summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/55773-0.txt7439
-rw-r--r--old/55773-0.zipbin145304 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h.zipbin1405600 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/55773-h.htm8798
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/bracer_72.pngbin586 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/cover.jpgbin165076 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i004.jpgbin105899 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i005.jpgbin5066 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i039.jpgbin88609 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i057.jpgbin86664 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i063.jpgbin52719 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i069.jpgbin86324 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i127.jpgbin89739 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i145.jpgbin58910 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i163.jpgbin84547 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i237.jpgbin81652 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i271.jpgbin99417 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i281.jpgbin61054 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i315.jpgbin81031 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i349.jpgbin98270 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i383.jpgbin83924 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55773-h/images/i401.jpgbin57157 -> 0 bytes
25 files changed, 17 insertions, 16237 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f603b5a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55773 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55773)
diff --git a/old/55773-0.txt b/old/55773-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index c532120..0000000
--- a/old/55773-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,7439 +0,0 @@
-Project Gutenberg's My Fifteen Lost Years, by Florence Elizabeth Maybrick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: My Fifteen Lost Years
- Mrs. Maybrick's Own Story
-
-Author: Florence Elizabeth Maybrick
-
-Release Date: October 18, 2017 [EBook #55773]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY FIFTEEN LOST YEARS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Cindy Horton and The Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Mrs. Maybrick’s Own Story
-
-[Illustration: FLORENCE ELIZABETH MAYBRICK]
-
-
-
-
- MRS. MAYBRICK’S
- OWN STORY
-
- MY FIFTEEN LOST YEARS
-
- By
- _FLORENCE ELIZABETH MAYBRICK_
-
- [Illustration]
-
- FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY
- NEW YORK and LONDON
- 1905
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1904,
- By FLORENCE ELIZABETH MAYBRICK
-
- [Printed in the United States of America]
-
- Published December, 1904
-
-
-
-
- To
-
- ALL THOSE FRIENDS IN AMERICA AND ENGLAND
-
- WHO, WITH UNWAVERING FAITH IN MY
- INNOCENCE, WORKED STEADFASTLY FOR MY FREEDOM,
- THIS BOOK IS GRATEFULLY DEDICATED
-
- FLORENCE ELIZABETH MAYBRICK.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PART ONE
-
- MRS. MAYBRICK’S OWN STORY
-
- PAGE
-
- FOREWORD.--Sketch of My Ancestry, 9
-
- CHAPTER I.--BEFORE THE TRIAL--My Arrest--A Prisoner
- in My Own House--At Walton Jail--Alone--The Coroner’s
- Inquest--A Plank for a Bed--The Verdict of the Coroner’s
- Jury--The Doctors Disagree--Letters from Walton Jail--Lord
- Russell’s Opinion--The Public Condemns Me Unheard, 23
-
- CHAPTER II.--THE TRIAL--The Injustice of Trying the Case at
- Liverpool--An Unexpected Verdict--The Judge’s Sentence--In
- the Shadow of Death--Commutation of Sentence, 50
-
- CHAPTER III.--IN SOLITARY CONFINEMENT--Removal to Woking
- Prison--The Convict Uniform--In Solitary Confinement--The
- Daily Routine--The Exercise Hour--The Midday Meal--The
- Cruelty of Solitary Confinement, 61
-
- CHAPTER IV.--THE PERIOD OF PROBATION--A Change of Cell--Evils
- of the Silent System--Insanity and Nervous Breakdown of
- Prisoners--Need of Separate Confinement for the
- Weak-Minded--Reading an Insufficient Relaxation--My
- Sufferings from Cold and Insomnia--Medical Attendance--Added
- Sufferings of the Delicately Nurtured--How Criminals and
- Imbeciles are Made, 76
-
- CHAPTER V.--THE PERIOD OF HARD LABOR--Routine--Talk with the
- Chaplain--My Work in the Kitchen--The Machine-made
- Menu--Visitors to the Kitchen--The “Homelike” Cell--The
- Opiate of Acquiescence--Visits of Prisoners’ Friends--My
- Mother’s Visits--A Letter from Lord Russell--Punished for
- Another’s Fault--Forms of Punishment--The True Aim of
- Punishment--The Evil of Collective Punishment--The Evil of
- Constant Supervision--Some Good Points of Convict Prisons--My
- Sickness--Taken to the Infirmary--The Utter Desolation of a
- Sick Prisoner, 93
-
- CHAPTER VI.--AT AYLESBURY PRISON--Removal from Woking--New
- Insignia of Shame--Arrival at Aylesbury Prison--A New Prison
- Régime--The Board of Visitors--Regulations Concerning
- Letters and Visits--My Letter to Gail Hamilton--A Visit from
- Lord Russell, 127
-
- CHAPTER VII.--A PETITION FOR RELEASE--Denied by the Secretary
- of State--Report of My Misconduct Refuted--Need of a Court of
- Criminal Appeal--Historic Examples of British Injustice--The
- Case of Adolf Beck, 145
-
- CHAPTER VIII.--RELIGION IN PRISON LIFE--Dedication of New
- Chapel--Influence of Religion upon Prisoners--Suicide of a
- Prisoner--Tragedies in Prison--Moral Effect of Harsh Prison
- Régime--Attacks of Levity--Self-discipline--Need of Women
- Doctors and Inspectors--Chastening Effect of Imprisonment on
- the Spirit--A Death-Bed Incident, 167
-
- CHAPTER IX.--MY LAST YEARS IN PRISON--I Am Set to Work in the
- Library--Newspapers Forbidden--How Prisoners Learn of Great
- Events--Strict Discipline of Prison Officers--Their High
- Character--Nervous Strain of Their Duties--Standing Orders
- for Warders--Crime a Mental Disease--Something Good in the
- Worst Criminal--Need of Further Prison Reform, 194
-
- CHAPTER X.--MY RELEASE--I Learn the Time When My Sentence Will
- Terminate--The Dawn of Liberty--The Release--In Retreat at
- Truro--I Come to America--My Lost Years, 211
-
-
- PART TWO
-
- ANALYSIS OF THE MAYBRICK CASE
-
- INTRODUCTION.--Petitions for a Reprieve--Illogical Position of
- Home Secretary--New Evidence of My Innocence Ignored--Lord
- Russell’s Letter--Efforts for Release--Even New Evidence
- Superfluous--The Doctors’ Doubt--Public Surprise at Verdict--
- Character of Jury--The “Mad Judge”--Justice Stephen’s Biased
- Charge--Lord Russell’s Memorandum Quashed--Repeated Protests
- of Lord Russell--The American Official Petition--Secretary
- Blaine’s Letter to Minister Lincoln--Henry W. Lucy on Lord
- Russell--Lord Russell’s Conviction of Mrs. Maybrick’s
- Innocence--Explanation of Attitude of Home Secretaries--
- Upholding the Justiciary--Need of Court of Criminal Appeal, 225
-
- THE BRIEF OF MESSRS. LUMLEY & LUMLEY.--Opinion Re F. E.
- Maybrick--Justice Stephen’s Misdirections--Misdirections as
- to Mr. Maybrick’s Symptoms--Misdirections as to Mrs.
- Maybrick’s Access to Poisons--Misdirection as to “Traces”
- of Arsenic--Misdirection as to Arsenic in Solution--Mr.
- Clayton’s Experiments--Misdirection as to Arsenic in
- Glycerin--Misdirection as to Evidence of Physicians--
- Misdirection as to Times When Arsenic May Have Been
- Administered--Misdirection as to Mrs. Maybrick’s Changing
- Medicine Bottles--Misdirection as to Administration with
- Intent to Kill--Exclusion of Prisoner’s Testimony--
- Misdirection as to Identity of Meat-Juice Bottle--
- Misdirection in Excluding Corroboration of Prisoner’s
- Statement--Misdirections to Jury to Draw Illegal
- Inferences--Misdirections Regarding the Medical Testimony--
- Conflict of Medical Opinion--Misdirections as to Cause of
- Death--Misdirection to Ignore Medical Testimony--Misreception
- of Evidence--Cruel Misstatement by Coroner--Medical Evidence
- for the Prosecution--Maybrick Died a Natural Death--The Chief
- Witness for the Prosecution--Medical Evidence for Defense--A
- Toxicological Study--Medical Weakness of Prosecution--The
- Administration of Arsenic--The Fly-paper Episode--How Mrs.
- Maybrick Accounts for the Fly-papers--Administration of
- Arsenic not Proved--Intent to Murder not Proved--Absence of
- Concealment by Prisoner--Some Important Deductions from
- Medical Testimony--Symptoms Due to Poisonous Drugs--Death from
- Natural Causes--Prosecution’s Deductions from Post-mortem
- Analysis Misleading--Recapitulation of Legal Points, 262
-
- MRS. MAYBRICK’S OWN ANALYSIS OF THE MEAT-JUICE INCIDENT, 366
-
- MEMORIALS FOR RESPITE OF SENTENCE.--From the Physicians of
- Liverpool--From the Bars of Liverpool and London--From
- Citizens of Liverpool, 381
-
- NEW EVIDENCE.--Arsenic Sold to Maybrick by Druggist--Arsenic
- Supplied to Maybrick by Manufacturing Chemist--Depositions as
- to Mr. Maybrick’s Arsenic Habit--Justice Stephen’s Retirement, 384
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- Florence Elizabeth Maybrick, _Frontispiece_
-
- FACING PAGE
-
- The Late Dr. Helen Densmore, 32
-
- Lord Charles Russell, 48
-
- St. George’s Hall, Liverpool, 52
-
- Justice Fitz-James Stephen, 56
-
- Baroness von Roques, 112
-
- Aylesbury Prison, 128
-
- Miss Mary A. Dodge (“Gail Hamilton”), 144
-
- Right Hon. A. Akers-Douglas, M.P., 216
-
- Hon. James G. Blaine, 248
-
- Hon. Robert T. Lincoln, 256
-
- Hon. John Hay, 288
-
- Hon. Joseph H. Choate, 320
-
- Samuel V. Hayden, 352
-
- Leonidas D. Yarrell, 368
-
-
-
-
-FOREWORD
-
-
-The writing of this book has been to me no joyful task, as its making
-has been at the expense of much-needed rest and peace of mind. In
-returning to my dear native land after a long imprisonment, I cherished
-the hope that I might as quietly as possible be permitted to take up
-the threads of outward existence so cruelly broken, little dreaming
-that trials hardly less grievous than those left behind awaited me;
-for no sooner had I touched these hospitable shores, when I was met
-by the fear-inspiring cry, “You must write a book--you must give the
-world an account of your sufferings”--as if one could never suffer
-enough. My well-meaning friends could hardly have known what they were
-asking in forcing upon me a mental return to the dread past. Solitary
-confinement in Woking Prison (as the reader may learn from these pages)
-was not such an elysium that one should voluntarily desire to hark back
-to it, nor is penal servitude in Aylesbury an Arcadian dream. While
-within their grim walls I did my best to exclude from thought the world
-without; and now that I am once again in the world (though scarcely of
-it), my one desire to shut out all the abhorrent things which so-called
-“prison life” stands for has thus far not only failed of realization,
-but, under conditions even more trying than the repressive prison
-régime (because of the free and happy life all about, which it seemed
-to poor me that I had some right to share), I have been compelled by
-force of circumstance to return to my cast-off prison shell, and live
-all the old heart-and-brain-crushing life over again. However, my
-second “trial and imprisonment,” like the first, is at last drawing to
-a close; and I devoutly trust that I shall be now permitted to enter
-upon a long-coveted rest, and partake as I may of those tempered joys
-which my countrymen by their beautiful sympathy have so chivalrously
-endeavored to make possible for me.
-
-Theoretically my imprisonment terminated on English soil, but so
-relentlessly have the fates pursued me that I have been in nowise free
-quite up to the present moment. In Rouen, France, where I sojourned at
-my mother’s home for three weeks, I was as much in durance to my genial
-enemy, the ubiquitous reporter, as when the English Government held me
-in its inexorable grasp. Our cottage was completely invested by him,
-and all approaches and exits held with a persistency which, under other
-circumstances, might well have extorted my admiration.
-
-Then came the ever-to-be-remembered sea voyage. I am a good sailor,
-and so the physical discomforts that beset so many were agreeably
-minimized; but I could not throw off the feeling that I was not yet
-free--the limits of the ship were still all too suggestive of the
-narrow exercise grounds of Aylesbury prison; and, while the eye
-could roam without hindrance, there came upon me again and again an
-irresistible desire, which the rolling billows strenuously gainsaid, to
-make a dash for liberty.
-
-Thereupon followed a couple of days at the Holland House, New York,
-with the same persistent reporter never absent. After this experience,
-I was taken by the kindest of friends to where nature is at her
-loveliest and human hearts beat in unison with their uplifting
-surroundings. Beautiful Cragsmoor, with its wide reaches of inspiring
-scenery, most appropriately the summer home of an artistic colony, is
-not too easy of access to mar a desire for seclusion, and a greater
-antithesis to prison walls than is afforded by this aerie can hardly be
-imagined.
-
-Here all things that on lower planes so cruelly vex the spirit seem
-far away and beneath. If only no publishers--however benevolent--had
-entered this Eden, what a paradise it could have been to me! However,
-in spite of these dread taskmasters, my soul drank deeply of the elixir
-so bountifully held to my lips; and when in the golden autumn all
-the noble woods about robed themselves in such glory as may be seen
-nowhere outside my beloved native land--and perchance nowhere here more
-ravishingly than in these Hudson Valley uplands--the rapture of my
-heart, so long starved within the narrowest and cruelest of confines,
-turned adoringly to Him who has made this world so beautiful for His
-children’s eyes.
-
-I need hardly be at pains to say to my readers, that lessons in
-literary composition form no part of the disciplinary curriculum of
-Aylesbury; nay, the art of writing is distinctly discouraged there, as
-interfering with the prescribed parliamentary régime. Accordingly, when
-I set out to tell my pitiful little story, I was told to look at myself
-objectively; then to pry into myself subjectively; then to regard
-both in their relation to the outside world--to describe how this,
-that, or the other affected me; in short, as one of them, more deep in
-science than others, expressed it, “We want as much as possible of the
-psychology of your prison life.”
-
-I surreptitiously looked up that awe-inspiring word in a dictionary,
-and found that it refers to the soul, and that it was my soul they
-wanted me to lay bare. I vehemently protested that that belonged to
-my God, and I had no right to expose it for daws to peck at. But the
-publishers, with the aid of my friends, persuaded me that the public
-would give me their tenderest regard, and that possibly the humanities
-might be furthered a bit if the story of a woman--whatever might be her
-failings in other directions--wholly guiltless of the terrible charge
-of wilful murder, and for which in her innocence she was made to suffer
-so cruelly, be given in fullest heart detail to a sympathetic world.
-So I have done what I trust is best for all--spared myself as little
-as possible, lest the picture fail from suppression--and my dearest
-heart-hope is that somewhat of good may come of it, especially in
-behalf of those whom a dire fate shall compel to follow in my steps,
-with bruised spirits and bleeding feet.
-
-
-SKETCH OF MY ANCESTRY
-
-I was born at Mobile, Ala., September 3, 1862. In searching for
-some account of my genealogy, I found a published letter of Gail
-Hamilton’s, who was ever one of my most eloquent and steadfast
-champions, and to whom I owe a debt of gratitude I can never adequately
-express. From this it appears that I am the great-great-granddaughter
-of Rev. Benjamin Thurston, a graduate of Harvard College, who settled
-at North Hampton, N. H., and of his wife, Sarah Phillips, who was
-the sister of John Phillips, who founded Phillips’ Academy in
-Exeter, endowed a professorship in Dartmouth, and contributed funds
-to Princeton; and who was the aunt of Samuel Phillips, who founded
-Phillips’s Academy at Andover.
-
-The mother of Sarah Phillips was Elizabeth Green, and from her the name
-of Elizabeth has come down in regular descent to myself.
-
-Elizabeth, daughter of Benjamin Thurston and Sarah Phillips, married
-James Milk Ingraham. Joseph H. Ingraham, of this family, gave to
-Portland, Me., for its improvement, property now amounting in value to
-millions--beautiful State Street, the market, the property of the High
-School, and much more. One of the Ingrahams was the wife of Philander
-Chase, the first Bishop of Illinois, uncle of Salmon P. Chase, who
-was Secretary of the Treasury under Lincoln and Chief Justice of the
-Supreme Court of the United States. Of the Ingraham family was that
-Commodore Ingraham who won laurels for his country and himself by
-rescuing Martin Koszata from the clutch of Austria. Connected with the
-Ingrahams was that Edward Preble, born at Falmouth Neck, whose father
-served under Wolfe and was wounded at Quebec; also that Commander
-Preble whose achievement before Tripoli was rewarded with a gold medal
-and the thanks of Congress. Rev. John Phillips and Thurston Ingraham,
-author of “Why We Believe the Bible,” both rectors in the Protestant
-Episcopal Church, were sons of James Milk Ingraham and Elizabeth
-Thurston Ingraham. John Ingraham, son of the preceding, is rector of
-Grace Church, St. Louis, Mo. His sister, Elizabeth Thurston Ingraham,
-married Darius Blake Holbrook, who was born in Dorchester, Mass. His
-mother was a Ridgeway. Her sister married a Quincy, and was aunt to
-John Quincy Adams. Mr. Holbrook was an originator of the land grant
-for the Illinois Central Railroad and its first president. He owned
-Cairo, at the mouth of the Ohio, and was associated with Cyrus Field
-in laying the first Atlantic cable. Caroline Elizabeth was the only
-child of Darius Blake Holbrook and Elizabeth Thurston Holbrook. She
-married William G. Chandler, of the banking house of St. John Powers &
-Co., Mobile, Ala. William G. Chandler’s father was Daniel Chandler, a
-lawyer of high standing in Georgia; his mother was Sarah Campbell, a
-sister of John A. Campbell, at one time Assistant Secretary of State
-for the Confederacy, and previously judge of the Supreme Court of the
-United States. Judge L. Q. C. Lamar, long a United States Senator, and
-afterward a justice of the Supreme Court, was near of kin.
-
-To William G. Chandler and Caroline Elizabeth Holbrook Chandler two
-children were born--Holbrook St. John and Florence Elizabeth. Their
-father died in 1863, and their mother, on account of the war, took the
-children abroad to be educated. The son died while pursuing his medical
-studies.
-
-As will be seen from the above summary of Gail Hamilton’s statement, I
-am descended, on both my paternal and my maternal side for generations,
-from good American stock. I was educated partly in Europe and partly
-in America, under the instruction of masters and governesses. I was too
-delicate for college life. I lived partly with my maternal grandmother,
-Elizabeth Holbrook, of New York, and partly with my mother, the
-Baroness von Roques, whose home was abroad. When not with them I was
-visiting or traveling with friends. My life was much the same as that
-of any other girl who enjoyed the pleasures of youth with a happy
-heart. I was very fond of tracing intricate designs and copying the
-old-time churches and cathedrals. My special pastime, however, was
-riding, and this I could indulge in to my heart’s content when residing
-with my stepfather, Baron Adolph von Roques, who, now retired, was at
-that time a cavalry officer in the Eighth Cuirassier Regiment of the
-German army and stationed at Cologne.
-
-At the age of eighteen I married James Maybrick, on the 27th of July,
-1881, at St. James Church, Piccadilly, London, and returned to America,
-where we made our home at Norfolk, Va. For business reasons we settled
-in a suburb of Liverpool called Aigworth. A son was born to us on the
-24th of March, 1882, and a daughter on June 20, 1886.
-
- FLORENCE ELIZABETH MAYBRICK.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER ONE
-
-Before the Trial
-
-
-MY ARREST
-
-Slowly consciousness returned. I opened my eyes. The room was in
-darkness. All was still. Suddenly the silence was broken by the bang of
-a closing door which startled me out of my stupor. Where was I? Why was
-I alone? What awful thing had happened? A flash of memory! My husband
-was dead! I drifted once more away from the things of sense. Then a
-voice, as if a long way off, spoke. A feeling of pain and distress shot
-through my body. I opened my eyes in terror. Edwin Maybrick was bending
-over me as I lay upon my bed. He had my arms tightly gripped, and was
-shaking me violently. “I want your keys--do you hear? Where are your
-keys?” he exclaimed harshly. I tried to form a reply, but the words
-choked me, and once more I passed into unconsciousness.
-
-It is the dawn of a Sabbath day.[1] I am still lying in my clothes,
-neglected and uncared for; without food since the morning of the day
-before. Consciousness came and went. During one of these interludes
-Michael Maybrick entered.
-
-“Nurse,” he said, “I am going up to London. Mrs. Maybrick is no longer
-mistress of this house. As one of the executors I forbid you to allow
-her to leave this room. I hold you responsible in my absence.”
-
-He then left the room. What did he mean? How dare he humble me thus in
-the presence of a stranger?
-
-Toward the night of the same day I said to the nurse, “I wish to see
-my children.” She took no notice. My voice was weak, and I thought
-perhaps she had not heard. “Nurse,” I repeated, “I want to see my
-children.” She walked up to my bed, and in a cold, deliberate voice
-replied: “You can not see Master James and Miss Gladys. Mr. Michael
-Maybrick gave orders that they were to leave the house without seeing
-you.” I fell back upon my pillow, dazed and stricken, weak, helpless,
-and impotent. Why was I treated thus? My brain reeled in seeking a
-reply to this query. At last I could bear it no longer, and my soul
-cried out to God to let me die. A third dreary night, and the day broke
-once again. I was still prostrate. The dull pain at my heart, the
-yearning for my little children, was becoming unbearable, but I was
-dumb.
-
-Suddenly the door opened and Dr. Humphreys entered. He walked silently
-to my bedside, felt my pulse, and without a word left the room. A few
-minutes later I heard the tramp of many feet coming up-stairs. They
-stopped at the door. The nurse advanced, and a crowd of men entered.
-One of them stepped to the foot of the bed and addressed me as follows:
-
-“Mrs. Maybrick, I am superintendent of the police, and I am about to
-say something to you. After I have said what I intend to say, if you
-reply be careful how you reply, because whatever you say may be used as
-evidence against you. Mrs. Maybrick, you are in custody on suspicion of
-causing the death of your late husband, James Maybrick, on the eleventh
-instant.” I made no reply, and the crowd passed out.
-
-
-A PRISONER IN MY OWN HOUSE
-
-Was I going mad? Did I hear myself accused of poisoning my husband? Why
-did not his brothers, who said they had his confidence, tell the police
-what all his intimate friends knew, that he was an arsenic eater? Why
-was I accused--I, who had nursed him assiduously day and night until
-my strength gave out, who had engaged trained nurses, and advised a
-consultation of physicians, and had done all that lay in my power to
-aid in his recovery? To whom could I appeal in my extreme distress? I
-lay ill and confined to my bed, with two professional nurses attending
-me, and with a policeman stationed in my room, although there was not
-and could not be the slightest chance of my escaping. The officer would
-not permit the door to be closed day or night, and I was denied in my
-own house, even before the inquest, the privacy accorded to a convicted
-prisoner. I asked that a cablegram be sent to my lawyers in New York.
-Inspector Baxendale read it, and then said he did not consider it of
-importance and should not send it. I then implored Dr. Humphreys to ask
-a friendly lawyer, Mr. R. S. Cleaver, of Liverpool, to come out to see
-me. After some delay Mr. Cleaver obtained a permit to enter the house
-and undertook to represent me.
-
-The fourth day came and went. On the fifth day, May 16, the stillness
-of the house was broken by the sound of hushed voices and hurrying
-footsteps. “Nurse,” I exclaimed, when I could no longer bear the
-feeling of oppression that possessed me, “is anything the matter?” She
-turned, and in a cold, harsh voice replied, “The funeral starts in an
-hour.” “Whose funeral?” I asked. “Your husband’s,” the nurse exclaimed;
-“but for you he would have been buried on Tuesday.” I stared at her for
-a moment, and then, trembling from head to foot, got out of bed and
-commenced with weak hands to dress myself. The nurse looked alarmed,
-and came forward. “Stand back!” I cried. “I will see my husband before
-he is taken away.” She placed herself in front of me; I pushed her
-aside and confronted the policeman at the door. “I demand to see my
-husband,” I exclaimed. “The law does not permit a person to be treated
-as guilty until she is proven so.”
-
-He hesitated, and then said, “Follow me.” With tottering steps,
-supported by the nurse, I was led into the adjoining room. Upon the
-bed stood the coffin, covered with white flowers. It was already
-closed. I turned to the policeman and the nurse. “Leave me alone with
-the dead.” They refused. I then knelt down at the bedside, and God in
-His mercy spared my reason by granting me, there and then, the first
-tears which many days of suffering had failed to bring. Death had wiped
-out the memory of many things. I was thankful to remember that I had
-stopped divorce proceedings, and that we had become reconciled for
-the children’s sake. Calmed, I arose and returned to my room. I sat
-down near a window, still weeping. Suddenly the harsh voice of a nurse
-broke on my ears: “If you wish to see the last of the husband you have
-poisoned you had better stand up. The funeral has started.” I stumbled
-to my feet and clutched at the window-sill, where I stood rigid and
-tearless until the hearse had passed, and was out of sight, and then I
-fainted.
-
-When I recovered consciousness I asked why my mother had not been sent
-for. No answer was made, but a tardy summons was sent to her at Paris.
-When she arrived she came to me at once. What a meeting! She kissed
-me, and was speaking a few loving words in French, when the nurse
-interposed and said, “You must speak in English,” and the policeman
-joined in with “I warn you, madam, that I will write down all you
-say,” and he produced paper and pencil. I then begged my mother to go
-into Liverpool to see the Messrs. Cleaver, who represented me, as they
-would give her all the information she required; and then I cried out
-in the bitterness of my heart, “Mother, they all believe me guilty,
-but I swear to you I am innocent.” That night I had a violent attack
-of hysteria. Two nurses and the policeman held me down, and when my
-mother, outraged by his presence, wished to take his place and send
-him from the room, Nurse Wilson became insolent and turned her out.
-
-
-AT WALTON JAIL
-
-The next morning, Saturday, the 18th of May, Dr. Hopper and Dr.
-Humphreys visited me, to ascertain whether I was in a condition to
-permit of formal proceedings taking place in my bedroom. In a few
-minutes they gave their consent. The magistrates and others then came
-up-stairs.
-
-There were present Colonel Bidwell, Mr. Swift (clerk), Superintendent
-Bryning, and my lawyers, the Messrs. Cleaver, Dr. Hopper, and Dr.
-Humphreys. I was fully conscious, but too prostrate to make any
-movement. Besides those in the room, there were seated outside the
-policeman and the nurse. Superintendent Bryning, who had taken up his
-position at the foot of the bed, said: “This person is Mrs. Maybrick,
-charged with causing the death of the late James Maybrick. She is
-charged with causing his death by administering poison to him. I
-understand that her consent is given to a remand, and therefore I need
-not introduce nor give evidence.”
-
-Mr. Swift: “You ask for a remand for eight days?”
-
-Mr. Arnold Cleaver: “I appear for the prisoner.”
-
-Colonel Bidwell: “Very well; I consent to a remand. That is all.”
-
-These gentlemen then departed. The police were in such a hurry to
-prefer the formal charge, they could not wait until the doctors
-should certify that I was in a fit state to be taken to the court in
-the ordinary way. The nurse then told me I must get up and dress. I
-prayed that my children might be sent for to bid me good-by--but I
-was peremptorily refused. I begged to gather together some necessary
-personal apparel, only to meet with another refusal. I was hurried
-away with such unseemly haste, that even my hand-bag with my toilet
-articles was left behind. My mother implored to be allowed to say
-good-by, but was denied. She had gone up to her bedroom, so she tells
-me, which looked out on the front, to try and see my face as they put
-me in the carriage, when they turned the key and locked her in. After I
-had gone a policeman unlocked the door.
-
-[Illustration: THE LATE DR. HELEN DENSMORE, An American advocate of
-Mrs. Maybrick’s innocence.]
-
-After a two hours’ drive we arrived at Walton Jail, in the suburbs of
-Liverpool. I shuddered as I looked at the tall, gloomy building. A
-bell was ringing, and the big iron gates swung back and allowed us to
-pass in. I was received by the governor and immediately led away by
-a female warder. We crossed a small courtyard and stopped at a door
-which she unlocked and relocked. Then we passed down a narrow passage
-to a door that led into a dark, gloomy room termed the “Reception.” A
-bench ran along each side, a bare wooden table stood in the middle,
-a weighing-machine by the door, with a foot measure beside it. A
-female warder asked me to give up any valuables in my possession.
-These consisted of a watch, two diamond rings, and a brooch. They were
-entered in a book. Then I was asked to stand upon the weighing-machine,
-and my weight was duly noted. These formalities completed, I was led
-through a building into a cell especially set apart for sick prisoners.
-The escort locked me in, and, utterly exhausted, stricken with a sense
-of horror and degradation, I sank upon the stone floor, reiterating,
-until consciousness left me, “Oh, my God, help me--help me!”
-
-
-ALONE
-
-When I opened my eyes I was in bed and alone. I gazed around. At the
-bedside was a chair with a china cup containing milk, and a plate
-of bread upon it. The cell was bare. The light struggled in dimly
-through a dirty, barred window. The stillness was appalling, and I felt
-benumbed--a sense of terrible oppression weighed me down. If only I
-could hear once more the sound of a friendly voice! If only some one
-would tell whose diabolical mind had conceived and directed suspicion
-against me!
-
-I remained in the cell three days, when my lawyer visited me. He
-arranged that I was to have a room especially set apart for prisoners
-awaiting trial who can afford to pay five shillings ($1.25) weekly, for
-the additional comfort of a table, an arm-chair, and a wash-stand. Had
-I not been able to do so I should have been consigned to an ordinary
-prison cell, and my diet would have been the same as that of convicted
-prisoners. Instead, my food was sent from a hotel outside. I was locked
-in this room for twenty-two hours out of the twenty-four. The only time
-I was permitted to leave it was for chapel in the morning and an hour’s
-exercise in the afternoon in the prison yard. The stillness, unbroken
-by any sound from the outside world, got on my nerves, and I wanted
-to scream, if only to hear my own voice. The unnatural confinement,
-without any one to speak to, was torture. The governor, the doctor, and
-the chaplain, it is true, came around every morning, but their visits
-were of such short duration, and so formal in their nature, that it was
-impossible to derive much relief from conversation with them.
-
-
-THE CORONER’S INQUEST
-
-On the 28th of May the Coroner’s inquest was held, but I was not well
-enough to attend. I was represented by my legal advisers. On the 3d of
-June I was still too ill to appear before the court. Mr. W. S. Barrett,
-as magistrate, accompanied by Mr. Swift, the clerk, held a Magisterial
-Court at Walton Jail. Mr. R. S. Cleaver did not attend, having
-consented to the police obtaining another remand for a week. Only one
-newspaper reporter was allowed to be present. I was accompanied to the
-visitors’ room by a female warder, and silently took a seat at the
-foot of a long table. I was quite composed. Superintendent Bryning rose
-from his seat at the end of the room and said:
-
-“This person, sir, is Mrs. Maybrick, who is charged with the murder of
-her husband, at Aigburth, on the 11th of last month. I have to ask that
-you remand her until Wednesday next.”
-
-Mr. Swift: “Mr. Cleaver, her solicitor, has sent me a note in which he
-consents to a remand until Wednesday.”
-
-Mr. Barrett: “If there is no objection she will be remanded until
-Wednesday morning.”
-
-
-A PLANK FOR A BED
-
-The magistrate then signed the document authorizing the remand, and I
-withdrew. On the 5th of June the adjourned inquest was held, and I was
-taken from jail at half-past eight in the morning to the Coroner’s
-Court in a cab, accompanied by Dr. O’Hagan, a female attendant, and
-a policeman. I was taken into the ante-room for the purpose of being
-identified by the witnesses for the prosecution. I was not taken
-into court, but at three o’clock Mr. Holbrook Gaskell, a magistrate,
-attended for the purpose of granting another remand, pending the result
-of the inquest, and again no evidence was given in my presence. I was
-taken to the county police station, Lark Lane. I passed the night in a
-cell which contained only a plank board as a bed. It was dark, damp,
-dirty, and horrible. A policeman, taking pity on me, brought me a
-blanket to lie on. In the adjoining cell, in a state of intoxication,
-two men were raving and cursing throughout the night. I had no
-light--there was no one to speak to. I was kept there three days, until
-the coroner’s jury had returned their verdict. A greengrocer near by,
-named Mrs. Pretty, to whom I had occasionally given orders for fruit,
-sent me in a daily gift of her best with a note of sympathy--a deed
-all the more striking in its generosity and nobleness, since the
-charity of none other of my own sex had reached to that degree of
-justice to regard me as innocent until proven guilty.
-
-
-THE VERDICT OF THE CORONER’S JURY
-
-On the 6th of June I was again driven to Garston to hear the coroner’s
-verdict. There was an elaborate array of lawyers, reporters, and
-witnesses, as well as many spectators.
-
-I waited in the ante-room until the coroner’s jury had summed up. The
-jury consisted mostly of gentlemen who at one time had been guests in
-my own house. Of all former friends present, there was only one who had
-the moral courage to approach me and shake my hand. Throughout the time
-I sat awaiting the call to appear before the coroner he remained beside
-me, speaking words of encouragement. But the others, who, without
-a word of evidence in my defense, had already judged and condemned
-me, passed by on the other side, for had they not already judged and
-condemned me?
-
-When my name was called a dead hush pervaded the court, and the coroner
-said:
-
-“Have you agreed upon your verdict, gentlemen?”
-
-The Foreman: “We have.”
-
-Q. “Do you find that death resulted from the administration of an
-irritant poison?”
-
-A. “Unanimously.”
-
-Q. “Do you say by whom that poison was administered?”
-
-A. “By twelve to one we decide that the poison was administered by Mrs.
-Maybrick.”
-
-Q. “Do you find that the poison was administered with the intent of
-taking life?”
-
-A. “Twelve of us have come to that conclusion.”
-
-The Coroner: “That amounts to a verdict of murder.”
-
-Then the requisition was made out in the following terms:
-
- “That James Maybrick, on the 11th of May, 1889, in the township of
- Garston, died from the effects of an irritant poison administered to
- him by Florence Elizabeth Maybrick, and so the jurors say: that the
- said Florence Elizabeth Maybrick did wilfully, feloniously, and of
- malice aforethought kill and murder the said James Maybrick.”
-
-I was then driven back to the Lark Lane Police Station, locked up, and
-remained the night. The next day I was returned to Walton Jail. How
-shall I describe my feelings? Mere words are utterly inadequate to do
-so. Not only was my sense of justice and fair play outraged, but it
-seemed to me a frightful danger to personal safety if the police, on
-the mere gossip of servants, and where a doctor had been unable to
-assign the cause of death, could go into a home and take an inmate
-into custody in the way I have shown.
-
-On the 13th of June I was brought before the magistrates, and for the
-first time evidence was given in my presence. I had been driven over to
-the court-house the evening before, and had passed the night there in
-charge of a policeman’s daughter, who remained in the room with me. Her
-father kept watch on the other side of the door. That night, on going
-to bed, as I knelt weary and lonely to say my prayers, I felt a hand on
-my shoulder and a tearful voice said, softly, “Let me hold your hand,
-Mrs. Maybrick, and let me say my prayers with you.” A simple expression
-of sympathy, but it meant so much to me at such a time.
-
-
-THE DOCTORS DISAGREE
-
-At half-past eight I was taken to a room adjoining the court, where, in
-charge of a female warder and a policeman, I awaited my call. I then
-passed into the court, where two magistrates, Sir William B. Forwood
-and Mr. W. S. Barrett, sat officially to hear the evidence. When the
-testimony had been given the court adjourned.
-
-When I rose to leave the court, in order to reach the door, I had
-to meet face to face well-dressed women spectators at the back, and
-the moment I turned around these started hissing me. The presiding
-justice immediately shouted to the officer on duty to shut the door,
-while the burly figures of several policemen, who moved toward the
-hostile spectators, effectually put an end to the outburst. It was amid
-such scenes, and this sort of preparation for my ordeal, that on the
-following day, the 14th of June, the Magisterial Inquiry was resumed,
-and the evidence connected with the charge of murder gone into. On
-conclusion of the testimony the magistrates retired, and after a brief
-consultation returned into court.
-
-Sir William Forwood: “Our opinion is that this is a case which ought to
-be decided by jury.”
-
-Mr. Pickford (my counsel): “If that is clearly the opinion of the Bench
-I shall not occupy their time by going into the defense now, because I
-understand, whatever defense may be put forward, the Bench may think it
-right for a jury to decide.”
-
-The Chairman: “Yes, we think so.”
-
-I was then ordered to stand up and was formally charged in the usual
-manner.
-
-I replied: “I reserve my defense.”
-
-Sir William Forwood made answer: “Florence Elizabeth Maybrick, it is
-our duty to commit you to take your trial at the ensuing Assizes for
-wilful murder of the late James Maybrick.”
-
-I was then remanded into custody.
-
-I found it difficult to understand why these magistrates committed
-me to trial for murder on that evidence. There was certainly not
-sufficient evidence that the cause of death was arsenic. The doctors
-could not say so. No arsenic had been found by the analyst in the
-stomach, the appearance of which at the _post-mortem_, Dr. Humphreys
-said, was “consistent” with either poisoning or ordinary congestion
-of the stomach; but, after examination, a minute quantity of arsenic,
-certainly not enough to cause death, was detected in the liver, the
-appearance of which, Dr. Humphreys said, showed no evidence of any
-irritant poison. On this point Dr. Carter agreed with Dr. Humphreys,
-“but in a more positive manner,” while Dr. Barron did not exactly agree
-with Dr. Carter.
-
-The analyst had found both arsenic and “traces” of arsenic, in some
-bottles and things which had been found in the house after death, as
-to which, where they came from, or who had put them there, no one
-had any knowledge. This is the evidence upon which I was committed.
-Justice Stephen, in addressing the grand jury, even thus early showed
-a predisposition against me, due at this time, no doubt, to the
-sensational reports in the press. A true bill was found, and I was
-brought to trial before him on the 31st of July.
-
-
-LETTERS FROM WALTON JAIL
-
-The six weeks intervening before my trial were very terrible. The
-mental strain was incessant, and I suffered much from insomnia. The
-stress and confinement were telling on my health, as was the separation
-from my children. I insert here two extracts from letters, written by
-me, from Walton Jail. One is to my mother, dated the 21st of July,
-1889, a few days before my trial:
-
- “I am not feeling very well. This fearful strain and the necessity for
- continued self-control is beginning to tell upon me. But I am not in
- the least afraid. I shall show composure, dignity and fortitude to the
- last.”
-
-The following is an extract from a letter I wrote to a friend on June
-27, before my trial on July 31:
-
- “I have made my peace with God. I have forgiven unreservedly all those
- who have ruined and forsaken me. To-morrow I partake of the Holy
- Communion with a clear conscience, and I place my faith in God’s
- mercy.
-
- “God give me strength is my constant prayer. I feel so lonely--as
- if every hand were against me. To think that for three or four days
- I must be unveiled before all those uncharitable eyes. You can not
- think how awful it appears to me. So far the ordeal has been all
- anticipation; then it will be stern reality--which always braces the
- nerves and courage.
-
- “I have seen in the Liverpool _Post_ the judge’s address on the
- prosecution to the jury, and it is enough to appal the stoutest heart.
- I hear the police are untiring and getting up the case against me
- regardless of expense.
-
- “Pray for me, my friend, for the darkest days of my life are now to
- be lived through. I trust in God’s justice, whatever I may be in the
- sight of man.”
-
-
-LORD RUSSELL’S OPINION
-
-I received many visits from my lawyers, the Messrs. Cleaver, and just
-before the trial one from my leading counsel, Sir Charles Russell,
-later Lord Russell of Killowen, Lord Chief Justice of England. The
-following statement made by him relative to this visit may interest my
-readers:
-
- “I will make no public statement of what my personal belief is as to
- Mrs. Maybrick’s guilt or innocence, but I will tell you, who have
- stood by her all these years, that, perplexed with the instructions
- in the brief, I took what was an unusual step: I went to see her in
- prison before her trial, and questioned her there to the best of
- my ability for the purpose of getting the truth out of her. During
- the whole seven days of her trial I made careful observation of her
- demeanor, and since her imprisonment I have availed myself of my
- judicial right to visit her at Aylesbury Prison; and, making the best
- use of such opportunities of arriving at a just conclusion about her
- own self-consciousness, I decided in my own mind that it never for a
- moment entered her mind to do any bodily injury to her husband. On the
- last occasion that I saw her I told her so, as I felt it would and did
- give the poor woman some comfort.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Copyright by W. & D. Downey, London
-
-LORD CHARLES RUSSELL, Q.C., Late Lord Chief Justice of England, Mrs.
-Maybrick’s counsel.]
-
-
-THE PUBLIC CONDEMNS ME UNHEARD
-
-The day preceding my trial found me calm in spirit, and in a measure
-prepared for the awful ordeal before me. Up to that time I had shown
-a composure that astonished every one. Indeed, some went so far as to
-say I was without feeling. Perhaps I was toward their kind. I would
-have responded to sympathy, but never to distrust. At that time I was
-suspected by all--or, rather, people were not sufficiently just to
-content themselves with suspicions; they condemned me outright, and,
-unheard, struck at a weak, defenseless woman; and this upon what is now
-generally admitted to have been insufficient evidence to sustain the
-indictment.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[1] May 12, 1889.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER TWO
-
-The Trial
-
-
-THE INJUSTICE OF TRYING THE CASE AT LIVERPOOL
-
-My trial was set for the 31st of July in St. George’s Hall, Liverpool.
-Immediately after nine o’clock on that day, the part of the building
-which is open to the general public was filled by a well-dressed
-audience, including many of my one-time friends. During all the days
-of my trial, I am told, Liverpool society fought for tickets. Ladies
-were attired as for a matinée, and some brought their luncheons that
-they might retain their seats. Many of them carried opera-glasses,
-which they did not hesitate to level at me. The Earl of Sefton occupied
-a seat on the bench with the judge, and among the audience were many
-public and city men and judicial officers. The press had for two
-months supplied nourishment in the form of the most sensational stories
-about me, to feed the morbid appetite of the public. The excitement
-ran so high that the Liverpool crowds even hissed me as I was driven
-through the streets. It was a mockery of justice to hold such a trial
-in such a place as Liverpool, at such a time, by a common jury; and it
-was a mockery of common sense to expect that any Liverpool common jury
-could, when they got into the jury-box, dismiss from their minds all
-they had heard and seen. In a letter which I wrote to my mother, when
-in Walton Jail, on the 28th of June, about a month before the trial, I
-said: “I sincerely hope Messrs. Cleaver will arrange for my trial to
-take place in London. I shall receive an impartial verdict there, which
-I can not expect from a jury in Liverpool, whose minds will virtually
-be made up before any evidence is heard.” Owing, however, to a lack of
-funds this hope was not realized.
-
-I was at this time alone, utterly forsaken, and the only persons to
-whom I could look for protection and advice were my lawyers, Messrs.
-Cleaver.
-
-At half-past eight on the morning of my trial, a black van was driven
-up to the side door, in the fore part of which were already confined
-the male prisoners awaiting trial. I was placed in the rear, a female
-warder stepped in, the door was shut, and I felt as if I were already
-buried. A crowd witnessed my departure from Walton Jail, and a larger
-one was assembled outside St. George’s Hall. But I was conducted into
-the building without attracting attention.
-
-At ten o’clock I heard a blast of trumpets that heralded the judge’s
-entrance into court. Shortly after my name was called, and, accompanied
-by a male and a female warder, I ascended slowly the stone staircase
-from the cells leading to the dock. I was calm and collected in manner,
-although aware of the gravity of my position. But the consciousness of
-innocence, and a strong faith in Divine support, made me confident
-that strength would be given to endure the awful ordeal before me.
-
-[Illustration: ST. GEORGE’S HALL, LIVERPOOL, Where the trial of Mrs
-Maybrick was held.]
-
-In reply to the Clerk of Arraigns, who read the charge against me of
-“feloniously and wilfully murdering my husband, James Maybrick,” I
-answered “Not guilty.” It is customary in criminal courts in England
-to compel a prisoner to stand in the dock during the whole trial, but
-I was provided with a seat by recommendation of the prison doctor,
-as I suffered from attacks of faintness, though against this humane
-departure a great public outcry was raised.
-
-The counsel engaged in the case were Mr. Addison, Q.C., M.P. (now judge
-at the Southwark County Court), Mr. McConnell, and Mr. Swift, for the
-prosecution; Sir Charles Russell, assisted by Mr. Pickford and Messrs.
-Cleaver, for the defense.
-
-
-AN UNEXPECTED VERDICT
-
-When the trial began there was a strong feeling against me, but as it
-proceeded, and the fact was made clear that Mr. Maybrick had long
-been addicted to taking large quantities of arsenic, coupled with the
-evidence, to quote Sir Charles Russell, (1) that there was no proof
-of arsenical poisoning, (2) that there was no proof that arsenic was
-administered to him by me, the prejudice against me gradually changed,
-until, at the close of the trial, there was a complete revulsion of
-sentiment, and my acquittal was confidently expected.
-
-When the jury retired to consider their verdict I was taken below, and
-here my solicitor came to speak to me; but the tension of mind was so
-great I do not recall one word that he said.
-
-After what seemed to me an age, but was in reality only thirty-eight
-minutes, the jury returned into court and took their places in the
-jury-box. I was recalled to the dock. When I stood up to hear the
-verdict I had an intuition that it was unfavorable. Every one looked
-away from me, and there was a stillness in court that could be felt.
-Then the Clerk of Arraigns arose and said:
-
-“Have you agreed upon the verdict, gentlemen?”
-
-“We have.”
-
-“And do you find the prisoner guilty of the murder of James Maybrick or
-not guilty?”
-
-The Foreman: “Guilty.”
-
-A prolonged “Ah!” strangely like the sighing of wind through a forest,
-sounded through the court. I reeled as if struck a blow and sank upon
-a chair. The Clerk of Arraigns then turned to me and said: “Florence
-Elizabeth Maybrick, you have been found guilty of wilful murder. Have
-you anything to say why the court should not pronounce sentence upon
-you according to the law?”
-
-I arose, and with a prayer for strength, I clasped the rail of the dock
-in front of me, and said in a low voice, but with firmness: “My lord,
-everything has been against me; I am not guilty of this crime.”
-
-
-THE JUDGE’S SENTENCE
-
-These were the last words which the law permitted me to speak. Mr.
-Justice Stephen then assumed the full dress of the criminal judge--the
-black cap--and pronounced the sentence of the court in these words:
-
- “Prisoner at the bar, I am no longer able to treat you as being
- innocent of the dreadful crime laid to your charge. You have been
- convicted by a jury of this city, after a lengthy and most painful
- investigation, followed by a defense which was in every respect worthy
- of the man. The jury has convicted you, and the law leaves me no
- discretion, and I must pass the sentence of the law:
-
- “The court doth order you to be taken from hence to the place from
- whence you came, and from thence to the place of execution, and that
- you be hanged by the neck until you are dead, and that your body be
- afterward buried within the precincts of the prison in which you shall
- be confined after your conviction. And may the Lord have mercy upon
- your soul!”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Copyright by Bassano, London.
-
-JUSTICE FITZ-JAMES STEPHEN. Who presided at the trial of Mrs.
-Maybrick.]
-
-Utterly stunned I was removed from the court to Walton Jail, there
-to be confined until this sentence of the law should be carried into
-effect.
-
-The mob, as the Liverpool public was styled by the press, before they
-had heard or read a word of the defense had hissed me when I entered
-the court; and now, that they had heard or read the evidence, cheered
-me as I drove away in the prison-van, and hissed and hooted the judge,
-who with difficulty gained his carriage.
-
-
-IN THE SHADOW OF DEATH
-
-In all the larger local English prisons there is one room, swept and
-ready, the sight of which can not fail to stir unwonted thoughts.
-The room is large, with barred windows, and contains only a bed and
-a chair. It is the last shelter of those whom the law declares to
-have forfeited their lives. Near by is a small brick building in the
-prison-yard, that has apparently nothing to connect it with the room;
-yet they are joined by a sinister suggestion.
-
-For nearly three terrible weeks I was confined in this cell of the
-condemned, to taste the bitterness of death under its most appalling
-and shameful aspect. I was carefully guarded by two female warders, who
-would gladly have been spared the task. They might not read nor sleep;
-at my meals, through my prayers, during every moment of agony, they
-still watched on and rarely spoke. Many have asked me what my feelings
-were at that awful time. I remember little in the way of details
-as to my state of mind. I was too overwhelmed for either analytic
-or collective thought. Conscious of my innocence, I had no fear of
-physical death, for the love of my Heavenly Father was so enveloping
-that death seemed to me a blessed escape from a world in which such an
-unspeakable travesty of justice could take place; while I petitioned
-for a reconsideration of the verdict, it was wholly for the sake of my
-mother and my children.
-
-I knew nothing of any public efforts for my relief. I was held fast on
-the wheels of a slow-moving machine, hypnotized by the striking hours
-and the flight of my numbered minutes, with the gallows staring me in
-the face. The date of my execution was not told me at Walton Jail,
-but I heard afterward that it was to have taken place on the 26th
-of August. On the 22d, while I was taking my daily exercise in the
-yard attached to the condemned cell, the governor, Captain Anderson,
-accompanied by the chief matron, entered. He called me to him, and,
-with a voice which--all honor to him--trembled with emotion, said:
-
-“Maybrick, no commutation of sentence has come down to-day, and I
-consider it my duty to tell you to prepare for death.”
-
-“Thank you, governor,” I replied; “my conscience is clear. God’s will
-be done.”
-
-
-COMMUTATION OF SENTENCE
-
-He then walked away and I returned to my cell. The female warder was
-weeping silently, but I was calm and spent the early part of the night
-in my usual prayers. About midnight exhausted nature could bear no
-more, and I fainted. I had barely regained consciousness when I heard
-the shuffle of feet outside, the click of the key in the lock--that
-warning catch in the slow machinery of my doom. I sprang up, and with
-one supreme effort of will braced myself for what I believed was the
-last act of my life. The governor and a chaplain entered, followed
-by a warder. They read my expectation in my face, and the governor,
-hastening forward, exclaimed in an agitated voice: “It is well; it is
-good news!” When I opened my eyes once more I was lying in bed in the
-hospital, and I remained there until I was taken to Woking Convict
-Prison.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THREE
-
-In Solitary Confinement
-
-
-REMOVAL TO WOKING PRISON
-
-On the morning of the 29th of August I was hastily awakened by a female
-warder, who said that orders had come down from the Home Office for my
-removal that day to a convict prison.
-
-When I left, the governor was standing at the gate, and, with a
-kindliness of voice which I deeply appreciated, told me to be brave and
-good.
-
-A crowd was in waiting at the station. I was roughly hustled through it
-into a third-class carriage.
-
-The only ray of light that penetrated those dark hours of my journey
-came from an American woman. God bless her, whoever she is or wherever
-she is! At every station that the train stopped she got out and came to
-the carriage door and spoke words of sympathy and comfort. She was the
-first of my countrywomen to voice to me the protest that swelled into
-greater volume as the years rolled by.
-
-As the train drew up at Woking station a crowd assembled. Outside stood
-a cab, to which I was at once conducted, and we drove through lovely
-woods; the scent of flowers was wafted by the breeze into what seemed
-to be a hearse that was bearing me on toward my living tomb.
-
-As we approached the prison the great iron gate swung wide, and the
-cab drove silently into the yard. There I descended. The governor
-gave an order, and a woman--who I afterward found was assistant
-superintendent--came forward. Accompanied by her and an officer, I was
-led across a near-by yard to a building which stood somewhat apart from
-the others and is known as the infirmary. There a principal matron
-received me, and the assistant superintendent and the chief matron
-returned to their quarters.
-
-
-THE CONVICT UNIFORM
-
-In the grasp of what seemed to me a horrible nightmare, I found
-myself in a cell with barred windows, a bed, and a chair. Without,
-the stillness of death reigned. I remained there perhaps half an hour
-when the door opened and I was commanded by a female warder to follow
-her. In a daze I obeyed mechanically. We crossed the same yard again
-and entered a door that led into a room containing only a fireplace, a
-table, and a bath. Here I was told to take off my clothes, as those I
-had traveled in had to be sent back to the prison at Liverpool, where
-they belonged.
-
-When I was dressed in the uniform to which the greatest stigma and
-disgrace is attached, I was told to sit down. The warder then stepped
-quickly forward, and with a pair of scissors cut off my hair to the
-nape of my neck. This act seemed, above all others, to bring me to a
-sense of my degradation, my utter helplessness; and the iron of the
-awful tragedy, of which I was the innocent victim, entered my soul. I
-was then weighed and my height taken. My weight was one hundred and
-twelve pounds, and my height five feet three inches.
-
-Once more I was bidden to follow my guide. We recrossed the yard and
-entered the infirmary. Here I was locked in the cell already mentioned.
-At last I could be alone after the anguish and torture of the day. I
-prayed for sleep that I might lose consciousness of my intolerable
-anguish. But sleep, that gentle nurse of the sad and suffering, came
-not. What a night! I shudder even now at the memory of it. Physically
-exhausted, smarting with the thought of the cruel, heartless way in
-which I had been beaten down and trodden under foot, I felt that mortal
-death would have been more merciful than the living death to which I
-was condemned. In the adjoining cell an insane woman was raving and
-weeping throughout the night, and I wondered whether in the years to
-come I should become like her.
-
-The next day I was visited by the governor on his official rounds. Then
-the doctor came and made a medical examination, and ordered me to be
-detained in the infirmary until further orders. My mind is a blank as
-to what happened for some time afterward. My next remembrance is being
-told by a coarse-looking, harsh-spoken female warder to get ready to go
-into the prison. Once more I was led across the big yard, and then I
-stood within the walls that were to be for years my tomb. Outside the
-sun was shining and the birds were singing.
-
-
-IN SOLITARY CONFINEMENT
-
-Without, picture a vast outline of frowning masonry. Within, when I
-had passed the double outer gates and had been locked out and locked
-in in succession, I found myself in a central hall, from which ran
-cage-like galleries divided into tiers and landings, with a row of
-small cells on either side. The floors are of stone, the landings of
-slate, the railings of steel, and the stairs of iron. Wire netting
-is stretched over the lowest tier to prevent prisoners from throwing
-themselves over in one of those frenzies of rage and despair of which
-every prison has its record. Within their walls can be found, above all
-places, that most degrading, heart-breaking product of civilization,
-a human automaton. All will, all initiative, all individuality, all
-friendship, all the things that make human beings attractive to one
-another, are absent. Suffering there is dumb, and when it goes beyond
-endurance--alas!
-
-I followed the warder to a door, perhaps not more than two feet in
-width. She unlocked it and said, “Pass in.” I stepped forward, but
-started back in horror. Through the open door I saw, by the dim light
-of a small window that was never cleaned, a cell seven feet by four.
-
-“Oh, don’t put me in there!” I cried. “I can not bear it.”
-
-For answer the warder took me roughly by the shoulder, gave me a push,
-and shut the door. There was nothing to sit upon but the cold slate
-floor. I sank to my knees. I felt suffocated. It seemed that the walls
-were drawing nearer and nearer together, and presently the life would
-be crushed out of me. I sprang to my feet and beat wildly with my hands
-against the door. “For God’s sake let me out! Let me out!” But my
-voice could not penetrate that massive barrier, and exhausted I sank
-once more to the floor. I can not recall those nine months of solitary
-confinement without a feeling of horror. My cell contained only a
-hammock rolled up in a corner, and three shelves let into the wall--no
-table nor stool. For a seat I was compelled to place my bedclothes on
-the floor.
-
-
-THE DAILY ROUTINE
-
-No one can realize the horror of solitary confinement who has not
-experienced it. Here is one day’s routine: It is six o’clock; I arise
-and dress in the dark; I put up my hammock and wait for breakfast. I
-hear the ward officer in the gallery outside. I take a tin plate and a
-tin mug in my hands and stand before the cell door. Presently the door
-opens; a brown, whole-meal, six-ounce loaf is placed upon the plate;
-the tin mug is taken, and three-quarters of a pint of gruel is measured
-in my presence, when the mug is handed back in silence, and the door is
-closed and locked. After I have taken a few mouthfuls of bread I begin
-to scrub my cell. A bell rings and my door is again unlocked. No word
-is spoken, because I know exactly what to do. I leave my cell and fall
-into single file, three paces in the rear of my nearest fellow convict.
-All of us are alike in knowing what we have to do, and we march away
-silently to Divine service. We are criminals under punishment, and
-our keepers march us like dumb cattle to the worship of God. To me the
-twenty minutes of its duration were as an oasis in a weary desert. When
-it came to an end I felt comforted, and always a little more resigned
-to my fate. Chapel over, I returned directly to my cell, for I was in
-solitary confinement, and might not enjoy the privilege of working in
-company with my prison companions.
