lightning agility took a flying leap
+ through it. One of the warders caught him by the left foot. Peace, hanging
+ from the carriage, grasped the footboard with his hands and kept kicking
+ the warder as hard as he could with his right foot. The other warder,
+ unable to get to the window to help his colleague, was making vain efforts
+ to stop the train by pulling the communication cord. For two miles the
+ train ran on, Peace struggling desperately to escape. At last he succeeded
+ in kicking off his left shoe, and dropped on to the line. The train ran on
+ another mile until, with the assistance of some gentlemen in other
+ carriages, the warders were able to get it pulled up. They immediately
+ hurried back along the line, and there, near a place called Kineton Park,
+ they found their prisoner lying in the footway, apparently unconscious and
+ bleeding from a severe wound in the scalp. A slow train from Sheffield
+ stopped to pick up the injured man. As he was lifted into the guard's van,
+ he asked them to cover him up as he was cold. On arriving at Sheffield,
+ Peace was taken to the Police Station and there made as comfortable as
+ possible in one of the cells. Even then he had energy enough to be
+ troublesome over taking the brandy ordered for him by the surgeon, until
+ one of the officers told "Charley" they would have none of his
+ hanky-panky, and he had got to take it. "All right," said Peace, "give me
+ a minute," after which he swallowed contentedly a couple of gills of the
+ genial spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peace's daring feat was not, according to his own account, a mere attempt
+ to escape from the clutches of the law; it was noble and Roman in its
+ purpose. This is what he told his stepson, Willie Ward: "I saw from the
+ way I was guarded all the way down from London and all the way back, when
+ I came for my first trial, that I could not get away from the warders, and
+ I knew I could not jump from an express train without being killed. I took
+ a look at Darnall as I went down and as I went back, and after I was put
+ in my cell, I thought it all over. I felt that I could not get away, and
+ then I made up my mind to kill myself. I got two bits of paper and pricked
+ on them the words, 'Bury me at Darnall. God bless you all!' With a bit of
+ black dirt that I found on the floor of my cell I wrote the same words on
+ another piece of paper, and then I hid them in my clothes. My hope was
+ that, when I jumped from the train I should be cut to pieces under the
+ wheels. Then I should have been taken to the Duke of York (a public-house
+ at Darnall) and there would have been an inquest over me. As soon as the
+ inquest was over you would have claimed my body, found the pieces of
+ paper, and then you would have buried me at Darnall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This statement of Peace is no doubt in the main correct. But it is
+ difficult to believe that there was not present to his mind the sporting
+ chance that he might not be killed in leaping from the train, in which
+ event he would no doubt have done his best to get away, trusting to his
+ considerable powers of ingenious disguise to elude pursuit. But such a
+ chance was remote. Peace had faced boldly the possibility of a dreadful
+ death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that strain of domestic sentiment, which would appear to have been a
+ marked characteristic of his family, Peace was the more ready to cheat the
+ gallows in the hope of being by that means buried decently at Darnall. It
+ was at Darnall that he had spent some months of comparative calm in his
+ tempestuous career, and it was at Darnall that he had first met Mrs.
+ Dyson. Another and more practical motive that may have urged Peace to
+ attempt to injure seriously, if not kill himself, was the hope of thereby
+ delaying his trial. If the magisterial investigation in Sheffield were
+ completed before the end of January, Peace could be committed for trial to
+ the ensuing Leeds Assizes which commenced in the first week in February.
+ If he were injured too seriously, this would not be possible. Here again
+ he was doomed to disappointment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peace recovered so well from the results of his adventure on the railway
+ that the doctor pronounced him fit to appear for his second examination
+ before the magistrate on January 30. To avoid excitement, both on the part
+ of the prisoner and the public, the court sat in one of the corridors of
+ the Town Hall. The scene is described as dismal, dark and cheerless. The
+ proceedings took place by candlelight, and Peace, who was seated in an
+ armchair, complained frequently of the cold. At other times he moaned and
+ groaned and protested against the injustice with which he was being
+ treated. But the absence of any audience rather dashed the effect of his
+ laments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most interesting part of the proceedings was the cross-examination of
+ Mrs. Dyson by Mr. Clegg, the prisoner's solicitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Its purpose was to show that Mrs. Dyson had been on more intimate terms
+ with Peace than she was ready to admit, and that Dyson had been shot by
+ Peace in the course of a struggle, in which the former had been the
+ aggressor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first part of his task Mr. Clegg met with some success. Mrs. Dyson,
+ whose memory was certainly eccentric&mdash;she could not, she said,
+ remember the year in which she had been married&mdash;was obliged to admit
+ that she had been in the habit of going to Peace's house, that she had
+ been alone with him to public-houses and places of entertainment, and that
+ she and Peace had been photographed together during the summer fair at
+ Sheffield. She could not "to her knowledge" recollect having told the
+ landlord of a public-house to charge her drink to Peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great deal of Mrs. Dyson's cross-examination turned on a bundle of
+ letters that had been found near the scene of Dyson's murder on the
+ morning following the crime. These letters consisted for the most part of
+ notes, written in pencil on scraps of paper, purporting to have been sent
+ from Mrs. Dyson to Peace. In many of them she asks for money to get drink,
+ others refer to opportunities for their meetings in the absence of Dyson;
+ there are kind messages to members of Peace's family, his wife and
+ daughter, and urgent directions to Peace to hold his tongue and not give
+ ground for suspicion as to their relations. This bundle of letters
+ contained also the card which Dyson had thrown into Peace's garden
+ requesting him not to interfere with his family. According to the theory
+ of the defence, these letters had been written by Mrs. Dyson to Peace, and
+ went to prove the intimacy of their relations. At the inquest after her
+ husband's murder, Mrs. Dyson had been questioned by the coroner about
+ these letters. She denied that she had ever written to Peace; in fact, she
+ said, she "never did write." It was stated that Dyson himself had seen the
+ letters, and declared them to be forgeries written by Peace or members of
+ his family for the purpose of annoyance. Nevertheless, before the
+ Sheffield magistrate Mr. Clegg thought it his duty to cross-examine Mrs.
+ Dyson closely as to their authorship. He asked her to write out a passage
+ from one of them: "You can give me something as a keepsake if you like,
+ but I don't like to be covetous, and to take them from your wife and
+ daughter. Love to all!" Mrs. Dyson refused to admit any likeness between
+ what she had written and the handwriting of the letter in question.
+ Another passage ran: "Will see you as soon as I possibly can. I think it
+ would be easier after you move; he won't watch so. The r&mdash;g fits the
+ little finger. Many thanks and love to&mdash;Jennie (Peace's daughter
+ Jane). I will tell you what I thought of when I see you about arranging
+ matters. Excuse this scribbling." In answer to Mr. Clegg, Mrs. Dyson
+ admitted that Peace had given her a ring, which she had worn for a short
+ time on her little finger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another letter ran: "If you have a note for me, send now whilst he is out;
+ but you must not venture, for he is watching, and you cannot be too
+ careful. Hope your foot is better. I went to Sheffield yesterday, but I
+ could not see you anywhere. Were you out? Love to Jane." Mrs. Dyson denied
+ that she had known of an accident which Peace had had to his foot at this
+ time. In spite of the ruling of the magistrate that Mr. Clegg had put
+ forward quite enough, if true, to damage Mrs. Dyson's credibility, he
+ continued to press her as to her authorship of these notes and letters,
+ but Mrs. Dyson was firm in her repudiation of them. She was equally firm
+ in denying that anything in the nature of a struggle had taken place
+ between Peace and her husband previous to his murder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the conclusion of Mrs. Dyson's evidence the prisoner was committed to
+ take his trial at the Leeds Assizes, which commenced the week following.
+ Peace, who had groaned and moaned and constantly interrupted the
+ proceedings, protested his innocence, and complained that his witnesses
+ had not been called. The apprehension with which this daring malefactor
+ was regarded by the authorities is shown by this clandestine hearing of
+ his case in a cold corridor of the Town Hall, and the rapidity with which
+ his trial followed on his committal. There is an appearance almost of
+ precipitation in the haste with which Peace was bustled to his doom. After
+ his committal he was taken to Wakefield Prison, and a few days later to
+ Armley Jail, there to await his trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This began on February 4, and lasted one day. Mr. Justice Lopes, who had
+ tried vainly to persuade the Manchester Grand Jury to throw out the bill
+ in the case of the brothers Habron, was the presiding judge. Mr. Campbell
+ Foster, Q.C., led for the prosecution. Peace was defended by Mr. Frank
+ Lockwood, then rising into that popular success at the bar which some
+ fifteen years later made him Solicitor-General, and but for his premature
+ death would have raised him to even higher honours in his profession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addressing the jury, both Mr. Campbell Foster and Mr. Lockwood took
+ occasion to protest against the recklessness with which the press of the
+ day, both high and low, had circulated stories and rumours about the
+ interesting convict. As early as November in 1878 one leading London daily
+ newspaper had said that "it was now established beyond doubt that the
+ burglar captured by Police Constable Robinson was one and the same as the
+ Banner Cross murderer." Since then, as the public excitement grew and the
+ facts of Peace's extraordinary career came to light, the press had
+ responded loyally to the demands of the greedy lovers of sensation, and
+ piled fiction on fact with generous profusion. "Never," said Mr. Lockwood,
+ "in the whole course of his experience&mdash;and he defied any of his
+ learned friends to quote an experience&mdash;had there been such an
+ attempt made on the part of those who should be most careful of all others
+ to preserve the liberties of their fellowmen and to preserve the dignity
+ of the tribunals of justice to determine the guilt of a man." Peace
+ exclaimed "Hear, hear!" as Mr. Lockwood went on to say that "for the sake
+ of snatching paltry pence from the public, these persons had wickedly
+ sought to prejudice the prisoner's life." Allowing for Mr. Lockwood's zeal
+ as an advocate, there can be no question that, had Peace chosen or been in
+ a position to take proceedings, more than one newspaper had at this time
+ laid itself open to prosecution for contempt of Court. The Times was not
+ far wrong in saying that, since Muller murdered Mr. Briggs on the North
+ London Railway and the poisonings of William Palmer, no criminal case had
+ created such excitement as that of Charles Peace. The fact that property
+ seemed to be no more sacred to him than life aggravated in a singular
+ degree the resentment of a commercial people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first witness called by the prosecution was Mrs. Dyson. She described
+ how on the night of November 29, 1876, she had come out of the outhouse in
+ the yard at the back of her house, and found herself confronted by Peace
+ holding a revolver; how he said: "Speak, or I'll fire!" and the sequence
+ of events already related up to the moment when Dyson fell, shot in the
+ temple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lockwood commenced his cross-examination of Mrs. Dyson by endeavouring
+ to get from her an admission; the most important to the defence, that
+ Dyson had caught hold of Peace after the first shot had been fired, and
+ that in the struggle which ensued, the revolver had gone off by accident.
+ But he was not very successful. He put it to Mrs. Dyson that before the
+ magistrate at Sheffield she had said: "I can't say my husband did not get
+ hold of the prisoner." "Put in the little word 'try,' please," answered
+ Mrs. Dyson. In spite of Mr. Lockwood's questions, she maintained that,
+ though her husband may have attempted to get hold of Peace, he did not
+ succeed in doing so. As she was the only witness to the shooting there was
+ no one to contradict her statement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lockwood fared better when he came to deal with the relations of Mrs.
+ Dyson with Peace previous to the crime. Mrs. Dyson admitted that in the
+ spring of 1876 her husband had objected to her friendship with Peace, and
+ that nevertheless, in the following summer, she and Peace had been
+ photographed together at the Sheffield fair. She made a vain attempt to
+ escape from such an admission by trying to shift the occasion of the
+ summer fair to the previous year, 1875, but Mr. Lockwood put it to her
+ that she had not come to Darnall, where she first met Peace, until the end
+ of that year. Finally he drove her to say that she could not remember when
+ she came to Darnall, whether in 1873, 1874, 1875, or 1876. She admitted
+ that she had accepted a ring from Peace, but could not remember whether
+ she had shown it to her husband. She had been perhaps twice with Peace to
+ the Marquis of Waterford public-house, and once to the Star Music Hall.
+ She could not swear one way or the other whether she had charged to
+ Peace's account drink consumed by her at an inn in Darnall called the
+ Half-way House. Confronted with a little girl and a man, whom Mr. Lockwood
+ suggested she had employed to carry notes to Peace, Mrs. Dyson said that
+ these were merely receipts for pictures which he had framed for her. On
+ the day before her husband's murder, Mrs. Dyson was at the Stag Hotel at
+ Sharrow with a little boy belonging to a neighbour. A man followed her in
+ and sat beside her, and afterwards followed her out. In answer to Mr.
+ Lockwood, Mrs. Dyson would "almost swear" the man was not Peace; he had
+ spoken to her, but she could not remember whether she had spoken to him or
+ not. She denied that this man had said to her that he would come and see
+ her the next night. As the result of a parting shot Mr. Lockwood obtained
+ from Mrs. Dyson a reluctant admission that she had been "slightly
+ inebriated" at the Half-way House in Darnall, but had not to her knowledge
+ been turned out of the house on that account. "You may not have known you
+ were inebriated?" suggested Mr. Lockwood. "I always know what I am doing,"
+ was Mrs. Dyson's reply, to which an unfriendly critic might have replied
+ that she did not apparently know with anything like certainty what she had
+ been doing during the last three or four years. In commenting on the trial
+ the following day, the Times stigmatised as "feeble" the prevarications by
+ which Mrs. Dyson tried to explain away her intimacy with Peace. In this
+ part of his cross-examination Mr. Lockwood had made it appear at least
+ highly probable that there had been a much closer relationship between
+ Mrs. Dyson and Peace than the former was willing to acknowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evidence of Mrs. Dyson was followed by that of five persons who had
+ either seen Peace in the neighbourhood of Banner Cross Terrace on the
+ night of the murder, or heard the screams and shots that accompanied it. A
+ woman, Mrs. Gregory, whose house was between that of the Dysons and the
+ passage in which Dyson was shot, said that she had heard the noise of the
+ clogs Mrs. Dyson was wearing as she went across the yard. A minute later
+ she heard a scream. She opened her back door and saw Dyson standing by his
+ own. She told him to go to his wife. She then went back into her house,
+ and almost directly after heard two shots, followed by another scream, but
+ no sound as of any scuffling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another witness was a labourer named Brassington. He was a stranger to
+ Peace, but stated that about eight o'clock on the night of the murder a
+ man came up to him outside the Banner Cross Hotel, a few yards from
+ Dyson's house. He was standing under a gas lamp, and it was a bright
+ moonlight night. The man asked him if he knew of any strange people who
+ had come to live in the neighbourhood. Brassington answered that he did
+ not. The man then produced a bundle of letters which he asked Brassington
+ to read. But Brassington declined, as reading was not one of his
+ accomplishments. The man then said that "he would make it a warm 'un for
+ those strange folks before morning&mdash;he would shoot both of them," and
+ went off in the direction of Dyson's house. Brassington swore positively
+ that Peace was the stranger who had accosted him that night, and Mr.
+ Lockwood failed to shake him in his evidence. Nor could Mr. Lockwood
+ persuade the surgeon who was called to Dyson at the time of his death to
+ admit that the marks on the nose and chin of the dead man could have been
+ caused by a blow; they were merely abrasions of the skin caused by the
+ wounded man falling to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evidence was then given as to threats uttered by Peace against the Dysons
+ in the July of 1876, and as to his arrest at Blackheath in the October of
+ 1878. The revolver taken from Peace that night was produced, and it was
+ shown that the rifling of the bullet extracted from Dyson's head was the
+ same as that of the bullet fired from the revolver carried by Peace at the
+ time of his capture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Campbell Foster wanted to put in as evidence the card that Dyson had
+ flung into Peace's garden at Darnall requesting him not to interfere with
+ his family. This card had been found among the bundle of letters dropped
+ by Peace near the scene of the murder. Mr. Lockwood objected to the
+ admission of the card unless all the letters were admitted at the same
+ time. The Judge ruled that both the card and the letters were
+ inadmissible, as irrelevant to the issue; Mr. Lockwood had, he said, very
+ properly cross-examined Mrs. Dyson on these letters to test her
+ credibility, but he was bound by her answers and could not contradict her
+ by introducing them as evidence in the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lockwood in his address to the jury did his best to persuade them that
+ the death of Dyson was the accidental result of a struggle between Peace
+ and himself. He suggested that Mrs. Dyson had left her house that night
+ for the purpose of meeting Peace, and that Dyson, who was jealous of his
+ wife's intimacy with him, had gone out to find her; that Dyson, seeing
+ Peace, had caught hold of him; and that the revolver had gone off
+ accidentally as Dyson tried to wrest it from his adversary. He repudiated
+ the suggestion of Mr. Foster that the persons he had confronted with Mrs.
+ Dyson in the course of his cross-examination had been hired for a paltry
+ sum to come into court and lie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twice, both at the beginning and the end of his speech, Mr. Lockwood urged
+ as a reason for the jury being tender in taking Peace's life that he was
+ in such a state of wickedness as to be quite unprepared to meet death.
+ Both times that his counsel put forward this curious plea, Peace raised
+ his eyes to heaven and exclaimed "I am not fit to die."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Justice Lopes in summing up described as an "absolute surmise" the
+ theory of the accidental discharge of the pistol. He asked the jury to
+ take Peace's revolver in their hands and try the trigger, so as to see for
+ themselves whether it was likely to go off accidentally or not. He pointed
+ out that the pistol produced might not have been the pistol used at Banner
+ Cross; at the same time the bullet fired in November, 1876, bore marks
+ such as would have been produced had it been fired from the pistol taken
+ from Peace at Blackheath in October, 1878. He said that Mr. Lockwood had
+ been perfectly justified in his attempt to discredit the evidence of Mrs.
+ Dyson, but the case did not rest on her evidence alone. In her evidence as
+ to the threats uttered by Peace in July, 1876, Mrs. Dyson was corroborated
+ by three other witnesses. In the Judge's opinion it was clearly proved
+ that no struggle or scuffle had taken place before the murder. If the
+ defence, he concluded, rested on no solid foundation, then the jury must
+ do their duty to the community at large and by the oath they had sworn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a quarter past seven when the jury retired. Ten minutes later they
+ came back into court with a verdict of guilty. Asked if he had anything to
+ say, Peace in a faint voice replied, "It is no use my saying anything."
+ The Judge, declining very properly to aggravate the prisoner's feelings by
+ "a recapitulation of any portion of the details of what I fear, I can only
+ call your criminal career," passed on him sentence of death. Peace
+ accepted his fate with composure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before we proceed to describe the last days of Peace on earth, let us
+ finish with the two women who had succeeded Mrs. Peace in his ardent
+ affections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days after Peace's execution Mrs. Dyson left England for America,
+ but before going she left behind her a narrative intended to contradict
+ the imputations which she felt had been made against her moral character.
+ An Irishwoman by birth, she said that she had gone to America when she was
+ fifteen years old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There she met and married Dyson, a civil engineer on the Atlantic and
+ Great Western Railway. Theirs was a rough and arduous life. But Mrs. Dyson
+ was thoroughly happy in driving her husband about in a buggy among bears
+ and creeks. She did not know fear and loved danger: "My husband loved me
+ and I loved him, and in his company and in driving him about in this wild
+ kind of fashion I derived much pleasure." However, Mr. Dyson's health
+ broke down, and he was obliged to return to England. It was at Darnall
+ that the fatal acquaintance with Peace began. Living next door but one to
+ the Dysons, Peace took the opportunity of introducing himself, and Mr.
+ Dyson "being a gentleman," took polite notice of his advances. He became a
+ constant visitor at the house. But after a time Peace began to show that
+ he was not the gentleman Mr. Dyson was. He disgusted the latter by
+ offering to show him improper pictures and "the sights of the town" of
+ Sheffield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dysons tried to shake off the unwelcome acquaintance, but that was
+ easier said than done. By this time Peace had set his heart on making Mrs.
+ Dyson leave her husband. He kept trying to persuade her to go to
+ Manchester with him, where he would take a cigar or picture shop, to which
+ Mrs. Dyson, in fine clothes and jewelry, should lend the charm of her
+ comely presence. He offered her a sealskin jacket, yards of silk, a gold
+ watch. She should, he said, live in Manchester like a lady, to which Mrs.
+ Dyson replied coldly that she had always lived like one and should
+ continue to do so quite independently of him. But Peace would listen to no
+ refusal, however decided its tone. Dyson threw over the card into Peace's
+ garden. This only served to aggravate his determination to possess himself
+ of the wife. He would listen at keyholes, leer in at the window, and
+ follow Mrs. Dyson wherever she went. When she was photographed at the
+ fair, she found that Peace had stood behind her chair and by that means
+ got himself included in the picture. At times he had threatened her with a
+ revolver. On one occasion when he was more insulting than usual, Mrs.
+ Dyson forgot her fear of him and gave him a thrashing. Peace threatened
+ "to make her so that neither man nor woman should look at her, and then he
+ would have her all to himself." It was with some purpose of this kind,
+ Mrs. Dyson suggested, that Peace stole a photograph of herself out of a
+ locket, intending to make some improper use of it. At last, in
+ desperation, the Dysons moved to Banner Cross. From the day of their
+ arrival there until the murder, Mrs. Dyson never saw Peace. She denied
+ altogether having been in his company the night before the murder. The
+ letters were "bare forgeries," written by Peace or members of his family
+ to get her into their power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Against the advice of all her friends Mrs. Dyson had come back from
+ America to give evidence against Peace. To the detective who saw her at
+ Cleveland she said, "I will go back if I have to walk on my head all the
+ way"; and though she little knew what she would have to go through in
+ giving her evidence, she would do it again under the circumstances. "My
+ opinion is," she said, "that Peace is a perfect demon&mdash;not a man. I
+ am told that since he has been sentenced to death he has become a changed
+ character. That I don't believe. The place to which the wicked go is not
+ bad enough for him. I think its occupants, bad as they might be, are too
+ good to be where he is. No matter where he goes, I am satisfied that there
+ will be hell. Not even a Shakespeare could adequately paint such a man as
+ he has been. My lifelong regret will be that I ever knew him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these few earnest words Mrs. Dyson quitted the shores of England,
+ hardly clearing up the mystery of her actual relations with Peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A woman with whom Mrs. Dyson very much resented finding herself classed&mdash;inebriety
+ would appear to have been their only common weakness&mdash;was Mrs.
+ Thompson, the "traitress Sue." In spite of the fact that on February 5
+ Mrs. Thompson had applied to the Treasury for L100, blood money due her
+ for assisting the police in the identification of Peace, she was at the
+ same time carrying on a friendly correspondence with her lover and making
+ attempts to see him. Peace had written to her before his trial hoping she
+ would not forsake him; "you have been my bosom friend, and you have
+ ofttimes said you loved me, that you would die for me." He asked her to
+ sell some goods which he had left with her in order to raise money for his
+ defence. The traitress replied on January 27 that she had already sold
+ everything and shared the proceeds with Mrs. Peace. "You are doing me
+ great injustice," she wrote, "by saying that I have been out to 'work'
+ with you. Do not die with such a base falsehood on your conscience, for
+ you know I am young and have my living and character to redeem. I pity you
+ and myself to think we should have met." After his condemnation Mrs.
+ Thompson made repeated efforts to see Peace, coming to Leeds for the
+ purpose. Peace wrote a letter on February 9 to his "poor Sue," asking her
+ to come to the prison. But, partly at the wish of Peace's relatives and
+ for reasons of their own, a permission given Mrs. Thompson by the
+ authorities to visit the convict was suddenly withdrawn, and she never saw
+ him again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III HIS TRIAL AND EXECUTION
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the lives of those famous men who have perished on the scaffold their
+ behaviour during the interval between their condemnation and their
+ execution has always been the subject of curiosity and interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be said at once that nothing could have been more deeply religious,
+ more sincerely repentant, more Christian to all appearances than Peace's
+ conduct and demeanour in the last weeks of his life. He threw himself into
+ the work of atonement with the same uncompromising zeal and energy that he
+ had displayed as a burglar. By his death a truly welcome and effective
+ recruit was lost to the ranks of the contrite and converted sinners.
+ However powerless as a controlling force&mdash;and he admitted it&mdash;his
+ belief in God and the devil may have been in the past, that belief was
+ assured and confident, and in the presence of death proclaimed itself with
+ vigour, not in words merely, but in deeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In obedience to the wishes of his family, Peace had refrained from seeing
+ Sue Thompson. This was at some sacrifice, for he wished very much to see
+ her and to the last, though he knew that she had betrayed him, sent her
+ affectionate and forgiving messages. These were transmitted to Sue by Mr.
+ Brion. This disingenuous gentleman was a fellow-applicant with Sue to the
+ Treasury for pecuniary recognition of his efforts in bringing about the
+ identification of Peace, and furnishing the police with information as to
+ the convict's disposal of his stolen property. In his zeal he had even
+ gone so far as to play the role of an accomplice of Peace, and by this
+ means discovered a place in Petticoat Lane where the burglar got rid of
+ some of his booty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Peace's condemnation Mr. Brion visited him in Armley Jail. His
+ purpose in doing so was to wring from his co-inventor an admission that
+ the inventions which they had patented together were his work alone. Peace
+ denied this, but offered to sell his share for L50. Brion refused the
+ offer, and persisted in his assertion that Peace had got his name attached
+ to the patents by undue influence, whatever that might mean. Peace, after
+ wrestling with the spirit, gave way. "Very well, my friend," he said, "let
+ it be as you say. I have not cheated you, Heaven knows. But I also know
+ that this infamy of mine has been the cause of bringing harm to you, which
+ is the last thing I should have wished to have caused to my friend." A
+ deed of gift was drawn up, making over to Brion Peace's share in their
+ inventions; this Peace handed to Brion as the price of the latter's
+ precious forgiveness and a token of the sincerity of his colleague's
+ repentance. Thus, as has often happened in this sad world, was
+ disreputable genius exploited once again by smug mediocrity. Mr. Brion,
+ having got all he wanted, left the prison, assuring the Governor that
+ Peace's repentance was "all bunkum," and advising, with commendable
+ anxiety for the public good, that the warders in the condemned cell should
+ be doubled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peace had one act of atonement to discharge more urgent than displaying
+ Christian forbearance towards ignoble associates. That was the righting of
+ William Habron, who was now serving the third year of his life sentence
+ for the murder of Constable Cock at Whalley Range. Peace sent for the
+ Governor of the jail a few days before his execution and obtained from him
+ the materials necessary for drawing up a plan. Peace was quite an adept at
+ making plans; he had already made an excellent one of the scene of Dyson's
+ murder. He now drew a plan of the place where Cock had been shot, gave a
+ detailed account of how he came by his death, and made a full confession
+ of his own guilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the confession he described how, some days before the burglary, he had,
+ according to his custom, "spotted" the house at Whalley Range. In order to
+ do this he always dressed himself respectably, because he had found that
+ the police never suspected anyone who wore good clothes. On the night of
+ the crime he passed two policemen on the road to the house. He had gone
+ into the grounds and was about to begin operations when he heard a rustle
+ behind him and saw a policeman, whom he recognised as one of those he had
+ met in the road, enter the garden. With his well-known agility Peace
+ climbed on to the wall, and dropped on to the other side, only to find
+ himself almost in the arms of the second policeman. Peace warned the
+ officer to stand back and fired his revolver wide of him. But, as Peace
+ said, "these Manchester policemen are a very obstinate lot." The constable
+ took out his truncheon. Peace fired again and killed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after the murderer saw in the newspapers that two men had been
+ arrested for the crime. "This greatly interested me," said Peace. "I
+ always had a liking to be present at trials, as the public no doubt know
+ by this time." So he went to Manchester Assizes and saw William Habron
+ sentenced to death. "People will say," he said, "that I was a hardened
+ wretch for allowing an innocent man to suffer for the crime of which I was
+ guilty but what man would have given himself up under such circumstances,
+ knowing as I did that I should certainly be hanged?" Peace's view of the
+ question was a purely practical one: "Now that I am going to forfeit my
+ own life and feel that I have nothing to gain by further secrecy, I think
+ it is right in the sight of God and man to clear this innocent young man."
+ It would have been more right in the sight of God and man to have done it
+ before, but then Peace admitted that during all his career he had allowed
+ neither God nor man to influence his actions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How many men in the situation of Peace at the time, with the certainty of
+ death before him if he confessed, would have sacrificed themselves to save
+ an innocent man? Cold-blooded heroism of this kind is rare in the annals
+ of crime. Nor did Peace claim to have anything of the hero about him.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Lion-hearted I've lived,
+ And when my time comes
+ Lion-hearted I'll die."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Though fond of repeating this piece of doggerel, Peace would have been the
+ last man to have attributed to himself all those qualities associated
+ symbolically with the lion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days before his execution Peace was visited in his prison by Mr.
+ Littlewood, the Vicar of Darnall. Mr. Littlewood had known Peace a few
+ years before, when he had been chaplain at Wakefield Prison. "Well, my old
+ friend Peace," he said as he entered the cell, "how are you to-day?" "'I
+ am very poorly, sir," replied the convict, "but I am exceedingly pleased
+ to see you." Mr. Littlewood assured Peace that there was at any rate one
+ person in the world who had deep sympathy with him, and that was himself.
+ Peace burst into tears. He expressed a wish to unburden himself to the
+ vicar, but before doing so, asked for his assurance that he believed in
+ the truth and sincerity of what he was about to say to him. He said that
+ he preferred to be hanged to lingering out his life in penal servitude,
+ that he was grieved and repentant for his past life. "If I could undo, or
+ make amends for anything I have done, I would suffer my body as I now
+ stand to be cut in pieces inch by inch. I feel, sir, that I am too bad to
+ live or die, and having this feeling I cannot think that either you or
+ anyone else would believe me, and that is the reason why I ask you so much
+ to try to be assured that you do not think I am telling lies. I call my
+ God to witness that all I am saying and wish to say shall be the truth&mdash;the
+ whole truth&mdash;nothing but the truth." Mr. Littlewood said that, after
+ carefully watching Peace and having regard to his experience of some of
+ the most hardened of criminals during his service in Wakefield Prison, he
+ felt convinced that Peace was in earnest and as sincere as any man could
+ be; he spoke rationally, coherently, and without excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peace was determined to test the extent of the reverend gentleman's faith
+ in his asseverations. "Now, sir," he said, "I understand that you still
+ have the impression that I stole the clock from your day-schools." Mr.
+ Littlewood admitted that such was his impression. "I thought so," replied
+ Peace, "and this has caused me much grief and pain, for I can assure you I
+ have so much respect for you personally that I would rather have given you
+ a clock and much more besides than have taken it. At the time your clock
+ was stolen I had reason for suspecting that it was taken by some colliers
+ whom I knew." There was a pause. Mr. Littlewood thought that Peace was
+ going to give him the name of the colliers. But that was not Peace's way.
+ He said sharply: "Do you now believe that I have spoken the truth in
+ denying that I took your clock, and will you leave me to-day fully
+ believing that I am innocent of doing that?" Mr. Littlewood looked at him
+ closely and appeared to be deliberating on his reply. Peace watched him
+ intently. At last Mr. Littlewood said, "Peace, I am convinced that you did
+ not take the clock. I cannot believe that you dare deny it now in your
+ position, if you really did." Once more Peace burst into tears, and was
+ unable for some time to speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having recovered his self-possession, Peace turned to the serious business
+ of confession. He dealt first with the murder of Dyson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He maintained that his relations with Mrs. Dyson had been of an intimate
+ character. He wanted to see her on the night of the crime in order to get
+ her to induce her husband to withdraw the warrant which he had procured
+ against him; he was tired, he said, of being hunted about from place to
+ place. He intercepted Mrs. Dyson as she crossed the yard. Instead of
+ listening to him quietly Mrs. Dyson became violent and threatening in her
+ language. Peace took out his revolver, and, holding it close to her head,
+ warned her that he was not to be trifled with. She refused to be warned.
+ Dyson, hearing the loud voices, came out of his house. Peace tried to get
+ away down the passage into Banner Cross Road, but Dyson followed and
+ caught hold of him. In the struggle Peace fired one barrel of his revolver
+ wide. Dyson seized the hand in which Peace was holding the weapon. "Then I
+ knew," said Peace, "I had not a moment to spare. I made a desperate
+ effort, wrenched the arm from him and fired again. All that was in my head
+ at the time was to get away. I never did intend, either there or anywhere
+ else, to take a man's life; but I was determined that I should not be
+ caught at that time, as the result, knowing what I had done before, would
+ have been worse even than had I stayed under the warrant." If he had
+ intended to murder Dyson, Peace pointed out that he would have set about
+ it in quite a different and more secret way; it was as unintentional a
+ thing as ever was done; Mrs. Dyson had committed the grossest perjury in
+ saying that no struggle had taken place between her husband and himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is to be remembered that Peace and Mrs. Dyson were the sole witnesses
+ of what took place that night between the two men. In point of credibility
+ there may be little to choose between them, but Peace can claim for his
+ account that it was the statement of a dying, and, to all appearances,
+ sincerely repentant sinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peace then repeated to Mr. Littlewood his confession of the killing of
+ Constable Cock, and his desire that Habron should be set free.(11) As to
+ this part of his career Peace indulged in some general reflections. "My
+ great mistake, sir," he said, "and I can see it now as my end approaches,
+ has been this&mdash;in all my career I have used ball cartridge. I can see
+ now that in using ball cartridge I did wrong I ought to have used blank
+ cartridge; then I would not have taken life." Peace said that he hoped he
+ would meet his death like a hero. "I do not say this in any kind of
+ bravado. I do not mean such a hero as some persons will understand when
+ they read this. I mean such a hero as my God might wish me to be. I am
+ deeply grieved for all I have done, and would atone for it to the utmost
+ of my power." To Mr. Littlewood the moment seemed convenient to suggest
+ that as a practical means of atonement Peace should reveal to him the
+ names of the persons with whom he had disposed of the greater part of his
+ stolen property. But in spite of much attempted persuasion by the reverend
+ gentleman Peace explained that he was a man and meant to be a man to the
+ end.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (11) William Habron was subsequently given a free pardon and L800 by way
+of compensation.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Earlier in their interview Peace had expressed to Mr. Littlewood a hope
+ that after his execution his name would never be mentioned again, but
+ before they parted he asked Mr. Littlewood, as a favour, to preach a
+ sermon on him after his death to the good people of Darnall. He wished his
+ career held up to them as a beacon, in order that all who saw might avoid
+ his example, and so his death be of some service to society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before Mr. Littlewood left, Peace asked him to hear him pray. Having
+ requested the warders to kneel down, Peace began a prayer that lasted
+ twenty minutes. He prayed for himself, his family, his victims, Mr.
+ Littlewood, society generally, and all classes of the community. Mr.
+ Littlewood described the prayer as earnest, fervent and fluent. At the end
+ Peace asked Mr. Littlewood if he ought to see Mrs. Dyson and beg her
+ forgiveness for having killed her husband. Mr. Littlewood, believing
+ erroneously that Mrs. Dyson had already left the country, told Peace that
+ he should direct all his attention to asking forgiveness of his Maker. At
+ the close of their interview Peace was lifted into bed and, turning his
+ face to the wall, wept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tuesday, February 25, was the day fixed for the execution of Peace. As the
+ time drew near, the convict's confidence in ultimate salvation increased.
+ A Dr. Potter of Sheffield had declared in a sermon that "all hope of
+ Peace's salvation was gone for ever." Peace replied curtly, "Well, Dr.
+ Potter may think so, but I don't." Though his health had improved, Peace
+ was still very feeble in body. But his soul was hopeful and undismayed. On
+ the Saturday before his death his brother and sister-in-law, a nephew and
+ niece visited him for the last time. He spoke with some emotion of his
+ approaching end. He said he should die about eight o'clock, and that at
+ four o'clock an inquest would be held on his body; he would then be thrown
+ into his grave without service or sermon of any kind. He asked his
+ relatives to plant a flower on a certain grave in a cemetery in Sheffield
+ on the day of his execution. He was very weak, he said, but hoped he
+ should have strength enough to walk to the scaffold. He sent messages to
+ friends and warnings to avoid gambling and drinking. He begged his brother
+ to change his manner of life and "become religious." His good counsel was
+ not apparently very well received. Peace's visitors took a depressing view
+ of their relative's condition. They found him "a poor, wretched, haggard
+ man," and, meeting Mrs. Thompson who was waiting outside the gaol for news
+ of "dear Jack," wondered how she could have taken up with such a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, the day before his execution, Peace was visited for the last time by
+ his wife, his stepson, his daughter, Mrs. Bolsover, and her husband, he
+ was in much better spirits. He asked his visitors to restrain themselves
+ from displays of emotion, as he felt very happy and did not wish to be
+ disturbed. He advised them to sell or exhibit for money certain works of
+ art of his own devising. Among them was a design in paper for a monument
+ to be placed over his grave. The design is elaborate but well and
+ ingeniously executed; in the opinion of Frith, the painter, it showed "the
+ true feeling of an artist." It is somewhat in the style of the Albert
+ Memorial, and figures of angels are prominent in the scheme. The whole
+ conception is typical of the artist's sanguine and confident assurance of
+ his ultimate destiny. A model boat and a fiddle made out of a hollow
+ bamboo cane he wished also to be made the means of raising money. He was
+ describing with some detail the ceremony of his approaching death and
+ burial when he was interrupted by a sound of hammering. Peace listened for
+ a moment and then said, "That's a noise that would make some men fall on
+ the floor. They are working at my own scaffold." A warder said that he was
+ mistaken. "No, I am not," answered Peace, "I have not worked so long with
+ wood without knowing the sound of deals; and they don't have deals inside
+ a prison for anything else than scaffolds." But the noise, he said, did
+ not disturb him in the least, as he was quite prepared to meet his fate.
+ He would like to have seen his grave and coffin; he knew that his body
+ would be treated with scant ceremony after his death. But what of that? By
+ that time his soul would be in Heaven. He was pleased that one sinner who
+ had seen him on his way from Pentonville to Sheffield, had written to tell
+ him that the sight of the convict had brought home to him the sins of his
+ own past life, and by this means he had found salvation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The time had come to say good-bye for the last time. Peace asked his
+ weeping relatives whether they had anything more that they wished to ask
+ him. Mrs. Peace reminded him that he had promised to pray with them at the
+ last. Peace, ever ready, knelt with them and prayed for half an hour. He
+ then shook hands with them, prayed for and blessed each one singly, and
+ himself gave way to tears as they left his presence. To his wife as she
+ departed Peace gave a funeral card of his own designing. It ran:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ In
+ Memory
+ of
+ Charles Peace
+ Who was executed in
+ Armley Prison
+ Tuesday February 25th,
+ 1879 Aged 47
+
+ For that I don but never
+ Intended.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The same day there arrived in the prison one who in his own trade had
+ something of the personality and assurance of the culprit he was to
+ execute. William Marwood&mdash;unlike his celebrated victim, he has his
+ place in the Dictionary of National Biography&mdash;is perhaps the most
+ remarkable of these persons who have held at different times the office of
+ public executioner. As the inventor of the "long drop," he has done a
+ lasting service to humanity by enabling the death-sentence passed by the
+ judge to be carried out with the minimum of possible suffering. Marwood
+ took a lofty view of the office he held, and refused his assent to the
+ somewhat hypocritical loathing, with which those who sanction and profit
+ by his exertions are pleased to regard this servant of the law. "I am
+ doing God's work," said Marwood, "according to the divine command and the
+ law of the British Crown. I do it simply as a matter of duty and as a
+ Christian. I sleep as soundly as a child and am never disturbed by
+ phantoms. Where there is guilt there is bad sleeping, but I am conscious
+ that I try to live a blameless life. Detesting idleness, I pass my vacant
+ time in business (he was a shoemaker at Horncastle, in Lincolnshire) and
+ work in my shoeshop near the church day after day until such time as I am
+ required elsewhere. It would have been better for those I executed if they
+ had preferred industry to idleness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marwood had not the almost patriarchal air of benevolent respectability
+ which his predecessor Calcraft had acquired during a short experience as a
+ family butler; but as an executioner that kindly old gentleman had been a
+ sad bungler in his time compared with the scientific and expeditious
+ Marwood. The Horncastle shoemaker was saving, businesslike, pious and
+ thoughtful. Like Peace, he had interests outside his ordinary profession.
+ He had at one time propounded a scheme for the abolition of the National
+ Debt, a man clearly determined to benefit his fellowmen in some way or
+ other. A predilection for gin would seem to have been his only concession
+ to the ordinary weakness of humanity. And now he had arrived in Armley
+ Jail to exercise his happy dispatch on the greatest of the many criminals
+ who passed through his hands, one who, in his own words, "met death with
+ greater firmness" than any man on whom he had officiated during seven
+ years of Crown employment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day of February the 25th broke bitterly cold. Like Charles I. before
+ him, Peace feared lest the extreme cold should make him appear to tremble
+ on the scaffold. He had slept calmly till six o'clock in the morning. A
+ great part of the two hours before the coming of the hangman Peace spent
+ in letter-writing. He wrote two letters to his wife, in one of which he
+ copied out some verses he had written in Woking Prison on the death of
+ their little boy John. In the second he expressed his satisfaction that he
+ was to die now and not linger twenty years in prison. To his daughter,
+ step-son and son-in-law he wrote letters of fervent, religious exhortation
+ and sent them tracts and pictures which he had secured from
+ well-intentioned persons anxious about his salvation. To an old friend,
+ George Goodlad, a pianist, who had apparently lived up to his name, he
+ wrote: "You chose an honest industrious way through life, but I chose the
+ one of dishonesty, villainy and sin"; let his fate, he said, be a warning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peace ate a hearty breakfast and awaited the coming of the executioner
+ with calm. He had been troubled with an inconvenient cough the night
+ before. "I wonder," he said to one of his warders, "if Marwood could cure
+ this cough of mine." He had got an idea into his head that Marwood would
+ "punish" him when he came to deal with him on the scaffold, and asked to
+ see the hangman a few minutes before the appointed hour. "I hope you will
+ not punish me. I hope you will do your work quickly," he said to Marwood.
+ "You shall not suffer pain from my hand," replied that worthy. "God bless
+ you," exclaimed Peace, "I hope to meet you all in heaven. I am thankful to
+ say my sins are all forgiven." And so these two pious men&mdash;on the
+ morning of an execution Marwood always knelt down and asked God's blessing
+ on the work he had to do&mdash;shook hands together and set about their
+ business. Firmly and fearlessly Peace submitted himself to the necessary
+ preparations. For one moment he faltered as the gallows came in sight, but
+ recovered himself quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Marwood was about to cover his face, Peace stopped him with some
+ irritation of manner and said that he wished to speak to the gentlemen of
+ the press who had been admitted to the ceremony. No one gainsaid him, and
+ he thus addressed the reporters: "You gentlemen reporters, I wish you to
+ notice the few words I am going to say. You know what my life has been. It
+ has been base; but I wish you to notice, for the sake of others, how a man
+ can die, as I am about to die, in fear of the Lord. Gentlemen, my heart
+ says that I feel assured that my sins are forgiven me, that I am going to
+ the Kingdom of Heaven, or else to the place prepared for those who rest
+ until the great Judgment day. I do not think I have any enemies, but if
+ there are any who would be so, I wish them well. Gentlemen, all and all, I
+ wish them to come to the Kingdom of Heaven when they die, as I am going to
+ die." He asked a blessing on the officials of the prison and, in
+ conclusion, sent his last wishes and respects to his dear children and
+ their mother. "I hope," he said, "no one will disgrace them by taunting
+ them or jeering them on my account, but to have mercy upon them. God bless
+ you, my dear children. Good-bye, and Heaven bless you. Amen: Oh, my Lord
+ God, have mercy upon me!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the cap had been placed over his head Peace asked twice very
+ sharply, as a man who expected to be obeyed, for a drink of water. But
+ this time his request was not compiled with. He died instantaneously and
+ was buried in Armley Jail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Peace flourished in 1914 instead of 1874, his end might have been
+ honourable instead of dishonourable. The war of to-day has no doubt saved
+ many a man from a criminal career by turning to worthy account qualities
+ which, dangerous in crime, are useful in war. Absolute fearlessness,
+ agility, resource, cunning and determination; all these are admirable
+ qualities in the soldier; and all these Charles Peace possessed in a
+ signal degree. But fate denied him opportunity, he became a burglar and
+ died on the scaffold. Years of prison life failed, as they did in those
+ days, to make any impression for good on one resolute in whatever way he
+ chose to go. Peace was a born fighter. A detective who knew him and had on
+ one occasion come near capturing him in London, said that he was a fair
+ fighter, that he always gave fair warning to those on whom he fired, and
+ that, being a dead shot, the many wide shots which he fired are to be
+ reckoned proofs of this. Peace maintained to the last that he had never
+ intended to kill Dyson. This statement ex-detective Parrock believed, and
+ that the fatal shot was fired over Peace's shoulder as he was making off.
+ Though habitually sober, Peace was made intoxicated now and then by the
+ drink, stood him by those whom he used to amuse with his musical tricks
+ and antics in public-houses. At such times he would get fuddled and
+ quarrelsome. He was in such a frame of mind on the evening of Dyson's
+ murder. His visit to the Vicar of Ecclesall brought him little comfort or
+ consolation. It was in this unsatisfactory frame of mind that he went to
+ Dyson's house. This much the ex-detective would urge in his favour. To his
+ neighbours he was an awe-inspiring but kind and sympathetic man. "If you
+ want my true opinion of him," says Detective Parrock, "he was a burglar to
+ the backbone but not a murderer at heart. He deserved the fate that came
+ to him as little as any who in modern times have met with a like one."
+ Those who are in the fighting line are always the most generous about
+ their adversaries. Parrock as a potential target for Peace's revolver, may
+ have erred on the side of generosity, but there is some truth in what he
+ says.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Peace himself admitted, his life had been base. He was well aware that
+ he had misused such gifts as nature had bestowed on him. One must go back
+ to mediaeval times to find the counterpart of this daring ruffian who,
+ believing in personal God and devil, refuses until the end to allow either
+ to interfere with his business in life. In this respect Charles Peace
+ reminds us irresistibly of our Angevin kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is only one criminal who vies with Charley Peace in that genial
+ popular regard which makes Charles "Charley" and John "Jack," and that is
+ Jack Sheppard. What Jack was to the eighteenth century, that Charley was
+ to the nineteenth. And each one is in a sense typical of his period. Lecky
+ has said that the eighteenth century is richer than any other in the
+ romance of crime. I think it may fairly be said that in the nineteenth
+ century the romance of crime ceased to be. In the eighteenth century the
+ scenery and dresses, all the stage setting of crime make for romance; its
+ literature is quaint and picturesque; there is something gay and debonair
+ about the whole business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheppard is typical of all this. There is a certain charm about the
+ rascal; his humour is undeniable; he is a philosopher, taking all that
+ comes with easy grace, even his betrayal by his brother and others who
+ should have been loyal to him. Jack Sheppard has the good-humoured
+ carelessness of that most engaging of all eighteenth century malefactors,
+ Deacon Brodie. It is quite otherwise with Charley Peace. There is little
+ enough gay or debonair about him. Compared with Sheppard, Peace is as drab
+ as the surroundings of mid-Victorian crime are drab compared with the
+ picturesqueness of eighteenth century England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crime in the nineteenth century becomes more scientific in its methods and
+ in its detection also. The revolver places a more hasty, less decorous
+ weapon than the old-fashioned pistol in the hands of the determined
+ burglar. The literature of crime, such as it is, becomes vulgar and
+ prosaic. Peace has no charm about him, no gaiety, but he has the virtues
+ of his defects. He, unlike Sheppard, shuns company; he works alone, never
+ depending on accomplices; a "tight cock," as Sheppard would have phrased
+ it, and not relying on a like quality of tightness in his fellows.
