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diff --git a/6085.txt b/6085.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a20ccfb --- /dev/null +++ b/6085.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1133 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Code of Honor, by John Lyde Wilson + +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: The Code of Honor + +Author: John Lyde Wilson + +Release Date: July, 2004 [EBook #6085] +Posting Date: March 25, 2009 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CODE OF HONOR *** + + + + +Produced by Holly Ingraham + + + + + + + +THE CODE OF HONOR; + +or + +RULES FOR THE GOVERNMENT + +of + +PRINCIPALS AND SECONDS + +in + +DUELLING + + +by John Lyde Wilson + + + +Summary: + +Originally this was published by the author (1784-1849), a +former governor of South Carolina, as a 22-page booklet, in 1838. Before +his death he added an appendix of the 1777 Irish duelling code, but +this second edition was not printed until 1858, as a 46-page small book, +still sized to fit in the case with one's duelling pistols. This code +is far less blood-thirsty than many might suppose, but built on a closed +social caste and standards of behavior quite alien to today. + +Transcriber's Note: In the appendix the term "rencontre" is used. In +British law (then covering Ireland) this refers to an immediate fight in +the heat of offense. A duel would be undertaken in "cold blood" if not +cool temper. Killing a man in a rencontre counted as manslaughter; in a +duel, as murder. + +On more than one occasion, the author refers to "posting" an offender. +This refers to posting to the public a notice as to his behavior in some +central club or business spot frequented by all men of that level of +society; exactly where varied from town to town. It was the ultimate +sanction, making the challengee's refusal to either apologize or fight a +public stain upon his character. + + + + +TO THE PUBLIC + +The man who adds in any way to the sum of human happiness is strictly in +the discharge of a moral duty. When Howard visited the victims of +crime and licentiousness, to reform their habits and ameliorate their +condition, the question was never asked whether he had been guilty +of like excesses or not? The only question the philanthropist would +propound, should be, has the deed been done in the true spirit of +Christian benevolence? Those who know me, can well attest the motive +which has caused the publication of the following sheets, to which they +for a long time urged me in vain. Those who do not know me, have no +right to impute a wrong motive; and if they do, I had rather be the +object, than the authors of condemnation. To publish a CODE OF HONOR, +to govern in cases of individual combat, might seem to imply, that the +publisher was an advocate of duelling, and wished to introduce it as the +proper mode of deciding all personal difficulties and misunderstandings. +Such implication would do me great injustice. But if the question be +directly put to me, whether there are not cases where duels are right +and proper, I would unhesitatingly answer, there are. If an oppressed +nation has a right to appeal to arms in defence of its liberty and the +happiness of its people, there can be no argument used in support of +such appeal, which will not apply with equal force to individuals. +How many cases are there, that might be enumerated, where there is no +tribunal to do justice to an oppressed and deeply wronged individual? +If he be subjected to a tame submission to insult and disgrace, where no +power can shield him from its effects, then indeed it would seem, that +the first law of nature, self-preservation, points out the only remedy +for his wrongs. The history of all animated nature exhibits a determined +resistance to encroachments upon natural rights,--nay, I might +add, inanimate nature, for it also exhibits a continual warfare for +supremacy. Plants of the same kind, as well as trees, do not stop +their vigorous growth because they overshadow their kind; but, on the +contrary, flourish with greater vigor as the more weak and delicate +decline and die. Those of different species are at perpetual warfare. +The sweetest rose tree will sicken and waste on the near approach of +the noxious bramble, and the most promising fields of wheat yield a +miserable harvest if choked up with tares and thistles. The elements +themselves war together, and the angels of heaven have met in fierce +encounter. The principle of self-preservation is co-extensive with +creation; and when by education we make character and moral worth a part +of ourselves, we guard these possessions with more watchful zeal than +life itself, and would go farther for their protection. When one finds +himself avoided in society, his friends shunning his approach, his +substance wasting, his wife and children in want around him, and +traces all his misfortunes and misery to the slanderous tongue of the +calumniator, who, by secret whisper or artful innuendo, has sapped and +undermined his reputation, he must be more or less than man to submit in +silence. + +The indiscriminate and frequent appeal to arms, to settle trivial +disputes and misunderstandings, cannot be too severely censured and +deprecated. I am no advocate of such duelling. But in cases where the +laws of the country give no