-
-Work I must, but I must work alone. Needlework and knitting fall to my
-lot. My task for the day is handed to me, and I sit in my cell plying
-my needle, with the consciousness that I must not indulge in an idle
-moment, for an unaccomplished task means loss of marks, and loss of
-marks means loss of letters and visits. As chapel begins at 8:30 I am
-back in my cell soon after nine, and the requirement is that I shall
-make one shirt a day--certainly not less than five shirts a week. If I
-am obstinate or indolent, I shall be reported by the ward officer, and
-be brought to book with punishment--perhaps reduced to a diet of bread
-and water and total confinement in my cell for twenty-four hours. If I
-am faint, weak, or unwell, I may be excused the full performance of my
-task; but there must be no doubt of my inability. In such case it is
-for me to have my name entered for the prison doctor, and obtain from
-him the indulgence that will remit a portion of my prescribed work to
-three or four shirts.
-
-However, as I am well, I work automatically, closely, and with
-persistence. Then comes ten o’clock, and with it the governor with
-his escort. He inspects each cell, and if all is not as it should
-be, the prisoner will hear of it. There is no friendly greeting of
-“Good-morning” nor parting “Good-night” within those gloomy walls.
-The tone is formal and the governor says: “How are you, Maybrick?
-Any complaints? Do you want anything?” and then he passes on. Then
-I am again alone with my work and my brooding thoughts. I never
-made complaints. One but adds to one’s burden by finding causes for
-complaint. With the coming and the going of the governor the monotony
-returns to stagnation.
-
-
-THE EXERCISE HOUR
-
-Presently, however, the prison bell rings again. I know what the
-clangor means, and mechanically lay down my work. It is the hour
-for exercise, and I put on my bonnet and cape. One by one the cell
-doors of the ward are opened. One by one we come out from our cells
-and fall into single file. Then, with a ward officer in charge, we
-march into the exercise yard. We have drawn up in line, three paces
-apart, and this is the form in which we tramp around the yard and
-take our exercise. This yard is perhaps forty feet square, and there
-are thirty-five of us to expand in its “freedom.” The inclosure is
-oppressively repulsive. Stone-flagged, hemmed within ugly walls, it
-gives one a hideous feeling of compression. It seems more like a
-bear-pit than an airing ground for human beings. But I forget that
-we are not here to have things made easy, comfortable, and pleasant
-for us. We are here to be punished, to be scourged for our crimes and
-misdeeds. Can you wonder that human nature sometimes revolts and dares
-even prison rigor? Human instincts may be suppressed, but not wholly
-crushed.
-
-There were at Woking two yards in which flowers and green trees were
-visible, but it was only in after years that I was permitted to take my
-exercise in these yards, and then only half an hour on Sunday.
-
-When the one hour for exercise is over, in a file as before, we
-tramp back to our work. Confined as we are for twenty-two hours in
-our narrow, gloomy cells, the exercise, dull as it is, is our only
-opportunity for a glimpse of the sky and for a taste of outdoor life,
-and affords our only relief from an otherwise almost unbearable day.
-
-
-THE MIDDAY MEAL
-
-At noon the midday meal. The first sign of its approach is the sound of
-the fatigue party of prisoners bringing the food from the kitchen into
-the ward. I hear the ward officer passing with the weary group from
-cell to cell, and presently she will reach my door. My food is handed
-to me, then the door is closed and double locked. In the following two
-hours, having finished my meal, I can work or read. At two o’clock the
-fatigue party again goes on its mechanical round; the cell door is
-again unlocked, this time for the collection of dinner-cans. The meal
-of each prisoner is served out by weight, and the law allows her to
-claim her full quantity to the uttermost fraction of an ounce. She is
-even entitled to see it weighed if she fancies it falls short. Work is
-then resumed until five o’clock, when gruel and bread is again served,
-as at breakfast, with half an hour for its disposal. From that time
-on until seven o’clock more work, when again is heard the clang of
-the prison bell, and with it comes the end of our monotonous day. I
-take down my hammock, and once more await the opening of the door. We
-have learned exactly what to do. With the opening of our cells we go
-forward, and each places her broom outside the door. So shall it be
-known that we each have been visited in our cells before the locking of
-our doors and gates for the night. If any of us are taking medicine by
-the doctor’s orders we now receive it. On through the ten long, weary
-hours of the night the night officers patrol the wards, keeping watch,
-and through a glass peep-hole silently inspect us in our beds to see
-that nothing is amiss.
-
-
-THE CRUELTY OF SOLITARY CONFINEMENT
-
-Solitary confinement is by far the most cruel feature of English penal
-servitude. It inflicts upon the prisoner at the commencement of her
-sentence, when most sensitive to the horrors which prison punishment
-entails, the voiceless solitude, the hopeless monotony, the long vista
-of to-morrow, to-morrow, to-morrow stretching before her, all filled
-with desolation and despair. Once a prisoner has crossed the threshold
-of a convict prison, not only is she dead to the world, but she is
-expected in word and deed to lose or forget every vestige of her
-personality. Verily,
-
- The mills of the gods grind slowly,
- But they grind exceeding small,
- And woe to the wight unholy
- On whom those millstones fall.
-
-So it is with the Penal Code which directs this vast machinery, doing
-its utmost with tireless, ceaseless revolutions to mold body and soul
-slowly, remorselessly, into the shape demanded by Act of Parliament.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER FOUR
-
-The Period of Probation
-
-
-A CHANGE OF CELL
-
-The day I had completed the nine months of solitary confinement I
-entered upon a new stage, that of probation for nine months. I was
-taken from Hall G to Hall A. There were in Woking seven halls, A, B, C,
-D, E, F, G, separated by two barred doors and a narrow passage. Every
-hall has three wards. The female warder who accompanied me locked me
-in my cell. I looked around with a sense of intense relief. The cell
-was as large again as the one I had left. The floor was of wood instead
-of slate. It contained a camp bedstead on which was placed a so-called
-mattress, consisting of a sack the length of the bed, stuffed with
-coir, the fiber of the coconut. There were also provided two coarse
-sheets, two blankets, and a red counterpane. In a corner were three
-iron shelves let in the wall one above the other. On the top shelf
-was folded a cape, and on top of this there was a small, coarse straw
-bonnet. The second shelf contained a tin cup, a tin plate, a wooden
-spoon, and a salt-cellar. The third shelf was given up to a slate, on
-which might be written complaints or requests to the governor; it is a
-punishable offense in prison to write with a pencil or on any paper not
-provided.
-
-There was also a Bible, a prayer-book and hymn-book, and a book from
-the library. Near the door stood a log of wood upright, fastened to the
-floor, and this was the only seat in the cell. It was immovable, and so
-placed that the prisoner might always be in view of the warder. Near
-it, let into the wall, was a piece of deal board, which answered for a
-table. Through an almost opaque piece of square glass light glimmered
-from the hall, the only means of lighting the cell at night; facing
-this, high up, was a barred window admitting light from the outside.
-
-
-EVILS OF THE SILENT SYSTEM
-
-The routine of my daily life was the same as during “solitary
-confinement.” The cell door may be open, but its outer covering or gate
-is locked, and, although I knew there was a human creature separated
-from me only by a cell wall and another gate, not a whisper might I
-breathe. There is no rule of prison discipline so productive of trouble
-and disaster as the “silent system,” and the tyrannous and rigorous
-method with which it is enforced is the cause of two-thirds of all
-the misconduct and disturbance that occurs in prison. The silence
-rule gives supreme gratification to the tyrannous officer, for on the
-slightest pretext she can report a woman for talking--a turn of the
-head, a movement of the lips is enough of an excuse for a report.
-And there is heavy punishment that can be inflicted for this offense,
-both in the male and female prisons. An offender may be consigned to
-solitary confinement, put for three days on bread and water, or suffer
-the loss of a week’s remission, which means a week added to her term of
-imprisonment--and all this for incautiously uttering a word.
-
-Unless it be specifically intended as a means of torture, the system of
-solitary confinement, even for four months, the term to which it has
-since been reduced, can meet only with condemnation. I am convinced
-that, within limits, the right of speech and the interchange of
-thought, at least for two hours daily, even during probation, would
-insure better discipline than perpetual silence, which can be enforced
-only by a complete suppression of nature, and must result in consequent
-weakness of mind and ruin of temper. During the first months of her
-sentence a prisoner is more frequently in trouble for breach of this
-one rule than from all other causes. The reduction of the term of
-probation from nine to four months has been followed by a reduction in
-mental afflictions, which is proof that nothing wholesome or good can
-have its growth in unnatural solitude.
-
-The silent system has a weakening effect upon the memory. A prisoner
-often finds difficulty in deciding upon the pronunciation of words
-which she has not heard for a considerable period. I often found
-myself, when desirous of using unusual words, especially in French or
-German, pronouncing them to myself in order to fix the pronunciation
-in my memory. It is well to bear in mind what a small number of words
-the prisoner has an opportunity of using in the monotony of prison
-life. The same inquiries are made day after day, and the same responses
-given. A vocabulary of one hundred words will include all that a
-prisoner habitually uses.
-
-
-INSANITY AND NERVOUS BREAKDOWN OF PRISONERS
-
-No defender of the silent system pretends that it wholly succeeds in
-preventing speech among prisoners. But be that as it may, a period
-of four months’ solitary confinement in the case of a female, and
-six months’ in the case of a male, and especially of a girl or
-youth, is surely a crime against civilization and humanity. Such a
-punishment is inexpressible torture to both mind and body. I speak
-from experience. The torture of continually enforced silence is known
-to produce insanity or nervous breakdown more than any other feature
-connected with prison discipline. Since the passing of the Act of 1898,
-mitigating this form of punishment, much good has been accomplished, as
-is proved by the diminution of insanity in prison life, the decreasing
-scale of prison punishment, and the lessening of the death-rate.
-By still further reducing this barbarous practise, or, better, by
-abolishing it entirely, corresponding happy results may confidently
-be expected. The more the prisoners are placed under conditions and
-amid surroundings calculated to develop a better life, the greater is
-the hope that the system will prove curative; but so long as prisoners
-are subjected to conditions which have a hardening effect at the very
-beginning of their prison life, there is little chance of ultimate
-reformation.
-
-
-NEED OF SEPARATE CONFINEMENT FOR THE WEAK-MINDED
-
-There are many women who hover about the borderland of insanity for
-months, possibly for years. They are recognized as weak-minded, and
-consequently they make capital out of their condition, and by the
-working of their distorted minds, and petty tempers, and unreasonable
-jealousy, add immeasurably not only to the ghastliness of the “house
-of sorrow,” but are a sad clog on the efforts to self-betterment of
-their level-minded sisters in misery. Of these many try hard to make
-the best of what has to be gone through. Therefore, is it necessary,
-is it wise, is it right that such a state of things should be allowed?
-The weak-minded should be kept in a separate place, with their own
-officers to attend them. Neither the weak-minded, the epileptic, nor
-the consumptives were isolated. There is great need of reform wherever
-this is the case. Prisoners whose behavior is different from the normal
-should be separated from the other prisoners, and made to serve out
-their sentences under specially adapted conditions.
-
-I read in the newspapers that insanity is on the increase; this fact is
-clearly reflected within the prison walls. It is stated that the insane
-form about three per thousand of the general population. In local
-English prisons insanity, it is said, even after deducting those who
-come in insane, is seven times more prevalent than among the general
-population.
-
-
-READING AN INSUFFICIENT RELAXATION
-
-The nervous crises do not now supervene so frequently as formerly
-in the case of prisoners of a brooding disposition, but the fact
-remains that, in spite of the slight amelioration, mental light is
-still excluded--that communion on which rests all human well-being.
-The vacuity of the solitary system, to some at least, is partially
-lighted by books. But what of those who can not read, or who have
-not sufficient concentration of mind to profit by reading as a
-relaxation? There are many such, in spite of the high standard of
-free education that prevails at the present day. The shock of the
-trial, and the uprooting of a woman’s domestic ties, coupled with
-the additional mental strain of having to start her prison career in
-solitary confinement, is surely neither humane, nor merciful, nor
-wise. These months of solitary confinement leave an ineffaceable mark.
-It is during the first lonely months that the seeds of bitterness
-and hardness of heart are sown, and it requires more than a passive
-resistance--nay, nothing short of an unfaltering faith and trust in an
-overruling Providence--to bring a prisoner safely through the ordeal.
-Let the sympathetic reader try to realize what it means never to feel
-the touch of anything soft or warm, never to see anything that is
-attractive--nothing but stone above, around, and beneath. The deadly
-chill creeps into one’s bones; the bitter days of winter and the still
-bitterer nights were torture, for Woking Prison was not heated. My
-hands and feet were covered with chilblains.
-
-
-MY SUFFERINGS FROM COLD AND INSOMNIA
-
-Oh, the horrors of insomnia! If one could only forget one’s sufferings
-in sleep! During all the fifteen years of my imprisonment, insomnia was
-(and, alas! is still) my constant companion. Little wonder! I might
-fall asleep, when suddenly the whole prison is awakened by shriek
-upon shriek, rending the stillness of the night. I am now, perforce,
-fully awake. Into my ears go tearing all the shrill execrations and
-blasphemies, all the hideous uproars of an inferno, compounded of
-bangs, shrieks, and general demoniac ragings. The wild smashing of
-glass startles the halls. I lie in my darkened cell with palpitating
-heart. Like a savage beast, the woman of turmoil has torn her clothing
-and bedding into shreds, and now she is destroying all she can lay
-hands on. The ward officers are rushing about in slippered feet, the
-bell rings summoning the warders, who are always needed when such
-outbursts occur, and the woman, probably in a strait-jacket, is borne
-to the penal cells. Then stillness returns to the ghastly place, and
-with quivering nerves I may sleep--if I can.
-
-
-MEDICAL ATTENDANCE
-
-But what if one is ill in the night? The lonely prisoner in her cell
-may summon aid by ringing the bell. The moment it is set in motion it
-causes a black iron slab to project from the outer wall of her cell
-in the gallery. On the slab is the prisoner’s number, and the ward
-officer, hearing the bell, at once looks for the cell from which the
-call has been sent. Presently she finds it, then fetches the principal
-matron, and together they enter the hard, unhomelike place. If the
-prisoner is ill they call the doctor of the prison, and medicines and
-aid will be given. But sympathy is no part of their official duty, and
-be the warder never so tender in her own domestic circle, tenderness
-must not be shown toward a prisoner. The patient may be removed from
-her cell to the infirmary, where they will care for her medically,
-perhaps as well as they would in a hospital; she may even receive a
-few flowers from an infirmary warder whose heart comes out from its
-official shell; but through it all, sick though she be, she is still a
-prisoner under lock and key, a woman under surveillance, a woman denied
-communion with her kind.
-
-
-ADDED SUFFERINGS OF THE DELICATELY NURTURED
-
-What words can adequately describe the long years, blank and weary
-enough for all prisoners, but which are indescribably so to one who
-has been delicately nurtured! I had enjoyed the refinements of social
-life; I had pitied, and tried, as far as lay in my power, to help the
-poor and afflicted, but I had never known anything of the barbarism,
-the sordid vices of low life. And I was condemned to drag out existence
-amid such surroundings, because twelve ignorant men had taken upon
-themselves to decide a question which neither the incompetent judge nor
-the medical witnesses could themselves determine.
-
-So far as I can learn, there is no other instance of a woman
-undoubtedly innocent and of gentle birth, confined for a term of nearly
-fifteen years in an English convict prison. In the nature of things a
-delicate woman feels more acutely than a robust prisoner the rigors of
-prolonged captivity.
-
-Neither confidence nor respect can be secured when punishment is
-excessive, for it then becomes an act of persecution, suitable only
-for ages of darkness. The supineness of Parliament in not establishing
-a court of criminal appeal fastens a dark blot upon the judicature of
-England, and is inconsistent with the innate love of justice and fair
-play of its people.
-
-
-HOW CRIMINALS AND IMBECILES ARE MADE
-
-The law in prison is the same for the rich as the poor, the “Star
-Class” as for the ignorant, brutalized criminal. My register was “L.
-P. 29.” These letters and numbers were worked in white cotton upon a
-piece of black cloth. Your sentence is indicated thus: “L” stands for
-penal servitude for life; “P” for the year of conviction, which in my
-case was the sixteenth year since the previous lettering. This is done
-every twenty-five years. The “29” meant that I was the twenty-ninth
-convict of my year, 1889. In addition to this register I wore a red
-cloth star placed above it. The “Star Class,” of which I was a member,
-consisted of women who have been convicted of one crime only, committed
-in a moment of weakness or despair, or under pressure which they were
-not strong enough to resist at the time, such as infanticide, forgery,
-incendiarism; and who, having been educated and respectably brought
-up, betray otherwise no criminal instincts or inclinations; and who,
-when in the world, would be distinct in character from the habitual
-criminal, not only from a social point of view, but in their virtues,
-faults, and crimes.
-
-There should be separate rules and privileges to meet the case
-of a prisoner guilty of moral lapses only, as distinguished from
-the habitual breaker of the laws. At present the former gets the
-same treatment and discipline as the habitual criminal of several
-convictions, and can not claim a single privilege that the old offender
-has not a right to ask--for example, members of both classes are
-limited to the same number of letters and visits. The “Star Class” is
-supposed to be kept separate from ordinary prisoners. It was so at
-Woking Prison. But at Aylesbury Prison, to which I was transferred
-later, they were sandwiched between two wards of habitual criminals,
-with whom they came continually in contact, not only in passing to
-and from the workshops, fetching meals, and going to exercise, but
-continuously. That contamination should ensue is hardly surprising.
-It requires a will of iron, and nearly the spirit of a saint, not
-to be corrupted by the sights and sounds of a prison, even when no
-word is spoken. It is a serious accusation against any system to say
-“that it produces the thing it is designed to prevent,” but such, I
-am convinced, is the fact as regards the manufacture of criminals and
-imbeciles by the present system of penalism almost the world over.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER FIVE
-
-The Period of Hard Labor
-
-
-ROUTINE
-
-Having passed solitary confinement and probation, I entered upon
-the third stage, hard labor, when I was permitted to leave my cell
-to assist in carrying meals from the kitchen, and to sit at my door
-and converse with the prisoners in the adjoining cells for two hours
-daily--but always in the presence of an officer who controls and limits
-the conversation. My daily routine was now also somewhat different from
-that of solitary confinement and probation.
-
-At six o’clock the bell rings to rise. Half an hour later a second bell
-signifies to the officers that it is time to come on duty. Each warder
-in charge of certain wards--there are three wards to each hall--then
-goes to the chief matron’s office, where she receives a key wherewith
-to unlock the prisoners’ cells. All keys are given up by the female
-warder before going off duty, and locked for the night in an iron safe
-under the charge of a male warder. When again in possession of her key
-she repairs to her ward, and at the order, “Unlock,” she lets out the
-prisoners to empty their slops. This done, they are once more locked
-in, with the exception of three women who go down to the kitchen to
-fetch the cans of tea and loaves of bread which make up the prisoners’
-breakfast. At Woking the breakfast was of cocoa and coarse meal bread,
-while later, at Aylesbury, it consisted of tea and white bread. I am
-constrained to remark here that more consideration should be shown by
-the medical officer toward women who complain of being physically unfit
-to do heavy lifting and carrying. The can is carried by two women up
-two or three flights of stairs, according to the location of their
-ward, and the bread by one woman only. Each can contains fourteen
-quarts of tea, and the bread-basket holds thirty pounds or more of
-bread. To a woman with strong muscles it may cause no distress, but in
-the case of myself and others equally frail, the physical strain was
-far beyond our strength, and left us utterly exhausted after the task.
-
-The breakfast was served at seven o’clock, when the officers returned
-to the mess-room to take theirs. At 7:30 a bell rang again, and the
-officers returned to their respective wards. At ten minutes to eight
-the order was given, “Unlock.” Once more the doors were opened. Then
-followed the order, “Chapel,” and each woman stood at her door with
-Bible, prayer-book, and hymn-book in hand. At the words “Pass on,” they
-file one behind the other into the chapel, where a warder from each
-ward sits with her back to the altar that she may be able the better
-to watch those under her charge and see that they do not speak. After
-a service of twenty minutes the prisoners file back to their cells,
-place their books on the lower shelf, and with a drab cape and a white
-straw hat stand in readiness for the next order, “To your doors.” This
-given, they descend into the hall and pass out to their respective
-places of work.
-
-
-TALK WITH THE CHAPLAIN
-
-Many of these women have their tender, spiritual moments. At such times
-they will beg for a favorite hymn to be sung at the chapel service
-on Sunday, and their requests are generally granted by the chaplain.
-He is the only friend of the prisoner, and his work is arduous and
-often thankless. He is the only one within the walls to whom she may
-turn for sympathy and advice. It may not be every woman who gladly
-avails herself of the enforced privilege of attending daily chapel.
-“Religion,” as a term, is unpalatable to many. But there are very few
-who are not better and happier for the few moments’ unofficial talk
-with her chaplain, be she Protestant or Roman Catholic.
-
-It is to be regretted that his authority is so limited, and his
-opportunities for brightening the lives of those who walk in dark
-places so few. Red tape and standing orders confront him at every
-turn, so that even the religious training is drawn and sucked beneath
-the mighty wheel of the Penal Code, and there is no time for personal
-suasion to play more than a minor part in a convict’s life.
-
-
-MY WORK IN THE KITCHEN
-
-The work for first offenders, who are called the “Star Class,” consists
-of labor in the kitchen, the mess, and the officers’ quarters. Six
-months after I entered upon the third stage I was put to work in the
-kitchen. My duties were as follows: To wash ten cans, each holding
-four quarts; to scrub one table, twenty feet in length; two dressers,
-twelve feet in length; to wash five hundred dinner-tins; to clean
-knives; to wash a sack of potatoes; to assist in serving the dinners,
-and to scrub a piece of floor twenty by ten feet. Besides myself there
-were eight other women on hard labor in the kitchen. Our day commenced
-at 6 A.M., and continued until 5:30 P.M. A half hour at breakfast time,
-twenty minutes at chapel, one hour and a half after the midday meal,
-and half an hour after tea summed up our leisure. The work was hard and
-rough. The combined heat of the coppers, the stove, and the steamers
-was overpowering, especially on hot summer days; but I struggled on,
-doing this work preferably to some other, because the kitchen was the
-only place where the monotony of prison life was broken. It was the
-“show place,” and all visitors looked in to see the food.
-
-
-THE MACHINE-MADE MENU
-
-What dining in prison means may be judged by a perusal of the schedule
-as given in the Prison Commission Report:
-
-
- DIET FOR FEMALE CONVICTS
-
-
- Breakfast
-
- Three-quarters of a pint of cocoa, containing ½ ounce of cocoa, 2
- ounces milk, ½ ounce of molasses. Bread.
-
-
- Dinner
-
- Sunday. 4 ounces tinned pressed beef. Bread.
-
- } 3 ounces (cooked), with its
- } own liquor, flavored with ½
- Monday. Mutton } ounce onions, and thickened
- Tuesday. Beef } with bread and potatoes left
- Wednesday. Mutton } on previous days, 1/8 ounce
- Friday. Beef } of flour, and for every 100
- } convicts, ¾ ounce of pepper.
- } ¾ pound potatoes. Bread.
-
- Saturday. 1 pint soup, containing 6 ounces of shins of beef
- (uncooked), 1 ounce pearl barley, 3 ounces of fresh vegetables,
- including onions, and for every 100 convicts, ¾ ounce pepper. ¾
- pound potatoes. Bread.
-
- Thursday. ¾ pound pudding, containing 1 ounce 2 drachms water. ¾ pound
- potatoes. Bread.
-
-
- Supper
-
- 1 pint gruel, containing 2 ounces oatmeal, ¾ ounce molasses, 2 ounces
- milk. Bread.
-
- Bread per convict per week, 118 ounces.
-
- Bread per convict each week-day, 16 ounces.
-
- Bread per convict each Sunday, 22 ounces.
-
- Salt per convict per day, ½ ounce.[2]
-
-
-VISITORS TO THE KITCHEN
-
-During the four years I worked in the kitchen I saw many people. The
-Duke of Connaught, Sir Evelyn Wood and his staff, Lord Alverston, Sir
-Edward du Cane, the late Lord Rothschild, and Sir Evelyn Ruggles-Brise,
-besides judges, magistrates, authors, philanthropists and others of an
-inquiring turn of mind, who had obtained the necessary permit to make
-the tour of the prison under the escort of the governor or one or two
-of his satellites. These ladies and gentlemen expressed the most varied
-and sometimes startling opinions. I recollect on one occasion, when
-some visitors happened to be inspecting the kitchen during the dishing
-up of the hospital patients’ dinner, one old gentleman of the party was
-quite scandalized at the sight of a juicy mutton-chop and a tempting
-milk pudding. He expostulated in such a way that the governor hastened
-to explain that it was not the ordinary prison diet, but was intended
-for a very sick woman. Even then this old gentleman was not satisfied,
-and stalked out, audibly grumbling about people living on the fat of
-the land and getting a better dinner than he did. I firmly believe that
-he left the prison under the impression that its inmates lived like
-pampered gourmets, and that he no longer marveled there were so many
-criminals when they were fed on such luxuries.
-
-
-THE “HOMELIKE” CELL
-
-On another occasion a benevolent-looking old lady, having given
-everything and everybody as minute an inspection as was possible,
-expressed herself as being charmed, remarking:
-
-“Everything is so nice and homelike!”
-
-I have often wondered what that good lady’s home was like.
-
-A little philosophy is useful, a saving grace, even in prison; but
-people have such different ways of expressing sympathy. A visitor, who
-I have no doubt intended to be sympathetic, noticing the letter “L” on
-my arm, inquired:
-
-“How long a time have you to do?”
-
-“I have just completed ten years,” was my reply.
-
-“Oh, well,” cheerfully responded the sympathetic one, “you have done
-half your time, haven’t you? The remaining ten years will soon slip
-by”; and the visitor passed on, blissfully ignorant of the sword she
-had unwittingly thrust into my aching heart. Even if a prisoner has
-little or no hope of a mitigation, it is not pleasant to have an old
-wound ruthlessly handled, and ten years’ imprisonment as lightly spoken
-of as ten days might be.
-
-
-THE OPIATE OF ACQUIESCENCE
-
-I preferred the kitchen work, although often beyond my strength, to any
-other that fell to a prisoner’s lot, because of the glimpses into the
-outside world it occasionally afforded. But I never permitted myself
-to dwell upon the fact that at one time I had been the social equal
-of at least the majority of those with whom I thus came into passing
-contact, since to do so would have made my position by contrast so
-unbearable that it would have unfitted me to do the work in a spirit
-of submission, not to speak of the mental suffering which awakened
-memories would have occasioned. I soon found that both my spiritual and
-my mental salvation, under the repressive rules in force, depended upon
-unresisting acquiescence--the keeping of my sensibilities dulled as
-near as possible to the level of the mere animal state which the Penal
-Code, whether intentionally or otherwise, inevitably brings about.
-
-I have been frequently asked by friends, since my release, how I could
-possibly have endured the shut-in life under such soul-depressing
-influences. I have given here and there in my narrative indications
-of my feelings under different circumstances. Here I may state in
-general that I early found that thoughts of without and thoughts of
-within--those that haunted me of the world and those that were ever
-present in my surroundings--would not march together. I had to keep
-step with either the one or the other. The conflict between the two
-soon became unbearable, and I was compelled to make choice: whether
-I would live in the past and as much as possible exclude the prison,
-and take the punishment which would inevitably follow--as it had in
-so many cases--in an unbalanced mind; or would shut the past out
-altogether and coerce my thoughts within the limitations of the prison
-regulations. My safety lay, as I found, in compressing my thoughts to
-the smallest compass of mental existence, and no sooner did worldly
-visions or memories intrude themselves, as they necessarily would, than
-I immediately and resolutely shut them out as one draws the blind to
-exclude the light. While I thus suppressed all emotions belonging to
-a natural life, I nevertheless found, whenever I came accidentally in
-contact with visitors from the outside world, that my inner nature was
-attuned like the strings of a harp to the least vibration of others’
-emotions. The slightest unconscious inflection of the voice, whether
-sympathetic or otherwise, would call forth either a grateful response
-or an instant withdrawal into the armor of reserve which I had to adopt
-for my self-protection. But this exclusion of the world created a dark
-background which served only to intensify the light that shone upon me
-from realms unseen of mortal eyes. Lonely I was, yet I was never alone.
-But, however satisfying the spiritual communion, the human heart is so
-constituted that it needs must yearn for love and sympathy from its own
-kind, for recognition of all that is best in us, by something that is
-like unto it, in its experiences, feelings, emotions, and aspirations.
-
-
-VISITS OF PRISONERS’ FRIENDS
-
-A prisoner is allowed to receive a visit from her friends at intervals
-of six, four, and two months, according to her stage of service.
-There are four stages, each of nine months’ duration: first, solitary
-confinement; second, probation; while the third and fourth stages are
-not specially designated. During the first two stages the prisoner is
-clothed in brown, at the third stage in green, and the fourth in navy
-blue. Every article worn by the prisoner or in use by her is stamped
-with a “broad arrow,” the convict’s crest.
-
-A visit may be forfeited by bad conduct or delayed through a loss
-of marks. When a prisoner is entitled to receive a visitor, she
-applies to the governor for permission to have the permit sent to the
-person she names; but if the police report concerning the designated
-visitor is unfavorable the request is not granted. When a prisoner’s
-friends--three being the maximum--arrive at the prison gates they ring
-a bell. The gatekeeper views them through a grille and inquires their
-business. They show their permit; whereupon he notifies the chief
-matron, who in turn notifies the officer in charge of the prisoner.
-
-The rule regarding visits precluded any discussion of prison affairs,
-or anything regarding treatment, or aught that passes within the
-prison walls. Had I permitted myself to break this rule the visit
-would have been stopped at once by the matron in charge. Consequently,
-all the statements on such matters reported from time to time in the
-press during my imprisonment, and quoted as received from my mother or
-friends, are shown to be pure fabrications.
-
-
-MY MOTHER’S VISITS
-
-A visit! What joy or what sorrow those words express in the outside
-world! But in prison--the pain of it is so great that it can hardly be
-borne.
-
-Whenever my mother’s visit was announced, accompanied by a matron I
-passed into a small, oblong room. There a grilled screen confronted me;
-a yard or two beyond was a second barrier identical in structure, and
-behind it I could see the form of my mother, and sitting in the space
-between the grilles, thus additionally separating us, was a prison
-matron. No kiss; not even a clasp of the hand; no privacy sacred to
-mother and daughter; not a whisper could pass between us. Was not this
-the very depth of humiliation?
-
-My mother crossed every two months from France to visit me. Neither
-heat nor cold deterred her from taking this fatiguing journey. Thus
-again and again she traveled a hundred miles for love of me, to cheer,
-comfort, and console; a hundred miles for thirty minutes!
-
-At these visits she would tell me as best she could of the noble,
-unwearied efforts of my countrymen and countrywomen in my cause; of
-the sympathy and support of my own Government; of the earnest efforts
-of the different American ambassadors in my behalf. And though their
-efforts proved all in vain, the knowledge of their belief in my
-innocence, and of their sympathy comforted, cheered, and strengthened
-me to tread bravely the thorny path of my daily life.
-
-Almost before we had time to compose ourselves there would come a
-silent sign from the mute matron in the chair--the thirty minutes
-had passed. “Good-by,” we say, with a lingering look, and then turn
-our backs upon each other, she to go one way, I another; one leading
-out into the broad, open day, the other into the stony gloom of the
-prison. Do you wonder that when I went back into my lonely cell the
-day had become darker? I went forth to meet a crown of joy and love,
-only to return with a cross of sorrow; for these visits always created
-passionate longings for freedom, with their vivid recollections of past
-joys that at times were almost unbearable. No one will ever know what
-my mother suffered.
-
-
-A LETTER FROM LORD RUSSELL
-
-As the years passed the repression of the prison system developed a
-kind of mental numbness which rendered my life, in a measure, more
-endurable. It also came as a relief to my own sufferings to take an
-interest in those of my fellow prisoners. Then Lord Russell of Killowen
-wrote me a letter[3] expressing his continued confidence in me, which
-greatly renewed my courage, while the loving messages from my friends
-in America kept alive my faith in human nature.
-
-
-PUNISHED FOR ANOTHER’S FAULT
-
-By the exercise of great self-control and restraint I had maintained a
-perfect good-conduct record at Woking for a period of years, when an
-act of one of my fellow prisoners got me into grievous trouble.
-
-It is the rule to search daily both the cell and the person of all
-prisoners--those at hard labor three times a day--to make sure that
-they have nothing concealed with which they may do themselves bodily
-injury.
-
-To me it was a bitter indignity. I was never allowed to forget that,
-being a prisoner, even my body was not my own. It was horrible to
-be touched by unfriendly hands, yet I was compelled to submit--to
-be undressed and be searched. During the term of my imprisonment I
-was searched about ten thousand times, and on only one occasion was
-anything found contrary to regulations. I had no knowledge of it at
-the time, as the article had been placed surreptitiously in my cell by
-another prisoner to save herself from punishment.
-
-The facts are as follows: I was working in the kitchen, when a prisoner
-upset some boiling water on my foot. I thought it best not to speak of
-it, and did not, therefore, mention it to any one. My foot, however,
-became inflamed and caused me great pain, and the prisoner in question,
-noticing that I limped, inquired what the matter was. I told her that
-the coarse wool of my stocking was irritating the blister on my foot.
-Thereupon she offered to give me some wool of a finer quality with
-which to knit a more comfortable pair. I was not aware at the time that
-this was not permitted, nor that the wool was stolen. When it neared
-her turn to be searched, having a lot of this worsted concealed in
-her bed, she made the excuse of indisposition in order to return to
-her cell and get rid of it. While there she transferred it from her
-cell to mine, its neighbor, the doors of the cells being open during
-working-time.
-
-[Illustration: BARONESS VON ROQUES, The mother of Mrs. Maybrick.]
-
-When the time came to search my cell, the wool was, of course, found,
-and I was at once reported. The warder took me to the penal ward, and
-I was shut in a cell, in which the light came but dimly through a
-perforated sheet of iron. This was at eight A.M. At ten o’clock I was
-brought before the governor for examination and judgment. I stated that
-the wool did not belong to me and that I was ignorant as to how it got
-into my cell. The governor took the officer’s deposition to the effect
-that it was found in my cell, and reasoned that I must, therefore,
-have knowledge of the article. I was taken back to the punishment cell
-and left there for eight hours. When the officer opened the door to
-read to me the governor’s judgment, I was found in a dead faint on the
-floor. With some difficulty I was restored to consciousness and was
-then removed to the hospital. When I had sufficiently recovered from
-the shock, I was allowed to return to my own cell in the hall to do my
-punishment. I was degraded for a month to a lower stage, with a loss of
-twenty-six marks, and had six days added to my original sentence.
-
-Had this offense occurred under the more enlightened system that
-obtains at Aylesbury Prison at the present time, I should have been
-forgiven, as it was a first offense under this particular rule. The
-governor at Woking was a just and humane man, and he was not a little
-troubled to reconcile the fact of my being in possession of this
-worsted, when I had no means of access to the tailor shop or of coming
-in contact with any of the workers there who alone had the handling
-of it. Of course, I could not explain that the worsted had been passed
-into the kitchen by one of the tailoresses, who came every morning to
-fetch hot water for use in the tailor-room, and who was a friend of the
-prisoner who put it in my cell.
-
-I was kept in the hall during the months of my penal punishment, and
-also for twelve months thereafter, since at that time a “report” always
-carried with it a loss of the privilege of working in the kitchen.
-When I had an opportunity, in “association time,” of speaking to the
-prisoner who had got me into this trouble, and reproached her for the
-injury she had done me, she frankly confessed her deed, but excused
-herself by saying that she did not expect I would be punished; that
-she was tempted to do it because at that time her case was under
-consideration at the Home Office, and that she had received the promise
-of an early discharge if she did not have any “reports.” She well knew
-that if this worsted had been found in her cell this promise would
-have been revoked. As she was a “life woman,” and had served a long
-time, I had not the heart to deprive her of this, perhaps her only
-chance of freedom, through a vindication of myself. A week later I had
-the satisfaction of knowing that my silence had been the means of her
-liberation.
-
-
-FORMS OF PUNISHMENT
-
-The punishment of prisoners at Woking consisted of:
-
-1. Loss of marks, termed in prison parlance, “remission on her
-sentence,” but without confinement in the penal ward.
-
-2. Solitary confinement for twenty-four hours in the penal ward, with
-loss of marks.
-
-3. Solitary confinement, with loss of marks, on bread and water from
-one to three days.
-
-4. Solitary confinement, with loss of marks, on bread and water for
-three days, either in a strait-jacket or “hobbles.” Hobbling consists
-in binding the wrists and ankles of a prisoner, then strapping them
-together behind her back. This position causes great suffering, is
-barbarous, and can be enforced only by the doctor’s orders.
-
-5. To the above was sometimes added, in violent cases, shearing and
-blistering of the head, or confinement in the dark cell. The dark
-cell was underground, and consisted of four walls, a ceiling, and a
-floor, with double doors, in which not a ray of light penetrated. No. 5
-punishment was abolished at Aylesbury, but in that prison even to give
-a piece of bread to a fellow prisoner is still a punishable offense.
-
-
-THE TRUE AIM OF PUNISHMENT
-
-Punishment should be carried out in a humane, sympathetic spirit, and
-not in a dehumanizing or tyrannous manner. It should be remedial in
-character, and not degrading and deteriorating. It should be the aim
-and object of the prison system to send a prisoner back into the world
-capable of rehabilitating himself or herself and becoming a useful
-citizen. The punishment in a convict prison, within my knowledge, is
-carried out in an oppressive way, the delinquent is left entirely to
-herself to work out her own salvation, and in nine cases out of ten
-she works out her own destruction instead, and leaves prison hardened,
-rancorous, and demoralized.
-
-
-THE EVIL OF COLLECTIVE PUNISHMENT
-
-There are so many prisoners with whom complaint-making is a mania,
-who on every possible occasion make trivial, exaggerated, and false
-complaints, that it is not altogether strange that officials look
-with a certain skepticism on all fault-finding; hence it frequently
-happens that those with just grievances are discredited because of the
-shortcomings of the habitual grumblers. At the same time, one can not
-disapprove too strongly of collective punishment which involves the
-utter absence of trust in any prisoner, however deserving. A prisoner
-slightly abuses a privilege or is guilty of some small infringement of
-the rules, when down comes the hammer wielded by the inexorable Penal
-Code, and strikes not only the one offending, but, in its expansive
-dealing, all the other prisoners, guilty or innocent of the offense.
-Many a privilege, trivial in itself and absolutely harmless, has been
-condemned because of its abuse by one prisoner.
-
-I cite one instance. Each cell was provided with a nail on which,
-during the day, the prisoner could hang a wet towel, and, during the
-night, her clothes. Those who worked in the laundry came in with wet
-clothing every evening, which, as no change is allowed, must be either
-dried at night or put on wet the next morning. One prisoner pulled her
-nail out and purposely wounded herself. She was weak-minded, and no
-doubt thought to excite pity. The matter was referred to the director,
-Mr. Pennythorne, who gave the order that all the nails throughout
-the building be removed. Hence, because of the shortcomings of one
-weak-minded woman, all opportunity for the working women to dry their
-clothes was taken from them. Others besides myself appealed to the
-director and protested. He replied that we would be obliged to submit
-to the edict the same as the rest, and that no distinction could be
-made in our favor. Of course we could not argue the matter; the penalty
-fell heavier upon the laundry women and the kitchen workers than upon
-myself. It is a glaring instance of the great wrong done by collective
-punishment. However, the prisoners had their revenge, for they never
-referred to him afterward except as “Mr. Pennynails.”
-
-
-THE EVIL OF CONSTANT SUPERVISION
-
-Individual supervision is compulsory, and in many cases it is
-essential, but not in all. Surely there are some prisoners who might,
-with good results, be trusted. The supervision is never relaxed; the
-prisoner is always in sight or hearing of an officer. During the day
-she is never trusted out of sight, and at night the watchful eye of the
-night officer can see her by means of a small glass fitted in the door
-of each cell. She may grow gray during the length of her imprisonment,
-but the rule of supervision is never relaxed. Try and realize what
-it means always to feel that you are watched. After all, these
-prisoners are women, some may be mothers, and it is surely the height
-of wickedness and folly to crush whatever remnant of humanity and
-self-respect even a convict woman may still have left her. These poor
-creatures who wear the brand of prison shame are guarded and controlled
-by women, but men make the rules which regulate every movement of
-their forlorn lives.
-
-
-SOME GOOD POINTS OF CONVICT PRISONS
-
-The rules of prison, rigorous as they are, are not wholly without
-some consideration for the hapless beings who are condemned to suffer
-punishment for their sins within their gloomy walls. On the men’s side
-the system is harsher, the life harder, and the discipline more strict
-and severe; and I can well believe that for a man of refinement and
-culture the punishment falls little short of a foretaste of inferno.
-But gloomy and tragic as the convict establishment is, it is a better
-place than the county prison, and I have heard habitual criminals avow
-that a convict prison is the nearest approach to a comfortable “home”
-in the penal world. I know that a certain type of degenerate women,
-after serving their sentences, have committed grave offenses with the
-sole object of obtaining a conviction which would send them back to
-penal servitude. For such the segregation system would be the most
-effectual remedy.
-
-
-MY SICKNESS
-
-I had never been a robust woman, and the hardships of prison life were
-breaking down my constitution. The cells at Woking were not heated. In
-the halls were two fireplaces and a stove, which were alight day and
-night; but as the solid doors of the cells were all locked, the heat
-could not penetrate them. Thus, while the atmosphere outside the cell
-might be warm, the inside was icy cold. During the hard winter frosts
-the water frequently froze in my cell over night. The bed-clothing was
-insufficient, and I suffered as much from the cold as the poorest and
-most miserable creature on earth. Added to this, I was compelled to go
-out and exercise in all kinds of weather. On rainy days I would come in
-with my shoes and stockings wet through, and as I possessed only one
-pair of shoes and one pair of stockings, I had to keep them on, wet as
-they were. The shoes I had to wear until worn out; the stockings until
-changed on the Saturday of each week, which was the only day a change
-of any kind of underwear could be obtained, no matter in what condition
-it might be. Therefore, the majority of the inmates in the winter time
-seldom had dry feet, if there was much rain or snow, the natural result
-being catarrh, influenza, bronchitis, and rheumatism, from all of which
-I suffered in turn.
-
-
-TAKEN TO THE INFIRMARY
-
-As long as the prisoner is not feverish she is treated in her own cell
-in the ward, her food remaining the ordinary prison dietary; but as
-soon as her temperature rises, as occurred in my case frequently, she
-is admitted as a patient to the infirmary, where she is fed according
-to medical prescription.
-
-The infirmary stands a little detached from the prison grounds. It has
-several wards, containing from six to fifteen beds, and several cells
-for cases that require isolation. The beds are placed on each side of
-the room, and are covered with blue and white counterpanes. At the head
-of each is a shelf, on which stand two cups, a plate, and a diet card.
-In the middle of each room is a long deal table. On the walls are a few
-old Scriptural pictures.
-
-
-THE UTTER DESOLATION OF A SICK PRISONER
-
-When a prisoner is admitted she is first weighed and then allotted a
-bed. Her food and medicine are given her by an officer, who places it
-on a chair at her bedside if she is too ill to sit at the table. The
-doctor makes his rounds in the morning and evening, and if the patient
-is seriously ill he may make a visit in the night also. The matron
-in charge goes through the wards at stated times to see that all is
-going well, but there is no nursing. The prisoner must attend to her
-own wants, and if too weak to do so, she must depend upon some other
-patient less ill than herself to assist her. To be sick in prison is
-a terrible experience. I felt acutely the contrast between former
-illnesses at home and the desolation and the indifference of the
-treatment under conditions afforded by a prison infirmary. To lie all
-day and night, perhaps day after day, and week after week, alone and in
-silence, without the touch of a friendly hand, the sound of a friendly
-voice, or a single expression of sympathy or interest! The misery and
-desolation of it all can not be described. It must be experienced. I
-arrived at Woking ill, and I left Woking ill.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[2] A convict employed in washing, or other exceptional hard work, may
-have daily an extra allowance of 3 ounces bread, and cheese 1 ounce,
-as an intermediate meal between breakfast and dinner, and an extra
-allowance of 1 ounce of meat (uncooked) four times a week. A convict
-on entering the second-class will have the choice of 1 pint of tea
-(made of 1/6 ounce tea, ½ ounce of sugar, 2 ounces milk) and 2 ounces
-additional bread instead of gruel for supper; and a convict on entering
-the first or special class will have, in addition to the above, the
-choice of 4 ounces of baked mutton cooked in its own liquor, not
-flavored or thickened, instead of boiled meat or soup, if she takes tea
-instead of gruel. The food is wholesome, but spoiled by overcooking.
-But oh, how jaded the palate becomes!
-
-[3] Reproduced in the Introduction to Part Two.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER SIX
-
-At Aylesbury Prison
-
-
-REMOVAL FROM WOKING
-
-I had been admitted to the infirmary suffering from a feverish cold.
-I had been in bed a fortnight and was feeling very weak, when, on the
-morning of November 4, 1896, I awoke to find the matron standing at
-my bedside. “Maybrick,” she said, “the governor has given orders that
-you are to be removed to-day to Aylesbury Prison. Get up at once.”
-Without a word of explanation she left. I had become a living rule of
-obedience, and so with trembling hands dressed myself. Presently I
-heard footsteps approaching. A female warder entered with a long, dark
-cloak covered with broad arrows, the insignia of the convict. I was
-told to put on this garment of shame. Then, supported by the warder,
-I crossed the big yard to the chief matron’s office. There other women
-of the “Star Class” were waiting, handcuffed. A male warder stepped
-forward and told me to hold out my hands, whereupon he fastened on a
-pair of handcuffs and chained me to the rest of the gang. This was done
-by means of a chain which ran through an outer ring attached to each
-pair of handcuffs, thus uniting ten women in a literal chain-gang.
-This was to me the last straw of degradation--the parting indignity
-of hateful Woking; but, happily, this was a painful prelude to a more
-merciful régime at Aylesbury.
-
-Some of the women were weeping, some swearing. When all were ready the
-prison-van drove into the yard and we filed out to the clanking of our
-chains. Then the door was shut and we were driven off. A special train
-was waiting at the station, and escorted between male warders we got
-in. It was bitterly cold and raining heavily, but crowds lined the road
-and platforms.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Copyright by S. G. Payne & Son, Aylesbury.
-
-AYLESBURY PRISON, Where Mrs. Maybrick was confined from 1896 to 1904.]
-
-
-NEW INSIGNIA OF SHAME
-
-We were objects of morbid curiosity to the idle and curious people, who
-may or may not have felt sorry for us. But to be stared at was most
-distressing to all, to the first offender in particular. If the public
-but realized how prisoners suffer when their disgrace is thus brought
-to the public notice, they might feel ashamed of their lack of ordinary
-human consideration and pass on. But why should it be necessary at all
-to subject a prisoner to such humiliation and degradation? Male as well
-as female prisoners could be transferred from one prison to another
-without attracting any notice in the street or at the station, if
-they were provided with garments for traveling upon which the hideous
-brand of shame--the “broad arrow”--is not stamped. It is this mark of
-condemnation which attracts the morbid curiosity of the people. Such
-exhibitions and the callous disregard of a prisoner’s feelings can
-only harden and embitter the heart and lower his or her self-respect.
-
-
-ARRIVAL AT AYLESBURY PRISON
-
-After a journey of nearly five hours we arrived at Aylesbury Station.
-The public were apparently aware that the first batch of convicts was
-to be transferred that day, as there were crowds at all the stations at
-which we stopped. When we got out at Aylesbury it was with difficulty
-that a passage was made for us. The prison-vans were in readiness, and
-we were rapidly driven away. I felt weak and faint and cold. A thick
-fog enveloped the town, and I could see only the dim outlines of houses
-appearing and disappearing as we passed along. We stopped before what
-appeared a gigantic structure, and then drove through two large iron
-gates into a small courtyard. There we descended and drew up in line
-to be counted by the officer, while our numbers and names were given
-to the governor, who stood waiting to receive us. The order “Pass on!”
-was called by the matron in charge, whereupon we entered a long, dark,
-gloomy passage, at the end of which was a strong, barred door. This was
-unlocked, and, when we had passed in, relocked.
-
-I have already described what a prison is like. Again we stood in line.
-Then a male warder came forward. He unlocked my handcuffs and unclasped
-the chain which bound me to my fellow convicts. With a clang that
-echoed through the empty halls they fell together to the ground. My
-wrists were bruised and sore from the long pressure of their combined
-weight.
-
-Presently the order “Pass on!” was repeated, and, led by a female
-warder, we went up two flights of the iron stairway to the top ward of
-the hall. Each prisoner was then in turn locked into a cell. Thus ended
-my second journey as a prisoner. The contrast with former journeys in
-my life drew bitter tears from my eyes.
-
-During the remainder of the week daily batches of prisoners continued
-to arrive, and on the sixth day all had been duly transferred from
-Woking Prison, which was then turned into military barracks.
-
-After this short break in our prison life the same daily routine was
-once more taken up. Whether it was due to the change of air or other
-physical causes I can not say, but from the time of my arrival I began
-to droop. I lost strength and suffered terribly from insomnia.
-
-
-A NEW PRISON RÉGIME
-
-Six months after our arrival, there came a change of authorities, and
-with the passing of the years a more enlightened régime was instituted
-by the Home Office. If a prisoner has any complaint to make or
-wishes to seek advice, she asks to have her name put down to see the
-governor. She is then termed a “wisher,” and is “seen” by him in his
-office in the presence of the chief matron. Her request is written down
-by him in her penal record, and if he can not settle the matter out of
-hand it is referred to a “visiting director,” to whom the prisoner is
-permitted to make a statement. If this gentleman finds that his powers
-are insufficient to deal with the question, he in turn passes it on to
-the prison commission, and sometimes it goes even to the Secretary of
-State himself.
-
-The same privilege holds good concerning medical matters. If a prisoner
-is feeling ill she asks the officer in charge of the ward where she
-is located to enter her name on the doctor’s book. At ten o’clock
-the prisoner is sent for, and sees the doctor in the presence of an
-infirmary nurse. He enters her name in a book, also the prescription,
-both of which are copied later in the prisoner’s medical record. If a
-prisoner is dissatisfied with the treatment she is receiving, she can
-make application to see the “medical inspector,” who comes to the
-prison every three months. But if neither the governor, nor the doctor,
-nor the director, nor the inspector gives satisfaction, then there is
-the “Board of Visitors” to inquire into the complaint.
-
-
-THE BOARD OF VISITORS
-
-The idea of the “Board of Visitors” is to act as a guaranty to the
-public that everything is honest and above board, and that there
-can be no possibility of inhuman treatment. If this is the sole
-object in view--namely, that the prisoners shall be seen by these
-“visitors”--then the object is largely attained. They have done much
-to ameliorate the prisoners’ condition. Whereas, at one time the women
-slept in their clothes, they are now provided with nightdresses;
-instead of sitting with their feet always on the stone floor, they are
-now allowed a small mat, as well as a wooden stool; and, as the result
-of many complaints regarding the rapid decay of teeth, toothbrushes
-are allowed, a concession which I much appreciated. For a short time
-felt slippers were granted us, but these have been discontinued on
-the ground of expense. The same beneficent influence also secured
-wide-brimmed hats for the women. Formerly they had nothing to protect
-their eyes, and the reflected glare from the stone walls was the cause
-of much weakness and inflammation.
-
-There were several changes in the diet also. Tea was substituted for
-cocoa at breakfast and supper, white bread in lieu of wholemeal bread,
-and tinned meat replaced the dry bread and cheese previously given on
-Sunday.
-
-The time of solitary confinement was reduced from nine months to four,
-and immediately on its expiration the probationers can now work in
-“association” in either the laundry or the tailor’s shops where the
-officers’ uniforms--of brown cashmere in summer and navy-blue serge
-in winter--are made, besides all the clothing for the prisoners’ own
-use; also in the twine-room, where excellent spinning is done; while
-the prisoner with special aptitude may be recommended to the bead-room,
-which turns out really artistic work.
-
-
-REGULATIONS CONCERNING LETTERS AND VISITS
-
-The prisoners were also allowed to receive three photographs of near
-relatives and to keep them in their cells. Previously these had to be
-returned within twenty-four hours. Best of all, the intervals between
-letters and visits were reduced by a month. The number of letters
-permitted to be sent by a prisoner varies according to the stage she
-is in. In the fourth stage a letter is allowed every two months, and
-a “special letter” occasionally, if the prisoner’s conduct has been
-satisfactory.
-
-The following is a copy of the prison regulations concerning
-communications between prisoners and their friends:
-
- “The following regulations as to communications, by visit or letter,
- between prisoners and their friends, are notified for the information
- of their correspondents:
-
- “The permission to write and receive letters is given to prisoners
- for the purpose of enabling them to keep up a connection with their
- respectable friends, and not that they may be kept informed of public
- events.
-
- “All letters are read by the prison authorities. They must be
- legibly written, and not crossed. Any which are of an objectionable
- tendency, either to or from prisoners, or containing slang or improper
- expressions, will be suppressed.
-
- “Prisoners are permitted to receive and to write a letter at
- intervals, which depends on the rules of the stage they attain by
- industry and good conduct; but matters of special importance to a
- prisoner may be communicated at any time by letter (prepaid) to the
- governor, who will inform the prisoner thereof, if expedient.
-
- “In case of misconduct the privilege of receiving and writing a letter
- may be forfeited for a time.
-
- “Money, books, postage-stamps, food, tobacco, clothes, etc., should
- not be sent to prisoners for their use in prison, as nothing is
- allowed to be received at the prison for that purpose.
-
- “Persons attempting to clandestinely communicate with, or to introduce
- any article to or for prisoners, are liable to fine or imprisonment,
- and any prisoner concerned in such practises is liable to be severely
- punished.
-
- “Prisoners’ friends are sometimes applied to by unauthorized persons
- to send money, etc., to them privately, under pretense that they can
- apply it for the benefit of the prisoners, and under such fraudulent
- pretense such persons endeavor to obtain money for themselves. Any
- letter containing such an application received by the friends of a
- prisoner should be at once forwarded by them to the governor.
-
- “Prisoners are allowed to receive visits from their friends, according
- to rules, at intervals which depend on their stage.
-
- “When visits are due to prisoners notification will be sent to the
- friends whom they desire to visit them.”
-
-While in Woking Prison, under the privilege of these rules, I wrote the
-following letter to the late Miss Mary A. Dodge (“Gail Hamilton”)--she
-who was my most eloquent and steadfast champion in America:
-
- P 29, June 24, 1892.
-
- DEAR MISS DODGE:
-
- I feel that I owe you such a debt of gratitude for the truly noble,
- beautiful, and womanly manner in which you have used that glorious
- gift of God--your genius--in the cause of a helpless and sorely
- afflicted sister, whose claim to your compassion was but that of a
- common humanity and nationality, that I feel I must send you a few
- lines, if only to disabuse your mind of any lingering doubts of my
- gratitude that my silence may have caused to arise. My dear mother
- has, I believe, explained to you the almost insurmountable difficulty
- I find in writing to friends abroad, with only one letter every two
- months at my disposal, and which I do not feel justified in depriving
- her of. I can, therefore, only express through her from time to time
- my heartfelt thanks for all that has been and is still being done
- in my behalf. I utterly despair, however, of finding words that
- shall convey to you even the faintest idea of the fulness of a heart
- completely overwhelmed by the sympathy, kindness, and generosity of my
- friends. My feelings of love, however, and admiration for you and them
- is simply beyond all power of expression.
-
- The world may and does bemoan the gradual extinction in this
- generation of those finer and nobler traits of character which
- our forefathers so beautifully exemplified; lays at the door of a
- higher civilization the terrible increase of selfishness, pride, and
- indifference to all the higher duties of Christianity. But, I ask,
- where can a grander exception be found to such apparent degeneration
- than that displayed by the conduct of those truly noble men and women,
- who, without a thought of self or of the trouble involved, have stood
- forth to plead the cause of their countrywoman? Could man do more
- than he is doing? Could woman do more for her nearest and dearest than
- the ladies of America are doing for me? No! a thousand times, no!
-
- Some day, my health and purse permitting, I shall hope to tell them
- face to face, if mere words can tell, how greatly their faithful,
- unwearying efforts, their undaunted energy, their sympathy and
- kindness and generosity have helped me to rise above the depressing
- influences of the injustice I am suffering under, to endure patiently,
- to bear bravely the hardships of this life, and to feel through all
- that the hope and comfort afforded me by their help is but a beautiful
- example of the way in which God answers the prayers of his people.
-
- I would now fain beg of you, dear friend, to express my deepest and
- most heartfelt gratitude to President Harrison, Mr. Blaine, and the
- other members of the Cabinet. Also to all the distinguished gentlemen
- who so generously attached their signatures to the splendid petition
- sent lately from Washington to the Hon. Henry Matthews, Secretary
- of State, London, and to assure them of my great appreciation of the
- honor and justice they have done me in thus espousing my cause. Oh,
- how wretchedly I have expressed what I really feel and would like to
- say! But you, too, have a woman’s heart, and you can therefore realize
- the feelings I find it so hard to express. It would be a still more
- hopeless task to try to tell you what I think of you--noblest and
- truest of women; that must wait until we meet. Until that glad day,
- believe me,
-
- Yours gratefully and sincerely,
- FLORENCE E. MAYBRICK.