+ Sheppard is a slave to his women, Edgeworth Bess and Mrs. Maggot; Mrs.
+ Peace and Sue Thompson are the slaves of Peace. Sheppard loves to stroll
+ openly about the London streets in his fine suit of black, his ruffled
+ shirt and his silver-hilted sword. Peace lies concealed at Peckham beneath
+ the homely disguise of old Mr. Thompson. Sheppard is an imp, Peace a
+ goblin. But both have that gift of personality which, in their own
+ peculiar line, lifts them out from the ruck, and makes them Jack and
+ Charley to those who like to know famous people by cheery nicknames.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so we must accept Charles Peace as a remarkable character, whose
+ unquestioned gifts as a man of action were squandered on a criminal
+ career; neither better nor worse than a great number of other persons,
+ whose good fortune it has been to develop similar qualities under happier
+ surroundings. There are many more complete villains than the ordinary
+ criminal, who contrive to go through life without offending against the
+ law. Close and scientific investigation has shown that the average
+ convicted criminal differs intellectually from the normal person only in a
+ slightly lower level of intelligence, a condition that may well be
+ explained by the fact that the convicted criminal has been found out.
+ Crime has been happily defined by a recent and most able investigator into
+ the character of the criminal(12) as "an unusual act committed by a
+ perfectly normal person." At the same time, according to the same
+ authority, there is a type of normal person who tends to be convicted of
+ crime, and he is differentiated from his fellows by defective physique and
+ mental capacity and an increased possession of antisocial qualities.(13)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (12) "The English Convict," a statistical study, by Charles Goring, M.D.
+His Majesty's Stationery Office, 1913.
+
+ (13) Murderers&mdash;at least those executed for their crimes&mdash;have not for
+obvious reasons been made the subject of close scientific observation.
+Their mental capacity would in all probability be found to be rather
+higher than that of less ambitious criminals.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ How does Peace answer to the definition? Though short in stature, his
+ physical development left little to be desired: he was active, agile, and
+ enjoyed excellent health at all times. For a man of forty-seven he had
+ aged remarkably in appearance. That is probably to be accounted for by
+ mental worry. With two murders on his conscience we know from Sue Thompson
+ that all she learnt of his secrets was what escaped from him in his
+ troubled dreams&mdash;Peace may well have shown traces of mental anxiety.
+ But in all other respects Charles Peace would seem to have been physically
+ fit. In intellectual capacity he was undoubtedly above the average of the
+ ordinary criminal. The facts of his career, his natural gifts, speak for
+ themselves. Of anti-social proclivities he no doubt possessed his share at
+ the beginning, and these were aggravated, as in most cases they were in
+ his day, by prison life and discipline.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Judged as scientifically as is possible where the human being is
+ concerned, Peace stands out physically and intellectually well above the
+ average of his class, perhaps the most naturally gifted of all those who,
+ without advantages of rank or education, have tried their hands at crime.
+ Ordinary crime for the most part would appear to be little better than the
+ last resort of the intellectually defective, and a poor game at that. The
+ only interesting criminals are those worthy of something better. Peace was
+ one of these. If his life may be said to point a moral, it is the very
+ simple one that crime is no career for a man of brains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ The Career of Robert Butler
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is a report of Butler's trial published in Dunedin. It gives in full
+ the speeches and the cross-examination of the witnesses, but not in all
+ cases the evidence-in-chief. By the kindness of a friend in New Zealand I
+ obtained a copy of the depositions taken before the magistrate; with this
+ I have been able to supplement the report of the trial. A collection of
+ newspaper cuttings furnished me with the details of the rest of Butler's
+ career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I THE DUNEDIN MURDERS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the evening of March 23, 1905, Mr. William Munday, a highly respected
+ citizen of the town of Tooringa, in Queensland, was walking to the
+ neighbouring town of Toowong to attend a masonic gathering. It was about
+ eight o'clock, the moon shining brightly. Nearing Toowong, Mr. Munday saw
+ a middle-aged man, bearded and wearing a white overcoat, step out into the
+ moonlight from under the shadow of a tree. As Mr. Munday advanced, the man
+ in the white coat stood directly in his way. "Out with all you have, and
+ quick about it," he said. Instead of complying with this peremptory
+ summons, Mr. Munday attempted to close with him. The man drew back
+ quickly, whipped out a revolver, fired, and made off as fast as he could.
+ The bullet, after passing through Mr. Munday's left arm, had lodged in the
+ stomach. The unfortunate gentleman was taken to a neighbouring hospital
+ where, within a few hours, he was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime a vigorous search was made for his assailant. Late the
+ same night Constable Hennessy, riding a bicycle, saw a man in a white coat
+ who seemed to answer to the description of the assassin. He dismounted,
+ walked up to him and asked him for a match. The man put his hand inside
+ his coat. "What have you got there?" asked the constable. "I'll&mdash;soon
+ show you," replied the man in the white coat, producing suddenly a large
+ revolver. But Hennessy was too quick for him. Landing him one under the
+ jaw, he sent him to the ground and, after a sharp struggle, secured him.
+ Constable Hennessy little knew at the time that his capture in Queensland
+ of the man in the white coat was almost as notable in the annals of crime
+ as the affray at Blackheath on an autumn night in 1878, when Constable
+ Robinson grappled successfully, wounded as he was, with Charles Peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man taken by Hennessy gave the name of James Wharton, and as James
+ Wharton he was hanged at Brisbane. But before his death it was ascertained
+ beyond doubt, though he never admitted it himself, that Wharton was none
+ other than one Robert Butler, whose career as a criminal and natural
+ wickedness may well rank him with Charles Peace in the hierarchy of
+ scoundrels. Like Peace, Butler was, in the jargon of crime, a "hatter," a
+ "lone hand," a solitary who conceived and executed his nefarious designs
+ alone; like Peace, he supplemented an insignificant physique by a liberal
+ employment of the revolver; like Peace, he was something of a musician,
+ the day before his execution he played hymns for half an hour on the
+ prison organ; like Peace, he knew when to whine when it suited his
+ purpose; and like Peace, though not with the same intensity, he could be
+ an uncomfortably persistent lover, when the fit was on him. Both men were
+ cynics in their way and viewed their fellow-men with a measure of
+ contempt. But here parallel ends. Butler was an intellectual, inferior as
+ a craftsman to Peace, the essentially practical, unread, naturally gifted
+ artist. Butler was a man of books. He had been schoolmaster, journalist.
+ He had studied the lives of great men, and as a criminal, had devoted
+ especial attention to those of Frederick the Great and Napoleon. Butler's
+ defence in the Dunedin murder trial was a feat of skill quite beyond the
+ power of Peace. Peace was a religious man after the fashion of the
+ mediaeval tyrant, Butler an infidel. Peace, dragged into the light of a
+ court of justice, cut a sorry figure; here Butler shone. Peace escaped a
+ conviction for murder by letting another suffer in his place; Butler
+ escaped a similar experience by the sheer ingenuity of his defence. Peace
+ had the modesty and reticence of the sincere artist; Butler the loquacious
+ vanity of the literary or forensic coxcomb. Lastly, and it is the supreme
+ difference, Butler was a murderer by instinct and conviction, as Lacenaire
+ or Ruloff; "a man's life," he said, "was of no more importance than a
+ dog's; nature respects the one no more than the other, a volcanic eruption
+ kills mice and men with the one hand. The divine command, 'kill, kill and
+ spare not,' was intended not only for Joshua, but for men of all time; it
+ is the example of our rulers, our Fredericks and Napoleons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Butler was of the true Prussian mould. "In crime," he would say, "as in
+ war, no half measures. Let us follow the example of our rulers whose
+ orders in war run, 'Kill, burn and sink,' and what you cannot carry away,
+ destroy.'" Here is the gospel of frightfulness applied almost
+ prophetically to crime. To Butler murder is a principle of warfare; to
+ Peace it was never more than a desperate resort or an act the outcome of
+ ungovernable passion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ireland can claim the honour of Butler's birth. It took place at Kilkenny
+ about 1845. At an early age he left his native land for Australia, and
+ commenced his professional career by being sentenced under the name of
+ James Wilson&mdash;the same initials as those of James Wharton of
+ Queensland&mdash;to twelve months' imprisonment for vagrancy. Of the
+ sixteen years he passed in Victoria he spent thirteen in prison, first for
+ stealing, then in steady progression for highway robbery and burglary.
+ Side by side with the practical and efficient education in crime furnished
+ by the Victorian prisons of that day, Butler availed himself of the
+ opportunity to educate his mind. It was during this period that he found
+ inspiration and encouragement in the study of the lives of Frederick and
+ Napoleon, besides acquiring a knowledge of music and shorthand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When in 1876 Butler quitted Australia for New Zealand, he was sufficiently
+ accomplished to obtain employment as a schoolmaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Cromwell, Otago, under the name of "C. J. Donelly, Esq.," Butler opened
+ a "Commercial and Preparatory Academy," and in a prospectus that recalls
+ Mr. Squeers' famous advertisement of Dotheboys Hall, announced that the
+ programme of the Academy would include "reading, taught as an art and upon
+ the most approved principles of elocution, writing, arithmetic, euclid,
+ algebra, mensuration, trigonometry, book-keeping, geography, grammar,
+ spelling and dictation, composition, logic and debate, French, Latin,
+ shorthand, history, music, and general lectures on astronomy, natural
+ philosophy, geology, and other subjects." The simpler principles of these
+ branches of learning were to be "rendered intelligible, and a firm
+ foundation laid for the acquirement of future knowledge." Unfortunately a
+ suspicion of theft on Butler's part cut short the fulfilment of this
+ really splendid programme, and Butler left Cromwell hurriedly for the
+ ampler field of Dunedin. There, less than a fortnight after his
+ arrivel{sic}, he was sentenced to four years' hard labour for several
+ burglaries committed in and about that city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 18th of February, 1880, Butler was released from prison. With that
+ consummate hypocrisy which was part of the man, he had contrived to enlist
+ the sympathies of the Governor of the Dunedin Jail, who gave him, on his
+ departure, a suit of clothes and a small sum of money. A detective of the
+ name of Bain tried to find him employment. Butler wished to adopt a
+ literary career. He acted as a reporter on the Dunedin Evening Star, and
+ gave satisfaction to the editor of that newspaper. An attempt to do some
+ original work, in the shape of "Prison Sketches," for another newspaper,
+ was less successful. Bain had arranged for the publication of the articles
+ in the Sunday Advertiser, but when the time came to deliver his
+ manuscript, Butler failed to appear. Bain, whose duty it was to keep an
+ eye on Butler, found him in the street looking wild and haggard. He said
+ that he had found the work "too much for his head," that he had torn up
+ what he had written, that he had nowhere to go, and had been to the end of
+ the jetty with the intention of drowning himself. Bain replied somewhat
+ caustically that he thought it a pity he had not done so, as nothing would
+ have given him greater joy than going to the end of the jetty and
+ identifying his body. "You speak very plainly," said Butler. "Yes, and
+ what is more, I mean what I say," replied Bain. Butler justified Bain's
+ candour by saying that if he broke out again, he would be worse than the
+ most savage tiger ever let loose on the community. As a means of obviating
+ such an outbreak, Butler suggested that, intellectual employment having
+ failed, some form of manual labour should be found him. Bain complied with
+ Butler's request, and got him a job at levelling reclaimed ground in the
+ neighbourhood of Dunedin. On Wednesday, March 10, Butler started work, but
+ after three hours of it relinquished the effort. Bain saw Butler again in
+ Dunedin on the evening of Saturday, March 13, and made an appointment to
+ meet him at half-past eight that night. Butler did not keep the
+ appointment. Bain searched the town for him, but he was nowhere to be
+ found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the same time Butler had some talk with another member of the
+ Dunedin police force, Inspector Mallard. They discussed the crimes of
+ Charles Peace and other notable artists of that kind. Butler remarked to
+ Mallard how easy it would be to destroy all traces of a murder by fire,
+ and asked the inspector whether if he woke up one morning to find some
+ brutal murder had been committed, he would not put it down to him. "No,
+ Butler," replied the inspector, "the first thing I should do would be to
+ look for suspicious circumstances, and most undoubtedly, if they pointed
+ to you, you would be looked after."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the early morning of this Saturday, March 13, the house of a Mr.
+ Stamper, a solicitor of Dunedin, had been broken into, and some articles
+ of value, among them a pair of opera glasses, stolen. The house had been
+ set on fire, and burned to the ground. On the morning of the following
+ day, Sunday, the 14th, Dunedin was horrified by the discovery of a far
+ more terrible crime, tigerish certainly in its apparent ferocity. In a
+ house in Cumberland Street, a young married couple and their little baby
+ were cruelly murdered and un{sic}{an??} unsuccessful attempt made to fire
+ the scene of the crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About half-past six on Sunday morning a man of the name of Robb, a
+ carpenter, on getting out of bed, noticed smoke coming from the house of a
+ neighbor of his, Mr. J. M. Dewar, who occupied a small one-floored cottage
+ standing by itself in Cumberland Street, a large and broad thoroughfare on
+ the outskirts of the town. Dewar was a butcher by trade, a young man, some
+ eighteen months married, and father of a baby girl. Robb, on seeing smoke
+ coming from Dewar's house, woke his son, who was a member of the fire
+ brigade. The latter got up, crossed the street, and going round to the
+ back door, which he found wide open, entered the house. As he went along
+ the passage that separated the two front rooms, a bedroom and
+ sitting-room, he called to the inmates to get up. He received no answer,
+ but as he neared the bedroom he heard a "gurgling" sound. Crawling on his
+ hands and knees he reached the bedroom door, and two feet inside it his
+ right hand touched something. It was the body of a woman; she was still
+ alive, but in a dying condition. Robb dragged her across the passage into
+ the sitting-room. He got some water, and extinguished the fire in the
+ bedroom. On the bed lay the body of Dewar. To all appearances he had been
+ killed in his sleep. By his side was the body of the baby, suffocated by
+ the smoke. Near the bed was an axe belonging to Dewar, stained with blood.
+ It was with this weapon, apparently, that Mr. and Mrs. Dewar had been
+ attacked. Under the bed was a candlestick belonging also to the Dewars,
+ which had been used by the murderer in setting fire to the bed. The front
+ window of the sitting-room was open, there were marks of boot nails on the
+ sill, and on the grass in front of the window a knife was found. An
+ attempt had been made to ransack a chest of drawers in the bedroom, but
+ some articles of jewellery lying in one of the drawers, and a ring on the
+ dressing-table had been left untouched. As far as was known, Mr. and Mrs.
+ Dewar were a perfectly happy and united couple. Dewar had been last seen
+ alive about ten o'clock on the Saturday night getting off a car near his
+ home. At eleven a neighbour had noticed a light in the Dewars' house.
+ About five o'clock on the Sunday morning another neighbour had been
+ aroused from his sleep by the sound as of something falling heavily. It
+ was a wild and boisterous night. Thinking the noise might be the slamming
+ of his stable door, he got up and went out to see that it was secure. He
+ then noticed that a light was burning in the bedroom window of the Dewars'
+ cottage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing more was known of what had occurred that morning until at
+ half-past six Robb saw the smoke coming from Dewars' house. Mrs. Dewar,
+ who alone could have told something, never recovered consciousness and
+ died on the day following the crime. Three considerable wounds sufficient
+ to cause death had been inflicted on the unfortunate woman's head, and
+ five of a similar character on that of her husband. At the head of the
+ bed, which stood in the corner of the room, there was a large smear of
+ blood on the wall just above the door; there were spots of blood all over
+ the top of the bed, and some smaller ones that had to all appearances
+ spurted on to the panel of the door nearest to the bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The investigation of this shocking crime was placed in the hands of
+ Detective Bain, whose duty it had been to keep an eye on Robert Butler,
+ but he did not at first associate his interesting charge with the
+ commission of the murder. About half-past six on Sunday evening Bain
+ happened to go to a place called the Scotia Hotel, where the landlord
+ informed him that one of his servants, a girl named Sarah Gillespie, was
+ very anxious to see him. Her story was this: On the morning of Thursday,
+ March 11, Robert Butler had come to the hotel; he was wearing a dark
+ lavender check suit and carried a top coat and parcel. Butler had stayed
+ in the hotel all Thursday and slept there that night. He had not slept in
+ the hotel on the Friday night, and Sarah Gillespie had not seen him again
+ until he came into the house about five and twenty minutes to seven on
+ Sunday morning. The girl noticed that he was pale and excited, seemed
+ afraid and worried, as if someone were coming after him. After giving her
+ some money for the landlord, he went upstairs, fetched his top coat, a
+ muffler, and his parcel. Before leaving he said he would have a pint of
+ beer, as he had not breakfasted. He then left, presumably to catch an
+ early train.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Butler was next seen a few minutes later at a shop near the hotel, where
+ he bought five tins of salmon, and about the same time a milk-boy saw him
+ standing on the kerb in Cumberland Street in a stooping position, his head
+ turned in the direction of Dewars' house. A little after ten the same
+ night Butler entered a hotel at a place called Blueskin, some twelve miles
+ distant from Dunedin. He was wearing an overcoat and a light muffler. He
+ sat down at a table in the dining-room and seemed weary and sleepy.
+ Someone standing at the bar said "What a shocking murder that was in
+ Cumberland Street!" Butler started up, looked steadily from one to the
+ other of the two men who happened to be in the room, then sat down again
+ and, taking up a book, appeared to be reading. More than once he put down
+ the book and kept shifting uneasily in his chair. After having some supper
+ he got up, paid his reckoning, and left the hotel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At half-past three the following morning, about fifteen miles from
+ Dunedin, on the road to Waikouaiti, two constables met a man whom they
+ recognised as Butler from a description that had been circulated by the
+ police. The constables arrested and searched him. They found on him a pair
+ of opera glasses, the property of Mr. Stamper, whose house had been
+ burgled and burned down on the morning of the 13th. Of this crime Butler
+ acknowledged himself to be the perpetrator. Besides the opera glasses the
+ constables took from Butler two tins of salmon, a purse containing four
+ shillings and sixpence, a pocket knife, a box of matches, a piece of
+ candle, and a revolver and cartridges. The prisoner was carrying a top
+ coat, and was dressed in a dark coat and grey trousers, underneath which
+ he was wearing a white shirt, an under flannel and a Rob Roy Crimean
+ shirt. One of the constables noticed that there were marks of blood on his
+ shirt. Another singular feature in Butler's attire was the fact that the
+ outer soles of his boots had been recently removed. When last seen in
+ Dunedin Butler had been wearing a moustache; he was now clean shaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same evening a remarkable interview took place in the lock-up at
+ Waikouaiti between Butler and Inspector Mallard. Mallard, who had some
+ reason for suspecting Butler, bearing in mind their recent conversation,
+ told the prisoner that he would be charged with the murder in Cumberland
+ Street. For a few seconds, according to Mallard, the prisoner seemed
+ terribly agitated and appeared to be choking. Recovering himself somewhat,
+ he said, "If for that, you can get no evidence against me; and if I am
+ hanged for it, I shall be an innocent man, whatever other crimes I may
+ have committed." Mallard replied, "There is evidence to convict you&mdash;the
+ fire was put out." Butler than{sic} said that he would ask Mallard a
+ question, but, after a pause, decided not to do so. Mallard, after
+ examining Butler's clothes, told him that those were not the clothes in
+ which he had left the Scotia Hotel. Butler admitted it, and said he had
+ thrown those away in the North East Valley. Mallard alluded to the
+ disappearance of the prisoner's moustache. Butler replied that he had cut
+ it off on the road. Mallard noticed then the backs of Butler's hands were
+ scratched, as if by contact with bushes. Butler seemed often on the point
+ of asking questions, but would then stop and say "No, I won't ask you
+ anything." To the constables who had arrested him Butler remarked, "You
+ ought to remember me, because I could have shot you if I had wished." When
+ Mallard later in the evening visited Butler again, the prisoner who was
+ then lying down said, "I want to speak to you. I want to ask the press not
+ to publish my career. Give me fair play. I suppose I shall be convicted
+ and you will see I can die like a man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days after Butler's arrest a ranger on the Town Belt, a hill
+ overlooking Dunedin, found a coat, a hat and silk striped cravat, and a
+ few days later a pair of trousers folded up and placed under a bush. These
+ articles of clothing were identified as those which Butler had been seen
+ wearing on the Saturday and Sunday morning. They were examined. There were
+ a number of bloodstains on them, not one of them larger in size than a
+ pea, some almost invisible. On the front of the trousers about the level
+ of the groin there were blood spots on both sides. There was blood on the
+ fold of the left breast of the coat and on the lining of the cuff of the
+ right arm. The shirt Butler was wearing at the time of his arrest was
+ examined also. There were small spots of blood, about fourteen altogether,
+ on the neck and shoulder bands, the right armpit, the left sleeve, and on
+ both wristbands. Besides the clothes, a salmon tin was found on the Town
+ Belt, and behind a seat in the Botanical Gardens, from which a partial
+ view of the Dewars' house in Cumberland Street could be obtained, two more
+ salmon tins were found, all three similar to the five purchased by Butler
+ on the Sunday morning, two of which had been in his possession at the time
+ of his arrest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were the main facts of the case which Butler had to answer when, a
+ few weeks later, he was put on his trial before the Supreme Court at
+ Dunedin. The presiding judge was Mr. Justice Williams, afterwards Sir
+ Joshua Williams and a member of the Privy Council. The Crown Prosecutor,
+ Mr. Haggitt, conducted the case for the Crown, and Butler defended
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II THE TRIAL OF BUTLER
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To a man of Butler's egregious vanity his trial was a glorious opportunity
+ for displaying his intellectual gifts, such as they were. One who had
+ known him in prison about this time describes him as a strange compound of
+ vanity and envy, blind to his own faults and envious of the material
+ advantages enjoyed by others. Self-willed and arrogant, he could bully or
+ whine with equal effect. Despising men, he believed that if a man did not
+ possess some requisite quality, he had only to ape it, as few would
+ distinguish between the real and the sham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But with all these advantages in the struggle for life, it is certain that
+ Butler's defence would have been far less effective had be{sic} been
+ denied all professional aid. As a matter of fact, throughout his trial
+ Butler was being advised by three distinguished members of the New Zealand
+ bar, now judges of the Supreme Court, who though not appearing for him in
+ court, gave him the full benefit of their assistance outside it. At the
+ same time Butler carried off the thing well. Where imagination was
+ required, Butler broke down; he could not write sketches of life in
+ prison; that was too much for his pedestrian intellect. But given the
+ facts of a case, dealing with a transaction of which he alone knew the
+ real truth, and aided by the advice and guidance of trained intellects,
+ Butler was unquestionably clever and shrewd enough to make the best use of
+ such advantages in meeting the case against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus equipped for the coming struggle, this high-browed ruffian, with his
+ semi-intellectual cast of countenance, his jerky restless posturing, his
+ splay-footed waddle, "like a lame Muscovy duck," in the graphic words of
+ his gaol companion, stood up to plead for his life before the Supreme
+ Court at Dunedin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be said at the outset that Butler profited greatly by the
+ scrupulous fairness shown by the Crown Prosecutor. Mr. Haggitt extended to
+ the prisoner a degree of consideration and forbearance, justified
+ undoubtedly towards an undefended prisoner. But, as we have seen, Butler
+ was not in reality undefended. At every moment of the trial he was in
+ communication with his legal advisers, and being instructed by them how to
+ meet the evidence given against him. Under these circumstances the
+ unfailing consideration shown him by the Crown Prosecutor seems almost
+ excessive. From the first moment of the trial Butler was fully alive to
+ the necessities of his situation. He refrained from including in his
+ challenges of the jury the gentleman who was afterwards foreman; he knew
+ he was all right, he said, because he parted his hair in the middle, a
+ "softy," in fact. He did not know in all probability that one gentleman on
+ the jury had a rooted conviction that the murder of the Dewars was the
+ work of a criminal lunatic. There was certainly nothing in Butler's
+ demeanour or behaviour to suggest homicidal mania.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The case against Butler rested on purely circumstantial evidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No new facts of importance were adduced at the trial. The stealing of
+ Dewar's wages, which had been paid to him on the Saturday, was the motive
+ for the murder suggested by the Crown. The chief facts pointing to
+ Butler's guilt were: his conversation with Mallard and Bain previous to
+ the crime; his demeanour after it; his departure from Dunedin; the removal
+ of his moustache and the soles of his boots; his change of clothes and the
+ bloodstains found upon them, added to which was his apparent inability to
+ account for his movements on the night in question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such as the evidence was, Butler did little to shake it in
+ cross-examination. His questions were many of them skilful and pointed,
+ but on more than one occasion the judge intervened to save him from the
+ danger common to all amateur cross-examiners, of not knowing when to stop.
+ He was most successful in dealing with the medical witnesses. Butler had
+ explained the bloodstains on his clothes as smears that had come from
+ scratches on his hands, caused by contact with bushes. This explanation
+ the medical gentlemen with good reason rejected. But they went further,
+ and said that these stains might well have been caused by the spurting and
+ spraying of blood on to the murderer as he struck his victims. Butler was
+ able to show by the position of the bloodstains on the clothes that such
+ an explanation was open to considerable doubt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Butler's speech in his defence lasted six hours, and was a creditable
+ performance. Its arrangement is somewhat confused and repetitious, some
+ points are over-elaborated, but on the whole he deals very successfully
+ with most of the evidence given against him and exposes the unquestionable
+ weakness of the Crown case. At the outset he declared that he had taken
+ his innocence for his defence. "I was not willing," he said, "to leave my
+ life in the hands of a stranger. I was willing to incur all the
+ disadvantages which the knowledge of the law might bring upon me. I was
+ willing, also, to enter on this case without any experience whatever of
+ that peculiarly acquired art of cross-examination. I fear I have done
+ wrong. If I had had the assistance of able counsel, much more light would
+ have been thrown on this case than has been." As we have seen, Butler
+ enjoyed throughout his trial the informal assistance of three of the most
+ able counsel in New Zealand, so that this heroic attitude of conscious
+ innocence braving all dangers loses most of its force. Without such
+ assistance his danger might have been very real.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great deal of the evidence as to his conduct and demeanour at the time
+ of the murder Butler met by acknowledging that it was he who had broken
+ into Mr. Stamper's house on the Saturday morning, burgled it and set it on
+ fire. His consciousness of guilt in this respect was, he said, quite
+ sufficient to account for anything strange or furtive in his manner at
+ that time. He was already known to the police; meeting Bain on the
+ Saturday night, he felt more than ever sure that he was susspected{sic} of
+ the robbery at Mr. Stamper's; he therefore decided to leave Dunedin as
+ soon as possible. That night, he said, he spent wandering about the
+ streets half drunk, taking occasional shelter from the pouring rain, until
+ six o'clock on the Sunday morning, when he went to the Scotia Hotel. A
+ more detailed account of his movements on the night of the Dewars' murder
+ he did not, or would not, give.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he comes to the facts of the murder and his theories as to the nature
+ and motive of the crime&mdash;theories which he developed at rather
+ unnecessary length for the purpose of his own defence&mdash;his speech is
+ interesting. It will be recollected that on the discovery of the murder, a
+ knife was found on the grass outside the house. This knife was not the
+ property of the Dewars. In Butler's speech he emphasised the opinion that
+ this knife had been brought there by the murderer: "Horrible though it may
+ be, my conclusion is that he brought it with the intention of cutting the
+ throats of his victims, and that, finding they lay in rather an untoward
+ position, he changed his mind, and, having carried out the object with
+ which he entered the house, left the knife and, going back, brought the
+ axe with which he effected his purpose. What was the purpose of the
+ murderer? Was it the robbery of Dewar's paltry wages? Was it the act of a
+ tiger broken loose on the community? An act of pure wanton devilry? or was
+ there some more reasonable explanation of this most atrocious crime?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Butler rejected altogether the theory of ordinary theft. No thief of
+ ambitious views, he said, would pitch upon the house of a poor journeyman
+ butcher. The killing of the family appeared to him to be the motive: "an
+ enemy hath done this." The murderer seems to have had a knowledge of the
+ premises; he enters the house and does his work swiftly and promptly, and
+ is gone. "We cannot know," Butler continues, "all the passages in the
+ lives of the murdered man or woman. What can we know of the hundred spites
+ and jealousies or other causes of malice which might have caused the
+ crime? If you say some obscure quarrel, some spite or jealousy is not
+ likely to have been the cause of so dreadful a murder, you cannot revert
+ to the robbery theory without admitting a motive much weaker in all its
+ utter needlessness and vagueness. The prominent feature of the murder,
+ indeed the only feature, is its ruthless, unrelenting, determined
+ vindictiveness. Every blow seemed to say, 'You shall die you shall not
+ live.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether Butler were the murderer of the Dewars or not, the theory that
+ represented them as having been killed for the purpose of robbery has its
+ weak side all the weaker if Butler, a practical and ambitious criminal,
+ were the guilty man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1882, two years after Butler's trial, there appeared in a New Zealand
+ newspaper, Society, published in Christchurch, a series of Prison
+ "Portraits," written evidently by one who had himself undergone a term of
+ imprisonment. One of the "Portraits" was devoted to an account of Butler.
+ The writer had known Butler in prison. According to the story told him by
+ Butler, the latter had arrived in Dunedin with a quantity of jewellery he
+ had stolen in Australia. This jewellery he entrusted to a young woman for
+ safe keeping. After serving his first term of two years' imprisonment in
+ Dunedin, Butler found on his release that the young woman had married a
+ man of the name of Dewar. Butler went to Mrs. Dewar and asked for the
+ return of his jewellery; she refused to give it up. On the night of the
+ murder he called at the house in Cumberland Street and made a last appeal
+ to her, but in vain. He determined on revenge. During his visit to Mrs.
+ Dewar he had had an opportunity of seeing the axe and observing the best
+ way to break into the house. He watched the husband's return, and decided
+ to kill him as well as his wife on the chance of obtaining his week's
+ wages. With the help of the knife which he had found in the backyard of a
+ hotel he opened the window. The husband he killed in his sleep, the woman
+ waked with the first blow he struck her. He found the jewellery in a
+ drawer rolled up in a pair of stockings. He afterwards hid it in a
+ well-marked spot some half-hour before his arrest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few years after its appearance in Society, this account of Butler was
+ reproduced in an Auckland newspaper. Bain, the detective, wrote a letter
+ questioning the truth of the writer's statements. He pointed out that when
+ Butler first came to Dunedin he had been at liberty only a fortnight
+ before serving his first term of imprisonment, very little time in which
+ to make the acquaintance of a woman and dispose of the stolen jewellery.
+ He asked why, if Butler had hidden the jewellery just before his arrest,
+ he had not also hidden the opera-glasses which he had stolen from Mr.
+ Stamper's house. Neither of these comments is very convincing. A fortnight
+ seems time enough in which a man of Butler's character might get to know a
+ woman and dispose of some jewellery; while, if Butler were the murderer of
+ Mr. Dewar as well as the burglar who had broken into Stamper's house, it
+ was part of his plan to acknowledge himself guilty of the latter crime and
+ use it to justify his movements before and after the murder. Bain is more
+ convincing when he states at the conclusion of his letter that he had
+ known Mrs. Dewar from childhood as a "thoroughly good and true woman,"
+ who, as far as he knew, had never in her life had any acquaintance with
+ Butler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time, the account given by Butler's fellow-prisoner, in which
+ the conduct of the murdered woman is represented as constituting the
+ provocation for the subsequent crime, explains one peculiar circumstance
+ in connection with the tragedy, the selection of this journeyman butcher
+ and his wife as the victims of the murderer. It explains the theory, urged
+ so persistently by Butler in his speech to the jury, that the crime was
+ the work of an enemy of the Dewars, the outcome of some hidden spite, or
+ obscure quarrel; it explains the apparent ferocity of the murder, and the
+ improbability of a practical thief selecting such an unprofitable couple
+ as his prey. The rummaged chest of drawers and the fact that some trifling
+ articles of jewellery were left untouched on the top of them, are
+ consistent with an eager search by the murderer for some particular
+ object. Against this theory of revenge is the fact that Butler was a
+ malignant ruffian and liar in any case, that, having realised very little
+ in cash by the burglary at Stamper's house, he would not be particular as
+ to where he might get a few shillings more, that he had threatened to do a
+ tigerish deed, and that it is characteristic of his vanity to try to
+ impute to his crime a higher motive than mere greed or necessity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Butler showed himself not averse to speaking of the murder in Cumberland
+ Street to at least one of those, with whom he came in contact in his later
+ years. After he had left New Zealand and returned to Australia, he was
+ walking in a street in Melbourne with a friend when they passed a lady
+ dressed in black, carrying a baby in her arms. The baby looked at the two
+ men and laughed. Butler frowned and walked rapidly away. His companion
+ chaffed him, and asked whether it was the widow or the baby that he was
+ afraid of. Butler was silent, but after a time asked his companion to come
+ into some gardens and sit down on one of the seats, as he had something
+ serious to say to him. For a while Butler sat silent. Then he asked the
+ other if he had ever been in Dunedin. "Yes," was the reply. "Look here,"
+ said Butler, "you are the only man I ever made any kind of confidant of.
+ You are a good scholar, though I could teach you a lot." After this
+ gracious compliment he went on: "I was once tried in Dunedin on the charge
+ of killing a man, woman and child, and although innocent, the crime was
+ nearly brought home to me. It was my own ability that pulled me through.
+ Had I employed a professional advocate, I should not have been here to-day
+ talking to you." After describing the murder, Butler said: "Trying to fire
+ the house was unnecessary, and killing the baby was unnecessary and cruel.
+ I respect no man's life, for no man respects mine. A lot of men I have
+ never injured have tried to put a rope round my neck more than once. I
+ hate society in general, and one or two individuals in particular. The man
+ who did that murder in Dunedin has, if anything, my sympathy, but it seems
+ to me he need not have killed that child." His companion was about to
+ speak. Butler stopped him. "Now, don't ever ask me such a silly question
+ as that," he said. "What?" asked his friend. "You were about to ask me if
+ I did that deed," replied Butler, "and you know perfectly well that,
+ guilty or innocent, that question would only be answered in one way." "I
+ was about to ask nothing of the kind," said the other, "for you have
+ already told me that you were innocent." "Good!" said Butler, "then let
+ that be the end of the subject, and never refer to it again, except,
+ perhaps, in your own mind, when you can, if you like, remember that I said
+ the killing of the child was unnecessary and cruel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having developed to the jury his theory of why the crime was committed,
+ Butler told them that, as far as he was concerned, there were four points
+ against him on which the Crown relied to prove his guilt. Firstly, there
+ was the fact of his being in the neighbourhood of the crime on the Sunday
+ morning; that, he said, applied to scores of other people besides himself.
+ Then there was his alleged disturbed appearance and guilty demeanour. The
+ evidence of that was, he contended, doubtful in any case, and referable to
+ another cause; as also his leaving Dunedin in the way and at the time he
+ did. He scouted the idea that murderers are compelled by some invisible
+ force to betray their guilt. "The doings of men," he urged, "and their
+ success are regulated by the amount of judgment that they possess, and,
+ without impugning or denying the existence of Providence, I say this is a
+ law that holds good in all cases, whether for evil or good. Murderers, if
+ they have the sense and ability and discretion to cover up their crime,
+ will escape, do escape, and have escaped. Many people, when they have
+ gravely shaken their heads and said 'Murder will out,' consider they have
+ done a great deal and gone a long way towards settling the question. Well,
+ this, like many other stock formulas of Old World wisdom, is not true. How
+ many murders are there that the world has never heard of, and never will?
+ How many a murdered man, for instance, lies among the gum-trees of
+ Victoria, or in the old abandoned mining-shafts on the diggings, who is
+ missed by nobody, perhaps, but a pining wife at home, or helpless
+ children, or an old mother? But who were their murderers? Where are they?
+ God knows, perhaps, but nobody else, and nobody ever will." The fact, he
+ said, that he was alleged to have walked up Cumberland Street on the
+ Sunday morning and looked in the direction of the Dewars' house was,
+ unless the causes of superstition and a vague and incomplete reasoning
+ were to be accepted as proof, evidence rather of his innocence than his
+ guilt. He had removed the soles of his boots, he said, in order to ease
+ his feet in walking; the outer soles had become worn and ragged, and in
+ lumps under his feet. He denied that he had told Bain, the detective, that
+ he would break out as a desperate tiger let loose on the community; what
+ he had said was that he was tired of living the life of a prairie dog or a
+ tiger in the jungle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Butler was more successful when he came to deal with the bloodstains on
+ his clothes. These, he said, were caused by the blood from the scratches
+ on his hands, which had been observed at the time of his arrest. The
+ doctors had rejected this theory, and said that the spots of blood had
+ been impelled from the axe or from the heads of the victims as the
+ murderer struck the fatal blow. Butler put on the clothes in court, and
+ was successful in showing that the position and appearance of certain of
+ the blood spots was not compatible with such a theory. "I think," he said,
+ "I am fairly warranted in saying that the evidence of these gentlemen is,
+ not to put too fine a point on it, worth just nothing at all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Butler's concluding words to the jury were brief but emphatic: "I stand in
+ a terrible position. So do you. See that in your way of disposing of me
+ you deliver yourselves of your responsibilities."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the exercise of his forbearance towards an undefended prisoner, Mr.
+ Haggitt did not address the jury for the Crown. At four o'clock the judge
+ commenced his summing-up. Mr. Justice Williams impressed on the jury that
+ they must be satisfied, before they could convict the prisoner, that the
+ circumstances of the crime and the prisoner's conduct were inconsistent
+ with any other reasonable hypothesis than his guilt. There was little or
+ no evidence that robbery was the motive of the crime. The circumstance of
+ the prisoner being out all Saturday night and in the neighbourhood of the
+ crime on Sunday morning only amounted to the fact that he had an
+ opportunity shared by a great number of other persons of committing the
+ murder. The evidence of his agitation and demeanour at the time of his
+ arrest must be accepted with caution. The evidence of the blood spots was
+ of crucial importance; there was nothing save this to connect him directly
+ with the crime. The jury must be satisfied that the blood on the clothes
+ corresponded with the blood marks which, in all probability, would be
+ found on the person who committed the murder. In regard to the medical
+ testimony some caution must be exercised. Where medical gentlemen had made
+ observations, seen with their own eyes, the direct inference might be
+ highly trustworthy, but, when they proceeded to draw further inferences,
+ they might be in danger of looking at facts through the spectacles of
+ theory; "we know that people do that in other things besides science&mdash;politics,
+ religion, and so forth." Taking the Crown evidence, at its strongest,
+ there was a missing link; did the evidence of the bloodstains supply it?
+ These bloodstains were almost invisible. Could a person be reasonably
+ asked to explain how they came where they did? Could they be accounted for
+ in no other reasonable way than that the clothes had been worn by the
+ murderer of the Dewars?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of a summing-up distinctly favourable to the prisoner, the jury
+ were out three hours. According to one account of their proceedings, told
+ to the writer, there was at first a majority of the jurymen in favour of
+ conviction. But it was Saturday night; if they could not come to a
+ decision they were in danger of being locked up over Sunday. For this
+ reason the gentleman who held an obstinate and unshaken belief that the
+ crime was the work of a homicidal maniac found an unexpected ally in a
+ prominent member of a church choir who was down to sing a solo in his
+ church on Sunday, and was anxious not to lose such an opportunity for
+ distinction. Whatever the cause, after three hours' deliberation the jury
+ returned a verdict of "Not Guilty." Later in the Session Butler pleaded
+ guilty to the burglary at Mr. Stamper's house, and was sentenced to
+ eighteen years' imprisonment. The severity of this sentence was not, the
+ judge said, intended to mark the strong suspicion under which Butler
+ laboured of being a murderer as well as a burglar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ends of justice had been served by Butler's acquittal. But in the
+ light of after events, it is perhaps unfortunate that the jury did not
+ stretch a point and so save the life of Mr. Munday of Toowong. Butler
+ underwent his term of imprisonment in Littleton Jail. There his reputation
+ was most unenviable. He is described by a fellow prisoner as ill-tempered,
+ malicious, destructive, but cowardly and treacherous. He seems to have
+ done little or no work; he looked after the choir and the library, but was
+ not above breaking up the one and smashing the other, if the fit seized
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III HIS DECLINE AND FALL
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1896 Butler was released from prison. The news of his release was
+ described as falling like a bombshell among the peaceful inhabitants of
+ Dunedin. In the colony of Victoria, where Butler had commenced his career,
+ it was received with an apprehension that was justified by subsequent
+ events. It was believed that on his release the New Zealand authorities
+ had shipped Butler off to Rio. But it was not long before he made his way
+ once more to Australia. From the moment of his arrival in Melbourne he was
+ shadowed by the police. One or two mysterious occurrences soon led to his
+ arrest. On June 5 he was sentenced to twelve months' imprisonment under
+ the Criminal Influx Act, which makes it a penal offence for any convict to
+ enter Victoria for three years after his release from prison. Not content
+ with this, the authorities determined to put Butler on trial on two
+ charges of burglary and one of highway robbery, committed since his return
+ to the colony. To one charge of burglary, that of breaking into a
+ hairdresser's shop and stealing a wig, some razors and a little money,
+ Butler pleaded guilty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the charge of highway robbery, which bore a singular resemblance to
+ the final catastrophe in Queensland, he resisted to the utmost, and showed
+ that his experience in the Supreme Court at Dunedin had not been lost on
+ him. At half-past six one evening in a suburb of Melbourne an elderly
+ gentleman found himself confronted by a bearded man, wearing a long
+ overcoat and a boxer hat and flourishing a revolver, who told him abruptly
+ to "turn out his pockets." The old man did ashe was told. The robber then
+ asked for his watch and chain, saying "Business must be done." The old
+ gentleman mildly urged that this was a dangerous business. On being
+ assured that the watch was a gold one, the robber appeared willing to risk
+ the danger, and departed thoroughly satisfied. The old gentleman
+ afterwards identified Butler as the man who had taken his watch. Another
+ elderly man swore that he had seen Butler at the time of the robbery in
+ the possession of a fine gold watch, which he said had been sent him from
+ home. But the watch had not been found in Butler's possession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On June 18 Butler was put on his trial in the Melbourne Criminal Court
+ before Mr. Justice Holroyd, charged with robbery under arms. His
+ appearance in the dock aroused very considerable interest. "It was the
+ general verdict," wrote one newspaper, "that his intellectual head and
+ forehead compared not unfavourably with those of the judge." He was
+ decently dressed and wore pince-nez, which he used in the best
+ professional manner as he referred to the various documents that lay in
+ front of him. He went into the witness-box and stated that the evening of
+ the crime he had spent according to his custom in the Public Library.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For an hour and a half he addressed the jury. He disputed the possibility
+ of his identification by his alleged victim. He was "an old gentleman of
+ sedentary pursuits and not cast in the heroic mould." Such a man would be
+ naturally alarmed and confused at meeting suddenly an armed robber. Now,
+ under these circumstances, could his recognition of a man whose face was
+ hidden by a beard, his head by a boxer hat, and his body by a long
+ overcoat, be considered trustworthy? And such recognition occurring in the
+ course of a chance encounter in the darkness, that fruitful mother of
+ error? The elderly gentleman had described his moustache as a slight one,
+ but the jury could see that it was full and overhanging. He complained
+ that he had been put up for identification singly, not with other men,
+ according to the usual custom; the police had said to the prosecutor: "We
+ have here a man that we think robbed you, and, if he is not the man, we
+ shall be disappointed," to which the prosecutor had replied: "Yes, and if
+ he is not the man, I shall be disappointed too." For the elderly person
+ who had stated that he had seen a gold watch in Butler's possession the
+ latter had nothing but scorn. He was a "lean and slippered pantaloon in
+ Shakespeare's last stage"; and he, Butler, would have been a lunatic to
+ have confided in such a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jury acquitted Butler, adding as a rider to their verdict that there
+ was not sufficient evidence of identification. The third charge against
+ Butler was not proceeded with. He was put up to receive sentence for the
+ burglary at the hairdresser's shop. Butler handed to the judge a written
+ statement which Mr. Justice Holroyd described as a narrative that might
+ have been taken from those sensational newspapers written for
+ nursery-maids, and from which, he said, he could not find that Butler had
+ ever done one good thing in the whole course of his life. Of that life of
+ fifty years Butler had spent thirty-five in prison. The judge expressed
+ his regret that a man of Butler's knowledge, information, vanity, and
+ utter recklessness of what evil will do, could not be put away somewhere
+ for the rest of his life, and sentenced him to fifteen years' imprisonment
+ with hard labour. "An iniquitous and brutal sentence!" exclaimed the
+ prisoner. After a brief altercation with the judge, who said that he could
+ hardly express the scorn he felt for such a man, Butler was removed. The
+ judge subsequently reduced the sentence to one of ten years. Chance or
+ destiny would seem implacable in their pursuit of Mr. William Munday of
+ Toowong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Butler after his trial admitted that it was he who had robbed the old
+ gentleman of his watch, and described to the police the house in which it
+ was hidden. When the police went there to search they found that the house
+ had been pulled down, but among the debris they discovered a brown paper
+ parcel containing the old gentleman's gold watch and chain, a
+ five-chambered revolver, a keen-edged butcher's knife, and a mask.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Butler served his term of imprisonment in Victoria, "an unmitigated
+ nuisance" to his custodians. On his release in 1904, he made, as in
+ Dunedin, an attempt to earn a living by his pen. He contributed some
+ articles to a Melbourne evening paper on the inconveniences of prison
+ discipline, but he was quite unfitted for any sustained effort as a
+ journalist. According to his own account, with the little money he had
+ left he made his way to Sydney, thence to Brisbane. He was half-starved,
+ bewildered, despairing; in his own words, "if a psychological camera could
+ have been turned on me it would have shown me like a bird fascinated by a
+ serpent, fascinated and bewildered by the fate in front, behind, and
+ around me." Months of suffering and privation passed, months of tramping
+ hundreds of miles with occasional breakdowns, months of hunger and
+ sickness; "my actions had become those of a fool; my mind and will had
+ become a remnant guided or misguided by unreasoning impulse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was under the influence of such an impulse that on March 23 Butler had
+ met and shot Mr. Munday at Toowong. On May 24 he was arraigned at Brisbane
+ before the Supreme Court of Queensland. But the Butler who stood in the
+ dock of the Brisbane Criminal Court was very different from the Butler who
+ had successfully defended himself at Dunedin and Melbourne. The spirit had
+ gone out of him; it was rather as a suppliant, represented by counsel,
+ that he faced the charge of murder. His attitude was one of humble and
+ appropriate penitence. In a weak and nervous voice he told the story of
+ his hardships since his release from his Victorian prison; he would only
+ urge that the shooting of Mr. Munday was accidental, caused by Munday
+ picking up a stone and attacking him. When about to be sentenced to death
+ he expressed great sorrow and contrition for his crime, for the poor wife
+ and children of his unfortunate victim. His life, he said, was a poor
+ thing, but he would gladly give it fifty times over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sentence of death was confirmed by the Executive on June 30. To a
+ Freethought advocate who visited him shortly before his execution, Butler
+ wrote a final confession of faith: "I shall have to find my way across the
+ harbour bar without the aid of any pilot. In these matters I have for many
+ years carried an exempt flag, and, as it has not been carried through
+ caprice or ignorance, I am compelled to carry it to the last. There is an
+ impassable bar of what I honestly believe to be the inexorable logic of
+ philosophy and facts, history and experience of the nature of the world,
+ the human race and myself, between me and the views of the communion of
+ any religious organisation. So instead of the 'depart Christian soul' of
+ the priest, I only hope for the comfort and satisfaction of the last
+ friendly good-bye of any who cares to give it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this positive affirmation of unbelief Butler wilted somewhat at the
+ approach of death. The day before his execution he spent half an hour
+ playing hymns on the church organ in the prison; and on the scaffold,
+ where his agitation rendered him almost speechless, he expressed his
+ sorrow for what he had done, and the hope that, if there were a heaven,
+ mercy would be shown him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ M. Derues
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The last word on Derues has been said by M. Georges Claretie in his
+ excellent monograph, "Derues L'Empoisonneur," Paris. 1907. There is a full
+ account of the case in Vol. V. of Fouquier, "Causes Celebres."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I THE CLIMBING LITTLE GROCER
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Etienne Saint-Faust de Lamotte, a provincial nobleman of ancient
+ lineage and moderate health, ex-equerry to the King, desired in the year
+ 1774 to dispose of a property in the country, the estate of Buisson-Souef
+ near Villeneuve-le-Roi, which he had purchased some ten years before out
+ of money acquired by a prudent marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With an eye to the main chance M. de Lamotte had in 1760 ran away with the
+ daughter of a wealthy citizen of Rheims, who was then staying with her
+ sister in Paris. They lived together in the country for some time, and a
+ son was born to them, whom the father legitimised by subsequently marrying
+ the mother. For a few years M. and Mme. de Lamotte dwelt happily together
+ at Buisson-Souef. But as their boy grew up they became anxious to leave
+ the country and return to Paris, where M. de Lamotte hoped to be able to
+ obtain for his son some position about the Court of Louis XVI. And so it
+ was that in May, 1775, M. de Lamotte gave a power of attorney to his wife
+ in order that she might go to Paris and negotiate for the sale of
+ Buisson-Souef. The legal side of the transaction was placed in the hands
+ of one Jolly, a proctor at the Chatelet in Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the proctor Jolly had a client with a great desire to acquire a place
+ in the country, M. Derues de Cyrano de Bury, lord of Candeville, Herchies,
+ and other places. Here was the very man to comply with the requirements of
+ the de Lamottes, and such a pleasing, ready, accommodating gentleman into
+ the bargain! Very delicate to all appearances, strangely pale, slight,
+ fragile in build, with his beardless chin and feminine cast of feature,
+ there was something cat-like in the soft insinuating smile of this
+ seemingly most amiable, candid and pious of men. Always cheerful and
+ optimistic, it was quite a pleasure to do business with M. Derues de
+ Cyrano de Bury. The de Lamottes after one or two interviews were delighted
+ with their prospective purchaser. Everything was speedily settled. M.