redress for injuries received, where public +opinion not only authorizes, but enjoins resistance, it is needless and +a waste of time to denounce the practice. It will be persisted in as +long as a manly independence, and a lofty personal pride in all that +dignifies and ennobles the human character, shall continue to exist. If +a man be smote on one cheek in public, and he turns the other, which +is also smitten, and he offers no resistance, but blesses him that so +despitefully used him, I am aware that he is in the exercise of great +Christian forbearance, highly recommended and enjoined by many very good +men, but utterly repugnant to those feelings which nature and education +have implanted in the human character. If it was possible to enact +laws so severe and impossible to be evaded, as to enforce such rule of +behavior, all that is honorable in the community would quit the country +and inhabit the wilderness with the Indians. If such a course of conduct +was infused by education into the minds of our youth, and it became +praiseworthy and honorable to a man to submit to insult and indignity, +then indeed the forbearance might be borne without disgrace. Those, +therefore, who condemn all who do not denounce duelling in every case, +should establish schools where a passive submission to force would be +the exercise of a commendable virtue. I have not the least doubt, that +if I had been educated in such a school, and lived in such a society, +I would have proved a very good member of it. But I much doubt, if a +seminary of learning was established, where this Christian forbearance +was inculcated and enforced, whether there would be many scholars. + +I would not wish to be understood to say, that I do not desire to see +duelling to cease to exist entirely, in society. But my plan for doing +it away, is essentially different from the one which teaches a passive +forbearance to insult and indignity. I would inculcate in the rising +generation a spirit of lofty independence; I would have them taught that +nothing was more derogatory to the honor of a gentleman, than to wound +the feelings of any one, however humble. That if wrong be done to +another, it was more an act of heroism and bravery to repair the injury, +than to persist in error, and enter into mortal combat with the injured +party. This would be an aggravation of that which was already odious, +and would put him without the pale of all decent society and honorable +men. I would strongly inculcate the propriety of being tender of the +feelings, as well as the failings, of those around him. I would teach +immutable integrity, and uniform urbanity of manners. Scrupulously +to guard individual honor, by a high personal self respect, and +the practice of every commendable virtue. Once let such a system of +education be universal, and we should seldom hear, if ever, of any more +duelling. + +The severest penal enactments cannot restrain the practice of duelling, +and their extreme severity in this State, the more effectually shields +the offenders. The teaching and preaching of our eloquent Clergy, may +do some service, but is wholly inadequate to suppress it. Under these +circumstances, the following rules are given to the public, and if I can +save the life of one useful member of society, I will be compensated. +I have restored to the bosoms of many, their sons, by my timely +interference, who are ignorant of the misery I have averted from them. I +believe that nine duels out of ten, if not ninety-nine out of a hundred, +originate in the want of experience in the seconds. A book of authority, +to which they can refer in matters where they are uninformed, will +therefore be a desideratum. How far this code will be that book, the +public will decide. + +THE AUTHOR + + + + +RULES FOR PRINCIPALS AND SECONDS IN DUELLING. + + + + +CHAPTER I. The Person Insulted, Before Challenge Sent + +1. Whenever you believe that you are insulted, if the insult be in +public and by words or behavior, never resent it there, if you have +self-command enough to avoid noticing it. If resented there, you offer +an indignity to the company, which you should not. + +2. If the insult be by blows or any personal indignity, it may be +resented at the moment, for the insult to the company did not originate +with you. But although resented at the moment, you are bound still to +have satisfaction, and must therefore make the demand. + +3. When you believe yourself aggrieved, be silent on the subject, speak +to no one about the matter, and see your friend, who is to act for you, +as soon as possible. + +4. Never send a challenge in the first instance, for that precludes all +negotiation. Let your note be in the language of a gentleman, and +let the subject matter of complaint be truly and fairly set forth, +cautiously avoiding attributing to the adverse party any improper +motive. + +5. When your second is in full possession of the facts, leave the whole +matter to his judgment, and avoid any consultation with him unless +he seeks it. He has the custody of your honor, and by obeying him you +cannot be compromitted. + +6. Let the time of demand upon your adversary after the insult, be as +short as possible, for he has the right to double that time in replying +to you, unless you give him some good reason for your delay. Each +party is entitled to reasonable time, to make