-
- P.S. My next date for receiving letters is 19th July.
-
-TO MISS DODGE,
- Washington, D. C., U. S. A.
-
-
-A VISIT FROM LORD RUSSELL
-
-I was sitting in my cell one day feeling very weak and ill. I was
-recovering from an attack of influenza, and the cold comfort of
-my surroundings increased the physical and mental depression which
-accompanies this complaint. I wondered vaguely why my life was spared,
-why I was permitted to suffer this terrible injustice, when my sad
-thoughts were distracted by the sounds of approaching voices. I arose
-from my seat--which is a compulsory attitude of submission when an
-authority approaches a prisoner--and stood waiting for I knew not
-what. Presently I heard the tones of a voice which I can never forget
-while memory lasts, though that voice is now hushed in death; a voice
-which, through the darkest days of my life, ever spoke words of trust,
-comfort, and encouragement. Surely I must be dreaming, I thought, or my
-mind is growing weak and I am becoming fanciful; for how should this
-voice reach me within these prison walls? I looked up, startled, and
-once more thought my mind was wandering, for there stood the noblest,
-truest friend that woman ever had: the champion of the weak and
-the oppressed; the brave upholder of justice and law in the face of
-prejudice and public hostility--Lord Russell of Killowen, Lord Chief
-Justice of England. He stepped into my cell with a kindly smile on his
-face, and sat down on my stool, while the governor waited outside. He
-talked to me for half an hour, and I can never forget the beauty and
-grandeur of that presence. As he rose to leave he turned toward me,
-and, seeing unshed tears in my eyes, he took my hand in his, and in his
-strong, emphatic way said: “Be brave, be strong; I believe you to be an
-innocent woman. I have done and will continue to do all I can for you.”
-
-It has been denied in England that Lord Russell took any interest in me
-other than he might in any client he was paid to defend; but the letter
-which I have already given, written to me at Woking, as well as various
-statements made by him, and quoted elsewhere, must set that aspersion
-at rest.
-
-[Illustration: MISS MARY A. DODGE (“Gail Hamilton”), An American
-advocate of Mrs. Maybrick’s innocence.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER SEVEN
-
-A Petition for Release
-
-
-DENIED BY THE SECRETARY OF STATE
-
-I had been at Aylesbury about eight months when I petitioned the
-Secretary of State for a reconsideration of my case, with a view to my
-release. To this I received the usual official reply, “Not sufficient
-grounds.”
-
-A prisoner may petition the Secretary of State every three months. In
-my opinion, the privilege of petitioning on a case should be reduced
-from four times a year to once a year, with the provision that if
-anything of importance to a prisoner transpires within that period
-it may be duly submitted to the Secretary of State on recommendation
-of the governor or director; that all complaints regarding food,
-treatment, or medical attention should be referred to the visiting
-director in the first instance, instead of the Secretary of State,
-who under the present system passes it back to the directors for the
-necessary investigation. This would do away with the continual daily
-distress and irritation and disappointment created in the prison
-on receipt of unfavorable replies from the Home Office. A prisoner
-petitions. A private inquiry is held, to which the prisoner is not a
-party, and of which she has no information, nor does she receive any
-during its progress or after its conclusion, save that the result,
-which is nearly always negative, is communicated to her. In this
-inquiry any one who is opposed to the prisoner may seek to influence
-the official mind. I will state a case in point. A friend asked the
-Secretary of State for the United States, the Hon. John Hay, to
-interest himself in my case. Mr. Hay replied that he had been informed
-by the Home Office that I had been “a disobedient and troublesome
-prisoner.”
-
-
-REPORT OF MY MISCONDUCT REFUTED
-
-When I was told this at a visit I had my name entered to see the
-governor. I insisted that the governor should inform me when, and after
-what breach of the rules, such a report had been sent to the Home
-Office. After carefully looking through my penal record he could find
-no entry to that effect, and concluded by saying that I must have been
-misinformed. He said that my conduct was good, and that he had never
-made any report to the contrary. Obviously, therefore, this report from
-the Home Office to Mr. Hay was due to an adverse influence, of which I
-have still no knowledge. Statements are made against a prisoner, of the
-nature of which she is entirely ignorant. Being ignorant, she has no
-way of refuting them. Worse still, they are retained in the Home Office
-to her dying day, and the unfortunate woman knows nothing of them or
-their effect. The only thing certain is that she is further condemned.
-
-
-NEED OF A COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEAL
-
-The Home Office, while exercising a private function of reconsideration
-grounded on the royal prerogative of mercy, emphatically disclaims
-being a court of appeal or a judicial tribunal in any sense of
-the word. Yet the consideration of a convict’s case rests alone
-with the Secretary of State. It is a matter of unwritten law that
-the Home Secretary shall act individually and solely upon his own
-responsibility, and none of his colleagues are to assume or take part
-therein.
-
-There are numerous instances where judges, witnesses, and juries have
-gone wrong. Indeed, it will be found that even in cases which have
-seemed the clearest and least complicated in the trial grievous
-mistakes have been made. But in England the blame rests on the public
-and the bar in that no means are provided to set the wrong right.
-What a difference it would have made in my life if I had been granted
-a second trial! I could have called other witnesses, submitted
-fresh evidence, and refuted false testimony. Is it not the climax
-of injustice that men and women, if sued for money, even for a few
-shillings, can appeal from court to court--even to the House of Lords,
-the English court of last resort; but when character, all that life
-holds dear, and life itself, are in jeopardy, a prisoner’s fate may
-depend upon the incompetent construction of one man, and there is no
-appeal?
-
-A hard-worked Secretary of State, whose time, night and day, is
-crowded with every kind of duty, correspondence, and labor, in the
-House of Commons or in the Home Office, has to consider a vast number
-of petitions, complaints, and miscarriages of justice, or too severe
-sentences, any one of which might require hours and sometimes days to
-investigate. He is assisted by several officers, but, strange to say,
-it is no part of their qualifications (or that of the Home Secretary
-himself), that they should be familiar with the criminal law or the
-prosecution or defense of prisoners. These permanent officials are,
-besides, occupied with hundreds of other matters which come before
-the Home Office, on which they have to guide their chief. Think of
-the untold sufferings of individuals and families, the shame and
-degradation which they would be spared, if England had a court of
-criminal appeal.
-
-
-HISTORIC EXAMPLES OF BRITISH INJUSTICE
-
-The Home Office detects and corrects a larger number of erroneous
-verdicts than the public is aware. This arises from the secret and
-partial methods of remedying miscarriages of justice frequently
-adopted. The first object is to maintain the public belief in the
-infallibility of judges and juries. If an innocent person could slip
-out quietly, without shaking this belief, he might be permitted to
-do so. The Home Secretary is, in fact, a politician, who has little
-time to spare for the consideration of criminal cases, and furthermore
-must see to it that his conduct does not injure his party. Thus he is
-often deterred from interfering with verdicts and sentences by sheer
-timidity. When he affirms a sentence he can throw the greater part
-of the blame on others if he is afterward proved to be wrong; but
-when he reverses either verdict or sentence, he must take the whole
-responsibility upon himself. This is, I believe, the true explanation
-of the secret and partial reversals which are not unusual at the
-Home Office. The Home Secretary, as well as his subordinates, must
-frequently let “dare not wait upon I would.”
-
-If a crime is committed and no one is brought to justice, the police
-are blamed; but if a person is convicted the police are praised,
-without regard as to whether the right person has been convicted.
-Hence there is usually a strong effort to beat up evidence against the
-person suspected, as in my case and that of Adolf Beck (see page 155),
-and to keep back anything in favor of the prisoner that comes to the
-knowledge of the police. When an appeal is made from the verdict to
-the Home Secretary, the first step is to consult the very judge who is
-responsible, in nine cases out of ten, for the erroneous verdict. It
-is easy to see that, where such reference is made, the judge is liable
-to be biased in support of his own rulings. How much more the ends of
-justice would be furthered by having the case retried!
-
-God only knows how many men and women have been innocent of the charges
-brought against them, and for which they have been unjustly punished. I
-will mention a few only of many cases on record.
-
-A man, Hebron by name, was convicted at Manchester, of murder. He
-was sentenced to death, but fortunately this was commuted to penal
-servitude for life. After serving two years the real murderer, a man
-named Peace, was discovered, and Hebron was “graciously pardoned.”
-
-Another cruel case was that of John Kensall, who was convicted of
-murder, but, through action taken by the late Lord Chief Justice
-Russell, was shown to be innocent. The Home Office could not at first
-“see its way to interfere,” and had it not been for Lord Russell’s
-clear head and splendid generalship, by which the authorities at the
-Home Office were outwitted, he would not have been released so soon.
-
-The case of the man Hay, wrongly convicted, was of a serious nature,
-showing that he was the victim of a conspiracy; yet had it not been for
-Sir William Harcourt’s instituting an investigation independent of the
-Home Office, it is very doubtful whether Hay would have been able to
-establish his innocence. But he did so, and a pardon was granted him.
-
-It looks almost as if justice in England were growing of late more than
-ordinarily blind. Thrice, within three years, has the Home Secretary’s
-“pardon” been granted to men found to have been wrongfully convicted.
-
-The average man takes it for granted that these hideous mistakes must,
-of necessity, be few and far between; but the criminologist knows
-better. He, at all events, is well aware that every year a number
-of innocent people are sentenced to suffer either an ignominious
-death upon the scaffold, or the long-drawn-out living death of penal
-servitude.
-
-Many of these judicial miscarriages never come to light at all. Others
-are purposely glossed over by the powers that be. But occasionally one
-occurs of so appalling a nature that it rivets the attention and shocks
-the conscience of the entire civilized world, as in the case of Adolf
-Beck.
-
-
-THE CASE OF ADOLF BECK
-
-Adolf Beck was twice convicted for crimes committed by a man who
-somewhat resembled him. He served his first sentence and had been
-convicted for a second crime on “misrepresented identity” when his
-innocence was providentially established. The case is too lengthy for
-detailed account in these pages, and I shall content myself in giving
-the summing-up of Mr. George R. Sims in the pamphlet reprinted from his
-presentation of the case in the columns of _The Daily Mail_ of London:
-
- “I have told in plain words the story of a foul wrong done to an
- innocent man.
-
- “I have proved beyond all question that Adolf Beck was in 1896, by the
- Common Sergeant, Sir Forrest Fulton, at the Old Bailey, sentenced to
- seven years’ penal servitude for being an ex-convict named John Smith.
-
- “I have proved that he was _not_ found guilty of being John Smith by
- the jury.
-
- “The former conviction for which Mr. Adolf Beck was sentenced and
- punished was not only never submitted to the jury, but they were
- warned by the judge that they were not to take the issue of Beck being
- Smith into consideration in arriving at their verdict. They were to
- dismiss it completely from their minds.
-
- “I have proved that if this issue had been left for the jury to
- consider they must have acquitted Mr. Beck, who showed by an
- indisputable alibi that he could not be Smith, the man convicted in
- 1877.
-
- “I have proved that this terrible mockery of justice, the conviction
- of an innocent man for a series of crimes that it was quite impossible
- he could have committed, was brought about by the action of the
- leading counsel for the Treasury, which action was supported by the
- Common Sergeant, Sir Forrest Fulton.
-
- “I have proved that the evidence of the policeman, Eliss Spurrell,
- which was used at the police-court to assist in getting Beck committed
- for trial, was kept out at the Old Bailey, where it would have insured
- Beck’s acquittal.
-
- “I have proved that at the police-court in 1896 Mr. Gurrin, the
- Treasury expert, reported that all the documents connected with the
- 1896 frauds were in the handwriting of John Smith of 1877.
-
- “I have proved that at the 1896 trial at the Old Bailey Mr. Gurrin
- swore that, to the best of his belief, all the documents were in the
- disguised handwriting of Mr. Beck.
-
- “I have proved that no one in his senses could at the trial have
- accepted the theory that Adolf Beck was John Smith after listening to
- the evidence of Major Lindholm, Gentleman of the Chamber to the King
- of Denmark, Col. Josiah Harris, and the Consul-General for Peru at
- Liverpool.
-
- “The Common Sergeant accepted as true their evidence of a complete
- alibi for Mr. Beck, so far as 1877 and the years Smith was in prison
- were concerned, or he would, it is to be presumed, have taken measures
- to have those gentlemen prosecuted for committing wilful and corrupt
- perjury in order to defeat the ends of justice.
-
- “I have proved that Beck, after his imprisonment, compelled the Home
- Office authorities to acknowledge that he was not Smith, and to admit
- the physical impossibility of his being Smith--Smith was a Jew, and
- he, Beck, was not--and that therefore, by the evidence of the Treasury
- witnesses, he had been wrongfully committed.
-
- “I have proved that Beck was stripped and officially examined for body
- marks before his trial, in order that such marks might be compared
- with those on the record in the possession of the authorities as the
- body marks of John Smith.
-
- “I have proved that Adolf Beck had none of the body marks of John
- Smith, the man in whose handwriting Mr. Gurrin had declared the
- incriminating documents of 1896 to be.
-
- “I have proved that all the petitions setting forth these facts
- and others, which fully established Beck’s innocence, met with no
- consideration.
-
- “I have proved that when the frauds of 1877 and 1896 were repeated
- in 1904, and the incriminating documents were found to be in the
- handwriting of 1877, stroke for stroke, peculiarity for peculiarity,
- almost word for word, the fact that the authorities had admitted
- that Mr. Beck _could not be_ the author of the 1877 frauds or the
- writer of the 1877 documents was utterly ignored, and the responsible
- authorities, with every proof of Mr. Beck’s innocence in their
- possession, allowed him to be arrested, charged, tried, and convicted
- again.
-
- “I have proved that the identification of Mr. Beck by the female
- witnesses as the man who robbed them was a monstrous farce.
-
- “I have proved that, so far from Mr. Beck being the ‘double’ of
- John Smith, he was utterly unlike him, except that each had a gray
- mustache. Beck had neither the noticeable scar at the point of the
- jaw nor the noticeable wart over one eye that are striking marks of
- identity in John Smith--marks which would not escape the most casual
- observer.
-
- “I have proved that Beck’s conviction in 1896 was secured by a device
- which was utterly unworthy of a British court of justice--a device
- so unfair and unjust that an innocent and inoffensive foreigner, a
- Norwegian who had sought the hospitality of our shores, was by its
- employment sent into penal servitude for seven years for the crimes of
- another man.
-
- “I have proved that Mr. Beck was in 1904 convicted of repeating letter
- for letter, word for word, trick for trick, check for check, false
- address for false address, false name for false name, the frauds of
- 1877 and 1896, of which the authorities had absolute proof that he was
- innocent, and of which, though they had never remitted one day of his
- sentence, they had _admitted_ that he was innocent.
-
- “I have been careful to keep to the main issue, and have refrained
- from examining the side issues, some of which reveal most lamentable
- features in connection with our criminal procedure.
-
- “I will prove one thing more, and leave the facts I have established
- to the judgment of the public.
-
- “At the end of the report of the second trial of Adolf Beck, which
- took place at the Old Bailey on June 27, 1904 (Sessions Paper CXL.,
- Part 837), are these words, printed as I give them below:
-
- “‘GUILTY. _He then PLEADED GUILTY to a conviction of obtaining goods
- by false pretenses at this Court on February 26, 1896. Judgment
- respited._’
-
- “Pleaded guilty to a former conviction! Adolf Beck pleaded guilty to
- nothing. How could he plead guilty, being an innocent man! He cried
- aloud when the charge of the first conviction was read aloud to him,
- ‘As God is my witness, I was innocent then as I am innocent now.’
-
- “The epilogue to the tragedy of our English Dreyfus is written in
- those damning words in the Sessions Paper, the official minutes of
- evidence in Central Criminal Court trials.
-
- “Beck’s last hope had perished. Once more a merciless fate had blinded
- the eyes and closed the ears of Justice to his innocence. He was to
- be immured in a convict cell for ten, perhaps for fourteen, years; he
- was to pass the closing years of his life a branded felon amid all the
- horrors of a convict prison. In all human probability he would die
- without ever seeing the light of freedom again, for he could not have
- borne this second torture.
-
- “His voice, crying aloud for freedom, would be heard no more.
- Petitions for a reinvestigation of his case would be hopeless. He had
- been robbed of his last earthly chance of proving his innocence.
-
- “Those words, ‘The prisoner pleaded guilty to a former conviction,’
- would have damned him to the last day of his life.
-
- “My painful task is ended.
-
- “A foreigner, a stranger within our gates, a man of kindly heart and
- gentle ways, has been foully wronged. There is but one reparation we
- can make him. The people of this country owe him a testimonial of
- sympathy that shall endure and remain. On the site of his martyrdom
- there should rise a national monument. Let that monument take the
- form of a Court of Criminal Appeal. That is the one reparation that
- the English people can make to Adolf Beck for the foul wrong he has
- suffered in their midst.”
-
-In a sense the innocent man who is hanged may be regarded as better
-off than he who is called upon to endure lifelong imprisonment. There
-are plenty of examples of these judicial murders. Over a score of
-undoubted cases occurred in the first two decades of the last century,
-and since then there have been twice as many more. A notorious and
-awful case was that of Eliza Fenning, who, at eighteen years of age,
-was sent to the gallows upon the perjured evidence of an accomplice of
-the real murderer. The latter afterward confessed.
-
-Another similar case occurred in 1850, when a man named Ross was
-executed for poisoning his young wife by mixing arsenic with her food.
-A few years later certain facts came to light, proving conclusively
-that the real criminal was a female acquaintance and confidante of the
-dead woman.
-
-Thomas Perryman, again, was found guilty in 1879 of the murder of
-his aged mother on the very flimsiest of evidence. His sentence was
-commuted to penal servitude for life, and in the ordinary course
-of events he should now be free. More than 100,000 people have, at
-different times, petitioned for the release of this convict, and the
-highest judicial authorities have expressed their belief in his entire
-innocence of the crime imputed to him. Yet he has been compelled to
-drink his terrible cup to the bitter dregs.
-
-In 1844 a gentleman named Barker was sentenced to penal servitude
-for life for a forgery of which he was afterward proved to have been
-wholly innocent. He served four years, and was then released and
-readmitted to practise as an attorney. In 1859, eleven years after
-having been “pardoned,” he was, upon the recommendation of a Select
-Committee of the House of Commons, voted a sum of £5,000, “as a
-national acknowledgment of the wrong he had suffered from an erroneous
-prosecution.”
-
-The famous Edlingham case will doubtless be fresh in the minds of
-most people. In February, 1879, the village vicarage was entered
-by burglars, and a determined attempt was made to murder the aged
-incumbent. For this outrage two men, Brannagham and Murphy, were
-sentenced to lifelong imprisonment. After a lapse of nine years the
-crime was confessed to by two well-known criminals named Richardson and
-Edgell, the result being that the innocent convicts were released, with
-an honorarium of £800 apiece.
-
-The eminent King’s Counsel, Sir George Lewis, has openly said that he
-will not allow himself to speak of the way in which the “Edalji” trial
-was conducted, and he further adds: “I have it on undoubted authority
-that every ‘M.P.’ connected with the legal profession believes as I do
-that that man is innocent. And yet a declaration from such a source is
-allowed by the public to pass unnoticed. As I have before stated, ‘it
-is not the business of the public, nor of individual citizens, to prove
-the innocence of any unhappy person whom the process of law selects
-for punishment; but it is the business of every citizen to see that
-the courts incontestably prove the guilt of any person accused of a
-crime before sentence is passed.’ Neither condition was fulfilled in
-the case of the prisoner. I have studied the evidence, and say, from
-knowledge gained by fifteen years’ association with criminals, that
-this unfortunate young man is _innocent_.” Surely after the disclosures
-of the Adolf Beck case this one, on the word of Sir George Lewis, ought
-to receive unbiased consideration from the Home Office.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER EIGHT
-
-Religion in Prison Life
-
-
-DEDICATION OF NEW CHAPEL
-
-On our arrival at Aylesbury Prison there was no chapel. Divine service
-was held in one of the halls, in which the prisoners assembled each
-morning for twenty minutes of service. This arrangement had many
-disadvantages, and one of the ladies on the Board of Visitors came
-nobly to our relief with an offer to provide the prison with a chapel.
-The Home Office “graciously” accepted this generous proposition, and
-twelve months later it was completed and dedicated by the Lord Bishop
-of Reading. (It was burned to the ground since my departure from
-Aylesbury.)
-
-On the day preceding the ceremony I was asked to assist in decorating
-the chapel with flowers kindly sent by Lady Rothschild. It was a
-delicate expression of sympathy for the prisoners, which she repeated
-on all high festival days. She was deeply affected when I told her how
-profoundly the women appreciated her recognition of a common humanity.
-
-On the appointed day all work was suspended to enable the prisoners to
-be present. In the galleries were seated the families of the governor,
-chaplain, and doctor; at the right of the altar the generous donor of
-the chapel, Adeline, Duchess of Bedford, was seated with her friends.
-The organist played a prelude, and then the bishop, accompanied by the
-chaplain and the clergymen of the diocese, entered the chapel. After
-a hymn had been sung, a short service followed, and then the bishop
-stepped forward and, facing the altar, read the “dedication service.”
-It was most impressive. Then followed a prayer and a hymn, and the
-service was over. The prisoners filed back to their respective cells
-and the visitors made the tour of the prison.
-
-I was a patient in the infirmary at the time, but had received
-permission to attend the chapel. Before the Bishop of Reading left the
-prison he visited the sick, and as he passed my cell he stopped and
-spoke to me words of hope and encouragement, adding his blessing.
-
-
-INFLUENCE OF RELIGION UPON PRISONERS
-
-Another occasion on which the Bishop of Reading visited the prison was
-the holding of a confirmation service. Many women of earnest minds in
-prison sought in this manner to prove the sincerity of their repentance
-and their resolution to live godly lives; and, with one exception, all
-those confirmed that day have remained true to their profession.
-
-Penal servitude is a fiery test of one’s religious convictions. One’s
-faith is either strengthened and deepened or else it goes under
-altogether. I have witnessed many a sad spiritual shipwreck within
-those walls.
-
-On a dark, gloomy day in October the rain pattered against the window
-of my cell and the wind howled dismally around that huge “house of
-sorrow.” Now and then the sound of weeping broke upon the stillness,
-and I prayed in my heart for the poor souls in travail whose pains
-had broken through the enforced rule of silence. There is no sound in
-all the world so utterly unnerving as the hopeless sob of the woman
-in physical isolation who may not be spiritually comforted. Separated
-from loved ones, beyond the reach of tender hands and voices, she has
-no one, as in former years, to share her sufferings or minister to her
-pain. Alone, one of a mass, with no one to care but the good God above;
-for “to suffer” thus is the punishment that man has decreed.
-
-The humanizing influences, in my opinion, can be brought to bear
-upon prisoners with beneficial results only when supported by the
-advantages of religious teachings. During the early part of my sentence
-there were Scripture readers, laymen and laywomen, in all convict
-prisons, to assist the chaplain in his arduous duties; but, on the
-ground of expense, these have been dispensed with, thus practically
-removing the only means of administering the moral medicine which is
-essential to the cure of the habitual prisoner’s mental disease.
-
-A large amount of crime is due to physical and mental degeneration.
-Nevertheless, crime is also the result of lovelessness, when it is not
-a disease, and the true curative system should give birth to love in
-human souls. There is not a man or woman living so low but we can do
-something to better him or her, if we give love and sympathy in the
-service and have an all-embracing affection for both God and man.
-
-If the future system is to treat the criminal in a curative or
-reformative way, rather than by punitive methods, the means to
-this end must certainly be increased. Even the worst woman can be
-approached through the emotional side of her nature. A kind word, a
-sympathetic look, a smile, a little commendation now and then, given
-by the officers in charge, would soon gain the respect and confidence
-of the prisoner, and thereby render her the more amenable to rules
-and regulations. A prisoner with whom I worked, and whose inner life
-by near association was revealed to me, had got into a very morbid,
-depressed state of mind. She was under close observation by the
-doctor’s orders. Her penal record was not a good one; her hasty temper
-was continually getting her into trouble, and when she was punished she
-would brood over it.
-
-
-SUICIDE OF A PRISONER
-
-One day she asked for permission to see me; the permission was refused.
-She made the request a second time, and, the fact coming to the
-knowledge of the chaplain, he advised that it be granted, believing,
-from his personal knowledge of my influence in the prison, that it
-would have a beneficial effect. I was allowed to see her, and after a
-few minutes’ conversation she appeared brighter. I told her that the
-people of God have a promise of a Comforter from heaven to come to them
-and abide with them, even in tribulation and in prison. She promised
-me she would try to be more submissive and accept her punishment in
-a better spirit. For several days after she seemed to improve. But
-one afternoon she once more made the request to be allowed to see me.
-As none of the authorities were in the building at the time, and the
-chief matron could not take upon herself the responsibility of granting
-the request, it was refused. I felt rather anxious about it, but was
-helpless. At five o’clock that evening, just before supper was served,
-the woman was found dead in her cell; she had hanged herself to the
-window. She was only twenty-four years of age, and was serving a five
-years’ sentence for shooting her betrayer under great provocation.
-The tragedy was naturally kept quiet; none of the prisoners knew of
-it until the following morning. How the truth got abroad I do not
-know, but when the doors were unlocked after breakfast, instead of
-the women passing out of their cells in the usual orderly way, they
-rushed out, shouting excitedly at the top of their voices: “M---- has
-hanged herself; ... she was driven to it!” In vain the officers tried
-to pacify them or to explain the true state of things; they would not
-listen, and continued to scream: “Don’t talk to us--you are paid to say
-that! If you did not say that it was all right you would be turned out
-of the gates!” And the uproar increased. As I have already stated, the
-“Star Class” was sandwiched between two wards of habitual criminals,
-and we had the benefit of every disturbance. During the excitement one
-of the ringleaders caught sight of me and shouted: “Mrs. Maybrick, is
-it true that M---- was driven to it?” The tumult was increasing and
-was growing beyond the control of the warder, when the chief matron,
-becoming alarmed, sent up word that I might explain to the women.
-Accompanied by an officer, I did so, and in a few minutes the uproar
-calmed down and the women returned quietly to their cells. I have
-reason to believe that I always had the full confidence of my fellow
-prisoners; they were quick to know and appreciate that I had their
-welfare at heart, and that I never countenanced any disobedience or
-breach of the rules. A first offender, under sentence for many years,
-will suffer from the punishment according as she maintains or damages
-her self-respect.
-
-
-TRAGEDIES IN PRISON
-
-Above others there are four tragic prison episodes which, once
-witnessed, can never be forgotten:
-
-1. Breaking bad news to a prisoner--telling her that a dear one in
-the outside world is dying, and that she may not go to him; that she
-must wait in terrible suspense until the last message is sent, no
-communication in the mean time being permitted.
-
-2. Receiving an intimation of the death of a beloved father, mother,
-brother or sister, husband or child, whose visits and letters have been
-the sole comfort and support of that prisoner’s hard lot.
-
-3. The loss of reason by a prisoner who was not strong enough to endure
-the punishment decreed by Act of Parliament.
-
-4. The suicide, who prefers to trust to the mercy of God rather than
-suffer at the hands of man.
-
-Why should a woman be considered less loving, less capable of
-suffering, because she is branded with the name of “convict?” She may
-be informed that her nearest and dearest are dying, but the rules will
-permit no departure to relieve the heart-breaking suspense. In the
-world at large telegrams may be sent and daily bulletins received, but
-not in the convict’s world.
-
-Death is a solemn event under any circumstances, and reverence for the
-dead is inculcated by our religion, but to die in prison is a thing
-that every inmate dreads with inexpressible horror. When a prisoner is
-at the point of death, she is put into a cell alone, or into a ward,
-if there is one vacant. There she lies alone. The nurse and infirmary
-officers come and go; her fellow prisoners gladly minister to her;
-the doctor and chaplain are assiduous in their attentions; but she is
-nevertheless alone, cut off from her kin, tended by the servants of the
-law instead of the servants of love, and it is only at the very last
-that her loved ones may come and say their farewell. Oh! the pathos,
-the anguish of such partings--who shall describe them? And when all
-is over, and the law has no longer any power over the body it has
-tortured, it may be claimed and taken away.
-
-The case of the prisoner who becomes insane is no less harrowing. She
-is kept in the infirmary with the other patients for three months. If
-she does not recover her reason within that period, she is certified
-by three doctors as insane and then removed to the criminal lunatic
-asylum. In the mean time the peace and rest of the other sick persons
-in the infirmary are disturbed by her ravings, and their feelings
-wrought upon by the daily sight of a demented fellow creature.
-
-And the suicide! To see the ghastly and distorted features of a fellow
-prisoner, with whom one has worked and suffered, killed by her own
-hands--such scenes as these haunted me for weeks; and it needed all my
-reliance on God to throw off the depression that inevitably followed.
-
-
-MORAL EFFECT OF HARSH PRISON REGIME
-
-Have you ever tried to realize what kind of life that must be in which
-the sight of a child’s face and the sound of a child’s voice are ever
-absent; in which there are none of the sweet influences of the home;
-the daily intercourse with those we love; the many trifling little
-happenings, so unimportant in themselves, but which go so far to make
-up the sum of human happiness? It commences with the clangor of bells
-and the jingling of keys, and closes with the banging of hundreds
-of doors, while the after silence is broken only by shrieks and
-blasphemies, the trampling of many feet, and the orders of warders.
-
-In the winter the prisoners get up in the dark, and breakfast in the
-dark, to save the expense of gas. The sense of touch becomes very
-acute, as so much has to be done without light. Until I had served
-three years of my sentence I had not been allowed to see my own face.
-Then a looking-glass, three inches long, was placed in my cell. I
-have often wondered how this deprivation could be harmonized with a
-purpose to enforce tidiness or cleanliness in a prisoner. The obvious
-object in depriving prisoners of the only means through which they
-can reasonably be expected to conform to the official standard of
-facial cleanliness is to eradicate woman’s assumed innate sense of
-vanity; but whether or no it succeeds in this, certain it is that
-cleanliness becomes a result of compulsion rather than of a natural
-womanly impulse. Also she must maintain the cleanliness of her prison
-cell on an ounce of soap per week. After I left Aylesbury I heard that
-the steward had received orders from the Home Office to reduce this
-enormous quantity. If true it will leave the unfortunate prisoners with
-three-quarters of an ounce of soap weekly wherewith to maintain that
-cleanliness which is said to be next to godliness. The prisoners are
-allowed a hot bath once a week, but in the interval they may not have a
-drop of hot water, except by the doctor’s orders.
-
-
-ATTACKS OF LEVITY
-
-All human instincts can not be crushed, even by an act of Parliament,
-and sometimes the prisoners indulge in a flight of levity, which
-is, however, promptly stopped by the officer in charge. But even
-wilfulness and levity are to some a relief from the perpetual silence.
-A young girl, fifteen years of age, came in on a conviction of penal
-servitude for life. In a fit of passion she had strangled a child of
-which she had charge. In consideration of her youth and the medical
-evidence adduced at her trial, sentence of death was commuted. She
-was in the “Star Class,” and it aroused my indignation to witness her
-sufferings. A mature woman may submit to the inevitable patiently, as
-an act of faith or as a proof of her philosophy; but a child of that
-age has neither faith nor philosophy sufficient to support her against
-this repressive system of torture. At times, however, the girl had
-attacks of levity which manifested themselves in most amusing ways.
-One day she was put out to work in the officers’ quarters and told to
-black-lead a grate. With a serious face she set to work. Presently the
-officer asked whether she had finished her task, to which she meekly
-replied “Yes,” at the same time lifting her face, which, to the utter
-amazement of the female warder, had been transformed from a white to a
-brightly polished black one.
-
-On another occasion she was told that she would be wanted in the
-infirmary. She was suffering great pain at the time, and had begged the
-doctor to extract a tooth. When the infirmary nurse unlocked her door
-she was found in bed. This is strictly against the rules, unless the
-prisoner has special permission from the doctor to lie down during the
-day. Of course, the officer ordered her to get up at once, to which she
-replied, “I can’t.” “Why not?” asked the officer. “Because I can’t,”
-the girl repeated. Whereupon the officer lifted off the bed covering to
-see what was amiss. To her astonishment she saw that the child had got
-inside the mattress (which I described in the beginning as a long sack
-stuffed with the fiber of the coconut), and had drawn the end of it on
-a string around her neck, so that nothing but her head was visible.
-
-It has been said that no apples are so sweet as those that are
-stolen, and the great pleasure the women in prison derive from their
-surreptitious levity is because it can so rarely be indulged in, and
-the opportunities for its expression must always be stolen.
-
-There is an axiom in prison, “The worse the woman, the better the
-prisoner.” As one goes about the prison, and observes those women who
-are permitted little privileged tasks, such as tidying the garden,
-cleaning the chapel, or any of the light and semi-responsible tasks
-which convicts like, one will notice the privileged are not, as a rule,
-the young or respectably brought up, but old, professional criminals.
-They know the rules of the prison, they spend the greater part of
-their lives there, and they know exactly how to behave so as to earn
-the maximum of marks; their object is to get out in the shortest
-possible time, and to have as light work as possible while they are
-in. The officers like them because they know their work without having
-to be taught. “There is no servant like an old thief,” I have heard it
-said. “They do good work.” This is quite typical of a certain kind of
-prisoner who is the mainstay of the prisons.
-
-The conviction of young girls to penal servitude is shocking, for it
-destroys the chief power of prevention that prisons are supposed to
-possess, and accustoms the young criminal to a reality which has far
-less terror for her than the idea of it had. Prison life is entirely
-demoralizing to any girl under twenty years of age, and it is to
-prevent such demoralizing influence upon young girls that some more
-humane system of punishment should be enacted.
-
-
-SELF-DISCIPLINE
-
-In saying a word on what is, perhaps, best described as “prison
-self-discipline,” I trust the reader will acquit me of any motive
-other than a desire that it may result in some sister in misfortune
-deriving benefit from a similar course. That the state of mind in
-which one enters upon the life of a convict has some influence on
-conduct--whether she does so with a consciousness of innocence or
-otherwise--should, perhaps, go without saying. Nevertheless, innocent
-or guilty, a proper self-respect can not fail to be helpful, be the
-circumstances what they may; and from the moment I crossed Woking’s
-grim threshold until the last day when I passed from the shadow and the
-gloom of Aylesbury into God’s free sunlight, I adhered strictly to a
-determination that I would come out of the ordeal--if ever--precisely
-as I had entered upon it; that no loving eyes of mother or friends
-should detect in my habits, manners, or modes of thought or expression
-the slightest deterioration.
-
-Accordingly I set about from the very start to busy myself--and this
-was no small helpfulness in filling the dreary hours of the seemingly
-endless days of solitary confinement--keeping my cell in order and
-ever making the most of such scant material for adornment as the rules
-permitted. Little enough in this way, it may be imagined, falls to a
-convict’s lot. Indeed, the sad admission is forced that nearly every
-semblance of refinement is maintained at one’s peril, for “motives”
-receive small consideration in the interpretation of prison rules,
-however portentously they may have loomed in the process that placed an
-innocent woman under the shadow of the scaffold, and only by grace of a
-commutation turned her into a “life” convict.
-
-Come what would, I was determined not to lose my hold on the amenities
-of my former social position, and, though I had only a wooden stool and
-table, they were always spotless, my floor was ever brightly polished,
-while my tin pannikins went far to foster the delusion that I was in
-possession of a service of silver.
-
-Confinement in a cell is naturally productive of slothful habits and
-indifference to personal appearance. I felt it would be a humiliation
-to have it assumed that I could or would deteriorate because of my
-environment. I therefore made it a point never to yield to that feeling
-of indifference which is the almost universal outcome of prison life.
-I soon found that this self-imposed regimen acted as a wholesome
-moral tonic, and so, instead of falling under the naturally baneful
-influences of my surroundings, I strove, with ever-renewed spiritual
-strength, to rise above them. At first the difference that marked me
-from so many of my fellow prisoners aroused in them something like
-a feeling of resentment; but when they came to know me this soon
-wore off, and I have reason to believe that my example of unvarying
-neatness and civility did not fail in influencing others to look a bit
-more after their personal appearance and to modify their speech. At
-any rate, it had this effect: Aylesbury Prison is the training-school
-for female warders for all county prisons. Having served a month’s
-probation here, they are recommended, if efficient in enforcing the
-prison “discipline,” for transference to analogous establishments in
-the counties. It happened not infrequently, therefore, that new-comers
-were taken to my cell as the model on which all others should be
-patterned.
-
-I partook of my meals, coarse and unappetizing as the food might be,
-after the manner I had been wont in the dining-room of my own home;
-and, though unseen, I never permitted myself to use my fingers (as
-most prisoners invariably did) where a knife, fork, or spoon would be
-demanded by good manners. Neither did I permit myself, either at table
-(though alone) or elsewhere, to fall into slouchy attitudes, even
-when, because of sickness, it was nearly impossible for me to hold up
-my head.
-
-I speak of this because of the almost universal tendency among
-prisoners to mere animality. “What matters it?” is the general retort.
-Accordingly, the average convict keeps herself no cleaner than the
-discipline strenuously exacts, while all their attitudes express
-hopeless indifference, callous carelessness, to a degree that often
-lowers them to the behavior of the brutes of the field. The repressive
-system can neither reform nor raise the nature or habits of prisoners.
-
-
-NEED OF WOMEN DOCTORS AND INSPECTORS
-
-Women doctors and inspectors should be appointed in all female prisons.
-Otherwise what can be expected of a woman of small mental resources,
-shut in on herself, often unable to read or write with any readiness;
-of bad habits; with a craving for low excitement; whose chief pleasure
-has been in the grosser kind of animal delight? The mind turns morbidly
-inward; the nerves are shattered. Although the dark cell is no longer
-used, mental light is still excluded. Recidivation is more frequent
-with women than with men. The jail taint seems to sink deeper into
-woman’s nature, and at Aylesbury numbers of the more abandoned ones are
-seldom for long out of the male warders’ hands.
-
-
-CHASTENING EFFECT OF IMPRISONMENT ON THE SPIRIT
-
-For a considerable period I was given work in the officers’ mess. Their
-quarters are in a detached building within the prison precincts, and
-are reached by crossing a small grass-plot which separates it from
-the prison. Each officer has a small bedroom, in which she sleeps and
-passes her time when off duty. All meals are served in the mess-room,
-and consist of breakfast at seven o’clock, lunch on turn between nine
-and eleven, dinner at twelve-thirty, tea at five, and supper whenever
-they are off duty. The cooking is excellent and varied. A matron is in
-charge of the commissariat department, and has four prisoners of the
-“Star Class” working under her. I did scullery work, which consisted
-of washing up all the crockery, glass, knives, forks, and spoons used
-at these five meals, besides all the pots and pans required in their
-preparation. As a staff of twenty-five sat down to these frequent meals
-daily, the work was very hard and quite beyond my strength. The “Star
-Class” of workers should not be kept at it more than six months at a
-time. Some of the life women have been in the kitchen and mess-room as
-long as three and four years, and, as neither the culinary arrangements
-nor the ventilation are modern, the consequent physical and mental
-depression arising from these defects, and the monotony of the work, is
-only too apparent.
-
-I was not feeling well at the time, and soon after I had a long
-illness--a nervous breakdown, due partly to insomnia and partly to the
-unrelieved strain and stress of years of hard labor. My recovery was
-very slow. I was in the infirmary about eighteen months, and was glad
-when finally discharged, as the intervals between my letters and visits
-were shorter when I was in discipline quarters and could earn more
-marks. During the long years of my imprisonment I learned many lessons
-I needed, perhaps, to have learned during my earlier life; but, thank
-God, I was no criminal! I was being punished for that of which I was
-innocent. I believe it is God’s task to judge and ours to endure, but I
-could not understand what his plans and his purposes were. I believed
-they were good, although I could not see how eternity itself could make
-up for my sufferings. Perhaps they were intended to work out some good
-to others, by ways I should never know, until I saw with the clear
-eyes of another world. Still, the external conditions of life acted
-on my body and mind, and I scarcely knew at times how to bear them.
-I could not have endured them without God’s sustaining grace. I used
-often to repeat these lines:
-
- “With patience, then, the course of duty run;
- God never does nor suffers to be done
- But that which you would do if you could see
- The end of all events as well as he.”
-
-
-A DEATH-BED INCIDENT
-
-A woman lay dying in a near-by cell. Of the sixty years of her life she
-had spent forty within prison walls. What that life had been I will not
-say, but when she was in the agony of death she called to me: “I don’t
-know anything about your God, but if he has made you tender and loving
-to a bad lot like me, I know he will not be hard on a poor soul who
-never had a chance. Give me a kiss, dear lass, before I go. No one has
-kissed me since my mother died.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER NINE
-
-My Last Years in Prison
-
-
-I AM SET TO WORK IN THE LIBRARY
-
-When I recovered from my nervous breakdown, by medical order I was
-given lighter employment, and went into the library. I was now the only
-prisoner in the building who had suffered under the hardships of the
-old system at Woking Prison, all the rest of those who came with me
-having in the interim returned to the world. In fact, I was the only
-one who had served over ten years.
-
-My task in the library was to assist the schoolmistress and to change
-the library books twice a week. They were carried from cell to cell,
-and this represented the handling of over two hundred and fifty books.
-In addition to this, I had to be “literary nurse,” whose duties were
-to attend to worn-out books, binding up their wounds and prolonging
-their days of usefulness; doing cataloguing and entry work; to print
-the name of each prisoner on a card placed over her cell door; to copy
-hymns, and to make scrap-books for the illiterate prisoners, besides
-other miscellaneous duties.
-
-The library was a very good one and contained not only the latest
-novels, but philosophical works and books for study; also a limited
-number in French and German. To these were added religious works,
-especially poetry, and sermons for Sunday reading. I found a choice
-collection to help me support the Sabbath day, for the suspended
-animation makes a day of misery of the “day of rest.” One could not
-read all day without tiring, and the absence of week-day work usually
-made it a day of heavy, creeping depression. There are two periods of
-exercise, and chapel morning and afternoon. The remainder of the time
-the prisoners are locked in their cells. Reading was my only solace;
-from first to last I read every moment that I could call my own. The
-best index of the quality of the books was that every volume was read
-or examined by the chaplain and his staff before it was admitted to
-the library. If it contained any articles on prison life or matters
-relating to prisoners, these were always carefully cut out.
-
-From my observations I consider that prison schoolmasters and
-schoolmistresses are overburdened with miscellaneous and incompatible
-duties. No one needs to be told that the average prisoner is a slow
-learner, and that even a dull boy or girl is a better pupil than a
-grown man or woman plodding along in the first steps of knowledge, and
-who is taught, not in a class, but in a cell. Yet the schoolmaster
-or schoolmistress has to devote hours daily to teaching, to help in
-letter-writing, in the office work, in the distribution of library
-books, in the library work; and now that their number is likewise
-reduced on the ground of expense, the pressure of their work is out of
-all proportion to the hours within which it can be reasonably performed.
-
-I have always been fond of reading, and during my leisure hours I got
-through a large number of books. This was between noon and half-past
-one, and seven and eight in the evening, when my light had to be put
-out.
-
-
-NEWSPAPERS FORBIDDEN
-
-The rules forbid that any public news be conveyed to the prisoners,
-either at visits or by letters. This seems to be a very short-sighted
-view to take of the matter. To allow newspapers in the prison might, of
-course, lead to cipher communications to prisoners from their friends;
-but no harm can possibly come of allowing information regarding public
-affairs of national interest to be conveyed through the legitimate
-channels of letters and visits. It would give the prisoners fresh food
-for thought, and tend greatly to relieve that vacuity of mind which
-is the outcome of lack of knowledge of external things, and of the
-monotony of their lives; it would also make a pause in their broodings
-over their cases, which is the sole subject of their thoughts and
-conversations when permitted to converse at all.
-
-
-HOW PRISONERS LEARN OF GREAT EVENTS
-
-The lowering of the prison flag told us of the death of Queen Victoria,
-although we had heard several days before that she was sinking. When
-King Edward was dangerously ill it was talked of among the officers,
-and the prisoners, through me, asked that special prayers might be said
-in the chapel.
-
-When Mafeking was relieved and when peace with the Boers was declared,
-flags were hoisted. Jubilee and Coronation days were the only occasions
-I remember when we had any relaxation of prison rules, and then
-there was much disappointment, since in lieu of a mitigation of our
-sentences, as was the case in India, they gave us extra meat and plum
-pudding.
-
-
-STRICT DISCIPLINE OF PRISON OFFICERS
-
-I have served under three governors, each of whom was an intelligent
-and conspicuously humane man. They knew their prisoners and tried to
-understand them, but there is not much a governor can do for them of
-his own initiative. I consider that he who holds this responsible
-position should have more of a free hand, and be allowed to use his
-discretion in all ordinary matters pertaining to the prison discipline
-and welfare of the prisoners.
-
-They were all advanced disciplinarians. The routine reeled itself off
-with mechanical precision. The rules were enforced and carried out to
-the letter. The deadly monotony never varied; all days are alike;
-weeks, months, years slowly accumulate, and, in the mean time, the
-mental rust is eating into the weary brain, and the outspoken cry rises
-up daily--“How long, O Lord! how long?”
-
-The officers are almost as keen as the governor in their efforts to
-keep things up to the mark. It is seldom they allow prisoners under
-their observation or supervision any slight relaxation which nature may
-demand, but the rules forbid. They dislike to punish a woman, and in
-their hearts make many excuses for the black sheep.
-
-
-THEIR HIGH CHARACTER
-
-As a class, with few exceptions, the prison staff is worthy of respect
-and confidence, and might be trusted with any task. The patience,
-civility, and self-control which the officers exhibit under the most
-trying circumstances, as a rule, mark them as men and women possessing
-a high sense of duty, not only as civil servants, but as Christians.
-
-
-NERVOUS STRAIN OF THEIR DUTIES
-
-The hours of work are long, the nervous strain is incessant. I could
-wish that those in high places showed a little more appreciation of
-what these faithful servants do, and were not so sparing of their
-praise and commendation. The small remuneration they receive can not
-make up for the deprivation of the amenities of life which the prison
-service entails. Two writers on prison life have expressed themselves
-in widely different ways regarding the warders and officers. One writer
-compares them to slave-and cattle-drivers; another expresses surprise
-that they are as good as they are. As, I trust, an impartial observer,
-I agree with the latter opinion. Experience has taught me that, in most
-cases, if the prisoner is amiable and willing, the officer on her part
-is ready to meet the prisoner fully half way--at all events, as far as
-circumstances and duty will permit, for the continual daily changes of
-duty, from ward to ward and hall to hall, make it nearly impossible
-for any officer to acquire a true knowledge of the character of those
-under her charge.
-
-It would be interesting if a trained psychologist could watch
-and report upon the insidious effect of the repressive rules and
-regulations of a prison on the more impressionable officers and
-prisoners. When such officers first enter this service they are natural
-women with a natural demeanor and expression of countenance. After a
-time, however, the molding effects of “standing orders” become apparent
-in the sternness of their expression, the harsh tones of their voices,
-and the abruptness of their manner.
-
-
-STANDING ORDERS FOR WARDERS
-
-These “standing orders” may be paraphrased as follows:
-
-“You must not do this or say that, or look sympathetic or friendly, or
-converse with prisoners in any way. You must always suspect them of
-wishing to do something underhand, sly, and contrary to orders. You
-must never let them for a moment out of your sight, or permit them to
-suppose that you have either trust or confidence in them. It is your
-duty to see that the means of punishment devised by the Penal Code
-are faithfully carried out. You are not to trouble yourself about the
-result upon the prisoner--that is the affair of the Government.”
-
-Any familiarity on the part of an officer with a prisoner is
-strictly forbidden by the rules of prison service, and the slightest
-manifestation of the sort would entail serious punishment on the
-officer. Surely this is not as it should be; on the contrary, greater
-discretionary power should be permitted to officers in their relations
-with prisoners, for the influence for good which a kind, well-disposed
-officer could exert upon a prisoner is incalculable. But all this
-possible influence for good is denied expression by the spirit of
-mistrust and suspicion which pervades the entire prison administration.
-This is one of the most regrettable features of the system. No officer
-is trusted by her superior, and no prisoner, however exemplary her
-conduct, may be trusted by any one officially connected with the
-institution.
-
-An officer who commits a breach of any rule laid down for her may be
-fined a sum varying from one to ten shillings, and if the offense is a
-grave one she may be discharged.
-
-
-CRIME A MENTAL DISEASE
-
-When will those connected with prisons awake to the fact that the
-criminal is mentally diseased? Ninety-nine out of a hundred criminals,
-when not such by accident, through poverty, or environment, come
-to their lot through inherited, malformed brains. It ought to be
-the sacred duty of earnest men to deal kindly, intelligently, and
-patiently with them. The prison, which is now a dreadful place of
-punishment and humiliation, ought to be made a home of regeneration and
-reformation, in which intelligent effort is made to raise the prisoner
-to a higher level; and this surely is not done by withdrawing all the
-refining influences.
-
-I hope the time is not far off when men and women will take more of
-a heart interest in prisoners, and when, no matter how low they may
-have sunk, an opportunity to live honestly will be given them on their
-release; when the society against which they have sinned will treat
-them so kindly that for very shame they will seek to do better, and
-repentance shall enter into the most darkened soul. The “eye for an
-eye and tooth for a tooth” doctrine is not a part of the Christian
-dispensation. Our Lord Jesus Christ gave his last supreme lesson, as he
-turned toward the thief at his side on the cross, and there put an end
-to that old law forever.
-
-
-SOMETHING GOOD IN THE WORST CRIMINAL
-
-There is some good to be found in the worst criminal, which, if
-nourished by patience and sympathy, will grow into more good. I speak
-from a large, intimate personal experience, for during my imprisonment
-it was my happy fortune to evoke kindly reciprocations from some of the
-worst and most degraded characters. I will cite an instance.
-
-One day I was crossing the hall when a fight occurred. I can not
-describe it--it was too horrible. The crowd surged toward me, and I was
-being drawn in among the combatants, when one of them, catching sight
-of me, stepped out with a face streaming with blood, and pushed me into
-an open cell, closing the door after me. When I thanked her the next
-day she replied:
-
-“Why, bless your heart, Mrs. Maybrick, did you think I would let them
-hurt a hair of your head?”
-
-I believe I had the sympathy and respect of all my fellow prisoners,
-and when I left Aylesbury, my feelings were those of mingled relief
-and regret. I could not but feel attached to those with whom I had
-lived and suffered and worked for so many weary years. I knew, perhaps,
-more of the life history of these poor women, their inner thoughts and
-feelings, than any one else in the prison. In suffering, in sympathy,
-in pity, we were all akin. In the association hour they would bring me
-their letters from home to read, and show me the photographs of their
-children or other dear ones, while tears would course down their cheeks
-at the memory of happier days.
-
-
-NEED OF FURTHER PRISON REFORM
-
-Many opinions have been written regarding prisons, but with few
-exceptions they are the observations of outsiders, which means, they
-must of necessity be to a certain extent superficial.
-
-I have touched only a few spots of the great diseased system of prison
-management, but what public opinion did to ameliorate past abuses,
-public opinion can still do to improve the treatment of to-day’s
-criminal. A little over a hundred years ago there were thirty-four
-offenses in England punishable by capital punishment. To-day there is
-only one. Charles Dickens did more than any agency toward doing away
-with imprisonment for debt, yet last year there were no less than
-eleven thousand prisoners in confinement for debt in English prisons.
-How many of these have since joined the ranks of the criminals through
-loss of self-respect? What has been the effect upon their wives and
-families? Why is a man imprisoned for debt? Certainly not to enable him
-to pay it. He can earn nothing while in prison, where he is supported
-at the expense of the state; and if he has a wife or family, they
-either become dependent on the rates, or incur debts which he will
-have to pay on his release. Again, he may not improbably lose his
-employment, and have to look out for another when liberated, and his
-imprisonment does not make it more easy, either to procure work or
-to perform it efficiently. The ground of imprisonment is dishonesty.
-But is not actual dishonesty sufficiently met by the criminal law?
-In what sense is the debtor dishonest? Is it meant that he has money
-in his pocket and refuses to pay his debts? Is it not rather that he
-ought to have had money? It is proved perhaps that he is earning so
-much per week, possibly, but how long had he been earning and how long
-was he out of employment before that? Has he had sickness? There have
-been many instances where a man was in the hospital when the committal
-order was made, and was seized and carried off to prison immediately
-on discharge. If non-payment of a debt is not a crime, why is he in
-prison for it? If it is a crime, why has he not the benefit of a trial
-by jury on the ability or inability of paying his debts? And why
-should not the Home Office or other appellate tribunal have the power
-of revising his sentence? If the debtor has goods that can be seized,
-let them be seized; if there is money coming to him, let the creditor
-attach it; if it comes within the scope of the bankruptcy law, let
-him be adjudicated and examined on oath to every shilling that he has
-received or spent. But why, in the name of justice and humanity, treat
-him as a criminal, prevent him from earning his bread, and make him
-an incumbrance on the State, exposing his wife and daughter to ruin,
-degrading him, lowering his self-respect, and subjecting him to the
-taint of the prison atmosphere, without satisfactory evidence of his
-ability to pay at the time of committal? Several prisoners that I came
-in contact with were made criminals because their husbands had left
-their families destitute because imprisoned for debt.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER TEN
-
-My Release
-
-
-I LEARN THE TIME WHEN MY SENTENCE WILL TERMINATE
-
-After I had been incarcerated for a few years I found out that it was
-usual in the case of a life convict who has earned good marks to have
-her sentence brought up for consideration after she has served fifteen
-years. A life sentence usually means twenty years, and three months is
-taken off each year as a reward for good conduct. In February, 1903, I
-was definitely informed that my case would follow the ordinary course.
-I have been accused of obtaining my release by “trickery,” but these
-facts speak for themselves.
-
-The impression has also been given by the press that great leniency
-was shown in my case, and that through the intervention of friends
-the Home Office released me before the expiration of my sentence. No
-exceptional leniency whatever was shown in my case. It depends upon the
-prisoner herself whether she is released at an earlier period or serves
-the full term of her sentence. By an unbroken record of good conduct I
-reduced my life sentence, which is twenty years, to fifteen years; this
-expired on the 25th of July, 1904.
-
-
-THE DAWN OF LIBERTY
-
-As a giant refreshed by sleep, the prison awakens to life, and the
-voices of officers, the clang of doors, the ringing of bells echo
-throughout the halls. What does it portend? Is it the arrival of some
-distinguished visitor from the Home Office? Then I hear the sound of
-approaching footsteps, as they come nearer and nearer and then stop at
-my cell door. The governor ushers in three gentlemen--one tall and
-dark and handsome, but with a stern face; another short, with a white
-beard and blue eyes which looked at me somewhat coldly; of the third I
-have no distinct recollection. The tall gentleman conversed pleasantly
-for several minutes about my work and myself, then passed out on his
-tour of inspection. I did not know at the time who these visitors were,
-but learned later that the gentleman who spoke to me was the Secretary
-of State, Sir Matthew White-Ridley; one of his companions was Sir
-Kenelm Digby, and the other Sir Evelyn Ruggles-Brise, the chairman of
-the Prison Committee, who takes a really humane interest in the welfare
-of the convicts.
-
-One morning, a week later, I was summoned to appear before the
-governor. It is an ordeal to be dreaded by any one who has broken the
-rules, but I knew I had not, and therefore concluded that I was wanted
-in connection with my work. When I entered the office he looked up with
-a kindly smile, which was also reflected in the face of the chief
-matron. My attention was arrested. I stood silently waiting for him to
-speak. After searching among some papers on the table, he picked up
-one and read something to the following effect: “The prisoner, P 29,
-Florence E. Maybrick, is to be informed that the Secretary of State
-has decided to grant her discharge from prison when she has completed
-fifteen years of her sentence, conditional upon her conduct.”
-
-For a moment I failed to grasp the full meaning of these words, but
-when I did--how shall I describe the mingled feelings of joy and
-thankfulness, of relief and hope, with which I was overwhelmed! I
-returned to my cell dazed by the unexpected message for which for so
-many long, weary years I had hoped and prayed.
-
-How anxiously I waited for those last few months to pass!
-
-
-THE RELEASE
-
-It was Christmas Eve of 1903. I had helped to decorate the chapel with
-evergreens, which is the only way in which the greatest festival of
-the church’s year is kept in prison. There is no rejoicing allowed
-prisoners; no festival meal of roast beef and plum pudding, only the
-usual prison diet; and the sad memories of happier days are emphasized
-by our bare cells with their maximum of cleanliness and minimum of
-comfort. But to me it was the last Christmas in that “house of sorrow,”
-and my heart felt the dawning of a brighter day. Only four weeks more
-and I would have passed out of its grim gates forever! How I counted
-those days, and yet how I shrank from going once more into the world
-that had been so cruel, so hostile, so unmerciful, in spite of the fact
-that there was no proof that I was the guilty woman they assumed me to
-be! But kind friends and loving hearts were waiting to greet me, to
-give me refuge and comfort.
-
-On Saturday, the 23d of January, my mother visited me at Aylesbury
-Prison for the last time. How many weary and sad hours we had passed in
-that visiting-room! Our hearts were too full for much conversation, and
-it was with broken voices that we discussed the arrangements made for
-my departure on the following Monday.