+ Derues and his wife, a lady belonging to the distinguished family of
+ Nicolai, visited Buisson-Souef. They were enchanted with what they saw,
+ and their hosts were hardly less enchanted with their visitors. By the end
+ of December, 1775, the purchase was concluded. M. Derues was to give
+ 130,000 livres (about L20,000) for the estate, the payments to be made by
+ instalments, the first of 12,000 livres to be paid on the actual signing
+ of the contract of sale, which, it was agreed, was to be concluded not
+ later than the first of June, 1776. In the meantime, as an earnest of good
+ faith, M. Derues gave Mme. de Lamotte a bill for 4,200 livres to fall due
+ on April 1, 1776.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What could be more satisfactory? That M. Derues was a substantial person
+ there could be no doubt. Through his wife he was entitled to a sum of
+ 250,000 livres as her share of the property of a wealthy kinsman, one
+ Despeignes-Duplessis, a country gentleman, who some four years before had
+ been found murdered in his house under mysterious circumstances. The
+ liquidation of the Duplessis inheritance, as soon as the law's delay could
+ be overcome, would place the Derues in a position of affluence fitting a
+ Cyrano de Bury and a Nicolai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this time M. Derues was in reality far from affluent. In point of fact
+ he was insolvent. Nor was his lineage, nor that of his wife, in any way
+ distinguished. He had no right to call himself de Cyrano de Bury or Lord
+ of Candeville. His wife's name was Nicolais, not Nicolai&mdash;a very
+ important difference from the genealogical point of view. The Duplessis
+ inheritance, though certainly existent, would seem to have had little more
+ chance of realisation than the mythical Crawford millions of Madame
+ Humbert. And yet, crippled with debt, without a penny in the world, this
+ daring grocer of the Rue Beaubourg, for such was M. Derues' present
+ condition in life, could cheerfully and confidently engage in a
+ transaction as considerable as the purchase of a large estate for 130,000
+ livres! The origin of so enterprising a gentleman is worthy of attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Antoine Francois Derues was born at Chartres in 1744; his father was a
+ corn merchant. His parents died when he was three years old. For some time
+ after his birth he was assumed to be a girl; it was not until he was
+ twelve years old that an operation determined his sex to be masculine.
+ Apprenticed by his relatives to a grocer, Derues succeeded so well in the
+ business that he was able in 1770 to set up on his own account in Paris,
+ and in 1772 he married. Among the grocer's many friends and acquaintances
+ this marriage created something of a sensation, for Derues let it be known
+ that the lady of his choice was of noble birth and an heiress. The first
+ statement was untrue. The lady was one Marie Louise Nicolais, daughter of
+ a non-commissioned artillery officer, turned coachbuilder. But by
+ suppressing the S at the end of her name, which Derues was careful also to
+ erase in his marriage contract, the ambitious grocer was able to describe
+ his wife as connected with the noble house of Nicolai, one of the most
+ distinguished of the great French families.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was more truth in the statement that Mme. Derues was an heiress. A
+ kinsman of her mother, Beraud by name, had become the heir to a certain
+ Marquis Desprez. Beraud was the son of a small merchant. His mother had
+ married a second time, the husband being the Marquis Desprez, and through
+ her Beraud had inherited the Marquis' property. According to the custom of
+ the time, Beraud, on coming into his inheritance, took a title from one of
+ his estates and called himself thenceforth the lord of
+ Despeignes-Duplessis. A rude, solitary, brutal man, devoted to sport, he
+ lived alone in his castle of Candeville, hated by his neighbours, a terror
+ to poachers. One day he was found lying dead in his bedroom; he had been
+ shot in the chest; the assassin had escaped through an open window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mystery of Beraud's murder was never solved. His estate of 200,000
+ livres was divided among three cousins, of whom the mother of Mme. Derues
+ was one. Mme. Derues herself was entitled to a third of his mother's share
+ of the estate, that is, one-ninth of the whole. But in 1775 Derues
+ acquired the rest of the mother's share on condition that he paid her an
+ annual income of 1,200 livres. Thus on the liquidation of the Duplessis
+ inheritance Mme. Derues would be entitled nominally to some 66,500 livres,
+ about L11,000 in English money. But five years had passed since the death
+ of Despeignes-Duplessis, and the estate was still in the slow process of
+ legal settlement. If Derues were to receive the full third of the
+ Duplessis inheritance&mdash;a very unlikely supposition after four years
+ of liquidation&mdash;66,000 livres would not suffice to pay his ordinary
+ debts quite apart from the purchase money of Buisson-Souef. His financial
+ condition was in the last degree critical. Not content with the modest
+ calling of a grocer, Derues had turned money-lender, a money-lender to
+ spendthrift and embarrassed noblemen. Derues dearly loved a lord; he
+ wanted to become one himself; it delighted him to receive dukes and
+ marquises at the Rue Beaubourg, even if they came there with the avowed
+ object of raising the wind. The smiling grocer, in his everlasting bonnet
+ and flowered dressing-gown a la J. J. Rousseau, was ever ready to oblige
+ the needy scion of a noble house. What he borrowed at moderate interest
+ from his creditors he lent at enhanced interest to the quality. Duns and
+ bailiffs jostled the dukes and marquises whose presence at the Rue
+ Beaubourg so impressed the wondering neighbours of the facile grocer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This aristocratic money-lending proved a hopeless trade; it only plunged
+ Derues deeper and deeper into the mire of financial disaster. The noblemen
+ either forgot to pay while they were alive, or on their death were found
+ to be insolvent. Derues was driven to ordering goods and merchandise on
+ credit, and selling them at a lower price for ready money. Victims of this
+ treatment began to press him seriously for their money or their goods.
+ Desperately he continued to fence them off with the long expected windfall
+ of the Duplessis inheritance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paris was getting too hot for him. Gay and irrepressible as he was, the
+ strain was severe. If he could only find some retreat in the country where
+ he might enjoy at once refuge from his creditors and the rank and
+ consequence of a country gentleman! Nothing&mdash;no fear, no
+ disappointment, no disaster&mdash;could check the little grocer's ardent
+ and overmastering desire to be a gentleman indeed, a landed proprietor, a
+ lord or something or other. At the beginning of 1775 he had purchased a
+ place near Rueil from a retired coffeehouse-keeper, paying 1,000 livres on
+ account, but the non-payment of the rest of the purchase-money had
+ resulted in the annulment of the contract. Undefeated, Derues only
+ determined to fly the higher. Having failed to pay 9,000 livres for a
+ modest estate near Rueil, he had no hesitation in pledging himself to pay
+ 130,000 livres for the lordly domain of Buisson-Souef. So great were his
+ pride and joy on the conclusion of the latter bargain that he amused
+ himself by rehearsing on paper his future style and title: "Antoine
+ Francois de Cyrano Derues de Bury, Seigneur de Buisson-Souef et Valle
+ Profonde." He is worthy of Thackeray's pen, this little grocer-snob, with
+ his grand and ruinous acquaintance with the noble and the great, his
+ spurious titles, his unwearied climbing of the social ladder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The confiding, if willing, dupe of aristocratic impecuniosity, Derues was
+ a past master of the art of duping others. From the moment of the purchase
+ of Buisson-Souef all his art was employed in cajoling the trusting and
+ simple de Lamottes. Legally Buisson-Souef was his from the signing of the
+ agreement in December, 1775. His first payment was due in April, 1776.
+ Instead of making it, Derues went down to Buisson-Souef with his little
+ girl, and stayed there as the guests of the de Lamottes for six months.
+ His good humour and piety won all hearts. The village priest especially
+ derived great satisfaction from the society of so devout a companion. He
+ entertained his good friends, the merry little man, by dressing up as a
+ woman, a role his smooth face and effeminate features well fitted him to
+ play. If business were alluded to, the merry gentleman railed at the delay
+ and chicanery of lawyers; it was that alone that postponed the liquidation
+ of the Duplessis inheritance; as soon as the lawyers could be got rid of,
+ the purchase-money of his new estate would be promptly paid up. But as
+ time went on and no payment was forthcoming the de Lamottes began to feel
+ a little uneasy. As soon as Derues had departed in November M. de Lamotte
+ decided to send his wife to Paris to make further inquiries and, if
+ possible, bring their purchaser up to the scratch. Mme. de Lamotte had
+ developed into a stout, indolent woman, of the Mrs. Bloss type, fond of
+ staying in bed and taking heavy meals. Her son, a fat, lethargic youth of
+ fourteen, accompanied his mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On hearing of Mme. de Lamotte's contemplated visit to Paris, Derues was
+ filled with alarm. If she were living free and independent in Paris she
+ might find out the truth about the real state of his affairs, and then
+ good-bye to Buisson-Souef and landed gentility! No, if Mme. de Lamotte
+ were to come to Paris, she must come as the guest of the Derues, a
+ pleasant return for the hospitality accorded to the grocer at
+ Buisson-Souef. The invitation was given and readily accepted; M. de
+ Lamotte still had enough confidence in and liking for the Derues to be
+ glad of the opportunity of placing his wife under their roof. And so it
+ was that on December 16, 1776, Mme. de Lamotte arrived at Paris and took
+ up her abode at the house of the Derues in the Rue Beaubourg Her son she
+ placed at a private school in a neighbouring street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Derues there was now one pressing and immediate problem to be solved&mdash;how
+ to keep Buisson-Souef as his own without paying for it? To one less
+ sanguine, less daring, less impudent and desperate in his need, the
+ problem would have appeared insoluble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But that was by no means the view of the cheery and resourceful grocer. He
+ had a solution ready, well thought out and bearing to his mind the stamp
+ of probability. He would make a fictitious payment of the purchase-money
+ to Mme. de Lamotte. She would then disappear, taking her son with her. Her
+ indiscretion in having been the mistress of de Lamotte before she became
+ his wife, would lend colour to his story that she had gone off with a
+ former lover, taking with her the money which Derues had paid her for
+ Buisson-Souef. He would then produce the necessary documents proving the
+ payment of the purchase-money, and Buisson-Souef would be his for good and
+ all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prime necessity to the success of this plan was the disappearance,
+ willing or unwilling, of Mme. de Lamotte and her son. The former had
+ settled down quite comfortably beneath the hospitable roof of the Derues,
+ and under the soothing influence of her host showed little vigour in
+ pressing him for the money due to herself and her husband. She had already
+ spent a month in quietly enjoying Paris and the society of her friends
+ when, towards the end of January, 1770, her health and that of her son
+ began to fail. Mme. de Lamotte was seized with sickness and internal
+ trouble. Though Derues wrote to her husband that his wife was well and
+ their business was on the point of conclusion, by the 30th of January Mme.
+ de Lamotte had taken to her bed, nursed and physicked by the ready Derues.
+ On the 31st the servant at the Rue Beaubourg was told that she could go to
+ her home at Montrouge, whither Derues had previously sent his two
+ children. Mme. Derues, who was in an interesting condition, was sent out
+ for an hour by her husband to do some shopping. Derues was alone with his
+ patient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the evening a friend, one Bertin, came to dine with Derues. Bertin was
+ a short, hustling, credulous, breathless gentleman, always in a hurry,
+ with a great belief in the abilities of M. Derues. He found the little man
+ in excellent spirits. Bertin asked if he could see Mme. de Lamotte. Mme.
+ Derues said that that was impossible, but that her husband had given her
+ some medicine which was working splendidly. The young de Lamotte called to
+ see his mother. Derues took him into her room; in the dim light the boy
+ saw her sleeping, and crept out quietly for fear of disturbing her. The
+ Derues and their friends sat down to dinner. Derues kept jumping up and
+ running into the sick room, from which a horrible smell began to pervade
+ the house. But Derues was radiant at the success of his medicine. "Was
+ there ever such a nurse as I am?" he exclaimed. Bertin remarked that he
+ thought it was a woman's and not a man's place to nurse a lady under such
+ distressing circumstances. Derues protested that it was an occupation he
+ had always liked. Next day, February 1, the servant was still at
+ Montrouge; Mme. Derues was again sent out shopping; again Derues was alone
+ with his patient. But she was a patient no longer; she had become a
+ corpse. The highly successful medicine administered to the poor lady by
+ her jolly and assiduous nurse had indeed worked wonders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Derues had bought a large leather trunk. It is possible that to Derues
+ belongs the distinction of being the first murderer to put that harmless
+ and necessary article of travel to a criminal use. He was engaged in his
+ preparations for coffining Mme. de Lamotte, when a female creditor knocked
+ insistently at the door. She would take no denial. Clad in his bonnet and
+ gown, Derues was compelled to admit her. She saw the large trunk, and
+ suspected a bolt on the part of her creditor. Derues reassured her; a
+ lady, he said, who had been stopping with them was returning to the
+ country. The creditor departed. Later in the day Derues came out of the
+ house and summoned some porters. With their help the heavy trunk was taken
+ to the house of a sculptor, a friend of Derues, who agreed to keep it in
+ his studio until Derues could take it down to his place in the country.
+ Bertin came in to dinner again that evening, and also the young de
+ Lamotte. Derues was gayer than ever, laughing and joking with his guests.
+ He told the boy that his mother had quite recovered and gone to Versailles
+ to see about finding him some post at the Court. "We'll go and see her
+ there in a day or two," he said, "I'll let you know when."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the following day a smartly dressed, dapper, but very pale little
+ gentleman, giving the name of Ducoudray, hired a vacant cellar in a house
+ in the Rue de la Mortellerie. He had, he said, some Spanish wine he wanted
+ to store there, and three or four days later M. Ducoudray deposited in
+ this cellar a large grey trunk. A few days after he employed a man to dig
+ a large hole in the floor of the cellar, giving as his reason for such a
+ proceeding that "there was no way of keeping wine like burying it." While
+ the man worked at the job, his genial employer beguiled his labours with
+ merry quips and tales, which he illustrated with delightful mimicry. The
+ hole dug, the man was sent about his business. "I will bury the wine
+ myself," said his employer, and on one or two occasions M. Ducoudray was
+ seen by persons living in the house going in and out of his cellar, a
+ lighted candle in his hand. One day the pale little gentleman was observed
+ leaving the cellar, accompanied by a porter carrying a large trunk, and
+ after that the dwellers in the Rue de la Mortellerie saw the pale little
+ gentleman no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days later M. Derues sent down to his place at Buisson-Souef a large
+ trunk filled with china. It was received there by M. de Lamotte. Little
+ did the trusting gentleman guess that it was in this very trunk that the
+ body of his dear wife had been conveyed to its last resting place in the
+ cellar of M. Ducoudray in the Rue de la Mortellerie. Nor had M.
+ Mesvrel-Desvergers, importunate creditor of M. Derues, guessed the
+ contents of the large trunk that he had met his debtor one day early in
+ February conveying through the streets of Paris. Creditors were always
+ interrupting Derues at inconvenient moments. M. Mesvrel-Desvergers had
+ tapped Derues on the shoulder, reminded him forcibly of his liability
+ towards him, and spoken darkly of possible imprisonment. Derues pointed to
+ the trunk. It contained, he said, a sample of wine; he was going to order
+ some more of it, and he would then be in a position to pay his debt. But
+ the creditor, still doubting, had M. Derues followed, and ascertained that
+ he had deposited his sample of wine at a house in the Rue de la
+ Mortellerie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Wednesday, February 12, a M. Beaupre of Commercy arrived at Versailles
+ with his nephew, a fat boy, in reality some fourteen years of age, but
+ given out as older. They hired a room at the house of a cooper named
+ Pecquet. M. Beaupre was a very pale little gentleman, who seemed in
+ excellent spirits, in spite of the fact that his nephew was clearly
+ anything but well. Indeed, so sick and ailing did he appear to be that
+ Mme. Pecquet suggested that his uncle should call in a doctor. But M.
+ Beaupre said that that was quite unnecessary; he had no faith in doctors;
+ he would give the boy a good purge. His illness was due, he said, to a
+ venereal disorder and the drugs which he had been taking in order to cure
+ it; it was a priest the boy needed rather than a doctor. On the Thursday
+ and Friday the boy's condition showed little improvement; the vomiting
+ continued. But on Saturday M. Beaupre declared himself as highly delighted
+ with the success of his medicine. The same night the boy was dead. The
+ priest, urgently sent for by his devout uncle, arrived to find a corpse.
+ On the following day "Louis Anotine Beaupre, aged twenty-two and a half,"
+ was buried at Versailles, his pious uncle leaving with the priest six
+ livres to pay for masses for the repose of his erring nephew's soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same evening M. Derues who, according to his own account, had left
+ Paris with the young de Lamotte in order to take the boy to his mother in
+ Versailles, returned home to the Rue Beaubourg. As usual, Bertin dropped
+ in to dinner. He found his host full of merriment, singing in the
+ lightness of his heart. Indeed, he had reason to be pleased, for at last,
+ he told his wife and his friend, Buisson-Souef was his. He had seen Mme.
+ de Lamotte at Versailles and paid her the full purchase-money in good,
+ sounding gold. And, best joke of all, Mme. de Lamotte had no sooner
+ settled the business than she had gone off with a former lover, her son
+ and her money, and would in all probability never be heard of again. The
+ gay gentleman laughingly reminded his hearers that such an escapade on the
+ part of Mme. de Lamotte was hardly to be wondered at, when they
+ recollected that her son had been born out of wedlock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To all appearances Mme. de Lamotte had undoubtedly concluded the sale of
+ Buisson-Souef to Derues and received the price of it before disappearing
+ with her lover. Derues had in his possession a deed of sale signed by Mme.
+ de Lamotte and acknowledging the payment to her by Derues of 100,000
+ livres, which he had borrowed for that purpose from an advocate of the
+ name of Duclos. As a fact the loan from Duclos to Derues was fictitious. A
+ legal document proving the loan had been drawn up, but the cash which the
+ notary had demanded to see before executing the document had been borrowed
+ for a few hours. Duclos, a provincial advocate, had acted in good faith,
+ in having been represented to him that such fictitious transactions were
+ frequently used in Paris for the purpose of getting over some temporary
+ financial difficulty. On the 15th of February the deed of the sale of
+ Buisson-Souef had been brought by a woman to the office of a scrivener
+ employed by Derues; it was already signed, but the woman asked that
+ certain blanks should be filled in and that the document should be dated.
+ She was told that the date should be that of the day on which the parties
+ had signed it. She gave it as February 12. A few days later Derues called
+ at the office and was told of the lady's visit. "Ah!" he said, "it was
+ Mme. de Lamotte herself, the lady who sold me the estate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime Derues, through his bustling and ubiquitous friend Bertin,
+ took good care that the story of Mme. de Lamotte's sale of Buisson-Souef
+ and subsequent elopement should be spread sedulously abroad. By Bertin it
+ was told to M. Jolly, the proctor in whose hands the de Lamottes had
+ placed the sale of Buisson-Souef. It was M. Jolly who had in the first
+ instance recommended to them his client Derues as a possible purchaser.
+ The proctor, who knew Mme. de Lamotte to be a woman devoted to her husband
+ and her home, was astonished to hear of her infidelity, more especially as
+ the story told by Derues represented her as saying in very coarse terms
+ how little she cared for her husband's honour. He was surprised, too, that
+ she should not have consulted him about the conclusion of the business
+ with Derues, and that Derues himself should have been able to find so
+ considerable a sum of money as 100,000 livres. But, said M. Jolly, if he
+ were satisfied that Mme. de Lamotte had taken away the money with her,
+ then he would deliver up to Derues the power of attorney which M. de
+ Lamotte had left with him in 1775, giving his wife authority to carry out
+ the sale of Buisson-Souef. Mme. de Lamotte, being a married woman, the
+ sale of the property to Derues would be legally invalid if the husband's
+ power of attorney were not in the hands of the purchaser.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II THE GAME OF BLUFF
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Derues, on the eve of victory, the statement of Jolly in regard to the
+ power of attorney was a serious reverse. He had never thought of such an
+ instrument, or he would have persuaded Mme. de Lamotte to have gotten
+ permission of it before her disappearance. Now he must try to get it from
+ Jolly himself. On the 26th of February he once again raised from a
+ friendly notary a few thousand livres on the Duplessis inheritance, and
+ deposited the deed of sale of Buisson-Souef as further security. His
+ pocket full of gold, he went straight to the office of Jolly. To the
+ surprise of the proctor Derues announced that he had come to pay him 200
+ livres which he owed him, and apologised for the delay. Taking the gold
+ coins from his pockets he filled his three-cornered hat with considerably
+ more than the sum due, and held it out invitingly to M. Jolly. Then he
+ proceeded to tell him of his dealings with Mme. de Lamotte. She had
+ offered, he said, to get the power of attorney for him, but he, trusting
+ in her good faith, had said that there was no occasion for hurry; and
+ then, faithless, ungrateful woman that she was, she had gone off with his
+ money and left him in the lurch. "But," he added, "I trust you absolutely,
+ M. Jolly, you have all my business in your hands, and I shall be a good
+ client in the future. You have the power of attorney&mdash;you will give
+ it to me?" and he rattled the coins in his hat. "I must have it," he went
+ on, "I must have it at any price at any price," and again the coins danced
+ in his hat, while his eyes looked knowingly at the proctor. M. Jolly saw
+ his meaning, and his surprise turned to indignation. He told Derues
+ bluntly that he did not believe his story, that until he was convinced of
+ its truth he would not part with the power of attorney, and showed the
+ confounded grocer the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Derues hastened home filled with wrath, and took counsel with his friend
+ Bertin. Bertin knew something of legal process; they would try whether the
+ law could not be invoked to compel Jolly to surrender the power of
+ attorney. Bertin went off to the Civil Lieutenant and applied for an order
+ to oblige M. Jolly to give up the document in question. An order was made
+ that Jolly must either surrender it into the hands of Derues or appear
+ before a referee and show cause why he should not comply with the order.
+ Jolly refused still to give it up or allow a copy of it to be made, and
+ agreed to appear before the referee to justify his action. In the meantime
+ Derues, greatly daring, had started for Buisson-Souef to try what "bluff"
+ could do in this serious crisis in his adventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Buisson-Souef poor M. de Lamotte waited, puzzled and distressed, for
+ news from his wife. On Saturday, 17th, the day after the return of Derues
+ from Versailles, he heard from Mme. Derues that his wife had left Paris
+ and gone with her son to Versailles. A second letter told him that she had
+ completed the sale of Buisson-Souef to Derues, and was still at Versailles
+ trying to obtain some post for the boy. On February 19 Mme. Derues wrote
+ again expressing surprise that M. de Lamotte had not had any letter from
+ his wife and asking if he had received some oysters which the Derues had
+ sent him. The distracted husband was in no mood for oysters. "Do not send
+ me oysters," he writes, "I am too ill with worry. I thank you for all your
+ kindness to my son. I love him better than myself, and God grant he will
+ be good and grateful." The only reply he received from the Derues was an
+ assurance that he would see his wife again in a few days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The days passed, but Mme. de Lamotte made no sign. About four o'clock on
+ the afternoon of February 28, Derues, accompanied by the parish priest of
+ Villeneuvele-Roi, presented himself before M. de Lamotte at Buisson-Souef.
+ For the moment M. de Lamotte was rejoiced to see the little man; at last
+ he would get news of his wife. But he was disappointed. Derues could tell
+ him only what he had been told already, that his wife had sold their
+ estate and gone away with the money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. de Lamotte was hardly convinced. How, he asked Derues, had he found the
+ 100,000 livres to buy Buisson-Souef, he who had not a halfpenny a short
+ time ago? Derues replied that he had borrowed it from a friend; that there
+ was no use in talking about it; the place was his now, his alone, and M.
+ de Lamotte had no longer a right to be there; he was very sorry, poor dear
+ gentleman, that his wife had gone off and left him without a shilling, but
+ personally he would always be a friend to him and would allow him 3,000
+ livres a year for the rest of his life. In the meantime, he said, he had
+ already sold forty casks of the last year's vintage, and would be obliged
+ if M. de Lamotte would see to their being sent off at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time the anger and indignation of M. de Lamotte blazed forth. He
+ told Derues that his story was a pack of lies, that he was still master at
+ Buisson-Souef, and not a bottle of wine should leave it. "You are
+ torturing me," he exclaimed, "I know something has happened to my wife and
+ child. I am coming to Paris myself, and if it is as I fear, you shall
+ answer for it with your head!" Derues, undismayed by this outburst,
+ re-asserted his ownership and departed in defiant mood, leaving on the
+ premises a butcher of the neighbourhood to look after his property.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But things were going ill with Derues. M. de Lamotte meant to show fight;
+ he would have powerful friends to back him; class against class, the
+ little grocer would be no match for him. It was immediate possession of
+ Buisson-Souef that Derues wanted, not lawsuits; they were expensive and
+ the results uncertain. He spoke freely to his friends of the difficulties
+ of the situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What could he do? The general opinion seemed to be that some fresh news of
+ Mme. de Lamotte&mdash;her reappearance, perhaps&mdash;would be the only
+ effective settlement of the dispute. He had made Mme. de Lamotte
+ disappear, why should he not make her reappear? He was not the man to
+ stick at trifles. His powers of female impersonation, with which he had
+ amused his good friends at Buisson-Souef, could now be turned to practical
+ account. On March 5 he left Paris again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the evening of March 7 a gentleman, M. Desportes of Paris, hired a room
+ at the Hotel Blanc in Lyons. On the following day he went out early in the
+ morning, leaving word that, should a lady whom he was expecting, call to
+ see him, she was to be shown up to his room. The same morning a gentleman,
+ resembling M. Desportes of Paris, bought two lady's dresses at a shop in
+ Lyons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same afternoon a lady dressed in black silk, with a hood well drawn
+ over her eyes, called at the office of M. Pourra, a notary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter was not greatly attracted by his visitor, whose nose struck him
+ as large for a woman. She said that she had spent her youth in Lyons, but
+ her accent was distinctly Parisian. The lady gave her name as Madame de
+ Lamotte, and asked for a power of attorney by which she could give her
+ husband the interest due to her on a sum of 30,000 livres, part of the
+ purchase-money of the estate of Buisson-Souef, which she had recently
+ sold. As Mme. de Lamotte represented herself as having been sent to M.
+ Pourra by a respectable merchant for whom he was in the habit of doing
+ business, he agreed to draw up the necessary document, accepting her
+ statement that she and her husband had separate estates. Mme. de Lamotte
+ said that she would not have time to wait until the power of attorney was
+ ready, and therefore asked M. Pourra to send it to the parish priest at
+ Villeneuvele-Roi; this he promised to do. Mme. de-Lamotte had called twice
+ during the day at the Hotel Blanc and asked for M. Desportes of Paris, but
+ he was not at home. While Derues, alias Desportes, alias Mme. de Lamotte,
+ was masquerading in Lyons, events had been moving swiftly and unfavourably
+ in Paris. Sick with misgiving and anxiety, M. de Lamotte had come there to
+ find, if possible, his wife and child. By a strange coincidence he
+ alighted at an inn in the Rue de la Mortellerie, only a few yards from the
+ wine-cellar in which the corpse of his ill-fated wife lay buried. He lost
+ no time in putting his case before the Lieutenant of Police, who placed
+ the affair in the hands of one of the magistrates of the Chatelet, then
+ the criminal court of Paris. At first the magistrate believed that the
+ case was one of fraud and that Mme. de Lamotte and her son were being kept
+ somewhere in concealment by Derues. But as he investigated the
+ circumstances further, the evidence of the illness of the mother and son,
+ the date of the disappearance of Mme. de Lamotte, and her reputed
+ signature to the deed of sale on February 12, led him to suspect that he
+ was dealing with a case of murder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Derues returned to Paris from Lyons, on March 11, he found that the
+ police had already visited the house and questioned his wife, and that he
+ himself was under close surveillance. A day or two later the advocate,
+ Duclos, revealed to the magistrate the fictitious character of the loan of
+ 100,000 livres, which Derues alleged that he had paid to Mme. de Lamotte
+ as the price of Buisson-Souef. When the new power of attorney purporting
+ to be signed by Mme. de Lamotte arrived from Lyons, and the signature was
+ compared with that on the deed of sale of Buisson-Souef to Derues, both
+ were pronounced to be forgeries. Derues was arrested and lodged in the
+ Prison of For l'Eveque.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The approach of danger had not dashed the spirits of the little man, nor
+ was he without partisans in Paris. Opinion in the city was divided as to
+ the truth of his account of Mme. de Lamotte's elopement. The nobility were
+ on the side of the injured de Lamotte, but the bourgeoisie accepted the
+ grocer's story and made merry over the deceived husband. Interrogated,
+ however, by the magistrate of the Chatelet, Derues' position became more
+ difficult. Under the stress of close questioning the flimsy fabric of his
+ financial statements fell to pieces like a house of cards. He had to admit
+ that he had never paid Mme. de Lamotte 100,000 livres; he had paid her
+ only 25,000 livres in gold; further pressed he said that the 25,000 livres
+ had been made up partly in gold, partly in bills; but where the gold had
+ come from, or on whom he had drawn the bills, he could not explain. Still
+ his position was not desperate; and he knew it. In the absence of Mme. de
+ Lamotte he could not be charged with fraud or forgery; and until her body
+ was discovered, it would be impossible to charge him with murder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A month passed; Mme. Derues, who had made a belated attempt to follow her
+ husband's example by impersonating Mme. de Lamotte in Paris, had been
+ arrested and imprisoned in the Grand Chatelet; when, on April 18,
+ information was received by the authorities which determined them to
+ explore the wine-cellar in the Rue de la Mortellerie. Whether the woman
+ who had let the cellar to Derues, or the creditor who had met him taking
+ his cask of wine there, had informed the investigating magistrate, seems
+ uncertain. In any case, the corpse of the unhappy lady was soon brought to
+ light and Derues confronted with it. At first he said that he failed to
+ recognise it as the remains of Mme. de Lamotte, but he soon abandoned that
+ rather impossible attitude. He admitted that he had given some harmless
+ medicine to Mme. de Lamotte during her illness, and then, to his horror,
+ one morning had awakened to find her dead. A fear lest her husband would
+ accuse him of having caused her death had led him to conceal the body, and
+ also that of her son who, he now confessed, had died and been buried by
+ him at Versailles. On April 23 the body of the young de Lamotte was
+ exhumed. Both bodies were examined by doctors, and they declared
+ themselves satisfied that mother and son had died "from a bitter and
+ corrosive poison administered in some kind of drink." What the poison was
+ they did not venture to state, but one of their number, in the light of
+ subsequent investigation, arrived at the conclusion that Derues had used
+ in both cases corrosive sublimate. How or where he had obtained the poison
+ was never discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Justice moved swiftly in Paris in those days. The preliminary
+ investigation in Derues' case was ended on April 28. Two days later his
+ trial commenced before the tribunal of the Chatelet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It lasted one day. The judges had before them the depositions taken by the
+ examining magistrate. Both Derues and his wife were interrogated. He
+ maintained that he had not poisoned either Mme. de Lamotte or her son; his
+ only crime, he said, lay in having concealed their deaths. Mme; Derues
+ said: "It is Buisson-Souef that has ruined us! I always told my husband
+ that he was mad to buy these properties&mdash;I am sure my husband is not
+ a poisoner&mdash;I trusted my husband and believed every word he said."
+ The court condemned Derues to death, but deferred judgment in his wife's
+ case on the ground of her pregnancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now the frail, cat-like little man had to brace himself to meet a
+ cruel and protracted execution. But sanguine to the last, he still hoped.
+ An appeal lay from the Chatelet to the Parliament of Paris. It was heard
+ on March 5. Derues was brought to the Palais de Justice. The room in which
+ he waited was filled with curious spectators, who marvelled at his
+ coolness and impudence. He recognised among them a Benedictine monk of his
+ acquaintance. "My case," he called out to him, "will soon be over; we'll
+ meet again yet and have a good time together." One visitor, wishing not to
+ appear too curious, pretended to be looking at a picture. "Come, sir,"
+ said Derues, "you haven't come here to see the pictures, but to see me.
+ Have a good look at me. Why study copies of nature when you can look at
+ such a remarkable original as I?" But there were to be no more days of
+ mirth and gaiety for the jesting grocer. His appeal was rejected, and he
+ was ordered for execution on the morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At six o'clock on the morning of May 6 Derues returned to the Palais de
+ Justice, there to submit to the superfluous torments of the question
+ ordinary and extraordinary. Though condemned to death, torture was to be
+ applied in the hope of wringing from the prisoner some sort of confession.
+ The doctors declared him too delicate to undergo the torture of pouring
+ cold water into him, which his illustrious predecessor, Mme. de
+ Brinvilliers, had suffered; he was to endure the less severe torture of
+ the "boot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His legs were tightly encased in wood, and wedges were then hammered in
+ until the flesh was crushed and the bones broken. But never a word of
+ confession was wrung from the suffering creature. Four wedges constituting
+ the ordinary torture he endured; at the third of the extraordinary he
+ fainted away. Put in the front of a fire the warmth restored him. Again he
+ was questioned, again he asserted his wife's innocence and his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At two o'clock in the afternoon Derues was recovered sufficiently to be
+ taken to Notre Dame. There, in front of the Cathedral, candle in hand and
+ rope round his neck, he made the amende honorable. But as the sentence was
+ read aloud to the people Derues reiterated the assertion of his innocence.
+ From Notre Dame he was taken to the Hotel de Ville. A condemned man had
+ the right to stop there on his way to execution, to make his will and last
+ dying declarations. Derues availed himself of this opportunity to protest
+ solemnly and emphatically his wife's absolute innocence of any complicity
+ in whatever he had done. "I want above all," he said, "to state that my
+ wife is entirely innocent. She knew nothing. I used fifty cunning devices
+ to hide everything from her. I am speaking nothing but the truth, she is
+ wholly innocent&mdash;as for me, I am about to die." His wife was allowed
+ to see him; he enjoined her to bring up their children in the fear of God
+ and love of duty, and to let them know how he had died. Once again, as he
+ took up the pen to sign the record of his last words, he re-asserted her
+ innocence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the last dreadful punishment the offending grocer was to be spared
+ nothing. For an aristocrat like Mme. de Brinvilliers beheading was
+ considered indignity enough. But Derues must go through with it all; he
+ must be broken on the wheel and burnt alive and his ashes scattered to the
+ four winds of heaven; there was to be no retentum for him, a clause
+ sometimes inserted in the sentence permitting the executioner to strangle
+ the broken victim before casting him on to the fire. He must endure all to
+ the utmost agony the law could inflict. It was six o'clock when Derues
+ arrived at the Place de Greve, crowded to its capacity, the square itself,
+ the windows of the houses; places had been bought at high prices, stools,
+ ladders, anything that would give a good view of the end of the now famous
+ poisoner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pale but calm, Derues faced his audience. He was stripped of all but his
+ shirt; lying flat on the scaffold, his face looking up to the sky, his
+ head resting on a stone, his limbs were fastened to the wheel. Then with a
+ heavy bar of iron the executioner broke them one after another, and each
+ time he struck a fearful cry came from the culprit. The customary three
+ final blows on the stomach were inflicted, but still the little man lived.
+ Alive and broken, he was thrown on to the fire. His burnt ashes, scattered
+ to the winds, were picked up eagerly by the mob, reputed, as in England
+ the pieces of the hangman's rope, talismans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some two months after the execution of her husband Mme. Derues was
+ delivered in the Conciergerie of a male child; it is hardly surprising, in
+ face of her experiences during her pregnancy, that it was born an idiot.
+ In January, 1778, the judges of the Parliament, by a majority of one,
+ decided that she should remain a prisoner in the Conciergerie for another
+ year, while judgment in her case was reserved. In the following August she
+ was charged with having forged the signature of Mme. de Lamotte on the
+ deeds of sale. In February, 1779, the two experts in handwriting to whom
+ the question had been submitted decided in her favour, and the charge was
+ abandoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mme. Derues had a far sterner, more implacable and, be it added, more
+ unscrupulous adversary than the law in M. de Lamotte.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not content with her husband's death, M. de Lamotte believed the wife to
+ have been his partner in guilt, and thirsted for revenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To accomplish it he even stooped to suborn witnesses, but the conspiracy
+ was exposed, and so strong became the sympathy with the accused woman that
+ a young proctor of the Parliament published a pamphlet in her defence,
+ asking for an immediate inquiry into the charges made against her, charges
+ that had in no instance been proved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, in March, 1779, the Parliament decided to finish with the affair.
+ In secret session the judges met, examined once more all the documents in
+ the case, listened to a report on it from one of their number,
+ interrogated the now weary, hopeless prisoner, and, by a large majority,
+ condemned her to a punishment that fell only just short of the supreme
+ penalty. On the grounds that she had wilfully and knowingly participated
+ with her husband in the fraudulent attempt to become possessed of the
+ estate of Buisson-Souef, and was strongly suspected of having participated
+ with him in his greater crime, she was sentenced to be publicly flogged,
+ branded on both shoulders with the letter V (Voleuse) and imprisoned for
+ life in the Salpetriere Prison. On March 13, in front of the Conciergerie
+ Mme. Derues underwent the first part of her punishment. The same day her
+ hair was cut short, and she was dressed in the uniform of the prison in
+ which she was to pass the remainder of her days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paris had just begun to forget Mme. Derues when a temporary interest
+ was-excited in her fortunes by the astonishing intelligence that, two
+ months after her condemnation, she had been delivered of a child in her
+ new prison. Its fatherhood was never determined, and, taken from her
+ mother, the child died in fifteen days. Was its birth the result of some
+ passing love affair, or some act of drunken violence on the part of her
+ jailors, or had the wretched woman, fearing a sentence of death, made an
+ effort to avert once again the supreme penalty? History does not relate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten years passed. A fellow prisoner in the Salpetriere described Mme.
+ Derues as "scheming, malicious, capable of anything." She was accused of
+ being violent, and of wishing to revenge herself by setting fire to Paris.
+ At length the Revolution broke on France, the Bastille fell, and in that
+ same year an old uncle of Mme. Derues, an ex-soldier of Louis XV., living
+ in Brittany, petitioned for his niece's release. He protested her
+ innocence, and begged that he might take her to his home and restore her
+ to her children. For three years he persisted vainly in his efforts. At
+ last, in the year 1792, it seemed as if they might be crowned with
+ success. He was told that the case would be re-examined; that it was
+ possible that the Parliament had judged unjustly. This good news came to
+ him in March. But in September of that year there took place those
+ shocking massacres in the Paris prisons, which rank high among the
+ atrocities of the Revolution. At four o'clock on the afternoon of
+ September 4, the slaughterers visited the Salpetriere Prison, and fifth
+ among their victims fell the widow of Derues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Dr. Castaing
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There are two reports of the trial of Castaing: "Proces Complet d'Edme
+ Samuel Castaing," Paris, 1823; "Affaire Castaing," Paris, 1823.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I AN UNHAPPY COINCIDENCE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edme Castaing, born at Alencon in 1796, was the youngest of the three sons
+ of an Inspector-General in the department of Woods and Forests. His elder
+ brother had entered the same service as his father, the other brother was
+ a staff-captain of engineers. Without being wealthy, the family,
+ consisting of M. and Mme. Castaing and four children, was in comfortable
+ circumstances. The young Edme was educated at the College of Angers&mdash;the
+ Alma Mater of Barre and Lebiez&mdash;where, intelligent and hard working,
+ he carried off many prizes. He decided to enter the medical profession,
+ and at the age of nineteen commenced his studies at the School of Medicine
+ in Paris. For two years he worked hard and well, living within the modest
+ allowance made him by his father. At the end of that time this young man
+ of two or three-and-twenty formed a passionate attachment for a lady, the
+ widow of a judge, and the mother of three children. Of the genuine depth
+ and sincerity of this passion for a woman who must have been considerably
+ older than himself, there can be no doubt. Henceforth the one object in
+ life to Castaing was to make money enough to relieve the comparative
+ poverty of his adored mistress, and place her and her children beyond the
+ reach of want. In 1821 Castaing became a duly qualified doctor, and by
+ that time had added to the responsibilities of his mistress and himself by
+ becoming the father of two children, whom she had brought into the world.
+ The lady was exigent, and Castaing found it difficult to combine his work
+ with a due regard to her claims on his society. Nor was work plentiful or
+ lucrative. To add to his embarrassments Castaing, in 1818, had backed a
+ bill for a friend for 600 francs. To meet it when it fell due two years
+ later was impossible, and desperate were the efforts made by Castaing and
+ his mother to put off the day of reckoning. His father, displeased with
+ his son's conduct, would do nothing to help him. But his mother spared no
+ effort to extricate him from his difficulties. She begged a highly placed
+ official to plead with the insistent creditor, but all in vain. There
+ seemed no hope of a further delay when suddenly, in the October of 1822,
+ Castaing became the possessor of 100,000 francs. How he became possessed
+ of this considerable sum of money forms part of a strange and mysterious
+ story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the friends of Castaing were two young men of about his own age,
+ Auguste and Hippolyte Ballet. Auguste, the elder, had the misfortune a few
+ days after his birth to incur his mother's lasting dislike. The nurse had
+ let the child fall from her arms in the mother's presence, and the shock
+ had endangered Mme. Ballet's life. From that moment the mother took a
+ strong aversion to her son; he was left to the charge of servants; his
+ meals were taken in the kitchen. As soon as he was five years old he was
+ put out to board elsewhere, while his brother Hippolyte and his sister
+ were well cared for at home. The effect of this unjust neglect on the
+ character of Auguste Ballet was, as may be imagined, had; he became
+ indolent and dissipated. His brother Hippolyte, on the other hand, had
+ justified the affectionate care bestowed on his upbringing; he had grown
+ into a studious, intelligent youth of a refined and attractive
+ temperament. Unhappily, early in his life he had developed consumption, a
+ disease he inherited from his mother. As he grew older his health grew
+ steadily worse until, in 1822, his friends were seriously alarmed at his
+ condition. It became so much graver that, in the August of that year, the
+ doctors recommended him to take the waters at Enghien. In September he
+ returned to Paris apparently much better, but on October 2 he was seized
+ with sudden illness, and three days later he was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few years before the death of Hippolyte his father and mother had died
+ almost at the same time. M. Ballet had left to each of his sons a fortune
+ of some 260,000 francs. Though called to the bar, both Auguste and
+ Hippolyte Ballet were now men of independent means. After the death of
+ their parents, whatever jealousy Auguste may have felt at the unfair
+ preference which his mother had shown for her younger son, had died down.
+ At the time of Hippolyte's death the brothers were on good terms, though
+ the more prudent Hippolyte disapproved of his elder brother's
+ extravagance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Hippolyte Ballet Dr. Castaing had become the fast friend. Apart from
+ his personal liking for Castaing, it was a source of comfort to Hippolyte,
+ in his critical state of health, to have as his friend one whose medical
+ knowledge was always at his service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the middle of August, 1822, Hippolyte, on the advice of his doctors,
+ went to Enghien to take the waters. There Castaing paid him frequent
+ visits. He returned to Paris on September 22, and seemed to have benefited
+ greatly by the cure. On Tuesday, October 1, he saw his sister, Mme.
+ Martignon, and her husband; he seemed well, but said that he was having
+ leeches applied to him by his friend Castaing. On the Wednesday evening
+ his sister saw him again, and found him well and with a good appetite. On
+ the Thursday, after a night disturbed by severe attacks of vomiting, his
+ condition seemed serious. His brother-in-law, who visited him, found that
+ he had taken to his bed, his face was swollen, his eyes were red. His
+ sister called in the evening, but could not see him. The servants told her
+ that her brother was a little better but resting, and that he did not wish
+ to be disturbed; they said that Dr. Castaing had been with him all day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Friday Castaing himself called on the Martignons, and told them that
+ Hippolyte had passed a shockingly bad night. Madame Martignon insisted on
+ going to nurse her brother herself, but Castaing refused positively to let
+ her see him; the sight of her, he said, would be too agitating to the
+ patient. Later in the day Mme. Martignon went to her brother's house. In
+ order to obey Dr. Castaing's injunctions, she dressed herself in some of
+ the clothes of the servant Victoire, in the hope that if she went into his
+ bedroom thus disguised, Hippolyte would not recognise her. But even this
+ subterfuge was forbidden by Castaing, and Mme. Martignon had to content
+ herself with listening in an adjoining room for the sound of her brother's
+ voice. At eight o'clock that evening the Martignons learnt that Hippolyte
+ was better, but at ten o'clock they received a message that he was dying,
+ and that his brother Auguste had been sent for. Mme. Martignon was
+ prostrated with grief, but her husband hastened to his brother-in-law's
+ house. There he found Castaing, who said that the death agony of his
+ friend was so dreadful that he had not the strength to remain in the room
+ with the dying man. Another doctor was sent for, but at ten o'clock the
+ following morning, after protracted suffering, Hippolyte Ballet passed
+ away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A post-mortem was held on his body. It was made by Drs. Segalas and
+ Castaing. They stated that death was due to pleurisy aggravated by the
+ consumptive condition of the deceased, which, however serious, was not of
+ itself likely to have been so rapidly fatal in its consequences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hippolyte had died, leaving a fortune of some 240,000 francs. In the
+ previous September he had spoken to the notary Lebret, a former clerk of
+ his father's, of his intention of making a will. He had seen that his
+ brother Auguste was squandering his share of their inheritance; he told
+ Lebret that whatever he might leave to Auguste should not be placed at his
+ absolute disposal. To his servant Victoire, during his last illness,
+ Hippolyte had spoken of a will he had made which he wished to destroy. If
+ Hippolyte had made such a will, did he destroy it before his death? In any
+ case, no trace of it was ever found after his death. He was presumed to
+ have died intestate, and his fortune was divided, three-quarters of it
+ going to his brother Auguste, the remaining quarter to his sister, Mme.