the necessary domestic +arrangements, by will or otherwise, before fighting. + +7. To a written communication you are entitled to a written reply, and +it is the business of your friend to require it. + + +SECOND'S DUTY BEFORE CHALLENGE SENT. + +1. Whenever you are applied to by a friend to act as his second, before +you agree to do so, state distinctly to your principal that you will be +governed only by your own judgment,--that he will not be consulted after +you are in full possession of the facts, unless it becomes necessary +to make or accept the amende honorable, or send a challenge. You are +supposed to be cool and collected, and your friend's feelings are more +or less irritated. + +2. Use every effort to soothe and tranquilize your principal; do not see +things in the same aggravated light in which he views them; extenuate +the conduct of his adversary whenever you see clearly an opportunity to +do so, without doing violence to your friend's irritated mind. Endeavor +to persuade him that there must have been some misunderstanding in the +matter. Check him if he uses opprobrious epithet towards his adversary, +and never permit improper or insulting words in the note you carry. + +3. To the note you carry in writing to the party complained of, you are +entitled to a written answer, which will be directed to your principal +and will be delivered to you by his adversary's friend. If this be not +written in the style of a gentleman, refuse to receive it, and assign +your reason for such refusal. If there be a question made as to the +character of the note, require the second presenting it to you, who +considers it respectful, to endorse upon it these words: "I consider the +note of my friend respectful, and would not have been the bearer of it, +if I believed otherwise." + +4. If the party called on, refuses to receive the note you bear, you are +entitled to demand a reason for such refusal. If he refuses to give +you any reason, and persists in such refusal, he treats, not only your +friend, but yourself, with indignity, and you must then make yourself +the actor, by sending a respectful note, requiring a proper explanation +of the course he has pursued towards you and your friend; and if he +still adheres to his determination, you are to challenge or post him. + +5. If the person to whom you deliver the note of your friend, declines +meeting him on the ground of inequality, you are bound to tender +yourself in his stead, by a note directed to him from yourself; and if +he refuses to meet you, you are to post him. + +6. In all cases of the substitution of the second for the principal, +the seconds should interpose and adjust the matter, if the party +substituting avows he does not make the quarrel of his principal +his own. The true reason for substitution, is the supposed insult of +imputing to you the like inequality which if charged upon your friend, +and when the contrary is declared, there should be no fight, for +individuals may well differ in their estimate of an individual's +character and standing in society. In case of substitution and a +satisfactory arrangement, you are then to inform your friend of all the +facts, whose duty it will be to post in person. + +7. If the party, to whom you present a note, employ a son, father or +brother, as a second, you may decline acting with either on the ground +of consanguinity. + +8. If a minor wishes you to take a note to an adult, decline doing so, +on the ground of his minority. But if the adult complained of, had made +a companion of the minor in society, you may bear the note. + +9. When an accommodation is tendered, never require too much; and if +the party offering the amende honorable, wishes to give a reason for his +conduct in the matter, do not, unless offensive to your friend, refuse +to receive it; by so doing you may heal the breach more effectually. + +10. If a stranger wishes you to bear a note for him, be well satisfied +before you do so, that he is on an equality with you; and in presenting +the note state to the party the relationship you stand towards him, +and what you know and believe about him; for strangers are entitled +to redress for wrongs, as well as others, and the rules of honor and +hospitality should protect him. + + + + +CHAPTER II. The Party Receiving a Note Before Challenge. + +1. When a note is presented to you by an equal, receive it, and read it, +although you may suppose it to be from one you do not intend to meet, +because its requisites may be of a character which may readily be +complied with. But if the requirements of a note cannot be acceded to, +return it, through the medium of your friend, to the person who handed +it to you, with your reason for returning it. + +2. If the note received be in abusive terms, object to its reception, +and return it for that reason; but if it be respectful, return an answer +of the same character, in which respond correctly and openly to all +interrogatories fairly propounded, and hand it to your friend, who, it +is presumed, you have consulted, and who has advised the answer; direct +it to the opposite party, and let it be delivered to his friend. + +3. You may refuse to receive a note, from a minor, (if you have not +made an associate of him); one that has been posted; one that has +been publicly disgraced without resenting it; one whose occupation is +unlawful; a man in his dotage and a lunatic. There may be other cases, +but the character of those enumerated will lead to a correct decision +upon those omitted. + +If you receive a note from a stranger, you have a right to a reasonable +time to ascertain his standing in society, unless he is fully vouched +for by his friend. + +4. If a party delays calling on you for a week or more, after the +supposed insult, and assigns no cause for the delay, if you require it, +you may double the time before you respond to him; for the wrong cannot +be considered aggravated; if borne patiently for some days, and the time +may have been used in preparation and practice. + +Second's Duty of the Party Receiving a Note Before Challenge Sent. + +1. When consulted by your friend, who has received a note requiring +explanation, inform him distinctly that he must be governed wholly by +you in the progress of the dispute. If he refuses, decline to act on +that ground. + +2. Use your utmost efforts to allay all excitement which your +principal may labor under; search diligently into the origin of the +misunderstanding; for gentlemen seldom insult each other, unless +they labor under some misapprehension or mistake; and when you have +discovered the original ground or error, follow each movement to the +time of sending the note, and harmony will be restored. + +3. When your principal refuses to do what you require of hi, decline +further acting on that ground, and inform the opposing second of your +withdrawal from the negotiation. + + + + +CHAPTER III. Duty of Challenger and His Second Before Fighting. + +1. After all efforts for a reconciliation are over, the party aggrieved +sends a challenge to his adversary, which is delivered to his second. + +2. Upon the acceptance of the challenge, the seconds make the necessary +arrangements for the meeting, in which each party is entitled to +a perfect equality. The old notion that the party challenged, was +authorized to name the time, place, distance and weapon, has been long +since exploded; nor would a man of chivalric honor use such a right, if +he possessed it. The time must e as soon as practicable, the place such +as had ordinarily been used where the parties are, the distance usual, +and the weapons that which is most generally used, which, in this State, +is the pistol. + +3. If the challengee insist upon what is not usual in time, place, +distance and weapon, do not yield the point, and tender in writing what +is usual in each, and if he refuses to give satisfaction, then your +friend may post him. + +4. If your friend be determined to fight and not post, you have the +right to withdraw. But if you continue to act, and have the right to +tender a still more deadly distance and weapon, and he must accept. + +5. The usual distance is from ten to twenty paces, as may be agreed on; +and the seconds in measuring the ground, usually step three feet. + +6. After all the arrangements are made, the seconds determine the giving +of the word and position, by lot; and he who gains has the choice of the +one or the other, selects whether it be the word or the position, but he +cannot have both. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. Duty of Challengee and Second After Challenge Sent. + +1. The challengee has no option when negotiation has ceased, but to +accept the challenge. + +2. The second makes the necessary arrangements with the second of the +person challenging. The arrangements are detailed in the preceding +chapter. + + + + +CHAPTER V. Duty of Principals and Seconds on the Ground. + +1. The principals are to be respectful in meeting, and neither by look +or expression irritate each other. They are to be wholly passive, being +entirely under the guidance of their seconds. + +2. When once posted, they are not to quit their positions under any +circumstances, without leave or direction of their seconds. + +3. When the principals are posted, the second giving the word, must +tell them to stand firm until he repeats the giving of the word, in the +manner it will be given when the parties are at liberty to fire. + +4. Each second has a loaded pistol, in order to enforce a fair combat +according to the rules agreed on; and if a principal fires before the +word or time agreed on, he is at liberty to fire at him, and if such +second's principal fall, it is his duty to do so. + +5. If after a fire, either party be touched, the duel is to end; and no +second is excusable who permits a wounded friend to fight; and no second +who knows his duty, will permit his friend to fight a man already hit. +I am aware there have been many instances where a contest has continued, +not only after slight, but severe wounds, had been received. In all such +cases, I think the seconds are blamable. + +6. If after an exchange of shots, neither party be hit, it is the +duty of the second of the challengee, to approach the second of +the challenger and say: "Our friends have exchanged shots, are you +satisfied, or is there any cause why the contest should be continued?" +If the meeting be of no serious cause of complaint, where the party +complaining had in no way been deeply injured, or grossly insulted, the +second of the party challenging should reply: "The point of honor being +settled, there can, I conceive, be no objection to a reconciliation, and +I propose that our principals meet