-
-The last Sunday I spent in prison I felt like one in a dream. I could
-not realize that to-morrow, the glad to-morrow, would bring with it
-freedom and life. In the evening I was sent for to say “Good-by” to
-the governor. Besides the chief matron and the one who was to be my
-escort to Truro, no one was aware of the day or hour of my departure
-from Aylesbury. Not a word had been said to the other prisoners. I
-should like to have said farewell to them, also to the officers whom
-I had known for fourteen years (for several had come with us from
-Woking Prison); but I thought it best to pass into my new life as
-quietly as possible. At my earnest request the Home Office consented
-to allow my place of destination to be kept a secret. I felt that I
-should derive more benefit from the change of my new environment and
-association with others, if my identity and place of retreat were not
-known to the public.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Copyright by the London Stereoscopic Co.
-
-RIGHT HON. A. AKERS DOUGLAS, M.P., British Home Secretary at time of
-Mrs. Maybrick’s release.]
-
-On Monday, the 25th of January, I was awakened early, and after
-laying aside, for the last time, the garments of shame and disgrace,
-I was clothed once more in those that represent civilization and
-respectability. I descended to the court below, and, accompanied by the
-chief matron and my escort, passed silently through the great gates and
-out of the prison. At half-past six a cab drove quietly up, and the
-matron and I silently stepped in and were driven away to the Aylesbury
-Station. On our arrival in London we proceeded at once to Paddington
-Station. The noise and the crowds of people everywhere bewildered me.
-
-
-IN RETREAT AT TRURO
-
-After an uneventful journey we arrived at Truro at six P.M., and
-drove at once to the Home of the Community of the Epiphany, where I
-stayed during the remainder of my term of six months. I am told that
-some comment has been made on the fact that the Home was a religious
-retreat, and that I ought to have been sent to a secular one instead.
-I went there entirely of my own desire. On our arrival there I bade a
-last farewell to my kind companion--one of the sweetest women it has
-been my privilege to meet. The Mother Superior, who had visited me
-three months previously at Aylesbury Prison, received me tenderly, and
-at once conducted me to my room. How pure and chaste everything looked
-after the cold, bare walls of my prison cell! How the restful quiet
-soothed my jarred and weakened nerves, and, above all, what comforting
-balm the dear Mother Superior and the sweet sisters poured into the
-wounds of my riven soul!
-
-I look back upon the six months spent within those sacred walls as the
-most peaceful and the happiest--in the true sense--of my life. The
-life there is so calm, so holy, and yet so cheerful, that one becomes
-infected, so that the sad thoughts flee away, the drooping hands are
-once more uplifted, and the heart strengthened to perform the work that
-a loving God may have ordained.
-
-I passed several hours of each day working in the sewing-room with the
-sisters. During my leisure time I read much, and when the weather was
-fine delighted in taking long walks within the lovely grounds that
-surround the Home. I did not go out in the country, nor attend the
-services on Sunday at the Cathedral.
-
-I left Truro on the 20th of July a free woman--with a ticket-of-leave,
-it is true, but as I am exempt from police supervision even in
-England, I have no need to consider it in America or elsewhere.
-
-By the courtesy of the American Ambassador, the Hon. Joseph H. Choate,
-I was provided with an escort to accompany me and my companion on our
-journey from Truro to Rouen, France.
-
-The Hon. John Hay, Secretary of State, Washington; the Hon. Joseph H.
-Choate, Mr. Henry White, Chargé d’Affaires, and Mr. Carter, Secretary
-of Embassy, at London, have always been most earnest in my cause. I
-deeply appreciate their untiring efforts in my behalf.
-
-
-I COME TO AMERICA
-
-After staying with my mother for three weeks, on the advice of my
-counselors, Messrs. Hayden & Yarrell, of Washington, District of
-Columbia, I decided to return to America with Mr. Samuel V. Hayden and
-his charming wife. I longed to be once more with my own people, and it
-was only physical weakness and nervous prostration that prevented me
-from doing so immediately upon my release. I met these good friends at
-Antwerp, Belgium, and sailed from there on the Red Star Line steamship
-_Vaderland_ for New York. My name was entered on the passenger list as
-Rose Ingraham, that I might secure more quiet and privacy; but when
-we were a few days out the fact of my identity became known, and with
-few exceptions the greatest courtesy, consideration, and delicacy were
-shown in the demeanor of the passengers toward me. If any of these
-should read these lines I would herewith express to them my grateful
-thanks and appreciation; while toward the captain and officers of the
-_Vaderland_ I feel especially indebted for their unwearied courtesy and
-consideration.
-
-When I first caught sight of the Statue of Liberty, I, perhaps more
-than any one on board, realized the full meaning of what it typifies,
-and I felt my heart stirred to its depths at the memory of what all my
-countrymen and countrywomen had done for me during the dark days of my
-past, to prove that they still carried me in their hearts, though the
-great ocean rolled between, and that I had not been robbed of the high
-privilege of being an American citizen.
-
-We arrived at New York on the 23d of August. It was a “red-letter” day.
-Once more, after many years of suffering and when I had long despaired
-of ever seeing the beloved faces of my friends again, my feet once
-again pressed the sacred soil of my native land.
-
-
-MY LOST YEARS
-
-A time will come when the world will acknowledge that the verdict which
-was passed upon me is absolutely untenable. But what then? Who shall
-give back the years I have spent within prison walls; the friends by
-whom I am forgotten; the children to whom I am dead;[4] the sunshine;
-the winds of heaven; my woman’s life, and all I have lost by this
-terrible injustice? Time may heal the deepest wounds when the balm of
-love and sympathy is poured into them. It is well; for if mental wounds
-proved as fatal as those of the body, the prison death-roll would
-indeed be a long one.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[4] The innocents--my children--one a baby of three years, the other a
-boy of seven, I had left behind in the world. They had been taught to
-believe that their mother was guilty, and, like their father, was to
-them dead. They have grown up to years of understanding under another
-name. I know nothing about them. When the pathos of all this touches
-the reader’s heart he will realize the tragedy of my case.
-
-During the early years of my imprisonment I received my children’s
-photographs once a year; also several friendly letters from Mr.
-Thomas Maybrick, with information about them. But as time passed on,
-these ceased altogether. When I could endure the silence no longer I
-instructed Mr. R. S. Cleaver, of Liverpool--who had been the solicitor
-in my case, and to whose unwavering faith and kindness I owe a debt I
-can never hope to repay--to write to Mr. Michael Maybrick to forward
-fresh photographs of my boy and girl. To this request Mr. Thomas
-Maybrick replied that Mr. Michael Maybrick refused to permit it. When
-the matter was further urged Mr. Michael Maybrick himself wrote to the
-governor to inform me that my son, who had been made acquainted with
-the history of the case, did not wish either his own or his sister’s
-photograph to be sent to me.
-
-
-
-
-PART TWO
-
-ANALYSIS OF THE MAYBRICK CASE
-
-
-
-
-Introduction
-
-
-PETITIONS FOR A REPRIEVE
-
-The jury’s verdict of guilty was rendered on August 7, 1889. The
-evidence at the trial, as well as the learned judge’s “summing up,” was
-reported almost verbatim in the English press. The result was that,
-not only in Liverpool, but in almost every city, town, and village
-of the United Kingdom, men and women of every class and grade of
-society arrived at the conclusion that the verdict was erroneous--as
-not founded upon evidence, but upon the biased and misleading summing
-up of the case by the mentally incompetent judge. Within a few days
-my lawyers, the Messrs. Cleaver, of Liverpool, who had notified the
-press that they would supply forms of petition, were inundated with
-applications. For the first two days they issued one thousand a day,
-and I have been informed that no less than five thousand petitions for
-a reprieve, representing nearly half a million signatures, were sent to
-the Home Secretary within the following ten days. In response to these,
-the Home Office issued to the press the following decision:
-
- “After the fullest consideration, and after taking the best medical
- and legal advice that could be obtained, the Home Secretary advised
- Her Majesty to respite the capital punishment of Florence Elizabeth
- Maybrick and to commute the punishment to penal servitude for life;
- inasmuch as, although the evidence leads to the conclusion that the
- prisoner administered and attempted to administer arsenic to her
- husband with intent to murder him, yet it does not wholly exclude
- a reasonable doubt _whether his death was in fact caused by the
- administration of arsenic_.”
-
-
-ILLOGICAL POSITION OF HOME SECRETARY
-
-Thus it will be seen that the Home Secretary, Mr. Matthews, ignored
-the important statement of the judge at the trial, when, in giving
-emphasis to his remarks, he told the jury that: “It is _essential_ to
-this charge _that the man died of arsenic_. This question must be the
-foundation of a judgment unfavorable to the prisoner, that he died
-of arsenic.” Then Mr. Matthews, on reviewing the evidence given at
-the trial, finding it impossible to justify the verdict, because the
-evidence “does not wholly exclude a reasonable doubt whether his [James
-Maybrick’s] death was in fact caused by the administration of arsenic,”
-which question was to be the foundation of a judgment unfavorable to
-me, instead of giving his prisoner the benefit of the reasonable
-doubt, took it upon himself to apply the spirit of the law and of the
-constitution, by making use of a wrongful conviction for one offense
-charged in order to punish me for a different offense for which I had
-never been tried, but with which he, without any public trial, charged
-me, viz., “administering and attempting to administer arsenic” to my
-husband.
-
-
-NEW EVIDENCE OF INNOCENCE IGNORED
-
-These charges, made by Mr. Matthews in 1889, have never been defined;
-nor has any statement been submitted to me or my legal advisers of
-the evidence relied on to prove them; nor have I been afforded an
-opportunity of being heard by counsel in answer to them, nor of
-pleading anything in reply to them. Had a second trial been granted
-me, I should have seen the evidence upon which the new charges were
-made against me, and in open court I could have confronted the
-witnesses. But Mr. Matthews sentenced me to penal servitude for life
-(without giving me a chance to defend myself against the charges)
-which involved nine months’ solitary confinement in my case--in
-itself a most excessive punishment for the untried and, consequently,
-unproven charges. He sent me to suffer fourteen and one-half years
-on suspicion--a suspicion not warranted by any evidence given at the
-trial. The new evidence, which has been obtained since my conviction,
-is admitted by all fair-minded persons to be of such a nature that it
-would satisfy any intelligent jury that I was not only wrongfully found
-guilty of murder, but was most wrongfully treated by Mr. Matthews.
-It completely exonerates me from the charge of murder as well as
-“administering and attempting to administer arsenic.” Since this
-evidence was published, no one has attempted to justify the conviction
-or the sentence passed upon me.
-
-Had the jury, instead of finding a verdict of “guilty” of murder,
-returned a verdict in the same terms as the finding of Mr. Matthews,
-the judge must have entered it as “not guilty” and discharged me.
-
-
-LORD RUSSELL’S LETTER
-
-Well might the Lord Chief Justice Russell of Killowen write me, as he
-did on the 27th of June, 1895, telling me that he had never relaxed his
-efforts to urge my release, and saying:
-
- ROYAL COURT, 27th June, 1895.
-
- MRS. MAYBRICK,
-
- DEAR MADAM: I have been absent on circuit; hence my delay in answering
- your letter.
-
- I beg to assure you that I have never relaxed my efforts where any
- suitable opportunity offered to urge that your release ought to be
- granted. I feel as strongly as I have felt from the first that you
- ought never to have been convicted, and this opinion I have very
- clearly expressed to Mr. Asquith, but I am sorry to say hitherto
- without effect.
-
- Rest assured that I shall renew my representations to the incoming
- Home Secretary, whoever he may be, as soon as the Government is formed
- and the Home Secretary is in a position to deal with such matters.
-
- I am,
- Faithfully,
- RUSSELL OF KILLOWEN.
-
-This also seems to be the opinion of the leading counsel for the
-prosecution, Mr. Addison, Q.C., M.P. (now Judge Addison, of the
-Southwark County Courts), who is reported to have said, after the
-summing up, that “the jury could not, especially in view of the medical
-evidence, find a verdict of guilty.” This statement will be found in
-Sir Charles Russell’s protest to Mr. Matthews.
-
-
-EFFORTS FOR RELEASE
-
-The public are not probably fully aware how much intensity of feeling
-and earnest work has been expended on my case during the fourteen and
-one-half years of my imprisonment. The Home Office knows. Men in high
-positions in both political parties in England have often united in
-demanding a new trial. The almost invariable reply has been that the
-best means to effect my release was to obtain new facts or evidence,
-and submit these to the Home Secretary for his consideration. Those
-well-meaning advisers seemed to forget that the half million of
-petitioners for my reprieve or free pardon in England--not to count
-those in America--were not moved thereto by new facts or evidence,
-but by the absence of facts or evidence sufficient to prove that the
-alleged crime had been committed by any one, or that either guilt or
-complicity in that crime, if crime it were, attached to me. Surely it
-is not the business of the public nor of individual citizens to prove
-the innocence of any unhappy person whom process of law selects for
-punishment, while it _is_ the business of every citizen to see that the
-courts incontestably prove the guilt of any person accused of a crime
-before sentence is passed, in the following manner:
-
-1. It must be proved that a crime has been committed.
-
-2. It must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused person
-is the one who committed it.
-
-
-EVEN NEW EVIDENCE SUPERFLUOUS
-
-Neither condition has yet been fulfilled in my case. The evidence on
-which a half million petitioners said and say I was unjustly condemned
-is sufficient in itself. While it is true if a new trial had been
-granted me I could have produced new evidence that overwhelmingly
-demonstrated my innocence, it is also true that more facts or new
-evidence were not requisite to enable justice to be done.
-
-
-THE DOCTORS’ DOUBT
-
-The doctors who gave evidence in favor of death by arsenical poisoning
-all stated that they would not have felt certain on the subject if
-the one-tenth of a grain of arsenic had not been found in the body.
-Therefore, since the presence of that arsenic could be otherwise
-accounted for, I was entitled to an acquittal even on the evidence
-of the Crown medical witnesses. Moreover, the symptom on which two
-or three doctors for the prosecution laid most stress--continuous
-vomiting--was referred by the third to morphia administered by himself.
-All three were examined before any evidence of Mr. Maybrick’s habit
-of arsenic taking was given. Had they believed him to be an arsenic
-eater, they might have arrived at a different conclusion. The doctors
-for the defense, who declared that Mr. Maybrick’s symptoms were not
-those of arsenical poisoning, were men of far more experience as
-regards poisons than the Crown medical witnesses. The quantity of
-arsenic found in the body was, in their opinion, quite consistent with
-administration in medicinal doses, and might have been introduced a
-considerable time before.
-
-The proved administration of poison with intent to kill is punishable
-by penal servitude, but not necessarily for life--sometimes for only
-three years; but the charge must be proved in open court to be a
-felonious attempt by some means actually used to effectuate the intent,
-and it remains with the prosecution to produce the necessary evidence
-that the means used were sufficient for the accomplishment of the
-effect.
-
-The medical evidence proved that the quantity of arsenic--one-tenth
-of a grain--found in Mr. Maybrick’s body was not sufficient to have
-produced death.
-
-
-PUBLIC SURPRISE AT VERDICT
-
-_The Times_ of August 8, 1889, declared that, of the hundreds of
-thousands of persons who followed the case with eager interest and
-attention, not one in three was prepared for the verdict. The large
-majority had believed that, in the presence of such contradictory
-evidence, the jury would give the prisoner the benefit of the doubt and
-bring in a verdict as much like the Scotch “not proven” as is permitted
-by English law.
-
-
-CHARACTER OF JURY
-
-There was strong prejudice against me, due to the numerous false and
-sensational reports circulated by the press during the interval between
-the arrest and the trial. The jury belonged to a class of men who were
-not competent to weigh technical evidence,[5] and no doubt attached
-great weight to the opinions of the local physicians, one of whom was
-somewhat of a celebrity. But the main element in the conviction was
-Justice Stephen, whose mind, undoubtedly owing to incipient insanity
-(he died insane a year later), was incapable of dealing with so
-intricate a case.
-
-
-THE “MAD JUDGE”
-
-The Liverpool _Daily Post_, as I am told, had been hostile rather than
-favorable toward me, but, on the death of Lord Chief Justice Russell,
-that journal, in articles of August 13 and 14, 1900, showed that it
-fully appreciated the unfairness of my trial, for it stated that no
-human being ought to be handed over to be tried by a “mad judge.” The
-following is taken from _The Post_ of August 13, 1900:
-
- “The death of the Lord Chief Justice may have recalled to the minds
- of some Liverpool folk a sad and sordid tragedy enacted among them
- eleven years ago, in which he was a principal performer. To those
- who were there, a vivid recollection still persists of that bright
- July morning when a thronged court, hushed in expectancy, awaited
- the beginning of the Maybrick trial. In fancy one still hears the
- distant fanfare of the trumpets as the judges with quaint pageantry
- passed down the hall, and still with the mind’s eye sees the stately
- crimson-clad figure of the great mad judge as he sat down to try his
- last case. A tragedy, indeed, was played upon the bench no less than
- in the dock.
-
- “Few who looked upon the strong, square head can have suspected that
- the light of reason was burning very low within; yet as the days of
- the trial dragged by--days that must have been as terrible to the
- judge as to the prisoner--men began to nod at him, to wonder, and to
- whisper. Nothing more painful was ever seen in court than the proud
- old man’s desperate struggle to control his failing faculties. But the
- struggle was unavailing. It was clear that the growing volume of facts
- was unassorted, undigested in his mind; that his judgment swayed
- backward and forward in the conflict of testimony; that his memory
- failed to grip the most salient features of the case for many minutes
- together. It was shocking to think that a human life depended upon the
- direction of this wreck of what was once a great judge.”
-
-
-JUSTICE STEPHEN’S BIASED CHARGE
-
-The charge of Mr. Justice Stephen to the jury positively teemed with
-misstatements as to the evidence given during the trial. I quote a
-statement from the same journal in its issue of August 17, 1900:
-
- “I should be very sorry to think that the same number of errors as to
- the matters of fact given in the evidence had ever been made in any
- judge’s charge. It simply swarms with them, and as the jury at the end
- of a long trial is likely to prefer the judge’s résumé to their own
- recollection, I doubt if the verdict in the Maybrick case was founded
- on the evidence at all. And if I am right in thinking that the jurors
- founded their verdict on the judge’s recapitulation of the evidence
- rather than on the evidence itself, I do not see how any counsel could
- have saved the prisoner.”
-
-That the jury “did not hear the whole of the evidence very distinctly”
-is admitted by one of them in the Liverpool _Daily Post_ of August 10,
-1889. Consequently they were likely to be unduly influenced by the
-judge’s charge. There is no evidence that the jury detected the judge’s
-misstatements, as a more intelligent jury certainly would have done.
-Their minds were “taken captive” by the charge of Justice Stephen, and
-they were as “clay in the hands of the potter.”
-
-
-LORD RUSSELL’S MEMORANDUM QUASHED
-
-The Lord Chief Justice sent the Home Secretary a memorandum consisting
-of twenty folios, in which he stated the strong opinion that “Mrs.
-Maybrick ought to be released at once.” The Lord Chief Justice also
-requested that the contents of his memorandum be made public. Yet when
-asked in the House of Commons to lay the document on the table of the
-House in order that it might be accessible to the members, the Home
-Secretary emphatically declined. The London _Daily Mail_, in a leader
-on this incident, said:
-
- “The only conceivable reasons for declining to give publicity to the
- letter, which was actually intended for publication, are apparently
- official red tape and the fear of giving new life to the agitation
- in favor of Mrs. Maybrick’s release. This result will be almost as
- effectually achieved by surrounding the case with further mystery and
- leaving upon the public mind the grave suspicion that justice may not
- have been done.”
-
-
-REPEATED PROTESTS OF LORD RUSSELL
-
-The following extracts are taken from the “Life of Lord Russell of
-Killowen” by R. Barry O’Brien.
-
- “In November, 1895, he [Lord Russell] wrote to Sir Matthew
- White-Ridley (page 260), conveying his strong and emphatic opinion
- that Florence Maybrick ought never to have been convicted; that her
- continued imprisonment is an injustice which ought promptly to be
- ended, and added: ‘I have never wavered in this opinion. After her
- conviction I wrote and had printed a memorandum, which I presume
- is preserved at the Home Office. Lest it should not be, I herewith
- transmit a copy.’
-
- “As is known, what happened was that Mr. Matthews, after consultation
- with the present Lord Chancellor, Lord Salisbury, and Mr. Justice
- Stephen, and after seeing Dr. Stephenson, the principal Crown witness,
- and also the late Dr. Tidy, respited the capital sentence on the
- expressed ground that there was sufficient doubt whether death had
- been caused by arsenical poisoning to justify the respite.
-
- “It will be seen (1) that such a doubt existed as to the commission
- of the offense for which Florence Maybrick was tried as rendered it
- improper, in the opinion of the Home Secretary and his advisers, that
- the capital sentence should be carried out; and (2) that for more
- than six years Florence Maybrick has been suffering imprisonment on
- the assumption of Mr. Matthews that she committed an offense for which
- she was never tried by the constitutional authority and of which she
- has never been adjudged guilty.”
-
-From page 261: “This is in itself a most serious state of things. It
-is manifestly unjust that Florence Maybrick should suffer for a crime
-in regard to which she has never been called upon to answer before any
-lawful tribunal.
-
-“Is it not obvious that if the attempt to murder had been the offense
-for which she was arraigned, the course of the defense would have been
-different? I speak as her counsel of what I know. Read the report
-of the defense, and you will see that I devoted my whole strength
-to and massed the evidence upon the point that the prosecution had
-misconceived the facts, that the foundation on which the whole case
-rested was rotten, for that, in fact, there was no murder; that, on the
-contrary, the deceased had died from natural causes.
-
-“It is true that incidental reference was made to certain alleged
-acts of Florence Maybrick, but the references were incidental only;
-the stress of my argument being, in fact, that _no murder had been
-committed, because the evidence did not warrant the conclusion that the
-deceased had died from arsenical poisoning_. On the other hand, had
-the Crown counsel suggested the case of attempt to murder by poison,
-it would have been the duty of counsel to address himself directly and
-mainly to the alleged circumstances which, it was argued, pointed to
-guilty intent. That these alleged circumstances were capable in part
-of being explained, in part of being minimized, and in part of being
-attacked as unreliably vouched, can not, I think, be doubted by any one
-who has with a critical eye scanned the evidence. I do not deny that my
-feelings are engaged in this case. It is impossible that they should
-not be, but I have honestly tried to judge the case, and I now say that
-_if I was called upon to advise in my character of head of the Criminal
-Judicature of this country, I should advise you that Florence Maybrick
-ought to be allowed to go free_.”
-
-From page 262: “I think it my duty to renew my protest against the
-continued imprisonment of Florence Maybrick. I consider the history of
-the case reflects discredit on the administration of the criminal law.
-I think my protest ought to be attended to at last. The prisoner has
-already undergone punishment for a period four times as long, or more,
-as the minimum punishment fixed by law for the commission of the crime,
-of which she has never been convicted or for which she has never been
-tried, but for which she has been adjudged guilty by your predecessor
-in the office of Home Secretary.”
-
-
-THE AMERICAN OFFICIAL PETITION
-
-The following is quoted from the American Official Petition sent to the
-Rt. Hon. Henry Matthews, Q.C., M.P., Her Majesty’s principal secretary
-for the Home Department:
-
- “As Florence Elizabeth Maybrick is an American woman, without father,
- brother, husband, or kin in England, except two infant children,
- enduring penal servitude for life in Woking Prison;
-
- “As the conduct of her trial resulted in a profound impression of a
- miscarriage of justice, in an earnest protest against the verdict, and
- the execution of the sentence of death, and its commutation to penal
- servitude for life on the ground of reasonable doubt whether a murder
- had been committed;
-
- “As a careful legal scrutiny of the evidence given at the trial
- by eminent solicitors, barristers, queen’s counsel, and members
- of Parliament, and the production of facts not in evidence at the
- trial have resulted in a final decision of counsel that the case
- is one proper for the grave consideration of a criminal appellate
- tribunal--if such a tribunal existed;
-
- “Therefore, we earnestly ask that the Rt. Hon. Henry Matthews,
- Q.C., M.P., Her Majesty’s principal secretary of state for the Home
- Department, will advise Her Majesty to order the pardon and release of
- the prisoner, who has now suffered an imprisonment of three years.
-
- “LEVI P. MORTON, Vice-President of the United States, President of
- the Senate.
-
- “CHARLES T. CRISP, Speaker of the House of Representatives.
-
- “CHARLES FOSTER, Secretary of the Treasury.
-
- “JAMES G. BLAINE, Secretary of State.
-
- “S. B. ELKINS, Secretary of War.
-
- “W. H. MILLER, Attorney-General.
-
- “JOHN WANAMAKER, Postmaster-General.
-
- “B. T. TRACY, Secretary of the Navy.
-
- “JOHN B. NOBLE, Secretary of the Interior.
-
- “G. M. RUSK, Secretary of Agriculture.
-
- “J., CARDINAL GIBBONS.
-
- “J. M. SCOFIELD, Major-General Commanding the Army.
-
- “A. W. TRULY, Brigadier-General-in-Chief, Signal Office.
-
- “THOMAS LINCOLN CASEY, Brigadier-General-in-Chief of Engineers.
-
- “JOSEPH CABELL BRECKENRIDGE, Brigadier-General, Infantry-General.
-
- “J. O. KELTON, Brigadier-General, Adjutant-General.
-
- “WILLIAM SMITH, Paymaster-General.
-
- “H. M. BATCHELDER, General-Quartermaster-General.
-
- “B. DUBARRY, General and Commanding General Infantry.
-
- “O. SUTHERLAND, General Infantry General.
-
- “D. W. FLAGLER, Chief of Ordnance.
-
- “J. NORMAN LISBER, Acting Judge-Advocate-General.
-
- “THOMAS EWING, Brevet-Major-General, U. S. A., and many others.”
-
-
-SECRETARY BLAINE’S LETTER TO MINISTER LINCOLN
-
-I will conclude by quoting the letter of Secretary Blaine to Mr. Robert
-Lincoln, then Minister to the Court of St. James. It will be seen that
-Mr. Blaine was of opinion that I had lost my citizenship. Since this
-letter was written it has been decided by the Supreme Court of the
-United States that a woman married to a foreigner, on the death of her
-husband can, on application, be reinstated to citizenship.
-
-[Illustration: HON. JAMES G. BLAINE, American Secretary of State,
-1889-1892.]
-
- “DEPARTMENT OF STATE, WASHINGTON,
- “March 7, 1892.
-
- “MY DEAR MR. LINCOLN: As Mrs. Maybrick lost her American citizenship
- by her English marriage, and as I fear she does not resume it by her
- widowhood, I can not instruct you officially as to the course you
- should pursue toward her.
-
- “But her American and Southern birth, her connection with many
- families of the highest respectability and even of prominence in the
- country’s service, have attracted much attention to her fate.
-
- “I have no other interest in her than an interest which you and
- I share in common with all our countrymen--the desire to help an
- American woman in distress. That she may have been influenced by the
- foolish ambition of too many American girls for a foreign marriage,
- and have descended from her own rank to that of her husband’s family,
- which seems to have been somewhat vulgar, must be forgiven to her
- youth, since she was only eighteen at the time of her marriage.
-
- “There is a wide and widening belief in this country that she is
- legally innocent and illegally imprisoned. The official charge of the
- judge that murder must be proved and the official announcement of the
- Home Secretary that the evidence leaves a ‘reasonable doubt’ of murder
- are the premises of but one conclusion--the discharge of the prisoner.
-
- “The fact that she was never indicted or tried by a jury of her peers
- on a specific count of felonious attempt to administer arsenic, yet
- is condemned to penal servitude for life on the Home Secretary’s
- statement that she evidently made such an attempt, can never be
- reconciled to the English principle that an accused person shall be
- tried by a jury of his peers. Lawyers here are among the strongest
- believers in the illegality of her imprisonment. Indeed, the sense of
- injustice is developing and deepening into horror.
-
- “Officially I could only instruct you on behalf of a multitude of
- American citizens to investigate her case. Personally I beg to
- express to you my deep interest in it, and pray you, if possible, to
- communicate with Messrs. Lumley and Sir Charles Russell as to any
- method of American cooperation which may seem to them desirable.
-
- “Messrs. Lumley have made a very able brief, which I am sure would
- interest you, and which seems to me unanswerable. Sir Charles Russell,
- whose reputation you know, is her counsel. Consult with them what best
- can be done, from an American point of view, to secure Mrs. Maybrick’s
- release. And if you shall have read Lumley’s brief, I am sure that
- conviction will lead you to personal activity in her behalf.
-
- “You can communicate with me in strict confidence, as from one
- American citizen to another, for the relief of an American woman
- helplessly enduring a great wrong.
-
- “Believe me, etc.,
- “JAMES G. BLAINE.”
-
-And yet it required the time from March 7, 1892, until July 20, 1904,
-to attain my liberation; and then it was accomplished by time limit and
-by no act of grace or concession on the part of the English Government.
-
-
-HENRY W. LUCY ON LORD RUSSELL
-
-_The Strand Magazine_, London, in its November number, 1900, published
-an article by Henry W. Lucy, Esq., who, speaking of the late Lord Chief
-Justice Russell, says:
-
- “The most remarkable episode in Charles Russell’s career at the bar
- undoubtedly was his defense of Mrs. Maybrick.
-
- “I happened to find myself in the same hotel with him at Liverpool
- on the morning of the day set down for the opening of the trial. At
- breakfast he spoke in confident terms of his client’s innocence and of
- the surety of her acquittal. He did not take into account the passing
- mood of the judge who tried the case, and so found himself out of his
- reckoning; but the verdict of the jury, still less the summing-up of
- Fitz-James Stephen, did not shake his conviction. Sir Charles Russell
- was of all men least likely to be misled by appearances or deliberate
- deception; having probed the case to the bottom, having turned his
- piercing eyes on the woman in the dock, having talked to her in
- private and studied her in public, he was convinced of her innocence.
-
- “Lord Landoff was a lawyer of high position at the English bar when,
- as Mr. Henry Matthews, he came into the Home Office.
-
- “The verdict of the jury was ‘guilty,’ and her sentence was death,
- which was a real surprise, as was afterward learned, even to the
- judge, Sir Fitz-James Stephen. If Mr. Matthews believed her guilty,
- he should not have commuted her sentence upon the ground that he
- assigned. If she was guilty she well deserved death on the scaffold.
- The evidence, however, satisfied Mr. Matthews that there was
- reasonable doubt that the death of Mr. Maybrick was due to arsenic.
- In this view, as is well known, he was sustained by Justice Stephen.
- If such a doubt really came into Mr. Matthews’s mind, as was made the
- ground of the commutation of the sentence, _under English law that
- doubt entitled the accused to acquittal_.
-
- “Why he lacked the courage of his convictions can only be surmised. At
- all events he did not dare to take the responsibility of allowing her
- to be executed.
-
- “The intercession of the American Government through Mr. Blaine,
- Secretary of State, was urgent, strong, and most intense. It is
- incredible that Mr. Matthews desired any loophole to release her. The
- case was full of them.
-
- “Sir Matthew White-Ridley was not a lawyer, and there is no
- probability that he ever read the evidence in the case, which was
- voluminous. He could not have read the papers in three days if he had
- attempted it. He simply followed his predecessor’s line and was not
- able to take up the case on its merits.”
-
-
-LORD RUSSELL’S CONVICTION OF MRS. MAYBRICK’S INNOCENCE
-
-This statement of Mr. Lucy is of great value as an answer to the
-assault made on Lord Russell’s memory after his death, on his firm
-belief in my innocence.
-
-Lord Hugh Cecil wrote to a constituent:
-
- “I believe I am right in stating that he (Lord Russell) never said
- that he believed Mrs. Maybrick to be innocent.”
-
-When this was shown Lord Russell by Mr. A. W. McDougall, Esq., the
-Chief Justice exclaimed:
-
- “Does Lord Hugh Cecil suppose that I would abandon all the traditions
- of the Bar and put forward publicly as an argument in such a case my
- personal belief in this, that, or the other thing? Does he suppose
- that I would have made all the efforts I have been making to obtain
- her freedom if I believed her to be guilty?”
-
-
-EXPLANATION OF ATTITUDE OF HOME SECRETARIES
-
-“Personal Rights,” of November 15, in commenting on the statement of
-Mr. Lucy in _The Strand Magazine_, says:
-
- “We do not share the belief that Sir Fitz-James Stephen was insane in
- any plenary sense at the time of the trial; but we are convinced that
- he was not fully sane. His charge to the jury, the report of which
- is reproduced in full in Mr. Levy’s book, is grotesquely inaccurate;
- and if the jury took it to be a compendium of the evidence--as they
- probably did--the result of their deliberation is fully accounted
- for. Indeed, if the facts were such as the judge stated, the verdict
- could hardly be impugned. How different they were may be seen by any
- one who compares the evidence with the judge’s charge, in the book
- already referred to. To take a single instance: the judge stated that,
- according to the evidence of Alice Yapp, at the commencement of Mr.
- Maybrick’s illness, he was very sick and in great pain immediately
- after some medicine was given to him by his wife. Alice Yapp swore
- nothing of the kind. She saw neither any administration of medicine
- nor any sickness. We could give other instances of gross inaccuracy,
- generally leading to the conclusion of the prisoner’s guilt; but, for
- our present purpose, the above incident will suffice.
-
- “If this was the character of the judge’s charge to the jury, what
- confidence can be placed in his notes? Still upon those notes was
- probably based the conclusions of successive Home Secretaries or of
- the officials employed by them. When Mr. Lucy holds up his hands in
- astonishment at the marvelous consensus of opinion of various Home
- Secretaries, he seems to us to manifest remarkable blindness--for one
- so long behind the Speaker’s chair--as to the vicarious nature of
- that opinion. It is more than possible that the conclusions of Mr.
- Matthews, Mr. Asquith, and Sir Matthew White-Ridley were all drawn
- for them by the same gentleman, or, at least, that the same gentleman
- helped these various Home Secretaries to come to the same conclusion.
-
- “We hope that Mr. Ritchie, the new Home Secretary, will judge this
- matter for himself. Let him read the salient portions, at least, of
- Mr. Levy’s book, and, per contra, the article of X. Y. Z. in _The
- Contemporary Review_ of September last. If he likes to make the
- inquiry, he will find that X. Y. Z. is one of his new permanent
- staff, and that the doctrines put forward in the article are the
- embodiment of Home Office practise. This is a matter which does not
- concern the Maybrick case alone. Scarcely a month passes without some
- new manifestation of injustice brought about by adherence to the
- traditions of the department over which Mr. Ritchie now presides. If
- he will seek out this hydra and slay it, he will leave for himself
- an immortal name among Secretaries of State, and--what he will hold
- of more importance--he will cut off a permanent source of injustice,
- give releasement and joy to the innocent pining in prison, and breathe
- a new life into a department which is sadly in need of a renovating
- spirit.”
-
-[Illustration: HON. ROBERT T. LINCOLN, American Ambassador to Court of
-St. James, 1889-1893.]
-
-
-UPHOLDING THE JUSTICIARY
-
-In the same number of this journal is an article from “Lex,” a
-well-known writer in English journals, which we reproduce:
-
- “SIR: May I call attention to the two articles in the Liverpool
- _Post_ of August 13 and 14, in which the utter incompetence of the
- judge at the Maybrick trial is strongly asserted? The writer is
- distinctly hostile to the prisoner, and writes without any intention
- of raising the question whether the trial was not null and void; but
- as the English system consists of trial by judge and jury, the total
- incompetence of either element should clearly vitiate it. Moreover,
- Mr. Ruggles-Brise, on the occasion of a visit to America in 1897,
- stated that the reason of the steadfast refusal of _the Home Secretary
- to release the prisoner was his desire to uphold the wholesome
- authority of the English justiciary_. That authority can not be
- regarded as wholesome if the judge was insane. Lord Russell, who was
- present throughout the trial, was of different opinion from that of
- the judge. He was undoubtedly sane. If Sir J. F. Stephen was insane,
- the public will, I think, be of opinion that the sane judge should
- have had the most influence with the executive.”
-
-
-NEED OF COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEAL
-
-Lord Esher, in _The Times_ of August 17, 1889, strongly advocated
-a court of criminal appeal, and _The Times_, in an article of the
-same date, supported the views expressed by Lord Esher and by Lord
-Fitzgerald, as follows:
-
- “A court of appeal, as Lord Esher sketches it, would not be open
- to the objections which can be fairly urged against our present
- informal method of procedure. The Home Secretary, as a quasi court
- of appeal, is, as Lord Fitzgerald remarks, not a judge and has not
- the power of a judge.... The judgment pronounced by a strong court
- of criminal appeal, such as Lord Esher’s letter suggests, would do
- more to satisfy the public mind than the best efforts of the Home
- Secretary could possibly do. The reform which Lord Esher advocates has
- been long called for, and Lord Fitzgerald did well to press it on the
- Government.... What the public feel is that they would rather have the
- fallibility of trained judges than the fallibility of an individual
- sitting without any of the apparatus with which a court of law is
- enabled to detect truth from falsehood, and perhaps unconsciously
- confusing the prerogative of mercy with justice.”
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[5] The jury was composed of three plumbers, two farmers, one milliner,
-one wood-turner, one provision dealer, one grocer, one ironmonger, one
-house-painter, and one baker.
-
-
-
-
-THE BRIEF OF MESSRS. LUMLEY & LUMLEY
-
-
-This brief of Messrs. Lumley & Lumley, characterized in the preceding
-letter of Secretary Blaine as “very able” and “unanswerable,” is
-too long for reproduction in these pages in its entirety, and hence
-only the main points are given. The document was prepared at the
-instance of Lord Russell of Killowen for submission to himself and
-three other Queen’s Counsel, with a view of obtaining a new trial. It
-may interest the reader to know that the money required to make this
-searching analysis by Messrs. Lumley & Lumley was raised by a popular
-subscription in America, through the good offices of the New York
-_World_. The eminent Queen’s counsel, after a full consideration of the
-analysis of the case, submitted the following opinion:
-
-
-OPINION--RE F. E. MAYBRICK
-
-“Having carefully considered the facts stated in the elaborate case
-submitted to us by Messrs. Lumley & Lumley, and the law applicable to
-the matter, we are clearly of opinion that there is no mode by which
-in this case a new trial or a ‘_venire de novo_’ can be obtained, nor
-can the prisoner be brought up on a ‘habeas corpus,’ with the view to
-retrying the issue of her innocence or guilt.
-
-“We say this notwithstanding the case of Regina _vs._ Scarfe (17 Q. B.,
-238, 5; Cox, C. C., 243; 2 Den., C. C., 281).
-
-“We are of opinion that in English criminal procedure there is no
-possibility of procuring a rehearing in the case of felony where
-a verdict has been found by a properly constituted jury upon an
-indictment which is correct in form. This rule is, in our opinion,
-absolute, unless circumstances have transpired, and have been entered
-upon the record, which, when there appearing, would invalidate the
-tribunal and reduce the trial to a nullity by reason of its not having
-been before a properly constituted tribunal. None of the matters
-proposed to be proved go to this length.
-
-“We think it right to add that there are many matters stated in the
-case, not merely with reference to the evidence at and the incidents
-of the trial, but suggesting new facts, which would be _matters proper
-for the grave consideration of a Court of Criminal Appeal_, if such a
-tribunal existed in this country.
-
- (Signed) “CHARLES RUSSELL, Q.C.
- “I. FLETCHER MOULTON, Q.C.
- “HARRY BOOKIN POLAND, Q.C.
- “REGINALD SMITH, Q.C.
-
- “LINCOLN’S INN, 12th April, 1892.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-This opinion was based upon the following points, presented by Messrs.
-Lumley & Lumley:
-
-
-JUSTICE STEPHEN’S MISDIRECTIONS
-
-The _misdirections_ which are selected for consideration may be
-conveniently classed, among others, under these headings:
-
-1. As to the facts disclosed in the evidence of the procuring and
-possession of arsenic by Mrs. Maybrick and of her administering it.
-
-2. As to the cause of death.
-
-A perusal of the summing-up from beginning to end impresses the mind
-with the feeling that, whenever Mr. Justice Stephen approached any fact
-offered by the defense which threw light upon _the possession_ and _an
-alleged_ administration of arsenic by Mrs. Maybrick, he drew the minds
-of the jury away from it; he played, in fact, the part of the peewit,
-which swoops and screams in another part of the field on purpose to
-hide where its nest is, and to draw the attention of the passers-by
-from the right spot.
-
-Mr. Justice Stephen pointed out to the jury in his summing-up: “You
-must begin the whole subject of poison with this, which is a remarkable
-fact in the case and which it seems to me tells favorably rather than
-otherwise for the prisoner. You must take notice of it and consider
-what inference you draw from it. In the whole case, from first to
-last, there is _no evidence_ at all of her having _bought_ any poison,
-or definitely having had anything to do with procuring any, with the
-exception of fly-papers. But there is evidence of a considerable
-quantity having been found in various things, which were kept some here
-and some there--kept principally, as I gather, in the inner room.[6]
-... There is evidence about a considerable quantity of poison in this
-house, and more particularly about one or two receptacles which were in
-the inner room, Mr. Maybrick’s dressing-room, as it has been pointed
-out.”
-
-
-MISDIRECTION AS TO MR. MAYBRICK’S SYMPTOMS
-
-From the testimony it appears that on the 27th of April James
-Maybrick, before starting to the Wirrall Races, was sick. There is
-no actual evidence of vomiting, but he is described as sick, and as
-feeling a numbness in his legs while walking downstairs, which was an
-old-standing complaint of his of many years. Both he himself and Mrs.
-Maybrick told the servants that this was due to a double dose of some
-London medicine. He got wet through at the races and dined in his wet
-clothes at a friend’s (Mr. Hobson), on the other side of the Mersey,
-and did not return home till after the servants had retired to bed;
-but the next morning, Sunday, the 28th of April, he was taken ill, and
-Mrs. Maybrick sent a servant off hurriedly for Dr. Humphreys, who had
-not attended her husband before, but who was the doctor living nearest
-the house, and in the mean time got some mustard and water, telling him
-to take it, as it would remove the brandy at all events. Dr. Humphreys
-attended James Maybrick on the 28th, but was not told by him that he
-had vomited the day before.
-
-Mr. Justice Stephen, when referring to this, said: “The Wirrall Races
-were followed by symptoms which were described to be arsenical.” It is
-submitted that this was a _misdirection_, the symptom there referred
-to being sickness, and there was no evidence of vomiting on any of the
-days immediately succeeding the Wirrall Races. But on the 28th of April
-the mustard and water was given him by Mrs. Maybrick for the purpose of
-_producing_ sickness and removing the brandy, and if he had been sick
-it would have been attributable to _mustard and water_, not to arsenic.
-
-On the other hand, the medical evidence showed that gastro-enteritis
-might have been set up either by improper food or drink, or an excess
-of either; or, again, by such a wetting through as deceased got at the
-Wirrall Races. On the 8th of May Alice Yapp communicated to Mrs. Briggs
-and Mrs. Hughes her suspicions that James Maybrick’s illness was due to
-Mrs. Maybrick poisoning him with _fly-papers_.
-
-
-MISDIRECTION AS TO MRS. MAYBRICK’S ACCESS TO POISONS
-
-The purchase and soaking of fly-papers is the only direct evidence of
-the possession of arsenic in any form by Mrs. Maybrick, but the judge
-told the jury, and it is submitted it is a _gross misdirection_, that
-Mrs. Maybrick “_undoubtedly had access to considerable quantities of
-arsenic in other forms_,” inasmuch as the _only evidence as to such
-access_ was that after the death of James Maybrick these two women,
-Mrs. Briggs and Alice Yapp, who exhibited the most unfriendly feeling
-toward her, said they had found in the house certain stores of arsenic.
-
-It is submitted for the serious consideration of counsel that the
-circumstances under which these two women produced these stores of
-arsenic are so suspicious as to justify the suggestion that that
-arsenic was not there before his death, and that Mrs. Maybrick never
-did have any access to it or knowledge of it at all. There was no
-evidence as to where or by whom this arsenic was obtained, nor was
-there any evidence that the police had made any effort to discover
-where, when, or by whom that arsenic was procured.
-
-[NOTE.--How and when this arsenic may have been procured by Mr.
-Maybrick himself will appear further on as a part of the new evidence.]
-
-The places in which arsenic was found were open and accessible to every
-one in the house, and no person gave any evidence that he or she had
-ever seen it in the house before these two women found it after death.
-
-As regards the black powder (arsenic mixed with charcoal) and the
-two solutions of arsenic produced by Mrs. Briggs and Alice Yapp, Mr.
-Davies, the analyst, gave evidence that, when analyzing the contents of
-the various bottles, he had searched diligently and microscopically for
-any traces, and could find no trace of charcoal having been introduced
-into any of them. So this circumstantial evidence may be eliminated.
-
-As regards white arsenic, also produced by these women, it must
-be observed that not only was it not shown that Mrs. Maybrick had
-purchased any, but it is submitted that the judge _ought to have
-pointed out to the jury_, as the fact is, that it would have been
-almost impossible for her or any woman to have obtained any white
-arsenic at all. No shopkeeper dare sell it to any one except to a
-medical man, and even then under the stringent restrictions of the Sale
-of Poison Act.
-
-At the trial a wholesale druggist (Thompson, of Liverpool) gave
-evidence that James Maybrick constantly visited his cousin, who had
-been in his employment at his stores, where he could have obtained
-white arsenic from him without any difficulty; and it will be observed
-that it was found in his hatbox.
-
-It is a remarkable thing in this connection that, while Edwin Maybrick
-called the police in on Sunday night, and gave them the black
-solutions and white solutions which Mrs. Briggs had found on the Sunday
-morning, he did not give them the black powder which Alice Yapp had
-found on the-night before; and, in fact, that Michael Maybrick did not
-give it to the police until Tuesday, the 14th.
-
-It is also a remarkable fact that, although these black solutions and
-that white solution of arsenic and that solid arsenic which Mrs. Briggs
-had found, were not handed by the police to the analyst until several
-days afterward, and were therefore _not known to be arsenic by anybody,
-yet Mrs. Briggs was able to inform Mrs. Maybrick on Tuesday, the 14th,
-as was testified to, that these bottles contained arsenic_.
-
-It is submitted that Mrs. Briggs could not have known that without some
-other means of knowledge than looking at them.
-
-The importance of this _misdirection_ of the judge as to the question
-of possession of arsenic by Mrs. Maybrick can not be overstated. It
-was _conclusively_ shown that no decoction of fly-papers or of the
-black powder was the source of the arsenic with which certain articles
-found in the house and office were said to be infected, because the
-analyst said he had searched for the fibers of the papers and for the
-charcoal, _and could not find any traces of either_. If Mrs. Maybrick
-knew of the pure arsenic, why should she have bought the fly-papers,
-either for a cosmetic purpose or murder, and what should she have
-wanted with “poison for cats?”
-
-
-MISDIRECTION AS TO “TRACES” OF ARSENIC
-
-Out of the list submitted by the police, therefore, the only two things
-which could have been the source of the arsenic were the bottle of
-saturated solution, No. 10 in the Police List, and the bottle of solid
-arsenic, No. 11 in the Police List.
-
-It may be observed that if all the arsenic or “traces” of the same,
-with which various things were said to be infected, were collected
-together, it would not constitute a fatal dose, the smallest fatal dose
-recorded being two grains, and this in the case of a woman, and surely
-not in the case of a person addicted to large doses of arsenic.
-
-At the inquest Mr. Davies defined what he meant by the word “trace.” He
-said:
-
-“It means something under 1/100 part of a grain. It does not mean
-something which I could not weigh, but something which I could _not_
-guarantee to be absolutely free from other things; but anything under
-1/100 part of a grain I should not consider satisfactory. If I said
-_distinct traces_, I should say it meant something between 1/100 and
-1/1000 part of a grain, while a _minute trace_ is less than 1/1000 part
-of a grain.”
-
-In reference to Reinsch’s test which Mr. Davies used in these
-experiments, this passage occurs in Taylor’s “Medical Jurisprudence,”
-vol. i., p. 268: “The mere presence of a gray deposit on pure copper
-affords _no absolute proof_ of the presence of arsenic. Bismuth,
-antimony, and mercury all yield deposits with Reinsch’s test. The gray
-deposit of bismuth may easily be taken for arsenic.” And again: “The
-errors into which the faulty methods of applying Reinsch’s test lead
-have led its reliability to be much discredited, and, although in
-skilful hands the results are trustworthy, it would be perhaps unsafe
-to rely upon it in an important criminal investigation.”
-
-It is submitted that the evidence relating to the articles which Mr.
-Davies said were infected with arsenic only to the extent of _an
-unweighable trace_ could not and ought not to be regarded as proof
-that any arsenic at all was there, or as being anything more _than
-a suspicion_ upon this analyst’s mind that what he saw was arsenic,
-and that it was a _misdirection_ on the part of Mr. Justice Stephen
-to treat a mere expression of opinion of that kind as proof of the
-presence of arsenic.
-
-
-MISDIRECTION AS TO ARSENIC IN SOLUTION
-
-It will be observed that the only things of which James Maybrick could
-have partaken [but did not], in which arsenic in a weighable form was
-present, were the bottle of Valentine’s meat juice and the pot of
-glycerin, and that the arsenic found in them was found in a state of
-solution.
-
-As regards the half grain of arsenic found in the _meat juice_,
-scientific evidence will be forthcoming that it is a physical
-impossibility for any person to dissolve half a grain of solid arsenic
-in 411 grains of Valentine’s meat juice, which is all the liquid that
-was in the bottle when it was handed to Mr. Davies.
-
-Mr. Davies, moreover, found that (although he used very loose and
-unscientific language in his evidence) the specific gravity of the meat
-juice was considerably reduced, thereby showing that the half grain
-of arsenic found in it had been introduced in the form of _arsenic in
-solution_.
-
-It will now be observed that the _only arsenic in solution_ which was
-_available_, among the stores of arsenic found in the house, was the
-_bottle No. 10_ in the police list, and it is submitted that bottle No.
-11 (solid arsenic) must, like the black solutions, _be eliminated_ from
-any store of arsenic which Mrs. Maybrick, whether she had access to it
-or not, could have employed for the purpose of infecting any of the
-things found in the house to be infected.
-
-Mr. Davies described the bottle No. 10 as a saturated solution of white
-arsenic, and he stated that it had been dissolved with water, some of
-the crystals remaining at the bottom undissolved.
-
-At the inquest he stated, in reply to a question by the coroner:
-“The bottle No. 10, which was also in the box, contained a saturated
-solution of arsenic and solid arsenic at the bottom. There was no label
-on it. It contained, solid and liquid, perhaps two grains--a grain at
-all events.”
-
-_So it is evident that there was not a fatal dose even in the stores
-which Mrs. Maybrick could have used had she had access to it._
-
-As regards this bottle, Mr. Justice Stephen told the jury: “A saturated
-solution is a solution which has taken up as much arsenic as it can,
-the water becoming saturated with arsenic; the remainder of the arsenic
-is found at the bottom. In this case there was a saturated solution of
-arsenic in the water and a small portion of arsenic at the bottom. With
-regard to that these questions arise: What was it for? Who is wanting
-such a quantity of strong solution of arsenic? Who has put it there and
-how is it to be used? These are the questions, in the solution of which
-I can not help you. There is nothing definite about it to connect Mr.
-Maybrick with it certainly.[7] If he was in the habit of arsenic eating
-he would not keep it saturated in water in quantities he could not
-possibly use.”
-
-Mr. Davies found that this bottle “contained in solid and liquid
-perhaps two grains--a grain at all events.” Now arsenic can be
-dissolved in water by two processes. In cold water by shaking it
-constantly for several hours (and the strongest solution that can
-be obtained by the cold-water process is a one-per-cent. solution,
-which is no stronger than the ordinary Fowler’s solution as sold in
-the shops). That is called a “saturated solution” by the cold-water
-process. A solution of three or even four per cent. can be obtained
-with boiling water, but only when the water is kept on the constant
-boil for several hours; and that is also called a “saturated solution,”
-so that the phrase “saturated solution” may mean either a weak solution
-of one per cent., such as is gained by the cold-water process, or a
-stronger solution of three per cent. by the boiling-water process, and
-Mr. Justice Stephen _misdirected_ the jury as to the meaning of the
-phrase “saturated solution.” He should have told them that a “saturated
-solution” of arsenic is one which has by any particular process taken
-up as much arsenic and _retained it in solution_ as is possible by
-that particular process, and that it might consequently be either a
-weak or a stronger solution, according as it has been dissolved by the
-cold-water or boiling-water process, by shaking for hours or boiling
-for hours.
-
-The questions put to the jury by Mr. Justice Stephen upon the
-interpretation of the phrase “saturated solution” which he gave,
-namely, “How is it to be used?” “Who is wanting such a quantity of
-_strong_ solution of arsenic?” are _misdirections_.
-
-
-MR. CLAYTON’S EXPERIMENTS
-
-Counsel are referred to experiments made with solutions of arsenic by
-Mr. E. Godwin Clayton, of the firm of Hassall & Clayton. From these it
-will be seen that by the experiment there marked B, where the arsenic
-was shaken at intervals of twenty minutes for six hours, the result
-shows that it would require 186½ grains of water to carry half a grain
-of arsenic. And that by experiment C, which is the strongest possible
-solution by the cold-water process, namely, one-per-cent. strength
-(equal to Fowler’s solution), it would require 50 grains of water to
-carry half a grain, but to obtain this the arsenic has to be shaken
-with cold water _at frequent intervals for four days_.
-
-Mr. Godwin Clayton, in his report as to these experiments, remarks:
-“I think, however, that as few people outside a chemical laboratory
-would have the patience or opportunity to make a solution by shaking
-it at short intervals during four days, the solution obtained in
-experiment B--namely, an arsenical strength of 0.268 per cent.--might
-be described in a popular sense, though not with strict scientific
-accuracy, as ‘saturated solution of arsenic.’” But then if that be so,
-that is only about a quarter of the strength of Fowler’s solution!
-The evidence of Mr. Davies as to the specific gravity of the meat
-juice being considerably reduced ought, it is submitted, _not_ to have
-been received as scientific evidence, and it was a _misdirection_ to
-treat it as such, because without the slightest difficulty, as will be
-seen by a reference to Mr. Godwin Clayton’s experiments, Mr. Davies’s
-evidence ought to have been scientifically exact, because he could have
-shown that (for example) if a solution of the strength of experiment
-B had been used, the 411 grains of liquid would have contained 186½
-of solution of arsenic and 244½ grains of meat juice; and, further,
-that the specific gravity of the meat juice would, in that case, have
-been lowered from 1.2143 to 1.1263; and it was, therefore, not only
-possible, but the duty of Mr. Davies, as an expert, to have shown, by
-comparing the specific gravity of the bottle No. 10 and the specific
-gravity of Valentine’s meat juice, that the “arsenic in solution” which
-had been introduced into it had been introduced into it out of that
-particular bottle, No. 10.
-
-Then, again, it will be seen from these experiments of Mr. Godwin
-Clayton that if the solution in bottle No. 10 had been a strong
-hot-water solution of three per cent., the specific gravity would not
-have been considerably reduced, because the meat juice would in that
-case have contained only 15½ grains of arsenical solution. To have
-obtained such a solution, the “arsenic powder” must have been boiled
-with distilled water for four hours; and it is submitted that it would
-have been _impossible_, in the first place, for Mrs. Maybrick, or
-any person outside a laboratory, to have adopted such a process of
-dissolving arsenic without the knowledge of the servants or anybody
-else; and, further, that even if she could have done this, she could
-not have possibly weighed out exactly half a grain of it, which is
-what Mr. Davies found; and it is suggested that the only way in which
-that half grain of arsenic could possibly have been measured into
-that bottle, must have been by introducing Fowler’s solution, _and
-no Fowler’s solution was found in the house_--and in no way was it
-suggested that Mrs. Maybrick had any access to any, though others in
-that house may have been able to procure such a medicinal dose of it.
-
-
-MISDIRECTION AS TO ARSENIC IN GLYCERIN
-
-As regards the glycerin, Inspector Baxendale said he found this
-bottle in the lavatory on the 18th of May. There was no evidence that
-this bottle had ever been in Mrs. Maybrick’s hands, and there was no
-evidence that any part of it had been used by James Maybrick. There was
-evidence that it was a freshly opened bottle. Scientific evidence will
-be forthcoming that it is _an absolute impossibility_ for any person
-to distribute arsenic evenly through a pound of glycerin.
-
-It is suggested that there is no possible means by which that glycerin
-could have been administered with a felonious intent to James Maybrick;
-the mere moistening the lips with small quantities of it could not have
-operated in that way.
-
-Scientific evidence will be forthcoming that glycerin, when kept in
-glass bottles, generally does contain arsenic, which it extracts from
-the glass of the bottle.
-
-In 1888 Jahns drew attention to arsenic being present in
-glycerin--_Chemische Zeitung_.
-
-In 1889 Vulpius also drew attention to it--_Apotheker Zeitung_.
-
-Siebold (see _Pharmaceutical Journal_, 5th October, 1889) said, at
-the Pharmaceutical Conference, on the 11th September, 1889, that his
-experiments were made with toilet and pharmaceutical glycerin, and that
-the majority showed presence of arsenious acid, varying from 1 grain
-in 4,000 to 1 grain in 5,000.