+ Martignon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the day of Hippolyte's death Auguste Ballet wrote from his brother's
+ house to one Prignon: "With great grief I have to tell you that I have
+ just lost my brother; I write at the same time to say that I must have
+ 100,000 francs to-day if possible. I have the greatest need of it. Destroy
+ my letter, and reply at once. M. Sandrie will, I am sure, accommodate me.
+ I am at my poor brother's house, from which I am writing." Prignon did as
+ he was asked, but it was two days before the stockbroker, Sandrie, could
+ raise the necessary sum. On October 7 he sold out sufficient of Auguste's
+ stock to realise 100,000 francs, and the following day gave Prignon an
+ order on the Bank of France for that amount. The same day Prignon took the
+ order to Auguste. Accompanied by Castaing and Jean, Auguste's black
+ servant, Auguste and Prignon drove to the bank. There the order was
+ cashed. Prignon's part of the business was at an end. He said good-bye to
+ Auguste outside the bank. As the latter got into his cabriolet, carrying
+ the bundle of notes, Prignon heard him say to Castaing: "There are the
+ 100,000 francs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why had Auguste Ballet, after his brother's death, such urgent need of
+ 100,000 francs? If the statements of Auguste made to other persons are to
+ be believed, he had paid the 100,000 francs which he had raised through
+ Prignon to Lebret, his father's former clerk, who would seem to have acted
+ as legal and financial adviser to his old master's children. According to
+ Auguste's story, his sister, Mme. Martignon, had offered Lebret 80,000
+ francs to preserve a copy of a will made by Hippolyte, leaving her the
+ bulk of his fortune. Castaing, however, had ascertained that Lebret would
+ be willing, if Auguste would outbid his sister and pay 100,000 francs, to
+ destroy the will so that, Hippolyte dying intestate, Auguste would take
+ the greater part of his brother's fortune. Auguste agreed to accept
+ Lebret's terms, raised the necessary sum, and handed over the money to
+ Castaing, who, in turn, gave it to Lebret, who had thereupon destroyed the
+ copy of the will. Castaing, according to the evidence of Auguste's
+ mistress, an actress of the name of Percillie, had spoken in her presence
+ of having himself destroyed one copy of Hippolyte's will before his death,
+ and admitted having arranged with Lebret after Hippolyte's death for the
+ destruction of the other copy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How far was the story told by Auguste, and repeated in somewhat different
+ shape by Castaing to other persons, true? There is no doubt that after the
+ visit to the Bank of France with Prignon on October 8, Auguste and
+ Castaing drove together to Lebret's office. The negro servant said that on
+ arriving there one of them got out of the cab and went up to Lebret's
+ house, but which of the two he would not at first say positively. Later he
+ swore that it was Auguste Ballet. Whatever happened on that visit to
+ Lebret's&mdash;and it was the theory of the prosecution that Castaing and
+ not Auguste had gone up to the office&mdash;the same afternoon Auguste
+ Ballet showed his mistress the seals of the copy of his brother's will
+ which Lebret had destroyed, and told her that Lebret, all through the
+ business, had refused to deal directly with him, and would only act
+ through the intermediary of Castaing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did Lebret, as a fact, receive the 100,000 francs? A close examination of
+ his finances showed no trace of such a sum. Castaing, on the other hand,
+ on October 10, 1822, had given a stockbroker a sum of 66,000 francs to
+ invest in securities; on the 11th of the same month he had lent his mother
+ 30,000 francs; and on the 14th had given his mistress 4,000 francs. Of how
+ this large sum of money had come to Castaing at a time when he was
+ practically insolvent he gave various accounts. His final version was that
+ in the will destroyed by Auguste, Hippolyte Ballet had left him an income
+ for life equivalent to a capital of 100,000 francs, and that Auguste had
+ given him that sum out of respect for his brother's wishes. If that
+ explanation were true, it was certainly strange that shortly after his
+ brother's death Auguste Ballet should have expressed surprise and
+ suspicion to a friend on hearing that Castaing had been buying stock to
+ the value of 8,000 francs. If he had given Castaing 100,000 francs for
+ himself, there was no occasion for surprise or suspicion at his investing
+ 8,000. That Auguste had paid out 100,000 francs to some one in October the
+ state of his finances at his death clearly proved. According to the theory
+ of the prosecution, Auguste believed that he had paid that money to Lebret
+ through the intermediary of Castaing, and not to Castaing himself. Hence
+ his surprise at hearing that Castaing, whom he knew to be impecunious, was
+ investing such a sum as 8,000 francs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No money had ever reached Lebret. His honesty and good faith were
+ demonstrated beyond any shadow of a doubt; no copy of any will of
+ Hippolyte Ballet had ever been in his possession. But Castaing had shown
+ Auguste Ballet a copy of his brother's will, the seals of which Auguste
+ had shown to his mistress. In all probability, and possibly at the
+ instigation of Castaing, Hippolyte Ballet had made a will, leaving the
+ greater part of his property to his sister. Somehow or other Castaing had
+ got possession of this will. On his death Castaing had invented the story
+ of Mme. Martignon's bribe to Lebret, and so persuaded Auguste to outbid
+ her. He had ingeniously kept Auguste and Lebret apart by representing
+ Lebret as refusing to deal direct with Auguste, and by these means had
+ secured to his own use the sum of 100,000 francs, which Auguste believed
+ was being paid to Lebret as the price of his alleged destruction of his
+ brother's will. The plot was ingenious and successful. To Lebret and the
+ Martignons Castaing said that Hippolyte had made a will in Mme.
+ Martignon's favour, but had destroyed it himself some days before his
+ death. The Martignons expressed themselves as glad that Hippolyte had done
+ so, for they feared lest such a will should have provoked resentment
+ against them on the part of Auguste. By keeping Auguste and Lebret apart,
+ Castaing prevented awkward explanations. The only possible danger of
+ discovery lay in Auguste's incautious admissions to his mistress and
+ friends; but even had the fact of the destruction of the will come to the
+ ears of the Martignons, it is unlikely that they would have taken any
+ steps involving the disgrace of Auguste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Castaing had enriched himself considerably by the opportune death of his
+ friend Hippolyte. It might be made a matter of unfriendly comment that, on
+ the first day of May preceding that sad event, Castaing had purchased ten
+ grains of acetate of morphia from a chemist in Paris, and on September 18,
+ less than a month before Hippolyte's death, he had purchased another ten
+ grains of acetate of morphia from the same chemist. The subject of poisons
+ had always been a favourite branch of Castaing's medical studies,
+ especially vegetable poisons; morphia is a vegetable poison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Castaing's position relative to Auguste Ballet was now a strong one. They
+ were accomplices in the unlawful destruction of Hippolyte's will. Auguste
+ believed it to be in his friend's power to ruin him at any time by
+ revealing his dealings with Lebret. But, more than that, to Auguste, who
+ believed that his 100,000 francs had gone into Lebret's pocket, Castaing
+ could represent himself as so far unrewarded for his share in the
+ business; Lebret had taken all the money, while he had received no
+ recompense of any kind for the trouble he had taken and the risk he was
+ encountering on his friend's behalf. Whatever the motive, from fear or
+ gratitude, Auguste Ballet was persuaded to make a will leaving Dr. Edme
+ Samuel Castaing the whole of his fortune, subject to a few trifling
+ legacies. But Auguste's feelings towards his sole legatee were no longer
+ cordial. To one or two of his friends he expressed his growing distaste
+ for Castaing's society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Castaing can hardly have failed to observe this change. He knew
+ Auguste to be reckless and extravagant with his money; he learnt that he
+ had realised another 100,000 francs out of his securities, and that he
+ kept the money locked up in a drawer in his desk. If Auguste's fortune
+ were dissipated by extravagance, or he revoked his will, Castaing stood to
+ lose heavily. As time went on Castaing felt less and less sure that he
+ could place much reliance on the favourable disposition or thrift of
+ Auguste. The latter had fallen in love with a new mistress; he began to
+ entertain expensively; even if he should not change his mind and leave his
+ money away from Castaing, there might very soon be no money to leave. At
+ the end of May, 1823, Castaing consulted a cousin of his, Malassis, a
+ notary's clerk, as to the validity of a will made by a sick man in favour
+ of his medical attendant. He said that he had a patient gravely ill who,
+ not wishing to leave his money to his sister, whom he disliked, intended
+ to leave it to him. Malassis reassured him as to the validity of such a
+ will, and gave him the necessary instructions for preparing it. On May 29
+ Castaing sent Malassis the will of Auguste Ballet with the following note,
+ "I send you the will of M. Ballets examine it and keep it as his
+ representative." The will was dated December 1, 1822, and made Castaing
+ sole legatee. On the same day that the will was deposited with Malassis,
+ Castaing and Auguste Ballet started to-gether on a little two days' trip
+ into the country. To his friends Auguste seemed in the best of health and
+ spirits; so much so that his housekeeper remarked as he left how well he
+ was looking, and Castaing echoed her remark, saying that he looked like a
+ prince!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the afternoon the two friends visited Saint Germain, then returned
+ to Paris, and at seven o'clock in the evening arrived at the Tete Noire
+ Hotel at Saint Cloud, where they took a double-bedded room, Castaing
+ paying five francs in advance. They spent the following day, Friday, May
+ 30, in walking about the neighbourhood, dined at the hotel at seven, went
+ out again and returned about nine o'clock. Soon after their return
+ Castaing ordered some warmed wine to be sent up to the bedroom. It was
+ taken up by one of the maid-servants. Two glasses were mixed with lemon
+ and sugar which Castaing had brought with him. Both the young men drank of
+ the beverage. Auguste complained that it was sour, and thought that he had
+ put too much lemon in it. He gave his glass to the servant to taste, who
+ also found the drink sour. Shortly after she left the room and went
+ upstairs to the bedside of one of her fellow-servants who was ill.
+ Castaing, for no apparent reason, followed her up and stayed in the room
+ for about five minutes. Auguste spent a bad night, suffering from internal
+ pains, and in the morning his legs were so swollen that he could not put
+ on his boots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Castaing got up at four o'clock that morning and asked one of the servants
+ to let him out. Two hours later he drove up in a cabriolet to the door of
+ a chemist in Paris, and asked for twelve grains of tartar emetic, which he
+ wanted to mix in a wash according to a prescription of Dr. Castaing. But
+ he did not tell the chemist that he was Dr. Castaing himself. An hour
+ later Castaing arrived at the shop of another chemist, Chevalier, with
+ whom he had already some acquaintance; he had bought acetate of morphia
+ from him some months before, and had discussed with him then the effects
+ of vegetable poisons. On this particular morning he bought of his
+ assistant thirty-six grains of acetate of morphia, paying, as a medical
+ man, three francs fifty centimes for it instead of the usual price of four
+ francs. Later in the morning Castaing returned to Saint Cloud, a distance
+ of ten miles from Paris, and said that he had been out for a long walk. He
+ found Auguste ill in bed. Castaing asked for some cold milk, which was
+ taken up to the bedroom by one of the servants. Shortly after this
+ Castaing went out again. During his absence Auguste was seized with
+ violent pains and sickness. When Castaing returned he found his friend in
+ the care of the people of the hotel. He told them to throw away the matter
+ that had been vomited, as the smell was offensive, and Auguste told them
+ to do as his friend directed. Castaing proposed to send for a doctor from
+ Paris, but Auguste insisted that a local doctor should be called in at
+ once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly Dr. Pigache of Saint Cloud was summoned. He arrived at the
+ hotel about eleven o'clock. Before seeing the patient Castaing told the
+ doctor that he believed him to be suffering from cholera. Pigache asked to
+ see the matter vomited but was told that it had been thrown away. He
+ prescribed a careful diet, lemonade and a soothing draught.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Pigache returned at three o'clock, when he found that the patient had
+ taken some lemonade, but, according to Castaing, had refused to take the
+ draught. He called again that afternoon. Ballet was much better; he said
+ that he would be quite well if he could get some sleep, and expressed a
+ wish to return to Paris. Dr. Pigache dissuaded him from this and left,
+ saying that he would come again in the evening. Castaing said that that
+ would be unnecessary, and it was agreed that Pigache should see the
+ patient again at eight o'clock the next morning. During the afternoon
+ Castaing sent a letter to Paris to Jean, Auguste's negro servant, telling
+ him to take the two keys of his master's desk to his cousin Malassis. But
+ the negro distrusted Castaing. He knew of the will which his master had
+ made in the doctor's favour. Rather than compromise himself by any
+ injudicious act, he brought the keys to Saint Cloud and there handed them
+ over to Castaing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Jean arrived his master complained to him of feeling very ill. Jean
+ said that he hoped he would be well enough to go back to Paris the
+ following day, to which Auguste replied, "I don't think so. But if I am
+ lucky enough to get away to-morrow, I shall leave fifty francs for the
+ poor here." About eleven o'clock that night Castaing, in Jean's presence,
+ gave the sick man a spoonful of the draught prescribed by Dr. Pigache.
+ Four or five minutes later Auguste was seized with terrible convulsions,
+ followed by unconsciousness. Dr. Pigache was sent for. He found Ballet
+ lying on his back unconscious, his throat strained, his mouth shut and his
+ eyes fixed; the pulse was weak, his body covered with cold sweat; and
+ every now and then he was seized with strong convulsions. The doctor asked
+ Castaing the cause of the sudden change in Ballet's condition. Castaing
+ replied that it had commenced shortly after he had taken a spoonful of the
+ draught which the doctor had prescribed for him. Dr. Pigache bled the
+ patient and applied twenty leeches. He returned about six; Ballet was
+ sinking, and Castaing appeared to be greatly upset. He told the doctor
+ what an unhappy coincidence it was that he should have been present at the
+ deathbeds of both Hippolyte and his brother Auguste; and that the position
+ was the more distressing for him as he was the sole heir to Auguste's
+ fortune. To M. Pelletan, a professor of medicine, who had been sent for to
+ St. Cloud in the early hours of Sunday morning, Castaing appeared to be in
+ a state of great grief and agitation; he was shedding tears. Pelletan was
+ from the first impressed by the suspicious nature of the case, and pointed
+ out to Castaing the awkwardness of his situation as heir to the dying man.
+ "You're right," replied Castaing, "my position is dreadful, horrible. In
+ my great grief I had never thought of it till now, but now you make me see
+ it clearly. Do you think there will be an investigation?" Pelletan
+ answered that he should be compelled to ask for a post-mortem. "Ah! You
+ will be doing me the greatest service," said Castaing, "I beg you to
+ insist on a post-mortem. You will be acting as a second father to me in
+ doing so." The parish priest was sent for to administer extreme unction to
+ the dying man. To the parish clerk who accompanied the priest Castaing
+ said, "I am losing a friend of my childhood," and both priest and clerk
+ went away greatly edified by the sincere sorrow and pious demeanour of the
+ young doctor. About mid-day on Sunday, June 1, Auguste Ballet died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the afternoon Castaing left the hotel for some hours, and that same
+ afternoon a young man about twenty-five years of age, short and fair, left
+ a letter at the house of Malassis. The letter was from Castaing and said,
+ "My dear friend, Ballet has just died, but do nothing before to-morrow,
+ Monday. I will see you and tell you, yes or no, whether it is time to act.
+ I expect that his brother-in-law, M. Martignon, whose face is pock-marked
+ and who carries a decoration, will call and see you. I have said that I
+ did not know what dispositions Ballet may have made, but that before his
+ death he had told me to give you two little keys which I am going to
+ deliver to you myself to-morrow, Monday. I have not said that we are
+ cousins, but only that I had seen you once or twice at Ballet's, with whom
+ you were friendly. So say nothing till I have seen you, but whatever you
+ do, don't say you are a relative of mine." When he returned to the hotel
+ Castaing found Martignon, Lebret, and one or two friends of Auguste
+ already assembled. It was only that morning that Martignon had received
+ from Castaing any intimation of his brother-in-law's critical condition.
+ From the first Castaing was regarded with suspicion; the nature of the
+ illness, the secrecy maintained about it by Castaing, the coincidence of
+ some of the circumstances with those of the death of Hippolyte, all
+ combined to excite suspicion. Asked if Auguste had left a will Castaing
+ said no; but the next day he admitted its existence, and said that it was
+ in the hands of Malassis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monday, June 2, was the day fixed for the post-mortem; it was performed in
+ the hotel at Saint Cloud. Castaing was still in the hotel under
+ provisional arrest. While the post-mortem was going on his agitation was
+ extreme; he kept opening the door of the room in which he was confined, to
+ hear if possible some news of the result. At last M. Pelletan obtained
+ permission to inform him of the verdict of the doctors. It was favourable
+ to Castaing; no trace of death by violence or poison had been discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The medical men declared death to be due to an inflammation of the
+ stomach, which could be attributed to natural causes; that the
+ inflammation had subsided; that it had been succeeded by cerebral
+ inflammation, which frequently follows inflammation of the stomach, and
+ may have been aggravated in this case by exposure to the sun or by
+ over-indulgence of any kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II THE TRIAL OF DR. CASTAING
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Castaing expected, as a result of the doctors' report, immediate release.
+ In this he was disappointed; he was placed under stricter arrest and taken
+ to Paris, where a preliminary investigation commenced, lasting five
+ months. During the early part of his imprisonment Castaing feigned
+ insanity, going to disgusting lengths in the hope of convincing those
+ about him of the reality of his madness. But after three days of futile
+ effort he gave up the attempt, and turned his attention to more practical
+ means of defence. In the prison at Versailles, whither he had been removed
+ from Paris, he got on friendly terms with a prisoner, one Goupil, who was
+ awaiting trial for some unimportant offence. To Goupil Castaing described
+ the cruelty of his position and the causes that had led to his wrongful
+ arrest. He admitted his unfortunate possession of the poison, and said
+ that the 100,000 francs which he had invested he had inherited from an
+ uncle. Through Goupil he succeeded in communicating with his mother in the
+ hope that she would use her influence to stifle some of the more serious
+ evidence against him. Through other prisoners he tried to get at the
+ chemists from whom he had bought acetate of morphia, and persuade them to
+ say that the preparation of morphia which he had purchased was harmless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trial of Castaing commenced before the Paris Assize Court on November
+ 10, 1823. He was charged with the murder of Hippolyte Ballet, the
+ destruction of a document containing the final dispositions of Hippolyte's
+ property, and with the murder of Auguste Ballet. The three charges were to
+ be tried simultaneously. The Act of Accusation in Castaing's case is a
+ remarkable document, covering a hundred closely-printed pages. It is a
+ well-reasoned, graphic and unfair statement of the case for the
+ prosecution. It tells the whole story of the crime, and inserts everything
+ that can possibly prejudice the prisoner in the eyes of the jury. As an
+ example, it quotes against Castaing a letter of his mistress in which, in
+ the course of some quarrel, she had written to him saying that his mother
+ had said some "horrible things" (des horreurs) of him; but what those
+ "horrible things" were was not revealed, nor were they ever alluded to
+ again in the course of the trial, nor was his mistress called as a
+ witness, though payments of money by Castaing to her formed an important
+ part of the evidence against him. Again, the evidence of Goupil, his
+ fellow prisoner, as to the incriminating statements made to him by
+ Castaing is given in the Act of Accusation, but Goupil himself was not
+ called at the trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the reading of the Act of Accusation by the Clerk of the Court
+ Castaing listened calmly. Only when some allusion was made to his mistress
+ and their children did he betray any sign of emotion. As soon as the
+ actual facts of the case were set out he was all attention, making notes
+ busily. He is described as rather attractive in appearance, his face long,
+ his features regular, his forehead high, his hair, fair in colour, brushed
+ back from the brows; he wore rather large side-whiskers. One of the
+ witnesses at Saint Cloud said that Castaing looked more like a priest than
+ a doctor; his downcast eyes, gentle voice, quiet and unassuming demeanour,
+ lent him an air of patience and humility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interrogatory of Castaing by the presiding judge lasted all the
+ afternoon of the first day of the trial and the morning of the second. The
+ opening part of it dealt with the murder of Hippolyte Ballet, and elicited
+ little or nothing that was fresh. Beyond the purchase of acetate of
+ morphia previous to Hippolyte's death, which Castaing reluctantly
+ admitted, there was no serious evidence against him, and before the end of
+ the trial the prosecution abandoned that part of the charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Questioned by the President as to the destruction of Hippolyte Ballet's
+ will, Castaing admitted that he had seen a draft of a will executed by
+ Hippolyte in favour of his sister, but he denied having told Auguste that
+ Lebret had in his possession a copy which he was prepared to destroy for
+ 100,000 francs. Asked to explain the assertion of Mlle. Percillie,
+ Auguste's mistress, that statements to this effect had been made in her
+ presence by both Auguste Ballet and himself, he said that it was not true;
+ that he had never been to her house. "What motive," he was asked, "could
+ Mlle. Percillie have for accusing you?" "She hated me," was the reply,
+ "because I had tried to separate Auguste from her." Castaing denied that
+ he had driven with Auguste to Lebret's office on October 8. Asked to
+ explain his sudden possession of 100,000 francs at a moment when he was
+ apparently without a penny, he repeated his statement that Auguste had
+ given him the capital sum as an equivalent for an income of 4,000 francs
+ which his brother had intended to leave him. "Why, when first asked if you
+ had received anything from Auguste, did you say you had received nothing?"
+ was the question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was a thoughtless statement," was the answer. "Why," pursued the
+ President, "should you not have admitted at once a fact that went to prove
+ your own good faith? If, however, this fact be true, it does not explain
+ the mysterious way in which Auguste asked Prignon to raise for him 100,000
+ francs; and unless those 100,000 francs were given to you, it is
+ impossible to account for them. It is important to your case that you
+ should give the jury a satisfactory explanation on this point." Castaing
+ could only repeat his previous explanations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interrogatory was then directed to the death of Auguste Ballet.
+ Castaing said that Auguste Ballet had left him all his fortune on account
+ of a disagreement with his sister. Asked why, after Auguste's death, he
+ had at first denied all knowledge of the will made in his favour and
+ deposited by him with Malassis, he could give no satisfactory reason.
+ Coming to the facts of the alleged poisoning of Auguste Ballet, the
+ President asked Castaing why, shortly after the warm wine was brought up
+ on the night of May 30, he went up to the room where one of the servants
+ of the hotel was lying sick. Castaing replied that he was sent for by the
+ wife of the hotel-keeper. This the woman denied; she said that she did not
+ even know that he was a doctor. "According to the prosecution," said the
+ judge, "you left the room in order to avoid drinking your share of the
+ wine." Castaing said that he had drunk half a cupful of it. The judge
+ reminded him that to one of the witnesses Castaing had said that he had
+ drunk only a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A ridiculous statement made by Castaing to explain the purchase of morphia
+ and antimony in Paris on May 31 was brought up against him. Shortly after
+ his arrest Castaing had said that the cats and dogs about the hotel had
+ made such a noise on the night of May 30 that they had disturbed the rest
+ of Auguste, who, in the early morning, had asked Castaing to get some
+ poison to kill them. He had accordingly gone all the way, about ten miles,
+ to Paris at four in the morning to purchase antimony and morphia to kill
+ cats and dogs. All the people of the hotel denied that there had been any
+ such disturbance on the night in question. Castaing now said that he had
+ bought the poisons at Auguste's request, partly to kill the noisy cats and
+ dogs, and partly for the purpose of their making experiments on animals.
+ Asked why he had not given this second reason before, he said that as
+ Auguste was not a medical man it would have been damaging to his
+ reputation to divulge the fact of his wishing to make unauthorised experiments
+ on animals. "Why go to Paris for the poison?" asked the judge, "there was
+ a chemist a few yards from the hotel. And when in Paris, why go to two
+ chemists?" To all these questions Castaing's answers were such as to lead
+ the President to express a doubt as to whether they were likely to
+ convince the jury. Castaing was obliged to admit that he had allowed, if
+ not ordered, the evacuations of the sick man to be thrown away. He stated
+ that he had thrown away the morphia and antimony, which he had bought in
+ Paris, in the closets of the hotel, because, owing to the concatenation of
+ circumstances, he thought that he would be suspected of murder. In reply
+ to a question from one of the jury, Castaing said that he had mixed the
+ acetate of morphia and tartar emetic together before reaching Saint Cloud,
+ but why he had done so he could not explain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The medical evidence at the trial was favourable to the accused. Orfila,
+ the famous chemist of that day, said that, though the symptoms in Auguste
+ Ballet's case might be attributed to poisoning by acetate of morphia or
+ some other vegetable poison, at the same time they could be equally well
+ attributed to sudden illness of a natural kind. The liquids, taken from
+ the stomach of Ballet, had yielded on analysis no trace of poison of any
+ sort. The convulsive symptoms present in Ballet's case were undoubtedly a
+ characteristic result of a severe dose of acetate of morphia.(14) Castaing
+ said that he had mixed the acetate of morphia and tartar emetic together,
+ but in any case no trace of either poison was found in Auguste's body, and
+ his illness might, from all appearances, have been occasioned by natural
+ causes. Some attempt was made by the prosecution to prove that the
+ apoplexy to which Hippolyte Ballet had finally succumbed, might be
+ attributed to a vegetable poison; one of the doctors expressed an opinion
+ favourable to that conclusion "as a man but not as a physician." But the
+ evidence did not go further.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (14) It was asserted some years later by one medical authority in
+Palmer's case that it might have been morphia and not strychnine that
+had caused the tetanic symptoms which preceded Cook's death.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ To the young priest-like doctor the ordeal of his trial was a severe one.
+ It lasted eight days. It was only at midday on the sixth day that the
+ evidence was concluded. Not only was Castaing compelled to submit to a
+ long interrogatory by the President, but, after each witness had given his
+ or her evidence, the prisoner was called on to refute or explain any
+ points unfavourable to him. This he did briefly, with varying success; as
+ the trial went on, with increasing embarrassment. A great deal of the
+ evidence given against Castaing was hearsay, and would have been
+ inadmissible in an English court of justice. Statements made by Auguste to
+ other persons about Castaing were freely admitted. But more serious was
+ the evidence of Mlle. Percillie, Auguste's mistress. She swore that on one
+ occasion in her presence Castaing had reproached Auguste with ingratitude;
+ he had complained that he had destroyed one copy of Hippolyte Ballet's
+ will, and for Auguste's sake had procured the destruction of the other,
+ and that yet, in spite of all this, Auguste hesitated to entrust him with
+ 100,000 francs. Asked what he had to say to this statement Castaing denied
+ its truth. He had, he said, only been in Mlle. Percillie's house once, and
+ then not with Auguste Ballet. Mlle. Percillie adhered to the truth of her
+ evidence, and the President left it to the jury to decide between them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Mme. Durand, a patient of Castaing, gave some curious evidence as to a
+ story told her by the young doctor. He said that a friend of his,
+ suffering from lung disease, had been persuaded into making a will in his
+ sister's favour. The sister had offered a bribe of 80,000 francs to her
+ brother's lawyer to persuade him to make such a will, and paid one of his
+ clerks 3,000 francs for drawing it up. Castaing, in his friend's interest,
+ and in order to expose the fraud, invited the clerk to come and see him.
+ His friend, hidden in an alcove in the room, overheard the conversation
+ between Castaing and the clerk, and so learnt the details of his sister's
+ intrigue. He at once destroyed the will and became reconciled with his
+ brother, whom he had been about to disinherit. After his death the
+ brother, out of gratitude, had given Castaing 100,000 francs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: Castaing, did you tell this story to Mme. Durand?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Castaing: I don't recollect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Avocat-General: But Mme. Durand says that you did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Castaing: I don't recollect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: You always say that you don't recollect; that is no answer.
+ Have you, yes or no, made such a statement to Mme. Durand?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Castaing: I don't recollect; if I had said it, I should recollect it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another lady whom Castaing had attended free of charge swore, with a good
+ deal of reluctance, that Castaing had told her a somewhat similar story as
+ accounting for his possession of 100,000 francs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Witnesses were called for the defence who spoke to the diligence and good
+ conduct of Castaing as a medical student; and eighteen, whom he had
+ treated free of expense, testified to his kindness and generosity. "All
+ these witnesses," said the President, "speak to your generosity; but, for
+ that very reason, you must have made little profit out of your profession,
+ and had little opportunity for saving anything," to which Castaing
+ replied: "These are not the only patients I attended; I have not called
+ those who paid me for my services." At the same time Castaing found it
+ impossible to prove that he had ever made a substantial living by the
+ exercise of his profession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the medical witnesses called for the defence, M. Chaussier, had
+ volunteered the remark that the absence of any trace of poison in the
+ portions of Auguste Ballet's body submitted to analysis, constituted an
+ absence of the corpus delicti. To this the President replied that that was
+ a question of criminal law, and no concern of his. But in his speech for
+ the prosecution the Avocat-General dealt with the point raised at some
+ length&mdash;a point which, if it had held good as a principle of English
+ law, would have secured the acquittal of so wicked a poisoner as Palmer.
+ He quoted from the famous French lawyer d'Aguesseau: "The corpus delicti
+ is no other thing than the delictum itself; but the proofs of the delictum
+ are infinitely variable according to the nature of things; they may be
+ general or special, principal or accessory, direct or indirect; in a word,
+ they form that general effect (ensemble) which goes to determine the
+ conviction of an honest man." If such a contention as M. Chaussier's were
+ correct, said the Avocat-General, then it would be impossible in a case of
+ poisoning to convict a prisoner after his victim's death, or, if his
+ victim survived, to convict him of the attempt to poison. He reminded the
+ jury of that paragraph in the Code of Criminal Procedure which instructed
+ them as to their duties: "The Law does not ask you to give the reasons
+ that have convinced you; it lays down no rules by which you are to decide
+ as to the fullness or sufficiency of proof... it only asks you one
+ question: 'Have you an inward conviction?'" "If," he said, "the actual
+ traces of poison are a material proof of murder by poison, then a new
+ paragraph must be added to the Criminal Code&mdash;'Since, however,
+ vegetable poisons leave no trace, poisoning by such means may be committed
+ with impunity.'" To poisoners he would say in future: "Bunglers that you
+ are, don't use arsenic or any mineral poison; they leave traces; you will
+ be found out. Use vegetable poisons; poison your fathers, poison your
+ mothers, poison all your families, and their inheritance will be yours&mdash;fear
+ nothing; you will go unpunished! You have committed murder by poisoning,
+ it is true; but the corpus delicti will not be there because it can't be
+ there!" This was a case, he urged, of circumstantial evidence. "We have,"
+ he said, "gone through a large number of facts. Of these there is not one
+ that does not go directly to the proof of poisoning, and that can only be
+ explained on the supposition of poisoning; whereas, if the theory of the
+ defence be admitted, all these facts, from the first to the last, become
+ meaningless and absurd. They can only be refuted by arguments or
+ explanations that are childish and ridiculous."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Castaing was defended by two advocates&mdash;Roussel, a schoolfellow of
+ his, and the famous Berryer, reckoned by some the greatest French orator
+ since Mirabeau. Both advocates were allowed to address the jury. Roussel
+ insisted on the importance of the corpus delicti. "The delictum," he said,
+ "is the effect, the guilty man merely the cause; it is useless to deal
+ with the cause if the effect is uncertain," and he cited a case in which a
+ woman had been sent for trial, charged with murdering her husband; the
+ moral proof of her guilt seemed conclusive, when suddenly her husband
+ appeared in court alive and well. The advocate made a good deal of the
+ fact that the remains of the draught prescribed by Dr. Pigache, a spoonful
+ of which Castaing had given to Auguste Ballet, had been analysed and
+ showed no trace of poison. Against this the prosecution set the evidence
+ of the chemist at Saint Cloud, who had made up the prescription. He said
+ that the same day he had made up a second prescription similar to that of
+ Dr. Pigache, but not made out for Auguste Ballet, which contained, in
+ addition to the other ingredients, acetate of morphia. The original of
+ this prescription he had given to a friend of Castaing, who had come to
+ his shop and asked him for it a few days after Ballet's death. It would
+ seem therefore that there had been two bottles of medicine, one of which
+ containing morphia had disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Roussel combatted the suggestion that the family of Castaing were in a
+ state of indigence. He showed that his father had an income of 10,000
+ francs, while his two brothers were holding good positions, one as an
+ officer in the army, the other as a government official. The mistress of
+ Castaing he represented as enjoying an income of 5,000 francs. He
+ protested against the quantity of hearsay evidence that had been admitted
+ into the case. "In England," he said, "when a witness is called, he is
+ asked 'What have you seen?' If he can only testify to mere talk, and
+ hearsay, he is not heard." He quoted the concluding paragraph of the will
+ of Auguste Ballet as showing his friendly feeling towards Castaing: "It is
+ only after careful reflection that I have made this final disposition of
+ my property, in order to mark the sincere friendship which I have never
+ for one moment ceased to feel for MM. Castaing, Briant and Leuchere, in
+ order to recognise the faithful loyalty of my servants, and deprive M. and
+ Mme. Martignon, my brother-in-law and sister, of all rights to which they
+ might be legally entitled on my death, fully persuaded in soul and
+ conscience that, in doing so, I am giving to each their just and proper
+ due." "Is this," asked M. Roussel, "a document wrested by surprise from a
+ weak man, extorted by trickery? Is he not acting in the full exercise of
+ his faculties? He forgets no one, and justifies his conduct."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When M. Roussel came to the incident of the noisy cats and dogs at Saint
+ Cloud, he was as ingenious as the circumstances permitted: "A serious
+ charge engrosses public attention; men's minds are concentrated on the
+ large, broad aspects of the case; they are in a state of unnatural
+ excitement. They see only the greatness, the solemnity of the accusation,
+ and then, suddenly, in the midst of all that is of such tragic and
+ surpassing interest, comes this trivial fact about cats and dogs. It makes
+ an unfavourable impression, because it is dramatically out of keeping with
+ the tragedy of the story. But we are not here to construct a drama. No,
+ gentlemen, look at it merely as a trivial incident of ordinary, everyday
+ life, and you will see it in its proper light." M. Roussel concluded by
+ saying that Castaing's most eloquent advocate, if he could have been
+ present, would have been Auguste Ballet. "If Providence had permitted him
+ to enter this court, he would cry out to you, 'Save my friend's life! His
+ heart is undefiled! He is innocent!'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Roussel concluded his speech at ten o'clock on Sunday night, November
+ 16. The next morning Berryer addressed the jury. His speech in defence of
+ Castaing is not considered one of his most successful efforts. He gave
+ personal testimony as to the taste of acetate of morphia. He said that
+ with the help of his own chemist he had put a quarter of a grain of the
+ acetate into a large spoonful of milk, and had found it so insupportably
+ bitter to the taste that he could not keep it in his mouth. If, he
+ contended, Ballet had been poisoned by tartar emetic, then twelve grains
+ given in milk would have given it an insipid taste, and vomiting
+ immediately after would have got rid of the poison. Later investigations
+ have shown that, in cases of antimonial poisoning, vomiting does not
+ necessarily get rid of all the poison, and the convulsions in which
+ Auguste Ballet died are symptomatic of poisoning either by morphia or
+ antimony. In conclusion, Berryer quoted the words addressed by one of the
+ Kings of France to his judges: "When God has not vouchsafed clear proof of
+ a crime, it is a sign that He does not wish that man should determine it,
+ but leaves its judgment to a higher tribunal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Avocat-General, in reply, made a telling answer to M. Roussel's
+ attempt to minimise the importance of the cats and dogs: "He has spoken of
+ the drama of life, and of its ordinary everyday incidents. If there is
+ drama in this case, it is of Castaing's making. As to the ordinary
+ incidents of everyday life, a man buys poison, brings it to the bedside of
+ his sick friend, saying it is for experiments on cats and dogs, the friend
+ dies, the other, his sole heir, after foretelling his death, takes
+ possession of his keys, and proceeds to gather up the spoils&mdash;are
+ these ordinary incidents of every-day life?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was nine o'clock at night when the jury retired to consider their
+ verdict. They returned into court after two hours' deliberation. They
+ found the prisoner "Not Guilty" of the murder of Hippolyte Ballet,
+ "Guilty" of destroying his will, and "Guilty" by seven votes to five of
+ the murder of Auguste Ballet. Asked if he had anything to say before
+ judgment was given, Castaing, in a very loud voice, said "No; but I shall
+ know how to die, though I am the victim of ill-fortune, of fatal
+ circumstance. I shall go to meet my two friends. I am accused of having
+ treacherously murdered them. There is a Providence above us! If there is
+ such a thing as an immortal soul, I shall see Hippolyte and Auguste Ballet
+ again. This is no empty declamation; I don't ask for human pity" (raising
+ his hands to heaven), "I look to God's mercy, and shall go joyfully to the
+ scaffold. My conscience is clear. It will not reproach me even when I
+ feel" (putting his hands to his neck). "Alas! It is easier to feel what I
+ am feeling than to express what I dare not express." (In a feeble voice):
+ "You have desired my death; you have it!" The judges retired to consider
+ the sentence. The candles were guttering, the light of the lamps was
+ beginning to fade; the aspect of the court grim and terrible. M. Roussel
+ broke down and burst into tears. Castaing leant over to his old
+ schoolfellow: "Courage, Roussel," he said; "you have always believed me
+ innocent, and I am innocent. Embrace for me my father, my mother, my
+ brothers, my child." He turned to a group of young advocates standing
+ near: "And you, young people, who have listened to my trial, attend also
+ my execution; I shall be as firm then as I am now. All I ask is to die
+ soon. I should be ashamed to plead for mercy." The judges returned.
+ Castaing was condemned to death, and ordered to pay 100,000 francs damages
+ to the family of Auguste Ballet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Castaing was not ashamed to appeal to the Court of Cassation for a
+ revision of his trial, but on December 4 his appeal was rejected. Two days
+ later he was executed. He had attempted suicide by means of poison, which
+ one of his friends had brought to him in prison, concealed inside a watch.
+ His courage failed him at the last, and he met his death in a state of
+ collapse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not often, happily, that a young man of gentle birth and good
+ education is a double murderer at twenty-six. And such a soft, humble,
+ insinuating young man too!&mdash;good to his mother, good to his mistress,
+ fond of his children, kind to his patients.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet this gentle creature can deliberately poison his two friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was ever such a contradictory fellow?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Professor Webster
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The best report of Webster's trial is that edited by Bemis. The following
+ tracts in the British Museum have been consulted by the writer: "Appendix
+ to the Webster Trial," Boston, 1850: "Thoughts on the Conviction of
+ Webster"; "The Boston Tragedy," by W. E. Bigelow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not often that the gaunt spectre of murder invades the cloistered
+ calm of academic life. Yet such a strange and unwonted tragedy befell
+ Harvard University in the year 1849, when John W. Webster, Professor of
+ Chemistry, took the life of Dr. George Parkman, a distinguished citizen of
+ Boston. The scene of the crime, the old Medical School, now a Dental
+ Hospital, is still standing, or was when the present writer visited Boston
+ in 1907. It is a large and rather dreary red-brick, three-storied
+ building, situated in the lower part of the city, flanked on its west side
+ by the mud flats leading down to the Charles River. The first floor
+ consists of two large rooms, separated from each other by the main
+ entrance hall, which is approached by a flight of steps leading up from
+ the street level. Of these two rooms, the left, as you face the building,
+ is fitted up as a lecture-room. In the year 1849 it was the lecture-room
+ of Professor Webster. Behind the lecture-room is a laboratory, known as
+ the upper laboratory, communicating by a private staircase with the lower
+ laboratory, which occupies the left wing of the ground floor. A small
+ passage, entered by a door on the left-hand side of the front of the
+ building, separated this lower laboratory from the dissecting-room, an
+ out-house built on to the west wall of the college, but now demolished.
+ From this description it will be seen that any person, provided with the
+ necessary keys, could enter the college by the side-door near the
+ dissecting room on the ground floor, and pass up through the lower and
+ upper laboratory into Professor Webster's lecture-room without entering
+ any other part of the building. The Professor of Chemistry, by locking the
+ doors of his lecture-rooms and the lower laboratory, could, if he wished,
+ make himself perfectly secure against intrusion, and come and go by the
+ side-door without attracting much attention. These rooms are little
+ altered at the present time from their arrangement in 1849. The
+ lecture-room and laboratory are used for the same purposes to-day; the
+ lower laboratory, a dismal chamber, now disused and somewhat rearranged,
+ is still recognisable as the scene of the Professor's chemical
+ experiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the second floor of the hospital is a museum, once anatomical, now
+ dental. One of the principal objects of interest in this museum is a
+ plaster cast of the jaws of Dr. George Parkman, made by a well-known
+ dentist of Boston, Dr. Keep, in the year 1846. In that year the new
+ medical college was formally opened. Dr. Parkman, a wealthy and
+ public-spirited citizen of Boston, had given the piece of land, on which
+ the college had been erected. He had been invited to be present at the
+ opening ceremony. In anticipation of being asked to make a speech on this
+ occasion Dr. Parkman, whose teeth were few and far between, had himself
+ fitted by Dr. Keep with a complete set of false teeth. Oliver Wendell
+ Holmes, then Professor of Anatomy at Harvard, who was present at the
+ opening of the college, noticed how very nice and white the doctor's teeth
+ appeared to be. It was the discovery of the remains of these same
+ admirable teeth three years later in the furnace in Professor Webster's
+ lower laboratory that led to the conviction of Dr. Parkman's murderer. By
+ a strange coincidence the doctor met his death in the very college which
+ his generosity had helped to build. Though to-day the state of the college
+ has declined from the medical to the dental, his memory still lives within
+ its walls by the cast of his jaws preserved in the dental museum as a
+ relic of a case, in which the art of dentistry did signal service to the
+ cause of justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his lifetime Dr. Parkman was a well-known figure in the streets of
+ Boston. His peculiar personal appearance and eccentric habits combined to
+ make him something of a character. As he walked through the streets he
+ presented a remarkable appearance. He was exceptionally tall, longer in
+ the body than the legs; his lower jaw protruded some half an inch beyond
+ the upper; he carried his body bent forward from the small of his back. He
+ seemed to be always in a hurry; so impetuous was he that, if his horse did
+ not travel fast enough to please him, he would get off its back, and,
+ leaving the steed in the middle of the street, hasten on his way on foot.
+ A just and generous man, he was extremely punctilious in matters of
+ business, and uncompromising in his resentment of any form of falsehood or
+ deceit. It was the force of his resentment in such a case that cost him
+ his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor was unfailingly punctual in taking his meals. Dr. Kingsley,
+ during the fourteen years he had acted as his agent, had always been able
+ to make sure of finding him at home at his dinner hour, half-past two
+ o'clock. But on Friday, November 23, 1849, to his surprise and that of his
+ family, Dr. Parkman did not come home to dinner; and their anxiety was
+ increased when the day passed, and there was still no sign of the doctor's
+ return. Inquiries were made. From these it appeared that Dr. Parkman had
+ been last seen alive between one and two o'clock on the Friday afternoon.
+ About half-past one he had visited a grocer's shop in Bridge Street, made
+ some purchases, and left behind him a paper bag containing a lettuce,
+ which, he said, he would call for on his way home. Shortly before two
+ o'clock he was seen by a workman, at a distance of forty or fifty feet
+ from the Medical College, going in that direction. From that moment all
+ certain trace of him was lost. His family knew that he had made an
+ appointment for half-past one that day, but where and with whom they did
+ not know. As a matter of fact, Professor John W. Webster had appointed
+ that hour to receive Dr. Parkman in his lecture-room in the Medical
+ College.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John W. Webster was at this time Professor of Chemistry and Mineralogy in
+ Harvard University, a Doctor of Medicine and a Member of the American
+ Academy of Arts and Sciences, the London Geological Society and the St.
+ Petersburg Mineralogical Society. He was the author of several works on
+ geology and chemistry, a man now close on sixty years of age. His
+ countenance was genial, his manner mild and unassuming; he was clean
+ shaven, wore spectacles, and looked younger than his years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Professor Webster was popular with a large circle of friends. To those who
+ liked him he was a man of pleasing and attractive manners, artistic in his
+ tastes&mdash;he was especially fond of music&mdash;not a very profound or
+ remarkable chemist, but a pleasant social companion. His temper was hasty
+ and irritable. Spoilt in his boyhood as an only child, he was self-willed
+ and self-indulgent. His wife and daughters were better liked than he. By
+ unfriendly criticics{sic} the Professor was thought to be selfish, fonder
+ of the good things of the table and a good cigar than was consistent with
+ his duty to his family or the smallness of his income. His father, a
+ successful apothecary at Boston, had died in 1833, leaving John, his only
+ son, a fortune of some L10,000. In rather less than ten years Webster had
+ run through the whole of his inheritance. He had built himself a costly
+ mansion in Cambridge, spent a large sum of money in collecting minerals,
+ and delighted to exercise lavish hospitality. By living consistently
+ beyond his means he found himself at length entirely dependent on his
+ professional earnings. These were small. His salary as Professor was fixed
+ at L240 a year;(15) the rest of his income he derived from the sale of
+ tickets for his lectures at the Medical College. That income was
+ insufficient to meet his wants.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (15) I have given these sums of money in their English equivalents
+in order to give the reader an idea of the smallness of the sum which
+brought about the tragedy.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As early as 1842 he had borrowed L80 from his friend Dr. Parkman. It was
+ to Parkman's good offices that he owed his appointment as a Professor at
+ Harvard; they had entered the University as under-graduates in the same
+ year. Up to 1847 Webster had repaid Parkman twenty pounds of his debt;
+ but, in that year he found it necessary to raise a further loan of L490,
+ which was subscribed by a few friends, among them Parkman himself. As a
+ security for the repayment of this loan, the professor executed a mortgage
+ on his valuable collection of minerals in favour of Parkman. In the April
+ of 1848 the Professor's financial difficulties became so serious that he
+ was threatened with an execution in his house. In this predicament he went
+ to a Mr. Shaw, Dr. Parkman's brother-in-law, and begged a loan of L240,
+ offering him as security a bill of sale on the collection of minerals,
+ which he had already mortgaged to Parkman. Shaw accepted the security, and
+ lent the money. Shaw would seem to have had a good deal of sympathy with
+ Webster's embarrassments; he considered the Professor's income very
+ inadequate to his position, and showed himself quite ready at a later
+ period to waive his debt altogether.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Parkman was a less easy-going creditor. Forbearing and patient as long
+ as he was dealt with fairly, he was merciless where he thought he detected
+ trickery or evasion. His forbearance and his patience were utterly
+ exhausted, his anger and indignation strongly aroused, when he learnt from
+ Shaw that Webster had given him as security for his debt a bill of sale on
+ the collection of minerals, already mortgaged to himself. From the moment
+ of the discovery of this act of dishonesty on the part of Webster, Parkman
+ pursued his debtor with unrelenting severity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He threatened him with an action at law; he said openly that he was
+ neither an honourable, honest, nor upright man; he tried to appropriate to
+ the payment of his debt the fees for lectures which Mr. Pettee, Webster's
+ agent, collected on the Professor's behalf. He even visited Webster in his
+ lecture-room and sat glaring at him in the front row of seats, while the
+ Professor was striving under these somewhat unfavourable conditions to
+ impart instruction to his pupils&mdash;a proceeding which the Doctor's odd
+ cast of features must have aggravated in no small degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was early in November that Parkman adopted these aggressive tactics. On
+ the 19th of that month Webster and the janitor of the College, Ephraim
+ Littlefield, were working in the upper laboratory. It was dark; they had
+ lit candles. Webster was reading a chemical book. As he looked up from the
+ book he saw Parkman standing in the doorway leading from the lecture-room.