on middle ground, shake hands, and +be friends." If this be acceded to by the second of the challengee, the +second of the party challenging, says: "We have agreed that the present +duel shall cease, the honor of each of you is preserved, and you will +meet on middle ground, shake hands and be reconciled." + +7. If the insult be of a serious character, it will be the duty of +the second of the challenger, to say, in reply to the second of the +challengee: "We have been deeply wronged, and if you are not disposed +to repair the injury, the contest must continue." And if the challengee +offers nothing by way of reparation, the fight continues until one or +the other of the principals is hit. + +8. If in cases where the contest is ended by the seconds, as mentioned +in the sixth rule of this chapter, the parties refuse to meet and be +reconciled, it is the duty of the seconds to withdraw from the field, +informing their principals, that the contest must be continued under the +superintendence of other friends. But if one agrees to this arrangement +of the seconds, and the other does not, the second of the disagreeing +principal only withdraws. + +9. If either principal on the ground refuses to fight or continue the +fight when required, it is the duty of his second to say to the other +second: "I have come upon the ground with a coward, and do tender you +my apology for an ignorance of his character; you are at liberty to post +him." The second, by such conduct, stands excused to the opposite party. + +10. When the duel is ended by a party being hit, it is the duty of the +second to the party so hit, to announce the fact to the second of the +party hitting, who will forthwith tender any assistance he can command +to the disabled principal. If the party challenging, hit the challengee, +it is his duty to say he is satisfied, and will leave the ground. If the +challenger be hit, upon the challengee being informed of it, he should +ask through his second, whether he is at liberty to leave the ground +which should be assented to. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. Who Should Be on the Ground. + +1. The principals, seconds, one surgeon and one assistant surgeon to +each principal; but the assistant surgeon may be dispensed with. + +2. Any number of friends that the seconds agree on, may be present, +provided they do not come within the degrees of consanguinity mentioned +in the seventh rule of Chapter I. 3. Persons admitted on the ground, are +carefully to abstain by word or behavior, from any act that might be +the least exceptionable; nor should they stand near the principals or +seconds, or hold conversations with them. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. Arms, and Manner of Loading and Presenting Them. + +1. The arms used should be smooth-bore pistols, not exceeding nine +inches in length, with flint and steel. Percussion pistols may be +mutually used if agreed on, but to object on that account is lawful. + +2. Each second informs the other when he is about to load, and invites +his presence, but the seconds rarely attend on such invitation, as +gentlemen may be safely trusted in the matter. + +3. The second, in presenting the pistol to his friend, should never +put it in his pistol hand, but should place it in the other, which is +grasped midway the barrel, with muzzle pointing in the contrary way to +that which he is to fire, informing him that his pistol is loaded and +ready for use. Before the word is given, the principal grasps the +butt firmly in his pistol hand, and brings it round, with the muzzle +downward, to the fighting position. + +4. The fighting position, is with the muzzle down and the barrel from +you; for although it may be agreed that you may hold your pistol with +the muzzle up, it may be objected to, as you can fire sooner from that +position, and consequently have a decided advantage, which ought not to +be claimed, and should not be granted. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. The Degrees of Insult, and How Compromised + +1. The prevailing rule is, that words used in retort, although +more violent and disrespectful than those first used, will not +satisfy,--words being no satisfaction for words. + +2. When words are used, and a blow given in return, the insult is +avenged; and if redress be sought, it must be from the person receiving +the blow. + +3. When blows are given in the first instance and not returned, and the +person first striking, be badly beaten or otherwise, the party first +struck is to make the demand, for blows do not satisfy a blow. + +4. Insults at a wine table, when the company are over-excited, must be +answered for; and if the party insulting have no recollection of the +insult, it is his duty to say so in writing, and negative the insult. +For instance, if the man say: "you are a liar and no gentleman," he +must, in addition to the plea of the want of recollection, say: "I +believe the party insulted to be a man of the strictest veracity and a +gentleman." + +5. Intoxication is not a full excuse for insult, but it will greatly +palliate. If it was a full excuse, it might be well counterfeited to +wound feelings, or destroy character. + +6. In all cases of intoxication, the seconds must use a sound discretion +under the above general rules. + +7. Can every insult be compromised? is a mooted and