-
-It may be pointed out that this is _a larger quantity_ than Mr. Davies
-found, which was only “about 1/10 of a grain in 1,000 grains.”
-
-The evidence relating to the administration of glycerin was that of
-Nurse Gore and Nurse Callery, and was to the effect that on Thursday
-night they refreshed James Maybrick’s mouth with _glycerin and borax
-mixed in a saucer_ that was on the table in the sick-room, and that
-Mrs. Maybrick had brought the glycerin that was used either from the
-medicine cupboard in her room or from the washstand drawer.
-
-The attention of counsel is called to the fact that this saucer of
-mixed glycerin and borax which was actually used _was not produced_
-at the trial, but Justice Stephen, when summing up to the jury, said:
-“Then you get the _blue_ bottle which contained Price’s glycerin. Here
-is the bottle, which there is no evidence to show that Mrs. Maybrick
-had even seen or touched; a considerable portion is still left. That
-glycerin was found in the lavatory outside, and if the bottle were
-filled and the same proportion of arsenic added, there would be
-two-thirds of a grain of arsenic in it. You have heard already that
-his mouth was moistened with glycerin and borax apparently the night
-before he died. If that be so, and the glycerin be really poison, it is
-certainly a very shocking result to arrive at.” Sir Charles Russell: “I
-think the evidence of Nurse Gore is that the bottle that was used the
-night before was taken, not from the lavatory, but from the cupboard
-of the washstand.” His Lordship: “It does not follow that that was the
-same bottle. One does not know the history of that bottle or where it
-went to. It may or may not have been the glycerin which was used for
-the purpose I have mentioned, namely, for moistening the lips. But it
-does appear in the case that a bottle was found in the lavatory, and
-that it contained a grain of arsenic, and that his mouth was moistened
-with glycerin and borax during the night in question; but the identity
-between that bottle and the bottle which contained the glycerin is not
-established and not proved.”
-
-It is submitted that the above was an _unfair and inflammatory
-suggestion_, and amounts to a gross MISDIRECTION, especially after
-all the evidence about the condition of deceased’s tongue and his
-complaining of a sensation as of a hair in his throat.
-
-This concludes the whole of the evidence to any articles containing
-arsenic which were found in the house, in which the arsenic was present
-in anything except as _unweighable “traces.”_
-
-
-MISDIRECTION AS TO EVIDENCE OF PHYSICIANS
-
-Justice Stephen further summed up: “The witness (Dr. Stevenson) stated:
-‘I should say more arsenic was administered on the 3d of May.’” It
-will be seen, by a reference to Dr. Stevenson’s evidence, that Dr.
-Stevenson _did not_ say this.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Copyright, 1904, by Pach Bros., New York.
-
-HON. JOHN HAY, American Secretary of State, 1898--]
-
-Dr. Humphreys was the only medical man in attendance at that time. The
-only symptoms on Friday, the 3d, were that he had “vomited twice.” At
-the inquest Dr. Humphreys said as to this:
-
-Q. “Did he say anything about his lunch on the previous day, Thursday,
-the 2d?”
-
-A. “Yes; he said some inferior sherry had been put into it, and that it
-had made him as bad as ever again.”
-
-And that also appears in Dr. Stevenson’s evidence at the trial:
-
-“He told the doctor he had not been well since the previous day, when I
-learn he had his lunch at the office.”
-
-It can not be suggested that the fact that the man vomited twice
-on Friday night was attributable to any arsenic taken at midday on
-Thursday, for Dr. Stevenson testified that the vomiting, which is a
-symptom of arsenic, usually follows the administration in about _half
-an hour_.
-
-Dr. Carter, who was not called in to the patient until Tuesday, May
-7th, in his evidence, however, suggested that:
-
-“I judge that the fatal dose must have been given on Friday, the 3d,
-but a dose might have been given after that. When he was so violently
-ill on the Friday, I thought it would be from the effects of the
-fatal dose, but there might have been subsequent doses”; and in
-cross-examination he explained that he had made this suggestion about
-the fatal dose because: “I was _told_ he was unable to retain anything
-on his stomach for several days.”
-
-It is submitted that the judge, when summing up, MISDIRECTED the jury
-by ignoring entirely the evidence and substituting for it this reckless
-suggestion of Dr. Carter’s.
-
-
-MISDIRECTION AS TO TIMES WHEN ARSENIC MAY HAVE BEEN ADMINISTERED
-
-The only occasions on which it was possible to suggest any act of
-administration of arsenic were the medicine on the 27th of April and
-the food at the office on May 1st and May 2d; and the judge told the
-jury:
-
-“The argument that the prisoner administered the arsenic is an argument
-depending upon the combination of a great variety of circumstances of
-suspicion. The theory is that there was poisoning by successive doses,
-and it is rather suggested that there may have been several doses. But
-I do not know that there was any effort made to point out the precise
-times at which doses may have been administered.”
-
-Under such circumstances it is submitted that the statement of the
-judge as to the medicine on the 27th of April, and as to the food at
-office, and as to the statement that “Friday (3d May) was the day on
-which began the symptoms of what may be called the fatal dose,” _are
-misdirections of vital importance to this case_, and such as to entitle
-Mrs. Maybrick to have the verdict set aside and have a new trial
-ordered.
-
-
-MISDIRECTION AS TO MRS. MAYBRICK’S CHANGING MEDICINE BOTTLES
-
-As regards the question of attempts to administer arsenic, the
-occasions upon which such conduct was imputed are changing medicine
-from one bottle into another and the Valentine’s meat juice. As regards
-the changing the bottle, there were two occasions when evidence was
-given as to Mrs. Maybrick’s doing this. The first was on the 7th of
-May, when Alice Yapp said that some of the medicines were kept on
-a table near the bedroom door and some in the bedroom, and that on
-Tuesday, 7th of May, she saw Mrs. Maybrick on the landing near the
-bedroom door, and what was she doing? She was apparently pouring
-something out of one bottle into another. They were medicine bottles.
-
-That is the whole evidence as to the incident, and as all the bottles
-in the house were analyzed, and none found to contain _even a trace of
-arsenic_ except the Clay and Abraham’s bottle--which James Maybrick was
-not taking at that time--the judge could not properly direct the jury
-to regard it as a matter of suspicion; _but he did do so_. He referred
-to this incident thus:
-
-“On the 28th April (the day after the Wirrall Races) Mrs. Maybrick sent
-for Dr. Humphreys, and afterward she was seen pouring medicine from one
-bottle into another.”
-
-It is submitted that this was _a serious misdirection_.
-
-The other occasion was on Friday, the 10th of May, when Michael
-Maybrick, seeing Mrs. Maybrick changing a medicine from one bottle
-to another in the bedroom, took the bottles away and had the
-prescription made up again, saying: “Florrie, how dare you tamper
-with the medicine?” Mrs. Maybrick explained that she was only putting
-the medicine into a larger bottle because there was so much sediment.
-Nurse Callery was present and there was no concealment about what she
-was doing, and the bullying conduct of Michael was absolutely without
-any sort of justification. _These bottles were analyzed and found to be
-harmless._
-
-Mr. Justice Stephen turned this incident, which occurred on the
-afternoon before death, and after she had been prevented from attending
-on her husband, against Mrs. Maybrick, thus--quoting Michael’s
-evidence: “In the bedroom I found Mrs. Maybrick pouring from one
-bottle into another and changing the labels, and I said, ‘Florrie, how
-dare you tamper with the medicine?’” And Justice Stephen continued:
-“Verily, this was a strange--I don’t say strange considering the
-circumstances--but dreadfully unwelcome remark to make to a lady in
-her own house, when she was in attendance on her husband, and something
-which showed the state of feeling in his mind, and must have attracted
-her attention.” It is submitted that this was a _misdirection_.
-
-
-MISDIRECTION AS TO ADMINISTRATION WITH INTENT TO KILL
-
-There was also an attempt by the prosecution to suggest an attempt to
-administer medicine, arising out of an occasion when James Maybrick
-said to her, “You have given me the wrong medicine again,” from which
-it appears that on the Friday, the day before death, Mrs. Maybrick
-was not giving him anything at all, but was trying to get him to take
-some medicine from Nurse Callery, who was endeavoring to induce him to
-take it. This was one of the medicines ordered by Dr. Humphreys, _and
-was found free from arsenic_. The judge did not refer to this in his
-summing-up, but reference to it is introduced here because it exhausts
-the whole evidence, with the exception of the Valentine’s meat juice
-incident, as to any suggestions or even of any occasions of attempt to
-administer, while Mr. Matthews advised the Queen that “the evidence
-leads clearly to the conclusion that the prisoner administered and
-attempted to administer arsenic to her husband with intent to murder,”
-which formed his ground for consigning this woman to penal servitude
-for life. _No evidence, either of any act of administration or of any
-act of attempt to administer either with or without felonious attempt,
-was given at the trial, which possibly could have led any person to
-any such conclusion_, with the single exception of the Valentine’s
-meat juice; and as none of that was administered after it had been in
-Mrs. Maybrick’s hands, the utmost that could be said of it (assuming
-that she did put any arsenic into it) is that it was an _attempt_ to
-administer, either feloniously or otherwise. It is submitted that the
-judge _misdirected_ the jury as to this incident, in that he did not
-tell them that the mere evidence of an attempt to administer arsenic
-was not sufficient--that they must be satisfied that the attempt to
-administer was with a _mens rea_ and with an intent to murder.
-
-
-EXCLUSION OF PRISONER’S TESTIMONY
-
-Mrs. Maybrick voluntarily told her solicitors, Mr. Arnold and Mr.
-Richard Cleaver, directly she was arrested and even before the inquest,
-that she had, at her husband’s urgent request, put a powder into a
-bottle of Valentine’s meat juice, but that she did not know, until
-Mrs. Briggs informed her that arsenic had been found in a bottle of
-meat juice, that the powder she had put in was assumably arsenic. [At
-the trial both Mr. Richard and Mr. Arnold Cleaver, her solicitors,
-offered to give evidence to this effect, but Justice Stephen refused to
-admit it.] She also tried to tell Mrs. Briggs the same thing, but the
-policeman stopped the conversation; and she also told it to her mother
-on her arrival. Mrs. Maybrick made no attempt at concealment about
-having put this powder in, although no one had seen her do it, and her
-solicitors, instead of relying as a line of defense on showing there
-was no “mens rea” in what she had done, kept back her account of what
-she had done. At the trial, however, after all the evidence for the
-prosecution had been concluded without a single witness speaking of her
-having put anything into anything, she _insisted_ on telling the jury,
-as she had told her solicitors, that she did put a powder into a bottle
-of meat juice, in accordance with an urgent request of her husband’s,
-but that she did not know it was arsenic. If she did not know, there
-was no “mens rea.” Upon that evidence, and upon certain suspicious
-circumstances connected with her conduct in taking the meat juice into
-the dressing-room and replacing it in the bedroom, the judge, as it is
-submitted, _misdirected_ the jury in the following passage:
-
-“Mr. Michael Maybrick says: ‘Nothing was given to my brother out of
-that.’ That is to say, nothing was given to him out of the bottle
-of Valentine’s meat juice, which undoubtedly had arsenic in it.
-Its presence was detected, but of that bottle which was poisoned
-he certainly had none. He had a small taste of it _before it was
-poisoned_, given him by Nurse Gore.”
-
-It is submitted that the words “before it was poisoned” is _a gross
-misdirection_.
-
-
-MISDIRECTION AS TO IDENTITY OF MEAT-JUICE BOTTLE
-
-It may be convenient here to interpose the following remarks on
-the subject of the identity of the bottle. Counsel will observe
-that the judge referred to the evidence at the inquest and at the
-magisterial inquiry, which, it is suggested, enables a reference to
-any discrepancies in the evidence of the witnesses on the three
-occasions--inquest, magisterial inquiry, and trial.
-
-The identity of the half-used bottle, which was found to contain “half
-a grain of arsenic in solution,” with the bottle which Mrs. Maybrick
-took into the dressing-room, was not proved. It was assumed alike by
-the prosecution and the defense, and by Mrs. Maybrick herself, _but it
-was not proved_. It was proved that there was another half-used bottle,
-of which James Maybrick had partaken on Monday, 6th of May, when Dr.
-Humphreys said:
-
-“Some of the Valentine’s meat juice had been taken, but it did not
-agree with the deceased and made him vomit. Witness did not remember
-him vomiting in his presence, but he complained of it. Witness told
-deceased to stop the Valentine’s meat juice, and said he was not
-surprised at it making Mr. Maybrick sick, as it made many people sick.”
-
-There was, therefore, another half-used bottle. The attention of
-counsel is strongly directed to the question of the identity of this
-half-used bottle.
-
-Besides the one in which the arsenic was detected, there was another
-half-used bottle produced at the trial, which was found by Mrs. Briggs
-after death in one of James Maybrick’s hatboxes in the dressing-room,
-together with the black solutions and white solutions of arsenic, and
-this bottle was found free of arsenic.
-
-As to the bottle which Mrs. Maybrick had in her hands on the night of
-the 9th-10th of May, and which she took into the dressing-room, and
-as to which she volunteered the statement that she had put a powder
-in, as to which evidence was given by Nurse Gore, was thus voluntarily
-corroborated by Mrs. Maybrick in her statement to the jury. From
-this it appears that Nurse Gore, on her arrival for duty on Thursday
-night, opened a fresh bottle of meat juice, which had been given to
-her the night before by Edwin Maybrick, and gave the patient one
-or two spoonfuls, and then placed it on the table, from which she
-shortly afterward saw Mrs. Maybrick remove it and take it into the
-dressing-room, the door of which was not shut, and then return with
-it into the bedroom and replace it on the table. Nurse Gore thought
-she did this in a stealthy way. It must be remembered that Nurse Gore
-was naturally suspicious, as is shown by the fact that on two previous
-occasions she suggested suspicions with regard to changes in medicines
-by Mrs. Maybrick, which on analysis were proved to be free from
-arsenic. When the patient, a short time afterward, awoke, Mrs. Maybrick
-came into the bedroom again and _removed_ the bottle from the table and
-placed it on the washstand, where there were only the ordinary jugs and
-basins, and there left it. Nurse Gore’s usual suspicions were aroused
-and she gave the patient none of it, nor did Mrs. Maybrick ask her to
-give him any. When Nurse Gore was relieved by Nurse Callery the next
-morning (Friday, the 10th), at 11 o’clock, she called her attention
-to it and asked her to take _a sample of it_, which Callery did, and
-put it into an ordinary medicine bottle, which Nurse Gore gave her for
-the purpose. Nurse Gore left the bottle on the washstand where Mrs.
-Maybrick had placed it. Nurse Gore did not mention the circumstance
-to Dr. Humphreys when he came to see the patient at 8:30 A.M., nor to
-Michael Maybrick, whose attention she directed to a bottle of brandy
-instead, which on analysis was found harmless; and she then went into
-Liverpool and saw the matron, and on her return to the house at 2
-o’clock told Callery to throw away the sample in accordance with the
-matron’s orders, which Callery did. The bottle in which that sample
-was taken was not specially identified, though it must have remained
-on the premises. It ought to have been produced, because, if arsenic
-was detected in the sample, the bottle of Valentine’s meat juice would
-have been identified by that means, and it would have been shown that
-the arsenic was in the meat juice which Mrs. Maybrick had taken into
-the dressing-room. On the other hand, as all the bottles which were in
-the house were analyzed and found free of arsenic, there is negative
-evidence that there was no arsenic in the sample taken.
-
-
-MISDIRECTION IN EXCLUDING CORROBORATION OF PRISONER’S STATEMENT
-
-Now the serious, most serious, consideration of counsel is asked for
-in comparing the evidence of these three witnesses--Gore, Callery, and
-Michael Maybrick--as given at the coroner’s inquest, as it appears in
-the coroner’s depositions, at the magisterial inquiry, as it appears
-in the magistrates’ depositions, and as given at the trial. It will be
-seen that there are great discrepancies as to the place in the room
-from which Michael Maybrick took the half-used bottle in which Mr.
-Davies, the analyst, subsequently detected one-tenth of a grain of
-arsenic in solution. It is suggested that Mr. Michael’s evidence at the
-inquest is the true account of where he got the bottle, and that his
-evidence at the trial is _cooked_, to suit the evidence of Gore, _and
-that the identity of the bottle is not established_. The statement,
-which in her statement to the jury Mrs. Maybrick said she was prevented
-by the policeman from making to Mrs. Briggs, the moment that person
-told her about arsenic being found in the meat juice, was communicated
-by Mrs. Maybrick at once to her solicitors, Mr. Arnold and Richard
-Cleaver; and it is submitted that it was a _misdirection_ of the judge
-to exclude their evidence in corroboration of such a material and
-important fact in her favor, _and a misdirection in refusing to allow
-corroboration in that way_ of what was in evidence, and did corroborate
-it--thereby constituting a matter which the jury should have had before
-them, as having a bearing on her statement.
-
-
-MISDIRECTIONS TO JURY TO DRAW ILLEGAL INFERENCES
-
-The judge referred to the Valentine’s meat-juice incident, the most
-vital point in the trial, in the following extraordinary manner at the
-end of his summing-up:
-
-“I may say this, however: supposing you find a man dying of arsenic,
-_and it is proved_ that a person put arsenic in his plate, and if he
-gives an explanation which you do not consider satisfactory--that is
-a very strong question to be considered--how far it goes, what its
-logical value is, I am not prepared to say--I could not say, and unless
-I had to write my verdict I should not say how I should deal with the
-verdict; but being no juryman, but only a judge, I can only say this,
-it is a matter for your serious consideration.”
-
-It is submitted that this was a _gross misdirection_ and _a cruel
-taunt_ to _drive the jury into finding a verdict_ against the prisoner
-upon that ground, _and it is submitted that so monstrously unfair an
-utterance can not be found in the reports of any summing-up by any
-judge in any criminal case_. See also another _misdirection_ where
-the judge read the examination of Nurse Gore and omitted reference to
-the sample, but said of the bottle, “In point of fact, _it remained
-where it was_ until taken away by Mr. Michael Maybrick,” when it is
-in evidence that Nurse Callery had taken a sample of it during the
-eighteen hours it remained on the washstand, and that others beside
-Mrs. Maybrick had access to it.
-
-It is submitted that, apart from the question of the identity of the
-bottle, there was no evidence, except Mrs. Maybrick’s statement, that
-she had put anything into the bottle, which justified Mr. Justice
-Stephen in using the words, “He had a small taste of it _before_ it was
-poisoned,” inasmuch as, except Mrs. Maybrick’s own voluntary statement
-that she had put a powder into a bottle of meat juice, there was
-nothing to show that the arsenic, detected by Mr. Davies in the bottle
-he analyzed, had not been in the bottle when Edwin Maybrick gave it to
-Nurse Gore and which she opened when she gave the patient “one or two
-spoonfuls.”
-
-Another _misdirection_ in reference to the meat-juice incident will be
-found in the summing-up in the words:
-
-“It has a sort of very remote bearing upon the statement which she made
-on Monday.”
-
-Instead of “a sort of very remote bearing,” it was a _matter of the
-greatest importance_ that it should be shown that _at the very instant_
-she heard that arsenic had been found in some meat juice, before even
-the inquest, _and before any arsenic had been found in the body_, she
-should have attempted to tell Mrs. Briggs that she had put a powder
-into some meat juice, but did not know what it was; and, in connection
-with this, the attention of counsel is called to the fact that Mr.
-Justice Stephen _refused to allow evidence showing that she had made
-this statement from the very first_.
-
-
-MISDIRECTIONS REGARDING THE MEDICAL TESTIMONY
-
-As to the cause of James Maybrick’s death, there was a most remarkable
-conflict of medical opinion. It was not until the post-mortem
-examination, held on Monday, the 13th of May, by Drs. Carter and
-Humphreys (the medical men who had attended the deceased during his
-illness), and Dr. Barron, that the cause of death was ascertained, and
-it was then found to be exhaustion, caused by gastro-enteritis or acute
-inflammation of the stomach and intestines, which, in their opinion,
-had been set up by an irritant poison, but might have been set up by
-his getting wet through.
-
-These doctors agreed that by the phrase “irritant poison” they meant
-any unwholesome food or drink.
-
-Up to the time of death the doctors, Messrs. Humphreys and Carter,
-had supposed and treated the patient for dyspepsia, notwithstanding
-that suggestions had been made to them by Michael Maybrick that the
-patient was being poisoned; and they said in their evidence that _but
-for the discovery of arsenic on the premises, they would have given a
-certificate of death from natural causes_.
-
-At the post-mortem examination they selected such portions of the body
-for analysis as they considered necessary, including, among other
-things, the stomach and its contents; and the analyst employed by the
-police (Mr. Davies) _found no arsenic in the stomach or its contents_,
-and was unable to discover any weighable traces of arsenic in any other
-portions of the body.
-
-About three weeks afterward the body was, by order of the Home
-Secretary, exhumed, and fresh portions of it were taken for analysis,
-some of which were examined by Mr. Davies and other parts by Dr.
-Stevenson, one of the Crown analysts.
-
-In those portions taken at the exhumation, the total result of the
-search for arsenic in the body was that Mr. Davies actually found
-unweighable arsenic, 2/100 of a grain, in the liver, and Dr. Stevenson
-76/1000 of a grain in the liver and 15/1000 in the intestines, making,
-when all added together, the total amount as found by Mr. Davies and
-Dr. Stevenson about one-tenth of a grain, made up of minute fractional
-portions of one-hundredths and one-thousandths.
-
-It was shown in evidence that the smallest fatal dose of arsenic ever
-recorded was two grains, which was in the case of a woman, and who
-presumably was not an arsenic-eater.
-
-It was shown in evidence that in the year 1888 Mrs. Maybrick had asked
-Dr. Hopper (who was at that time, and had been for many years, their
-regular medical attendant) to speak to Mr. Maybrick and prevent him
-taking certain medicines, which were doing him harm; that early in
-March she made the same appeal to Dr. Humphreys, suggesting at the time
-that Mr. Maybrick was taking a _white powder_, which she thought was
-strychnin.
-
-At the magisterial inquiry Dr. Humphreys stated that Mrs. Maybrick had,
-on the occasion of his being called in to the patient on the 28th of
-April, also spoken to him about her husband taking this white powder,
-and that in consequence of this he asked Mr. Maybrick about taking
-strychnin and nux vomica.
-
-Counsel will find proof, in the evidence given at the trial by Dr.
-Hopper, Mr. Heaton, Nicholas Bateson, Esq., Capt. Richard Thompson,
-Thomas Stansell, and Sir James Poole, ex-Mayor of Liverpool, as to the
-arsenic habit of James Maybrick and his opportunities for obtaining
-the drug. [To which must now be added the statutory declaration of
-Valentine Charles Blake, son of the late Sir Valentine Blake, M.P.,
-that he, about two months prior to Mr. Maybrick’s death, had procured
-him 150 grains of arsenic.] It may be stated here that from the
-appearance of the little bottles in which the white arsenic was found,
-they had been in use for a long time and were such as would be found
-as sample bottles in the offices of business houses to which it is
-unlikely Mrs. Maybrick would have access.
-
-It is submitted that the discovery of such a tiny quantity of arsenic
-in the body of a man addicted to such extraordinary habits might
-reasonably be accounted for by those habits.
-
-
-CONFLICT OF MEDICAL OPINION
-
-The conflict of medical opinion which was exhibited on this trial
-arose upon the point as to whether arsenic had been the cause of the
-gastro-enteritis, of which it was admitted that the man died.
-
-There was _no_ conflict of medical opinion on the facts that the
-quantity found in the body _was insufficient to cause death_, nor that
-gastro-enteritis might be set up by a vast variety of things besides
-arsenic--in fact, by any impure food or by excessive alcohol or by
-getting wet through. It was shown in evidence that Mr. Maybrick got
-wet through at the Wirrall Races on the 27th of April, and that he
-afterward went in his wet clothes to dinner at a friend’s on the other
-side of the Mersey.
-
-The conflict of medical opinion amounted to this, that the Crown
-called Drs. Carter and Humphreys, who both admitted that _they had
-never previously attended a case of arsenical poisoning, nor had ever
-before attended a post-mortem examination of a person whose death had
-been attributed to arsenic_--in short, that they had had no experience
-whatever. The Crown also called Dr. Stevenson (who had not attended
-the deceased, but had conducted the analysis of parts of the body) as
-an expert in poisoning, and he said, as to the symptoms during life:
-“_There is no distinctive diagnostic symptom of arsenical poisoning._
-The diagnostic thing is finding the arsenic.”
-
-The Crown also had Dr. Barron, who had attended the post-mortem, and
-who expressed himself unable to say that arsenic was the cause of the
-gastro-enteritis.
-
-These witnesses, it may be observed, gave their evidence both as to
-the symptoms during life and as to the appearances at the post-mortem
-_before_ the medical evidence for the defense had been called.
-
-The witnesses called for the defense had none of them attended the
-deceased, but were called as experts in poisoning, viz., Dr. Tidy, a
-Crown analyst, Dr. Macnamara, and Professor Paul, who all gave positive
-evidence that neither the symptoms during life nor the appearance after
-death were such as _could be attributed to arsenical poisoning_; that,
-in fact, they pointed _away from_, instead of toward, arsenic being the
-cause of death.
-
-The evidence of these witnesses was summarized very fairly by Mr.
-Justice Stephen.
-
-In the face of such a conflict of medical opinion, it is submitted that
-Mr. Justice Stephen should have refused to allow the jury to return any
-verdict of guilty at all.
-
-
-MISDIRECTIONS AS TO CAUSE OF DEATH
-
-On the first day of his summing-up, however, Mr. Justice Stephen told
-the jury as to the law under which they were to return their verdict:
-“You have been told that if you are not satisfied in your minds about
-poisoning--if you think he died from some other disease--then the case
-is not made out against the prisoner. It is a necessary step--it is
-_essential_ to this charge--that the man _died of poison_, and the
-poison suggested is arsenic. This is the question you have to consider,
-and it must be the foundation of a judgment unfavorable to the prisoner
-that he died of arsenic.”
-
-It is submitted that Mr. Justice Stephen _misdirected_ the jury when
-he told them to satisfy their minds whether he died from any other
-disease, inasmuch as the only question before the jury was whether _the
-cause of death was arsenic_.
-
-“The question for you is by what the illness was caused. Was it caused
-by arsenic or by some other means?”
-
-It is submitted that that is a _misdirection_. It might have been put
-to a coroner’s jury, but it was not a question which should have been
-put to a jury at a criminal trial.
-
-It is submitted that he _misdirected_ the jury in not also telling them
-that it was _essential_ to a verdict unfavorable to the prisoner that
-the arsenic of which he died _had been administered by her_, and also
-in not telling the jury that it was essential to a verdict unfavorable
-to the prisoner that, if she had administered any, she had done it with
-intent to destroy life.
-
-
-MISDIRECTION TO IGNORE MEDICAL TESTIMONY
-
-Mr. Justice Stephen then proceeded: “Now, let us see what the doctors
-say. Some say death was caused by arsenic, and others that it was not
-by arsenic--that he died of gastro-enteritis”; and he spoke of the
-medical evidence in a way which amounted to a direction to the jury
-that they were to treat it as _tainted with subtle partisanship_, and
-as evidence to which it was not necessary for them to attach _serious
-importance_. He, in fact, stated, and in so doing _misdirected_ the
-jury, that though it was essential to a verdict unfavorable to the
-prisoner that he died of arsenic, that question was one which they,
-the jury, could come to _their own opinion about, without taking into
-consideration the opinion of the medical experts, who had positively
-stated that arsenic was not the cause of death_. In other words, he
-directed the jury that, as the medical experts could not agree that
-the cause of death was arsenical poisoning, it was for them to decide
-that question from their own “_knowledge of human nature_.”
-
-On the second day of the summing-up the judge told the jury (and
-it is submitted that it contains _gross misdirections_): “You must
-consider the case as _a mere medical case_, in which you are to decide
-whether the man did or did not die of arsenic according to the medical
-evidence. You must not consider it as _a mere chemical case_, in which
-you decide whether the man died from arsenic which was discovered as
-the result of a chemical analysis. You must decide it as _a great,
-high, and important case_, involving in itself not only medical and
-chemical questions, but embodying in itself _a most highly important
-moral question_--and by that term, moral question, I do not mean a
-question of what is right and wrong in a moral point of view, but
-questions in which human nature enters and in which _you must rely on
-your knowledge of human nature_ in determining the resolution you
-arrive at.
-
-“You have, in the first place, to consider--far be it from me to
-exclude or try to get others to exclude from their own minds what I
-must feel myself vividly conscious of--the evidence in this matter. I
-think every human being in this case must feel vividly conscious of
-what you have to consider, but I had almost better say you ought not to
-consider, for fear you might consider it too much, the horrible nature
-of the inquiry in which you are engaged. I feel that it is a dreadful
-thing that you are deliberately considering whether you are to convict
-that woman of really as horribly dreadful a crime as ever any poor
-wretch who stood in the dock was accused of. If she is guilty--I am
-saying if my object is rather to heighten your feeling of the solemnity
-of the circumstances, and in no way to prevent you from feeling as you
-do feel, and as you ought to feel. I could say a good many other things
-about the awful nature of the charge, but I do not think it will be
-necessary to do any one thing. Your own hearts must tell you what it
-is for a person _to go on administering poison_ to a helpless, sick
-man, upon whom she has already inflicted a dreadful injury--an injury
-fatal to married life; the person who could do such a thing as that
-must be destitute of the least trace of human feeling.” And further on:
-“We have to consider this not in an unfeeling spirit--far from it--but
-in the spirit of people resolved to solve _by intellectual means an
-intellectual problem of great difficulty_.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Copyright by G. G. Rockwood, New York.
-
-HON. JOSEPH H. CHOATE, American Ambassador at the Court of St. James,
-1899--]
-
-Mr. Justice Stephen, in short, instead of putting to the jury for
-separate answers each of the following three questions:
-
-1. Did this man die of arsenic?
-
-2. Did Mrs. Maybrick administer that arsenic?
-
-3. Did she do it feloniously?
-
-invited them to return a verdict of “guilty” or “not guilty” upon a
-direction of law, wherein he told them that they were to decide it as
-_an intellectual problem_, on the question which, it is submitted, can
-be formulated thus:
-
-“Might this man have died of arsenic notwithstanding the opinion of
-the medical experts that he did _not_ die of arsenic?” And the jury
-answered “Yes.”
-
-It is submitted that this was _a gross misdirection_.
-
-It may be interesting and applicable to quote from a paper read by
-Sir Fitzjames Stephen himself at the Science Association in 1884:
-“It is not to be denied that, so long as great ignorance exists on
-matters of physical and medical science in all classes, physicians will
-occasionally have to submit to the mortification of seeing not only the
-jury, but the bar and bench itself, receive with scornful incredulity
-or with self-satisfied ignorance evidence which ought to be received
-with respect and attention.” How prophetic this was as exemplified by
-his own attitude in this trial need not be pointed out.
-
-
-MISRECEPTION OF EVIDENCE
-
-Under the head of Misreception of Evidence may be classed the
-observations of the judge, where, apparently in order to prevent
-the jury from being influenced _in favor of the prisoner_, owing to
-the small quantity of arsenic found in the body of the deceased, he
-mentioned _an instance of a dog_ being poisoned, in the body of which,
-though it had taken a large number of grains of arsenic, no arsenic was
-found after its death. The judge, in other words, turned himself into a
-witness for the prosecution. The unfairness to the prisoner of such a
-course is obvious. Had the judge been an ordinary witness he might have
-been cross-examined to show, _e.g._, that arsenic _passes away from the
-body of a dog much more quickly than from that of a man_, or that the
-circumstances as to time and quantity taken were such as to prove that
-there was no analogy between the two cases. As the matter stands, the
-judge’s recollection of an experiment _on a dog_, which had been made
-many years before, was meant to rebut a proposition much relied on by
-the defense, viz., that the small quantity of arsenic found in the body
-of the deceased was consistent with the view that he was _in the habit
-of taking arsenic_, rather than with the case for the Crown that he had
-been intentionally poisoned.
-
-
-CRUEL MISSTATEMENT BY THE CORONER
-
-The inquest was formally opened by taking the evidence of the
-identification of the deceased by his brother, Michael Maybrick, and
-then adjourned for a fortnight, the coroner announcing that there had
-been a post-mortem examination by Dr. Humphreys, and that the result
-of that examination was that poison was found in the stomach of the
-deceased in such quantities as to justify further examination; that
-the stomach of the deceased, and its contents, would meanwhile be
-chemically analyzed, and on the result of that analysis would depend
-the question whether or not criminal proceedings against some person
-would follow. Now the announcement that “poison had been found in the
-stomach of the deceased” was _contrary to fact_, and in consequence
-of this _cruel misstatement_ the proceedings caused an immense amount
-of popular excitement and prejudice against the accused, who, being
-too ill to be removed, remained at Battlecrease House, in charge of
-the police, till the following Saturday morning, the 18th May, when a
-sort of court inquiry was opened in Mrs. Maybrick’s bedroom by Colonel
-Bidwell, one of the county magistrates.
-
-
-MEDICAL EVIDENCE FOR THE PROSECUTION
-
-The evidence of Dr. Arthur Richard Hopper, who had been Mr. and Mrs.
-Maybrick’s medical adviser for about seven years, was taken. He had not
-attended Mr. Maybrick during his last illness, but spoke about Mrs.
-Maybrick having asked him the year before to check her husband from
-taking _dangerous drugs_, and that Mr. Maybrick had admitted to him
-that he used to dose himself with anything his friends recommended, and
-_that he was used to the taking of arsenic_.
-
-Dr. Richard Humphreys spoke as to the symptoms of the illness and
-his prescriptions, and that he had not suspected poisoning until it
-was suggested to him and his colleague, Dr. Carter, and that he had
-_himself administered arsenic_ to the deceased, in the form of Fowler’s
-solution, on the Sunday or Monday before death, and that he refused
-_a certificate of death only because arsenic had been found on the
-premises_.
-
-Dr. William Carter spoke of being called the Tuesday before death, and
-he agreed with Dr. Humphreys that an irritant poison, most probably
-arsenic, was the cause of death.
-
-Dr. Alexander Barron gave evidence to the effect that he was unable to
-ascertain _any particular poison_.
-
-Mr. Edward Davies, the analyst, was called, and gave evidence to the
-effect that he had found _no weighable arsenic_ in the portions of the
-body selected at the post-mortem, but that he had subsequently _found
-one fiftieth of a grain of arsenic_ in a part of the liver, nothing
-in the _stomach or its contents, but traces, not weighable_, in the
-intestines, and that he had found arsenic in some of the bottles and
-things found in the house after death and in the Valentine’s meat juice.
-
-The first issue which the jury at the trial had to determine was
-whether it was proved beyond _reasonable_ doubt that the deceased died
-from arsenical poisoning.
-
-Mr. Justice Stephen, in his summing-up, put this issue to the jury in
-the following words:
-
-“It is _essential_ to this charge that the man _died_ of arsenic.
-This question must be the foundation of a verdict unfavorable to the
-prisoner, that he _died of arsenic_.”
-
-It must be assumed that this was a question exclusively for medical
-experts, notwithstanding which the judge, in summing up, told the jury:
-
-“You must not consider this _as a mere medical case_, in which you are
-to decide whether the man _did_ or _did not die of arsenic poisoning
-according to the medical evidence_. You must _not consider it as a mere
-chemical case_, in which you decide whether the man _died from arsenic
-which was discovered as the result of a chemical analysis_. You must
-decide it as a _great and highly important case_, involving in itself
-not only medical and chemical questions, but involving in itself a most
-highly important _moral question_.”
-
-
-MAYBRICK DIED A NATURAL DEATH
-
-Dr. Humphreys gave it as his opinion that the appearances at the
-post-mortem were _consistent with congestion_ of the stomach not
-_necessarily caused by an irritant poison_, and that the symptoms
-during life were also consistent with congestion not caused by an
-irritant poison, but with acute inflammation of the stomach and
-intestines, produced by any cause whatever, and which would produce
-similar pathological results. He thought death was caused by some
-irritant poison, most likely arsenic, but he _would not like to
-swear that it was_. Dr. Humphreys’ evidence, therefore, amounted
-to this, that the deceased died from gastro-enteritis, a natural
-disease, attributable to a variety of causes, and that, apart from the
-suggestions already referred to, he would have certified accordingly.
-
-Dr. Humphreys’ evidence was confirmed by that of Dr. Carter, who
-stated he came to the same conclusion as Dr. Humphreys, “but in a
-more positive manner.” Dr. Carter had assisted at the post-mortem
-examination, besides being in close attendance on the deceased for the
-five days preceding his death, which he attributed to taking some
-irritant wine or decomposed meat, or to some grave error of diet; and
-when pressed as to whether he had any reason to suppose the article
-taken was poison, he explained that he did, but that by poison he meant
-something that was bad--it might be tinned meat, which the deceased had
-partaken of at the race dinner, or wine, or something which had set
-up gastritis. This witness’s account of the post-mortem was that they
-_found no arsenic_, but merely evidence of an irritant poison in the
-stomach and intestines, probably arsenic. Dr. Carter’s evidence was
-therefore _against poisoning by arsenic_ being conclusively accepted as
-the cause of death, _although subsequently he said he had no doubt it
-was arsenic_.
-
-Dr. Barron’s evidence as to the cause of death was that he considered
-from the post-mortem appearances that death was due to inflammation of
-the stomach and bowels, due to some irritant poison, but that he was
-unable to point to the particular poison, apart from what he heard;
-and, pressed as to what he meant by poison, the witness stated that
-poison might be bad tinned meat, bad fish, mussels, or generally bad
-food of any kind, or alcohol taken in excess.
-
-
-THE CHIEF WITNESS FOR THE PROSECUTION
-
-Dr. Stevenson expressed his opinion that the deceased died from
-arsenic poisoning, giving as his reasons that the main symptoms were
-those attributable to an irritant poison, and that they more closely
-resembled those of arsenic than of any other irritant of which he
-knew. He stated that he had known a great number of cases of poisoning
-by arsenic in every shape, and that he acted officially for the Home
-Office and Treasury in such cases. Dr. Stevenson was the witness of the
-prosecution, and gave his evidence _before_ he had heard the evidence
-for the defense.
-
-Dr. Stevenson also stated that the general symptoms of arsenic
-poisoning appeared _within half an hour_ of taking some article of
-food or medicine, and were nausea, with a sinking sensation of the
-stomach; vomiting, which, unlike that produced by any ordinary article
-of food or drink that disagrees, afforded as a rule no relief and
-often came on again; that there was most commonly pain in the stomach,
-diarrhea; after a time the region of the stomach becomes tender under
-pressure, the patient becomes restless, often bathed in perspiration;
-the throat is complained of; pain in the throat, extending down to the
-stomach; the tongue becomes very foul in appearance and furred. There
-is not a bad smell as in the ordinary dyspeptic tongue, a rapid and
-feeble pulse, thirst, great straining at stool, vomits and evacuations
-frequently stained with blood. Of fourteen symptoms of arsenic
-poisoning named by Dr. Stevenson, Mr. Maybrick exhibited _only one_,
-according to the testimony of Dr. Stevenson. With the exception of the
-foul tongue with malodorous breath, none of these symptoms coincided
-with those given by Drs. Humphreys and Carter, who were in attendance
-on the patient, while Dr. Stevenson _never saw him_.
-
-
-MEDICAL EVIDENCE FOR DEFENSE
-
-Then came the evidence for the defense, rebutting the presumption
-that death was caused by arsenic. First in order being Dr. Tidy, the
-examiner for forensic medicine at the London Hospital, and also, like
-Dr. Stevenson, employed as an analyst by the Home Office. This witness
-stated that, within a few years, close upon _forty cases of arsenical
-poisoning_ had come before him, which enabled him to indicate the
-recurring and distinctive indications formed in such cases.
-
-Dr. Tidy describes the symptoms of arsenic poisoning as purging and
-vomiting in a very excessive degree; a burning pain in the abdomen,
-more marked in the pit of the stomach, and increased considerably by
-pressure, usually associated with pain in the calves of the legs; then,
-after a certain interval, suffusion of the eyes--the eyes fill with
-tears; great irritability about the eyelids; frequent intolerance of
-light.
-
-Dr. Tidy added that there were three symptoms, such as cramps,
-tenesmus, straining, more or less present, but the prominent symptoms
-were those he had mentioned, especially the sickness, violent,
-incessant sickness, and that poisoning by arsenic was extremely simple
-to detect. Further, that he (Dr. Tidy) had known cases where one or
-more of the four symptoms mentioned had been absent, but he had never
-known a case in which all four symptoms were absent; and stated that he
-had followed every detail of the Maybrick case so far as he could, and
-had read all the depositions before the coroner and magistrate, and the
-account of the vomiting did not agree with his description of excessive
-and persistent vomiting, and was certainly not that kind of vomiting
-that takes place in a typical case of arsenical poisoning.
-
-Dr. Tidy further stated that, taking the whole of the symptoms,
-they undoubtedly were _not_ those of arsenical poisoning, nor did
-they point to such, but were perfectly consistent with death from
-gastro-enteritis, not caused by arsenical poisoning at all; and
-that, had he been called upon to advise, he should have said it was
-undoubtedly not arsenical poisoning, and that his view had been
-very much strengthened, to use his own words, by the result of the
-post-mortem, which distinctly pointed _away_ from arsenic.
-
-Then there was the evidence, in the same direction, of Dr. Macnamara,
-the president of the Royal College of Surgeons, and its representative
-on the General Medical Council of the Kingdom, which is summed up in
-the general question put to him and his answer:
-
-Question: Now, bringing your best judgment to bear on the matter--you
-having been present at the whole of this trial and heard the
-evidence--in your opinion, was this death from arsenical poisoning?
-
-Answer: _Certainly not_.
-
-In cross-examination Dr. Macnamara stated that, to the best of his
-judgment, Mr. Maybrick died of gastro-enteritis, not connected with
-arsenical poisoning, and which might have been caused by the wetting at
-the Wirrall races.
-
-Dr. Paul, professor of medical jurisprudence at University College,
-Liverpool, and pathologist at the Royal Infirmary, stated he had made
-and assisted at something like three or four thousand post-mortem
-examinations, and that the symptoms in the present case agreed with
-cases of _gastro-enteritis pure and simple_; that the finding of
-the arsenic in the body, in the quantity mentioned in the evidence,
-was quite consistent with the case of a man who had taken arsenic
-medicinally, but _who had left it off for some time, even for several
-months_.
-
-
-A TOXICOLOGICAL STUDY
-
-So positive were Dr. Tidy and Dr. Macnamara of their position as to the
-effect of arsenic on the human system, that they subsequently published
-“A Toxicological Study of the Maybrick Case,” thus challenging medical
-critics the world over to refute them. From this study the following,
-in tabular form, is taken, in order to contrast the symptoms from which
-Mr. Maybrick suffered with those which, it will be generally admitted,
-are the usual symptoms of arsenical poisoning:
-
- ARSENICAL POISONING MR. MAYBRICK’S CASE
-
- Countenance tells of severe | Not so described.
- suffering. |
- |
- Very great depression an early | Not present until toward
- symptom. | the end.
- |
- Fire-burning pain in stomach. | Not present.
- |
- Pain in stomach increased on | Pressure produced no
- pressure. | pain.
- |
- Violent and uncontrollable vomiting | “Hawking rather than vomiting;”
- independent of ingesta. | irritability of stomach
- | increased by ingesta.
- |
- Vomiting not relieved by such | Vomiting controlled by
- treatment as was used in Mr. | treatment.
- Maybrick’s case. |
- |
- During vomiting burning heat and | Not present.
- constriction felt in throat. |
- |
- Blood frequently present in | Not present.
- vomited and purged matter. |
- |
- Intensely painful cramps in | Not present.
- calves of the legs. |
- |
- Pain in urinating. | Not present.
- |
- Purging and tenesmus an early | Not present until twelfth day
- symptom. | of illness, and then once
- | only.
- |
- Great intolerance of light. | Not present.
- |
- Eyes suffused and smarting. | Not present.
- |
- Eyeballs inflamed and reddened. | Not present.
- |
- Eyelids intensely itchy. | Not present.
- |
- Rapid and painful respiration | Not present.
- an early symptom. |
- |
- Pulse small, frequent, irregular, | Not so described until
- and imperceptible from the | approach of death.
- outset. |
- |
- Arsenic easily detected in urine | Not detected, _although looked
- and fæces. | for_.
- |
- Tongue fiery red in its entirety, | Tongue not red; “simply filthy.”
- or fiery red at tip and margins |
- and foul toward base. |
- |
- Early and remarkable reduction | Temperature normal up to day
- of temperature generally. | preceding death.
-
-“Maybrick’s symptoms are as unlike poisoning by arsenic _as it is
-possible for a case of dyspepsia to be. Everything distinctive of
-arsenic is absent._ The urine contained no arsenic. The symptoms are
-not even consistent with arsenical poisoning.
-
-“Regarding the treatment adopted by the medical men, and more
-especially Dr. Carter’s action with regard to the meat juice, we
-are justified in assuming that the doctors themselves, even _after_
-a certain suggestion had been made to them, did not come to the
-conclusion that the illness of Maybrick was the result of arsenic.
-
-“It is noteworthy (1) that none was found in the stomach; (2) that
-Maybrick was in the habit of taking drugs, and among them arsenic.
-
-“Thus two conclusions are forced upon us:
-
-“(1) That the arsenic found in Maybrick’s body may have been taken in
-merely medicinal doses, and that probably it was so taken.
-
-“(2) That the arsenic may have been taken a considerable time before
-either his death or illness, and that probably it was so taken.
-
-“Our toxicological studies have led us to the three following
-conclusions:
-
-“(1) That the symptoms from which Maybrick suffered are consistent with
-any form of acute dyspepsia, but that they point _away_ from, rather
-than toward, arsenic as the cause of such dyspeptic condition.
-
-“(2) That the post-mortem appearances are indicative of inflammation,
-but that they emphatically point away from arsenic as the cause of
-death.
-
-“(3) That the analysis fails to find more than _one-twentieth_ part of
-a fatal dose of arsenic, and that the quantity so found _is perfectly
-consistent with its medicinal ingestion_.”
-
-
-THE MEDICAL WEAKNESS OF THE PROSECUTION
-
-Such was the complete evidence of the cause of death. The quantity
-of arsenic found in the body was _one-tenth_ of a grain, and upon
-this evidence rests the first issue the jury had to consider, namely,
-whether it was proved beyond reasonable doubt that the deceased died
-from arsenical poisoning.
-
-As to the value of the medical testimony on both sides, Dr. Humphreys
-_admitted that he never attended a case of arsenical poisoning in
-his life_, nor of any irritant poison, and that he would have given
-a certificate of death from natural causes had he not been told of
-arsenic found in the meat juice.
-
-Dr. Carter laid _no claim to any previous experience of poisoning by
-arsenic_, and was unable to say from the post-mortem examination that
-arsenic was the cause of death, which he could only attribute to an
-irritant of some kind, and he admitted that it was the evidence of Mr.
-Davies, as to the finding of arsenic in the body, which led him to the
-conclusion that arsenical poisoning had taken place.
-
-Dr. Barron did not see the patient, but assisted at the post-mortem
-examination, and stated that, judging by the appearances and apart from
-what he had heard, he was unable to identify arsenic as the particular
-poison which had set up the inflammation.
-
-Now, assuming for a moment that this issue as to the cause of death
-rested entirely upon the uncontradicted testimony of these three
-doctors called for the prosecution, Humphreys, Carter, and Barron, the
-jury would not have been justified in coming to the conclusion that
-there was _no reasonable doubt_ that arsenic poisoning was the cause
-of death. The doctors themselves had admitted that they were unable to
-arrive at that conclusion, apart from the evidence that arsenic was
-found in the body. _The idea of arsenical poisoning never occurred to
-them from the symptoms, until the use of arsenic was first suggested._
-
-_The doctors could not say that_ death resulted from arsenic poisoning,
-_and yet the jury have actually found that it did_, in the face of the
-opinions of three eminent medical experts, who say it did not.
-
-Even if these doctors had never been called at all for the defense, the
-jury were yet not justified in taking the evidence of Drs. Humphreys,
-Carter, and Barron, in the terms which they themselves never intended
-to pledge themselves to, namely, to exclude _a reasonable doubt_ that
-death was due to arsenic.
-
-Let us consider the position of the medical men called for the defense:
-Drs. Tidy, Macnamara, and Paul _are the highest authorities on medical
-and chemical jurisprudence in Great Britain_. No sort of hesitation or
-doubt attached to the opinions of any of them, and their experience of
-post-mortem examinations was referred to, as including in the practise
-of Dr. Tidy, the Crown analyst, some forty cases of arsenic poisoning
-alone. Dr. Macnamara indorsed the opinion of Dr. Tidy. In addition to
-that, there was on the same side the evidence of Dr. Paul, professor of
-medical jurisprudence and toxicology at University College, Liverpool,
-with an experience of three or four thousand post-mortem examinations.
-It is impossible to conjecture _by what process of reasoning_ the jury
-could have come to the conclusion, upon the evidence before them, that
-it _was beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Maybrick_ had met his death
-by arsenical poisoning.
-
-_This volume of evidence before the jury pointed not only to a doubt as
-to the cause of death, but to a reasonable_ conclusion that it was _not
-due to arsenical poisoning. It is inconceivable that the jury should
-have_ found as they did, _except under the mandatory direction of the
-judge, which left them apparently no alternative but to substitute
-his opinions and judgment for_ their own, so that on that _issue the
-finding was not so much the finding of the jury, to which the prisoner
-was by law entitled, but the finding of_ the judge, _of whom the jury,
-abrogating their own functions, became the mere mouthpieces_.
-
-
-THE ADMINISTRATION OF ARSENIC
-
-The consideration of the facts as given in evidence also covers the
-second issue which the jury had to determine, namely, whether, if
-arsenic poisoning was the cause of death, it was the prisoner who
-administered it with criminal intent. The evidence on this point was
-most inconclusive.
-
-_No one saw the prisoner administer arsenic to her husband._
-
-She had no opportunity of giving her husband anything since one or
-two o’clock on Wednesday afternoon (8th of May), after which she was
-closely watched by the nurses. _It was not shown that any food or drink
-administered to the deceased by the prisoner contained arsenic._ It
-was not shown that the prisoner _had placed arsenic in any food or
-drink intended for her husband’s use_. Nor, in fact, was any found,
-although searched for, in any food or medicine of which Mr. Maybrick
-partook during his illness, _except the arsenic in Fowler’s solution,
-prescribed and administered by Dr. Humphreys himself_.
-
-
-THE FLY-PAPER EPISODE
-
-The episode of the fly-papers may be considered as one of the most
-important factors in the whole case. It supplies, so to speak, the
-only link between Mrs. Maybrick and arsenic, which, it is well known,
-forms their chief ingredient. It was proved she had purchased the
-fly-papers without any attempt at concealment, and, while soaking, they
-were exposed to everybody’s view, quite openly, in a room accessible
-to every inmate of the house. It was not suggested that Mrs. Maybrick
-bought the other large quantity of arsenic, between seventy and eighty
-grains, found in the house after death, _and no one came forward to
-speak to any such purchase_. It was found in the most unlikely places
-for Mrs. Maybrick to have selected, if she had intended to use it,
-and the evidence against her on this point is of _a particularly
-vague and indefinite character_. [Justice Stephen, commenting on the
-quantity of arsenic found on the premises, himself observed that it
-was a remarkable fact in the case, and which, it appeared to him, told
-most favorably than otherwise for the prisoner, as in the whole case,
-from first to last, there was no evidence at all that she had bought
-any poison, or had anything to do with the procuring of any, with the
-exception of those fly-papers.] The accusation rests entirely _on
-suspicion, insinuation, and circumstantial suggestions; not one tittle
-of evidence was adduced in support of it_, and yet the jury came to the
-conclusion, without allowing of any doubt in the matter, _that it was
-her hand which administered the poison_.
-
-
-HOW MRS. MAYBRICK ACCOUNTS FOR THE FLY-PAPERS
-
-On this question the prisoner made a statement. She accounted for the
-soaking of the fly-papers upon grounds which were not only probable,
-but were corroborated by other incidents. That she was in the habit
-of using arsenic as a face wash is shown by the prescription in 1878,
-before her marriage, and of which the chemist made an entry in his
-books, which came to light, after the trial, under the following
-circumstances:
-
-Among the few articles which Mr. Maybrick’s brothers allowed to be
-taken from the house, they being the legatees of the deceased, was a
-Bible which had belonged to Mrs. Maybrick’s father, and which, with
-some other relics, came into the hands of Mrs. Maybrick’s mother, the
-Baroness von Roques, who, months afterward, happening to turn over
-the leaves of the Bible, came across a small piece of printed paper,
-evidently mislaid there, being a New York chemist’s label, with a New
-York doctor’s prescription written on the back, for an arsenical face
-wash “for external use, to be applied with a sponge twice a day.”
-
-This prescription contained Fowler’s solution of arsenic, chlorate of
-potash, rose-water, and rectified spirits; and was again made up, on
-the 17th of July, 1878, by a French chemist, Mr. L. Brouant, 81 Avenue
-D’Eylau, Paris. It corroborates Mrs. Maybrick’s statement at the trial
-that the fly-papers were being soaked for the purpose alleged by her.
-If Mrs. Maybrick had obtained or purchased the seventy or eighty grains
-of arsenic found in the house after the death, it is inconceivable that
-she should have openly manufactured more arsenic with the fly-papers.
-At the time she prepared the statement she had reason to believe that
-the prescription had been lost. She knew, therefore, it would be
-impossible for her to corroborate her story about the face wash, and
-she could have omitted that incident altogether, and contented herself
-by saying that she learned the preparation while at school in Germany.
-
-[In further explanation I desire to state that during my girlhood, as
-well as subsequently, I suffered occasionally, due to gastric causes,
-from an irritation of the skin. One of my schoolmates, observing
-that it troubled me a good deal, offered me a face lotion of her own
-preparation, explaining that it was much more difficult to obtain
-an arsenical ingredient abroad than in America, and to avoid any
-consequent annoyance she extracted the necessary small quantity of
-arsenic by the soaking of fly-papers. I had never had occasion to do
-so myself, as I had a prescription from Dr. Bay; but when I discovered
-that I had mislaid or lost this, I recalled the method of my friend,
-being, however, wholly ignorant of what quantity might be required. The
-reason why I wanted a cosmetic at this time was that I was going to a
-fancy dress ball with my husband’s brother, and that my face was at
-that time in an uncomfortable state of irritation.--F. E. M.]
-
-
-ADMINISTRATION OF ARSENIC NOT PROVED
-
-Dealing with the question, did Mrs. Maybrick administer the arsenic,
-there is absolutely no evidence _that she did. It was not for the
-prisoner to prove her innocence._ She was seen neither to administer
-the arsenic nor to put it in the food or drink taken by the deceased,
-and this issue was found against her in the absence of any evidence in
-support.
-
-
-INTENT TO MURDER NOT PROVED
-
-Mrs. Maybrick’s statement also bears strongly upon the question of
-administering with intent to murder. It is equally inconceivable that
-a guilty woman would have said anything about the white powder in the
-meat juice. She had nothing to gain by making such a statement, which
-could only land her in the sea of difficulties without any possible
-benefit, and here again the probabilities are entirely in her favor. It
-is beyond a doubt that Mr. Maybrick was in the habit, or had at some
-time or other been in the habit, of drugging himself with all sorts of
-medicines, including arsenic, and assumably he had obtained relief from
-it, or he would not have continued the practise.
-
-Mr. Justice Stephen, in his summing-up, animadverted in very strong
-terms on the testimony of arsenic being used for cosmetic purposes,
-although expert chemists had certified to large use of arsenic for such
-a purpose. An immense degree of speculation must have entered the minds
-of the jury before they could find as they did, and bridge the gulf
-between the soaking of the fly-papers and the death of Mr. Maybrick,
-for it is quite evident that the soaking of the fly-papers was the one
-connection between the arsenic and the prisoner upon which all the
-subsequent events turned; and, if that be so, the importance is seen at
-once of the statement she made regarding that incident, and conclusive
-evidence as to which was subsequently found in the providentially
-recovered prescription.
-
-[Illustration: SAMUEL V. HAYDEN, Of Hayden & Yarrell, American counsel
-of Mrs. Maybrick.]
-
-
-ABSENCE OF CONCEALMENT BY PRISONER
-
-Another remarkable circumstance is the absence of any attempt at
-concealment on the prisoner’s part. The fly-papers were purchased
-openly from chemists who knew the Maybricks well, and they were left
-soaking in such a manner as at once to refute any suggestion of
-secrecy; and her voluntary statement about the white powder which she
-placed in the meat juice, as to which there was absolutely no evidence
-to connect her with its presence there, seems inconsistent with the
-theory the prosecution attempted to build upon _a number of assumptions
-of which the accuracy was not proved_.