+ "Dr. Webster, are you ready for me to-night?" asked Parkman. "No," replied
+ the other, "I am not ready to-night." After a little further conversation
+ in regard to the mortgage, Parkman departed with the ominous remark,
+ "Doctor, something must be done to-morrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately the Professor was not in a position to do anything. He had
+ no means sufficient to meet his creditor's demands; and that creditor was
+ unrelenting. On the 22nd Parkman rode into Cambridge, where Webster lived,
+ to press him further, but failed to find him. Webster's patience, none too
+ great at any time, was being sorely tried. To whom could he turn? What
+ further resource was open to him? There was none. He determined to see his
+ creditor once more. At 8 o'clock on the morning of Friday the 23rd,
+ Webster called at Dr. Parkman's house and made the appointment for their
+ meeting at the Medical College at half-past one, to which the Doctor had
+ been seen hastening just before his disappearance. At nine o'clock the
+ same morning Pettee, the agent, had called on the Professor at the College
+ and paid him by cheque a balance of L28 due on his lecture tickets,
+ informing him at the same time that, owing to the trouble with Dr.
+ Parkman, he must decline to receive any further sums of money on his
+ behalf. Webster replied that Parkman was a nervous, excitable man, subject
+ to mental aberrations, but he added, "You will have no further trouble
+ with Dr. Parkman, for I have settled with him." It is difficult to see how
+ the Professor could have settled, or proposed to settle, with his creditor
+ on that day. A balance of L28 at his bank, and the L18 which Mr. Pettee
+ had paid to him that morning, represented the sum of Professor Webster's
+ fortune on Friday, November 23, 1849.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the afternoon of that day the search for the missing Parkman had
+ been unremitting. On the Saturday his friends communicated with the
+ police. On Sunday hand-bills were issued stating the fact of the Doctor's
+ disappearance, and on Monday, the 26th, a description and the offer of a
+ considerable reward for the discovery of his body were circulated both in
+ and out of the city. Two days later a further reward was offered. But
+ these efforts were fruitless. The only person who gave any information
+ beyond that afforded by those who had seen the Doctor in the streets on
+ the morning of his disappearance, was Professor Webster. About four
+ o'clock on the Sunday afternoon the Professor called at the house of the
+ Revd. Francis Parkman, the Doctor's brother. They were intimate friends.
+ Webster had for a time attended Parkman's chapel; and Mr. Parkman had
+ baptised the Professor's grand-daughter. On this Sunday afternoon Mr.
+ Parkman could not help remarking Webster's peculiar manner. With a bare
+ greeting and no expression of condolence with the family's distress, his
+ visitor entered abruptly and nervously on the object of his errand. He had
+ called, he said, to tell Mr. Parkman that he had seen his brother at the
+ Medical College on Friday afternoon, that he had paid him L90 which he
+ owed him, and that the Doctor had in the course of their interview taken
+ out a paper and dashed his pen through it, presumably as an acknowledgment
+ of the liquidation of the Professor's debt. Having communicated this
+ intelligence to the somewhat astonished gentleman, Webster left him as
+ abruptly as he had come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another relative of Dr. Parkman, his nephew, Mr. Parkman Blake, in the
+ course of inquiries as to his uncle's fate, thought it right to see
+ Webster. Accordingly he went to the college on Monday, the 26th, about
+ eleven o'clock in the morning. Though not one of his lecture days, the
+ janitor Littlefield informed him that the Professor was in his room. The
+ door of the lecture-room, however, was found to be locked, and it was only
+ after considerable delay that Mr. Blake gained admittance. As he descended
+ the steps to the floor of the lecture-room Webster, dressed in a working
+ suit of blue overalls and wearing on his head a smoking cap, came in from
+ the back door. Instead of advancing to greet his visitor, he stood fixed
+ to the spot, and waited, as if defensively, for Mr. Blake to speak. In
+ answer to Mr. Blake's questions Webster described his interview with Dr.
+ Parkman on the Friday afternoon. He gave a very similar account of it to
+ that he had already given to Mr. Francis Parkman. He added that at the end
+ of their interview he had asked the Doctor for the return of the mortgage,
+ to which the latter had replied, "I haven't it with me, but I will see it
+ is properly cancelled." Mr. Blake asked Webster if he could recollect in
+ what form of money it was that he had paid Dr. Parkman. Webster answered
+ that he could only recollect a bill of L20 on the New Zealand Bank:
+ pressed on this point, he seemed to rather avoid any further inquiries.
+ Mr. Blake left him, dissatisfied with the result of his visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One particular in Webster's statement was unquestionably strange, if not
+ incredible. He had, he said, paid Parkman a sum of L90, which he had given
+ him personally, and represented the Doctor as having at their interview
+ promised to cancel the mortgage on the collection of minerals which
+ Webster had given as security for the loan of L490 that had been
+ subscribed by Parkman and four of his friends. Now L120 of this loan was
+ still owing. If Webster's statement were true, Parkman had a perfect right
+ to cancel Webster's personal debt to himself; but he had no right to
+ cancel entirely the mortgage on the minerals, so long as money due to
+ others on that mortgage was yet unpaid. Was it conceivable that one so
+ strict and scrupulous in all monetary transactions as Parkman would have
+ settled his own personal claim, and then sacrificed in so discreditable a
+ manner the claims of others, for the satisfaction of which he had made
+ himself responsible?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was yet another singular circumstance. On Saturday, the 24th, the
+ day after his settlement with Parkman, Webster paid into his own account
+ at the Charles River Bank the cheque for L18, lecture fees, handed over to
+ him by the agent Pettee just before Dr. Parkman's visit on the Friday.
+ This sum had not apparently gone towards the making up of the L90, which
+ Webster said that he had paid to Parkman that day. The means by which
+ Webster had been enabled to settle this debt became more mysterious than
+ ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Tuesday, November 27, the Professor received three other visitors in
+ his lecture-room. These were police officers who, in the course of their
+ search for the missing man, felt it their duty to examine, however
+ perfunctorily, the Medical College. With apologies to the Professor, they
+ passed through his lecture room to the laboratory at the back, and from
+ thence, down the private stairs, past a privy, into the lower laboratory.
+ As they passed the privy one of the officers asked what place it was. "Dr.
+ Webster's private lavatory," replied the janitor, who was conducting them.
+ At that moment Webster's voice called them away to examine the store-room
+ in the lower laboratory, and after a cursory examination the officers
+ departed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The janitor, Ephraim Littlefield, did not take the opportunity afforded
+ him by the visit of the police officers to impart to them the feelings of
+ uneasiness; which the conduct of Professor Webster during the last three
+ days had excited in his breast. There were circumstances in the
+ Professor's behaviour which could not fail to attract the attention of a
+ man, whose business throughout the day was to dust and sweep the College,
+ light the fires and overlook generally the order and cleanliness of the
+ building.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Littlefield, it will be remembered, had seen Dr. Parkman on the Monday
+ before his disappearance, when he visited Webster at the College, and been
+ present at the interview, in the course of which the Doctor told Webster
+ that "something must be done." That Monday morning Webster asked
+ Littlefield a number of questions about the dissecting-room vault, which
+ was situated just outside the door of the lower laboratory. He asked how
+ it was built, whether a light could be put into it, and how it was reached
+ for the purpose of repair. On the following Thursday, the day before
+ Parkman's disappearance, the Professor told Littlefield to get him a pint
+ of blood from the Massachusetts Hospital; he said that he wanted it for an
+ experiment. On the morning of Friday, the day of Parkman's disappearance,
+ Littlefield informed the Professor that he had been unsuccessful in his
+ efforts to get the blood, as they had not been bleeding anyone lately at
+ the hospital. The same morning Littlefield found to his surprise a
+ sledge-hammer behind the door of the Professor's back room; he presumed
+ that it had been left there by masons, and took it down to the lower
+ laboratory. This sledge-hammer Littlefield never saw again. About a
+ quarter to two that afternoon Littlefield, standing at the front door,
+ after his dinner, saw Dr. Parkman coming towards the College. At two
+ o'clock Littlefield went up to Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes' room,
+ immediately above Professor Webster's, to help the Doctor to clear his
+ table after his lecture, which was the last delivered that day. About a
+ quarter of an hour later he let Dr. Holmes out, locked the front door and
+ began to clear out the stoves in the other lecture-rooms. When he reached
+ Webster's he was surprised to find that both doors, that of the lecture
+ room and that of the lower laboratory, were either locked or bolted. He
+ could hear nothing but the running of water in one of the sinks. About
+ half-past five Littlefield saw the Professor coming down the back stairs
+ with a lighted candle in his hand. Webster blew out the candle and left
+ the building. Late that night Littlefield again tried the Professor's
+ doors; they were still fastened. The janitor was surprised at this, as he
+ had never known such a thing to happen before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Saturday, the 24th, though not lecturing that day, the Professor came
+ to the College in the morning. He told Littlefield to light the stove in
+ the lower laboratory. When Littlefield made to pass from the lecture-room
+ into the Professor's private room at the back, and so down by the private
+ stairs to the lower laboratory, the Professor stopped him and told him to
+ go round by the door in front of the building. The whole of that day and
+ Sunday, the Professor's doors remained fast. On Sunday evening at sunset
+ Littlefield, who was talking with a friend in North Grove Street, the
+ street that faces the College, was accosted by Webster. The Professor
+ asked him if he recollected Parkman's visit to the College on Friday, the
+ 23rd, and, on his replying in the affirmative, the Professor described to
+ him their interview and the repayment of his debt. Littlefield was struck
+ during their conversation by the uneasiness of the Professor's bearing;
+ contrary to his habit he seemed unable to look him in the face, his manner
+ was confused, his face pale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the whole of Monday, except for a visit from Mr. Parkman Blake,
+ Professor Webster was again locked alone in his laboratory. Neither that
+ night, nor early Tuesday morning, could Littlefield get into the
+ Professor's rooms to perform his customary duties. On Tuesday the
+ Professor lectured at twelve o'clock, and later received the visit of the
+ police officers that has been described already. At four o'clock that
+ afternoon, the Professor's bell rang. Littlefield answered it. The
+ Professor asked the janitor whether he had bought his turkey for
+ Thanksgiving Day, which was on the following Thursday. Littlefield said
+ that he had not done so yet. Webster then handed him an order on his
+ provision dealer. "Take that," he said, "and get a nice turkey; perhaps I
+ shall want you to do some odd jobs for me." Littlefield thanked him, and
+ said that he would be glad to do anything for him that he could. The
+ janitor was the more surprised at Webster's generosity on this occasion,
+ as this turkey was the first present he had received at the Professor's
+ hands during the seven years he had worked in the College. Littlefield saw
+ the Professor again about half-past six that evening as the latter was
+ leaving the College. The janitor asked him if he wanted any more fires
+ lighted in his rooms, because owing to the holidays there were to be no
+ further lectures that week. Webster said that he did not, and asked
+ Littlefield whether he were a freemason. The janitor said "Yes," and with
+ that they parted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Littlefield was curious. The mysterious activity of the Professor of
+ Chemistry seemed to him more than unusual. His perplexity was increased on
+ the following day. Though on account of the holidays all work had been
+ suspended at the College for the remainder of the week, Webster was again
+ busy in his room early Wednesday morning. Littlefield could hear him
+ moving about. In vain did the janitor look through the keyhole, bore a
+ hole in the door, peep under it; all he could get was a sight of the
+ Professor's feet moving about the laboratory. Perplexity gave way to
+ apprehension when in the course of the afternoon Littlefield discovered
+ that the outer wall of the lower laboratory was so hot that he could
+ hardly bear to place his hand on it. On the outer side of this wall was a
+ furnace sometimes used by the Professor in his chemical experiments. How
+ came it to be so heated? The Professor had told Littlefield on Tuesday
+ that he should not be requiring any fires during the remainder of the
+ week.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The janitor determined to resolve his suspicions. He climbed up to the
+ back windows of the lower laboratory, found one of them unfastened, and
+ let himself in. But, beyond evidences of the considerable fires that had
+ been kept burning during the last few days, Littlefield saw nothing to
+ excite peculiar attention. Still he was uneasy. Those he met in the street
+ kept on telling him that Dr. Parkman would be found in the Medical
+ College. He felt that he himself was beginning to be suspected of having
+ some share in the mystery, whilst in his own mind he became more certain
+ every day that the real solution lay within the walls of Professor
+ Webster's laboratory. His attention had fixed itself particularly on the
+ lavatory at the foot of the stairs connecting the upper and lower
+ laboratories. This room he found to be locked and the key, a large one,
+ had disappeared. He recollected that when the police officers had paid
+ their visit to the college, the Professor had diverted their attention as
+ they were about to inspect this room. The only method by which, unknown to
+ the Professor and without breaking open the door, Littlefield could
+ examine the vault of this retiring room was by going down to the basement
+ floor of the college and digging a hole through the wall into the vault
+ itself. This he determined to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Thursday, Thanksgiving Day, Littlefield commenced operations with a
+ hatchet and a chisel. Progress was slow, as that evening he had been
+ invited to attend a festal gathering. On Friday the janitor, before
+ resuming work, acquainted two of the Professors of the college with his
+ proposed investigation, and received their sanction. As Webster, however,
+ was going constantly in and out of his rooms, he could make little further
+ progress that day. The Professor had come into town early in the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before going to the college he purchased some fish-hooks and gave orders
+ for the making of a strong tin box with firm handles, a foot and a half
+ square and a little more than a foot in depth; during the rest of the day
+ he had been busy in his rooms until he left the college about four
+ o'clock. Not till then was the watchful janitor able to resume his
+ labours. Armed with a crowbar, he worked vigorously until he succeeded in
+ penetrating the wall sufficiently to admit a light into the vault of the
+ lavatory. The first objects which the light revealed to his eyes, were the
+ pelvis of a man and two parts of a human leg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leaving his wife in charge of the remains, Littlefield went immediately to
+ the house of Professor Bigelow, and informed him of the result of his
+ search. They returned to the college some twenty minutes later,
+ accompanied by the City Marshal. The human remains&mdash;a pelvis, a thigh
+ and a leg&mdash;were taken out of the vault, and on a further search some
+ pieces of bone were removed from one of the furnaces in the lower
+ laboratory. The City Marshal at once dispatched three of his officers to
+ Cambridge, to the house of Professor Webster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To his immediate circle of friends and relations the conduct of the
+ Professor during this eventful week had betrayed no unwonted discomposure
+ or disturbance of mind. His evenings had been spent either at the house of
+ friends, or at his own, playing whist, or reading Milton's "Allegro" and
+ "Penseroso" to his wife and daughters. On Friday evening, about eight
+ o'clock, as the Professor was saying good-bye to a friend on the steps of
+ his house at Cambridge, the three police officers drove up to the door and
+ asked him to accompany them to the Medical College. It was proposed, they
+ said, to make a further search there that evening, and his presence was
+ considered advisable. Webster assented immediately, put on his boots, his
+ hat and coat, and got into the hired coach. As they drove towards the
+ city, Webster spoke to the officers of Parkman's disappearance, and
+ suggested that they should stop at the house of a lady who, he said, could
+ give them some peculiar information on that subject. As they entered
+ Boston, he remarked that they were taking the wrong direction for reaching
+ the college. One of the officers replied that the driver might be "green,"
+ but that he would find his way to the college in time. At length the coach
+ stopped. One of the officers alighted, and invited his companions to
+ follow him into the office of the Leverett Street Jail. They obeyed. The
+ Professor asked what it all meant; he was informed that he must consider
+ himself in custody, charged with the murder of Dr. George Parkman.
+ Webster, somewhat taken aback, desired that word should be sent to his
+ family, but was dissuaded from his purpose for the time being. He was
+ searched, and among other articles taken from him was a key some four or
+ five inches long; it was the missing lavatory key. Whilst one of the
+ officers withdrew to make out a mittimus, the Professor asked one of the
+ others if they had found Dr. Parkman. The officer begged him not to
+ question him. "You might tell me something about it," pleaded Webster.
+ "Where did they find him? Did they find the whole body? Oh, my children!
+ What will they do? What will they think of me? Where did you get the
+ information?" The officers asked him if anybody had access to his
+ apartments but himself. "Nobody," he replied, "but the porter who makes
+ the fire." Then, after a pause, he exclaimed: "That villain! I am a ruined
+ man." He was walking up and down wringing his hands, when one of the
+ officers saw him put one hand into his waistcoat pocket, and raise it to
+ his lips. A few moments later the unhappy man was seized with violent
+ spasms. He was unable to stand, and was laid down in one of the cells.
+ From this distressing state he was roused shortly before eleven, to be
+ taken to the college. He was quite incapable of walking, and had to be
+ supported by two of the officers. He was present there while his rooms
+ were searched; but his state was painful in the extreme. He asked for
+ water, but trembled so convulsively that he could only snap at the tumbler
+ like a dog; his limbs were rigid; tears and sweat poured down his cheeks.
+ On the way back to the jail, one of the officers, moved by his condition,
+ expressed his pity for him. "Do you pity me? Are you sorry for me? What
+ for?" asked Webster. "To see you so excited," replied the officer. "Oh!
+ that's it," said the Professor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole night through the prisoner lay without moving, and not until the
+ following afternoon were his limbs relaxed sufficiently to allow of his
+ sitting up. As his condition improved, he grew more confident. "That is no
+ more Dr. Parkman's body," he said, "than mine. How in the world it came
+ there I don't know," and he added: "I never liked the looks of Littlefield
+ the janitor; I opposed his coming there all I could."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime a further examination of the Professor's rooms on Saturday
+ had resulted in the discovery, in a tea-chest in the lower laboratory, of
+ a thorax, the left thigh of a leg, and a hunting knife embedded in tan and
+ covered over with minerals; some portions of bone and teeth were found
+ mixed with the slag and cinders of one of the furnaces; also some
+ fish-hooks and a quantity of twine, the latter identical with a piece of
+ twine that had been tied round the thigh found in the chest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days later the Professor furnished unwittingly some additional
+ evidence against himself. On the Monday evening after his arrest he wrote
+ from prison to one of his daughters the following letter:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "MY DEAREST MARIANNE,&mdash;I wrote Mama yesterday; I had a good sleep
+ last night, and dreamt of you all. I got my clothes off, for the first
+ time, and awoke in the morning quite hungry. It was a long time before my
+ first breakfast from Parker's came; and it was relished, I can assure you.
+ At one o'clock I was notified that I must appear at the court room. All
+ was arranged with great regard to my comfort, and went off better than I
+ had anticipated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On my return I had a bit of turkey and rice from Parker's. They send much
+ more than I can eat, and I have directed the steward to distribute the
+ surplus to any poor ones here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you will send me a small canister of tea, I can make my own. A little
+ pepper I may want some day. I would send the dirty clothes, but they were
+ taken to dry. Tell Mama NOT TO OPEN the little bundle I gave her the other
+ day, but to keep it just as she received it. With many kisses to you all.
+ Good night!&mdash;From your affectionate
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "FATHER."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "P.S.&mdash;My tongue troubles me yet very much, and I must have bitten it
+ in my distress the other night; it is painful and swollen, affecting my
+ speech. Had Mama better send for Nancy? I think so; or Aunt Amelia."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Couple of coloured neck handkerchiefs, one Madras."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This letter, which shows an anxiety about his personal comfort singular in
+ one so tragically situated, passed through the hands of the keeper of the
+ jail. He was struck by the words underlined, "NOT TO OPEN," in regard to
+ the small bundle confided to Mrs. Webster. He called the attention of the
+ police to this phrase. They sent immediately an officer armed with a
+ search warrant to the Professor's house. He received from Mrs. Webster
+ among other papers a package which, on being opened, was found to contain
+ the two notes given by Webster to Parkman as acknowledgments of his
+ indebtedness to him in 1842 and 1847, and a paper showing the amount of
+ his debts to Parkman in 1847. There were daubs and erasures made across
+ these documents, and across one was written twice over the word "paid."
+ All these evidences of payments and cancellations appeared on examination
+ to be in the handwriting of the Professor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After an inquest lasting nine days the coroner's jury declared the remains
+ found in the college to be those of Dr. George Parkman, and that the
+ deceased had met his death at the hands of Professor J. W. Webster. The
+ prisoner waived his right to a magisterial investigation, and on January
+ 26, 1850, the Grand Jury returned a true bill. But it was not until March
+ 17 that the Professor's trial opened before the Supreme Court of
+ Massachusetts. The proceedings were conducted with that dignity and
+ propriety which we look for in the courts of that State. The principal
+ features in the defence were an attempt to impugn the testimony of the
+ janitor Littlefield, and to question the possibility of the identification
+ of the remains of Parkman's teeth. There was a further attempt to prove
+ that the deceased had been seen by a number of persons in the streets of
+ Boston on the Friday afternoon, after his visit to the Medical College.
+ The witness Littlefield was unshaken by a severe cross-examination. The
+ very reluctance with which Dr. Keep gave his fatal evidence, and the
+ support given to his conclusions by distinguished testimony told strongly
+ in favour of the absolute trustworthiness of his statements. The evidence
+ called to prove that the murdered man had been seen alive late on Friday
+ afternoon was highly inconclusive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Contrary to the advice of his counsel, Webster addressed the jury himself.
+ He complained of the conduct of his case, and enumerated various points
+ that his counsel had omitted to make, which he conceived to be in his
+ favour. The value of his statements may be judged by the fact that he
+ called God to witness that he had not written any one of the anonymous
+ letters, purporting to give a true account of the doctor's fate, which had
+ been received by the police at the time of Parkman's disappearance. After
+ his condemnation Webster confessed to the authorship of at least one of
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jury retired at eight o'clock on the eleventh day of the trial. They
+ would seem to have approached their duty in a most solemn and devout
+ spirit, and it was with the greatest reluctance and after some searching
+ of heart that they brought themselves to find the prisoner guilty of
+ wilful murder. On hearing their verdict, the Professor sank into a seat,
+ and, dropping his head, rubbed his eyes behind his spectacles as if wiping
+ away tears. On the following morning the Chief Justice sentenced him to
+ death after a well-meaning speech of quite unnecessary length and
+ elaboration, at the conclusion of which the condemned man wept freely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A petition for a writ of error having been dismissed, the Professor in
+ July addressed a petition for clemency to the Council of the State. Dr.
+ Putnam, who had been attending Webster in the jail, read to the Council a
+ confession which he had persuaded the prisoner to make. According to this
+ statement Webster had, on the Friday afternoon, struck Parkman on the head
+ with a heavy wooden stick in a wild moment of rage, induced by the violent
+ taunts and threats of his creditor. Appalled by his deed, he had in panic
+ locked himself in his room, and proceeded with desperate haste to
+ dismember the body; he had placed it for that purpose in the sink in his
+ back room, through which was running a constant stream of water that
+ carried away the blood. Some portions of the body he had burnt in the
+ furnace; those in the lavatory and the tea-chest he had concealed there,
+ until he should have had an opportunity of getting rid of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this statement Professor Webster denied all premeditation. Dr. Putnam
+ asked him solemnly whether he had not, immediately before the crime,
+ meditated at any time on the advantages that would accrue to him from
+ Parkman's death. Webster replied "Never, before God!" He had, he
+ protested, no idea of doing Parkman an injury until the bitter tongue of
+ the latter provoked him. "I am irritable and violent," he said, "a
+ quickness and brief violence of temper has been the besetting sin of my
+ life. I was an only child, much indulged, and I have never secured the
+ control over my passions that I ought to have acquired early; and the
+ consequence is&mdash;all this!" He denied having told Parkman that he was
+ going to settle with him that afternoon, and said that he had asked him to
+ come to the college with the sole object of pleading with him for further
+ indulgence. He explained his convulsive seizure at the time of his arrest
+ by his having taken a dose of strychnine, which he had carried in his
+ pocket since the crime. In spite of these statements and the prayers of
+ the unfortunate man's wife and daughters, who, until his confession to Dr.
+ Putnam, had believed implicity in his innocence, the Council decided that
+ the law must take its course, and fixed August 30 as the day of execution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Professor resigned himself to his fate. He sent for Littlefield and
+ his wife, and expressed his regret for any injustice he had done them:
+ "All you said was true. You have misrepresented nothing." Asked by the
+ sheriff whether he was to understand from some of his expressions that he
+ contemplated an attempt at suicide, "Why should I?" he replied, "all the
+ proceedings in my case have been just... and it is just that I should die
+ upon the scaffold in accordance with that sentence." "Everybody is right,"
+ he said to the keeper of the jail, "and I am wrong. And I feel that, if
+ the yielding up of my life to the injured law will atone, even in part,
+ for the crime I have committed, that is a consolation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a letter to the Reverend Francis Parkman he expressed deep contrition
+ for his guilt. He added one sentence which may perhaps fairly express the
+ measure of premeditation that accompanied his crime. "I had never," he
+ wrote, "until the two or three last interviews with your brother, felt
+ towards him anything but gratitude for his many acts of kindness and
+ friendship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Professor Webster met his death with fortitude and resignation. That he
+ deserved his fate few will be inclined to deny. The attempt to procure
+ blood, the questions about the dissecting-room vault, the appointment made
+ with Parkman at the college, the statement to Pettee, all point to some
+ degree of premeditation, or at least would make it appear that the murder
+ of Parkman had been considered by him as a possible eventuality. His
+ accusation of Littlefield deprives him of a good deal of sympathy. On the
+ other hand, the age and position of Webster, the aggravating persistency
+ of Parkman, his threats and denunciations, coupled with his own shortness
+ of temper, make it conceivable that he may have killed his victim on a
+ sudden and overmastering provocation, in which case he had better at once
+ have acknowledged his crime instead of making a repulsive attempt to
+ conceal it. But for the evidence of Dr. Keep he would possibly have
+ escaped punishment altogether. Save for the portions of his false teeth,
+ there was not sufficient evidence to identify the remains found in the
+ college as those of Parkman. Without these teeth the proof of the corpus
+ delicti would have been incomplete, and so afforded Webster a fair chance
+ of acquittal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ The Mysterious Mr. Holmes
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "The Holmes-Pitezel Case," by F. B. Geyer, 1896; "Holmes' Own Story,"
+ Philadelphia, 1895; and "Celebrated Criminal Cases of America," by T. S.
+ Duke, San Francisco, are the authorities for this account of the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I HONOUR AMONGST THIEVES
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1894 Mr. Smith, a carpenter, of Philadelphia, had patented a
+ new saw-set. Wishing to make some money out of his invention, Mr. Smith
+ was attracted by the sign:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ B. F. PERRY PATENTS BOUGHT AND SOLD
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ which he saw stretched across the window of a two-storied house, 1,316
+ Callowhill Street. He entered the house and made the acquaintance of Mr.
+ Perry, a tall, dark, bony man, to whom he explained the merits of his
+ invention. Perry listened with interest, and asked for a model. In the
+ meantime he suggested that Smith should do some carpenter's work for him
+ in the house. Smith agreed, and on August 22, while at work there saw a
+ man enter the house and go up with Perry to a room on the second story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days later Smith called at Callowhill Street to ask Perry about the
+ sale of the patent. He waited half an hour in the shop below, called out
+ to Perry who, he thought, might be in the rooms above, received no answer
+ and went away. Next day, September 4, Smith returned, found the place just
+ as he had left it the day before; called Perry again, but again got no
+ answer. Surprised, he went upstairs, and in the back room of the second
+ story the morning sunshine, streaming through the window, showed him the
+ dead body of a man, his face charred beyond recognition, lying with his
+ feet to the window and his head to the door. There was evidence of some
+ sort of explosion: a broken bottle that had contained an inflammable
+ substance, a broken pipe filled with tobacco, and a burnt match lay by the
+ side of the body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general appearance of the dead man answered to that of B. F. Perry. A
+ medical examination of the body showed that death had been sudden, that
+ there had been paralysis of the involuntary muscles, and that the stomach,
+ besides showing symptoms of alcoholic irritation, emitted a strong odour
+ of chloroform. An inquest was held, and a verdict returned that B. F.
+ Perry had died of congestion of the lungs caused by the inhalation of
+ flame or chloroform. After lying in the mortuary for eleven days the body
+ was buried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime the Philadelphia branch of the Fidelity Mutual Life
+ Association had received a letter from one Jephtha D. Howe, an attorney at
+ St. Louis, stating that the deceased B. F. Perry was Benjamin F. Pitezel
+ of that city, who had been insured in their office for a sum of ten
+ thousand dollars. The insurance had been effected in Chicago in the
+ November of 1893. Mr. Howe proposed to come to Philadelphia with some
+ members of the Pitezel family to identify the remains. Referring to their
+ Chicago branch, the insurance company found that the only person who would
+ seem to have known Pitezel when in that city, was a certain H. H. Holmes,
+ living at Wilmette, Illinois. They got into communication with Mr. Holmes,
+ and forwarded to him a cutting from a newspaper, which stated erroneously
+ that the death of B. F. Perry had taken place in Chicago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On September 18 they received a letter from Mr. Holmes, in which he
+ offered what assistance he could toward the identification of B. F. Perry
+ as B. F. Pitezel. He gave the name of a dentist in Chicago who would be
+ able to recognise teeth which he had made for Pitezel, and himself
+ furnished a description of the man, especially of a malformation of the
+ knee and a warty growth on the back of the neck by which he could be
+ further identified. Mr. Holmes offered, if his expenses were paid, to come
+ to Chicago to view the body. Two days later he wrote again saying that he
+ had seen by other papers that Perry's death had taken place in
+ Philadelphia and not in Chicago, and that as he had to be in Baltimore in
+ a day or two, he would run over to Philadelphia and visit the office of
+ the Fidelity Life Association.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On September 20 the assiduous Mr. Holmes called at the office of the
+ Association in Philadelphia, inquired anxiously about the nature and cause
+ of Perry's death, gave again a description of him and, on learning that
+ Mr. Howe, the attorney from St. Louis, was about to come to Philadelphia
+ to represent the widow, Mrs. Pitezel, and complete the identification,
+ said that he would return to give the company any further help he could in
+ the matter. The following day Mr. Jephtha D. Howe, attorney of St. Louis,
+ arrived in Philadelphia, accompanied by Alice Pitezel, a daughter of the
+ deceased. Howe explained that Pitezel had taken the name of Perry owing to
+ financial difficulties. The company said that they accepted the fact that
+ Perry and Pitezel were one and the same man, but were not convinced that
+ the body was Pitezel's body. The visit of Holmes was mentioned. Howe said
+ that he did not know Mr. Holmes, but would be willing to meet him. At this
+ moment Holmes arrived at the office. He was introduced to Howe as a
+ stranger, and recognised as a friend by Alice Pitezel, a shy, awkward girl
+ of fourteen or fifteen years of age. It was then arranged that all the
+ parties should meet again next day to identify, if possible, the body,
+ which had been disinterred for that purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unpleasant duty of identifying the rapidly decomposing remains was
+ greatly curtailed by the readiness of Mr. Holmes. When the party met on
+ the 22nd at the Potter's Field, where the body had been disinterred and
+ laid out, the doctor present was unable to find the distinctive marks
+ which would show Perry and Pitezel to have been the same man. Holmes at
+ once stepped into the breach, took off his coat, rolled up his sleeves,
+ put on the rubber gloves, and taking a surgeon's knife from his pocket,
+ cut off the wart at the back of the neck, showed the injury to the leg,
+ and revealed also a bruised thumbnail which had been another distinctive
+ mark of Pitezel. The body was then covered up all but the teeth; the girl
+ Alice was brought in, and she said that the teeth appeared to be like
+ those of her father. The insurance company declared themselves satisfied,
+ and handed to Mr. Howe a cheque for 9,175 dollars, and to Mr. Holmes ten
+ dollars for his expenses. Smith, the carpenter, had been present at the
+ proceedings at the Potter's Field. For a moment he thought he detected a
+ likeness in Mr. Holmes to the man who had visited Perry at Callowhill
+ Street on August 22 and gone upstairs with him, but he did not feel sure
+ enough of the fact to make any mention of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the prison at St. Louis there languished in the year 1894 one Marion
+ Hedgspeth, serving a sentence of twenty years' imprisonment for an
+ audacious train robbery. On the night of November 30, 1891, the 'Friscow
+ express from St. Louis had been boarded by four ruffians, the express car
+ blown open with dynamite, and 10,000 dollars carried off. Hedgspeth and
+ another man were tried for the robbery, and sentenced to twenty years'
+ imprisonment. On October 9, 1894, Hegspeth{sic} made a statement to the
+ Governor of the St. Louis prison, which he said he wished to be
+ communicated to the Fidelity Mutual Life Association. In the previous July
+ Hedgspeth said that he had met in the prison a man of the name of H. M.
+ Howard, who was charged with fraud, but had been released on bail later in
+ the month. While in prison Howard told Hedgspeth that he had devised a
+ scheme for swindling an insurance company of 10,000 dollars, and promised
+ Hedgspeth that, if he would recommend him a lawyer suitable for such an
+ enterprise, he should have 500 dollars as his share of the proceeds.
+ Hedgspeth recommended Jephtha D. Howe. The latter entered with enthusiasm
+ into the scheme, and told Hedgspeth that he thought Mr. Howard "one of the
+ smoothest and slickest" men he had ever known. A corpse was to be found
+ answering to Pitezel's description, and to be so treated as to appear to
+ have been the victim of an accidental explosion, while Pitezel himself
+ would disappear to Germany. From Howe Hedgspeth learnt that the swindle
+ had been carried out successfully, but he had never received from Howard
+ the 500 dollars promised him. Consequently, he had but little compunction
+ in divulging the plot to the authorities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was realised at once that H. M. Howard and H. H. Holmes were the same
+ person, and that Jephtha D. Howe and Mr. Holmes were not the strangers to
+ each other that they had affected to be when they met in Philadelphia.
+ Though somewhat doubtful of the truth of Hedgspeth's statement, the
+ insurance company decided to set Pinkerton's detectives on the track of
+ Mr. H. H. Holmes. After more than a month's search he was traced to his
+ father's house at Gilmanton, N. H., and arrested in Boston on November 17.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Inquiry showed that, early in 1894, Holmes and Pitezel had acquired some
+ real property at Fort Worth in Texas and commenced building operations,
+ but had soon after left Texas under a cloud, arising from the theft of a
+ horse and other dubious transactions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Holmes had obtained the property at Fort Worth from a Miss Minnie
+ Williams, and transferred it to Pitezel. Pitezel was a drunken "crook," of
+ mean intelligence, a mesmeric subject entirely under the influence of
+ Holmes, who claimed to have considerable hypnotic powers. Pitezel had a
+ wife living at St. Louis and five children, three girls&mdash;Dessie,
+ Alice, and Nellie&mdash;a boy, Howard, and a baby in arms. At the time of
+ Holmes' arrest Mrs. Pitezel, with her eldest daughter, Dessie, and her
+ little baby, was living at a house rented by Holmes at Burlington,
+ Vermont. She also was arrested on a charge of complicity in the insurance
+ fraud and brought to Boston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days after his arrest Holmes, who dreaded being sent back to Texas on
+ a charge of horse-stealing, for which in that State the punishment is apt
+ to be rough and ready, made a statement to the police, in which he
+ acknowledged the fraud practised by him and Pitezel on the insurance
+ company. The body substituted for Pitezel had been obtained, said Holmes,
+ from a doctor in New York, packed in a trunk and sent to Philadelphia, but
+ he declined for the present to give the doctor's name. Pitezel, he said,
+ had gone with three of his children&mdash;Alice, Nellie and Howard&mdash;to
+ South America. This fact, however, Holmes had not communicated to Mrs.
+ Pitezel. When she arrived at Boston, the poor woman was in great distress
+ of mind. Questioned by the officers, she attempted to deny any complicity
+ in the fraud, but her real anxiety was to get news of her husband and her
+ three children. Alice she had not seen since the girl had gone to
+ Philadelphia to identify the supposed remains of her father. Shortly after
+ this Holmes had come to Mrs. Pitezel at St. Louis, and taken away Nellie
+ and Howard to join Alice, who, he said, was in the care of a widow lady at
+ Ovington, Kentucky. Since then Mrs. Pitezel had seen nothing of the
+ children or her husband. At Holmes' direction she had gone to Detroit,
+ Toronto, Ogdensberg and, lastly, to Burlington in the hope of meeting
+ either Pitezel or the children, but in vain. She believed that her husband
+ had deserted her; her only desire was to recover her children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On November 20 Holmes and Mrs. Pitezel were transferred from Boston to
+ Philadelphia, and there, along with Benjamin Pitezel and Jephtha D. Howe,
+ were charged with defrauding the Fidelity Life Association of 10,000
+ dollars. Soon after his arrival in Philadelphia Holmes, who was never
+ averse to talking, was asked by an inspector of the insurance company who
+ it was that had helped him to double up the body sent from New York and
+ pack it into the trunk. He replied that he had done it alone, having
+ learned the trick when studying medicine in Michigan. The inspector
+ recollected that the body when removed from Callowhill Street had been
+ straight and rigid. He asked Holmes what trick he had learnt in the course
+ of his medical studies by which it was possible to re-stiffen a body once
+ the rigor mortis had been broken. To this Holmes made no reply. But he
+ realised his mistake, and a few weeks later volunteered a second
+ statement. He now said that Pitezel, in a fit of depression, aggravated by
+ his drinking habits, had committed suicide on the third story of the house
+ in Callowhill Street. There Holmes had found his body, carried it down on
+ to the floor below, and arranged it in the manner agreed upon for
+ deceiving the insurance company. Pitezel, he said, had taken his life by
+ lying on the floor and allowing chloroform to run slowly into his mouth
+ through a rubber tube placed on a chair. The three children, Holmes now
+ stated, had gone to England with a friend of his, Miss Minnie Williams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Minnie Williams was the lady, from whom Holmes was said to have
+ acquired the property in Texas which he and Pitezel had set about
+ developing. There was quite a tragedy, according to Holmes, connected with
+ the life of Miss Williams. She had come to Holmes in 1893, as secretary,
+ at a drug store which he was then keeping in Chicago. Their relations had
+ become more intimate, and later in the year Miss Williams wrote to her
+ sister, Nannie, saying that she was going to be married, and inviting her
+ to the wedding. Nannie arrived, but unfortunately a violent quarrel broke
+ out between the two sisters, and Holmes came home to find that Minnie in
+ her rage had killed her sister. He had helped her out of the trouble by
+ dropping Nannie's body into the Chicago lake. After such a distressing
+ occurrence Miss Williams was only too glad of the opportunity of leaving
+ America with the Pitezel children. In the meantime Holmes, under the name
+ of Bond, and Pitezel, under that of Lyman, had proceeded to deal with Miss
+ Williams' property in Texas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For women Holmes would always appear to have possessed some power of
+ attraction, a power of which he availed himself generously. Holmes, whose
+ real name was Herman W. Mudgett, was thirty-four years of age at the time
+ of his arrest. As a boy he had spent his life farming in Vermont, after
+ which he had taken up medicine and acquired some kind of medical degree.
+ In the course of his training Holmes and a fellow student, finding a body
+ that bore a striking resemblance to the latter; obtained 1,000 dollars
+ from an insurance company by a fraud similar to that in which Holmes had
+ engaged subsequently with Pitezel. After spending some time on the staff
+ of a lunatic asylum in Pennsylvania, Holmes set up as a druggist in
+ Chicago. His affairs in this city prospered, and he was enabled to erect,
+ at the corner of Wallace and Sixty-Third Streets, the four-storied
+ building known later as "Holmes Castle." It was a singular structure. The
+ lower part consisted of a shop and offices. Holmes occupied the second
+ floor, and had a laboratory on the third. In his office was a vault, air
+ proof and sound proof. In the bathroom a trap-door, covered by a rug,
+ opened on to a secret staircase leading down to the cellar, and a similar
+ staircase connected the cellar with the laboratory. In the cellar was a
+ large grate. To this building Miss Minnie Williams had invited her sister
+ to come for her wedding with Holmes, and it was in this building,
+ according to Holmes, that the tragedy of Nannie's untimely death occurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In hoping to become Holmes' wife, Miss Minnie Williams was not to enjoy an
+ exclusive privilege. At the time of his arrest Holmes had three wives,
+ each ignorant of the others' existence. He had married the first in 1878,
+ under the name of Mudgett, and was visiting her at Burlington, Vermont,
+ when the Pinkerton detectives first got on his track. The second he had
+ married at Chicago, under the name of Howard, and the third at Denver as
+ recently as January, 1894, under the name of Holmes. The third Mrs. Holmes
+ had been with him when he came to Philadelphia to identify Pitezel's body.
+ The appearance of Holmes was commonplace, but he was a man of plausible
+ and ingratiating address, apparent candour, and able in case of necessity
+ to "let loose," as he phrased it, "the fount of emotion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The year 1895 opened to find the much enduring Holmes still a prisoner in
+ Philadelphia. The authorities seemed in no haste to indict him for fraud;
+ their interest was concentrated rather in endeavouring to find the
+ whereabouts of Miss Williams and her children, and of one Edward Hatch,
+ whom Holmes had described as helping him in arranging for their departure.
+ The "great humiliation" of being a prisoner was very distressing to
+ Holmes.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "I only know the sky has lost its blue,
+ The days are weary and the night is drear."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ These struck him as two beautiful lines very appropriate to his situation.
+ He made a New Year's resolve to give up meat during his close confinement.
+ The visits of his third wife brought him some comfort. He was "agreeably
+ surprised" to find that, as an unconvicted prisoner, he could order in his
+ own meals and receive newspapers and periodicals. But he was hurt at an
+ unfriendly suggestion on the part of the authorities that Pitezel had not
+ died by his own hand, and that Edward Hatch was but a figment of his rich
+ imagination. He would like to have been released on bail, but in the same
+ unfriendly spirit was informed that, if he were, he would be detained on a
+ charge of murder. And so the months dragged on. Holmes, studious, patient,
+ injured, the authorities puzzled, suspicions, baffled&mdash;still no news
+ of Miss Williams or the three children. It was not until June 3 that
+ Holmes was put on his trial for fraud, and the following day pleaded
+ guilty. Sentence was postponed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same day Holmes was sent for to the office of the District Attorney,
+ who thus addressed him: "It is strongly suspected, Holmes, that you have
+ not only murdered Pitezel, but that you have killed the children. The best
+ way to remove this suspicion is to produce the children at once. Now,
+ where are they?" Unfriendly as was this approach, Holmes met it calmly,
+ reiterated his previous statement that the children had gone with Miss
+ Williams to England, and gave her address in London, 80 Veder or Vadar
+ Street, where, he said, Miss Williams had opened a massage establishment.
+ He offered to draw up and insert a cipher advertisement in the New York
+ Herald, by means of which, he said, Miss Williams and he had agreed to
+ communicate, and almost tearfully he added, "Why should I kill innocent
+ children?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Asked to give the name of any person who had seen Miss Williams and the
+ children in the course of their journeyings in America, he resented the
+ disbelief implied in such a question, and strong was his manly indignation
+ when one of the gentlemen present expressed his opinion that the story was
+ a lie from beginning to end. This rude estimate of Holmes' veracity was,
+ however, in some degree confirmed when a cipher advertisement published in
+ the New York Herald according to Holmes' directions, produced no reply
+ from Miss Williams, and inquiry showed that no such street as Veder or
+ Vadar Street was to be found in London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of these disappointments, Holmes' quiet confidence in his own
+ good faith continued unshaken. When the hapless Mrs. Pitezel was released,
+ he wrote her a long letter. "Knowing me as you do," he said, "can you
+ imagine me killing little and innocent children, especially without any
+ motive?" But even Mrs. Pitezel was not wholly reassured. She recollected
+ how Holmes had taken her just before his arrest to a house he had rented
+ at Burlington, Vermont, how he had written asking her to carry a package
+ of nitro-glycerine from the bottom to the top of the house, and how one
+ day she had found him busily removing the boards in the cellar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II THE WANDERING ASSASSIN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The District Attorney and the Insurance Company were not in agreement as
+ to the fate of the Pitezel children. The former still inclined to the hope
+ and belief that they were in England with Miss Williams, but the insurance
+ company took a more sinister view. No trace of them existed except a tin
+ box found among Holmes' effects, containing letters they had written to
+ their mother and grandparents from Cincinnati, Indianapolis, and Detroit,
+ which had been given to Holmes to dispatch but had never reached their
+ destination. The box contained letters from Mrs. Pitezel to her children,
+ which Holmes had presumably intercepted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was decided to make a final attempt to resolve all doubts by sending an
+ experienced detective over the route taken by the children in America. He
+ was to make exhaustive inquiries in each city with a view to tracing the
+ visits of Holmes or the three children. For this purpose a detective of
+ the name of Geyer was chosen. The record of his search is a remarkable
+ story of patient and persistent investigation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice Pitezel had not seen her mother since she had gone with Holmes to
+ identify her father's remains in Philadelphia. From there Holmes had taken
+ her to Indianapolis. In the meantime he had visited Mrs. Pitezel at St.
+ Louis, and taken away with him the girl, Nellie, and the boy, Howard,
+ alleging as his reason for doing so that they and Alice were to join their
+ father, whose temporary effacement was necessary to carry out successfully
+ the fraud on the insurance company, to which Mrs. Pitezel had been from
+ the first an unwilling party. Holmes, Nellie and Howard had joined Alice
+ at Indianapolis, and from there all four were believed to have gone to
+ Cincinnati. It was here, accordingly, on June 27, 1895, that Geyer
+ commenced his search.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After calling at a number of hotels, Geyer found that on Friday, September
+ 28, 1894, a man, giving the name of Alexander E. Cook, and three children
+ had stayed at a hotel called the Atlantic House. Geyer recollected that
+ Holmes, when later on he had sent Mrs. Pitezel to the house in Burlington,
+ had described her as Mrs. A. E. Cook and, though not positive, the hotel
+ clerk thought that he recognised in the photographs of Holmes and he three
+ children, which Geyer showed him, the four visitors to the hotel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had left the Atlantic House the next day, and on that same day, the
+ 29th, Geyer found that Mr. A. E. Cook and three children had registered at
+ the Bristol Hotel, where they had stayed until Sunday the 30th.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Knowing Holmes' habit of renting houses, Geyer did not confine his
+ enquiries to the hotels. He visited a number of estate agents and learnt
+ that a man and a boy, identified as Holmes and Howard Pitezel, had
+ occupied a house No. 305 Poplar Street. The man had given the name of A.