vexed question. On +this subject, no rules can be given that will be satisfactory. The old +opinion, that a blow must require blood, is not of force. Blows may be +compromised in many cases. What those are, much depend on the seconds. + + + + +APPENDIX. + +Since the above Code was in press, a friend has favored +me with the IRISH CODE OF HONOR, which I had never seen; and it is +published as an Appendix to it. One thing must be apparent to every +reader, viz., the marked amelioration of the rules that govern in +duelling at the present time. I am unable to say what code exists now in +Ireland, but I very much doubt whether it be of the same character which +it bore in 1777. The American Quarterly Review for September, 1824, in a +notice of Sir Jonah Barrington's history of his own times, has published +this code; and followed it up with some remarks, which I have thought +proper to insert also. The grave reviewer has spoken of certain States +in terms so unlike a gentleman, that I would advise him to look at +home, and say whether he does not think that the manners of his own +countrymen, do not require great amendment? I am very sure, that the +citizens of the States so disrespectfully spoken of, would feel a deep +humiliation, to be compelled to exchange their urbanity of deportment, +for the uncouth incivility of the people of Massachusetts. Look at their +public journals, and you will find them, very generally, teeming with +abuse of private character, which would not be countenanced here. The +idea of New England becoming a school for manners, is about as fanciful +as Bolinbroke's "idea of a patriot king." I like their fortiter in re, +but utterly eschew their suaviter in modo. + +"The practice of duelling and points of honor settled at Clonmell summer +assizes, 1777, by the gentleman delegates of Tipperary, Galway, Mayo, +Sligo and Roscommon, and prescribed for general adoption throughout +Ireland. + +"Rule 1.--The first offence requires the apology, although the retort +may have been more offensive than the insult.--Example: A. tells B. +he is impertinent, &C.; B. retorts, that he lies; yet A. must make the +first apology, because he gave the first offence, and then, (after one +fire,) B. may explain away the retort by subsequent apology. + +"Rule 2.--But if the parties would rather fight on: then, after two +shots each, (but in no case before,) B. may explain first, and A. +apologize afterward. + +"Rule 3.--If a doubt exist who gave the first offence, the decision +rests with the seconds; if they won't decide or can't agree, the matter +must proceed to two shots, or a hit, if the challenger requires it. + +"Rule 4.--When the lie direct is the first offence, the aggressor must +either beg pardon in express terms; exchange tow shots previous to +apology; or three shots followed up by explanation; or fire on till a +severe hit be received by one party or the other. + +"Rule 5.--As a blow is strictly prohibited under any circumstances among +gentlemen, no verbal apology can be received for such an insult; the +alternatives therefore are: the offender handing a can to the injured +party, to be used on his own back, at the same time begging pardon; +firing on until one or both is disabled; or exchanging three shots, and +then asking pardon without the proffer of the cane. + +"If swords are used, the parties engage till one is well-blooded, +disabled or disarmed; or until, after receiving a wound, and blood being +drawn, the aggressor begs pardon. + +"N.B. A disarm is considered the same as a disable; the disarmer may +(strictly) break his adversary's sword; but if it be the challenger who +is disarmed, it is considered ungenerous to do so. + +"In case the challenged be disarmed and refuses to ask pardon or atone, +he must not be killed as formerly; but the challenger may lay his sword +on the aggressor's shoulder, than break the aggressor's sword, and say, +'I spare your life!' The challenged can never revive the quarrel, the +challenger may. + +"Rule 6.--If A. give B. the lie, and B. retorts by a blow, (being the +two greatest offences,) no reconciliation can take place till after two +discharges each, or a severe hit; after which, B. may beg A.'s pardon +for the blow, and then A. may explain simply for the lie; because a blow +is never allowable, and the offence of the lie therefore merges in it. +(See preceding rule.) + +"N.B. Challenges for individual causes, may be reconciled on the +ground, after one shot. An explanation, or the slightest hit should be +sufficient in such cases, because no personal offence transpired. + +"Rule 7.--But no apology can be received, in any case, after the parties +have actually taken their ground, without exchange of fires. + +"Rule 8.--In the above case, no challenger is obliged to divulge the +cause of his challenge, (if private,) unless required by the challenged +to do so before their meeting. + +"Rule 9.--All imputations of cheating at play, races, &c, to be +considered equivalent to a blow; but may be reconciled after one shot, +on admitting their falsehood, and begging pardon publicly. + +"Rule 10.--Any insult to a lady under a gentleman's care or protection, +to be considered as, by one degree, a greater offence than if given to +the gentleman personally, and to be regulated accordingly. + +"Rule 11.