-
-The question of the prisoner’s guilt was not capable of being reduced
-to any issue upon which the prosecution could bring to bear direct
-evidence; the most they were capable of doing was to show that the
-prisoner had _opportunities_ of administering poison, which she _shared
-with every individual in the house_; further, that she had arsenic
-in her possession (and this was an _open secret_, as we have already
-explained with reference to the fly-papers); and, lastly, that she
-had the possibility of extracting arsenic in sufficient quantities
-to cause death, which was, however, extremely doubtful; and then the
-prosecution tried to complete this indirect evidence by proving that
-Mr. Maybrick died from arsenic poisoning, _which they signally failed
-to do_. The strong point of the prosecution, as they alleged, was that
-a bottle of Valentine’s meat juice had been seen in her hands on the
-night of Thursday, the 9th of May, and she replaced it in the bedroom,
-where it was afterward found by Michael Maybrick, and analyzed by Mr.
-Davis, who found half a grain of “arsenic in solution”; but there was
-_no direct proof_, such as is absolutely necessary to a conviction in a
-criminal case, _of the identity of the bottle_ seen in Mrs. Maybrick’s
-hands and that given to the analyst, and there was evidence that it had
-remained in the bedroom _within reach of anybody, Mr. Maybrick himself
-included_, for eighteen hours, and did not until the next day reach
-the hands of the analyst. These bottles are all alike in appearance,
-of similar turnip-like shape as the bovril bottles now sold, and it
-is clear there was more than one, because Dr. Humphreys says in his
-evidence that on visiting his patient on the 6th of May he found some
-of the Valentine’s meat extract had made Mr. Maybrick sick, which he
-was not surprised at, as it often made people sick; while Nurse Gore,
-speaking of the bottle seen in the hands of Mrs. Maybrick, said it was
-a _fresh, unused bottle_, which she had herself opened only an hour
-before.
-
-No evidence was given of what became of the opened bottle, and the
-presence of the arsenic having already been accounted for, and the fact
-recorded that the meat juice was not given to Mr. Maybrick, there is
-nothing to add to what has already been said, except that the account
-exactly dovetails with the prisoner’s own voluntary statement.
-
-Can any one, closely following the evidence throughout, fail to be
-impressed with the _inconsistency of Mrs. Maybrick’s conduct in
-relation to her husband’s illness with a desire to murder him?_ In
-all recorded cases of poisoning, the utmost precautions to screen the
-victim from observation have been observed. In the present instance it
-would seem as if just the reverse object had been aimed at. We find
-the prisoner _first giving the alarm about the attack_ of illness;
-first sending for the doctors, brothers, and friends; first suggesting
-that something taken by her husband, some drug or medicine, was at the
-bottom of the mischief. We find the very first thing she does is to
-administer a mustard emetic--the last thing one would have expected if
-there had been a desire to poison him. If the prisoner _had wished to
-put everybody in the house, and the doctors themselves, on the scent of
-poison, she could not have acted differently_.
-
-[See also “Mrs. Maybrick’s Own Analysis of the Meat-Juice Incident,”
-page 366.]
-
-
-SOME IMPORTANT DEDUCTIONS FROM MEDICAL TESTIMONY
-
-From Dr. Humphreys’ testimony it appears that, after the days when
-he was away from the patient, and when Mrs. Maybrick had undisturbed
-access to her husband, _no symptoms whatever of arsenical poisoning
-appeared_. If, then, arsenic was administered by Mrs. Maybrick under
-the doctors’ eyes, without their detecting it, _what value can attach
-to the testimony of the medical attendants_ as to the cause of death,
-apart from the post-mortem examination, by which they practically admit
-_they allowed their judgment to be governed_?
-
-Does not the only alternative present itself that Drs. Humphreys
-and Carter are driven to the admission: “That the deceased died of
-arsenical poisoning we deduce, not from the _symptoms during life_, but
-from the fact that _arsenic was found in the body after death_”?
-
-
-SYMPTOMS DUE TO POISONOUS DRUGS
-
-From the medical testimony it appears that the following list of
-_poisonous drugs_ was prescribed and administered to Mr. Maybrick
-shortly before his death:
-
- April 28, 1899, diluted prussic acid; April 29, Papaine’s iridin;
- May 3, morphia suppository; May 4, ipecacuanha; May 5, prussic acid;
- May 6, Fowler’s solution of arsenic; May 7, jaborandi tincture and
- antipyrin; May 10, sulfonal, cocain, and phosphoric acid.
-
- Also, during the same period, the following were prescribed: bismuth,
- double doses; nitro-glycerin; cascara; nitro-hydrochloric acid
- (composed of nux vomica, strychnin, and brucine); Plummer’s pills
- (containing antimony and calomel); bromide of potassium; tincture of
- hyoscyamus; tincture of henbane; chlorin.
-
-Now it will be observed that up to May 6, when Fowler’s solution of
-arsenic was administered, no symptom whatever had been observed _at
-all compatible with the effects of arsenic_.
-
-The sickness produced by the morphia continued after the taking of
-arsenic, and down the unfortunate man’s throat prussic acid, papaine,
-iridin, morphia, ipecacuanha, and arsenic, some of the most powerful
-drugs known to the pharmacopœia, had found their way by the advice of
-Dr. Humphreys, in less than a week, while he was told to eat nothing,
-and allay his thirst with a damp cloth; and the charge of poisoning
-is made against the prisoner because he is suggested to have had an
-irritant poison in his stomach, and minute traces of arsenic in some
-other organs, within five days afterward.
-
-
-DEATH FROM NATURAL CAUSES
-
-The whole history of the case, from its medical aspect, is consistent
-with the small quantity of arsenic found in the body being part of
-that prescribed by Dr. Humphreys, or the remains of that taken by the
-deceased himself, _there being no particle of evidence to show that he
-discontinued the habit of drugging himself almost up to the day of his
-death_. This is also in accord with the evidence of Dr. Carter, who
-attended at a later period, and, taken as a whole, the evidence of both
-of these doctors, as well as their treatment of the deceased, points to
-_death from natural causes_.
-
-
-PROSECUTION’S DEDUCTIONS FROM POST-MORTEM ANALYSIS MISLEADING
-
-The evidence of the prosecution in connection with the analysis was
-thoroughly _unreliable and misleading_. Dr. Stevenson’s difficulty was
-that, while two grains of arsenic was the smallest quantity capable
-of killing, the analyst had found only one-tenth of a grain, or the
-twentieth part of the smallest fatal dose, and, in substance, Dr.
-Stevenson proceeds to argue as follows:
-
-(_a_) I found 0.015 grain of arsenic in 8 ounces of intestines.
-(There is no record as to what part of the intestines he examined.) I
-have weighed the intestines of some other person (not Mr. Maybrick),
-and find their entire weight to be so much. If, then, 8 ounces of
-Mr. Maybrick’s intestines yield 0.015 grain, the entire intestines
-(calculated from the weight of some one else’s intestines), had I
-analyzed them, would have yielded one-eleventh of a grain.
-
-(_b_) Dr. Stevenson then proceeds to argue: “I found 0.026 grain of
-arsenic in 4 ounces of liver. The entire liver weighed 48 ounces,
-_therefore the entire liver contained 0.32 grain of arsenic_.”
-
-(_c_) Dr. Stevenson argues further: “The intestines and liver,
-therefore, may be taken to contain together four-tenths of a grain of
-arsenic, and, having found four-tenths of a grain, I _assume_ that the
-body at the time of death _probably contained a fatal dose of arsenic_.”
-
-Such was the deduction Dr. Stevenson arrived at, _necessitating the
-assumption that arsenic was equally distributed in the intestines and
-liver_, whereas it is within the _personal knowledge of eminent men_
-(such as Drs. Tidy and Macnamara) that arsenic may be found after death
-_in one portion of the intestines, and not a trace of it in any other
-part_. That in arsenical poisoning the arsenic may be found in the
-rectum and in the duodenum, and in no other part, is beyond dispute,
-and the _fallacy of Dr. Stevenson’s process must be self-evident_.
-
-The witnesses for the prosecution themselves supply the proof of the
-unequal distribution of the arsenic in the liver.
-
-Mr. Davies calculates the quantity in the whole liver as 0.130 grain.
-
-Dr. Stevenson, in his first experiment, puts it at 0.312 grain, and in
-his second experiment at 0.278 grain; in other words, Dr. Stevenson
-finds _double in one experiment_ and considerably _more than double in
-another experiment, the quantity found by Mr. Davies, and it is upon
-this glaring miscalculation and discrepancy that the case for the
-prosecution was made_ to rest, and Mrs. Maybrick was convicted.
-
-But with all this miscalculation the approximate amount of arsenic _can
-only be swelled up to four-tenths of a grain, less than one-fourth of a
-fatal dose_, and it was demonstrated that every other part of the body,
-urine, bile, stomach, contents of stomach, heart, lungs, spleen, fluid
-from mouth, and even bones, _were all found to be free from arsenic_.
-
-
-RECAPITULATION OF LEGAL POINTS
-
-The legal points of the case may thus conveniently be recapitulated
-under the following short heads:
-
-There _was no conclusive_ evidence that Mr. Maybrick died from other
-than natural causes (the word “conclusive” being used in the sense of
-_free from doubt_).
-
-There was no conclusive evidence that he died from arsenical poisoning.
-
-There was no evidence that the prisoner administered or attempted to
-administer arsenic to him.
-
-There was no evidence that the prisoner, if she did administer or
-attempt to administer arsenic, did so with intent to murder.
-
-The judge, while engaged in his summing-up, placed himself in a
-position where his mind was open to the influence of public discussion
-and prejudice, to which was probably attributable the evident change in
-his summing-up between the first and second days; and he also _assumed
-facts against the prisoner which were not proved_.
-
-The jury were _allowed to separate_ and frequent places of public
-resort and entertainment during such summing-up.
-
-The verdict was _against the weight of evidence_.
-
-The jury _did not give the prisoner the benefit of the doubt_ suggested
-by the disagreement of expert witnesses on a material issue in the
-case.
-
-The Home Secretary should have remitted the entire sentence by reason
-of his being satisfied that there existed a _reasonable doubt of her
-guilt_, which, had it been taken into consideration at the time, would
-have entitled _her to an acquittal_.
-
-The indictment contained no specific account of felonious
-administration of poison, and consequently the jury found the prisoner
-guilty of an offense _for which she was never tried_.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[6] Mr. Maybrick’s dressing-room.
-
-[7] Later evidence showed that Mr. Maybrick secured as much as 150
-grains from one person, only about two months before his death.
-
-
-
-
-Mrs. Maybrick’s Own Analysis
-
-OF THE MEAT-JUICE INCIDENT
-
-
- I said in my statement to the Court, regarding this meat juice,
- that: “On Thursday night, the 9th, after Nurse Gore had given my
- husband beef juice, I went and sat on the bed by the side of him. He
- complained to me of feeling very sick, very weak, and very depressed,
- and again implored me to give him a powder, which he had referred to
- early in the evening and which I had then declined to give him. I was
- overwrought, terribly anxious, miserably unhappy, and his evident
- distress utterly unnerved me. He told me the powder would not harm
- him, and that I could put it in his food. I then consented. My lord,
- I had not one true or honest friend in the house. I had no one to
- consult and no one to advise me. I was deposed from my position as
- mistress in my own house and from the position of attending on my
- own husband, notwithstanding that he was so ill. Notwithstanding the
- evidence of nurses and servants, I may say that he wished to have me
- with him. [This desire was corroborated by the testimony of Nurse
- Callery.] He missed me whenever I was not with him. Whenever I went
- out of the room he asked for me, and for four days before he died I
- was not allowed to give him even a piece of ice without its being
- taken from my hand. When I found the powder I took it into the inner
- room, and in pushing through the door I upset the bottle, and, in
- order to make up the quantity of fluid spilled, I added a considerable
- quantity of water. On returning to the room I found my husband asleep,
- and I placed the bottle on the table by the window. When he awoke he
- had a choking sensation in his throat and vomiting. After that he
- appeared a little better. As he did not ask for the powder again, and
- as I was not anxious to give it to him, I removed the bottle from the
- small table, where it would attract his attention, to the top of the
- washstand, where he could not see it. There I left it until I believe
- Mr. Michael Maybrick took possession of it. Until a few minutes before
- Mr. Bryning made the terrible charge against me, no one in that
- house had informed me of the fact that a death certificate had been
- refused, or that a post-mortem examination had taken place, or that
- there was any reason to suppose that my husband died from other than
- natural causes. It was only when Mrs. Briggs alluded to the presence
- of arsenic in the meat juice that I was made aware of the [supposed]
- nature of the powder my husband had asked me to give him. I then
- attempted to make an explanation to Mrs. Briggs, such as I am now
- making to your lordship, when a policeman interrupted the conversation
- and put a stop to it.”
-
-Some time after my conviction there was found among my effects a
-prescription for a face wash containing arsenic (the existence of
-which Justice Stephen in his summing up flouted as an invention of
-mine to cover an intent to poison). This, together with the fact that
-on analysis no trace of “fiber” was discovered in the body or in any
-of the things containing poison found in the house, should remove the
-“fly-paper incident” from all serious consideration in its bearing on
-the case (although it was the source of all “suspicions” before death).
-
-[Illustration: LEONIDAS D. YARRELL, Of Hayden & Yarrell, American
-counsel of Mrs. Maybrick.]
-
-There remain only as “circumstantial evidence of guilt” what has come
-to be known as the “motive,” and the Valentine’s meat-juice incident.
-The “motive,” however regarded, was surely no incentive to murder,
-as inasmuch if I wanted to be free there was sufficient evidence in
-my possession (in the nature of infidelity and cruelty) to secure
-a divorce, and it was with regard to steps in that direction that
-I had already taken that I made confession to my husband after our
-reconciliation, and to which I referred as to the “wrong” I had done
-him, because of the publicity and ruin to his business it involved. The
-“motive,” which was introduced into the case in the form of a letter
-written by me on the 8th of May, in which I said that my husband
-was “sick unto death,” was made much of by the prosecution, and it
-led Justice Stephen to say, in his summing-up, “that I could not have
-known that my husband was dying (except I knew something others did
-not suspect), inasmuch as the doctors, from the diagnosis, did not
-consider the case at all serious.” The justice either did not or would
-not understand (though it was testified to) that the phrase, “sick
-unto death,” is an American colloquialism, especially of the South,
-and commonly employed with reference to any illness at all serious.
-Aside from the fact that all in attendance (save and except the doctors
-per their medical testimony) did regard it as serious--a witness for
-the prosecution, Mrs. Briggs, testified that she regarded him on that
-day as “dangerously ill,” and Mr. Michael Maybrick said that when he
-saw his brother on the evening of the same day “he was shocked by his
-appearance”--I may say here that the phrase “sick unto death,” in
-connection with other causes for apprehension, was prompted by the fact
-that my husband had told me that very morning that “he thought he was
-going to die”; and that this was his feeling is conclusively shown by
-the evidence of Dr. Humphreys at the inquest, when he testified that he
-had remarked to Mr. Michael Maybrick on this same Wednesday, the 8th
-of May: “I am not satisfied with your brother, and I will tell you why
-[not because the symptoms seemed serious to him, it will be observed].
-_Your brother tells me he is going to die._”
-
-That I regarded the case as really serious is surely further supported
-by the fact that, notwithstanding the easy-going attitude of Dr.
-Humphreys, I had persisted in urging a consultation, which accordingly
-took place on the 7th. As to what the attending physicians _knew_ or
-_did not know_ about the medical aspects of the case, I confidently
-refer the reader to their own remarkable testimony.
-
-There then remains for serious consideration only what is known as the
-“Valentine meat-juice incident.” Of this I know no more now than is
-included in my statement at the trial--namely, that at my husband’s
-urgent, piteous request I placed a powder (which by his direction I
-took from a pocket in his vest, hanging in the adjoining room, which
-room until his sickness had been his private bedroom, he having been
-removed to mine as being larger and more airy) in a bottle of meat
-juice, no part of the contents of which were given him, and hence at
-the very most there could only have legally arisen from this act a
-charge of “intent to poison.”
-
-I do not assume that I can solve a problem that has puzzled so many
-able minds, but I trust I shall make clear that the prosecution can not
-acquit itself of the inference of “cooking” up a case against me with
-reference to this meat-juice incident:
-
-1. At the inquest, only a few days after the occurrence, Nurse Gore
-testified, “I could and did see _clearly_ what Mrs. Maybrick did
-with the bottle,” though she failed to tell what she saw; and it
-is remarkable she was not further questioned on this point. At the
-magisterial inquiry and trial, _per contra_, she testified that “she
-[I] pushed the door to conceal (note the animus) her [my] movements”;
-but on cross-examination she so far corrected herself as to say: “Mrs.
-Maybrick did _not_ shut the dressing-room door.”
-
-2. When I returned with the bottle to the sick-room, she testified that
-I placed it on the table in a “_surreptitious manner_,” though this
-action, according to her own testimony, happened while “she [I] raised
-her right hand and replaced the bottle on the table, while she [I] was
-talking to me [her].”
-
-If one wanted to do such an act “surreptitiously,” would one choose the
-moment of all others when by conversation one is calling attention to
-oneself? Do not the two things involve a direct contradiction?
-
-3. It is in evidence that an hour after I had placed the bottle on a
-little table in the window, I returned to the room and removed it from
-the table to the washstand (where it remained during most of the next
-day), lest the sight of it should renew Mr. Maybrick’s desire for it,
-as he had just awakened. Note how this bottle is juggled with by the
-witnesses for the prosecution.
-
-Michael Maybrick, at the inquest, in answer to the question, “Where did
-you find the Valentine’s meat juice?” replied: “I found it on a _little
-table mixed up_ with _several other bottles_.” Note the particularity
-of this bottle being _mixed up with several other bottles_. Obviously
-he at this time, only a few days after the event, had a clear picture
-of the situation in his mind. In corroboration of this testimony that
-the bottle _he took_ was on the table and _not on the washstand_, there
-is the testimony of Nurse Callery, who at the inquest stated: “My
-attention was called by her [Nurse Gore] to a bottle of Valentine’s
-meat juice, which was on _a table_ in Mr. Maybrick’s room. I took a
-sample. I don’t know what became of the bottle of meat juice. I saw
-Mr. Michael Maybrick in the room before going off duty at 4.50 P.M. on
-Friday, but did not see him take the meat juice away.”
-
-Nurse Gore gave her testimony at the inquest _after_ the two others,
-and deposed that Mr. Michael Maybrick took the bottle from the
-_washstand_ where I had placed it, thus contradicting Michael Maybrick,
-and in a way also Nurse Callery, who testified that Nurse Gore called
-her attention to a bottle on the _small table_. Obviously this
-difference introduces _two_ bottles; but this would never answer the
-prosecution, and accordingly Mr. Michael Maybrick at the trial dropped
-_the table_ sworn to at the inquest and fell in line with Nurse Gore
-in so far as to say: “It was standing on the _washstand_, and it
-was _among some other bottles_.” Note that, while he substitutes the
-_washstand_ for the _table_, he still clings to the _bottles_--a most
-important circumstance--as it was indubitably shown that there were on
-the _washstand_ only the “ordinary basins and jugs” (water pitchers).
-Obviously Mr. Michael Maybrick had not fully comprehended the purpose
-of the prosecution in “harmonizing” the testimony with that of Nurse
-Gore; the “bottles” were too clearly in his mind to be dropped without
-a distinct effort, and he naturally introduced them again; and, to fit
-in with the Nurse Gore and the amended Mr. Michael Maybrick evidence,
-Nurse Callery also changed front at the trial, and the _table_ of her
-inquest testimony is also turned into a washstand. It is in evidence
-that as late as the 6th of May my husband took meat juice out of a
-bottle then in the room, the contents of which, however, did not
-agree with him, and upon the _order of Dr. Humphreys_ its giving was
-discontinued, he adding that he was “not surprised,” as it was known
-not to agree with some people.
-
-Although this was the doctor’s order, Mr. Edwin Maybrick took it upon
-himself to procure a fresh bottle, and, distinctly against the same
-order, Nurse Gore set about to administer its contents. Subsequently
-a bottle of meat juice, half full, was found in a small wooden box
-with other bottles (one of them containing arsenic in solution) in my
-husband’s hat-box.
-
-Nevertheless, though we are here undeniably dealing with _three_
-meat-juice bottles, only two were accounted for at the trial. What
-became of the third bottle? And which of the _three_ was missing? Now,
-furthermore, it is in evidence that Nurse Callery handled one of these
-bottles (between the time that I placed one on the washstand and the
-time when Mr. Michael Maybrick, more than twelve hours later, took one
-either from the _table_ or the _washstand_ for analysis), for she took
-a sample of it, which she afterward threw away.
-
-As all Valentine’s meat-juice bottles look alike, Mr. Michael Maybrick
-showed sufficient caution to say he could not identify the bottle shown
-him; but Nurse Gore, to whom every act of mine, however innocent, was
-fraught with “surreptitiousness” and “suspicion,” balked at no such
-scruples, but boldly testified that the bottle produced in court was
-the identical one that Mr. Michael Maybrick “took from the washstand,”
-even though at the inquest, when his memory was freshest, he testified
-that he took it from the _table_.
-
-It should be remembered that my statement to the court was to the
-effect that I put a powder (its nature unknown to me) in the meat-juice
-bottle I had in my hands. Yet no bottle containing a powder, or in
-which a powder had been dissolved, appeared in evidence. According to
-the analyst, the bottle submitted to him contained arsenic that had
-been put in in a state of solution. Now it resolves itself to this:
-either I uttered a falsehood about the powder and really introduced a
-solution, or another bottle was substituted for the one I had for two
-minutes in my possession.
-
-The contention of the prosecution was that I “invented” the powder,
-precisely as it was contended I “invented” the face-wash prescription
-which was found after the trial. If I “invented” the powder, how
-did I come by the solution? If I had had arsenic in solution in my
-possession, would I have gone to the trouble of making a solution
-for a face wash by the clumsy method of soaking fly-papers? Is not
-the proposition quite absurd on its face--that I should openly call
-attention to a method of arsenic extraction with the object of murder,
-when I already had the means at my command?
-
-Finally, let it be borne in mind, as stated by Justice Stephen himself
-as a remarkable fact, that no arsenic was traced to my procurement
-or found in my personal belongings (save and except the innocuous
-fly-papers), and I may add that no arsenic was traced to any one
-connected with the case, except to my husband.
-
-I say it is absolutely clear that the bottle of Valentine’s meat
-juice which Mr. Michael Maybrick took possession of and handed to Dr.
-Carter is not the same bottle which Nurse Gore saw me place on the
-washstand. There should be no flaw in the identity of the bottle which
-was handed to the analyst and the one which was in my hands, and I
-think the reader will say that it is impossible to conceive a greater
-_flaw in any evidence of identity_ than shown by these witnesses of the
-prosecution at the inquest, when their minds were freshest as to their
-respective parts in this incident, and at the trial.
-
-Those of my readers who follow the analysis of the testimony as
-presented by Messrs. Lumley & Lumley can hardly have failed to be
-impressed by the fact that I was surrounded by unscrupulous enemies,
-by people who not only had extraordinary knowledge as to where to look
-for deposits of arsenic, but also remarkable intuitions that arsenic
-had been administered before any evidence of the presence of poison had
-been analytically proven.
-
-In the above I have not aimed to make an analysis of the testimony,
-such as, for example, on the evidence now available, Lord Russell could
-have made; I have simply endeavored to satisfy my readers that I have
-substantial grounds for asserting my innocence before the world.
-
- FLORENCE ELIZABETH MAYBRICK.
-
-
-
-
-MEMORIALS FOR RESPITE OF SENTENCE
-
-
-FROM THE PHYSICIANS OF LIVERPOOL
-
-In a memorial for respite of sentence of Mrs. Maybrick, which was
-signed by leading medical practitioners of Liverpool, the petitioners
-say in part:
-
- “3. It was admitted by the medical testimony on behalf of the
- prosecution that the symptoms during life and the post-mortem
- appearances were in themselves insufficient to justify the conclusion
- that death was caused by arsenic, and that it was only the discovery
- of traces of that poison in certain parts of the viscera which
- eventually led to that conclusion.
-
- “4. The arsenic so found in the viscera was less in quantity than
- _that found in any previous case of arsenical poisoning in which
- arsenic has been found at all_.
-
- “5. There was indisputable evidence on the part of the defense that
- the deceased had been in the habit of taking arsenic, both medicinally
- and otherwise, for many years, and that the small quantity found in
- the viscera was inconsistent with the theory of a fatal dose at any
- time or times during the period covered by the illness of the deceased.
-
- “6. Lastly, your memorialists agree with the evidence given by Dr.
- Tidy, Dr. Macnamara, and Mr. Paul on behalf of the defense, that the
- medical evidence on behalf of the prosecution _had entirely failed to
- prove that the death was due to arsenical poisoning at all_.”
-
-
-FROM THE BARS OF LIVERPOOL AND LONDON
-
-Leading members of the Bars of Liverpool and London signed a memorial
-praying a reprieve of Mrs. Maybrick’s sentence “on the ground ... of
-the great conflict of medical testimony as to the cause of death” of
-Mr. Maybrick.
-
-
-FROM CITIZENS OF LIVERPOOL
-
-A petition for reprieve of Mrs. Maybrick’s sentence was signed by many
-and influential citizens of Liverpool. Among the reasons urged were:
-
-3. Lack of direct evidence of administration of arsenic.
-
-4. The weak case against prisoner on general facts unduly prejudiced by
-evidence of motive.
-
-5. Preponderance of medical testimony that death was ascribable to
-natural causes.
-
- [I feel a deep respect for the noble avowal given in the petition
- of the medical practitioners of Liverpool, who must have felt the
- honor of their profession at stake, and that their individual dignity
- and humanity were concerned. The feeling among the Bar on receipt
- of the verdict was an almost universal, if not a quite unanimous,
- one of surprise. I have already mentioned (in Part One), the change
- of attitude of the citizens of Liverpool toward me, as the trial
- progressed, from hostility to belief in my innocence.--F. E. M.]
-
-
-
-
-NEW EVIDENCE
-
-
-ARSENIC SOLD TO MAYBRICK BY DRUGGIST
-
-Mr. Edwin Garnett Heaton, a retired chemist (druggist), formerly
-carried on business at 14 Exchange Street East, Liverpool, for
-seventeen years; he retired from business in 1888. He testified at the
-trial:
-
- “Mr. Maybrick called frequently at my shop for about ten years or
- more, off and on. He used to get the tonic called ‘pick-me-up.’
- He would come to the shop, get it, and drink it up. He gave me
- a prescription which altered it, which I put up with _liquor
- arsenicalis_. He brought the prescription for the first few times;
- I used afterward to give it him at once, when he came into the shop
- and gave his order. I prepared the ‘pick-me-up’ and added the stuff.
- At the beginning of giving it to him, a certain quantity of _liquor
- arsenicalis_ was given, and as it continued it was gradually increased
- from first to last, so at the last it was 75 per cent. greater in
- quantity than it was originally. He used to get it from two to five
- times a day, and each containing 75 per cent. increase.”
-
-This testimony of Mr. Heaton’s was challenged by the prosecution, and
-considerably nullified by the fact that he did not know Mr. Maybrick,
-his customer, by name, but identified him by a photograph. To show
-how inexorably one fatality after another was woven into the web of
-my tragic case, it is in order to state that Mr. Heaton’s connection
-with Mr. Maybrick could and would undoubtedly have been perfectly
-established but for what in the circumstances can be characterized only
-as a criminal blunder on the part of the police. In the printed police
-list of the score or more medicine bottles found locked in the private
-desk of Mr. Maybrick at his office was one entered as follows: “Spirit
-of salvolatile, Edwin G. Easton, Exchange Street East, Liverpool.”
-This misprint of Easton for Heaton escaped the attention of everybody
-at the trial, and thus prevented the defense from identifying most
-circumstantially Mr. Maybrick with Mr. Heaton’s customer who had the
-arsenic habit.
-
-
-ARSENIC SUPPLIED TO MAYBRICK BY MANUFACTURING CHEMIST
-
-About ten years ago Mr. Valentine Charles Blake, of Victoria
-Embankment, son of a well-known baronet and Member of Parliament,
-made a voluntary statutory declaration [corroborated on oath in every
-possible essential by William Bryer Nation, of No. 7 Lion Street, a
-manufacturing chemist and patentee], that Mr. Maybrick, about two
-months before his death, procured through him (Mr. Blake), from
-Mr. Nation’s supplies, as much as 150 grains of arsenic in various
-forms. Mr. Nation, assisted by Mr. Blake, had made certain chemical
-experiments in preparing ramie, the fiber of rhea grass, to serve as a
-substitute for cotton. Among other ingredients used was arsenic, some
-in pure form (white arsenic), some mixed with soot, and some mixed with
-charcoal. In January, 1889, the process was perfected, and some time
-during the same month Mr. Nation sent Mr. Blake to see Mr. Maybrick, to
-get his assistance in placing the product on the market. Mr. Maybrick
-was interested in the proposition and inquired closely into the nature
-of the process, what ingredients were used, etc. The deponent told him
-that, among other materials, arsenic was employed.
-
-Then, to quote the exact words of the deposition, Mr. Blake went on to
-say:
-
- “14. The said Mr. Maybrick shortly afterward, during discussion at the
- same interview, asked me whether I had heard that many inhabitants of
- Styria, in Austria, habitually took arsenic internally and throve upon
- it. I said that I had heard so. He then spoke to me of De Quincey,
- the author of ‘Confessions of an Opium-Eater,’ and asked me had I
- read the work. I said, ‘Yes,’ and that I wondered De Quincey could
- have taken such a quantity as 900 drops of laudanum in a day. The
- said James Maybrick said, ‘One man’s poison is another man’s meat,
- and there is a so-called poison which is like meat and liquor to me
- whenever I feel weak and depressed. It makes me stronger in mind and
- in body at once,’ or words to that effect. I ventured to ask him what
- it was. He answered, ‘I don’t tell everybody, and wouldn’t tell you,
- only you mentioned arsenic. It is arsenic. I take it when I can get
- it, but the doctors won’t put any into my medicine except now and then
- a trifle, that only tantalizes me,’ or words to that effect. After
- a pause, during which I said nothing, the said James Maybrick said:
- ‘Since you use arsenic, can you let me have some? I find a difficulty
- in getting it here.’ I answered that I had some by me, and that, since
- I had only used it for experiments which were now perfected, I had
- no further use for it, and he (Maybrick) was welcome to all I had
- left. He then asked me what it was worth, and offered to pay for it in
- advance. I replied that I had no license to sell drugs, and suggested
- that we should make it a _quid pro quo_. Mr. Maybrick was to do his
- best with the ramie grass product, and I was to make him a present of
- the arsenic I had.
-
- “15. It was finally agreed that when I came to Liverpool again, as
- arranged I should bring with me and hand him the arsenic aforesaid.
-
- “16. _In February, 1889_, I again called at the office of the said
- James Maybrick, in Liverpool, and, as promised, I handed him all the
- arsenic I had at my command, amounting to about 150 grains, some of
- the ‘white’ and some of the two kinds of ‘black’ arsenic, in three
- separate paper packets. I told him to be careful, as he had ‘almost
- enough to poison a regiment.’ When we separated the said James
- Maybrick took away the said arsenic with him, saying he was going home
- to his house at Aigburth, to which he invited me. Having a train to
- catch, I declined the invitation, promising to accept it on my next
- visit to Liverpool, but before that occurred I read of his death.
-
- “17. After the wife of the said James Maybrick had been accused of
- his alleged murder, I wrote to Mr. Cleaver, her then solicitor, of
- Liverpool, to the effect that I could give some evidence which might
- be of use to his client, and I posted such letter but received no
- reply.
-
- “18. At this time I was intensely anxious as to the fate of my only
- son, Valentine Blake, who had in the previous year sailed on board
- the ship _Melanasia_ from South Shields for Valparaiso, which ship
- was then very long overdue and unheard of. I eventually learned, as
- a result of a Board of Trade inquiry, that the said ship must have
- foundered with all hands, my only son included. At the time I wrote
- as aforesaid to Mr. Cleaver, my entire attention was engrossed in
- endeavoring to get news as to the ship which never came home, and I
- felt little interest in any other subject. Receiving no reply to my
- said letter to Mr. Cleaver, I took no further steps in the matter
- until, seeing recently in a newspaper that Mr. Jonathan E. Harris, of
- 95 Leadenhall Street, in the city of London, was now acting for Mrs.
- James Maybrick and her mother, the Baroness de Roques, I called at the
- offices of the said Mr. Harris and made to him a statement.”
-
-
-DEPOSITIONS AS TO MR. MAYBRICK’S ARSENIC HABIT
-
-On August 10, Henry Bliss, former proprietor of Sefton Club and
-Chambers, Liverpool, made a sworn deposition, in which he said:
-
- “Mr. Maybrick lived in the chambers on and off several months, and was
- in the habit of dosing himself. On one occasion he asked me to leave
- a prescription at a well-known Liverpool chemist’s to be made up by
- the time he left ‘Change. The chemist remarked: ‘He ought to be very
- careful and not take an overdose of it.’”
-
-On March 31, 1891, Franklin George Bancroft, artist and writer, of
-Columbia, S. C., made a sworn deposition, in which he said:
-
- “1. Between the years 1874 and 1876 I was personally acquainted
- with James Maybrick, late of Battlecrease House, Aigburth, near
- Liverpool, merchant, deceased, who was then living in Norfolk, Va.
- I was frequently in his company, and from time to time I have _seen
- him take from his vest pocket a case resembling a cigarette case,
- which contained a packet of white powders_, and place the contents of
- one such powder on several occasions into the glass of wine (usually
- Chablis, claret, or champagne) he was at the time drinking, and
- swallow the same.
-
- “2. Seeing him take this powder, I did, on one occasion, ask him what
- it was, and the said James Maybrick replied, ‘Longevity and fair
- complexion, my boy!’ and he subsequently informed me that the said
- white powders were composed of _arsenic_ among other ingredients.”
-
-
-JUSTICE STEPHEN’S RETIREMENT
-
-There are also facts in relation to the judge who tried the case which,
-had they been anticipated at the time of the trial, could not have
-failed to have had some weight, directly or indirectly, on the minds
-of the jury; that is to say, his retirement from the Bench not long
-afterward, in April, 1891, when, to quote his own words in addressing
-the Bar, of whom he was taking leave, “he had been made acquainted with
-the fact that he was regarded by some as no longer physically capable
-of discharging his duties”; and it will be no matter of surprise, to
-those who have read critically the summing-up of Mr. Justice Stephen on
-this trial, to notice the entire change from a favorable bias between
-his address to the jury on the first days of the trial to the violent
-hostility shown at its conclusion.
-
-This change of front can be in a manner accounted for, as it had been
-suggested to the prisoner’s friends, by a conversation on the case
-between Mr. Justice Stephen and another member of the Bench, Mr.
-Justice Grantham, at a social meeting of an entirely private character.
-
-A mental malady was developed in the judge so soon after the trial
-that it was properly said to have been caused _by his brooding over
-it_, and this condition increased so rapidly and markedly that his
-_resignation was demanded_. It is but reasonable to suppose that the
-judge’s mental incapacity reached farther back than its discovery, and
-that the illogical and unjust summing-up was connected with the mental
-overthrow of the otherwise able judge. And it may be here added that
-Justice Stephen himself, in the second edition of the “General Views of
-the Criminal Law of England, 1890,” says, at page 173, that out of 979
-cases tried before him, from January, 1885, to September, 1889, “the
-case of Mrs. Maybrick was the only case in which there could be any
-doubt about the facts.”
-
-
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note
-
-Minor punctuation errors (i.e. missing periods) have been corrected.
-Variations in hyphenation (i.e. hatbox and hat-box) present in the
-original text have been retained.
-
-In the illustration caption, Miss Mary A. Dodge was incorrectly
-referred to as “Miss Mary F. Dodge.” This has been corrected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of My Fifteen Lost Years, by
-Florence Elizabeth Maybrick
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY FIFTEEN LOST YEARS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 55773-0.txt or 55773-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/5/7/7/55773/
-
-Produced by Cindy Horton and The Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law 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. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/55773-0.zip b/old/55773-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 5738962..0000000
--- a/old/55773-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h.zip b/old/55773-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index b4c37bb..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/55773-h.htm b/old/55773-h/55773-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index 52b4b7f..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/55773-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,8798 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=us-ascii" />
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
- <title>
- My Fifteen Lost Years, by Florence Elizabeth Maybrick&mdash;a Project Gutenberg eBook.
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css">
-
-body {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
- h1,h2,h3 {
- text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
- clear: both;
-}
-
-h2, h3 {font-weight: normal;}
-
-h2.sub {line-height: 1.5}
-
-p {
- margin-top: .51em;
- text-align: justify;
- text-indent: 1em;
- margin-bottom: .49em;
-}
-
-.noindent {text-indent: 0em;}
-
-.ph1, .ph2, .ph3 { text-align: center; text-indent: 0em; font-weight: normal; }
-.ph1 { font-size: xx-large; margin: .67em auto; }
-.ph2 { font-size: x-large; margin: .75em auto; }
-.ph3 { font-size: large; margin: .83em auto; }
-
-.p2 {margin-top: 2em;}
-
-#titlepage, #half-title, #verso, #dedic {
- margin-top: 6em;
- text-align: center;
-}
-
-#titlepage {border: solid 2px;}
-
-#titlepage p {
- text-align: center;
- text-indent: 0em;
- line-height: 1.5em;
- margin-top: 3em;
-}
-
-#half-title {font-size: large;}
-
-#half-title p {text-align: center; text-indent: 0em;}
-
-#verso p {text-align: center; text-indent: 0em;}
-
-#dedic p {text-align: center; text-indent: 0em;}
-
-@media print, handheld
-{
- #titlepage, #half-title, #verso, #dedic
- {
- page-break-before: always;
- page-break-after: always;
- }
-}
-
-.chapter {margin-top: 6em;}
-
-hr {clear: both;}
-
-hr.full {width: 95%; margin-right: 2.5%; margin-left: 2.5%;}
-
-hr.r5 {width: 5%; margin: 1em 47.5% 1em 47.5%;}
-hr.r15 {width: 15%; margin: 1em 42.5% 1em 42.5%;}
-
-.f90 {font-size: 90%;}
-.f80 {font-size: 80%;}
-.f70 {font-size: 70%;}
-
-.ml2 {margin-left: 2em;}
-.ml4 {margin-left: 4em;}
-.ml5 {margin-left: 5em;}
-
-.mr1 {margin-right: 1em;}
-.mr2 {margin-right: 2em;}
-.mr4 {margin-right: 4em;}
-.mr8 {margin-right: 8em;}
-.mr11 {margin-right: 11em;}
-
-.mt105 {margin-top: 1.5em;}
-
-table {
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
-}
-
- .tdl {text-align: left;}
- .tdr {text-align: right;}
- .tdc {text-align: center;}
-
-.bot {vertical-align: bottom;}
-
-.pt2 {padding-top: 2em;}
-
-.pl2 {padding-left: 2em;}
-
-.hang {
- margin-left: 2em;
- text-indent: -2em;
-}
-
-.hangtbl {
- margin-left: 2em;
- text-indent: -1em;
-}
-
-p.drop-cap {
- text-indent: 0em;
-}
-
-p.drop-cap:first-letter
-{
- float: left;
- margin: .05em 0.1em 0em 0em;
- font-size: 250%;
- line-height:0.85em;
-}
-
-p.drop-cap2 {
- text-indent: 0em;
-}
-
-p.drop-cap2:first-letter
-{
- float: left;
- margin: 0em .01em 0em 0em;
- font-size: 250%;
- line-height:0.85em;
-}
-
-.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
- /* visibility: hidden; */
- position: absolute;
- left: 92%;
- font-size: smaller;
- text-align: right;
-} /* page numbers */
-
-.blockquot {margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;}
-
-.br {border-right: solid 2px;}
-
-.center {text-align: center;}
-
-.right {text-align: right;}
-
-.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
-
-.lowercase {text-transform: lowercase;}
-
-.bold {font-weight: bold;}
-
-/* Images */
-
-img {max-width: 100%; height: auto; width: auto;}
-
-.figcenter {
- margin: auto;
- text-align: center;
-}
-
-.wreath {margin-top: 4em; margin-bottom: 4em;}
-
-/* Footnotes */
-.footnotes {border: dashed 1px;}
-
-.footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;}
-
-.footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
-
-.fnanchor {
- vertical-align: super;
- font-size: .8em;
- text-decoration:
- none;
-}
-
-/* Poetry */
-.poetry {text-align: center;}
-
-.poem {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: auto;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- display: inline-block;
- text-align: left;
-}
-
-.poem .stanza {margin: 1em auto;}
-
-.poem p {margin: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
-.poem p.i1 {margin-left: .5em;}
-.poem p.i2 {margin-left: 1em;}
-
-/* Transcriber's notes */
-.tnotes {
- background-color: #eeeeee;
- border: 1px solid black;
- padding: 1em;
-}
-
-@media handheld {
-
- .poetry
- {
- display: block;
- margin-left: 1.5em;
- }
-
- p.drop-cap:first-letter
- {
- float: none;
- margin: 0;
- font-size: 100%;
- }
-}
-
-@media screen {
-
- .illus {margin-top: 6em; margin-bottom: 6em;}
-
- table {max-width: 70%;}
-}
-
-@media handheld, print {
-
- .illus {page-break-before: always; page-break-after: always;}
-}
- </style>
- </head>
-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's My Fifteen Lost Years, by Florence Elizabeth Maybrick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: My Fifteen Lost Years
- Mrs. Maybrick's Own Story
-
-Author: Florence Elizabeth Maybrick
-
-Release Date: October 18, 2017 [EBook #55773]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY FIFTEEN LOST YEARS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Cindy Horton and The Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p>
-
-<div id="half-title">
-
-<p class="ph1">Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s Own Story</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 537px;">
-<a id="frontis"></a>
-<img src="images/i004.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="center noindent">FLORENCE ELIZABETH MAYBRICK</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a></span></p>
-
-<div id="titlepage">
-
-<p class="ph1" style="margin-top: -.02em">MRS. MAYBRICK&#8217;S<br />
-OWN STORY</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<h1>MY FIFTEEN LOST YEARS</h1>
-
-<span class="smcap">By</span><br />
-<span class="ph3"><i>FLORENCE ELIZABETH MAYBRICK</i></span>
-
-<div class="figcenter wreath" style="max-width: 100px;">
-<img src="images/i005.jpg" alt="wreath decoration" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="ph2" style="margin-top: -.25em">FUNK &amp; WAGNALLS COMPANY<br />
-<span class="smcap">NEW YORK and LONDON</span><br />
-1905
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p>
-
-<div id="verso">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1904,<br />
-By FLORENCE ELIZABETH MAYBRICK</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>[Printed in the United States of America]</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Published December, 1904</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span></p>
-
-<div id="dedic">
-
-<p class="bold">To</p>
-
-<p>ALL THOSE FRIENDS IN AMERICA AND ENGLAND</p>
-
-<p class="f80">WHO, WITH UNWAVERING FAITH IN MY<br />
-INNOCENCE, WORKED STEADFASTLY FOR MY FREEDOM,<br />
-THIS BOOK IS GRATEFULLY DEDICATED</p>
-
-<p class="ml4">FLORENCE ELIZABETH MAYBRICK.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc ph3" colspan="2">PART ONE</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">MRS. MAYBRICK&#8217;S OWN STORY</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc"></td>
- <td class="tdr f70">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="smcap">Foreword.</span>&mdash;Sketch
-of My Ancestry,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_9">9</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="smcap">Chapter I.&mdash;Before the
-Trial</span>&mdash;My Arrest&mdash;A Prisoner in My Own House&mdash;At
-Walton Jail&mdash;Alone&mdash;The Coroner&#8217;s Inquest&mdash;A Plank
-for a Bed&mdash;The Verdict of the Coroner&#8217;s Jury&mdash;The
-Doctors Disagree&mdash;Letters from Walton Jail&mdash;Lord
-Russell&#8217;s Opinion&mdash;The Public Condemns Me Unheard,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_23">23</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="smcap">Chapter II.&mdash;The
-Trial</span>&mdash;The Injustice of Trying the Case at
-Liverpool&mdash;An Unexpected Verdict&mdash;The Judge&#8217;s
-Sentence&mdash;In the Shadow of Death&mdash;Commutation of
-Sentence,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_50">50</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="smcap">Chapter III.&mdash;In Solitary
-Confinement</span>&mdash;Removal to Woking Prison&mdash;The Convict
-Uniform&mdash;In Solitary Confinement&mdash;The Daily Routine&mdash;The
-Exercise Hour&mdash;The Midday Meal&mdash;The Cruelty of Solitary
-Confinement,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_61">61</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi"
-id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span><span class="smcap">Chapter
-IV.&mdash;The Period of Probation</span>&mdash;A Change of
-Cell&mdash;Evils of the Silent System&mdash;Insanity and Nervous
-Breakdown of Prisoners&mdash;Need of Separate Confinement for the
-Weak-Minded&mdash;Reading an Insufficient Relaxation&mdash;My
-Sufferings from Cold and Insomnia&mdash;Medical Attendance&mdash;Added
-Sufferings of the Delicately Nurtured&mdash;How Criminals and Imbeciles
-are Made,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="smcap">Chapter V.&mdash;The Period of
-Hard Labor</span>&mdash;Routine&mdash;Talk with the Chaplain&mdash;My
-Work in the Kitchen&mdash;The Machine-made Menu&mdash;Visitors to
-the Kitchen&mdash;The &#8220;Homelike&#8221; Cell&mdash;The Opiate
-of Acquiescence&mdash;Visits of Prisoners&#8217; Friends&mdash;My
-Mother&#8217;s Visits&mdash;A Letter from Lord Russell&mdash;Punished
-for Another&#8217;s Fault&mdash;Forms of Punishment&mdash;The True Aim
-of Punishment&mdash;The Evil of Collective Punishment&mdash;The Evil of
-Constant Supervision&mdash;Some Good Points of Convict Prisons&mdash;My
-Sickness&mdash;Taken to the Infirmary&mdash;The Utter Desolation of a
-Sick Prisoner,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="smcap">Chapter VI.&mdash;At
-Aylesbury Prison</span>&mdash;Removal from Woking&mdash;New Insignia
-of Shame&mdash;Arrival at Aylesbury Prison&mdash;A New Prison
-R&eacute;gime&mdash;The Board of Visitors&mdash;Regulations Concerning
-Letters and Visits&mdash;My Letter to Gail Hamilton&mdash;A Visit from
-Lord Russell,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_127">127</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="smcap">Chapter VII.&mdash;A Petition
-for Release</span>&mdash;Denied by the Secretary of State&mdash;Report
-of My Misconduct Refuted&mdash;Need of a Court of Criminal
-Appeal&mdash;Historic Examples of British Injustice&mdash;The Case of
-Adolf Beck,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_145">145</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="smcap">Chapter VIII.&mdash;Religion
-in Prison Life</span>&mdash;Dedication of New Chapel&mdash;Influence of
-Religion upon Prisoners&mdash;Suicide of a Prisoner&mdash;Tragedies in
-Prison&mdash;Moral Effect of Harsh Prison R&eacute;gime&mdash;Attacks
-of Levity&mdash;Self-discipline&mdash;Need of Women Doctors
-and Inspectors&mdash;Chastening Effect of Imprisonment on the
-Spirit&mdash;A Death-Bed Incident,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_167">167</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii"
-id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span><span class="smcap">Chapter IX.&mdash;My
-Last Years in Prison</span>&mdash;I Am Set to Work in the
-Library&mdash;Newspapers Forbidden&mdash;How Prisoners Learn of Great
-Events&mdash;Strict Discipline of Prison Officers&mdash;Their High
-Character&mdash;Nervous Strain of Their Duties&mdash;Standing Orders
-for Warders&mdash;Crime a Mental Disease&mdash;Something Good in the
-Worst Criminal&mdash;Need of Further Prison Reform,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="smcap">Chapter X.&mdash;My
-Release</span>&mdash;I Learn the Time When My Sentence Will
-Terminate&mdash;The Dawn of Liberty&mdash;The Release&mdash;In Retreat
-at Truro&mdash;I Come to America&mdash;My Lost Years,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_211">211</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc ph3 pt2" colspan="2">PART TWO</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">ANALYSIS OF THE MAYBRICK CASE</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span
-class="smcap">Introduction.</span>&mdash;Petitions for a
-Reprieve&mdash;Illogical Position of Home Secretary&mdash;New Evidence
-of My Innocence Ignored&mdash;Lord Russell&#8217;s Letter&mdash;Efforts
-for Release&mdash;Even New Evidence Superfluous&mdash;The
-Doctors&#8217; Doubt&mdash;Public Surprise at Verdict&mdash;Character
-of Jury&mdash;The &#8220;Mad Judge&#8221;&mdash;Justice
-Stephen&#8217;s Biased Charge&mdash;Lord Russell&#8217;s Memorandum
-Quashed&mdash;Repeated Protests of Lord Russell&mdash;The American
-Official Petition&mdash;Secretary Blaine&#8217;s Letter to Minister
-Lincoln&mdash;Henry W. Lucy on Lord Russell&mdash;Lord Russell&#8217;s
-Conviction of Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s Innocence&mdash;Explanation of
-Attitude of Home Secretaries&mdash;Upholding the Justiciary&mdash;Need
-of Court of Criminal Appeal,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_225">225</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii"
-id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span><span class="smcap">The
-Brief of Messrs. Lumley &amp; Lumley.</span>&mdash;Opinion
-Re F. E. Maybrick&mdash;Justice Stephen&#8217;s
-Misdirections&mdash;Misdirections as to Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s
-Symptoms&mdash;Misdirections as to Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s Access
-to Poisons&mdash;Misdirection as to &#8220;Traces&#8221; of
-Arsenic&mdash;Misdirection as to Arsenic in Solution&mdash;Mr.
-Clayton&#8217;s Experiments&mdash;Misdirection as to
-Arsenic in Glycerin&mdash;Misdirection as to Evidence of
-Physicians&mdash;Misdirection as to Times When Arsenic May Have Been
-Administered&mdash;Misdirection as to Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s Changing
-Medicine Bottles&mdash;Misdirection as to Administration with Intent to
-Kill&mdash;Exclusion of Prisoner&#8217;s Testimony&mdash;Misdirection
-as to Identity of Meat-Juice Bottle&mdash;Misdirection in Excluding
-Corroboration of Prisoner&#8217;s Statement&mdash;Misdirections to
-Jury to Draw Illegal Inferences&mdash;Misdirections Regarding the
-Medical Testimony&mdash;Conflict of Medical Opinion&mdash;Misdirections
-as to Cause of Death&mdash;Misdirection to Ignore Medical
-Testimony&mdash;Misreception of Evidence&mdash;Cruel Misstatement by
-Coroner&mdash;Medical Evidence for the Prosecution&mdash;Maybrick
-Died a Natural Death&mdash;The Chief Witness for the
-Prosecution&mdash;Medical Evidence for Defense&mdash;A Toxicological
-Study&mdash;Medical Weakness of Prosecution&mdash;The Administration
-of Arsenic&mdash;The Fly-paper Episode&mdash;How Mrs. Maybrick
-Accounts for the Fly-papers&mdash;Administration of Arsenic
-not Proved&mdash;Intent to Murder not Proved&mdash;Absence of
-Concealment by Prisoner&mdash;Some Important Deductions from Medical
-Testimony&mdash;Symptoms Due to Poisonous Drugs&mdash;Death from
-Natural Causes&mdash;Prosecution&#8217;s Deductions from Post-mortem
-Analysis Misleading&mdash;Recapitulation of Legal Points,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_262">262</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="smcap">Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s Own
-Analysis of the Meat-Juice Incident</span>,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_366">366</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="smcap">Memorials for Respite of
-Sentence.</span>&mdash;From the Physicians of Liverpool&mdash;From the
-Bars of Liverpool and London&mdash;From Citizens of Liverpool,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_381">381</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><span class="smcap">New
-Evidence.</span>&mdash;Arsenic Sold to Maybrick by
-Druggist&mdash;Arsenic Supplied to Maybrick by Manufacturing
-Chemist&mdash;Depositions as to Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s Arsenic
-Habit&mdash;Justice Stephen&#8217;s Retirement,</td>
-
- <td class="tdr bot"><a href="#Page_384">384</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="List of Illustrations">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Florence Elizabeth Maybrick,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i><a href="#frontis">Frontispiece</a></i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"></td>
- <td class="tdr f70">FACING PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Late Dr. Helen Densmore,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate1">32</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Lord Charles Russell,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate2">48</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">St. George&#8217;s Hall, Liverpool,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate3">52</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Justice Fitz-James Stephen,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate4">56</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Baroness von Roques,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate5">112</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Aylesbury Prison,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate6">128</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Miss Mary A. Dodge (&#8220;Gail Hamilton&#8221;),</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate7">144</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Right Hon. A. Akers-Douglas, M.P.,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate8">216</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Hon. James G. Blaine,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate9">248</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Hon. Robert T. Lincoln,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate10">256</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Hon. John Hay,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate11">288</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Hon. Joseph H. Choate,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate12">320</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Samuel V. Hayden,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate13">352</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Leonidas D. Yarrell,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#plate14">368</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>FOREWORD</h2>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">The</span> writing of this book
-has been to me no joyful task, as its making has been at the expense
-of much-needed rest and peace of mind. In returning to my dear native
-land after a long imprisonment, I cherished the hope that I might as
-quietly as possible be permitted to take up the threads of outward
-existence so cruelly broken, little dreaming that trials hardly less
-grievous than those left behind awaited me; for no sooner had I touched
-these hospitable shores, when I was met by the fear-inspiring cry,
-&#8220;You must write a book&mdash;you must give the world an account
-of your sufferings&#8221;&mdash;as if one could never suffer enough.
-My well-meaning friends could hardly have known what they were asking
-in forcing upon me a mental return to the<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span> dread past. Solitary
-confinement in Woking Prison (as the reader may learn from these pages)
-was not such an elysium that one should voluntarily desire to hark
-back to it, nor is penal servitude in Aylesbury an Arcadian dream.
-While within their grim walls I did my best to exclude from thought
-the world without; and now that I am once again in the world (though
-scarcely of it), my one desire to shut out all the abhorrent things
-which so-called &#8220;prison life&#8221; stands for has thus far not
-only failed of realization, but, under conditions even more trying than
-the repressive prison r&eacute;gime (because of the free and happy life
-all about, which it seemed to poor me that I had some right to share),
-I have been compelled by force of circumstance to return to my cast-off
-prison shell, and live all the old heart-and-brain-crushing life
-over again. However, my second &#8220;trial and imprisonment,&#8221;
-like the first, is at last<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11"
-id="Page_11">[11]</a></span> drawing to a close; and I devoutly trust
-that I shall be now permitted to enter upon a long-coveted rest, and
-partake as I may of those tempered joys which my countrymen by their
-beautiful sympathy have so chivalrously endeavored to make possible for
-me.</p>
-
-<p>Theoretically my imprisonment terminated on English soil, but so
-relentlessly have the fates pursued me that I have been in nowise free
-quite up to the present moment. In Rouen, France, where I sojourned at
-my mother&#8217;s home for three weeks, I was as much in durance to my
-genial enemy, the ubiquitous reporter, as when the English Government
-held me in its inexorable grasp. Our cottage was completely invested by
-him, and all approaches and exits held with a persistency which, under
-other circumstances, might well have extorted my admiration.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the ever-to-be-remembered<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span> sea voyage. I am a good
-sailor, and so the physical discomforts that beset so many were
-agreeably minimized; but I could not throw off the feeling that I was
-not yet free&mdash;the limits of the ship were still all too suggestive
-of the narrow exercise grounds of Aylesbury prison; and, while the eye
-could roam without hindrance, there came upon me again and again an
-irresistible desire, which the rolling billows strenuously gainsaid, to
-make a dash for liberty.</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon followed a couple of days at the Holland House, New
-York, with the same persistent reporter never absent. After this
-experience, I was taken by the kindest of friends to where nature is
-at her loveliest and human hearts beat in unison with their uplifting
-surroundings. Beautiful Cragsmoor, with its wide reaches of inspiring
-scenery, most appropriately the summer home of an artistic colony, is
-not too easy of access to mar a desire for<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span> seclusion, and a greater
-antithesis to prison walls than is afforded by this aerie can hardly be
-imagined.</p>
-
-<p>Here all things that on lower planes so cruelly vex the spirit
-seem far away and beneath. If only no publishers&mdash;however
-benevolent&mdash;had entered this Eden, what a paradise it could have
-been to me! However, in spite of these dread taskmasters, my soul
-drank deeply of the elixir so bountifully held to my lips; and when in
-the golden autumn all the noble woods about robed themselves in such
-glory as may be seen nowhere outside my beloved native land&mdash;and
-perchance nowhere here more ravishingly than in these Hudson Valley
-uplands&mdash;the rapture of my heart, so long starved within the
-narrowest and cruelest of confines, turned adoringly to Him who has
-made this world so beautiful for His children&#8217;s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>I need hardly be at pains to say to my<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span> readers, that lessons in
-literary composition form no part of the disciplinary curriculum of
-Aylesbury; nay, the art of writing is distinctly discouraged there,
-as interfering with the prescribed parliamentary r&eacute;gime.