+ C. Hayes. He had taken the house on Friday the 28th, and on the 29th had
+ driven up to it with the boy in a furniture wagon. A curious neighbour,
+ interested in the advent of a newcomer, saw the wagon arrive, and was
+ somewhat astonished to observe that the only furniture taken into the
+ house was a large iron cylinder stove. She was still further surprised
+ when, on the following day, Mr. Hayes told her that he was not going after
+ all to occupy the house, and made her a present of the cylinder stove.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Cincinnati Geyer went to Indianapolis. Here inquiry showed that on
+ September 30 three children had been brought by a man identified as Holmes
+ to the Hotel English, and registered in the name of Canning. This was the
+ maiden name of Mrs. Pitezel. The children had stayed at the hotel one
+ night. After that Geyer seemed to lose track of them until he was reminded
+ of a hotel then closed, called the Circle House. With some difficulty he
+ got a sight of the books of the hotel, and found that the three Canning
+ children had arrived there on October 1 and stayed until the 10th. From
+ the former proprietor of the hotel he learnt that Holmes had described
+ himself as the children's uncle, and had said that Howard was a bad boy,
+ whom he was trying to place in some institution. The children seldom went
+ out; they would sit in their room drawing or writing, often they were
+ found crying; they seemed homesick and unhappy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are letters of the children written from Indianapolis to their
+ mothers, letters found in Holmes' possession, which had never reached her.
+ In these letters they ask their mother why she does not write to them. She
+ had written, but her letters were in Holmes' possession. Alice writes that
+ she is reading "Uncle Tom's Cabin." She has read so much that her eyes
+ hurt; they have bought a crystal pen for five cents which gives them some
+ amusement; they had been to the Zoo in Cincinnati the Sunday before: "I
+ expect this Sunday will pass away slower than I don't know&mdash;Howard is
+ two (sic) dirty to be seen out on the street to-day." Sometimes they go
+ and watch a man who paints "genuine oil paintings" in a shoe store, which
+ are given away with every dollar purchase of shoes&mdash;"he can paint a
+ picture in one and a half minutes, ain't that quick!" Howard was getting a
+ little troublesome. "I don't like to tell you," writes Alice, "but you ask
+ me, so I will have to. Howard won't mind me at all. He wanted a book and I
+ got 'Life of General Sheridan,' and it is awful nice, but now he don't
+ read it at all hardly." Poor Howard! One morning, says Alice, Mr. Holmes
+ told him to stay in and wait for him, as he was coming to take him out,
+ but Howard was disobedient, and when Mr. Holmes arrived he had gone out.
+ Better for Howard had he never returned! "We have written two or three
+ letters to you," Alice tells her mother, "and I guess you will begin to
+ get them now." She will not get them. Mr. Holmes is so very particular
+ that the insurance company shall get no clue to the whereabouts of any
+ member of the Pitezel family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geyer knew that from Indianapolis Holmes had gone to Detroit. He
+ ascertained that two girls, "Etta and Nellie Canning," had registered on
+ October 12 at the New Western Hotel in that city, and from there had moved
+ on the 15th to a boarding-house in Congress Street. From Detroit Alice had
+ written to her grandparents. It was cold and wet, she wrote; she and Etta
+ had colds and chapped hands: "We have to stay in all the time. All that
+ Nell and I can do is to draw, and I get so tired sitting that I could get
+ up and fly almost. I wish I could see you all. I am getting so homesick
+ that I don't know what to do. I suppose Wharton (their baby brother) walks
+ by this time, don't he? I would like to have him here, he would pass away
+ the time a good deal." As a fact little Wharton, his mother and sister
+ Dessie, were at this very moment in Detroit, within ten minutes' walk of
+ the hotel at which Holmes had registered "Etta and Nellie Canning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On October 14 there had arrived in that city a weary, anxious-looking
+ woman, with a girl and a little baby. They took a room at Geis's Hotel,
+ registering as Mrs. Adams and daughter. Mrs. Adams seemed in great
+ distress of mind, and never left her room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The housekeeper, being shown their photographs, identified the woman and
+ the girl as Mrs. Pitezel and her eldest daughter Dessie. As the same time
+ there had been staying at another hotel in Detroit a Mr. and Mrs. Holmes,
+ whose photographs showed them to be the Mr. Holmes in question and his
+ third wife. These three parties&mdash;the two children, Mrs. Pitezel and
+ her baby, and the third Mrs. Holmes&mdash;were all ignorant of each
+ other's presence in Detroit; and under the secret guidance of Mr. Holmes
+ the three parties (still unaware of their proximity to each other), left
+ Detroit for Canada, arriving in Toronto on or about October 18, and
+ registering at three separate hotels. The only one who had not to all
+ appearances reached Toronto was the boy Howard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Toronto "Alice and Nellie Canning" stayed at the Albion Hotel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They arrived there on October 19, and left on the 25th. During their stay
+ a man, identified as Holmes, had called every morning for the two
+ children, and taken them out; but they had come back alone, usually in
+ time for supper. On the 25th he had called and taken them out, but they
+ had not returned to supper. After that date Geyer could find no trace of
+ them. Bearing in mind Holmes' custom of renting houses, he compiled a list
+ of all the house agents in Toronto, and laboriously applied to each one
+ for information. The process was a slow one, and the result seemed likely
+ to be disappointing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To aid his search Geyer decided to call in the assistance of the Press.
+ The newspapers readily published long accounts of the case and portraits
+ of Holmes and the children. At last, after eight days of patient and
+ untiring investigation, after following up more than one false clue, Geyer
+ received a report that there was a house&mdash;No. 16 St. Vincent Street&mdash;which
+ had been rented in the previous October by a man answering to the
+ description of Holmes. The information came from an old Scottish gentleman
+ living next door. Geyer hastened to see him. The old gentleman said that
+ the man who had occupied No. 16 in October had told him that he had taken
+ the house for his widowed sister, and he recognised the photograph of
+ Alice Pitezel as one of the two girls accompanying him. The only furniture
+ the man had taken into the house was a bed, a mattress and a trunk. During
+ his stay at No. 16 this man had called on his neighbour about four o'clock
+ one afternoon and borrowed a spade, saying that he wanted to dig a place
+ in the cellar where his widowed sister could keep potatoes; he had
+ returned the spade the following morning. The lady to whom the house
+ belonged recognised Holmes' portrait as that of the man to whom she had
+ let No. 16.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last Geyer seemed to be on the right track. He hurried back to St.
+ Vincent Street, borrowed from the old gentleman at No. 18 the very spade
+ which he had lent to Holmes in the previous October, and got the
+ permission of the present occupier of No. 16 to make a search. In the
+ centre of the kitchen Geyer found a trap-door leading down into a small
+ cellar. In one corner of the cellar he saw that the earth had been
+ recently dug up. With the help of the spade the loose earth was removed,
+ and at a depth of some three feet, in a state of advanced decomposition,
+ lay the remains of what appeared to be two children. A little toy wooden
+ egg with a snake inside it, belonging to the Pitezel children, had been
+ found by the tenant who had taken the house after Holmes; a later tenant
+ had found stuffed into the chimney, but not burnt, some clothing that
+ answered the description of that worn by Alice and Etta Pitezel; and by
+ the teeth and hair of the two corpses Mrs. Pitezel was able to identify
+ them as those of her two daughters. The very day that Alice and Etta had
+ met their deaths at St. Vincent Street, their mother had been staying near
+ them at a hotel in the same city, and later on the same day Holmes had
+ persuaded her to leave Toronto for Ogdensburg. He said that they were
+ being watched by detectives, and so it would be impossible for her husband
+ to come to see her there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the problem was not yet wholly solved. What had become of Howard? So
+ far Geyer's search had shown that Holmes had rented three houses, one in
+ Cincinnati, one in Detroit, and one in Toronto. Howard had been with his
+ sisters at the hotels in Indianapolis, and in Detroit the house agents had
+ said that, when Holmes had rented a house there, he had been accompanied
+ by a boy. Yet an exhaustive search of that house had revealed no trace of
+ him. Geyer returned to Detroit and again questioned the house agents; on
+ being pressed their recollection of the boy who had accompanied Holmes
+ seemed very vague and uncertain. This served only to justify a conclusion
+ at which Geyer had already arrived, that Howard had never reached Detroit,
+ but had disappeared in Indianapolis. Alice's letters, written from there,
+ had described how Holmes had wanted to take Howard out one day and how the
+ boy had refused to stay in and wait for him. In the same way Holmes had
+ called for the two girls at the Albion Hotel in Toronto on October 25 and
+ taken them out with him, after which they had never been seen alive except
+ by the old gentleman at No. 18 St. Vincent Street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Geyer could discover that Holmes had not departed in Indianapolis from
+ his usual custom of renting houses, he might be on the high way to solving
+ the mystery of Howard's fate. Accordingly he returned to Indianapolis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime, Holmes, in his prison at Philadelphia, learnt of the
+ discovery at Toronto. "On the morning of the 16th of July," he writes in
+ his journal, "my newspaper was delivered to me about 8.30 a.m., and I had
+ hardly opened it before I saw in large headlines the announcement of the
+ finding of the children in Toronto. For the moment it seemed so impossible
+ that I was inclined to think it was one of the frequent newspaper
+ excitements that had attended the earlier part of the case, but, in
+ attempting to gain some accurate comprehension of what was stated in the
+ article, I became convinced that at least certain bodies had been found
+ there, and upon comparing the date when the house was hired I knew it to
+ be the same as when the children had been in Toronto; and thus being
+ forced to realise the awfulness of what had probably happened, I gave up
+ trying to read the article, and saw instead the two little faces as they
+ had looked when I hurriedly left them&mdash;felt the innocent child's kiss
+ so timidly given, and heard again their earnest words of farewell, and
+ realised that I had received another burden to carry to my grave with me,
+ equal, if not worse, than the horrors of Nannie Williams' death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Questioned by the district attorney, Holmes met this fresh evidence by
+ evoking once again the mythical Edward Hatch and suggesting that Miss
+ Minnie Williams, in a "hellish wish for vengeance" because of Holmes'
+ fancied desertion, and in order to make it appear probable that he, and
+ not she, had murdered her sister, had prompted Hatch to commit the horrid
+ deed. Holmes asked to be allowed to go to Toronto that he might collect
+ any evidence which he could find there in his favour. The district
+ attorney refused his request; he had determined to try Holmes in
+ Philadelphia. "What more could, be said?" writes Holmes. Indeed, under the
+ circumstances, and in the unaccountable absence of Edward Hatch and Minnie
+ Williams, there was little more to be said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Detective Geyer reopened his search in Indianapolis by obtaining a list of
+ advertisements of houses to let in the city in 1894. Nine hundred of these
+ were followed up in vain. He then turned his attention to the small towns
+ lying around Indianapolis with no happier result. Geyer wrote in something
+ of despair to his superiors: "By Monday we will have searched every
+ outlying town except Irvington. After Irvington, I scarcely know where we
+ shall go." Thither he went on August 27, exactly two months from the day
+ on which his quest had begun. As he entered the town he noticed the
+ advertisement of an estate agent. He called at the office and found a
+ "pleasant-faced old gentleman," who greeted him amiably. Once again Geyer
+ opened his now soiled and ragged packet of photographs, and asked the
+ gentleman if in October, 1894, he had let a house to a man who said that
+ he wanted one for a widowed sister. He showed him the portrait of Holmes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man put on his glasses and looked at the photograph for some time.
+ Yes, he said, he did remember that he had given the keys of a cottage in
+ October, 1894, to a man of Holmes' appearance, and he recollected the man
+ the more distinctly for the uncivil abruptness with which he had asked for
+ the keys; "I felt," he said, "he should have had more respect for my grey
+ hairs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the old gentleman's office Geyer hastened to the cottage, and made at
+ once for the cellar. There he could find no sign of recent disturbance.
+ But beneath the floor of a piazza adjoining the house he found the remains
+ of a trunk, answering to the description of that which the Pitezel
+ children had had with them, and in an outhouse he discovered the
+ inevitable stove, Holmes' one indispensable piece of furniture. It was
+ stained with blood on the top. A neighbour had seen Holmes in the same
+ October drive up to the house in the furniture wagon accompanied by a boy,
+ and later in the day Holmes had asked him to come over to the cottage and
+ help him to put up a stove. The neighbour asked him why he did not use
+ gas; Holmes replied that he did not think gas was healthy for children.
+ While the two men were putting up the stove, the little boy stood by and
+ watched them. After further search there were discovered in the cellar
+ chimney some bones, teeth, a pelvis and the baked remains of a stomach,
+ liver and spleen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Medical examination showed them to be the remains of a child between seven
+ and ten years of age. A spinning top, a scarf-pin, a pair of shoes and
+ some articles of clothing that had belonged to the little Pitezels, had
+ been found in the house at different times, and were handed over to Geyer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His search was ended. On September 1 he returned to Philadelphia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Holmes was put on his trial on October 28, 1895, before the Court of Oyer
+ and Terminer in Philadelphia, charged with the murder of Benjamin Pitezel.
+ In the course of the trial the district attorney offered to put in
+ evidence showing that Holmes had also murdered the three children of
+ Pitezel, contending that such evidence was admissible on the ground that
+ the murders of the children and their father were parts of the same
+ transaction. The judge refused to admit the evidence, though expressing a
+ doubt as to its inadmissibility. The defence did not dispute the identity
+ of the body found in Callowhill Street, but contended that Pitezel had
+ committed suicide. The medical evidence negatived such a theory. The
+ position of the body, its condition when discovered, were entirely
+ inconsistent with self-destruction, and the absence of irritation in the
+ stomach showed that the chloroform found there must have been poured into
+ it after death. In all probability, Holmes had chloroformed Pitezel when
+ he was drunk or asleep. He had taken the chloroform to Callowhill Street
+ as a proposed ingredient in a solution for cleaning clothes, which he and
+ Pitezel were to patent. It was no doubt with the help of the same drug
+ that he had done to death the little children, and failing the
+ nitro-glycerine, with that drug he had intended to put Mrs. Pitezel and
+ her two remaining children out of the way at the house in Burlington; for
+ after his trial there was found there, hidden away in the cellar, a bottle
+ containing eight or ten ounces of chloroform.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though assisted by counsel, Holmes took an active part in his defence. He
+ betrayed no feeling at the sight of Mrs. Pitezel, the greater part of
+ whose family he had destroyed, but the appearance of his third wife as a
+ witness he made an opportunity for "letting loose the fount of emotion,"
+ taking care to inform his counsel beforehand that he intended to perform
+ this touching feat. He was convicted and sentenced to death on November 2.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Previous to the trial of Holmes the police had made an exhaustive
+ investigation of the mysterious building in Chicago known as "Holmes'
+ Castle." The result was sufficiently sinister. In the stove in the cellar
+ charred human bones were found, and in the middle of the room stood a
+ large dissecting table stained with blood. On digging up the cellar floor
+ some human ribs, sections of vertebrae and teeth were discovered buried in
+ quicklime, and in other parts of the "castle" the police found more
+ charred bones, some metal buttons, a trunk, and a piece of a watch chain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trunk and piece of watch chain were identified as having belonged to
+ Miss Minnie Williams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Inquiry showed that Miss Williams had entered Holmes' employment as a
+ typist in 1893, and had lived with him at the castle. In the latter part
+ of the year she had invited her sister, Nannie, to be present at her
+ wedding with Holmes. Nannie had come to Chicago for that purpose, and
+ since then the two sisters had never been seen alive. In February in the
+ following year Pitezel, under the name of Lyman, had deposited at Fort
+ Worth, Texas, a deed according to which a man named Bond had transferred
+ to him property in that city which had belonged to Miss Williams, and
+ shortly after, Holmes, under the name of Pratt, joined him at Fort Worth,
+ whereupon the two commenced building on Miss Williams' land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other mysterious cases besides those of the Williams sisters revealed the
+ Bluebeard-like character of this latterday castle of Mr. Holmes. In 1887 a
+ man of the name of Connor entered Holmes' employment. He brought with him
+ to the castle a handsome, intelligent wife and a little girl of eight or
+ nine years of age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a short time Connor quarrelled with his wife and went away, leaving
+ Mrs. Connor and the little girl with Holmes. After 1892 Mrs. Connor and
+ her daughter had disappeared, but in August, 1895, the police found in the
+ castle some clothes identified as theirs, and the janitor, Quinlan,
+ admitted having seen the dead body of Mrs. Connor in the castle. Holmes,
+ questioned in his prison in Philadelphia, said that Mrs. Connor had died
+ under an operation, but that he did not know what had become of the little
+ girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year of Mrs. Connor's disappearance, a typist named Emily Cigrand,
+ who had been employed in a hospital in which Benjamin Pitezel had been a
+ patient, was recommended by the latter to Holmes. She entered his
+ employment, and she and Holmes soon became intimate, passing as "Mr. and
+ Mrs. Gordon." Emily Cigrand had been in the habit of writing regularly to
+ her parents in Indiana, but after December 6, 1892, they had never heard
+ from her again, nor could any further trace of her be found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man who worked for Holmes as a handy man at the castle stated to the
+ police that in 1892 Holmes had given him a skeleton of a man to mount, and
+ in January, 1893, showed him in the laboratory another male skeleton with
+ some flesh still on it, which also he asked him to mount. As there was a
+ set of surgical instruments in the laboratory and also a tank filled with
+ a fluid preparation for removing flesh, the handy man thought that Holmes
+ was engaged in some kind of surgical work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About a month before his execution, when Holmes' appeals from his sentence
+ had failed and death appeared imminent, he sold to the newspapers for
+ 7,500 dollars a confession in which he claimed to have committed
+ twenty-seven murders in the course of his career. The day after it
+ appeared he declared the whole confession to be a "fake." He was tired, he
+ said, of being accused by the newspapers of having committed every
+ mysterious murder that had occurred during the last ten years. When it was
+ pointed out to him that the account given in his confession of the murder
+ of the Pitezel children was clearly untrue, he replied, "Of course, it is
+ not true, but the newspapers wanted a sensation and they have got it." The
+ confession was certainly sensational enough to satisfy the most exacting
+ of penny-a-liners, and a lasting tribute to Holmes' undoubted power of
+ extravagant romancing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to his story, some of his twenty-seven victims had met their
+ death by poison, some by more violent methods, some had died a lingering
+ death in the air-tight and sound-proof vault of the castle. Most of these
+ he mentioned by name, but some of these were proved afterwards to be
+ alive. Holmes had actually perpetrated, in all probability, about ten
+ murders. But, given further time and opportunity, there is no reason why
+ this peripatetic assassin should not have attained to the considerable
+ figure with which he credited himself in his bogus confession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Holmes was executed in Philadelphia on May 7, 1896. He seemed to meet his
+ fate with indifference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The motive of Holmes in murdering Pitezel and three of his children and in
+ planning to murder his wife and remaining children, originated in all
+ probability in a quarrel that occurred between Pitezel and himself in the
+ July of 1894. Pitezel had tired apparently of Holmes and his doings, and
+ wanted to break off the connection. But he must have known enough of
+ Holmes' past to make him a dangerous enemy. It was Pitezel who had
+ introduced to Holmes, Emily Cigrand, the typist, who had disappeared so
+ mysteriously in the castle; Pitezel had been his partner in the fraudulent
+ appropriation of Miss Minnie Williams' property in Texas; it is more than
+ likely, therefore, that Pitezel knew something of the fate of Miss
+ Williams and her sister. By reviving, with Pitezel's help, his old plan
+ for defrauding insurance companies, Holmes saw the opportunity of making
+ 10,000 dollars, which he needed sorely, and at the same time removing his
+ inconvenient and now lukewarm associate. Having killed Pitezel and
+ received the insurance money, Holmes appropriated to his own use the
+ greater part of the 10,000 dollars, giving Mrs. Pitezel in return for her
+ share of the plunder a bogus bill for 5,000 dollars. Having robbed Mrs.
+ Pitezel of both her husband and her money, to this thoroughgoing criminal
+ there seemed only one satisfactory way of escaping detection, and that was
+ to exterminate her and the whole of her family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Holmes not confided his scheme of the insurance fraud to Hedgspeth in
+ St. Louis prison and then broken faith with him, there is no reason why
+ the fraud should ever have been discovered. The subsequent murders had
+ been so cunningly contrived that, had the Insurance Company not put the
+ Pinkerton detectives on his track, Holmes would in all probability have
+ ended by successfully disposing of Mrs. Pitezel, Dessie, and the baby at
+ the house in Burlington, Vermont, and the entire Pitezel family would have
+ disappeared as completely as his other victims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Holmes admitted afterwards that his one mistake had been his confiding to
+ Hedgspeth his plans for defrauding an insurance company&mdash;a mistake,
+ the unfortunate results of which might have been avoided, if he had kept
+ faith with the train robber and given him the 500 dollars which he had
+ promised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The case of Holmes illustrates the practical as well as the purely ethical
+ value of "honour among thieves," and shows how a comparatively
+ insignificant misdeed may ruin a great and comprehensive plan of crime. To
+ dare to attempt the extermination of a family of seven persons, and to
+ succeed so nearly in effecting it, could be the work of no tyro, no
+ beginner like J. B. Troppmann. It was the act of one who having already
+ succeeded in putting out of the way a number of other persons undetected,
+ might well and justifiably believe that he was born for greater and more
+ compendious achievements in robbery and murder than any who had gone
+ before him. One can almost subscribe to America's claim that Holmes is the
+ "greatest criminal" of a century boasting no mean record in such persons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the remarkable character of his achievements as an assassin we are apt
+ to lose sight of Holmes' singular skill and daring as a liar and a
+ bigamist. As an instance of the former may be cited his audacious
+ explanation to his family, when they heard of his having married a second
+ time. He said that he had met with a serious accident to his head, and
+ that when he left the hospital, found that he had entirely lost his
+ memory; that, while in this state of oblivion, he had married again and
+ then, when his memory returned, realised to his horror his unfortunate
+ position. Plausibility would seem to have been one of Holmes' most useful
+ gifts; men and women alike&mdash;particularly the latter&mdash;he seems to
+ have deceived with ease. His appearance was commonplace, in no way
+ suggesting the conventional criminal, his manner courteous, ingratiating
+ and seemingly candid, and like so many scoundrels, he could play
+ consummately the man of sentiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The weak spot in Holmes' armour as an enemy of society was a dangerous
+ tendency to loquacity, the defect no doubt of his qualities of plausible
+ and insinuating address and ever ready mendacity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ The Widow Gras
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Report of the trial of the woman Gras and Gaudry in the Gazette des
+ Tribunaux. The case is dealt with also by Mace in his "Femmes
+ Criminelles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I THE CHARMER
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jenny Amenaide Brecourt was born in Paris in the year 1837. Her father was
+ a printer, her mother sold vegetables. The parents neglected the child,
+ but a lady of title took pity on her, and when she was five years old
+ adopted her. Even as a little girl she was haughty and imperious. At the
+ age of eight she refused to play with another child on the ground of her
+ companion's social inferiority. "The daughter of a Baroness," she said,
+ "cannot play with the daughter of a wine-merchant." When she was eleven
+ years old, her parents took her away from her protectress and sent her
+ into the streets to sell gingerbread&mdash;a dangerous experience for a
+ child of tender years. After six years of street life, Amenaide sought out
+ her benefactress and begged her to take her back. The Baroness consented,
+ and found her employment in a silk manufactory. One day the girl, now
+ eighteen years old, attended the wedding of one of her companions in the
+ factory. She returned home after the ceremony thoughtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She said that she wanted to get married. The Baroness did not take her
+ statement seriously, and on the grocer calling one day, said in jest to
+ Amenaide, "You want a husband, there's one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Amenaide was in earnest. She accepted the suggestion and, to the
+ Baroness' surprise, insisted on taking the grocer as her husband.
+ Reluctantly the good lady gave her consent, and in 1855 Amenaide Brecourt
+ became the wife of the grocer Gras.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A union, so hasty and ill-considered, was not likely to be of long
+ duration. With the help of the worthy Baroness the newly married couple
+ started a grocery business. But Amenaide was too economical for her
+ husband and mother-in-law. Quarrels ensued, recriminations. In a spirit of
+ unamiable prophecy husband and wife foretold each other's future. "You
+ will die in a hospital," said the wife. "You will land your carcase in
+ prison," retorted the husband. In both instances they were correct in
+ their anticipations. One day the husband disappeared. For a short time
+ Amenaide returned to her long-suffering protectress, and then she too
+ disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she is heard of again, Amenaide Brecourt has become Jeanne de la
+ Cour. Jeanne de la Cour is a courtesan. She has tried commerce, acting,
+ literature, journalism, and failed at them all. Henceforth men are to make
+ her fortune for her. Such charms as she may possess, such allurements as
+ she can offer, she is ready to employ without heart or feeling to
+ accomplish her end. Without real passion, she has an almost abnormal,
+ erotic sensibility, which serves in its stead. She cares only for one
+ person, her sister. To her Jeanne de la Cour unfolded her philosophy of
+ life. While pretending to love men, she is going to make them suffer. They
+ are to be her playthings, she knows how to snare them: "All is dust and
+ lies. So much the worse for the men who get in my way. Men are mere
+ stepping-stones to me. As soon as they begin to fail or are played out, I
+ put them scornfully aside. Society is a vast chess-board, men the pawns,
+ some white, some black; I move them as I please, and break them when they
+ bore me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The early years of Jeanne de la Cour's career as a Phryne were hardly more
+ successful than her attempts at literature, acting and journalism. True to
+ her philosophy, she had driven one lover, a German, to suicide, and
+ brought another to his death by over-doses of cantharides. On learning of
+ the death of the first, she reflected patriotically, "One German the less
+ in Paris!" That of the second elicited the matter-of-fact comment, "It was
+ bound to happen; he had no moderation." A third admirer, who died in a
+ hospital, was dismissed as "a fool who, in spite of all, still respects
+ women." But, in ruining her lovers, she had ruined her own health. In 1865
+ she was compelled to enter a private asylum. There she is described as
+ "dark in complexion, with dark expressive eyes, very pale, and of a
+ nervous temperament, agreeable, and pretty." She was suffering at the time
+ of her admission from hysterical seizures, accompanied by insane
+ exaltation, convulsions and loss of speech. In speaking of her humble
+ parents she said, "I don't know such people"; her manner was bombastic,
+ and she was fond of posing as a fine lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a few months Jeanne de la Cour was discharged from the asylum as
+ cured, and on the advice of her doctors went to Vittel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There she assumed the rank of Baroness and recommenced her career, but
+ this time in a more reasonable and businesslike manner. Her comments,
+ written to her sister, on her fellow guests at the hotel are caustic. She
+ mocks at some respectable married women who are trying to convert her to
+ Catholicism. To others who refuse her recognition, she makes herself so
+ mischievous and objectionable that in self-defence they are frightened
+ into acknowledging her. Admirers among men she has many, ex-ministers,
+ prefects. It was at Vittel that occurred the incident of the wounded
+ pigeon. There had been some pigeon-shooting. One of the wounded birds flew
+ into the room of the Baroness de la Cour. She took pity on it, tended it,
+ taught it not to be afraid of her and to stay in her room. So touching was
+ her conduct considered by some of those who heard it, that she was
+ nicknamed "the Charmer." But she is well aware, she writes to her sister,
+ that with the true ingratitude of the male, the pigeon will leave her as
+ soon as it needs her help no longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, for the moment, "disfigured as it is, beautiful or ugly," she
+ loves it. "Don't forget," she writes, "that a woman who is practical and
+ foreseeing, she too enjoys her pigeon shooting, but the birds are her
+ lovers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shortly after she left Vittel an event occurred which afforded Jeanne de
+ la Cour the prospect of acquiring that settled position in life which,
+ "practical and foreseeing," she now regarded as indispensable to her
+ future welfare. Her husband, Gras, died, as she had foretold, in the
+ Charity Hospital. The widow was free. If she could bring down her bird, it
+ was now in her power to make it hers for life. Henceforth all her efforts
+ were directed to that end. She was reaching her fortieth year, her hair
+ was turning grey, her charms were waning. Poverty, degradation, a
+ miserable old age, a return to the wretched surroundings of her childhood,
+ such she knew to be the fate of many of her kind. There was nothing to be
+ hoped for from the generosity of men. Her lovers were leaving her.
+ Blackmail, speculation on the Bourse, even the desperate expedient of a
+ supposititious child, all these she tried as means of acquiring a
+ competence. But fortune was shy of the widow. There was need for dispatch.
+ The time was drawing near when it might be man's unkind privilege to put
+ her scornfully aside as a thing spent and done with. She must bring down
+ her bird, and that quickly. It was at this critical point in the widow's
+ career, in the year 1873, that she met at a public ball for the first time
+ Georges de Saint Pierre.(16)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (16) For obvious reasons I have suppressed the real name of the widow's
+lover.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Georges de Saint Pierre was twenty years of age when he made the
+ acquaintance of the Widow Gras. He had lost his mother at an early age,
+ and since then lived with relatives in the country. He was a young man of
+ independent means, idle, of a simple, confiding and affectionate
+ disposition. Four months after his first meeting with the widow they met
+ again. The end of the year 1873 saw the commencement of an intimacy, which
+ to all appearances was characterised by a more lasting and sincere
+ affection than is usually associated with unions of this kind. There can
+ be no doubt that during the three years the Widow Gras was the mistress of
+ Georges de Saint Pierre, she had succeeded in subjugating entirely the
+ senses and the affection of her young lover. In spite of the twenty years
+ between them, Georges de Saint Pierre idolised his middle-aged mistress.
+ She was astute enough to play not only the lover, but the mother to this
+ motherless youth. After three years of intimacy he writes to her: "It is
+ enough for me that you love me, because I don't weary you, and I, I love
+ you with all my heart. I cannot bear to leave you. We will live happily
+ together. You will always love me truly, and as for me, my loving care
+ will ever protect you. I don't know what would become of me if I did not
+ feel that your love watched over me." The confidence of Georges in the
+ widow was absolute. When, in 1876, he spent six months in Egypt, he made
+ her free of his rooms in Paris, she was at liberty to go there when she
+ liked; he trusted her entirely, idolised her. Whatever her faults, he was
+ blind to them. "Your form," he writes, "is ever before my eyes; I wish I
+ could enshrine your pure heart in gold and crystal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The widow's conquest, to all appearances, was complete. But Georges was
+ very young. He had a family anxious for his future; they knew of his
+ liaison; they would be hopeful, no doubt, of one day breaking it off and
+ of marrying him to some desirable young person. From the widow's point of
+ view the situation lacked finality. How was that to be secured?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, toward the end of the year 1876, after the return of Georges from
+ Egypt, the widow happened to be at the house of a friend, a ballet dancer.
+ She saw her friend lead into the room a young man; he was sightless, and
+ her friend with tender care guided him to a seat on the sofa. The widow
+ was touched by the spectacle. When they were alone, she inquired of her
+ friend the reason of her solicitude for the young man. "I love this victim
+ of nature," she replied, "and look after him with every care. He is young,
+ rich, without family, and is going to marry me. Like you, I am just on
+ forty; my hair is turning grey, my youth vanishing. I shall soon be cast
+ adrift on the sea, a wreck. This boy is the providential spar to which I
+ am going to cling that I may reach land in safety." "You mean, then," said
+ the widow, "that you will soon be beyond the reach of want?" "Yes,"
+ answered the friend, "I needn't worry any more about the future."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I congratulate you," said the widow, "and what is more, your lover will
+ never see you grow old."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To be cast adrift on the sea and to have found a providential spar! The
+ widow was greatly impressed by her friend's rare good fortune. Indeed, her
+ experience gave the widow furiously to think, as she revolved in her brain
+ various expedients by which Georges de Saint Pierre might become the
+ "providential spar" in her own impending wreck. The picture of the blind
+ young man tenderly cared for, dependent utterly on the ministrations of
+ his devoted wife, fixed itself in the widow's mind; there was something
+ inexpressibly pathetic in the picture, whilst its practical significance
+ had its sinister appeal to one in her situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point in the story there appears on the scene a character as
+ remarkable in his way as the widow herself, remarkable at least for his
+ share in the drama that is to follow. Nathalis Gaudry, of humble
+ parentage, rude and uncultivated, had been a playmate of the widow when
+ she was a child in her parents' house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had grown up together, but, after Gaudry entered the army, had lost
+ sight of each other. Gaudry served through the Italian war of 1859,
+ gaining a medal for valour. In 1864 he had married.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eleven years later his wife died, leaving him with two children. He came
+ to Paris and obtained employment in an oil refinery at Saint Denis. His
+ character was excellent; he was a good workman, honest, hard-working, his
+ record unblemished. When he returned to Paris, Gaudry renewed his
+ friendship with the companion of his youth. But Jeanne Brecourt was now
+ Jeanne de la Cour, living in refinement and some luxury, moving in a
+ sphere altogether remote from and unapproachable by the humble workman in
+ an oil refinery. He could do no more than worship from afar this strange
+ being, to him wonderfully seductive in her charm and distinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On her side the widow was quite friendly toward her homely admirer. She
+ refused to marry him, as he would have wished, but she did her best
+ without success to marry him to others of her acquaintance. Neither a
+ sempstress nor an inferior actress could she persuade, for all her zeal,
+ to unite themselves with a hand in an oil mill, a widower with two
+ children. It is typical of the widow's nervous energy that she should have
+ undertaken so hopeless a task. In the meantime she made use of her
+ admirer. On Sundays he helped her in her apartment, carried coals, bottled
+ wine, scrubbed the floors, and made himself generally useful. He was
+ supposed by those about the house to be her brother. Occasionally, in the
+ absence of a maid, the widow allowed him to attend on her personally, even
+ to assist her in her toilette and perform for her such offices as one
+ woman would perform for another. The man soon came to be madly in love
+ with the woman; his passion, excited but not gratified, enslaved and
+ consumed him. To some of his fellow-workmen who saw him moody and
+ preoccupied, he confessed that he ardently desired to marry a friend of
+ his childhood, not a working woman but a lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the situation and state of mind of Nathalis Gaudry when, in
+ November, 1876, he received a letter from the widow, in which she wrote,
+ "Come at once. I want you on a matter of business. Tell your employer it
+ is a family affair; I will make up your wages." In obedience to this
+ message Gaudry was absent from the distillery from the 17th to the 23rd of
+ November.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "matter of business" about which the widow wished to consult with
+ Gaudry turned out to be a scheme of revenge. She told him that she had
+ been basely defrauded by a man to whom she had entrusted money. She
+ desired to be revenged on him, and could think of no better way than to
+ strike at his dearest affections by seriously injuring his son. This she
+ proposed to do with the help of a knuckle-duster, which she produced and
+ gave to Gaudry. Armed with this formidable weapon, Gaudry was to strike
+ her enemy's son so forcibly in the pit of the stomach as to disable him
+ for life. The widow offered to point out to Gaudry the young man whom he
+ was to attack. She took him outside the young man's club and showed him
+ his victim. He was Georges de Saint Pierre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good fortune of her friend, the ballet-dancer, had proved a veritable
+ toxin in the intellectual system of the Widow Gras. The poison of envy,
+ disappointment, suspicion, apprehension had entered into her soul. Of what
+ use to her was a lover, however generous and faithful, who was free to
+ take her up and lay her aside at will? But such was her situation relative
+ to Georges de Saint Pierre. She remembered that the wounded pigeon, as
+ long as it was dependent on her kind offices, had been compelled to stay
+ by her side; recovered, it had flown away. Only a pigeon, maimed beyond
+ hope of recovery, could she be sure of compelling to be hers for all time,
+ tied to her by its helpless infirmity, too suffering and disfigured to be
+ lured from its captivity. And so, in accordance with her philosophy of
+ life, the widow, by a blow in the pit of the stomach with a
+ knuckle-duster, was to bring down her bird which henceforth would be
+ tended and cared for by "the Charmer" to her own satisfaction and the
+ admiration of all beholders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some reason, the natural reluctance of Gaudry, or perhaps a feeling of
+ compunction in the heart of the widow, this plan was not put into
+ immediate execution. Possibly she hesitated before adopting a plan more
+ cruel, more efficacious. Her hesitation did not last long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the dawn of the year 1877 the vigilant apprehension of the widow was
+ roused by the tone of M. de Saint Pierre's letters. He wrote from his home
+ in the country, "I cannot bear leaving you, and I don't mean to. We will
+ live together." But he adds that he is depressed by difficulties with his
+ family, "not about money or business but of a kind he can only communicate
+ to her verbally." To the widow it was clear that these difficulties must
+ relate to the subject of marriage. The character of Georges was not a
+ strong one; sooner or later he might yield to the importunities of his
+ family; her reign would be ended, a modest and insufficient pension the
+ utmost she could hope for. She had passed the meridian of her life as a
+ charmer of men, her health was giving way, she was greedy, ambitious,
+ acquisitive. In January she asked her nephew, who worked as a gilder, to
+ get her some vitriol for cleaning her copper. He complied with her
+ request.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During Jeanne de la Cour's brief and unsuccessful appearance as an actress
+ she had taken part in a play with the rather cumbrous title, Who Puts out
+ the Eyes must Pay for Them. The widow may have forgotten this event; its
+ occurrence so many years before may have been merely a sinister
+ coincidence. But the incident of the ballet-dancer and her sightless lover
+ was fresh in her mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in January the widow wrote to Georges, who was in the country, and
+ asked him to take her to the masked ball at the Opera on the 13th. Her
+ lover was rather surprised at her request, nor did he wish to appear with
+ her at so public a gathering. "I don't understand," he writes, "why you
+ are so anxious to go to the Opera. I can't see any real reason for your
+ wanting to tire yourself out at such a disreputable gathering. However, if
+ you are happy and well, and promise to be careful, I will take you. I
+ would be the last person, my dear little wife, to deny you anything that
+ would give you pleasure." But for some reason Georges was unhappy,
+ depressed. Some undefined presentiment of evil seems to have oppressed
+ him. His brother noticed his preoccupation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He himself alludes to it in writing to his mistress: "I am depressed this
+ evening. For a very little I could break down altogether and give way to
+ tears. You can't imagine what horrid thoughts possess me. If I felt your
+ love close to me, I should be less sad." Against his better inclination
+ Georges promised to take the widow to the ball on the 13th. He was to come
+ to Paris on the night of the 12th.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II THE WOUNDED PIGEON
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the afternoon of January 11, Gaudry called to see the widow. There had
+ been an accident at the distillery that morning, and work was suspended
+ for three days. The widow showed Gaudry the bottle containing the vitriol
+ which her nephew had procured for her use. She was ill, suffering, she
+ said; the only thing that could make her well again would be the execution
+ of her revenge on the son of the man who had defrauded her so wickedly:
+ "Make him suffer, here are the means, and I swear I will be yours." She
+ dropped a little of the vitriol on to the floor to show its virulent
+ effect. At first Gaudry was shocked, horrified. He protested that he was a
+ soldier, that he could not do such a deed; he suggested that he should
+ provoke the young man to a duel and kill him. "That is no use," said the
+ widow, always sensitive to social distinctions; "he is not of your class,
+ he would refuse to fight with you." Mad with desire for the woman, his
+ senses irritated and excited, the ultimate gratification of his passion
+ held alluringly before him, the honest soldier consented to play the
+ cowardly ruffian. The trick was done. The widow explained to her
+ accomplice his method of proceeding. The building in the Rue de Boulogne,
+ in which the widow had her apartment, stood at the end of a drive some
+ twenty-seven and a half yards long and five and a half yards wide. About
+ half-way up the drive, on either side, there were two small houses, or
+ pavilions, standing by themselves and occupied by single gentlemen. The
+ whole was shut off from the street by a large gate, generally kept closed,
+ in which a smaller gate served to admit persons going in or out. According
+ to the widow's plan, the young man, her enemy's son, was to take her to
+ the ball at the Opera on the night of January 13. Gaudry was to wait in
+ her apartment until their return. When he heard the bell ring, which
+ communicated with the outer gate, he was to come down, take his place in
+ the shadow of one of the pavilions on either side of the drive, and from
+ the cover of this position fling in the face of the young man the vitriol
+ which she had given him. The widow herself, under the pretence of closing
+ the smaller gate, would be well behind the victim, and take care to leave
+ the gate open so that Gaudry could make his escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of his reluctance, his sense of foreboding, Georges de Saint
+ Pierre came to Paris on the night of the 12th, which he spent at the
+ widow's apartment. He went to his own rooms on the morning of the 13th.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This eventful day, which, to quote Iago, was either to "make or fordo
+ quite" the widow, found her as calm, cool and deliberate in the execution
+ of her purpose as the Ancient himself. Gaudry came to her apartment about
+ five o'clock in the afternoon. The widow showed him the vitriol and gave
+ him final directions. She would, she said, return from the ball about
+ three o'clock in the morning. Gaudry was then sent away till ten o'clock,
+ as Georges was dining with her. He returned at half-past ten and found the
+ widow dressing, arraying herself in a pink domino and a blonde wig. She
+ was in excellent spirits. When Georges came to fetch her, she put Gaudry
+ into an alcove in the drawing-room which was curtained off from the rest
+ of the room. Always thoughtful, she had placed a stool there that he might
+ rest himself. Gaudry could hear her laughing and joking with her lover.
+ She reproached him playfully with hindering her in her dressing. To keep
+ him quiet, she gave him a book to read, Montaigne's "Essays." Georges
+ opened it and read the thirty-fifth chapter of the second book, the essay
+ on "Three Good Women," which tells how three brave women of antiquity
+ endured death or suffering in order to share their husbands' fate.
+ Curiously enough, the essay concludes with these words, almost prophetic
+ for the unhappy reader: "I am enforced to live, and sometimes to live is
+ magnanimity." Whilst Georges went to fetch a cab, the widow released
+ Gaudry from his place of concealment, exhorted him to have courage, and
+ promised him, if he succeeded, the accomplishment of his desire. And so
+ the gay couple departed for the ball. There the widow's high spirits, her
+ complete enjoyment, were remarked by more than one of her acquaintances;
+ she danced one dance with her lover, and with another young man made an
+ engagement for the following week.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, at the Rue de Boulogne, Gaudry sat and waited in the widow's
+ bedroom. From the window he could see the gate and the lights of the cab
+ that was to bring the revellers home. The hours passed slowly. He tried to
+ read the volume of Montaigne where Georges had left it open, but the words
+ conveyed little to him, and he fell asleep. Between two and three o'clock
+ in the morning he was waked by the noise of wheels. They had returned. He
+ hurried downstairs and took up his position in the shadow of one of the
+ pavilions. As Georges de Saint Pierre walked up the drive alone, for the
+ widow had stayed behind to fasten the gate, he thought he saw the figure
+ of a man in the darkness. The next moment he was blinded by the burning
+ liquid flung in his face. The widow had brought down her pigeon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first she would seem to have succeeded perfectly in her attempt.
+ Georges was injured for life, the sight of one eye gone, that of the other
+ threatened, his face sadly disfigured. Neither he nor anyone else
+ suspected the real author of the crime. It was believed that the
+ unfortunate man had been mistaken for some other person, and made by
+ accident the victim of an act of vengeance directed against another.
+ Georges was indeed all the widow's now, lodged in her own house to nurse
+ and care for. She undertook the duty with every appearance of affectionate
+ devotion. The unhappy patient was consumed with gratitude for her untiring
+ solicitude; thirty nights she spent by his bedside. His belief in her was
+ absolute. It was his own wish that she alone should nurse him. His family
+ were kept away, any attempts his relatives or friends made to see or
+ communicate with him frustrated by the zealous widow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was this uncompromising attitude on her part toward the friends of
+ Georges, and a rumour which reached the ears of one of them that she
+ intended as soon as possible to take her patient away to Italy, that
+ sounded the first note of danger to her peace of mind. This friend
+ happened to be acquainted with the son of one of the Deputy Public
+ Prosecutors in Paris. To that official he confided his belief that there
+ were suspicious circumstances in the case of Georges de Saint Pierre. The
+ judicial authorities were informed and the case placed in the hands of an
+ examining magistrate. On February 2, nearly a month after the crime, the
+ magistrate, accompanied by Mace, then a commissary of police, afterwards
+ head of the Detective Department, paid a visit to the Rue de Boulogne.
+ Their reception was not cordial. It was only after they had made known
+ their official character that they got audience of the widow. She entered
+ the room, carrying in her hand a surgical spray, with which she played
+ nervously while the men of the law asked to see her charge. She replied
+ that it was impossible. Mace placed himself in front of the door by which
+ she had entered, and told her that her attitude was not seemly. "Leave
+ that spray alone," he said; "it might shoot over us, and then perhaps we
+ should be sprinkled as M. de Saint Pierre was." From that moment, writes
+ Mace, issue was joined between the widow and himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magistrate insisted on seeing the patient. He sat by his bedside. M.
+ de Saint Pierre told him that, having no enemies, he was sure he had been
+ the victim of some mistake, and that, as he claimed no damages for his
+ injuries, he did not wish his misfortune to be made public. He wanted to
+ be left alone with his brave and devoted nurse, and to be spared the
+ nervous excitement of a meeting with his family. He intended, he added, to
+ leave Paris shortly for change of scene and air. The widow cut short the
+ interview on the ground that her patient was tired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was inhuman, she said, to make him suffer so. The magistrate, before
+ leaving, asked her whither she intended taking her patient. She replied,
+ "To Italy." That, said the magistrate, would be impossible until his
+ inquiry was closed. In the meantime she might take him to any place within
+ the Department of the Seine; but she must be prepared to be under the
+ surveillance of M. Mace, who would have the right to enter her house
+ whenever he should think it expedient. With this disconcerting
+ intelligence the men of the law took leave of the widow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was no longer to be left in undisturbed possession of her prize. Her
+ movements were watched by two detectives. She was seen to go to the
+ bachelor lodgings of Georges and take away a portable desk, which
+ contained money and correspondence. More mysterious, however, was a visit
+ she paid to the Charonne Cemetery, where she had an interview with an
+ unknown, who was dressed in the clothes of a workman. She left the
+ cemetery alone, and the detectives lost track of her companion. This
+ meeting took place on February 11. Shortly after the widow left Paris with
+ Georges de Saint Pierre for the suburb of Courbevoie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mace had elicited certain facts from the porter at the Rue de Boulogne and
+ other witnesses, which confirmed his suspicion that the widow had played a
+ sinister part in her lover's misfortune. Her insistence that he should
+ take her to the ball on January 13; the fact that, contrary to the
+ ordinary politeness of a gentleman, he was walking in front of her at the
+ time of the attack; and that someone must have been holding the gate open
+ to enable the assailant to escape it was a heavy gate, which, if left to
+ itself after being opened, would swing too quickly on its hinges and shut
+ of its own accord&mdash;these facts were sufficient to excite suspicion.
+ The disappearance, too, of the man calling himself her brother, who had
+ been seen at her apartment on the afternoon of the 13th, coupled with the
+ mysterious interview in the cemetery, suggested the possibility of a crime
+ in which the widow had had the help of an accomplice. To facilitate
+ investigation it was necessary to separate the widow from her lover. The
+ examining magistrate, having ascertained from a medical report that such a
+ separation would not be hurtful to the patient, ordered the widow to be
+ sent back to Paris, and the family of M. de Saint Pierre to take her
+ place. The change was made on March 6. On leaving Courbevoie the widow was
+ taken to the office of Mace. There the commissary informed her that she
+ must consider herself under provisional arrest. "But who," she asked
+ indignantly, "is to look after my Georges?" "His family," was the curt
+ reply. The widow, walking up and down the room like a panther, stormed and
+ threatened. When she had in some degree recovered herself, Mace asked her
+ certain questions. Why had she insisted on her lover going to the ball?