--Offences originating or accruing from the support of a lady's +reputation, to be considered as less unjustifiable than any other of the +same class, and as admitting of lighter apologies by the aggressor; this +to be determined by the circumstances of the case, but always favorably +to the lady. + +"Rule 12.--In simple unpremeditated rencontres with the small sword or +couteau-de-chasse, the rule is, first draw, first sheathe; unless blood +be drawn: then both sheathe, and proceed to investigation. + +"Rule 13.--No dumb-shooting, or firing in the air, admissible in any +case. The challenger ought not to have challenged without receiving +offence; and the challenged ought, if he gave offence, to have made an +apology before he came on the ground: therefore, children's play must be +dishonorable on one side or the other, and is accordingly prohibited. + +"Rule 14.--Seconds to be of equal rank in society with the principals +they attend, inasmuch as a second may choose or chance to become a +principal, and equality is indispensable. + +"Rule 15.--Challenges are never to be delivered at night, unless the +party to be challenged intend leaving the place of offence before +morning; for it is desirable to avoid all hot-headed proceedings. + +"Rule 16.--The challenged has the right to choose his own weapon, unless +the challenger gives his honor he is no swordsman; after which, +however, he cannot decline any second species of weapon proposed by the +challenged. + +"Rule 17.--The challenged chooses his ground; the challenger chooses his +distance; the seconds fix the time and terms of firing. + +"Rule 18.--The seconds load in presence of each other, unless they give +their mutual honors that they have charged smooth and single, which +should be held sufficient. + +"Rule 19.--Firing may be regulated, first by signal; secondly, by +word of command; or, thirdly, at pleasure, as may be agreeable to the +parties. In the latter case, the parties may fire at their reasonable +leisure, but second presents and rests are strictly prohibited. + +"Rule 20.--In all cases a miss-fire is equivalent to a shot, and a snap +or a non-cock is to be considered as a miss-fire. + +"Rule 21.--Seconds are bound to attempt a reconciliation before the +meeting takes place, or after sufficient firing or hits, as specified. + +"Rule 22.--Any wound sufficient to agitate the nerves and necessarily +make the hands shake, must end the business for that day. + +"Rule 23.--If the cause of meeting be of such a nature that no apology +or explanation can or will be received, the challenged takes his ground, +and calls on the challenger to proceed as he chooses: in such cases +firing at pleasure is the usual practice, but may be varied by +agreement. + +"Rule 24.--In slight cases, the second hands his principal but one +pistol; but in gross cases, two, holding another case ready charged in +reserve. + +"Rule 25.--When seconds disagree, and resolve to exchange shots +themselves, it must be at the same time and at right angles with their +principals. + +"If with swords, side by side, at five paces interval. + +"N.B. All matters and doubts not herein mentioned, will be explained +and cleared up by application to the committee, who meet alternately at +Clonmell and Galway, at their quarter sessions, for the purpose. + + "CROW RYAN, President." + + "JAMES KEOG, + "AMBY BODKIN, Secretaries." + + + + +ADDITIONAL GALWAY ARTICLES + +"Rule 1.--No party can be allowed to bend his knee or cover his side +with his left hand; but may present at any level from the hip to the +eye. + +"Rule 2.--One can neither advance nor retreat, if the ground be +measured. If the ground be unmeasured, either party may advance at +pleasure, even to touch muzzle; but neither can advance on his adversary +after the fire, unless his adversary step forward on him. + +"The seconds stand responsible for this last rule being strictly +observed; bad cases have accrued from neglecting it." + +This precise and enlightened digest was rendered necessary by the +multitude of quarrels that arouse without "sufficient dignified +provocation:" the point of honor men required a uniform government; +and the code thus formed was disseminated throughout the island, with +directions that it should be strictly observed by all gentlemen, and +kept in their pistol cases. The rules, with some others, were commonly +styled "the thirty-six commandments," and, according to the author, have +been much acted upon down to the present day. Tipperary and Galway were +the chief schools of duelling. We remember to have heard, in travelling +to the town of the former name in a stage coach, a dispute between two +Irish companions, on the point, which was the most gentlemanly country +in all Ireland--Tipperary or Galway? and both laid great stress upon +the relative duelling merits of those counties. By the same criterion, +Tennessee, Kentucky, Georgia and South Carolina, would bear away the +palm of gentility among the States of the Union. + + + + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Code of Honor, by John Lyde Wilson + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CODE OF HONOR *** + +***** This file should be named 6085.txt or 6085.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/6/0/8/6085/ + +Produced by Holly Ingraham + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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