-Accordingly, when I set out to tell my pitiful little story, I was told
-to look at myself objectively; then to pry into myself subjectively;
-then to regard both in their relation to the outside world&mdash;to
-describe how this, that, or the other affected me; in short, as one of
-them, more deep in science than others, expressed it, &#8220;We want as
-much as possible of the psychology of your prison life.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I surreptitiously looked up that awe-inspiring word in a
-dictionary, and found that it refers to the soul, and that it was my
-soul they wanted me to lay bare. I vehemently protested that that
-belonged to my God, and I had no right to expose it for daws to
-peck at. But the publishers, with the aid<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span> of my friends,
-persuaded me that the public would give me their tenderest regard,
-and that possibly the humanities might be furthered a bit if the
-story of a woman&mdash;whatever might be her failings in other
-directions&mdash;wholly guiltless of the terrible charge of wilful
-murder, and for which in her innocence she was made to suffer so
-cruelly, be given in fullest heart detail to a sympathetic world. So I
-have done what I trust is best for all&mdash;spared myself as little as
-possible, lest the picture fail from suppression&mdash;and my dearest
-heart-hope is that somewhat of good may come of it, especially in
-behalf of those whom a dire fate shall compel to follow in my steps,
-with bruised spirits and bleeding feet.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Sketch of My Ancestry</span></h3>
-
-<p>I was born at Mobile, Ala., September 3, 1862. In searching for
-some account of my genealogy, I found a published letter of<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span> Gail
-Hamilton&#8217;s, who was ever one of my most eloquent and steadfast
-champions, and to whom I owe a debt of gratitude I can never adequately
-express. From this it appears that I am the great-great-granddaughter
-of Rev. Benjamin Thurston, a graduate of Harvard College, who settled
-at North Hampton, N. H., and of his wife, Sarah Phillips, who was
-the sister of John Phillips, who founded Phillips&#8217; Academy in
-Exeter, endowed a professorship in Dartmouth, and contributed funds
-to Princeton; and who was the aunt of Samuel Phillips, who founded
-Phillips&#8217;s Academy at Andover.</p>
-
-<p>The mother of Sarah Phillips was Elizabeth Green, and from her the
-name of Elizabeth has come down in regular descent to myself.</p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth, daughter of Benjamin Thurston and Sarah Phillips, married
-James Milk Ingraham. Joseph H. Ingraham, of<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span> this family, gave to
-Portland, Me., for its improvement, property now amounting in value
-to millions&mdash;beautiful State Street, the market, the property
-of the High School, and much more. One of the Ingrahams was the wife
-of Philander Chase, the first Bishop of Illinois, uncle of Salmon
-P. Chase, who was Secretary of the Treasury under Lincoln and Chief
-Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Of the Ingraham
-family was that Commodore Ingraham who won laurels for his country
-and himself by rescuing Martin Koszata from the clutch of Austria.
-Connected with the Ingrahams was that Edward Preble, born at Falmouth
-Neck, whose father served under Wolfe and was wounded at Quebec; also
-that Commander Preble whose achievement before Tripoli was rewarded
-with a gold medal and the thanks of Congress. Rev. John Phillips and
-Thurston Ingraham, author<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18"
-id="Page_18">[18]</a></span> of &#8220;Why We Believe the Bible,&#8221;
-both rectors in the Protestant Episcopal Church, were sons of James
-Milk Ingraham and Elizabeth Thurston Ingraham. John Ingraham, son of
-the preceding, is rector of Grace Church, St. Louis, Mo. His sister,
-Elizabeth Thurston Ingraham, married Darius Blake Holbrook, who was
-born in Dorchester, Mass. His mother was a Ridgeway. Her sister
-married a Quincy, and was aunt to John Quincy Adams. Mr. Holbrook was
-an originator of the land grant for the Illinois Central Railroad and
-its first president. He owned Cairo, at the mouth of the Ohio, and
-was associated with Cyrus Field in laying the first Atlantic cable.
-Caroline Elizabeth was the only child of Darius Blake Holbrook and
-Elizabeth Thurston Holbrook. She married William G. Chandler, of the
-banking house of St. John Powers &amp; Co., Mobile, Ala. William
-G. Chandler&#8217;s father<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19"
-id="Page_19">[19]</a></span> was Daniel Chandler, a lawyer of high
-standing in Georgia; his mother was Sarah Campbell, a sister of John A.
-Campbell, at one time Assistant Secretary of State for the Confederacy,
-and previously judge of the Supreme Court of the United States. Judge
-L. Q. C. Lamar, long a United States Senator, and afterward a justice
-of the Supreme Court, was near of kin.</p>
-
-<p>To William G. Chandler and Caroline Elizabeth Holbrook Chandler two
-children were born&mdash;Holbrook St. John and Florence Elizabeth.
-Their father died in 1863, and their mother, on account of the war,
-took the children abroad to be educated. The son died while pursuing
-his medical studies.</p>
-
-<p>As will be seen from the above summary of Gail Hamilton&#8217;s
-statement, I am descended, on both my paternal and my maternal side
-for generations, from good<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20"
-id="Page_20">[20]</a></span> American stock. I was educated partly in
-Europe and partly in America, under the instruction of masters and
-governesses. I was too delicate for college life. I lived partly with
-my maternal grandmother, Elizabeth Holbrook, of New York, and partly
-with my mother, the Baroness von Roques, whose home was abroad. When
-not with them I was visiting or traveling with friends. My life was
-much the same as that of any other girl who enjoyed the pleasures of
-youth with a happy heart. I was very fond of tracing intricate designs
-and copying the old-time churches and cathedrals. My special pastime,
-however, was riding, and this I could indulge in to my heart&#8217;s
-content when residing with my stepfather, Baron Adolph von Roques,
-who, now retired, was at that time a cavalry officer in the Eighth
-Cuirassier Regiment of the German army and stationed at Cologne.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21"
-id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At the age of eighteen I married James Maybrick, on the 27th of
-July, 1881, at St. James Church, Piccadilly, London, and returned to
-America, where we made our home at Norfolk, Va. For business reasons we
-settled in a suburb of Liverpool called Aigworth. A son was born to us
-on the 24th of March, 1882, and a daughter on June 20, 1886.</p>
-
-<p class="right mr4"><span class="smcap">Florence Elizabeth Maybrick.</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p>
- <span class="pagenum">
- <a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a>
- </span><br />
- <span class="pagenum">
- <a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a>
- </span>
-</p>
-
-<h2 class="sub">CHAPTER ONE<br />
-
-Before the Trial</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">My Arrest</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">Slowly</span> consciousness
-returned. I opened my eyes. The room was in darkness. All was still.
-Suddenly the silence was broken by the bang of a closing door which
-startled me out of my stupor. Where was I? Why was I alone? What
-awful thing had happened? A flash of memory! My husband was dead! I
-drifted once more away from the things of sense. Then a voice, as if
-a long way off, spoke. A feeling of pain and distress shot through my
-body. I opened my eyes in terror. Edwin Maybrick was bending over me
-as I lay upon my bed. He had my arms tightly gripped, and was<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span> shaking
-me violently. &#8220;I want your keys&mdash;do you hear? Where are your
-keys?&#8221; he exclaimed harshly. I tried to form a reply, but the
-words choked me, and once more I passed into unconsciousness.</p>
-
-<p>It is the dawn of a Sabbath day.<a name="FNanchor_1_1"
-id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
-I am still lying in my clothes, neglected and uncared for; without
-food since the morning of the day before. Consciousness came and went.
-During one of these interludes Michael Maybrick entered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nurse,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I am going up to London. Mrs.
-Maybrick is no longer mistress of this house. As one of the executors I
-forbid you to allow her to leave this room. I hold you responsible in
-my absence.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He then left the room. What did he mean? How dare he humble me thus
-in the presence of a stranger?</p>
-
-<p>Toward the night of the same day I said to the nurse, &#8220;I wish
-to see my children.&#8221; She took no notice. My voice was weak,<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span> and I
-thought perhaps she had not heard. &#8220;Nurse,&#8221; I repeated,
-&#8220;I want to see my children.&#8221; She walked up to my bed, and
-in a cold, deliberate voice replied: &#8220;You can not see Master
-James and Miss Gladys. Mr. Michael Maybrick gave orders that they
-were to leave the house without seeing you.&#8221; I fell back upon
-my pillow, dazed and stricken, weak, helpless, and impotent. Why was
-I treated thus? My brain reeled in seeking a reply to this query. At
-last I could bear it no longer, and my soul cried out to God to let
-me die. A third dreary night, and the day broke once again. I was
-still prostrate. The dull pain at my heart, the yearning for my little
-children, was becoming unbearable, but I was dumb.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the door opened and Dr. Humphreys entered. He walked
-silently to my bedside, felt my pulse, and without a word left the
-room. A few minutes later I heard the tramp of many feet coming
-up-stairs. They stopped at the door. The<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span> nurse advanced, and a
-crowd of men entered. One of them stepped to the foot of the bed and
-addressed me as follows:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mrs. Maybrick, I am superintendent of the police, and I am
-about to say something to you. After I have said what I intend to say,
-if you reply be careful how you reply, because whatever you say may
-be used as evidence against you. Mrs. Maybrick, you are in custody on
-suspicion of causing the death of your late husband, James Maybrick,
-on the eleventh instant.&#8221; I made no reply, and the crowd passed
-out.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">A Prisoner in My Own House</span></h3>
-
-<p>Was I going mad? Did I hear myself accused of poisoning my
-husband? Why did not his brothers, who said they had his confidence,
-tell the police what all his intimate friends knew, that he was
-an arsenic eater? Why was I accused&mdash;I, who had nursed him
-assiduously day and night until<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27"
-id="Page_27">[27]</a></span> my strength gave out, who had engaged
-trained nurses, and advised a consultation of physicians, and had done
-all that lay in my power to aid in his recovery? To whom could I appeal
-in my extreme distress? I lay ill and confined to my bed, with two
-professional nurses attending me, and with a policeman stationed in my
-room, although there was not and could not be the slightest chance of
-my escaping. The officer would not permit the door to be closed day
-or night, and I was denied in my own house, even before the inquest,
-the privacy accorded to a convicted prisoner. I asked that a cablegram
-be sent to my lawyers in New York. Inspector Baxendale read it, and
-then said he did not consider it of importance and should not send
-it. I then implored Dr. Humphreys to ask a friendly lawyer, Mr. R. S.
-Cleaver, of Liverpool, to come out to see me. After some delay Mr.
-Cleaver obtained a permit to enter the house and undertook to represent
-me.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28"
-id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The fourth day came and went. On the fifth day, May 16, the
-stillness of the house was broken by the sound of hushed voices and
-hurrying footsteps. &#8220;Nurse,&#8221; I exclaimed, when I could no
-longer bear the feeling of oppression that possessed me, &#8220;is
-anything the matter?&#8221; She turned, and in a cold, harsh voice
-replied, &#8220;The funeral starts in an hour.&#8221; &#8220;Whose
-funeral?&#8221; I asked. &#8220;Your husband&#8217;s,&#8221; the
-nurse exclaimed; &#8220;but for you he would have been buried on
-Tuesday.&#8221; I stared at her for a moment, and then, trembling
-from head to foot, got out of bed and commenced with weak hands to
-dress myself. The nurse looked alarmed, and came forward. &#8220;Stand
-back!&#8221; I cried. &#8220;I will see my husband before he is taken
-away.&#8221; She placed herself in front of me; I pushed her aside
-and confronted the policeman at the door. &#8220;I demand to see my
-husband,&#8221; I exclaimed. &#8220;The law does not permit a person to
-be treated as guilty until she is proven so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29"
-id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He hesitated, and then said, &#8220;Follow me.&#8221; With tottering
-steps, supported by the nurse, I was led into the adjoining room.
-Upon the bed stood the coffin, covered with white flowers. It was
-already closed. I turned to the policeman and the nurse. &#8220;Leave
-me alone with the dead.&#8221; They refused. I then knelt down at the
-bedside, and God in His mercy spared my reason by granting me, there
-and then, the first tears which many days of suffering had failed to
-bring. Death had wiped out the memory of many things. I was thankful
-to remember that I had stopped divorce proceedings, and that we had
-become reconciled for the children&#8217;s sake. Calmed, I arose and
-returned to my room. I sat down near a window, still weeping. Suddenly
-the harsh voice of a nurse broke on my ears: &#8220;If you wish to see
-the last of the husband you have poisoned you had better stand up. The
-funeral has started.&#8221; I stumbled to my feet and clutched at the
-window-sill, where I stood rigid and tearless<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span> until the hearse had
-passed, and was out of sight, and then I fainted.</p>
-
-<p>When I recovered consciousness I asked why my mother had not been
-sent for. No answer was made, but a tardy summons was sent to her at
-Paris. When she arrived she came to me at once. What a meeting! She
-kissed me, and was speaking a few loving words in French, when the
-nurse interposed and said, &#8220;You must speak in English,&#8221;
-and the policeman joined in with &#8220;I warn you, madam, that I
-will write down all you say,&#8221; and he produced paper and pencil.
-I then begged my mother to go into Liverpool to see the Messrs.
-Cleaver, who represented me, as they would give her all the information
-she required; and then I cried out in the bitterness of my heart,
-&#8220;Mother, they all believe me guilty, but I swear to you I am
-innocent.&#8221; That night I had a violent attack of hysteria. Two
-nurses and the policeman held me down, and when my mother, outraged
-by his presence, wished<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31"
-id="Page_31">[31]</a></span> to take his place and send him from the
-room, Nurse Wilson became insolent and turned her out.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">At Walton Jail</span></h3>
-
-<p>The next morning, Saturday, the 18th of May, Dr. Hopper and Dr.
-Humphreys visited me, to ascertain whether I was in a condition to
-permit of formal proceedings taking place in my bedroom. In a few
-minutes they gave their consent. The magistrates and others then came
-up-stairs.</p>
-
-<p>There were present Colonel Bidwell, Mr. Swift (clerk),
-Superintendent Bryning, and my lawyers, the Messrs. Cleaver, Dr.
-Hopper, and Dr. Humphreys. I was fully conscious, but too prostrate to
-make any movement. Besides those in the room, there were seated outside
-the policeman and the nurse. Superintendent Bryning, who had taken
-up his position at the foot of the bed, said: &#8220;This person is
-Mrs. Maybrick, charged with causing the death<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span> of the late James Maybrick.
-She is charged with causing his death by administering poison to him. I
-understand that her consent is given to a remand, and therefore I need
-not introduce nor give evidence.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Swift: &#8220;You ask for a remand for eight days?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Arnold Cleaver: &#8220;I appear for the prisoner.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Bidwell: &#8220;Very well; I consent to a remand. That is
-all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>These gentlemen then departed. The police were in such a hurry
-to prefer the formal charge, they could not wait until the doctors
-should certify that I was in a fit state to be taken to the court in
-the ordinary way. The nurse then told me I must get up and dress. I
-prayed that my children might be sent for to bid me good-by&mdash;but
-I was peremptorily refused. I begged to gather together some necessary
-personal apparel, only to meet with another refusal. I was hurried away
-with such unseemly haste,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33"
-id="Page_33">[33]</a></span> that even my hand-bag with my toilet
-articles was left behind. My mother implored to be allowed to say
-good-by, but was denied. She had gone up to her bedroom, so she tells
-me, which looked out on the front, to try and see my face as they put
-me in the carriage, when they turned the key and locked her in. After I
-had gone a policeman unlocked the door.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 526px;">
-<a id="plate1"></a>
-<img src="images/i039.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="center noindent">THE LATE DR. HELEN DENSMORE,<br />
-An American advocate of Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s innocence.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>After a two hours&#8217; drive we arrived at Walton Jail, in the
-suburbs of Liverpool. I shuddered as I looked at the tall, gloomy
-building. A bell was ringing, and the big iron gates swung back and
-allowed us to pass in. I was received by the governor and immediately
-led away by a female warder. We crossed a small courtyard and stopped
-at a door which she unlocked and relocked. Then we passed down a
-narrow passage to a door that led into a dark, gloomy room termed
-the &#8220;Reception.&#8221; A bench ran along each side, a bare
-wooden table stood in the middle, a weighing-machine by the door,
-with a foot measure beside<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34"
-id="Page_34">[34]</a></span> it. A female warder asked me to give up
-any valuables in my possession. These consisted of a watch, two diamond
-rings, and a brooch. They were entered in a book. Then I was asked
-to stand upon the weighing-machine, and my weight was duly noted.
-These formalities completed, I was led through a building into a cell
-especially set apart for sick prisoners. The escort locked me in, and,
-utterly exhausted, stricken with a sense of horror and degradation, I
-sank upon the stone floor, reiterating, until consciousness left me,
-&#8220;Oh, my God, help me&mdash;help me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Alone</span></h3>
-
-<p>When I opened my eyes I was in bed and alone. I gazed around.
-At the bedside was a chair with a china cup containing milk, and a
-plate of bread upon it. The cell was bare. The light struggled in
-dimly through a dirty, barred window. The stillness was appalling,
-and I felt benumbed&mdash;a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35"
-id="Page_35">[35]</a></span> sense of terrible oppression weighed me
-down. If only I could hear once more the sound of a friendly voice!
-If only some one would tell whose diabolical mind had conceived and
-directed suspicion against me!</p>
-
-<p>I remained in the cell three days, when my lawyer visited me. He
-arranged that I was to have a room especially set apart for prisoners
-awaiting trial who can afford to pay five shillings ($1.25) weekly, for
-the additional comfort of a table, an arm-chair, and a wash-stand. Had
-I not been able to do so I should have been consigned to an ordinary
-prison cell, and my diet would have been the same as that of convicted
-prisoners. Instead, my food was sent from a hotel outside. I was
-locked in this room for twenty-two hours out of the twenty-four. The
-only time I was permitted to leave it was for chapel in the morning
-and an hour&#8217;s exercise in the afternoon in the prison yard.
-The stillness, unbroken by any sound from the outside world, got on
-my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-nerves, and I wanted to scream, if only to hear my own voice. The
-unnatural confinement, without any one to speak to, was torture. The
-governor, the doctor, and the chaplain, it is true, came around every
-morning, but their visits were of such short duration, and so formal
-in their nature, that it was impossible to derive much relief from
-conversation with them.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Coroner&#8217;s Inquest</span></h3>
-
-<p>On the 28th of May the Coroner&#8217;s inquest was held, but I was
-not well enough to attend. I was represented by my legal advisers. On
-the 3d of June I was still too ill to appear before the court. Mr.
-W. S. Barrett, as magistrate, accompanied by Mr. Swift, the clerk,
-held a Magisterial Court at Walton Jail. Mr. R. S. Cleaver did not
-attend, having consented to the police obtaining another remand for
-a week. Only one newspaper reporter was allowed to be present. I was
-accompanied to the visitors<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37"
-id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>&#8217; room by a female warder, and
-silently took a seat at the foot of a long table. I was quite composed.
-Superintendent Bryning rose from his seat at the end of the room and
-said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This person, sir, is Mrs. Maybrick, who is charged with the
-murder of her husband, at Aigburth, on the 11th of last month. I have
-to ask that you remand her until Wednesday next.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Swift: &#8220;Mr. Cleaver, her solicitor, has sent me a note in
-which he consents to a remand until Wednesday.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Barrett: &#8220;If there is no objection she will be remanded
-until Wednesday morning.&#8221;</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">A Plank for a Bed</span></h3>
-
-<p>The magistrate then signed the document authorizing the remand, and
-I withdrew. On the 5th of June the adjourned inquest was held, and I
-was taken from jail at half-past eight in the morning to the<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-Coroner&#8217;s Court in a cab, accompanied by Dr. O&#8217;Hagan, a
-female attendant, and a policeman. I was taken into the ante-room for
-the purpose of being identified by the witnesses for the prosecution.
-I was not taken into court, but at three o&#8217;clock Mr. Holbrook
-Gaskell, a magistrate, attended for the purpose of granting another
-remand, pending the result of the inquest, and again no evidence
-was given in my presence. I was taken to the county police station,
-Lark Lane. I passed the night in a cell which contained only a plank
-board as a bed. It was dark, damp, dirty, and horrible. A policeman,
-taking pity on me, brought me a blanket to lie on. In the adjoining
-cell, in a state of intoxication, two men were raving and cursing
-throughout the night. I had no light&mdash;there was no one to speak
-to. I was kept there three days, until the coroner&#8217;s jury had
-returned their verdict. A greengrocer near by, named Mrs. Pretty, to
-whom I had occasionally given orders for fruit, sent me in a<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span> daily
-gift of her best with a note of sympathy&mdash;a deed all the more
-striking in its generosity and nobleness, since the charity of none
-other of my own sex had reached to that degree of justice to regard me
-as innocent until proven guilty.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Verdict of the Coroner&#8217;s Jury</span></h3>
-
-<p>On the 6th of June I was again driven to Garston to hear the
-coroner&#8217;s verdict. There was an elaborate array of lawyers,
-reporters, and witnesses, as well as many spectators.</p>
-
-<p>I waited in the ante-room until the coroner&#8217;s jury had
-summed up. The jury consisted mostly of gentlemen who at one time
-had been guests in my own house. Of all former friends present,
-there was only one who had the moral courage to approach me and
-shake my hand. Throughout the time I sat awaiting the call to
-appear before the coroner he remained beside me, speaking words
-of encouragement. But the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40"
-id="Page_40">[40]</a></span> others, who, without a word of evidence in
-my defense, had already judged and condemned me, passed by on the other
-side, for had they not already judged and condemned me?</p>
-
-<p>When my name was called a dead hush pervaded the court, and the
-coroner said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you agreed upon your verdict, gentlemen?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Foreman: &#8220;We have.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Q. &#8220;Do you find that death resulted from the administration of
-an irritant poison?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A. &#8220;Unanimously.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Q. &#8220;Do you say by whom that poison was administered?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A. &#8220;By twelve to one we decide that the poison was
-administered by Mrs. Maybrick.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Q. &#8220;Do you find that the poison was administered with the
-intent of taking life?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A. &#8220;Twelve of us have come to that conclusion.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41"
-id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Coroner: &#8220;That amounts to a verdict of murder.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then the requisition was made out in the following terms:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;That James Maybrick, on the 11th of May, 1889, in the
-township of Garston, died from the effects of an irritant poison
-administered to him by Florence Elizabeth Maybrick, and so the
-jurors say: that the said Florence Elizabeth Maybrick did wilfully,
-feloniously, and of malice aforethought kill and murder the said James
-Maybrick.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>I was then driven back to the Lark Lane Police Station, locked up,
-and remained the night. The next day I was returned to Walton Jail.
-How shall I describe my feelings? Mere words are utterly inadequate to
-do so. Not only was my sense of justice and fair play outraged, but
-it seemed to me a frightful danger to personal safety if the police,
-on the mere gossip of servants, and where a doctor had been unable to
-assign the cause of death, could go into a<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span> home and take an inmate
-into custody in the way I have shown.</p>
-
-<p>On the 13th of June I was brought before the magistrates, and for
-the first time evidence was given in my presence. I had been driven
-over to the court-house the evening before, and had passed the night
-there in charge of a policeman&#8217;s daughter, who remained in the
-room with me. Her father kept watch on the other side of the door.
-That night, on going to bed, as I knelt weary and lonely to say my
-prayers, I felt a hand on my shoulder and a tearful voice said, softly,
-&#8220;Let me hold your hand, Mrs. Maybrick, and let me say my prayers
-with you.&#8221; A simple expression of sympathy, but it meant so much
-to me at such a time.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Doctors Disagree</span></h3>
-
-<p>At half-past eight I was taken to a room adjoining the court, where,
-in charge of a female warder and a policeman, I awaited my call. I then
-passed into the court, where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43"
-id="Page_43">[43]</a></span> two magistrates, Sir William B. Forwood
-and Mr. W. S. Barrett, sat officially to hear the evidence. When the
-testimony had been given the court adjourned.</p>
-
-<p>When I rose to leave the court, in order to reach the door, I had
-to meet face to face well-dressed women spectators at the back, and
-the moment I turned around these started hissing me. The presiding
-justice immediately shouted to the officer on duty to shut the door,
-while the burly figures of several policemen, who moved toward the
-hostile spectators, effectually put an end to the outburst. It was amid
-such scenes, and this sort of preparation for my ordeal, that on the
-following day, the 14th of June, the Magisterial Inquiry was resumed,
-and the evidence connected with the charge of murder gone into. On
-conclusion of the testimony the magistrates retired, and after a brief
-consultation returned into court.</p>
-
-<p>Sir William Forwood: &#8220;Our opinion is that this is a case which
-ought to be decided by jury.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44"
-id="Page_44">[44]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pickford (my counsel): &#8220;If that is clearly the opinion of
-the Bench I shall not occupy their time by going into the defense now,
-because I understand, whatever defense may be put forward, the Bench
-may think it right for a jury to decide.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Chairman: &#8220;Yes, we think so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was then ordered to stand up and was formally charged in the usual
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>I replied: &#8220;I reserve my defense.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Sir William Forwood made answer: &#8220;Florence Elizabeth Maybrick,
-it is our duty to commit you to take your trial at the ensuing Assizes
-for wilful murder of the late James Maybrick.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was then remanded into custody.</p>
-
-<p>I found it difficult to understand why these magistrates
-committed me to trial for murder on that evidence. There was
-certainly not sufficient evidence that the cause of death was
-arsenic. The doctors could not say so. No arsenic had been found
-by the analyst in the stomach, the appearance of which at the
-<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">post-mortem</i>, Dr. Humphreys<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45"
-id="Page_45">[45]</a></span> said, was &#8220;consistent&#8221; with
-either poisoning or ordinary congestion of the stomach; but, after
-examination, a minute quantity of arsenic, certainly not enough to
-cause death, was detected in the liver, the appearance of which, Dr.
-Humphreys said, showed no evidence of any irritant poison. On this
-point Dr. Carter agreed with Dr. Humphreys, &#8220;but in a more
-positive manner,&#8221; while Dr. Barron did not exactly agree with Dr.
-Carter.</p>
-
-<p>The analyst had found both arsenic and &#8220;traces&#8221; of
-arsenic, in some bottles and things which had been found in the house
-after death, as to which, where they came from, or who had put them
-there, no one had any knowledge. This is the evidence upon which I was
-committed. Justice Stephen, in addressing the grand jury, even thus
-early showed a predisposition against me, due at this time, no doubt,
-to the sensational reports in the press. A true bill was found, and I
-was brought to trial before him on the 31st of July.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46"
-id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Letters from Walton Jail</span></h3>
-
-<p>The six weeks intervening before my trial were very terrible. The
-mental strain was incessant, and I suffered much from insomnia. The
-stress and confinement were telling on my health, as was the separation
-from my children. I insert here two extracts from letters, written by
-me, from Walton Jail. One is to my mother, dated the 21st of July,
-1889, a few days before my trial:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;I am not feeling very well. This fearful strain and the
-necessity for continued self-control is beginning to tell upon me.
-But I am not in the least afraid. I shall show composure, dignity and
-fortitude to the last.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>The following is an extract from a letter I wrote to a friend on
-June 27, before my trial on July 31:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;I have made my peace with God. I have forgiven unreservedly
-all those who have ruined and forsaken me. To-morrow I partake of
-the Holy Communion with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47"
-id="Page_47">[47]</a></span> clear conscience, and I place my faith in
-God&#8217;s mercy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;God give me strength is my constant prayer. I feel so
-lonely&mdash;as if every hand were against me. To think that for three
-or four days I must be unveiled before all those uncharitable eyes.
-You can not think how awful it appears to me. So far the ordeal has
-been all anticipation; then it will be stern reality&mdash;which always
-braces the nerves and courage.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have seen in the Liverpool <cite>Post</cite> the judge&#8217;s address
-on the prosecution to the jury, and it is enough to appal the stoutest
-heart. I hear the police are untiring and getting up the case against
-me regardless of expense.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pray for me, my friend, for the darkest days of my life are
-now to be lived through. I trust in God&#8217;s justice, whatever I may
-be in the sight of man.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Lord Russell&#8217;s Opinion</span></h3>
-
-<p>I received many visits from my lawyers, the Messrs. Cleaver,
-and just before the trial one from my leading counsel, Sir<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span> Charles
-Russell, later Lord Russell of Killowen, Lord Chief Justice of England.
-The following statement made by him relative to this visit may interest
-my readers:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;I will make no public statement of what my personal belief
-is as to Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s guilt or innocence, but I will tell
-you, who have stood by her all these years, that, perplexed with the
-instructions in the brief, I took what was an unusual step: I went to
-see her in prison before her trial, and questioned her there to the
-best of my ability for the purpose of getting the truth out of her.
-During the whole seven days of her trial I made careful observation of
-her demeanor, and since her imprisonment I have availed myself of my
-judicial right to visit her at Aylesbury Prison; and, making the best
-use of such opportunities of arriving at a just conclusion about her
-own self-consciousness, I decided in my own mind that it never for a
-moment entered her mind to do any bodily injury to her husband. On the
-last occasion that I saw her I told her so, as I felt it would and did
-give the poor woman some comfort.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 531px;">
-<a id="plate2"></a>
-<img src="images/i057.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="f80 noindent">Copyright by W. &amp; D. Downey, London</p>
-<p class="center noindent">LORD CHARLES RUSSELL, Q.C.,<br />
-Late Lord Chief Justice of England, Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s
-counsel.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Public Condemns Me Unheard</span></h3>
-
-<p>The day preceding my trial found me calm in spirit, and in a measure
-prepared for the awful ordeal before me. Up to that time I had shown
-a composure that astonished every one. Indeed, some went so far as to
-say I was without feeling. Perhaps I was toward their kind. I would
-have responded to sympathy, but never to distrust. At that time I was
-suspected by all&mdash;or, rather, people were not sufficiently just to
-content themselves with suspicions; they condemned me outright, and,
-unheard, struck at a weak, defenseless woman; and this upon what is now
-generally admitted to have been insufficient evidence to sustain the
-indictment.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50"
-id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="sub">CHAPTER TWO<br />
-
-The Trial</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Injustice of Trying the Case at
-Liverpool</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">My</span> trial was set for
-the 31st of July in St. George&#8217;s Hall, Liverpool. Immediately
-after nine o&#8217;clock on that day, the part of the building which
-is open to the general public was filled by a well-dressed audience,
-including many of my one-time friends. During all the days of my trial,
-I am told, Liverpool society fought for tickets. Ladies were attired as
-for a matin&eacute;e, and some brought their luncheons that they might
-retain their seats. Many of them carried opera-glasses, which they
-did not hesitate to level at me. The Earl of Sefton occupied a seat
-on the bench with the judge, and among the audience were many public
-and city men and judicial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51"
-id="Page_51">[51]</a></span> officers. The press had for two months
-supplied nourishment in the form of the most sensational stories about
-me, to feed the morbid appetite of the public. The excitement ran so
-high that the Liverpool crowds even hissed me as I was driven through
-the streets. It was a mockery of justice to hold such a trial in such
-a place as Liverpool, at such a time, by a common jury; and it was a
-mockery of common sense to expect that any Liverpool common jury could,
-when they got into the jury-box, dismiss from their minds all they had
-heard and seen. In a letter which I wrote to my mother, when in Walton
-Jail, on the 28th of June, about a month before the trial, I said:
-&#8220;I sincerely hope Messrs. Cleaver will arrange for my trial to
-take place in London. I shall receive an impartial verdict there, which
-I can not expect from a jury in Liverpool, whose minds will virtually
-be made up before any evidence is heard.&#8221; Owing, however, to a
-lack of funds this hope was not realized.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52"
-id="Page_52">[52]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I was at this time alone, utterly forsaken, and the only persons to
-whom I could look for protection and advice were my lawyers, Messrs.
-Cleaver.</p>
-
-<p>At half-past eight on the morning of my trial, a black van was
-driven up to the side door, in the fore part of which were already
-confined the male prisoners awaiting trial. I was placed in the rear,
-a female warder stepped in, the door was shut, and I felt as if I were
-already buried. A crowd witnessed my departure from Walton Jail, and
-a larger one was assembled outside St. George&#8217;s Hall. But I was
-conducted into the building without attracting attention.</p>
-
-<p>At ten o&#8217;clock I heard a blast of trumpets that heralded the
-judge&#8217;s entrance into court. Shortly after my name was called,
-and, accompanied by a male and a female warder, I ascended slowly the
-stone staircase from the cells leading to the dock. I was calm and
-collected in manner, although aware of the gravity of my position. But
-the consciousness of innocence, and a strong<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span> faith in Divine support,
-made me confident that strength would be given to endure the awful
-ordeal before me.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 700px;">
-<a id="plate3"></a>
-<img src="images/i063.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="center noindent">ST. GEORGE&#8217;S HALL, LIVERPOOL,<br />
-Where the trial of Mrs Maybrick was held.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In reply to the Clerk of Arraigns, who read the charge against
-me of &#8220;feloniously and wilfully murdering my husband, James
-Maybrick,&#8221; I answered &#8220;Not guilty.&#8221; It is customary
-in criminal courts in England to compel a prisoner to stand in the
-dock during the whole trial, but I was provided with a seat by
-recommendation of the prison doctor, as I suffered from attacks of
-faintness, though against this humane departure a great public outcry
-was raised.</p>
-
-<p>The counsel engaged in the case were Mr. Addison, Q.C., M.P. (now
-judge at the Southwark County Court), Mr. McConnell, and Mr. Swift,
-for the prosecution; Sir Charles Russell, assisted by Mr. Pickford and
-Messrs. Cleaver, for the defense.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">An Unexpected Verdict</span></h3>
-
-<p>When the trial began there was a strong feeling against me,
-but as it proceeded, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54"
-id="Page_54">[54]</a></span> the fact was made clear that Mr. Maybrick
-had long been addicted to taking large quantities of arsenic, coupled
-with the evidence, to quote Sir Charles Russell, (1) that there was no
-proof of arsenical poisoning, (2) that there was no proof that arsenic
-was administered to him by me, the prejudice against me gradually
-changed, until, at the close of the trial, there was a complete
-revulsion of sentiment, and my acquittal was confidently expected.</p>
-
-<p>When the jury retired to consider their verdict I was taken below,
-and here my solicitor came to speak to me; but the tension of mind was
-so great I do not recall one word that he said.</p>
-
-<p>After what seemed to me an age, but was in reality only thirty-eight
-minutes, the jury returned into court and took their places in the
-jury-box. I was recalled to the dock. When I stood up to hear the
-verdict I had an intuition that it was unfavorable. Every one looked
-away from me, and there was a stillness in court that could<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span> be felt.
-Then the Clerk of Arraigns arose and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you agreed upon the verdict, gentlemen?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And do you find the prisoner guilty of the murder of James
-Maybrick or not guilty?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Foreman: &#8220;Guilty.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A prolonged &#8220;Ah!&#8221; strangely like the sighing of wind
-through a forest, sounded through the court. I reeled as if struck a
-blow and sank upon a chair. The Clerk of Arraigns then turned to me and
-said: &#8220;Florence Elizabeth Maybrick, you have been found guilty
-of wilful murder. Have you anything to say why the court should not
-pronounce sentence upon you according to the law?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I arose, and with a prayer for strength, I clasped the rail of
-the dock in front of me, and said in a low voice, but with firmness:
-&#8220;My lord, everything has been against me; I am not guilty of this
-crime.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56"
-id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Judge&#8217;s Sentence</span></h3>
-
-<p>These were the last words which the law permitted me to speak.
-Mr. Justice Stephen then assumed the full dress of the criminal
-judge&mdash;the black cap&mdash;and pronounced the sentence of the
-court in these words:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;Prisoner at the bar, I am no longer able to treat you as
-being innocent of the dreadful crime laid to your charge. You have been
-convicted by a jury of this city, after a lengthy and most painful
-investigation, followed by a defense which was in every respect worthy
-of the man. The jury has convicted you, and the law leaves me no
-discretion, and I must pass the sentence of the law:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The court doth order you to be taken from hence to the place
-from whence you came, and from thence to the place of execution, and
-that you be hanged by the neck until you are dead, and that your body
-be afterward buried within the precincts of the prison in which you
-shall be confined after your conviction. And may the Lord have mercy
-upon your soul!&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 530px;">
-<a id="plate4"></a>
-<img src="images/i069.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="f80 noindent">Copyright by Bassano, London.</p>
-<p class="center noindent">JUSTICE FITZ-JAMES STEPHEN.<br />
-Who presided at the trial of Mrs. Maybrick.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Utterly stunned I was removed from the court to Walton Jail, there
-to be confined until this sentence of the law should be carried into
-effect.</p>
-
-<p>The mob, as the Liverpool public was styled by the press, before
-they had heard or read a word of the defense had hissed me when I
-entered the court; and now, that they had heard or read the evidence,
-cheered me as I drove away in the prison-van, and hissed and hooted the
-judge, who with difficulty gained his carriage.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">In the Shadow of Death</span></h3>
-
-<p>In all the larger local English prisons there is one room, swept
-and ready, the sight of which can not fail to stir unwonted thoughts.
-The room is large, with barred windows, and contains only a bed
-and a chair. It is the last shelter of those whom the law declares
-to have forfeited their lives. Near by is a small brick building
-in the prison-yard, that has apparently<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span> nothing to connect it with
-the room; yet they are joined by a sinister suggestion.</p>
-
-<p>For nearly three terrible weeks I was confined in this cell of the
-condemned, to taste the bitterness of death under its most appalling
-and shameful aspect. I was carefully guarded by two female warders, who
-would gladly have been spared the task. They might not read nor sleep;
-at my meals, through my prayers, during every moment of agony, they
-still watched on and rarely spoke. Many have asked me what my feelings
-were at that awful time. I remember little in the way of details
-as to my state of mind. I was too overwhelmed for either analytic
-or collective thought. Conscious of my innocence, I had no fear of
-physical death, for the love of my Heavenly Father was so enveloping
-that death seemed to me a blessed escape from a world in which such an
-unspeakable travesty of justice could take place; while I petitioned
-for a reconsideration of the verdict,<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span> it was wholly for the sake
-of my mother and my children.</p>
-
-<p>I knew nothing of any public efforts for my relief. I was held fast
-on the wheels of a slow-moving machine, hypnotized by the striking
-hours and the flight of my numbered minutes, with the gallows staring
-me in the face. The date of my execution was not told me at Walton
-Jail, but I heard afterward that it was to have taken place on the 26th
-of August. On the 22d, while I was taking my daily exercise in the
-yard attached to the condemned cell, the governor, Captain Anderson,
-accompanied by the chief matron, entered. He called me to him, and,
-with a voice which&mdash;all honor to him&mdash;trembled with emotion,
-said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Maybrick, no commutation of sentence has come down to-day,
-and I consider it my duty to tell you to prepare for death.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you, governor,&#8221; I replied; &#8220;my conscience
-is clear. God&#8217;s will be done.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60"
-id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Commutation of Sentence</span></h3>
-
-<p>He then walked away and I returned to my cell. The female warder
-was weeping silently, but I was calm and spent the early part of the
-night in my usual prayers. About midnight exhausted nature could bear
-no more, and I fainted. I had barely regained consciousness when
-I heard the shuffle of feet outside, the click of the key in the
-lock&mdash;that warning catch in the slow machinery of my doom. I
-sprang up, and with one supreme effort of will braced myself for what
-I believed was the last act of my life. The governor and a chaplain
-entered, followed by a warder. They read my expectation in my face,
-and the governor, hastening forward, exclaimed in an agitated voice:
-&#8220;It is well; it is good news!&#8221; When I opened my eyes once
-more I was lying in bed in the hospital, and I remained there until I
-was taken to Woking Convict Prison.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61"
-id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="sub">CHAPTER THREE<br />
-
-In Solitary Confinement</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Removal to Woking Prison</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">On</span> the morning of the
-29th of August I was hastily awakened by a female warder, who said that
-orders had come down from the Home Office for my removal that day to a
-convict prison.</p>
-
-<p>When I left, the governor was standing at the gate, and, with a
-kindliness of voice which I deeply appreciated, told me to be brave and
-good.</p>
-
-<p>A crowd was in waiting at the station. I was roughly hustled through
-it into a third-class carriage.</p>
-
-<p>The only ray of light that penetrated those dark hours of
-my journey came from <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62"
-id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>an American woman. God bless her, whoever
-she is or wherever she is! At every station that the train stopped
-she got out and came to the carriage door and spoke words of sympathy
-and comfort. She was the first of my countrywomen to voice to me the
-protest that swelled into greater volume as the years rolled by.</p>
-
-<p>As the train drew up at Woking station a crowd assembled. Outside
-stood a cab, to which I was at once conducted, and we drove through
-lovely woods; the scent of flowers was wafted by the breeze into what
-seemed to be a hearse that was bearing me on toward my living tomb.</p>
-
-<p>As we approached the prison the great iron gate swung wide, and
-the cab drove silently into the yard. There I descended. The governor
-gave an order, and a woman&mdash;who I afterward found was assistant
-superintendent&mdash;came forward. Accompanied by her and an officer, I
-was led across a near-by yard to a building which stood somewhat apart
-from the others and is known as the infirmary. There a principal<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span> matron
-received me, and the assistant superintendent and the chief matron
-returned to their quarters.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Convict Uniform</span></h3>
-
-<p>In the grasp of what seemed to me a horrible nightmare, I found
-myself in a cell with barred windows, a bed, and a chair. Without,
-the stillness of death reigned. I remained there perhaps half an hour
-when the door opened and I was commanded by a female warder to follow
-her. In a daze I obeyed mechanically. We crossed the same yard again
-and entered a door that led into a room containing only a fireplace, a
-table, and a bath. Here I was told to take off my clothes, as those I
-had traveled in had to be sent back to the prison at Liverpool, where
-they belonged.</p>
-
-<p>When I was dressed in the uniform to which the greatest
-stigma and disgrace is attached, I was told to sit down. The
-warder then stepped quickly forward, and with a pair of scissors
-cut off my hair to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64"
-id="Page_64">[64]</a></span> nape of my neck. This act seemed, above
-all others, to bring me to a sense of my degradation, my utter
-helplessness; and the iron of the awful tragedy, of which I was the
-innocent victim, entered my soul. I was then weighed and my height
-taken. My weight was one hundred and twelve pounds, and my height five
-feet three inches.</p>
-
-<p>Once more I was bidden to follow my guide. We recrossed the yard and
-entered the infirmary. Here I was locked in the cell already mentioned.
-At last I could be alone after the anguish and torture of the day. I
-prayed for sleep that I might lose consciousness of my intolerable
-anguish. But sleep, that gentle nurse of the sad and suffering, came
-not. What a night! I shudder even now at the memory of it. Physically
-exhausted, smarting with the thought of the cruel, heartless way in
-which I had been beaten down and trodden under foot, I felt that
-mortal death would have been more merciful than the living death<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span> to which
-I was condemned. In the adjoining cell an insane woman was raving and
-weeping throughout the night, and I wondered whether in the years to
-come I should become like her.</p>
-
-<p>The next day I was visited by the governor on his official rounds.
-Then the doctor came and made a medical examination, and ordered me
-to be detained in the infirmary until further orders. My mind is a
-blank as to what happened for some time afterward. My next remembrance
-is being told by a coarse-looking, harsh-spoken female warder to get
-ready to go into the prison. Once more I was led across the big yard,
-and then I stood within the walls that were to be for years my tomb.
-Outside the sun was shining and the birds were singing.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">In Solitary Confinement</span></h3>
-
-<p>Without, picture a vast outline of frowning masonry. Within,
-when I had passed the double outer gates and had been locked<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span> out and
-locked in in succession, I found myself in a central hall, from which
-ran cage-like galleries divided into tiers and landings, with a row
-of small cells on either side. The floors are of stone, the landings
-of slate, the railings of steel, and the stairs of iron. Wire netting
-is stretched over the lowest tier to prevent prisoners from throwing
-themselves over in one of those frenzies of rage and despair of which
-every prison has its record. Within their walls can be found, above all
-places, that most degrading, heart-breaking product of civilization,
-a human automaton. All will, all initiative, all individuality, all
-friendship, all the things that make human beings attractive to one
-another, are absent. Suffering there is dumb, and when it goes beyond
-endurance&mdash;alas!</p>
-
-<p>I followed the warder to a door, perhaps not more than two
-feet in width. She unlocked it and said, &#8220;Pass in.&#8221;
-I stepped forward, but started back in horror. Through the open
-door I saw, by the dim<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67"
-id="Page_67">[67]</a></span> light of a small window that was never
-cleaned, a cell seven feet by four.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, don&#8217;t put me in there!&#8221; I cried. &#8220;I can
-not bear it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For answer the warder took me roughly by the shoulder, gave me a
-push, and shut the door. There was nothing to sit upon but the cold
-slate floor. I sank to my knees. I felt suffocated. It seemed that the
-walls were drawing nearer and nearer together, and presently the life
-would be crushed out of me. I sprang to my feet and beat wildly with my
-hands against the door. &#8220;For God&#8217;s sake let me out! Let me
-out!&#8221; But my voice could not penetrate that massive barrier, and
-exhausted I sank once more to the floor. I can not recall those nine
-months of solitary confinement without a feeling of horror. My cell
-contained only a hammock rolled up in a corner, and three shelves let
-into the wall&mdash;no table nor stool. For a seat I was compelled to
-place my bedclothes on the floor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68"
-id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Daily Routine</span></h3>
-
-<p>No one can realize the horror of solitary confinement who has
-not experienced it. Here is one day&#8217;s routine: It is six
-o&#8217;clock; I arise and dress in the dark; I put up my hammock and
-wait for breakfast. I hear the ward officer in the gallery outside. I
-take a tin plate and a tin mug in my hands and stand before the cell
-door. Presently the door opens; a brown, whole-meal, six-ounce loaf is
-placed upon the plate; the tin mug is taken, and three-quarters of a
-pint of gruel is measured in my presence, when the mug is handed back
-in silence, and the door is closed and locked. After I have taken a
-few mouthfuls of bread I begin to scrub my cell. A bell rings and my
-door is again unlocked. No word is spoken, because I know exactly what
-to do. I leave my cell and fall into single file, three paces in the
-rear of my nearest fellow convict. All of us are alike in knowing what
-we have to do, and we march away silently<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span> to Divine service. We are
-criminals under punishment, and our keepers march us like dumb cattle
-to the worship of God. To me the twenty minutes of its duration were as
-an oasis in a weary desert. When it came to an end I felt comforted,
-and always a little more resigned to my fate. Chapel over, I returned
-directly to my cell, for I was in solitary confinement, and might not
-enjoy the privilege of working in company with my prison companions.</p>
-
-<p>Work I must, but I must work alone. Needlework and knitting fall
-to my lot. My task for the day is handed to me, and I sit in my cell
-plying my needle, with the consciousness that I must not indulge in an
-idle moment, for an unaccomplished task means loss of marks, and loss
-of marks means loss of letters and visits. As chapel begins at 8:30
-I am back in my cell soon after nine, and the requirement is that I
-shall make one shirt a day&mdash;certainly not less than five shirts a
-week. If I am obstinate or indolent, I shall be reported by the<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span> ward
-officer, and be brought to book with punishment&mdash;perhaps reduced
-to a diet of bread and water and total confinement in my cell for
-twenty-four hours. If I am faint, weak, or unwell, I may be excused
-the full performance of my task; but there must be no doubt of my
-inability. In such case it is for me to have my name entered for the
-prison doctor, and obtain from him the indulgence that will remit a
-portion of my prescribed work to three or four shirts.</p>
-
-<p>However, as I am well, I work automatically, closely, and with
-persistence. Then comes ten o&#8217;clock, and with it the governor
-with his escort. He inspects each cell, and if all is not as it should
-be, the prisoner will hear of it. There is no friendly greeting of
-&#8220;Good-morning&#8221; nor parting &#8220;Good-night&#8221;
-within those gloomy walls. The tone is formal and the governor
-says: &#8220;How are you, Maybrick? Any complaints? Do you want
-anything?&#8221; and then he passes on. Then I am again alone with my
-work and my brooding thoughts.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71"
-id="Page_71">[71]</a></span> I never made complaints. One but adds to
-one&#8217;s burden by finding causes for complaint. With the coming and
-the going of the governor the monotony returns to stagnation.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Exercise Hour</span></h3>
-
-<p>Presently, however, the prison bell rings again. I know what the
-clangor means, and mechanically lay down my work. It is the hour
-for exercise, and I put on my bonnet and cape. One by one the cell
-doors of the ward are opened. One by one we come out from our cells
-and fall into single file. Then, with a ward officer in charge, we
-march into the exercise yard. We have drawn up in line, three paces
-apart, and this is the form in which we tramp around the yard and
-take our exercise. This yard is perhaps forty feet square, and there
-are thirty-five of us to expand in its &#8220;freedom.&#8221; The
-inclosure is oppressively repulsive. Stone-flagged, hemmed within
-ugly walls, it gives one a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72"
-id="Page_72">[72]</a></span> hideous feeling of compression. It seems
-more like a bear-pit than an airing ground for human beings. But I
-forget that we are not here to have things made easy, comfortable, and
-pleasant for us. We are here to be punished, to be scourged for our
-crimes and misdeeds. Can you wonder that human nature sometimes revolts
-and dares even prison rigor? Human instincts may be suppressed, but not
-wholly crushed.</p>
-
-<p>There were at Woking two yards in which flowers and green trees were
-visible, but it was only in after years that I was permitted to take my
-exercise in these yards, and then only half an hour on Sunday.</p>
-
-<p>When the one hour for exercise is over, in a file as before, we
-tramp back to our work. Confined as we are for twenty-two hours in
-our narrow, gloomy cells, the exercise, dull as it is, is our only
-opportunity for a glimpse of the sky and for a taste of outdoor life,
-and affords our only relief from an otherwise almost unbearable
-day.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73"
-id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Midday Meal</span></h3>
-
-<p>At noon the midday meal. The first sign of its approach is the
-sound of the fatigue party of prisoners bringing the food from the
-kitchen into the ward. I hear the ward officer passing with the weary
-group from cell to cell, and presently she will reach my door. My
-food is handed to me, then the door is closed and double locked. In
-the following two hours, having finished my meal, I can work or read.
-At two o&#8217;clock the fatigue party again goes on its mechanical
-round; the cell door is again unlocked, this time for the collection
-of dinner-cans. The meal of each prisoner is served out by weight, and
-the law allows her to claim her full quantity to the uttermost fraction
-of an ounce. She is even entitled to see it weighed if she fancies
-it falls short. Work is then resumed until five o&#8217;clock, when
-gruel and bread is again served, as at breakfast, with half an hour
-for its disposal. From that time on until<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span> seven o&#8217;clock more
-work, when again is heard the clang of the prison bell, and with it
-comes the end of our monotonous day. I take down my hammock, and once
-more await the opening of the door. We have learned exactly what to do.
-With the opening of our cells we go forward, and each places her broom
-outside the door. So shall it be known that we each have been visited
-in our cells before the locking of our doors and gates for the night.
-If any of us are taking medicine by the doctor&#8217;s orders we now
-receive it. On through the ten long, weary hours of the night the night
-officers patrol the wards, keeping watch, and through a glass peep-hole
-silently inspect us in our beds to see that nothing is amiss.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Cruelty of Solitary Confinement</span></h3>
-
-<p>Solitary confinement is by far the most cruel feature of
-English penal servitude. It inflicts upon the prisoner at
-the commencement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75"
-id="Page_75">[75]</a></span> of her sentence, when most sensitive to
-the horrors which prison punishment entails, the voiceless solitude,
-the hopeless monotony, the long vista of to-morrow, to-morrow,
-to-morrow stretching before her, all filled with desolation and
-despair. Once a prisoner has crossed the threshold of a convict prison,
-not only is she dead to the world, but she is expected in word and deed
-to lose or forget every vestige of her personality. Verily,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
-<p>The mills of the gods grind slowly,</p>
-<p class="i2">But they grind exceeding small,</p>
-<p>And woe to the wight unholy</p>
-<p class="i2">On whom those millstones fall.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>So it is with the Penal Code which directs this vast machinery,
-doing its utmost with tireless, ceaseless revolutions to mold body
-and soul slowly, remorselessly, into the shape demanded by Act of
-Parliament.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="sub">CHAPTER FOUR<br />
-
-The Period of Probation</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">A Change of Cell</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">The</span> day I had completed
-the nine months of solitary confinement I entered upon a new stage,
-that of probation for nine months. I was taken from Hall G to Hall A.
-There were in Woking seven halls, A, B, C, D, E, F, G, separated by
-two barred doors and a narrow passage. Every hall has three wards. The
-female warder who accompanied me locked me in my cell. I looked around
-with a sense of intense relief. The cell was as large again as the one
-I had left. The floor was of wood instead of slate. It contained a camp
-bedstead on which was placed a so-called mattress, consisting of a
-sack the length of the bed, stuffed with coir, the fiber of the<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span> coconut.
-There were also provided two coarse sheets, two blankets, and a red
-counterpane. In a corner were three iron shelves let in the wall one
-above the other. On the top shelf was folded a cape, and on top of this
-there was a small, coarse straw bonnet. The second shelf contained a
-tin cup, a tin plate, a wooden spoon, and a salt-cellar. The third
-shelf was given up to a slate, on which might be written complaints or
-requests to the governor; it is a punishable offense in prison to write
-with a pencil or on any paper not provided.</p>
-
-<p>There was also a Bible, a prayer-book and hymn-book, and a book from
-the library. Near the door stood a log of wood upright, fastened to
-the floor, and this was the only seat in the cell. It was immovable,
-and so placed that the prisoner might always be in view of the warder.
-Near it, let into the wall, was a piece of deal board, which answered
-for a table. Through an almost opaque piece of square glass light
-glimmered from the hall, the only means of<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span> lighting the cell at night;
-facing this, high up, was a barred window admitting light from the
-outside.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Evils of the Silent System</span></h3>
-
-<p>The routine of my daily life was the same as during &#8220;solitary
-confinement.&#8221; The cell door may be open, but its outer covering
-or gate is locked, and, although I knew there was a human creature
-separated from me only by a cell wall and another gate, not a whisper
-might I breathe. There is no rule of prison discipline so productive
-of trouble and disaster as the &#8220;silent system,&#8221; and
-the tyrannous and rigorous method with which it is enforced is the
-cause of two-thirds of all the misconduct and disturbance that
-occurs in prison. The silence rule gives supreme gratification to
-the tyrannous officer, for on the slightest pretext she can report a
-woman for talking&mdash;a turn of the head, a movement of the lips
-is enough of an excuse for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79"
-id="Page_79">[79]</a></span> a report. And there is heavy punishment
-that can be inflicted for this offense, both in the male and female
-prisons. An offender may be consigned to solitary confinement,
-put for three days on bread and water, or suffer the loss of a
-week&#8217;s remission, which means a week added to her term of
-imprisonment&mdash;and all this for incautiously uttering a word.</p>
-
-<p>Unless it be specifically intended as a means of torture, the
-system of solitary confinement, even for four months, the term to
-which it has since been reduced, can meet only with condemnation.
-I am convinced that, within limits, the right of speech and the
-interchange of thought, at least for two hours daily, even during
-probation, would insure better discipline than perpetual silence,
-which can be enforced only by a complete suppression of nature, and
-must result in consequent weakness of mind and ruin of temper. During
-the first months of her sentence a prisoner is more frequently in
-trouble for breach of this one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80"
-id="Page_80">[80]</a></span> rule than from all other causes. The
-reduction of the term of probation from nine to four months has been
-followed by a reduction in mental afflictions, which is proof that
-nothing wholesome or good can have its growth in unnatural solitude.</p>
-
-<p>The silent system has a weakening effect upon the memory. A prisoner
-often finds difficulty in deciding upon the pronunciation of words
-which she has not heard for a considerable period. I often found
-myself, when desirous of using unusual words, especially in French or
-German, pronouncing them to myself in order to fix the pronunciation
-in my memory. It is well to bear in mind what a small number of words
-the prisoner has an opportunity of using in the monotony of prison
-life. The same inquiries are made day after day, and the same responses
-given. A vocabulary of one hundred words will include all that a
-prisoner habitually uses.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81"
-id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Insanity and Nervous Breakdown of
-Prisoners</span></h3>
-
-<p>No defender of the silent system pretends that it wholly succeeds
-in preventing speech among prisoners. But be that as it may, a period
-of four months&#8217; solitary confinement in the case of a female,
-and six months&#8217; in the case of a male, and especially of a girl
-or youth, is surely a crime against civilization and humanity. Such
-a punishment is inexpressible torture to both mind and body. I speak
-from experience. The torture of continually enforced silence is known
-to produce insanity or nervous breakdown more than any other feature
-connected with prison discipline. Since the passing of the Act of 1898,
-mitigating this form of punishment, much good has been accomplished,
-as is proved by the diminution of insanity in prison life, the
-decreasing scale of prison punishment, and the lessening of the
-death-rate. By still further reducing this barbarous practise,<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span> or,
-better, by abolishing it entirely, corresponding happy results may
-confidently be expected. The more the prisoners are placed under
-conditions and amid surroundings calculated to develop a better life,
-the greater is the hope that the system will prove curative; but so
-long as prisoners are subjected to conditions which have a hardening
-effect at the very beginning of their prison life, there is little
-chance of ultimate reformation.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Need of Separate Confinement for the
-Weak-Minded</span></h3>
-
-<p>There are many women who hover about the borderland of insanity
-for months, possibly for years. They are recognized as weak-minded,
-and consequently they make capital out of their condition, and
-by the working of their distorted minds, and petty tempers, and
-unreasonable jealousy, add immeasurably not only to the ghastliness of
-the &#8220;house of sorrow,&#8221; but are a sad clog on the efforts
-to self-betterment of their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83"
-id="Page_83">[83]</a></span> level-minded sisters in misery. Of
-these many try hard to make the best of what has to be gone through.