+ She had done nothing of the kind. How was it his assailant had got away so
+ quickly by the open gate? She did not know. What was the name and address
+ of her reputed brother? She was not going to deliver an honest father of a
+ family into the clutches of the police. What was the meaning of her visit
+ to the Charonne Cemetery? She went there to pray, not to keep
+ assignations. "And if you want to know," she exclaimed, "I have had
+ typhoid fever, which makes me often forget things. So I shall say nothing
+ more&mdash;nothing&mdash;nothing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taken before the examining magistrate, her attitude continued to be
+ defiant and arrogant. "Your cleverest policemen," she told the magistrate,
+ "will never find any evidence against me. Think well before you send me to
+ prison. I am not the woman to live long among thieves and prostitutes."
+ Before deciding finally whether the widow should be thrown into such
+ uncongenial society, the magistrate ordered Mace to search her apartment
+ in the Rue de Boulogne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On entering the apartment the widow asked that all the windows should be
+ opened. "Let in the air," she said; "the police are coming in; they make a
+ nasty smell." She was invited to sit down while the officers made their
+ search. Her letters and papers were carefully examined; they presented a
+ strange mixture of order and disorder. Carefully kept account books of her
+ personal expenses were mixed up with billets dous, paints and pomades,
+ moneylenders' circulars, belladonna and cantharides. But most astounding
+ of all were the contents of the widows' prie-Dieu. In this devotional
+ article of furniture were stored all the inmost secrets of her profligate
+ career. Affectionate letters from the elderly gentleman on whom she had
+ imposed a supposititious child lay side by side with a black-edged card,
+ on which was written the last message of a young lover who had killed
+ himself on her account. "Jeanne, in the flush of my youth I die because of
+ you, but I forgive you.&mdash;M." With these genuine outpourings of
+ misplaced affection were mingled the indecent verses of a more vulgar
+ admirer, and little jars of hashish. The widow, unmoved by this rude
+ exposure of her way of life, only broke her silence to ask Mace the
+ current prices on the Stock Exchange.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One discovery, however, disturbed her equanimity. In the drawer of a
+ cupboard, hidden under some linen, Mace found a leather case containing a
+ sheaf of partially-burnt letters. As he was about to open it the widow
+ protested that it was the property of M. de Saint Pierre. Regardless of
+ her protest, Mace opened the case, and, looking through the letters, saw
+ that they were addressed to M. de Saint Pierre and were plainly of an
+ intimate character. "I found them on the floor near the stove in the
+ dining-room," said the widow, "and I kept them. I admit it was a wrong
+ thing to do, but Georges will forgive me when he knows why I did it." From
+ his better acquaintance with her character Mace surmised that an action
+ admitted by the widow to be "wrong" was in all probability something
+ worse. Without delay he took the prisoner back to his office, and himself
+ left for Courbevoie, there to enlighten, if possible, her unhappy victim
+ as to the real character of his enchantress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interview was a painful one. The lover refused to hear a word against
+ his mistress. "Jeanne is my Antigone," he said. "She has lavished on me
+ all her care, her tenderness, her love, and she believes in God." Mace
+ told him of her past, of the revelations contained in the prie-Dieu of
+ this true believer, but he could make no impression. "I forgive her past,
+ I accept her present, and please understand me, no one has the power to
+ separate me from her." It was only when Mace placed in his hands the
+ bundle of burnt letters, that he might feel what he could not see, and
+ read him some passages from them, that the unhappy man realised the full
+ extent of his mistress' treachery. Feeling himself dangerously ill, dying
+ perhaps, M. de Saint Pierre had told the widow to bring from his rooms to
+ the Rue de Boulogne the contents of his private desk. It contained some
+ letters compromising to a woman's honour. These he was anxious to destroy
+ before it was too late. As he went through the papers, his eyes bandaged,
+ he gave them to the widow to throw into the stove. He could hear the fire
+ burning and feel its warmth. He heard the widow take up the tongs. He
+ asked her why she did so. She answered that it was to keep the burning
+ papers inside the stove. Now from Mace he learnt the real truth. She had
+ used the tongs to take out some of the letters half burnt, letters which
+ in her possession might be one day useful instruments for levying
+ blackmail on her lover. "To blind me," exclaimed M. de Saint Pierre, "to
+ torture me, and then profit by my condition to lie to me, to betray me&mdash;it's
+ infamous&mdash;infamous!" His dream was shattered. Mace had succeeded in
+ his task; the disenchantment of M. de Saint Pierre was complete. That
+ night the fastidious widow joined the thieves and prostitutes in the St.
+ Lazare Prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was all very well to imprison the widow, but her participation in the
+ outrage on M. de Saint Pierre was by no means established.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reputed brother, who had been in the habit of attending on her at the
+ Rue de Boulogne, still eluded the searches of the police. In silence lay
+ the widow's only hope of baffling her enemies. Unfortunately for the
+ widow, confinement told on her nerves. She became anxious, excited. Her
+ very ignorance of what was going on around her, her lover's silence made
+ her apprehensive; she began to fear the worst. At length&mdash;the widow
+ always had an itch for writing&mdash;she determined to communicate at all
+ costs with Gaudry and invoke his aid. She wrote appealing to him to come
+ forward and admit that he was the man the police were seeking, for
+ sheltering whom she had been thrown into prison. She drew a harrowing
+ picture of her sufferings in jail. She had refused food and been forcibly
+ fed; she would like to dash her head against the walls. If any misfortune
+ overtake Gaudry, she promises to adopt his son and leave him a third of
+ her property. She persuaded a fellow-prisoner; an Italian dancer
+ undergoing six months' imprisonment for theft, who was on the point of
+ being released, to take the letter and promise to deliver it to Gaudry at
+ Saint Denis. On her release the dancer told her lover of her promise. He
+ refused to allow her to mix herself up in such a case, and destroyed the
+ letter. Then the dancer blabbed to others, until her story reached the
+ ears of the police. Mace sent for her. At first she could remember only
+ that the name Nathalis occurred in the letter, but after visiting
+ accidentally the Cathedral at Saint Denis, she recollected that this
+ Nathalis lived there, and worked in an oil factory. It was easy after this
+ for the police to trace Gaudry. He was arrested. At his house, letters
+ from the widow were found, warning him not to come to her apartment, and
+ appointing to meet him in Charonne Cemetery. Gaudry made a full
+ confession. It was his passion for the widow, and a promise on her part to
+ marry him, which, he said, had induced him to perpetrate so abominable a
+ crime. He was sent to the Mazas Prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime the Widow Gras was getting more and more desperate. Her
+ complete ignorance tormented her. At last she gave up all hope, and twice
+ attempted suicide with powdered glass and verdigris. On May 12 the
+ examining magistrate confronted her with Gaudry. The man told his story,
+ the widow feigned surprise that the "friend of her childhood" should
+ malign her so cruelly. But to her desperate appeals Gaudry would only
+ reply, "It is too late!" They were sent for trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trial of the widow and her accomplice opened before the Paris Assize
+ Court on July 23, 1877, and lasted three days. The widow was defended by
+ Lachaud, one of the greatest criminal advocates of France, the defender of
+ Madame Lafarge, La Pommerais, Troppmann, and Marshal Bazaine. M. Demange
+ (famous later for his defence of Dreyfus) appeared for Gaudry. The case
+ had aroused considerable interest. Among those present at the trial were
+ Halevy, the dramatist, and Mounet-Sully and Coquelin, from the Comedie
+ Francaise. Fernand Rodays thus described the widow in the Figaro: "She
+ looks more than her age, of moderate height, well made, neither blatant
+ nor ill at ease, with nothing of the air of a woman of the town. Her hands
+ are small. Her bust is flat, and her back round, her hair quite white.
+ Beneath her brows glitter two jet-black eyes&mdash;the eyes of a tigress,
+ that seem to breathe hatred and revenge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gaudry was interrogated first. Asked by the President the motive of his
+ crime, he answered, "I was mad for Madame Gras; I would have done anything
+ she told me. I had known her as a child, I had been brought up with her.
+ Then I saw her again. I loved her, I was mad for her, I couldn't resist
+ it. Her wish was law to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Asked if Gaudry had spoken the truth, the widow said that he lied. The
+ President asked what could be his motive for accusing her unjustly. The
+ widow was silent. Lachaud begged her to answer. "I cannot," she faltered.
+ The President invited her to sit down. After a pause the widow seemed to
+ recover her nerve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: Was Gaudry at your house while you were at the ball?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Widow: No, no! He daren't look me in the face and say so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: But he is looking at you now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Widow: No, he daren't! (She fixes her eyes on Gaudry, who lowers his
+ head.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: I, whose duty it is to interrogate you, look you in the face
+ and repeat my question: Was Gaudry at your house at half-past ten that
+ night?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Widow: No.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: You hear her, Gaudry?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gaudry: Yes, Monsieur, but I was there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Widow: It is absolutely impossible! Can anyone believe me guilty of such a
+ thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: Woman Gras, you prefer to feign indignation and deny
+ everything. You have the right. I will read your examination before the
+ examining magistrate. I see M. Lachaud makes a gesture, but I must beg the
+ counsel for the defence not to impart unnecessary passion into these
+ proceedings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lachaud: My gesture was merely meant to express that the woman Gras is on
+ her trial, and that under the circumstances her indignation is natural.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: Very good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The appearance in the witness box of the widow's unhappy victim evoked
+ sympathy. He gave his evidence quietly, without resentment or indignation.
+ As he told his story the widow, whose eyes were fixed on him all the time,
+ murmured: "Georges! Georges! Defend me! Defend me!" "I state the facts,"
+ he replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prisoners could only defend themselves by trying to throw on each
+ other the guilt of the crime. M. Demange represented Gaudry as acting
+ under the influence of his passion for the Widow Gras. Lachaud, on the
+ other hand, attributed the crime solely to Gaudry's jealousy of the
+ widow's lover, and contended that he was the sole author of the outrage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jury by their verdict assigned to the widow the greater share of
+ responsibility. She was found guilty in the full degree, but to Gaudry
+ were accorded extenuating circumstances. The widow was condemned to
+ fifteen years' penal servitude, her accomplice to five years'
+ imprisonment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is dreadful to think how very near the Widow Gras came to accomplishing
+ successfully her diabolical crime. A little less percipitancy on her part,
+ and she might have secured the fruits of her cruelty. Her undoubted powers
+ of fascination, in spite of the fiendishness of her real character, are
+ doubly proved by the devotion of her lover and the guilt of her
+ accomplice. At the same time, with that strange contradiction inherent in
+ human nature, the Jekyll and Hyde elements which, in varying degree, are
+ present in all men and women, the Widow Gras had a genuine love for her
+ young sister. Her hatred of men was reasoned, deliberate, merciless and
+ implacable. There is something almost sadistic in the combination in her
+ character of erotic sensibility with extreme cruelty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Vitalis and Marie Boyer
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I found the story of this case in a brochure published in Paris as one of
+ a series of modern causes celebres. I have compared it with the reports of
+ the trial in the Gazette des Tribunaux.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I In the May of 1874, in the town of Montpellier, M. Boyer, a retired
+ merchant, some forty-six years of age, lay dying. For some months previous
+ to his death he had been confined to his bed, crippled by rheumatic gout.
+ As the hour of his death drew near, M. Boyer was filled with a great
+ longing to see his daughter, Marie, a girl of fifteen, and embrace her for
+ the last time. The girl was being educated in a convent at Marseilles. One
+ of M. Boyer's friends offered to go there to fetch her. On arriving at the
+ convent, he was told that Marie had become greatly attracted by the
+ prospect of a religious life. "You are happy," the Mother Superior had
+ written to her mother, "very happy never to have allowed the impure breath
+ of the world to have soiled this little flower. She loves you and her
+ father more than one can say." Her father's friend found the girl dressed
+ in the costume of a novice, and was told that she had expressed her desire
+ to take, one day, her final vows. He informed Marie of her father's dying
+ state, of his earnest wish to see her for the last time, and told her that
+ he had come to take her to his bedside. "Take me away from here?" she
+ exclaimed. The Mother Superior, surprised at her apparent reluctance to
+ go, impressed on her the duty of acceding to her father's wish. To the
+ astonishment of both, Marie refused to leave the convent. If she could
+ save her father's life, she said, she would go, but, as that was
+ impossible and she dreaded going out into the world again, she would stay
+ and pray for her father in the chapel of the convent, where her prayers
+ would be quite as effective as by his bedside. In vain the friend and the
+ Mother Superior tried to bend her resolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Happily M. Boyer died before he could learn of his daughter's singular
+ refusal. But it had made an unfavourable impression on the friend's mind.
+ He looked on Marie as a girl without real feeling, an egoist, her religion
+ purely superficial, hiding a cold and selfish disposition; he felt some
+ doubt as to the future development of her character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Boyer left a widow, a dark handsome woman, forty years of age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some twenty years before his death, Marie Salat had come to live with M.
+ Boyer as a domestic servant. He fell in love with her, she became his
+ mistress, and a few months before the birth of Marie, M. Boyer made her
+ his wife. Madame Boyer was at heart a woman of ardent and voluptuous
+ passions that only wanted opportunity to become careless in their
+ gratification. Her husband's long illness gave her such an opportunity. At
+ the time of his death she was carrying on an intrigue with a bookseller's
+ assistant, Leon Vitalis, a young man of twenty-one. Her bed-ridden
+ husband, ignorant of her infidelity, accepted gratefully the help of
+ Vitalis, whom his wife described as a relative, in the regulation of his
+ affairs. At length the unsuspecting Boyer died. The night of his death
+ Madame Boyer spent with her lover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother had never felt any great affection for her only child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During her husband's lifetime she was glad to have Marie out of the way at
+ the convent. But the death of M. Boyer changed the situation. He had left
+ almost the whole of his fortune, about 100,000 francs, to his daughter,
+ appointing her mother her legal guardian with a right to the enjoyment of
+ the income on the capital until Marie should come of age. Madame Boyer had
+ not hitherto taken her daughter's religious devotion very seriously. But
+ now that the greater part of her husband's fortune was left to Marie, she
+ realised that, should her daughter persist in her intention of taking the
+ veil, that fortune would in a very few years pass into the hands of the
+ sisterhood. Without delay Madame Boyer exercised her authority, and
+ withdrew Marie from the convent. The girl quitted it with every
+ demonstration of genuine regret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marie Boyer when she left the convent was growing into a tall and
+ attractive woman, her figure slight and elegant, her hair and eyes dark,
+ dainty and charming in her manner. Removed from the influences of convent
+ life, her religious devotion became a thing of the past. In her new
+ surroundings she gave herself up to the enjoyments of music and the
+ theatre. She realised that she was a pretty girl, whose beauty well repaid
+ the hours she now spent in the adornment of her person. The charms of
+ Marie were not lost on Leon Vitalis. Mean and significant in appearance,
+ Vitalis would seem to have been one of those men who, without any great
+ physical recommendation, have the knack of making themselves attractive to
+ women. After her husband's death Madame Boyer had yielded herself
+ completely to his influence and her own undoubted passion for him. She had
+ given him the money with which to purchase a business of his own as a
+ second-hand bookseller. This trade the enterprising and greedy young man
+ combined with money-lending and he clandestine sale of improper books and
+ photographs. To such a man the coming of Marie Boyer was a significant
+ event. She was younger, more attractive than her mother; in a very few
+ years the whole of her father's fortune would be hers. Slowly Vitalis set
+ himself to win the girl's affections. The mother's suspicions were
+ aroused; her jealousy was excited. She sent Marie to complete her
+ education at a convent school in Lyons. This was in the April of 1875. By
+ this time Marie and Vitalis had become friendly enough to arrange to
+ correspond clandestinely during the girl's absence from home. Marie was so
+ far ignorant of the relations of Vitalis with her mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her daughter sent away, Madame Boyer surrendered herself with complete
+ abandonment to her passion for her lover. At Castelnau, close to
+ Montpellier, she bought a small country house. There she could give full
+ rein to her desire. To the scandal of the occasional passerby she and her
+ lover would bathe in a stream that passed through the property, and sport
+ together on the grass. Indoors there were always books from Vitalis'
+ collection to stimulate their lascivious appetites. This life of pastoral
+ impropriety lasted until the middle of August, when Marie Boyer came home
+ from Lyons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vitalis would have concealed from the young girl as long as he could the
+ nature of his relations with Madame Boyer, but his mistress by her own
+ deliberate conduct made all concealment impossible. Whether from the utter
+ recklessness of her passion for Vitalis, or a desire to kill in her
+ daughter's heart any attachment which she may have felt towards her lover,
+ the mother paraded openly before her daughter the intimacy of her
+ relations with Vitalis, and with the help of the literature with which the
+ young bookseller supplied her, set about corrupting her child's mind to
+ her own depraved level. The effect of her extraordinary conduct was,
+ however, the opposite to what she had intended. The mind of the young girl
+ was corrupted; she was familiarised with vice. But in her heart she did
+ not blame Vitalis for what she saw and suffered; she pitied, she excused
+ him. It was her mother whom she grew to hate, with a hate all the more
+ determined for the cold passionless exterior beneath which it was
+ concealed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Boyer's deliberate display of her passion for Vitalis served only
+ to aggravate and intensify in Marie Boyer an unnatural jealousy that was
+ fast growing up between mother and daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marie did not return to the school at Lyons. In the winter of 1875, Madame
+ Boyer gave up the country house and, with her daughter, settled in one of
+ the suburbs of Montpellier. In the January of 1876 a theft occurred in her
+ household which obliged Madame Boyer to communicate with the police.
+ Spendthrift and incompetent in the management of her affairs, she was
+ hoarding and suspicious about money itself. Cash and bonds she would hide
+ away in unexpected places, such as books, dresses, even a soup tureen. One
+ of her most ingenious hiding places was a portrait of her late husband,
+ behind which she concealed some bearer bonds in landed security, amounting
+ to about 11,000 francs. One day in January these bonds disappeared. She
+ suspected a theft, and informed the police. Three days later she withdrew
+ her complaint, and no more was heard of the matter. As Marie and Vitalis
+ were the only persons who could have known her secret, the inference is
+ obvious. When, later in the year, Vitalis announced his intention of going
+ to Paris on business, his mistress expressed to him the hope that he would
+ "have a good time" with her bonds. Vitalis left for Paris. But there was
+ now a distinct understanding between Marie and himself. Vitalis had
+ declared himself her lover and asked her to marry him. The following
+ letter, written to him by Marie Boyer in the October of 1876, shows her
+ attitude toward his proposal:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank you very sincerely for your letter, which has given me very great
+ pleasure, because it tells me that you are well. It sets my mind at rest,
+ for my feelings towards you are the same as ever. I don't say they are
+ those of love, for I don't know myself; I don't know what such feelings
+ are. But I feel a real affection for you which may well turn to love. How
+ should I not hold in affectionate remembrance one who has done everything
+ for me? But love does not come to order. So I can't and don't wish to give
+ any positive answer about our marriage&mdash;all depends on circumstances.
+ I don't want any promise from you, I want you to be as free as I am. I am
+ not fickle, you know me well enough for that. So don't ask me to give you
+ any promise. You may find my letter a little cold. But I know too much of
+ life to pledge myself lightly. I assure you I think on it often. Sometimes
+ I blush when I think what marriage means."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Boyer, displeased at the theft, had let her lover go without any
+ great reluctance. No sooner had he gone than she began to miss him. Life
+ seemed dull without him. Mother and daughter were united at least in their
+ common regret at the absence of the young bookseller. To vary the monotony
+ of existence, to find if possible a husband for her daughter, Madame Boyer
+ decided to leave Montpellier for Marseilles, and there start some kind of
+ business. The daughter, who foresaw greater amusement and pleasure in the
+ life of a large city, assented willingly. On October 6, 1876, they arrived
+ at Marseilles, and soon after Madame bought at a price considerably higher
+ than their value, two shops adjoining one another in the Rue de la
+ Republique. One was a cheese shop, the other a milliner's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother arranged that she should look after the cheese shop, while her
+ daughter presided over the milliner's. The two shops were next door to one
+ another. Behind the milliner's was a drawing-room, behind the cheese shop
+ a kitchen; these two rooms communicated with each other by a large dark
+ room at the back of the building. In the kitchen was a trap-door leading
+ to a cellar. The two women shared a bedroom in an adjoining house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vitalis had opposed the scheme of his mistress to start shop-keeping in
+ Marseilles. He knew how unfitted she was to undertake a business of any
+ kind. But neither mother nor daughter would relinquish the plan. It
+ remained therefore to make the best of it. Vitalis saw that he must get
+ the business into his own hands; and to do that, to obtain full control of
+ Madame Boyer's affairs, he must continue to play the lover to her. To the
+ satisfaction of the two women, he announced his intention of coming to
+ Marseilles in the New Year of 1877. It was arranged that he should pass as
+ a nephew of Madame Boyer, the cousin of Marie. He arrived at Marseilles on
+ January 1, and received a cordial welcome. Of the domestic arrangements
+ that ensued, it is sufficient to say that they were calculated to whet the
+ jealousy and inflame the hatred that Marie felt towards her mother, who
+ now persisted as before in parading before her daughter the intimacy of
+ her relations with Vitalis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In these circumstances Vitalis succeeded in extracting from his mistress a
+ power of attorney, giving him authority to deal with her affairs and sell
+ the two businesses, which were turning out unprofitable. This done, he
+ told Marie, whose growing attachment to him, strange as it may seem, had
+ turned to love, that now at last they could be free. He would sell the two
+ shops, and with the money released by the sale they could go away
+ to-gether. Suddenly Madame Boyer fell ill, and was confined to her bed.
+ Left to themselves, the growing passion of Marie Boyer for Vitalis
+ culminated in her surrender. But for the sick mother the happiness of the
+ lovers was complete. If only her illness were more serious, more likely to
+ be fatal in its result! "If only God would take her!" said Vitalis. "Yes,"
+ replied her daughter, "she has caused us so much suffering!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Madame Boyer her illness had brought hours of torment, and at last
+ remorse. She realised the duplicity of her lover, she knew that he meant
+ to desert her for her daughter, she saw what wrong she had done that
+ daughter, she suspected even that Marie and Vitalis were poisoning her.
+ Irreligious till now, her thoughts turned to religion. As soon as she
+ could leave her bed she would go to Mass and make atonement for her sin;
+ she would recover her power of attorney, get rid of Vitalis for good and
+ all, and send her daughter back to a convent. But it was too late. Nemesis
+ was swift to overtake the hapless woman. Try as he might, Vitalis had
+ found it impossible to sell the shops at anything but a worthless figure.
+ He had no money of his own, with which to take Marie away. He knew that
+ her mother had resolved on his instant dismissal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as Madame Boyer was recovered sufficiently to leave her bed, she
+ turned on her former lover, denounced his treachery, accused him of
+ robbing and swindling her, and bade him go without delay. To Vitalis
+ dismissal meant ruin, to Marie it meant the loss of her lover. During her
+ illness the two young people had wished Madame Boyer dead, but she had
+ recovered. Providence or Nature having refused to assist Vitalis, he
+ resolved to fall back on art. He gave up a whole night's rest to the
+ consideration of the question. As a result of his deliberations he
+ suggested to the girl of seventeen the murder of her mother. "This must
+ end," said Vitalis. "Yes, it must," replied Marie. Vitalis asked her if
+ she had any objection to such a crime. Marie hesitated, the victim was her
+ mother. Vitalis reminded her what sort of a mother she had been to her.
+ The girl said that she was terrified at the sight of blood; Vitalis
+ promised that her mother should be strangled. At length Marie consented.
+ That night on some slight pretext Madame Boyer broke out into violent
+ reproaches against her daughter. She little knew that every reproach she
+ uttered served only to harden in her daughter's heart her unnatural
+ resolve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morning of March 19 Madame Boyer rose early to go to Mass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before she went out, she reminded Vitalis that this was his last day in
+ her service, that when she returned she would expect to find him gone. It
+ was after seven when she left the house. The lovers had no time to lose;
+ the deed must be done immediately on the mother's return. They arranged
+ that Vitalis should get rid of the shop-boy, and that, as soon as he had
+ gone, Marie should shut and lock the front doors of the two shops. At one
+ o'clock Madame Boyer came back. She expressed her astonishment and disgust
+ that Vitalis still lingered, and threatened to send for the police to turn
+ him out. Vitalis told the shop-boy that he could go away for a few hours;
+ they had some family affairs to settle. The boy departed. Madame Boyer,
+ tired after her long morning in the town, was resting on a sofa in the
+ sitting-room, at the back of the milliner's shop. Vitalis entered the
+ room, and after a few heated words, struck her a violent blow in the
+ chest. She fell back on the sofa, calling to her daughter to come to her
+ assistance. The daughter sought to drown her mother's cries by banging the
+ doors, and opening and shutting drawers. Vitalis, who was now trying to
+ throttle his victim, called to Marie to shut the front doors of the two
+ shops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To do so Marie had to pass through the sitting-room, and was a witness to
+ the unsuccessful efforts of Vitalis to strangle her mother. Having closed
+ the doors, she retired into the milliner's shop to await the issue. After
+ a few moments her lover called to her for the large cheese knife; he had
+ caught up a kitchen knife, but in his struggles it had slipped from his
+ grasp. Quickly Marie fetched the knife and returned to the sitting-room.
+ There a desperate struggle was taking place between the man and woman. At
+ one moment it seemed as if Madame Boyer would get the better of Vitalis,
+ whom nature had not endowed greatly for work of this kind. Marie came to
+ his aid. She kicked and beat her mother, until at last the wretched
+ creature released her hold and sank back exhausted. With the cheese knife,
+ which her daughter had fetched, Vitalis killed Madame Boyer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were murderers now, the young lovers. What to do with the body? The
+ boy would be coming back soon. The cellar under the kitchen seemed the
+ obvious place of concealment. With the help of a cord the body was lowered
+ into the cellar, and Marie washed the floor of the sitting-room. The boy
+ came back. He asked where Madame Boyer was. Vitalis told him that she was
+ getting ready to return to Montpellier the same evening, and that he had
+ arranged to go with her, but that he had no intention of doing so; he
+ would accompany her to the station, he said, and then at the last moment,
+ just as the train was starting, slip away and let her go on her journey
+ alone. To the boy, who knew enough of the inner history of the household
+ to enjoy the piquancy of the situation, such a trick seemed quite amusing.
+ He went away picturing in his mind the scene at the railway station and
+ its humorous possibilities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At seven o'clock Vitalis and Marie Boyer were alone once more with the
+ murdered woman. They had the whole night before them. Vitalis had already
+ considered the matter of the disposal of the body. He had bought a pick
+ and spade. He intended to bury his former mistress in the soil under the
+ cellar. After that had been done, he and Marie would sell the business for
+ what it would fetch, and go to Brussels&mdash;an admirable plan, which two
+ unforeseen circumstances defeated. The Rue de la Republique was built on a
+ rock, blasted out for the purpose. The shop-boy had gone to the station
+ that evening to enjoy the joke which, he believed, was to be played on his
+ mistress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Vitalis tried to dig a grave into the ground beneath the cellar he
+ realised the full horror of the disappointment. What was to be done? They
+ must throw the body into the sea. But how to get it there? The crime of
+ Billoir, an old soldier, who the year before in Paris had killed his
+ mistress in a fit of anger and cut up her body, was fresh in the
+ recollection of Vitalis. The guilty couple decided to dismember the body
+ of Madame Boyer and so disfigure her face as to render it unrecognisable.
+ In the presence of Marie, Vitalis did this, and the two lovers set out at
+ midnight to discover some place convenient for the reception of the
+ remains. They found the harbour too busy for their purpose, and decided to
+ wait until the morrow, when they would go farther afield. They returned
+ home and retired for the night, occupying the bed in which Madame Boyer
+ had slept the night before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morning of the 20th the lovers rose early, and a curious neighbour,
+ looking through the keyhole, saw them counting joyously money and
+ valuables, as they took them from Madame Boyer's cashbox. When the
+ shop-boy arrived, he asked Vitalis for news of Madame Boyer. Vitalis told
+ him that he had gone with her to the station, that she had taken the train
+ to Montpellier, and that, in accordance with his plan, he had given her
+ the slip just as the train was starting. This the boy knew to be false: he
+ had been to the station himself to enjoy the fun, and had seen neither
+ Vitalis nor Madame Boyer. He began to suspect some mystery. In the
+ evening, when the shops had been closed, and he had been sent about his
+ business, he waited and watched. In a short time he saw Vitalis and Marie
+ Boyer leave the house, the former dragging a hand-cart containing two
+ large parcels, while Marie walked by his side. They travelled some
+ distance with their burden, leaving the city behind them, hoping to find
+ some deserted spot along the coast where they could conceal the evidence
+ of their crime. Their nerves were shaken by meeting with a custom-house
+ officer, who asked them what it was they had in the cart. Vitalis answered
+ that it was a traveller's luggage, and the officer let them pass on. But
+ soon after, afraid to risk another such experience, the guilty couple
+ turned out the parcels into a ditch, covered them with stones and sand,
+ and hurried home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, the shop-boy and the inquisitive neighbour having consulted
+ together, went to the Commissary of Police and told him of the mysterious
+ disappearance of Madame Boyer. The Commissary promised to investigate the
+ matter, and had just dismissed his informants when word was brought to him
+ of the discovery, in a ditch outside Marseilles, of two parcels containing
+ human remains. He called back the boy and took him to view the body at the
+ Morgue. The boy was able, by the clothes, to identify the body as that of
+ his late mistress. The Commissary went straight to the shops in the Rue de
+ la Republique, where he found the young lovers preparing for flight. At
+ first they denied all knowledge of the crime, and said that Madame Boyer
+ had gone to Montpellier. They were arrested, and it was not long before
+ they both confessed their guilt to the examining magistrate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vitalis and Marie Boyer were tried before the Assize Court at Aix on July
+ 2, 1877. Vitalis is described as mean and insignificant in appearance,
+ thin, round-backed, of a bilious complexion; Marie Boyer as a pretty, dark
+ girl, her features cold in expression, dainty and elegant. At her trial
+ she seemed to be still so greatly under the influence of Vitalis that
+ during her interrogatory the President sent him out of court. To the
+ examining magistrate Marie Boyer, in describing her mother's murder, had
+ written, "I cannot think how I came to take part in it. I, who wouldn't
+ have stayed in the presence of a corpse for all the money in the world."
+ Vitalis was condemned to death, and was executed on August 17. He died
+ fearful and penitent, acknowledging his miserable career to be a warning
+ to misguided youth. Extenuating circumstances were accorded to Marie
+ Boyer, and she was sentenced to penal servitude for life. Her conduct in
+ prison was so repentant and exemplary that she was released in 1892.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Proal, a distinguished French judge, and the author of some important
+ works on crime, acted as the examining magistrate in the case of Vitalis
+ and Marie Boyer. He thus sums up his impression of the two criminals:
+ "Here is an instance of how greed and baseness on the one side, lust and
+ jealousy on the other, bring about by degrees a change in the characters
+ of criminals, and, after some hesitation, the suggestion and
+ accomplishment of parricide, Is it necessary to seek an explanation of the
+ crime in any psychic abnormality which is negatived to all appearances by
+ the antecedents of the guilty pair? Is it necessary to ask it of anatomy
+ or physiology? Is not the crime the result of moral degradation gradually
+ asserting itself in two individuals, whose moral and intellectual
+ faculties are the same as those of other men, but who fall, step by step,
+ into vice and crime? It is by a succession of wrongful acts that a man
+ first reaches the frontier of crime and then at length crosses it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ The Fenayrou Case
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is an account of this case in Bataille "Causes Criminelles et
+ Mondaines" (1882), and in Mace's book, "Femmes Criminelles." It is alluded
+ to in "Souvenirs d'un President d'Assises," by Berard des Glajeux. The
+ murder of the chemist Aubert by Marin Fenayrou and his wife Gabrielle was
+ perpetrated near Paris in the year 1882. In its beginning the story is
+ commonplace enough. Fenayrou was the son of a small chemist in the South
+ of France, and had come to Paris from the Aveyron Department to follow his
+ father's vocation. He obtained a situation as apprentice in the Rue de la
+ Ferme des Mathurins in the shop of a M. Gibon. On the death of M. Gibon
+ his widow thought she saw in Fenayrou a man capable of carrying on her
+ late husband's business. She gave her daughter in marriage to her
+ apprentice, and installed him in the shop. The ungrateful son-in-law, sure
+ of his wife and his business and contrary to his express promise, turned
+ the old lady out of the house. This occurred in the year 1870, Fenayrou
+ being then thirty years of age, his wife, Gabrielle, seventeen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were an ill-assorted and unattractive couple. The man, a compound of
+ coarse brutality and shrewd cunning, was at heart lazy and selfish, the
+ woman a spoilt child, in whom a real want of feeling was supplied by a
+ shallow sentimentalism. Vain of the superior refinement conferred on her
+ by a good middle-class education, she despised and soon came to loathe her
+ coarse husband, and lapsed into a condition of disappointment and
+ discontent that was only relieved superficially by an extravagant devotion
+ to religious exercises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in 1875, when the disillusionment of Mme. Fenayrou was complete,
+ that her husband received into his shop a pupil, a youth of twenty-one,
+ Louis Aubert. He was the son of a Norman tradesman. The ambitious father
+ had wished his son to enter the church, but the son preferred to be a
+ chemist. He was a shrewd, hard-working fellow, with an eye to the main
+ chance and a taste for pleasures that cost him nothing, jovial, but vulgar
+ and self-satisfied, the kind of man who, having enjoyed the favours of
+ woman, treats her with arrogance and contempt, till from loving she comes
+ to loathe him&mdash;a characteristic example, according to M. Bourget, of
+ le faux homme a femmes. Such was Aubert, Fenayrou's pupil. He was soon to
+ become something more than pupil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fenayrou as chemist had not answered to the expectations of his
+ mother-in-law. His innate laziness and love of coarse pleasures had
+ asserted themselves. At first his wife had shared in the enjoyments, but
+ as time went on and after the birth of their two children, things became
+ less prosperous. She was left at home while Fenayrou spent his time in
+ drinking bocks of beer, betting and attending race-meetings. It was
+ necessary, under these circumstances, that someone should attend to the
+ business of the shop. In Aubert Fenayrou found a ready and willing
+ assistant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From 1876 to 1880, save for an occasional absence for military service,
+ Aubert lived with the Fenayrous, managing the business and making love to
+ the bored and neglected wife, who after a few months became his mistress.
+ Did Fenayrou know of this intrigue or not? That is a crucial question in
+ the case. If he did not, it was not for want of warning from certain of
+ his friends and neighbours, to whom the intrigue was a matter of common
+ knowledge. Did he refuse to believe in his wife's guilt? or, dependent as
+ he was for his living on the exertions of his assistant, did he
+ deliberately ignore it, relying on his wife's attractions to keep the
+ assiduous Aubert at work in the shop? In any case Aubert's arrogance,
+ which had increased with the consciousness of his importance to the
+ husband and his conquest of the wife, led in August of 1880, to a rupture.
+ Aubert left the Fenayrous and bought a business of his own on the
+ Boulevard Malesherbes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before his departure Aubert had tried to persuade Mme. Gibon to sell up
+ her son-in-law by claiming from him the unpaid purchase-money for her
+ husband's shop. He represented Fenayrou as an idle gambler, and hinted
+ that he would find her a new purchaser. Such an underhand proceeding was
+ likely to provoke resentment if it should come to the ears of Fenayrou.
+ During the two years that elapsed between his departure from Fenayrou's
+ house and his murder, Aubert had prospered in his shop on the Boulevard
+ Malesherbes, whilst the fortunes of the Fenayrous had steadily
+ deteriorated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of the year 1881 Fenayrou sold his shop and went with his
+ family to live on one of the outer boulevards, that of Gouvion-Saint-Cyr.
+ He had obtained a post in a shady mining company, in which he had
+ persuaded his mother-in-law to invest 20,000 francs. He had attempted also
+ to make money by selling fradulent imitations of a famous table-water. For
+ this offence, at the beginning of 1882, he was condemned by the
+ Correctional Tribunal of Paris to three months' imprisonment and 1,000
+ francs costs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In March of 1882 the situation of the Fenayrous was parlous, that of
+ Aubert still prosperous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since Aubert's departure Mme. Fenayrou had entertained another lover, a
+ gentleman on the staff of a sporting newspaper, one of Fenayrou's turf
+ acquaintances. This gentleman had found her a cold mistress, preferring
+ the ideal to the real. As a murderess Madame Fenayrou overcame this
+ weakness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we are to believe Fenayrou's story, the most critical day in his life
+ was March 22, 1882, for it was on that day, according to his account, that
+ he learnt for the first time of his wife's intrigue with Aubert. Horrified
+ and enraged at the discovery, he took from her her nuptial wreath, her
+ wedding-ring, her jewellery, removed from its frame her picture in
+ charcoal which hung in the drawing-room, and told her, paralysed with
+ terror, that the only means of saving her life was to help him to murder
+ her lover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two months later, with her assistance, this outraged husband accomplished
+ his purpose with diabolical deliberation. He must have been well aware
+ that, had he acted on the natural impulse of the moment and revenged
+ himself then and there on Aubert, he would have committed what is regarded
+ by a French jury as the most venial of crimes, and would have escaped with
+ little or no punishment. He preferred, for reasons of his own, to set
+ about the commission of a deliberate and cold-blooded murder that bears
+ the stamp of a more sinister motive than the vengeance of a wronged
+ husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only step he took after the alleged confession of his wife on March 22
+ was to go to a commissary of police and ask him to recover from Aubert
+ certain letters of his wife's that were in his possession. This the
+ commissary refused to do. Mme. Gibon, the mother-in-law, was sent to
+ Aubert to try to recover the letters, but Aubert declined to give them up,
+ and wrote to Mme. Fenayrou:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame, to my displeasure I have had a visit this morning from your
+ mother, who has come to my home and made a most unnecessary scene and
+ reproached me with facts so serious that I must beg you to see me without
+ delay. It concerns your honour and mine.... I have no fear of being
+ confronted with your husband and yourself. I am ready, when you wish, to
+ justify myself.... Please do all you can to prevent a repetition of your
+ mother's visit or I shall have to call in the police."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is clear that the Fenayrous attached the utmost importance to the
+ recovery of this correspondence, which disappeared with Aubert's death.
+ Was the prime motive of the murder the recovery and destruction of these
+ letters? Was Aubert possessed of some knowledge concerning the Fenayrous
+ that placed them at his mercy?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would seem so. To a friend who had warned him of the danger to which
+ his intimacy with Gabrielle Fenayrou exposed him, Aubert had replied,
+ "Bah! I've nothing to fear. I hold them in my power." The nature of the
+ hold which Aubert boasted that he possessed over these two persons remains
+ the unsolved mystery of the case, "that limit of investigation," in the
+ words of a French judge, "one finds in most great cases, beyond which
+ justice strays into the unknown."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That such a hold existed, Aubert's own statement and the desperate
+ attempts made by the Fenayrous to get back these letters, would seem to
+ prove beyond question. Had Aubert consented to return them, would he have
+ saved his life? It seems probable. As it was, he was doomed. Fenayrou
+ hated him. They had had a row on a race-course, in the course of which
+ Aubert had humiliated his former master. More than this, Aubert had
+ boasted openly of his relations with Mme. Fenayrou, and the fact had
+ reached the ears of the husband. Fenayrou believed also, though
+ erroneously, that Aubert had informed against him in the matter of the
+ table-water fraud. Whether his knowledge of Aubert's relations with his
+ wife was recent or of long standing, he had other grounds of hate against
+ his former pupil. He himself had failed in life, but he saw his rival
+ prosperous, arrogant in his prosperity, threatening, dangerous to his
+ peace of mind; he envied and feared as well as hated him. Cruel, cunning
+ and sinister, Fenayrou spent the next two months in the meditation of a
+ revenge that was not only to remove the man he feared, but was to give him
+ a truly fiendish opportunity of satisfying his ferocious hatred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the wife what of her share in the business? Had she also come to hate
+ Aubert? Or did she seek to expiate her guilt by assisting her husband in
+ the punishment of her seducer? A witness at the trial described Mme.
+ Fenayrou as "a soft paste" that could be moulded equally well to vice or
+ virtue, a woman destitute of real feeling or strength of will, who, under
+ the direction of her husband, carried out implicitly, precisely and
+ carefully her part in an atrocious murder, whose only effort to prevent
+ the commission of such a deed was to slip away into a church a few minutes
+ before she was to meet the man she was decoying to his death, and pray
+ that his murder might be averted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her religious sense, like the images in the hat of Louis XI., was a source
+ of comfort and consolation in the doing of evil, but powerless to restrain
+ her from the act itself, in the presence of a will stronger than her own.
+ At the time of his death Aubert contemplated marriage, and had advertised
+ for a wife. If Mme. Fenayrou was aware of this, it may have served to
+ stimulate her resentment against her lover, but there seems little reason
+ to doubt that, left to herself, she would never have had the will or the
+ energy to give that resentment practical expression. It required the
+ dictation of the vindictive and malevolent Fenayrou to crystallise her
+ hatred of Aubert into a deliberate participation in his murder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eight or nine miles north-west of Paris lies the small town of Chatou, a
+ pleasant country resort for tired Parisians. Here Madeleine Brohan, the
+ famous actress, had inhabited a small villa, a two-storied building. At
+ the beginning of 1882 it was to let. In the April of that year a person of
+ the name of "Hess" agreed to take it at a quarterly rent of 1,200 francs,
+ and paid 300 in advance. "Hess" was no other than Fenayrou&mdash;the villa
+ that had belonged to Madeleine Brohan the scene chosen for Aubert's
+ murder. Fenayrou was determined to spare no expense in the execution of
+ his design: it was to cost him some 3,000 francs before he had finished
+ with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the actual manner of his betrayer's death, the outraged husband
+ found it difficult to make up his mind. It was not to be prompt, nor was
+ unnecessary suffering to be avoided. At first he favoured a pair of
+ "infernal" opera-glasses that concealed a couple of steel points which, by
+ means of a spring, would dart out into the eyes of anyone using them and
+ destroy their sight. This rather elaborate and uncertain machine was
+ abandoned later in favour of a trap for catching wolves. This was to be
+ placed under the table, and seize in its huge iron teeth the legs of the
+ victim. In the end simplicity, in the shape of a hammer and sword-stick,
+ won the day. An assistant was taken in the person of Lucien Fenayrou, a
+ brother of Marin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This humble and obliging individual, a maker of children's toys, regarded
+ his brother the chemist with something like veneration as the gentleman
+ and man of education of the family. Fifty francs must have seemed to him
+ an almost superfluous inducement to assist in the execution of what
+ appeared to be an act of legitimate vengeance, an affair of family honour
+ in which the wife and brother of the injured husband were in duty bound to
+ participate. Mme. Fenayrou, with characteristic superstition, chose the
+ day of her boy's first communion to broach the subject of the murder to
+ Lucien. By what was perhaps more than coincidence, Ascension Day, May 18,
+ was selected as the day for the crime itself. There were practical reasons
+ also. It was a Thursday and a public holiday. On Thursdays the Fenayrou
+ children spent the day with their grandmother, and at holiday time there
+ was a special midnight train from Chatou to Paris that would enable the
+ murderers to return to town after the commission of their crime. A goat
+ chaise and twenty-six feet of gas piping had been purchased by Fenayrou
+ and taken down to the villa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing remained but to secure the presence of the victim. At the
+ direction of her husband Mme. Fenayrou wrote to Aubert on May 14, a letter
+ in which she protested her undying love for him, and expressed a desire to
+ resume their previous relations. Aubert demurred at first, but, as she
+ became more pressing, yielded at length to her suggestion. If it cost him
+ nothing, Aubert was the last man to decline an invitation of the kind. A
+ trip to Chatou was arranged for Ascension Day, May 18, by the train
+ leaving Paris from the St. Lazare Station, at half-past eight in the
+ evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the afternoon of that day Fenayrou, his wife and his brother sent the
+ children to their grandmother and left Paris for Chatou at three o'clock.
+ Arrived there, they went to the villa, Fenayrou carrying the twenty-six
+ feet of gas-piping wound round him like some huge hunting-horn. He spent
+ the afternoon in beating out the piping till it was flat, and in making a
+ gag. He tried to take up the flooring in the kitchen, but this plan for
+ the concealment of the body was abandoned in favour of the river. As soon
+ as these preparations, in which he was assisted by his two relatives, had
+ been completed, Fenayrou placed a candle, some matches and the sword-stick
+ on the drawing-room table and returned to Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three conspirators dined together heartily in the Avenue de Clichy&mdash;soup,
+ fish, entree, sweet and cheese, washed down by a bottle of claret and a
+ pint of burgundy, coffee to follow, with a glass of chartreuse for Madame.
+ To the waiter the party seemed in the best of spirits. Dinner ended, the
+ two men returned to Chatou by the 7.35 train, leaving Gabrielle to follow
+ an hour later with Aubert. Fenayrou had taken three second-class return
+ tickets for his wife, his brother and himself, and a single for their
+ visitor. It was during the interval between the departure of her husband
+ and her meeting with Aubert that Mme. Fenayrou went into the church of St.
+ Louis d'Antin and prayed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At half-past eight she met Aubert at the St. Lazare Station, gave him his
+ ticket and the two set out for Chatou&mdash;a strange journey Mme.
+ Fenayrou was asked what they talked about in the railway carriage. "Mere
+ nothings," she replied. Aubert abused her mother; for her own part, she
+ was very agitated&mdash;tres emotionnee. It was about half-past nine when
+ they reached their destination. The sight of the little villa pleased
+ Aubert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" he said, "this is good. I should like a house like this and twenty
+ thousand francs a year!" As he entered the hall, surprised at the
+ darkness, he exclaimed: "The devil! it's precious dark! 'tu sais,
+ Gabrielle, que je ne suis pas un heros d'aventure.'" The woman pushed him
+ into the drawing-room. He struck a match on his trousers. Fenayrou, who
+ had been lurking in the darkness in his shirt sleeves, made a blow at him
+ with the hammer, but it was ineffectual. A struggle ensued. The room was
+ plunged in darkness. Gabrielle waited outside. After a little, her husband
+ called for a light; she came in and lit a candle on the mantelpiece.
+ Fenayrou was getting the worst of the encounter. She ran to his help, and
+ dragged off his opponent. Fenayrou was free. He struck again with the
+ hammer. Aubert fell, and for some ten minutes Fenayrou stood over the
+ battered and bleeding man abusing and insulting him, exulting in his
+ vengeance. Then he stabbed him twice with the sword-stick, and so ended
+ the business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The murderers had to wait till past eleven to get rid of the body, as the
+ streets were full of holiday-makers. When all was quiet they put it into
+ the goat chaise, wrapped round with the gas-piping, and wheeled it on to
+ the Chatou bridge. To prevent noise they let the body down by a rope into
+ the water. It was heavier than they thought, and fell with a loud splash
+ into the river. "Hullo!" exclaimed a night-fisherman, who was mending his
+ tackle not far from the bridge, "there go those butchers again, chucking
+ their filth into the Seine!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as they had taken the chaise back to the villa, the three
+ assassins hurried to the station to catch the last train. Arriving there a
+ little before their time, they went into a neighbouring cafe. Fenayrou had
+ three bocks, Lucien one, and Madame another glass of chartreuse. So home
+ to Paris. Lucien reached his house about two in the morning. "Well," asked
+ his wife, "did you have a good day?" "Splendid," was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eleven days passed. Fenayrou paid a visit to the villa to clean it and put
+ it in order. Otherwise he went about his business as usual, attending race
+ meetings, indulging in a picnic and a visit to the Salon. On May 27 a man
+ named Bailly, who, by a strange coincidence, was known by the nickname of
+ "the Chemist," walking by the river, had his attention called by a
+ bargeman to a corpse that was floating on the water. He fished it out. It
+ was that of Aubert. In spite of a gag tired over his mouth the water had
+ got into the body, and, notwithstanding the weight of the lead piping, it
+ had risen to the surface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the police had been informed of the disappearance of Aubert,
+ their suspicions had fallen on the Fenayrous in consequence of the request
+ which Marin Fenayrou had made to the commissary of police to aid him in
+ the recovery from Aubert of his wife's letters. But there had been nothing
+ further in their conduct to provoke suspicion. When, however, the body was
+ discovered and at the same time an anonymous letter received denouncing
+ the Fenayrous as the murderers of Aubert, the police decided on their
+ arrest. On the morning of June 8 M. Mace, then head of the Detective
+ Department, called at their house. He found Fenayrou in a dressing-gown.
+ This righteous avenger of his wife's seduction denied his guilt, like any
+ common criminal, but M. Mace handed him over to one of his men, to be
+ taken immediately to Versailles. He himself took charge of Madame, and, in
+ the first-class carriage full of people, in which they travelled together
+ to Versailles, she whispered to the detective a full confession of the
+ crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mace has left us an account of this singular railway journey. It was two
+ o'clock in the afternoon. In the carriage were five ladies and a young man
+ who was reading La Vie Parisienne. Mme. Fenayrou was silent and
+ thoughtful. "You're thinking of your present position?" asked the
+ detective. "No, I'm thinking of my mother and my dear children." "They
+ don't seem to care much about their father," remarked Mace. "Perhaps not."
+ "Why?" asked M. Mace. "Because of his violent temper," was the reply.
+ After some further conversation and the departure at Courbevoie of the
+ young man with La Vie Parisienne, Mme. Fenayrou asked abruptly: "Do you
+ think my husband guilty?" "I'm sure of it." "So does Aubert's sister."
+ "Certainly," answered M. Mace; "she looks on the crime as one of revenge."
+ "But my brother-in-law," urged the woman, "could have had no motive for
+ vengeance against Aubert." Mace answered coldly that he would have to
+ explain how he had employed his time on Ascension Day. "You see criminals
+ everywhere," answered Madame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the train had left St. Cloud, where the other occupants of the
+ carriage had alighted, the detective and his prisoner were alone, free of
+ interruption till Versailles should be reached. Hitherto they had spoken
+ in whispers; now Mace seized the opportunity to urge the woman to unbosom
+ herself to him, to reveal her part in the crime. She burst into tears.
+ There was an interval of silence; then she thanked Mace for the kindness
+ and consideration he had shown her. "You wish me," she asked, "to betray
+ my husband?" "Without any design or intention on your part," discreetly
+ answered the detective; "but by the sole force of circumstances you are
+ placed in such a position that you cannot help betraying him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether convinced or not of this tyranny of circumstance, Mme. Fenayrou
+ obeyed her mentor, and calmly, coldly, without regret or remorse, told him
+ the story of the assassination. Towards the end of her narration she
+ softened a little. "I know I am a criminal," she exclaimed. "Since this
+ morning I have done nothing but lie. I am sick of it; it makes me suffer
+ too much. Don't tell my husband until this evening that I have confessed;
+ there's no need, for, after what I have told you, you can easily expose
+ his falsehoods and so get at the truth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening the three prisoners&mdash;Lucien had been arrested at the
+ same time as the other two&mdash;were brought to Chatou. Identified by the
+ gardener as the lessee of the villa, Fenayrou abandoned his protestations
+ of innocence and admitted his guilt. The crime was then and there
+ reconstituted in the presence of the examining magistrate. With the help
+ of a gendarme, who impersonated Aubert, Fenayrou repeated the incidents of
+ the murder. The goat-chaise was wheeled to the bridge, and there in the
+ presence of an indignant crowd, the murderer showed how the body had been
+ lowered into the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a magisterial investigation lasting two months, which failed to shed
+ any new light on the more mysterious elements in the case, Fenayrou, his
+ wife and brother were indicted on August 19 before the Assize Court for
+ the Seine-et-Oise Department, sitting at Versailles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attitude of the three culprits was hardly such as to provoke the
+ sympathies of even a French jury. Fenayrou seemed to be giving a clumsy
+ and unconvincing performance of the role of the wronged husband; his heavy
+ figure clothed in an ill-fitting suit of "blue dittos," his ill-kempt red
+ beard and bock-stained moustache did not help him in his impersonation.
+ Mme. Fenayrou, pale, colourless, insignificant, was cold and impenetrable.
+ She described the murder of her lover "as if she were giving her cook a
+ household recipe for making apricot Jam." Lucien was humble and
+ lachrymose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his interrogatory of the husband the President, M. Berard des Glajeux,
+ showed himself frankly sceptical as to the ingenuousness of Fenayrou's
+ motives in assassinating Aubert. "Now, what was the motive of this
+ horrible crime?" he asked. "Revenge," answered Fenayrou.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: But consider the care you took to hide the body and destroy all
+ trace of your guilt; that is not the way in which a husband sets out to
+ avenge his honour; these are the methods of the assassin! With your wife's
+ help you could have caught Aubert in flagrante delicto and killed him on
+ the spot, and the law would have absolved you. Instead of which you decoy
+ him into a hideous snare. Public opinion suggests that jealousy of your
+ former assistant's success, and mortification at your own failure, were
+ the real motives. Or was it not perhaps that you had been in the habit of
+ rendering somewhat dubious services to some of your promiscuous clients?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fenayrou: Nothing of the kind, I swear it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: Do not protest too much. Remember that among your acquaintances
+ you were suspected of cheating at cards. As a chemist you had been
+ convinced of fraud. Perhaps Aubert knew something against you. Some act of
+ poisoning, or abortion, in which you had been concerned? Many witnesses
+ have believed this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your mother-in-law is said to have remarked, "My son-in-law will end in
+ jail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fenayrou (bursting into tears): This is too dreadful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: And Dr. Durand, an old friend of Aubert, remembers the deceased
+ saying to him, "One has nothing to fear from people one holds in one's
+ hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fenayrou: I don't know what he meant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: Or, considering the cruelty, cowardice, the cold calculation
+ displayed in the commission of the crime, shall we say this was a woman's
+ not a man's revenge. You have said your wife acted as your slave&mdash;was
+ it not the other way about?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fenayrou: No; it was my revenge, mine alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The view that regarded Mme. Fenayrou as a soft, malleable paste was not
+ the view of the President.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why," he asked the woman, "did you commit this horrible murder, decoy
+ your lover to his death?" "Because I had repented," was the answer; "I had
+ wronged my husband, and since he had been condemned for fraud, I loved him
+ the more for being unfortunate. And then I feared for my children."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: Is that really the case?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mme. Fenayrou: Certainly it is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President: Then your whole existence has been one of lies and hypocrisy.
+ Whilst you were deceiving your husband and teaching your children to
+ despise him you were covering him with caresses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You have played false to both husband and lover&mdash;to Aubert in
+ decoying him to his death, to your husband by denouncing him directly you
+ were arrested. You have betrayed everybody. The only person you have not
+ betrayed is yourself. What sort of a woman are you? As you and Aubert went
+ into the drawing-room on the evening of the murder you said loudly, "This
+ is the way," so that your husband, hearing your voice outside, should not
+ strike you by mistake in the darkness. If Lucien had not told us that you
+ attacked Aubert whilst he was struggling with your husband, we should
+ never have known it, for you would never have admitted it, and your
+ husband has all along refused to implicate you.... You have said that you
+ had ceased to care for your lover: he had ceased to care for you. He was
+ prosperous, happy, about to marry: you hated him, and you showed your hate
+ when, during the murder, you flung yourself upon him and cried, "Wretch!"
+ Is that the behaviour of a woman who represents herself to have been the
+ timid slave of her husband? No. This crime is the revenge of a cowardly
+ and pitiless woman, who writes down in her account book the expenses of
+ the trip to Chatou and, after the murder, picnics merrily in the green
+ fields. It was you who steeled your husband to the task.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How far the President was justified in thus inverting the parts played by
+ the husband and wife in the crime must be a matter of opinion. In his
+ volume of Souvenirs M. Berard des Glajeux modifies considerably the view
+ which he perhaps felt it his duty to express in his interrogatory of
+ Gabrielle Fenayrou. He describes her as soft and flexible by nature, the
+ repentant slave of her husband, seeking to atone for her wrong to him by
+ helping him in his revenge. The one feature in the character of Mme.
+ Fenayrou that seems most clearly demonstrated is its absolute
+ insensibility under any circumstances whatsoever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The submissive Lucien had little to say for himself, nor could any motive
+ for joining in the murder beyond a readiness to oblige his brother be
+ suggested. In his Souvenirs M. Berard des Glajeux states that to-day it
+ would seem to be clearly established that Lucien acted blindly at the
+ bidding of his sister-in-law, "qu'il avait beaucoup aimee et qui n'avait
+ pas ete cruelle a son egard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evidence recapitulated for the most part the facts already set out.
+ The description of Mme. Fenayrou by the gentleman on the sporting
+ newspaper who had succeeded Aubert in her affections is, under the
+ circumstances, interesting: "She was sad, melancholy; I questioned her,
+ and she told me she was married to a coarse man who neglected her, failed
+ to understand her, and had never loved her. I became her lover but, except
+ on a few occasions, our relations were those of good friends. She was a
+ woman with few material wants, affectionate, expansive, an idealist, one
+ who had suffered much and sought from without a happiness her marriage had
+ never brought her. I believe her to have been the blind tool of her
+ husband."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From motives of delicacy the evidence of this gentleman was read in his
+ presence; he was not examined orally. His eulogy of his mistress is loyal.
+ Against it may be set the words of the Procureur de la Republique, M.
+ Delegorgue: "Never has a more thorough-paced, a more hideous monster been
+ seated in the dock of an assize court. This woman is the personification
+ of falsehood, depravity, cowardice and treachery. She is worthy of the
+ supreme penalty." The jury were not of this opinion. They preferred to
+ regard Mme. Fenayrou as playing a secondary part to that of her husband.
+ They accorded in both her case and that of Lucien extenuating
+ circumstances. The woman was sentenced to penal servitude for life, Lucien
+ to seven years. Fenayrou, for whose conduct the jury could find no
+ extenuation, was condemned to death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the custom in certain assize towns for the President, after
+ pronouncing sentence, to visit a prisoner who had been ordered for
+ execution. M. Berard des Glajeux describes his visit to Fenayrou at
+ Versailles. He was already in prison dress, sobbing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His iron nature, which during five days had never flinched, had broken
+ down; but it was not for himself he wept, but for his wife, his children,
+ his brother; of his own fate he took no account. At the same moment his
+ wife was in the lodge of the courthouse waiting for the cab that was to
+ take her to her prison. Freed from the anxieties of the trial, knowing her
+ life to be spared, without so much as a thought for the husband whom she
+ had never loved, she had tidied herself up, and now, with all the ease of
+ a woman, whose misfortunes have not destroyed her self-possession, was
+ doing the honours of the jail. It was she who received her judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Fenayrou was not to die. The Court of Cassation, to which he had made
+ the usual appeal after condemnation, decided that the proceedings at
+ Versailles had been vitiated by the fact that the evidence of Gabrielle
+ Fenayrou's second lover had not been taken ORALLY, within the requirements
+ of the criminal code; consequently a new trial was ordered before the
+ Paris Assize Court. This second trial, which commenced on October 12,
+ saved Fenayrou's head. The Parisian jury showed themselves more lenient
+ than their colleagues at Versailles. Not only was Fenayrou accorded
+ extenuating circumstances, but Lucien was acquitted altogether. The only
+ person to whom these new proceedings brought no benefit was Mme. Fenayrou,
+ whose sentence remained unaltered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marin Fenayrou was sent to New Caledonia to serve his punishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There he was allowed to open a dispensary, but, proving dishonest, he lost
+ his license and became a ferryman&mdash;a very Charon for terrestrial
+ passengers. He died in New Caledonia of cancer of the liver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabrielle Fenayrou made an exemplary prisoner, so exemplary that, owing to
+ her good conduct and a certain ascendancy she exercised over her
+ fellow-prisoners, she was made forewoman of one of the workshops. Whilst
+ holding this position she had the honour of receiving, among those
+ entrusted to her charge, another Gabrielle, murderess, Gabrielle Bompard,
+ the history of whose crime is next to be related.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Eyraud and Bompard
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There are accounts of this case in Bataille "Causes Criminelles et
+ Mondaines," 1890, and in Volume X. of Fouquier "Causes Celebres."
+ "L'Affaire Gouffe" by Dr. Lacassagne, Lyons, 1891, and Goron "L'Amour
+ Criminel" may be consulted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ON July 27, in the year 1889, the Parisian police were informed of the
+ disappearance of one Gouffe, a bailiff. He had been last seen by two
+ friends on the Boulevard Montmartre at about ten minutes past seven on the
+ evening of the 26th, a Friday. Since then nothing had been heard of him,
+ either at his office in the Rue Montmartre, or at his private house in the
+ Rue Rougemont. This was surprising in the case of a man of regular habits
+ even in his irregularities, robust health, and cheerful spirits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gouffe was a widower, forty-two years of age. He had three daughters who
+ lived happily with him in the Rue Rougemont. He did a good trade as
+ bailiff and process-server, and at times had considerable sums of money in
+ his possession. These he would never leave behind him at his office, but
+ carry home at the end of the day's work, except on Fridays. Friday nights
+ Gouffe always spent away from home. As the society he sought on these
+ nights was of a promiscuous character, he was in the habit of leaving at
+ his office any large sum of money that had come into his hands during the
+ day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About nine o'clock on this particular Friday night, July 26, the
+ hall-porter at Gouffe's office in the Rue Montmartre heard someone, whom
+ he had taken at first to be the bailiff himself, enter the hall and go
+ upstairs to the office, where he remained a few minutes. As he descended
+ the stairs the porter came out of his lodge and, seeing it was a stranger,
+ accosted him. But the man hurried away without giving the porter time to
+ see his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the office was examined the next day everything was found in perfect
+ order, and a sum of 14,000 francs, hidden away behind some papers,
+ untouched. The safe had not been tampered with; there was, in short,
+ nothing unusual about the room except ten long matches that were lying
+ half burnt on the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On hearing of the bailiff's disappearance and the mysterious visitor to
+ his office, the police, who were convinced that Gouffe had been the victim
+ of some criminal design, inquired closely into his habits, his friends,
+ his associates, men and women. But the one man who could have breathed the
+ name that would have set the police on the track of the real culprits was,
+ for reasons of his own, silent. The police examined many persons, but
+ without arriving at any useful result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, on August 15, in a thicket at the foot of a slope running down
+ from the road that passes through the district of Millery, about ten miles
+ from Lyons, a roadmender, attracted by a peculiar smell, discovered the
+ remains of what appeared to be a human body. They were wrapped in a cloth,
+ but so decomposed as to make identification almost impossible. M. Goron,
+ at that time head of the Parisian detective police, believed them to be
+ the remains of Gouffe, but a relative of the missing man, whom he sent to
+ Lyons, failed to identify them. Two days after the discovery of the
+ corpse, there were found near Millery the broken fragments of a trunk, the
+ lock of which fitted a key that had been picked up near the body. A label
+ on the trunk showed that it had been dispatched from Paris to Lyons on
+ July 27, 188&mdash;, but the final figure of the date was obliterated.
+ Reference to the books of the railway company showed that on July 27,
+ 1889, the day following the disappearance of Gouffe, a trunk similar in
+ size and weight to that found near Millery had been sent from Paris to
+ Lyons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The judicial authorities at Lyons scouted the idea that either the corpse
+ or the trunk found at Millery had any connection with the disappearance of
+ Gouffe. When M. Goron, bent on following up what he believed to be
+ important clues, went himself to Lyons he found that the remains, after
+ being photographed, had been interred in the common burying-ground. The
+ young doctor who had made the autopsy produced triumphantly some hair
+ taken from the head of the corpse and showed M. Goron that whilst Gouffe's
+ hair was admittedly auburn and cut short, this was black, and had
+ evidently been worn long. M. Goron, after looking carefully at the hair,
+ asked for some distilled water. He put the lock of hair into it and, after
+ a few minutes' immersion, cleansed of the blood, grease and dust that had
+ caked them together, the hairs appeared clearly to be short and auburn.
+ The doctor admitted his error.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortified by this success, Goron was able to procure the exhumation of the
+ body. A fresh autopsy was performed by Dr. Lacassagne, the eminent medical
+ jurist of the Lyons School of Medicine. He was able to pronounce with
+ certainty that the remains were those of the bailiff, Gouffe. An injury to
+ the right ankle, a weakness of the right leg, the absence of a particular
+ tooth and other admitted peculiarities in Gouffe's physical conformation,
+ were present in the corpse, placing its identity beyond question. This
+ second post-mortem revealed furthermore an injury to the thyroid cartilage
+ of the larynx that had been inflicted beyond any doubt whatever, declared
+ Dr. Lacassagne, before death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was little reason to doubt that Gouffe had been the victim of murder
+ by strangulation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But by whom had the crime been committed? It was now the end of November.
+ Four months had passed since the bailiff's murder, and the police had no
+ clue to its perpetrators. At one time a friend of Gouffe's had been
+ suspected and placed under arrest, but he was released for want of
+ evidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day toward the close of November, in the course of a conversation with
+ M. Goron, a witness who had known Gouffe surprised him by saying abruptly,
+ "There's another man who disappeared about the same time as Gouffe." M.
+ Goron pricked up his ears. The witness explained that he had not mentioned
+ the fact before, as he had not connected it with his friend's
+ disappearance; the man's name, he said, was Eyraud, Michel Eyraud, M.
+ Goron made some inquires as to this Michel Eyraud. He learnt that he was a
+ married man, forty-six years of age, once a distiller at Sevres, recently
+ commission-agent to a bankrupt firm, that he had left France suddenly,
+ about the time of the disappearance of Gouffe, and that he had a mistress,
+ one Gabrielle Bompard, who had disappeared with him. Instinctively M.
+ Goron connected this fugitive couple with the fate of the murdered
+ bailiff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Confirmation of his suspicions was to come from London. The remains of the
+ trunk found at Millery had been skilfully put together and exposed at the
+ Morgue in Paris, whilst the Gouffe family had offered a reward of 500
+ francs to anybody who could in any way identify the trunk. Beyond
+ producing a large crop of anonymous letters, in one of which the crime was
+ attributed to General Boulanger, then in Jersey, these measures seemed
+ likely to prove fruitless. But one day in December, from the keeper of a
+ boarding-house in Gower Street, M. Goron received a letter informing him
+ that the writer believed that Eyraud and Gabrielle Bompard had stayed
+ recently at his house, and that on July 14 the woman, whom he knew only as
+ "Gabrielle," had left for France, crossing by Newhaven and Dieppe, and
+ taking with her a large and almost empty trunk, which she had purchased in
+ London. Inquires made by the French detectives established the correctness
+ of this correspondent's information. An assistant at a trunk shop in the
+ Euston Road was able to identify the trunk&mdash;brought over from Paris
+ for the purpose&mdash;as one purchased in his shop on July 12 by a
+ Frenchman answering to the description of Michel Eyraud. The wife of the
+ boarding-house keeper recollected having expressed to Gabrielle her
+ surprise that she should buy such an enormous piece of luggage when she
+ had only one dress to put into it. "Oh that's all right," answered
+ Gabrielle smilingly, "we shall have plenty to fill it with in Paris!"
+ Gabrielle had gone to Paris with the trunk on July 14, come back to London
+ on the 17th, and on the 20th she and Eyraud returned together to Paris
+ From these facts it seemed more than probable that these two were the
+ assassins so eagerly sought for by the police, and it seemed clear also
+ that the murder had been done in Paris. But what had become of this
+ couple, in what street, in what house in Paris had the crime been
+ committed? These were questions the police were powerless to answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The year 1889 came to an end, the murderers were still at large. But on
+ January 21, 1890, M. Goron found lying on his table a large letter bearing
+ the New York postmark. He opened it, and to his astonishment read at the
+ end the signature "Michel Eyraud." It was a curious letter, but
+ undoubtedly genuine. In it Eyraud protested against the suspicions
+ directed against himself; they were, he wrote, merely unfortunate
+ coincidences. Gouffe had been his friend; he had had no share whatever in
+ his death; his only misfortune had been his association with "that
+ serpent, Gabrielle Bompard." He had certainly bought a large trunk for
+ her, but she told him that she had sold it. They had gone to America
+ together, he to avoid financial difficulties in which he had been involved
+ by the dishonesty of the Jews. There Gabrielle had deserted him for
+ another man. He concluded a very long letter by declaring his belief in
+ Gabrielle's innocence&mdash;"the great trouble with her is that she is
+ such a liar and also has a dozen lovers after her." He promised that, as
+ soon as he learnt that Gabrielle had returned to Paris, he would, of his
+ own free will, place himself in the hands of M. Goron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was to have an early opportunity of redeeming his pledge, for on the
+ day following the receipt of his letter a short, well-made woman, dressed
+ neatly in black, with dyed hair, greyish-blue eyes, good teeth, a
+ disproportionately large head and a lively and intelligent expression of
+ face, presented herself at the Prefecture of Police and asked for an
+ interview with the Prefect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Requested to give her name, she replied, with a smile, "Gabrielle
+ Bompard." She was accompanied by a middle-aged gentleman, who appeared to
+ be devoted to her. Gabrielle Bompard and her friend were taken to the
+ private room of M. Loze, the Prefect of Police. There, in a half-amused
+ way, without the least concern, sitting at times on the edge of the
+ Prefect's writing-table, Gabrielle Bompard told how she had been the
+ unwilling accomplice of her lover, Eyraud, in the murder of the bailiff,
+ Gouffe. The crime, she stated, had been committed in No. 3 in the Rue
+ Tronson-Ducoudray, but she had not been present; she knew nothing of it
+ but what had been told her by Eyraud. After the murder she had accompanied
+ him to America; there they had met the middle-aged gentleman, her
+ companion. Eyraud had proposed that they should murder and rob him, but
+ she had divulged the plot to the gentleman and asked him to take her away.
+ It was acting on his advice that she had returned to France, determined to
+ give her evidence to the judicial authorities in Paris. The middle-aged
+ gentleman declared himself ready to vouch for the truth of a great part of
+ this interesting narrative. There they both imagined apparently that the
+ affair would be ended. They were extremely surprised when the Prefect,
+ after listening to their statements, sent for a detective-inspector who
+ showed Gabrielle Bompard a warrant for her arrest. After an affecting
+ parting, at least on the part of the middle-aged gentleman, Gabrielle
+ Bompard was taken to prison. There she soon recovered her spirits, which
+ had at no time been very gravely depressed by her critical situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to Eyraud's letters, if anyone knew anything about Gouffe's
+ murder, it was Gabrielle Bompard; according to the woman's statement, it
+ was Eyraud, and Eyraud alone, who had committed it. As they were both
+ liars&mdash;the woman perhaps the greater liar of the two&mdash;their
+ statements are not to be taken as other than forlorn attempts to shift the
+ blame on to each other's shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before extracting from their various avowals, which grew more complete as
+ time went on, the story of the crime, let us follow Eyraud in his flight
+ from justice, which terminated in the May of 1890 by his arrest in Havana.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immediately after the arrest of Gabrielle, two French detectives set out
+ for America to trace and run down if possible her deserted lover. For more
+ than a month they traversed Canada and the United States in search of
+ their prey. The track of the fugitive was marked from New York to San
+ Francisco by acts of thieving and swindling. At the former city he had
+ made the acquaintance of a wealthy Turk, from whom, under the pretence of
+ wishing to be photographed in it, he had borrowed a magnificent oriental
+ robe. The photograph was taken, but Eyraud forgot to return the costly
+ robe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At another time he was lodging in the same house as a young American
+ actor, called in the French accounts of the incident "Sir Stout." To "Sir
+ Stout" Eyraud would appear to have given a most convincing performance of
+ the betrayed husband; his wife, he said, had deserted him for another man;
+ he raved and stormed audibly in his bedroom, deploring his fate and vowing
+ vengeance. These noisy representations so impressed "Sir Stout" that, on
+ the outraged husband declaring himself to be a Mexican for the moment
+ without funds, the benevolent comedian lent him eighty dollars, which, it
+ is almost needless to add, he never saw again. In narrating this incident
+ to the French detectives, "Sir Stout" describes Eyraud's performance as
+ great, surpassing even those of Coquelin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Similar stories of theft and debauchery met the detectives at every turn,
+ but, helped in a great measure by the publicity the American newspapers
+ gave to the movements of his pursuers, Eyraud was able to elude them, and
+ in March they returned to France to concert further plans for his capture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eyraud had gone to Mexico. From there he had written a letter to M.
+ Rochefort's newspaper, L'Intransigeant, in which he declared Gouffe to
+ have been murdered by Gabrielle and an unknown. But, when official
+ inquiries were made in Mexico as to his whereabouts, the bird had flown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Havana, in Cuba, there lived a French dressmaker and clothes-merchant
+ named Puchen. In the month of February a stranger, ragged and unkempt, but
+ evidently a fellow-countryman, visited her shop and offered to sell her a
+ superb Turkish costume. The contrast between the wretchedness of the
+ vendor and the magnificence of his wares struck Madame Puchen at the time.
+ But her surprise was converted into suspicion when she read in the
+ American newspapers a description of the Turkish garment stolen by Michel
+ Eyraud, the reputed assassin of the bailiff Gouffe. It was one morning in
+ the middle of May that Mme. Puchen read the description of the robe that
+ had been offered her in February by her strange visitor. To her
+ astonishment, about two o'clock the same afternoon, she saw the stranger
+ standing before her door. She beckoned to him, and asked him if he still
+ had his Turkish robe with him; he seemed confused, and said that he had
+ sold it. The conversation drifted on to ordinary topics; the stranger
+ described some of his recent adventures in Mexico. "Oh!" exclaimed the
+ dressmaker, "they say Eyraud, the murderer, is in Mexico! Did you come
+ across him? Were you in Paris at the time of the murder?" The stranger
+ answered in the negative, but his face betrayed his uneasiness. "Do you
+ know you're rather like him?" said the woman, in a half-joking way. The
+ stranger laughed, and shortly after went out, saying he would return. He
+ did return on May 15, bringing with him a number of the Republique
+ Illustree that contained an almost unrecognisable portrait of Eyraud. He
+ said he had picked it up in a cafe. "What a blackguard he looks!" he
+ exclaimed as he threw the paper on the table. But the dressmaker's
+ suspicions were not allayed by the stranger's uncomplimentary reference to
+ the murderer. As soon as he had gone, she went to the French Consul and
+ told him her story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By one of those singular coincidences that are inadmissable in fiction or
+ drama, but occur at times in real life, there happened to be in Havana, of
+ all places, a man who had been employed by Eyraud at the time that he had
+ owned a distillery at Sevres. The Consul, on hearing the statement of Mme.
+ Puchen, sent for this man and told him that a person believed to be Eyraud
+ was in Havana. As the man left the Consulate, whom should he meet in the
+ street but Eyraud himself! The fugitive had been watching the movements of
+ Mme. Puchen; he had suspected, after the interview, that the woman would
+ denounce him to the authorities. He now saw that disguise was useless. He
+ greeted his ex-employe, took him into a cafe, there admitted his identity
+ and begged him not to betray him. It was midnight when they left the cafe.
+ Eyraud, repenting of his confidence, and no doubt anxious to rid himself
+ of a dangerous witness, took his friend into an ill-lighted and deserted
+ street; but the friend, conscious of his delicate situation, hailed a
+ passing cab and made off as quickly as he could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day, the 20th, the search for Eyraud was set about in earnest. The
+ Spanish authorities, informed of his presence in Havana, directed the
+ police to spare no effort to lay hands on him. The Hotel Roma, at which he
+ had been staying, was visited; but Eyraud, scenting danger, had gone to an
+ hotel opposite the railway station. His things were packed ready for
+ flight on the following morning. How was he to pass the night? True to his
+ instincts, a house of ill-fame, at which he had been entertained already,
+ seemed the safest and most pleasant refuge; but, when, seedy and shabby,
+ he presented himself at the door, he was sent back into the street. It was
+ past one in the morning. The lonely murderer wandered aimlessly in the
+ streets, restless, nervous, a prey to apprehension, not knowing where to
+ go. Again the man from Sevres met him. "It's all up with me!" said Eyraud,
+ and disappeared in the darkness. At two in the morning a police officer,
+ who had been patrolling the town in search of the criminal, saw, in the
+ distance, a man walking to and fro, seemingly uncertain which way to turn.
+ Hearing footsteps the man turned round and walked resolutely past the
+ policeman, saying good-night in Spanish. "Who are you? What's your
+ address?" the officer asked abruptly. "Gorski, Hotel Roma!" was the
+ answer. This was enough for the officer. Eyraud was know{sic} to have
+ passed as "Gorski," the Hotel Roma had already been searched as one of his
+ hiding-places. To seize and handcuff "Gorski" was the work of a moment. An
+ examination of the luggage left by the so-called Gorski at his last hotel
+ and a determined attempt at suicide made by their prisoner during the
+ night proved conclusively that to the Spanish police was the credit of
+ having laid by the heels, ten months after the commission of the crime,
+ Michel Eyraud, one of the assassins of the bailiff Gouffe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On June 16 Eyraud was delivered over to the French police. He reached
+ France on the 20th, and on July 1 made his first appearance before the
+ examining magistrate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be well at this point in the narrative to describe how Eyraud and
+ Gabrielle Bompard came to be associated together in crime. Gabrielle
+ Bompard was twenty-two years of age at the time of her arrest, the fourth
+ child of a merchant of Lille, a strong, hardworking, respectable man. Her
+ mother, a delicate woman, had died of lung disease when Gabrielle was
+ thirteen. Even as a child lying and vicious, thinking only of men and
+ clothes, Gabrielle, after being expelled as incorrigible from four
+ educational establishments, stayed at a fifth for some three years. There
+ she astonished those in authority over her by her precocious propensity
+ for vice, her treacherous and lying disposition, and a lewdness of tongue
+ rare in one of her age and comparative inexperience. At eighteen she
+ returned to her father's house, only to quit it for a lover whom, she
+ alleged, had hypnotised and then seduced her. Gabrielle was singularly
+ susceptible to hypnotic suggestion. Her father implored the family doctor
+ to endeavour to persuade her, while in the hypnotic state, to reform her
+ deplorable conduct. The doctor did his best but with no success. He
+ declared Gabrielle to be a neuropath, who had not found in her home such
+ influences as would have tended to overcome her vicious instincts. Perhaps
+ the doctor was inclined to sympathise rather too readily with his patient,
+ if we are to accept the report of those distinguished medical gentlemen
+ who, at a later date, examined carefully into the mental and physical
+ characteristics of Gabrielle Bompard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This girl of twenty had developed into a supreme instance of the "unmoral"
+ woman, the conscienceless egoist, morally colour-blind, vain, lewd, the
+ intelligence quick and alert but having no influence whatever on conduct.
+ One instance will suffice to show the sinister levity, the utter absence
+ of all moral sense in this strange creature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the murder of Gouffe, Gabrielle spent the night alone with the trunk
+ containing the bailiff's corpse. Asked by M. Goron what were her
+ sensations during this ghastly vigil, she replied with a smile, "You'd
+ never guess what a funny idea come into my head! You see it was not very
+ pleasant for me being thus tete-a-tete with a corpse, I couldn't sleep. So
+ I thought what fun it would be to go into the street and pick up some
+ respectable gentleman from the provinces. I'd bring him up to the room,
+ and just as he was beginning to enjoy himself say, 'Would you like to see
+ a bailiff?' open the trunk suddenly and, before he could recover from his
+ horror, run out into the street and fetch the police. Just think what a
+ fool the respectable gentleman would have looked when the officers came!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such callousness is almost unsurpassed in the annals of criminal
+ insensibility. Nero fiddling over burning Rome, Thurtell fresh from the
+ murder of Weare, inviting Hunt, the singer and his accomplice, to "tip
+ them a stave" after supper, Edwards, the Camberwell murderer, reading with
+ gusto to friends the report of a fashionable divorce case, post from the
+ murder of a young married couple and their baby&mdash;even examples such
+ as these pale before the levity of the "little demon," as the French
+ detectives christened Gabrielle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was Gabrielle Bompard when, on July 26, exactly one year to a day
+ before the murder of Gouffe, she met in Paris Michel Eyraud. These two
+ were made for each other. If Gabrielle were unmoral, Eyraud was immoral.
+ Forty-six at the time of Gouffe's murder, he was sufficiently practised in
+ vice to appreciate and enjoy the flagrantly vicious propensities of the
+ young Gabrielle. All his life Eyraud had spent his substance in
+ debauchery. His passions were violent and at times uncontrollable, but
+ unlike many remarkable men of a similar temperament, this strong animalism
+ was not in his case accompanied by a capacity for vigorous intellectual
+ exertion or a great power of work. "Understand this," said Eyraud to one
+ of the detectives who brought him back to France, "I have never done any
+ work, and I never will do any work." To him work was derogatory; better
+ anything than that. Unfortunately it could not be avoided altogether, but
+ with Eyraud such work as he was compelled at different times to endure was
+ only a means for procuring money for his degraded pleasures, and when
+ honest work became too troublesome, dishonesty served in its stead. When
+ he met Gabrielle he was almost at the end of his tether, bankrupt and
+ discredited. At a pinch he might squeeze a little money out of his wife,
+ with whom he continued to live in spite of his open infidelities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Save for such help as he could get from her small dowry, he was without
+ resources. A deserter from the army during the Mexican war in 1869, he had
+ since then engaged in various commercial enterprises, all of which had
+ failed, chiefly through his own extravagance, violence and dishonesty.
+ Gabrielle was quick to empty his pockets of what little remained in them.
+ The proceeds of her own immorality, which Eyraud was quite ready to share,
+ soon proved insufficient to replenish them. Confronted with ruin, Eyraud
+ and Gompard hit on a plan by which the woman should decoy some would-be
+ admirer to a convenient trysting-place. There, dead or alive, the victim
+ was to be made the means of supplying their wants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On further reflection dead seemed more expedient than alive, extortion
+ from a living victim too risky an enterprise. Their plans were carefully
+ prepared. Gabrielle was to hire a ground-floor apartment, so that any
+ noise, such as footsteps or the fall of a body, would not be heard by
+ persons living underneath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the beginning of July, 1889, Eyraud and Bompard were in London. There
+ they bought at a West End draper's a red and white silk girdle, and at a
+ shop in Gower Street a large travelling trunk. They bought, also in
+ London, about thirteen feet of cording, a pulley and, on returning to
+ Paris on July 20, some twenty feet of packing-cloth, which Gabrielle,
+ sitting at her window on the fine summer evenings, sewed up into a large
+ bag.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The necessary ground-floor apartment had been found at No. 3 Rue
+ Tronson-Ducoudray. Here Gabrielle installed herself on July 24. The
+ bedroom was convenient for the assassins' purpose, the bed standing in an
+ alcove separated by curtains from the rest of the room. To the beam
+ forming the crosspiece at the entrance into the alcove Eyraud fixed a
+ pulley. Through the pulley ran a rope, having at one end of it a swivel,
+ so that a man, hiding behind the curtains could, by pulling the rope
+ strongly, haul up anything that might be attached to the swivel at the
+ other end. It was with the help of this simple piece of mechanism and a
+ good long pull from Eyraud that the impecunious couple hoped to refill
+ their pockets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The victim was chosen on the 25th. Eyraud had already known of Gouffe's
+ existence, but on that day, Thursday, in a conversation with a common
+ friend, Eyraud learnt that the bailiff Gouffe was rich, that he was in the
+ habit of having considerable sums of money in his care, and that on Friday
+ nights Gouffe made it his habit to sleep from home. There was no time to
+ lose. The next day Gabrielle accosted Gouffe as he was going to his
+ dejeuner and, after some little conversation agreed to meet him at eight
+ o'clock that evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The afternoon was spent in preparing for the bailiff's reception in the
+ Rue Tronson-Ducoudray. A lounge-chair was so arranged that it stood with
+ its back to the alcove, within which the pulley and rope had been fixed by
+ Eyraud. Gouffe was to sit on the chair, Gabrielle on his knee. Gabrielle
+ was then playfully to slip round his neck, in the form of a noose, the
+ cord of her dressing gown and, unseen by him, attach one end of it to the
+ swivel of the rope held by Eyraud. Her accomplice had only to give a
+ strong pull and the bailiff's course was run.(17)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (17) One writer on the case has suggested that the story of the murder
+by rope and pulley was invented by Eyraud and Bompard to mitigate the
+full extent of their guilt, and that the bailiff was strangled while
+in bed with the woman. But the purchase of the necessary materials in
+London would seem to imply a more practical motive for the use of rope
+and pulley.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At six o'clock Eyraud and Bompard dined together, after which Eyraud
+ returned to the apartment, whilst Bompard went to meet Gouffe near the
+ Madeline Church. What occurred afterwards at No. 3 Rue Tronson-Ducoudray
+ is best described in the statement made by Eyraud at his trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At a quarter past eight there was a ring at the bell. I hid myself behind
+ the curtain. Gouffe came in. 'You've a nice little nest here,' he said.
+ 'Yes, a fancy of mine,' replied Gabrielle, 'Eyraud knows nothing about
+ it.' 'Oh, you're tired of him,' asked Gouffe. 'Yes,' she replied, 'that's
+ all over.' Gabrielle drew Gouffe down on to the chair. She showed him the
+ cord of her dressing-gown and said that a wealthy admirer had given it to
+ her. 'Very elegant,' said Gouffe, 'but I didn't come here to see that.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She then sat on his knee and, as if in play, slipped the cord round his
+ neck; then putting her hand behind him, she fixed the end of the cord into
+ the swivel, and said to him laughingly, 'What a nice necktie it makes!'
+ That was the signal. Eyraud pulled the cord vigorously and, in two
+ minutes, Gouffe had ceased to live."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eyraud took from the dead man his watch and ring, 150 francs and his keys.
+ With these he hurried to Gouffe's office and made a fevered search for
+ money. It was fruitless. In his trembling haste the murderer missed a sum
+ of 14,000 francs that was lying behind some papers, and returned, baffled
+ and despairing, to his mistress and the corpse. The crime had been a
+ ghastly failure. Fortified by brandy and champagne, and with the help of
+ the woman, Eyraud stripped the body, put it into the bag that had been
+ sewn by Gabrielle, and pushed the bag into the trunk. Leaving his mistress
+ to spend the night with their hateful luggage, Eyraud returned home and,
+ in his own words, "worn out by the excitement of the day, slept heavily."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day Eyraud, after saying good-bye to his wife and daughter, left
+ with Gabrielle for Lyons. On the 28th they got rid at Millery of the body
+ of Gouffe and the trunk in which it had travelled; his boots and clothes
+ they threw into the sea at Marseilles. There Eyraud borrowed 500 francs
+ from his brother. Gabrielle raised 2,000 francs in Paris, where they spent
+ August 18 and 19, after which they left for England, and from England
+ sailed for America. During their short stay in Paris Eyraud had the
+ audacity to call at the apartment in the Rue Tronson-Ducoudray for his
+ hat, which he had left behind; in the hurry of the crime he had taken away
+ Gouffe's by mistake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eyraud had been brought back to Paris from Cuba at the end of June, 1890.
+ Soon after his return, in the room in which Gouffe had been done to death
+ and in the presence of the examining magistrate, M. Goron, and some
+ fifteen other persons, Eyraud was confronted with his accomplice. Each
+ denied vehemently, with hatred and passion, the other's story. Neither
+ denied the murder, but each tried to represent the other as the more
+ guilty of the two. Eyraud said that the suggestion and plan of the crime
+ had come from Gabrielle; that she had placed around Gouffe's neck the cord
+ that throttled him. Gabrielle attributed the inception of the murder to
+ Eyraud, and said that he had strangled the bailiff with his own hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eyraud, since his return, had seemed indifferent to his own fate; whatever
+ it might be, he wished that his mistress should share it. He had no
+ objection to going to the guillotine as long as he was sure that Gabrielle
+ would accompany him. She sought to escape such a consummation by
+ representing herself as a mere instrument in Eyraud's hands. It was even
+ urged in her defence that, in committing the crime, she had acted under
+ the influence of hypnotic suggestion on the part of her accomplice. Three
+ doctors appointed by the examining magistrate to report on her mental
+ state came unanimously to the conclusion that, though undoubtedly
+ susceptible to hypnotic suggestion, there was no ground for thinking that
+ she had been acting under such influence when she participated in the
+ murder of Gouffe. Intellectually the medical gentlemen found her alert and
+ sane enough, but morally blind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trial of Eyraud and Bompard took place before the Paris Assize Court
+ on December 16, 1890. It had been delayed owing to the proceedings of an
+ enterprising journalist. The names of the jurymen who were to be called on
+ to serve at the assize had been published. The journalist conceived the
+ brilliant idea of interviewing some of these gentlemen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He succeeded in seeing four of them, but in his article which appeared in
+ the Matin newspaper said that he had seen twenty-one. Nine of them, he
+ stated, had declared themselves in favour of Gabrielle Bompard, but in
+ some of these he had discerned a certain "eroticism of the pupil of the
+ eye" to which he attributed their leniency. A month's imprisonment was the
+ reward of these flights of journalistic imagination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A further scandal in connection with the trial was caused by the lavish
+ distribution of tickets of admission to all sorts and kinds of persons by
+ the presiding judge, M. Robert, whose occasional levities in the course of
+ the proceedings are melancholy reading. As a result of his indulgence a
+ circular was issued shortly after the trial by M. Fallieres, then Minister
+ of Justice, limiting the powers of presidents of assize in admitting
+ visitors into the reserved part of the court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proceedings at the trial added little to the known facts of the case.
+ Both Eyraud and Bompard continued to endeavour to shift the blame on to
+ each other's shoulders. A curious feature of the trial was the appearance
+ for the defence of a M. Liegeois, a professor of law at Nancy. To the
+ dismay of the Court, he took advantage of a clause in the Code of Criminal
+ Instruction which permits a witness to give his evidence without
+ interruption, to deliver an address lasting four hours on hypnotic
+ suggestion. He undertook to prove that, not only Gabrielle Bompard, but
+ Troppmann, Madame Weiss, and Gabrielle Fenayrou also, had committed murder
+ under the influence of suggestion.(18) In replying to this rather
+ fantastic defence, the Procureur-General, M. Quesnay de Beaurepaire,
+ quoted a statement of Dr. Brouardel, the eminent medical jurist who had
+ been called for the prosecution, that "there exists no instance of a
+ crime, or attempted crime committed under the influence of hypnotic
+ suggestion." As to the influence of Eyraud over Bompard, M. de Beaurepaire
+ said: "The one outstanding fact that has been eternally true for six
+ thousand years is that the stronger will can possess the weaker: that is
+ no peculiar part of the history of hypnotism; it belongs to the history of
+ the world. Dr. Liegeois himself, in coming to this court to-day, has
+ fallen a victim to the suggestion of the young advocate who has persuaded
+ him to come here to air his theories." The Court wisely declined to allow
+ an attempt to be made to hypnotise the woman Bompard in the presence of
+ her judges, and M. Henri Robert, her advocate, in his appeal to the jury,
+ threw over altogether any idea of hypnotic suggestion, resting his plea on
+ the moral weakness and irresponsibility of his client.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (18) Moll in his "Hypnotism" (London, 1909) states that, after Gabrielle
+Bompard's release M. Liegeois succeeded in putting her into a hypnotic
+state, in which she reacted the scene in which the crime was originally
+suggested to her. The value of such experiments with a woman as
+mischievous and untruthful as Gabrielle Bompard must be very doubtful.
+No trustworthy instance seems to be recorded in which a crime has
+been committed under, or brought about by, hypnotic or post-hypnotic
+suggestion, though, according to Moll, "the possibility of such a crime
+cannot be unconditionally denied."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In sheer wickedness there seems little enough to choose between Eyraud and
+ Bompard. But, in asking a verdict without extenuating circumstances
+ against the woman, the Procureur-General was by no means insistent. He
+ could not, he said, ask for less, his duty would not permit it: "But I am
+ ready to confess that my feelings as a man suffer by the duty imposed on
+ me as a magistrate. On one occasion, at the outset of my career, it fell
+ to my lot to ask from a jury the head of a woman. I felt then the same
+ kind of distress of mind I feel to-day. The jury rejected my demand; they
+ accorded extenuating circumstances; though defeated, I left the court a
+ happier man. What are you going to do to-day, gentlemen? It rests with
+ you. What I cannot ask of you, you have the right to accord. But when the
+ supreme moment comes to return your verdict, remember that you have sworn
+ to judge firmly and fearlessly." The jury accorded extenuating
+ circumstances to the woman, but refused them to the man. After a trial
+ lasting four days Eyraud was sentenced to death, Bompard to twenty years
+ penal servitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first Eyraud appeared to accept his fate with resignation. He wrote to
+ his daughter that he was tired of life, and that his death was the best
+ thing that could happen for her mother and herself. But, as time went on
+ and the efforts of his advocate to obtain a commutation of his sentence
+ held out some hope of reprieve, Eyraud became more reluctant to quit the
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are grounds for a successful appeal," he wrote, "I am pretty
+ certain that my sentence will be commuted.... You ask me what I do?
+ Nothing much. I can't write; the pens are so bad. I read part of the time,
+ smoke pipes, and sleep a great deal. Sometimes I play cards, and talk a
+ little. I have a room as large as yours at Sevres. I walk up and down it,
+ thinking of you all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But his hopes were to be disappointed. The Court of Cassation rejected his
+ appeal. A petition was addressed to President Carnot, but, with a firmness
+ that has not characterised some of his successors in office, he refused to
+ commute the sentence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morning of February 3, 1891, Eyraud noticed that the warders, who
+ usually went off duty at six o'clock, remained at their posts. An hour
+ later the Governor of the Roquette prison entered his cell, and informed
+ him that the time had come for the execution of the sentence. Eyraud
+ received the intelligence quietly. The only excitement he betrayed was a
+ sudden outburst of violent animosity against M. Constans, then Minister of
+ the Interior. Eyraud had been a Boulangist, and so may have nourished some
+ resentment against the Minister who, by his adroitness, had helped to
+ bring about the General's ruin. Whatever his precise motive, he suddenly
+ exclaimed that M. Constans was his murderer: "It's he who is having me
+ guillotined; he's got what he wanted; I suppose now he'll decorate
+ Gabrielle!" He died with the name of the hated Minister on his lips.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's A Book of Remarkable Criminals, by H. B. Irving
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>