-Therefore, is it necessary, is it wise, is it right that such a state
-of things should be allowed? The weak-minded should be kept in a
-separate place, with their own officers to attend them. Neither the
-weak-minded, the epileptic, nor the consumptives were isolated. There
-is great need of reform wherever this is the case. Prisoners whose
-behavior is different from the normal should be separated from the
-other prisoners, and made to serve out their sentences under specially
-adapted conditions.</p>
-
-<p>I read in the newspapers that insanity is on the increase; this
-fact is clearly reflected within the prison walls. It is stated that
-the insane form about three per thousand of the general population.
-In local English prisons insanity, it is said, even after deducting
-those who come in insane, is seven times more prevalent than among the
-general population.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84"
-id="Page_84">[84]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Reading an Insufficient Relaxation</span></h3>
-
-<p>The nervous crises do not now supervene so frequently as formerly
-in the case of prisoners of a brooding disposition, but the fact
-remains that, in spite of the slight amelioration, mental light
-is still excluded&mdash;that communion on which rests all human
-well-being. The vacuity of the solitary system, to some at least, is
-partially lighted by books. But what of those who can not read, or
-who have not sufficient concentration of mind to profit by reading
-as a relaxation? There are many such, in spite of the high standard
-of free education that prevails at the present day. The shock of the
-trial, and the uprooting of a woman&#8217;s domestic ties, coupled with
-the additional mental strain of having to start her prison career in
-solitary confinement, is surely neither humane, nor merciful, nor wise.
-These months of solitary confinement leave an ineffaceable mark. It is
-during the first lonely months that the seeds<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span> of bitterness and
-hardness of heart are sown, and it requires more than a passive
-resistance&mdash;nay, nothing short of an unfaltering faith and trust
-in an overruling Providence&mdash;to bring a prisoner safely through
-the ordeal. Let the sympathetic reader try to realize what it means
-never to feel the touch of anything soft or warm, never to see anything
-that is attractive&mdash;nothing but stone above, around, and beneath.
-The deadly chill creeps into one&#8217;s bones; the bitter days of
-winter and the still bitterer nights were torture, for Woking Prison
-was not heated. My hands and feet were covered with chilblains.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">My Sufferings from Cold and Insomnia</span></h3>
-
-<p>Oh, the horrors of insomnia! If one could only forget one&#8217;s
-sufferings in sleep! During all the fifteen years of my imprisonment,
-insomnia was (and, alas! is still) my constant companion. Little
-wonder! I might fall asleep, when suddenly the<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span> whole prison is awakened
-by shriek upon shriek, rending the stillness of the night. I am
-now, perforce, fully awake. Into my ears go tearing all the shrill
-execrations and blasphemies, all the hideous uproars of an inferno,
-compounded of bangs, shrieks, and general demoniac ragings. The wild
-smashing of glass startles the halls. I lie in my darkened cell with
-palpitating heart. Like a savage beast, the woman of turmoil has torn
-her clothing and bedding into shreds, and now she is destroying all
-she can lay hands on. The ward officers are rushing about in slippered
-feet, the bell rings summoning the warders, who are always needed when
-such outbursts occur, and the woman, probably in a strait-jacket, is
-borne to the penal cells. Then stillness returns to the ghastly place,
-and with quivering nerves I may sleep&mdash;if I can.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87"
-id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Medical Attendance</span></h3>
-
-<p>But what if one is ill in the night? The lonely prisoner in her cell
-may summon aid by ringing the bell. The moment it is set in motion it
-causes a black iron slab to project from the outer wall of her cell in
-the gallery. On the slab is the prisoner&#8217;s number, and the ward
-officer, hearing the bell, at once looks for the cell from which the
-call has been sent. Presently she finds it, then fetches the principal
-matron, and together they enter the hard, unhomelike place. If the
-prisoner is ill they call the doctor of the prison, and medicines and
-aid will be given. But sympathy is no part of their official duty, and
-be the warder never so tender in her own domestic circle, tenderness
-must not be shown toward a prisoner. The patient may be removed from
-her cell to the infirmary, where they will care for her medically,
-perhaps as well as they would in a hospital; she may even receive a
-few flowers from an infirmary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88"
-id="Page_88">[88]</a></span> warder whose heart comes out from its
-official shell; but through it all, sick though she be, she is still a
-prisoner under lock and key, a woman under surveillance, a woman denied
-communion with her kind.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Added Sufferings of the Delicately
-Nurtured</span></h3>
-
-<p>What words can adequately describe the long years, blank and weary
-enough for all prisoners, but which are indescribably so to one who
-has been delicately nurtured! I had enjoyed the refinements of social
-life; I had pitied, and tried, as far as lay in my power, to help the
-poor and afflicted, but I had never known anything of the barbarism,
-the sordid vices of low life. And I was condemned to drag out existence
-amid such surroundings, because twelve ignorant men had taken upon
-themselves to decide a question which neither the incompetent judge nor
-the medical witnesses could themselves determine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89"
-id="Page_89">[89]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>So far as I can learn, there is no other instance of a woman
-undoubtedly innocent and of gentle birth, confined for a term of nearly
-fifteen years in an English convict prison. In the nature of things a
-delicate woman feels more acutely than a robust prisoner the rigors of
-prolonged captivity.</p>
-
-<p>Neither confidence nor respect can be secured when punishment is
-excessive, for it then becomes an act of persecution, suitable only
-for ages of darkness. The supineness of Parliament in not establishing
-a court of criminal appeal fastens a dark blot upon the judicature of
-England, and is inconsistent with the innate love of justice and fair
-play of its people.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">How Criminals and Imbeciles are Made</span></h3>
-
-<p>The law in prison is the same for the rich as the poor, the
-&#8220;Star Class&#8221; as for the ignorant, brutalized criminal.
-My register was &#8220;L. P. 29.&#8221; These letters and<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span> numbers
-were worked in white cotton upon a piece of black cloth. Your sentence
-is indicated thus: &#8220;L&#8221; stands for penal servitude for
-life; &#8220;P&#8221; for the year of conviction, which in my case
-was the sixteenth year since the previous lettering. This is done
-every twenty-five years. The &#8220;29&#8221; meant that I was the
-twenty-ninth convict of my year, 1889. In addition to this register I
-wore a red cloth star placed above it. The &#8220;Star Class,&#8221;
-of which I was a member, consisted of women who have been convicted of
-one crime only, committed in a moment of weakness or despair, or under
-pressure which they were not strong enough to resist at the time, such
-as infanticide, forgery, incendiarism; and who, having been educated
-and respectably brought up, betray otherwise no criminal instincts
-or inclinations; and who, when in the world, would be distinct in
-character from the habitual criminal, not only from a social point of
-view, but in their virtues, faults, and crimes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91"
-id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There should be separate rules and privileges to meet the case
-of a prisoner guilty of moral lapses only, as distinguished from
-the habitual breaker of the laws. At present the former gets the
-same treatment and discipline as the habitual criminal of several
-convictions, and can not claim a single privilege that the old
-offender has not a right to ask&mdash;for example, members of both
-classes are limited to the same number of letters and visits. The
-&#8220;Star Class&#8221; is supposed to be kept separate from ordinary
-prisoners. It was so at Woking Prison. But at Aylesbury Prison, to
-which I was transferred later, they were sandwiched between two wards
-of habitual criminals, with whom they came continually in contact,
-not only in passing to and from the workshops, fetching meals, and
-going to exercise, but continuously. That contamination should ensue
-is hardly surprising. It requires a will of iron, and nearly the
-spirit of a saint, not to be corrupted by the sights and sounds of
-a prison, even when no word<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92"
-id="Page_92">[92]</a></span> is spoken. It is a serious accusation
-against any system to say &#8220;that it produces the thing it is
-designed to prevent,&#8221; but such, I am convinced, is the fact as
-regards the manufacture of criminals and imbeciles by the present
-system of penalism almost the world over.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93"
-id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="sub">CHAPTER FIVE<br />
-
-The Period of Hard Labor</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Routine</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">Having</span> passed solitary
-confinement and probation, I entered upon the third stage, hard labor,
-when I was permitted to leave my cell to assist in carrying meals from
-the kitchen, and to sit at my door and converse with the prisoners
-in the adjoining cells for two hours daily&mdash;but always in the
-presence of an officer who controls and limits the conversation. My
-daily routine was now also somewhat different from that of solitary
-confinement and probation.</p>
-
-<p>At six o&#8217;clock the bell rings to rise. Half an hour later
-a second bell signifies to the officers that it is time to come
-on duty. Each warder in charge of certain wards&mdash;there<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span> are
-three wards to each hall&mdash;then goes to the chief matron&#8217;s
-office, where she receives a key wherewith to unlock the
-prisoners&#8217; cells. All keys are given up by the female warder
-before going off duty, and locked for the night in an iron safe
-under the charge of a male warder. When again in possession of her
-key she repairs to her ward, and at the order, &#8220;Unlock,&#8221;
-she lets out the prisoners to empty their slops. This done, they are
-once more locked in, with the exception of three women who go down to
-the kitchen to fetch the cans of tea and loaves of bread which make
-up the prisoners&#8217; breakfast. At Woking the breakfast was of
-cocoa and coarse meal bread, while later, at Aylesbury, it consisted
-of tea and white bread. I am constrained to remark here that more
-consideration should be shown by the medical officer toward women who
-complain of being physically unfit to do heavy lifting and carrying.
-The can is carried by two women up two or three flights of<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span> stairs,
-according to the location of their ward, and the bread by one woman
-only. Each can contains fourteen quarts of tea, and the bread-basket
-holds thirty pounds or more of bread. To a woman with strong muscles
-it may cause no distress, but in the case of myself and others equally
-frail, the physical strain was far beyond our strength, and left us
-utterly exhausted after the task.</p>
-
-<p>The breakfast was served at seven o&#8217;clock, when the officers
-returned to the mess-room to take theirs. At 7:30 a bell rang again,
-and the officers returned to their respective wards. At ten minutes to
-eight the order was given, &#8220;Unlock.&#8221; Once more the doors
-were opened. Then followed the order, &#8220;Chapel,&#8221; and each
-woman stood at her door with Bible, prayer-book, and hymn-book in hand.
-At the words &#8220;Pass on,&#8221; they file one behind the other
-into the chapel, where a warder from each ward sits with her back to
-the altar that she may be able the better to<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span> watch those under her
-charge and see that they do not speak. After a service of twenty
-minutes the prisoners file back to their cells, place their books on
-the lower shelf, and with a drab cape and a white straw hat stand in
-readiness for the next order, &#8220;To your doors.&#8221; This given,
-they descend into the hall and pass out to their respective places of
-work.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Talk with the Chaplain</span></h3>
-
-<p>Many of these women have their tender, spiritual moments. At such
-times they will beg for a favorite hymn to be sung at the chapel
-service on Sunday, and their requests are generally granted by the
-chaplain. He is the only friend of the prisoner, and his work is
-arduous and often thankless. He is the only one within the walls to
-whom she may turn for sympathy and advice. It may not be every woman
-who gladly avails herself of the enforced privilege of attending daily
-chapel. &#8220;Religion,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97"
-id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>&#8221; as a term, is unpalatable to many.
-But there are very few who are not better and happier for the few
-moments&#8217; unofficial talk with her chaplain, be she Protestant or
-Roman Catholic.</p>
-
-<p>It is to be regretted that his authority is so limited, and his
-opportunities for brightening the lives of those who walk in dark
-places so few. Red tape and standing orders confront him at every
-turn, so that even the religious training is drawn and sucked beneath
-the mighty wheel of the Penal Code, and there is no time for personal
-suasion to play more than a minor part in a convict&#8217;s life.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">My Work in the Kitchen</span></h3>
-
-<p>The work for first offenders, who are called the &#8220;Star
-Class,&#8221; consists of labor in the kitchen, the mess, and the
-officers&#8217; quarters. Six months after I entered upon the third
-stage I was put to work in the kitchen. My duties were as follows:
-To<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-wash ten cans, each holding four quarts; to scrub one table, twenty
-feet in length; two dressers, twelve feet in length; to wash five
-hundred dinner-tins; to clean knives; to wash a sack of potatoes; to
-assist in serving the dinners, and to scrub a piece of floor twenty by
-ten feet. Besides myself there were eight other women on hard labor in
-the kitchen. Our day commenced at 6 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>,
-and continued until 5:30 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> A half hour
-at breakfast time, twenty minutes at chapel, one hour and a half after
-the midday meal, and half an hour after tea summed up our leisure. The
-work was hard and rough. The combined heat of the coppers, the stove,
-and the steamers was overpowering, especially on hot summer days; but
-I struggled on, doing this work preferably to some other, because
-the kitchen was the only place where the monotony of prison life was
-broken. It was the &#8220;show place,&#8221; and all visitors looked in
-to see the food.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99"
-id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Machine-made Menu</span></h3>
-
-<p>What dining in prison means may be judged by a perusal of the
-schedule as given in the Prison Commission Report:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot f90">
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Diet for Female Convicts</span></h3>
-
-<p class="center noindent">Breakfast</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Three-quarters of a pint of cocoa, containing
-&frac12; ounce of cocoa, 2 ounces milk, &frac12; ounce of molasses.
-Bread.</p>
-
-<p class="center noindent mt105">Dinner</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Sunday. 4 ounces tinned pressed beef. Bread.</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Meals of Certain Days" style="margin-left: 0em">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl" style="width: 9em">Monday. Mutton</td>
- <td class="tdl" rowspan="4" style="width: 2em">
- <img src="images/bracer_72.png" alt="right-facing curly bracket" />
- </td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl" rowspan="4" style="width: 20em">3 ounces (cooked), with its own liquor, flavored with &frac12; ounce onions, and thickened with bread and potatoes left on previous days, 1/8 ounce of flour, and for every 100 convicts, &frac34; ounce of pepper. &frac34; pound potatoes. Bread.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl" >Tuesday. Beef</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Wednesday. Mutton</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Friday. Beef</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="hang">Saturday. 1 pint soup, containing 6 ounces of shins of
-beef (uncooked), 1 ounce pearl barley, 3 ounces of fresh vegetables,
-including onions, and for every 100 convicts, &frac34; ounce pepper.
-&frac34; pound potatoes. Bread.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Thursday. &frac34; pound pudding, containing 1 ounce 2
-drachms water. &frac34; pound potatoes. Bread.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100"
-id="Page_100">[100]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center noindent mt105">Supper</p>
-
-<p class="hang">1 pint gruel, containing 2 ounces oatmeal, &frac34;
-ounce molasses, 2 ounces milk. Bread.</p>
-
-<p>Bread per convict per week, 118 ounces.</p>
-
-<p>Bread per convict each week-day, 16 ounces.</p>
-
-<p>Bread per convict each Sunday, 22 ounces.</p>
-
-<p>Salt per convict per day, &frac12; ounce.<a
-name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2"
-class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Visitors to the Kitchen</span></h3>
-
-<p>During the four years I worked in the kitchen I saw many people. The
-Duke of Connaught, Sir Evelyn Wood and his staff, Lord Alverston, Sir
-Edward du Cane, the late Lord Rothschild, and Sir Evelyn Ruggles-Brise,
-besides judges, magistrates, authors, philanthropists and others<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span> of
-an inquiring turn of mind, who had obtained the necessary permit to
-make the tour of the prison under the escort of the governor or one or
-two of his satellites. These ladies and gentlemen expressed the most
-varied and sometimes startling opinions. I recollect on one occasion,
-when some visitors happened to be inspecting the kitchen during the
-dishing up of the hospital patients&#8217; dinner, one old gentleman
-of the party was quite scandalized at the sight of a juicy mutton-chop
-and a tempting milk pudding. He expostulated in such a way that the
-governor hastened to explain that it was not the ordinary prison diet,
-but was intended for a very sick woman. Even then this old gentleman
-was not satisfied, and stalked out, audibly grumbling about people
-living on the fat of the land and getting a better dinner than he
-did. I firmly believe that he left the prison under the impression
-that its inmates lived like pampered gourmets, and that he no longer
-marveled there were so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102"
-id="Page_102">[102]</a></span> many criminals when they were fed on
-such luxuries.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The &#8220;Homelike&#8221; Cell</span></h3>
-
-<p>On another occasion a benevolent-looking old lady, having given
-everything and everybody as minute an inspection as was possible,
-expressed herself as being charmed, remarking:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Everything is so nice and homelike!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I have often wondered what that good lady&#8217;s home was like.</p>
-
-<p>A little philosophy is useful, a saving grace, even in prison; but
-people have such different ways of expressing sympathy. A visitor,
-who I have no doubt intended to be sympathetic, noticing the letter
-&#8220;L&#8221; on my arm, inquired:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How long a time have you to do?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have just completed ten years,&#8221; was my reply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, well,&#8221; cheerfully responded the sympathetic one,
-&#8220;you have done half your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103"
-id="Page_103">[103]</a></span> time, haven&#8217;t you? The remaining
-ten years will soon slip by&#8221;; and the visitor passed on,
-blissfully ignorant of the sword she had unwittingly thrust into my
-aching heart. Even if a prisoner has little or no hope of a mitigation,
-it is not pleasant to have an old wound ruthlessly handled, and ten
-years&#8217; imprisonment as lightly spoken of as ten days might be.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Opiate of Acquiescence</span></h3>
-
-<p>I preferred the kitchen work, although often beyond my strength,
-to any other that fell to a prisoner&#8217;s lot, because of the
-glimpses into the outside world it occasionally afforded. But I never
-permitted myself to dwell upon the fact that at one time I had been the
-social equal of at least the majority of those with whom I thus came
-into passing contact, since to do so would have made my position by
-contrast so unbearable that it would have unfitted me to do the work
-in a spirit of submission,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104"
-id="Page_104">[104]</a></span> not to speak of the mental suffering
-which awakened memories would have occasioned. I soon found that both
-my spiritual and my mental salvation, under the repressive rules in
-force, depended upon unresisting acquiescence&mdash;the keeping of
-my sensibilities dulled as near as possible to the level of the mere
-animal state which the Penal Code, whether intentionally or otherwise,
-inevitably brings about.</p>
-
-<p>I have been frequently asked by friends, since my release, how I
-could possibly have endured the shut-in life under such soul-depressing
-influences. I have given here and there in my narrative indications
-of my feelings under different circumstances. Here I may state in
-general that I early found that thoughts of without and thoughts of
-within&mdash;those that haunted me of the world and those that were
-ever present in my surroundings&mdash;would not march together. I had
-to keep step with either the one or the other. The conflict between
-the two soon became unbearable, and I was<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span> compelled to make
-choice: whether I would live in the past and as much as possible
-exclude the prison, and take the punishment which would inevitably
-follow&mdash;as it had in so many cases&mdash;in an unbalanced mind; or
-would shut the past out altogether and coerce my thoughts within the
-limitations of the prison regulations. My safety lay, as I found, in
-compressing my thoughts to the smallest compass of mental existence,
-and no sooner did worldly visions or memories intrude themselves,
-as they necessarily would, than I immediately and resolutely shut
-them out as one draws the blind to exclude the light. While I thus
-suppressed all emotions belonging to a natural life, I nevertheless
-found, whenever I came accidentally in contact with visitors from the
-outside world, that my inner nature was attuned like the strings of a
-harp to the least vibration of others&#8217; emotions. The slightest
-unconscious inflection of the voice, whether sympathetic or otherwise,
-would call forth either a grateful response<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span> or an instant withdrawal
-into the armor of reserve which I had to adopt for my self-protection.
-But this exclusion of the world created a dark background which served
-only to intensify the light that shone upon me from realms unseen
-of mortal eyes. Lonely I was, yet I was never alone. But, however
-satisfying the spiritual communion, the human heart is so constituted
-that it needs must yearn for love and sympathy from its own kind, for
-recognition of all that is best in us, by something that is like unto
-it, in its experiences, feelings, emotions, and aspirations.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Visits of Prisoners&#8217; Friends</span></h3>
-
-<p>A prisoner is allowed to receive a visit from her friends at
-intervals of six, four, and two months, according to her stage
-of service. There are four stages, each of nine months&#8217;
-duration: first, solitary confinement; second, probation; while the
-third and fourth stages are not specially<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span> designated. During
-the first two stages the prisoner is clothed in brown, at the third
-stage in green, and the fourth in navy blue. Every article worn by the
-prisoner or in use by her is stamped with a &#8220;broad arrow,&#8221;
-the convict&#8217;s crest.</p>
-
-<p>A visit may be forfeited by bad conduct or delayed through a loss of
-marks. When a prisoner is entitled to receive a visitor, she applies
-to the governor for permission to have the permit sent to the person
-she names; but if the police report concerning the designated visitor
-is unfavorable the request is not granted. When a prisoner&#8217;s
-friends&mdash;three being the maximum&mdash;arrive at the prison gates
-they ring a bell. The gatekeeper views them through a grille and
-inquires their business. They show their permit; whereupon he notifies
-the chief matron, who in turn notifies the officer in charge of the
-prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>The rule regarding visits precluded any discussion of prison
-affairs, or anything regarding treatment, or aught that passes<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-within the prison walls. Had I permitted myself to break this rule
-the visit would have been stopped at once by the matron in charge.
-Consequently, all the statements on such matters reported from time to
-time in the press during my imprisonment, and quoted as received from
-my mother or friends, are shown to be pure fabrications.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">My Mother&#8217;s Visits</span></h3>
-
-<p>A visit! What joy or what sorrow those words express in the outside
-world! But in prison&mdash;the pain of it is so great that it can
-hardly be borne.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever my mother&#8217;s visit was announced, accompanied by a
-matron I passed into a small, oblong room. There a grilled screen
-confronted me; a yard or two beyond was a second barrier identical
-in structure, and behind it I could see the form of my mother, and
-sitting in the space between the grilles, thus additionally separating
-us, was a prison matron.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109"
-id="Page_109">[109]</a></span> No kiss; not even a clasp of the hand;
-no privacy sacred to mother and daughter; not a whisper could pass
-between us. Was not this the very depth of humiliation?</p>
-
-<p>My mother crossed every two months from France to visit me. Neither
-heat nor cold deterred her from taking this fatiguing journey. Thus
-again and again she traveled a hundred miles for love of me, to cheer,
-comfort, and console; a hundred miles for thirty minutes!</p>
-
-<p>At these visits she would tell me as best she could of the noble,
-unwearied efforts of my countrymen and countrywomen in my cause; of
-the sympathy and support of my own Government; of the earnest efforts
-of the different American ambassadors in my behalf. And though their
-efforts proved all in vain, the knowledge of their belief in my
-innocence, and of their sympathy comforted, cheered, and strengthened
-me to tread bravely the thorny path of my daily life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110"
-id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Almost before we had time to compose ourselves there would come a
-silent sign from the mute matron in the chair&mdash;the thirty minutes
-had passed. &#8220;Good-by,&#8221; we say, with a lingering look, and
-then turn our backs upon each other, she to go one way, I another; one
-leading out into the broad, open day, the other into the stony gloom of
-the prison. Do you wonder that when I went back into my lonely cell the
-day had become darker? I went forth to meet a crown of joy and love,
-only to return with a cross of sorrow; for these visits always created
-passionate longings for freedom, with their vivid recollections of past
-joys that at times were almost unbearable. No one will ever know what
-my mother suffered.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">A Letter from Lord Russell</span></h3>
-
-<p>As the years passed the repression of the prison system
-developed a kind of mental numbness which rendered my life,<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-in a measure, more endurable. It also came as a relief to my own
-sufferings to take an interest in those of my fellow prisoners. Then
-Lord Russell of Killowen wrote me a letter<a name="FNanchor_3_3"
-id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
-expressing his continued confidence in me, which greatly renewed my
-courage, while the loving messages from my friends in America kept
-alive my faith in human nature.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Punished for Another&#8217;s Fault</span></h3>
-
-<p>By the exercise of great self-control and restraint I had maintained
-a perfect good-conduct record at Woking for a period of years, when an
-act of one of my fellow prisoners got me into grievous trouble.</p>
-
-<p>It is the rule to search daily both the cell and the person of all
-prisoners&mdash;those at hard labor three times a day&mdash;to make
-sure that they have nothing concealed with which they may do themselves
-bodily injury.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112"
-id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To me it was a bitter indignity. I was never allowed to forget that,
-being a prisoner, even my body was not my own. It was horrible to be
-touched by unfriendly hands, yet I was compelled to submit&mdash;to
-be undressed and be searched. During the term of my imprisonment I
-was searched about ten thousand times, and on only one occasion was
-anything found contrary to regulations. I had no knowledge of it at
-the time, as the article had been placed surreptitiously in my cell by
-another prisoner to save herself from punishment.</p>
-
-<p>The facts are as follows: I was working in the kitchen, when a
-prisoner upset some boiling water on my foot. I thought it best not to
-speak of it, and did not, therefore, mention it to any one. My foot,
-however, became inflamed and caused me great pain, and the prisoner in
-question, noticing that I limped, inquired what the matter was. I told
-her that the coarse wool of my stocking was irritating the blister on
-my foot. Thereupon she offered to give me<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span> some wool of a finer
-quality with which to knit a more comfortable pair. I was not aware at
-the time that this was not permitted, nor that the wool was stolen.
-When it neared her turn to be searched, having a lot of this worsted
-concealed in her bed, she made the excuse of indisposition in order to
-return to her cell and get rid of it. While there she transferred it
-from her cell to mine, its neighbor, the doors of the cells being open
-during working-time.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus">
-<a id="plate5"></a>
-<img src="images/i127.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="center noindent">BARONESS VON ROQUES,<br />
-The mother of Mrs. Maybrick.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>When the time came to search my cell, the wool was, of course,
-found, and I was at once reported. The warder took me to the
-penal ward, and I was shut in a cell, in which the light came but
-dimly through a perforated sheet of iron. This was at eight <span
-class="smcap">A.M.</span> At ten o&#8217;clock I was brought before the
-governor for examination and judgment. I stated that the wool did not
-belong to me and that I was ignorant as to how it got into my cell. The
-governor took the officer&#8217;s deposition to the effect that it was
-found in my cell, and reasoned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114"
-id="Page_114">[114]</a></span> that I must, therefore, have knowledge
-of the article. I was taken back to the punishment cell and left there
-for eight hours. When the officer opened the door to read to me the
-governor&#8217;s judgment, I was found in a dead faint on the floor.
-With some difficulty I was restored to consciousness and was then
-removed to the hospital. When I had sufficiently recovered from the
-shock, I was allowed to return to my own cell in the hall to do my
-punishment. I was degraded for a month to a lower stage, with a loss of
-twenty-six marks, and had six days added to my original sentence.</p>
-
-<p>Had this offense occurred under the more enlightened system that
-obtains at Aylesbury Prison at the present time, I should have
-been forgiven, as it was a first offense under this particular
-rule. The governor at Woking was a just and humane man, and he
-was not a little troubled to reconcile the fact of my being in
-possession of this worsted, when I had no means of access to the
-tailor shop or of coming in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115"
-id="Page_115">[115]</a></span> contact with any of the workers there
-who alone had the handling of it. Of course, I could not explain that
-the worsted had been passed into the kitchen by one of the tailoresses,
-who came every morning to fetch hot water for use in the tailor-room,
-and who was a friend of the prisoner who put it in my cell.</p>
-
-<p>I was kept in the hall during the months of my penal
-punishment, and also for twelve months thereafter, since at that
-time a &#8220;report&#8221; always carried with it a loss of the
-privilege of working in the kitchen. When I had an opportunity, in
-&#8220;association time,&#8221; of speaking to the prisoner who had
-got me into this trouble, and reproached her for the injury she had
-done me, she frankly confessed her deed, but excused herself by saying
-that she did not expect I would be punished; that she was tempted
-to do it because at that time her case was under consideration at
-the Home Office, and that she had received the promise of an early
-discharge if she did not have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116"
-id="Page_116">[116]</a></span> any &#8220;reports.&#8221; She well knew
-that if this worsted had been found in her cell this promise would have
-been revoked. As she was a &#8220;life woman,&#8221; and had served a
-long time, I had not the heart to deprive her of this, perhaps her only
-chance of freedom, through a vindication of myself. A week later I had
-the satisfaction of knowing that my silence had been the means of her
-liberation.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Forms of Punishment</span></h3>
-
-<p>The punishment of prisoners at Woking consisted of:</p>
-
-<p>1. Loss of marks, termed in prison parlance, &#8220;remission on her
-sentence,&#8221; but without confinement in the penal ward.</p>
-
-<p>2. Solitary confinement for twenty-four hours in the penal ward,
-with loss of marks.</p>
-
-<p>3. Solitary confinement, with loss of marks, on bread and water from
-one to three days.</p>
-
-<p>4. Solitary confinement, with loss of marks, on bread and
-water for three days,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117"
-id="Page_117">[117]</a></span> either in a strait-jacket or
-&#8220;hobbles.&#8221; Hobbling consists in binding the wrists and
-ankles of a prisoner, then strapping them together behind her back.
-This position causes great suffering, is barbarous, and can be enforced
-only by the doctor&#8217;s orders.</p>
-
-<p>5. To the above was sometimes added, in violent cases, shearing
-and blistering of the head, or confinement in the dark cell. The dark
-cell was underground, and consisted of four walls, a ceiling, and a
-floor, with double doors, in which not a ray of light penetrated. No. 5
-punishment was abolished at Aylesbury, but in that prison even to give
-a piece of bread to a fellow prisoner is still a punishable offense.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The True Aim of Punishment</span></h3>
-
-<p>Punishment should be carried out in a humane, sympathetic spirit,
-and not in a dehumanizing or tyrannous manner. It should be remedial
-in character, and not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118"
-id="Page_118">[118]</a></span> degrading and deteriorating. It should
-be the aim and object of the prison system to send a prisoner back into
-the world capable of rehabilitating himself or herself and becoming
-a useful citizen. The punishment in a convict prison, within my
-knowledge, is carried out in an oppressive way, the delinquent is left
-entirely to herself to work out her own salvation, and in nine cases
-out of ten she works out her own destruction instead, and leaves prison
-hardened, rancorous, and demoralized.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Evil of Collective Punishment</span></h3>
-
-<p>There are so many prisoners with whom complaint-making is a mania,
-who on every possible occasion make trivial, exaggerated, and false
-complaints, that it is not altogether strange that officials look
-with a certain skepticism on all fault-finding; hence it frequently
-happens that those with just grievances are discredited because of the
-shortcomings of the habitual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119"
-id="Page_119">[119]</a></span> grumblers. At the same time, one can not
-disapprove too strongly of collective punishment which involves the
-utter absence of trust in any prisoner, however deserving. A prisoner
-slightly abuses a privilege or is guilty of some small infringement of
-the rules, when down comes the hammer wielded by the inexorable Penal
-Code, and strikes not only the one offending, but, in its expansive
-dealing, all the other prisoners, guilty or innocent of the offense.
-Many a privilege, trivial in itself and absolutely harmless, has been
-condemned because of its abuse by one prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>I cite one instance. Each cell was provided with a nail on which,
-during the day, the prisoner could hang a wet towel, and, during the
-night, her clothes. Those who worked in the laundry came in with wet
-clothing every evening, which, as no change is allowed, must be either
-dried at night or put on wet the next morning. One prisoner pulled
-her nail out and purposely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120"
-id="Page_120">[120]</a></span> wounded herself. She was weak-minded,
-and no doubt thought to excite pity. The matter was referred to the
-director, Mr. Pennythorne, who gave the order that all the nails
-throughout the building be removed. Hence, because of the shortcomings
-of one weak-minded woman, all opportunity for the working women to
-dry their clothes was taken from them. Others besides myself appealed
-to the director and protested. He replied that we would be obliged
-to submit to the edict the same as the rest, and that no distinction
-could be made in our favor. Of course we could not argue the matter;
-the penalty fell heavier upon the laundry women and the kitchen
-workers than upon myself. It is a glaring instance of the great wrong
-done by collective punishment. However, the prisoners had their
-revenge, for they never referred to him afterward except as &#8220;Mr.
-Pennynails.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121"
-id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Evil of Constant Supervision</span></h3>
-
-<p>Individual supervision is compulsory, and in many cases it is
-essential, but not in all. Surely there are some prisoners who might,
-with good results, be trusted. The supervision is never relaxed; the
-prisoner is always in sight or hearing of an officer. During the day
-she is never trusted out of sight, and at night the watchful eye of
-the night officer can see her by means of a small glass fitted in
-the door of each cell. She may grow gray during the length of her
-imprisonment, but the rule of supervision is never relaxed. Try and
-realize what it means always to feel that you are watched. After all,
-these prisoners are women, some may be mothers, and it is surely the
-height of wickedness and folly to crush whatever remnant of humanity
-and self-respect even a convict woman may still have left her. These
-poor creatures who wear the brand of prison shame are guarded and
-controlled by women, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122"
-id="Page_122">[122]</a></span> men make the rules which regulate every
-movement of their forlorn lives.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Some Good Points of Convict Prisons</span></h3>
-
-<p>The rules of prison, rigorous as they are, are not wholly without
-some consideration for the hapless beings who are condemned to suffer
-punishment for their sins within their gloomy walls. On the men&#8217;s
-side the system is harsher, the life harder, and the discipline more
-strict and severe; and I can well believe that for a man of refinement
-and culture the punishment falls little short of a foretaste of
-inferno. But gloomy and tragic as the convict establishment is, it
-is a better place than the county prison, and I have heard habitual
-criminals avow that a convict prison is the nearest approach to a
-comfortable &#8220;home&#8221; in the penal world. I know that a
-certain type of degenerate women, after serving their sentences, have
-committed grave offenses with the sole object of obtaining a<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-conviction which would send them back to penal servitude. For such the
-segregation system would be the most effectual remedy.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">My Sickness</span></h3>
-
-<p>I had never been a robust woman, and the hardships of prison life
-were breaking down my constitution. The cells at Woking were not
-heated. In the halls were two fireplaces and a stove, which were alight
-day and night; but as the solid doors of the cells were all locked,
-the heat could not penetrate them. Thus, while the atmosphere outside
-the cell might be warm, the inside was icy cold. During the hard
-winter frosts the water frequently froze in my cell over night. The
-bed-clothing was insufficient, and I suffered as much from the cold
-as the poorest and most miserable creature on earth. Added to this,
-I was compelled to go out and exercise in all kinds of weather. On
-rainy days I would come in with my shoes and<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span> stockings wet through,
-and as I possessed only one pair of shoes and one pair of stockings,
-I had to keep them on, wet as they were. The shoes I had to wear
-until worn out; the stockings until changed on the Saturday of each
-week, which was the only day a change of any kind of underwear could
-be obtained, no matter in what condition it might be. Therefore,
-the majority of the inmates in the winter time seldom had dry feet,
-if there was much rain or snow, the natural result being catarrh,
-influenza, bronchitis, and rheumatism, from all of which I suffered in
-turn.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Taken to the Infirmary</span></h3>
-
-<p>As long as the prisoner is not feverish she is treated in her own
-cell in the ward, her food remaining the ordinary prison dietary; but
-as soon as her temperature rises, as occurred in my case frequently,
-she is admitted as a patient to the infirmary, where she is fed
-according to medical prescription.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125"
-id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The infirmary stands a little detached from the prison grounds. It
-has several wards, containing from six to fifteen beds, and several
-cells for cases that require isolation. The beds are placed on each
-side of the room, and are covered with blue and white counterpanes.
-At the head of each is a shelf, on which stand two cups, a plate, and
-a diet card. In the middle of each room is a long deal table. On the
-walls are a few old Scriptural pictures.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Utter Desolation of a Sick
-Prisoner</span></h3>
-
-<p>When a prisoner is admitted she is first weighed and then allotted
-a bed. Her food and medicine are given her by an officer, who places
-it on a chair at her bedside if she is too ill to sit at the table.
-The doctor makes his rounds in the morning and evening, and if the
-patient is seriously ill he may make a visit in the night also.
-The matron in charge goes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126"
-id="Page_126">[126]</a></span> through the wards at stated times to
-see that all is going well, but there is no nursing. The prisoner must
-attend to her own wants, and if too weak to do so, she must depend upon
-some other patient less ill than herself to assist her. To be sick in
-prison is a terrible experience. I felt acutely the contrast between
-former illnesses at home and the desolation and the indifference of the
-treatment under conditions afforded by a prison infirmary. To lie all
-day and night, perhaps day after day, and week after week, alone and in
-silence, without the touch of a friendly hand, the sound of a friendly
-voice, or a single expression of sympathy or interest! The misery and
-desolation of it all can not be described. It must be experienced. I
-arrived at Woking ill, and I left Woking ill.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="sub">CHAPTER SIX<br />
-
-At Aylesbury Prison</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Removal from Woking</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">I had</span> been admitted
-to the infirmary suffering from a feverish cold. I had been in
-bed a fortnight and was feeling very weak, when, on the morning
-of November 4, 1896, I awoke to find the matron standing at my
-bedside. &#8220;Maybrick,&#8221; she said, &#8220;the governor has
-given orders that you are to be removed to-day to Aylesbury Prison.
-Get up at once.&#8221; Without a word of explanation she left. I
-had become a living rule of obedience, and so with trembling hands
-dressed myself. Presently I heard footsteps approaching. A female
-warder entered with a long, dark cloak covered with broad arrows,
-the insignia of the convict. I was told to put on this garment of
-shame. Then, supported<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128"
-id="Page_128">[128]</a></span> by the warder, I crossed the big yard to
-the chief matron&#8217;s office. There other women of the &#8220;Star
-Class&#8221; were waiting, handcuffed. A male warder stepped forward
-and told me to hold out my hands, whereupon he fastened on a pair of
-handcuffs and chained me to the rest of the gang. This was done by
-means of a chain which ran through an outer ring attached to each pair
-of handcuffs, thus uniting ten women in a literal chain-gang. This
-was to me the last straw of degradation&mdash;the parting indignity
-of hateful Woking; but, happily, this was a painful prelude to a more
-merciful r&eacute;gime at Aylesbury.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the women were weeping, some swearing. When all were ready
-the prison-van drove into the yard and we filed out to the clanking of
-our chains. Then the door was shut and we were driven off. A special
-train was waiting at the station, and escorted between male warders we
-got in. It was bitterly cold and raining heavily, but crowds lined the
-road and platforms.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 700px">
-<a id="plate6"></a>
-<img src="images/i145.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="noindent f80">Copyright by S. G. Payne &amp; Son, Aylesbury.</p>
-
-<p class="center noindent">AYLESBURY PRISON,<br />
-Where Mrs. Maybrick was confined from 1896 to 1904.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">New Insignia of Shame</span></h3>
-
-<p>We were objects of morbid curiosity to the idle and curious people,
-who may or may not have felt sorry for us. But to be stared at was most
-distressing to all, to the first offender in particular. If the public
-but realized how prisoners suffer when their disgrace is thus brought
-to the public notice, they might feel ashamed of their lack of ordinary
-human consideration and pass on. But why should it be necessary at all
-to subject a prisoner to such humiliation and degradation? Male as well
-as female prisoners could be transferred from one prison to another
-without attracting any notice in the street or at the station, if they
-were provided with garments for traveling upon which the hideous brand
-of shame&mdash;the &#8220;broad arrow&#8221;&mdash;is not stamped.
-It is this mark of condemnation which attracts the morbid curiosity
-of the people. Such exhibitions and the callous disregard of a<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-prisoner&#8217;s feelings can only harden and embitter the heart and
-lower his or her self-respect.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Arrival at Aylesbury Prison</span></h3>
-
-<p>After a journey of nearly five hours we arrived at Aylesbury
-Station. The public were apparently aware that the first batch of
-convicts was to be transferred that day, as there were crowds at all
-the stations at which we stopped. When we got out at Aylesbury it was
-with difficulty that a passage was made for us. The prison-vans were
-in readiness, and we were rapidly driven away. I felt weak and faint
-and cold. A thick fog enveloped the town, and I could see only the
-dim outlines of houses appearing and disappearing as we passed along.
-We stopped before what appeared a gigantic structure, and then drove
-through two large iron gates into a small courtyard. There we descended
-and drew up in line to be counted by the<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span> officer, while our
-numbers and names were given to the governor, who stood waiting to
-receive us. The order &#8220;Pass on!&#8221; was called by the matron
-in charge, whereupon we entered a long, dark, gloomy passage, at the
-end of which was a strong, barred door. This was unlocked, and, when we
-had passed in, relocked.</p>
-
-<p>I have already described what a prison is like. Again we stood
-in line. Then a male warder came forward. He unlocked my handcuffs
-and unclasped the chain which bound me to my fellow convicts. With a
-clang that echoed through the empty halls they fell together to the
-ground. My wrists were bruised and sore from the long pressure of their
-combined weight.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the order &#8220;Pass on!&#8221; was repeated, and, led by
-a female warder, we went up two flights of the iron stairway to the top
-ward of the hall. Each prisoner was then in turn locked into a cell.
-Thus ended my second journey as a prisoner.<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span> The contrast with former
-journeys in my life drew bitter tears from my eyes.</p>
-
-<p>During the remainder of the week daily batches of prisoners
-continued to arrive, and on the sixth day all had been duly transferred
-from Woking Prison, which was then turned into military barracks.</p>
-
-<p>After this short break in our prison life the same daily routine was
-once more taken up. Whether it was due to the change of air or other
-physical causes I can not say, but from the time of my arrival I began
-to droop. I lost strength and suffered terribly from insomnia.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">A New Prison R&eacute;gime</span></h3>
-
-<p>Six months after our arrival, there came a change of
-authorities, and with the passing of the years a more enlightened
-r&eacute;gime was instituted by the Home Office. If a prisoner has
-any complaint to make or wishes to seek advice, she asks to have
-her name put down to see the governor.<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span> She is then termed a
-&#8220;wisher,&#8221; and is &#8220;seen&#8221; by him in his office in
-the presence of the chief matron. Her request is written down by him in
-her penal record, and if he can not settle the matter out of hand it is
-referred to a &#8220;visiting director,&#8221; to whom the prisoner is
-permitted to make a statement. If this gentleman finds that his powers
-are insufficient to deal with the question, he in turn passes it on to
-the prison commission, and sometimes it goes even to the Secretary of
-State himself.</p>
-
-<p>The same privilege holds good concerning medical matters. If a
-prisoner is feeling ill she asks the officer in charge of the ward
-where she is located to enter her name on the doctor&#8217;s book. At
-ten o&#8217;clock the prisoner is sent for, and sees the doctor in the
-presence of an infirmary nurse. He enters her name in a book, also the
-prescription, both of which are copied later in the prisoner&#8217;s
-medical record. If a prisoner is dissatisfied with the treatment
-she is receiving, she can make application<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span> to see the
-&#8220;medical inspector,&#8221; who comes to the prison every three
-months. But if neither the governor, nor the doctor, nor the director,
-nor the inspector gives satisfaction, then there is the &#8220;Board of
-Visitors&#8221; to inquire into the complaint.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Board of Visitors</span></h3>
-
-<p>The idea of the &#8220;Board of Visitors&#8221; is to act as a
-guaranty to the public that everything is honest and above board, and
-that there can be no possibility of inhuman treatment. If this is the
-sole object in view&mdash;namely, that the prisoners shall be seen by
-these &#8220;visitors&#8221;&mdash;then the object is largely attained.
-They have done much to ameliorate the prisoners&#8217; condition.
-Whereas, at one time the women slept in their clothes, they are now
-provided with nightdresses; instead of sitting with their feet always
-on the stone floor, they are now allowed a small mat, as well as a
-wooden stool; and, as the result of many<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span> complaints regarding
-the rapid decay of teeth, toothbrushes are allowed, a concession which
-I much appreciated. For a short time felt slippers were granted us,
-but these have been discontinued on the ground of expense. The same
-beneficent influence also secured wide-brimmed hats for the women.
-Formerly they had nothing to protect their eyes, and the reflected
-glare from the stone walls was the cause of much weakness and
-inflammation.</p>
-
-<p>There were several changes in the diet also. Tea was substituted for
-cocoa at breakfast and supper, white bread in lieu of wholemeal bread,
-and tinned meat replaced the dry bread and cheese previously given on
-Sunday.</p>
-
-<p>The time of solitary confinement was reduced from nine months
-to four, and immediately on its expiration the probationers can
-now work in &#8220;association&#8221; in either the laundry or the
-tailor&#8217;s shops where the officers&#8217; uniforms&mdash;of
-brown cashmere in summer and navy-blue serge<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span> in winter&mdash;are
-made, besides all the clothing for the prisoners&#8217; own use; also
-in the twine-room, where excellent spinning is done; while the prisoner
-with special aptitude may be recommended to the bead-room, which turns
-out really artistic work.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Regulations Concerning Letters and
-Visits</span></h3>
-
-<p>The prisoners were also allowed to receive three photographs of near
-relatives and to keep them in their cells. Previously these had to be
-returned within twenty-four hours. Best of all, the intervals between
-letters and visits were reduced by a month. The number of letters
-permitted to be sent by a prisoner varies according to the stage she
-is in. In the fourth stage a letter is allowed every two months, and
-a &#8220;special letter&#8221; occasionally, if the prisoner&#8217;s
-conduct has been satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>The following is a copy of the prison<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span> regulations concerning
-communications between prisoners and their friends:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;The following regulations as to communications, by visit
-or letter, between prisoners and their friends, are notified for the
-information of their correspondents:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The permission to write and receive letters is given to
-prisoners for the purpose of enabling them to keep up a connection with
-their respectable friends, and not that they may be kept informed of
-public events.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All letters are read by the prison authorities. They must be
-legibly written, and not crossed. Any which are of an objectionable
-tendency, either to or from prisoners, or containing slang or improper
-expressions, will be suppressed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Prisoners are permitted to receive and to write a letter
-at intervals, which depends on the rules of the stage they attain by
-industry and good conduct; but matters of special importance to a
-prisoner may be communicated at any time by letter (prepaid) to the
-governor, who will inform the prisoner thereof, if expedient.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138"
-id="Page_138">[138]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In case of misconduct the privilege of receiving and writing
-a letter may be forfeited for a time.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Money, books, postage-stamps, food, tobacco, clothes, etc.,
-should not be sent to prisoners for their use in prison, as nothing is
-allowed to be received at the prison for that purpose.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Persons attempting to clandestinely communicate with, or
-to introduce any article to or for prisoners, are liable to fine or
-imprisonment, and any prisoner concerned in such practises is liable to
-be severely punished.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Prisoners&#8217; friends are sometimes applied to by
-unauthorized persons to send money, etc., to them privately, under
-pretense that they can apply it for the benefit of the prisoners, and
-under such fraudulent pretense such persons endeavor to obtain money
-for themselves. Any letter containing such an application received by
-the friends of a prisoner should be at once forwarded by them to the
-governor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Prisoners are allowed to receive visits from their friends,
-according to rules, at intervals which depend on their stage.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139"
-id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When visits are due to prisoners notification will be sent to
-the friends whom they desire to visit them.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>While in Woking Prison, under the privilege of these rules, I wrote
-the following letter to the late Miss Mary A. Dodge (&#8220;Gail
-Hamilton&#8221;)&mdash;she who was my most eloquent and steadfast
-champion in America:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="right">P 29, June 24, 1892.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Dear Miss Dodge</span>:</p>
-
-<p>I feel that I owe you such a debt of gratitude for the truly noble,
-beautiful, and womanly manner in which you have used that glorious
-gift of God&mdash;your genius&mdash;in the cause of a helpless and
-sorely afflicted sister, whose claim to your compassion was but that
-of a common humanity and nationality, that I feel I must send you a
-few lines, if only to disabuse your mind of any lingering doubts of
-my gratitude that my silence may have caused to arise. My dear mother
-has, I believe, explained to you the almost insurmountable difficulty I
-find in writing to friends abroad, with only<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span> one letter every two
-months at my disposal, and which I do not feel justified in depriving
-her of. I can, therefore, only express through her from time to time my
-heartfelt thanks for all that has been and is still being done in my
-behalf. I utterly despair, however, of finding words that shall convey
-to you even the faintest idea of the fulness of a heart completely
-overwhelmed by the sympathy, kindness, and generosity of my friends. My
-feelings of love, however, and admiration for you and them is simply
-beyond all power of expression.</p>
-
-<p>The world may and does bemoan the gradual extinction in this
-generation of those finer and nobler traits of character which
-our forefathers so beautifully exemplified; lays at the door of a
-higher civilization the terrible increase of selfishness, pride, and
-indifference to all the higher duties of Christianity. But, I ask,
-where can a grander exception be found to such apparent degeneration
-than that displayed by the conduct of those truly noble men and
-women, who, without a thought of self or of the trouble involved,
-have stood forth to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141"
-id="Page_141">[141]</a></span> plead the cause of their countrywoman?
-Could man do more than he is doing? Could woman do more for her nearest
-and dearest than the ladies of America are doing for me? No! a thousand
-times, no!</p>
-
-<p>Some day, my health and purse permitting, I shall hope to tell them
-face to face, if mere words can tell, how greatly their faithful,
-unwearying efforts, their undaunted energy, their sympathy and kindness
-and generosity have helped me to rise above the depressing influences
-of the injustice I am suffering under, to endure patiently, to bear
-bravely the hardships of this life, and to feel through all that the
-hope and comfort afforded me by their help is but a beautiful example
-of the way in which God answers the prayers of his people.</p>
-
-<p>I would now fain beg of you, dear friend, to express my deepest
-and most heartfelt gratitude to President Harrison, Mr. Blaine, and
-the other members of the Cabinet. Also to all the distinguished
-gentlemen who so generously attached their signatures to the splendid
-petition sent lately from Washington to the Hon. Henry Matthews,<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-Secretary of State, London, and to assure them of my great appreciation
-of the honor and justice they have done me in thus espousing my cause.
-Oh, how wretchedly I have expressed what I really feel and would like
-to say! But you, too, have a woman&#8217;s heart, and you can therefore
-realize the feelings I find it so hard to express. It would be a still
-more hopeless task to try to tell you what I think of you&mdash;noblest
-and truest of women; that must wait until we meet. Until that glad day,
-believe me,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span style="margin-right: 3em">Yours gratefully and sincerely,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Florence E. Maybrick</span>.</p>
-
-<p>P.S. My next date for receiving letters
-is 19th July.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">To Miss Dodge</span>,<br />
-<span class="ml2">Washington, D. C., U. S. A.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">A Visit from Lord Russell</span></h3>
-
-<p>I was sitting in my cell one day feeling very weak and ill. I was
-recovering from an attack of influenza, and the cold comfort<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span> of
-my surroundings increased the physical and mental depression which
-accompanies this complaint. I wondered vaguely why my life was spared,
-why I was permitted to suffer this terrible injustice, when my sad
-thoughts were distracted by the sounds of approaching voices. I arose
-from my seat&mdash;which is a compulsory attitude of submission when an
-authority approaches a prisoner&mdash;and stood waiting for I knew not
-what. Presently I heard the tones of a voice which I can never forget
-while memory lasts, though that voice is now hushed in death; a voice
-which, through the darkest days of my life, ever spoke words of trust,
-comfort, and encouragement. Surely I must be dreaming, I thought, or my
-mind is growing weak and I am becoming fanciful; for how should this
-voice reach me within these prison walls? I looked up, startled, and
-once more thought my mind was wandering, for there stood the noblest,
-truest friend that woman ever had: the champion of the weak and<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-the oppressed; the brave upholder of justice and law in the face of
-prejudice and public hostility&mdash;Lord Russell of Killowen, Lord
-Chief Justice of England. He stepped into my cell with a kindly smile
-on his face, and sat down on my stool, while the governor waited
-outside. He talked to me for half an hour, and I can never forget the
-beauty and grandeur of that presence. As he rose to leave he turned
-toward me, and, seeing unshed tears in my eyes, he took my hand in his,
-and in his strong, emphatic way said: &#8220;Be brave, be strong; I
-believe you to be an innocent woman. I have done and will continue to
-do all I can for you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It has been denied in England that Lord Russell took any interest
-in me other than he might in any client he was paid to defend; but the
-letter which I have already given, written to me at Woking, as well as
-various statements made by him, and quoted elsewhere, must set that
-aspersion at rest.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 540px;">
-<a id="plate7"></a>
-<img src="images/i163.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="center noindent">MISS MARY A. DODGE (&#8220;Gail Hamilton&#8221;),<br />
-An American advocate of Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s innocence.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="sub">CHAPTER SEVEN<br />
-
-A Petition for Release</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Denied by the Secretary of State</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">I had</span> been at Aylesbury about eight months when I petitioned the
-Secretary of State for a reconsideration of my case, with a view to
-my release. To this I received the usual official reply, &#8220;Not
-sufficient grounds.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A prisoner may petition the Secretary of State every three months.
-In my opinion, the privilege of petitioning on a case should be reduced
-from four times a year to once a year, with the provision that if
-anything of importance to a prisoner transpires within that period it
-may be duly submitted to the Secretary of State on recommendation of
-the governor or director;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146"
-id="Page_146">[146]</a></span> that all complaints regarding food,
-treatment, or medical attention should be referred to the visiting
-director in the first instance, instead of the Secretary of State,
-who under the present system passes it back to the directors for
-the necessary investigation. This would do away with the continual
-daily distress and irritation and disappointment created in the
-prison on receipt of unfavorable replies from the Home Office. A
-prisoner petitions. A private inquiry is held, to which the prisoner
-is not a party, and of which she has no information, nor does she
-receive any during its progress or after its conclusion, save that
-the result, which is nearly always negative, is communicated to her.
-In this inquiry any one who is opposed to the prisoner may seek
-to influence the official mind. I will state a case in point. A
-friend asked the Secretary of State for the United States, the Hon.
-John Hay, to interest himself in my case. Mr. Hay replied that he
-had been informed by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147"
-id="Page_147">[147]</a></span> Home Office that I had been &#8220;a
-disobedient and troublesome prisoner.&#8221;</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Report of My Misconduct Refuted</span></h3>
-
-<p>When I was told this at a visit I had my name entered to see the
-governor. I insisted that the governor should inform me when, and after
-what breach of the rules, such a report had been sent to the Home
-Office. After carefully looking through my penal record he could find
-no entry to that effect, and concluded by saying that I must have been
-misinformed. He said that my conduct was good, and that he had never
-made any report to the contrary. Obviously, therefore, this report from
-the Home Office to Mr. Hay was due to an adverse influence, of which
-I have still no knowledge. Statements are made against a prisoner,
-of the nature of which she is entirely ignorant. Being ignorant, she
-has no way of refuting them. Worse still, they are retained in the
-Home Office to her dying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148"
-id="Page_148">[148]</a></span> day, and the unfortunate woman knows
-nothing of them or their effect. The only thing certain is that she is
-further condemned.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Need of a Court of Criminal Appeal</span></h3>
-
-<p>The Home Office, while exercising a private function of
-reconsideration grounded on the royal prerogative of mercy,
-emphatically disclaims being a court of appeal or a judicial tribunal
-in any sense of the word. Yet the consideration of a convict&#8217;s
-case rests alone with the Secretary of State. It is a matter of
-unwritten law that the Home Secretary shall act individually and solely
-upon his own responsibility, and none of his colleagues are to assume
-or take part therein.</p>
-
-<p>There are numerous instances where judges, witnesses, and juries
-have gone wrong. Indeed, it will be found that even in cases which have
-seemed the clearest and least complicated in the trial grievous<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-mistakes have been made. But in England the blame rests on the public
-and the bar in that no means are provided to set the wrong right.
-What a difference it would have made in my life if I had been granted
-a second trial! I could have called other witnesses, submitted
-fresh evidence, and refuted false testimony. Is it not the climax
-of injustice that men and women, if sued for money, even for a few
-shillings, can appeal from court to court&mdash;even to the House of
-Lords, the English court of last resort; but when character, all that
-life holds dear, and life itself, are in jeopardy, a prisoner&#8217;s
-fate may depend upon the incompetent construction of one man, and there
-is no appeal?</p>
-
-<p>A hard-worked Secretary of State, whose time, night and day,
-is crowded with every kind of duty, correspondence, and labor, in
-the House of Commons or in the Home Office, has to consider a vast
-number of petitions, complaints, and miscarriages of justice, or too
-severe sentences, any one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150"
-id="Page_150">[150]</a></span> of which might require hours and
-sometimes days to investigate. He is assisted by several officers, but,
-strange to say, it is no part of their qualifications (or that of the
-Home Secretary himself), that they should be familiar with the criminal
-law or the prosecution or defense of prisoners. These permanent
-officials are, besides, occupied with hundreds of other matters which
-come before the Home Office, on which they have to guide their chief.
-Think of the untold sufferings of individuals and families, the shame
-and degradation which they would be spared, if England had a court of
-criminal appeal.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Historic Examples of British Injustice</span></h3>
-
-<p>The Home Office detects and corrects a larger number of erroneous
-verdicts than the public is aware. This arises from the secret and
-partial methods of remedying miscarriages of justice frequently
-adopted. The first object is to maintain<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span> the public belief in
-the infallibility of judges and juries. If an innocent person could
-slip out quietly, without shaking this belief, he might be permitted
-to do so. The Home Secretary is, in fact, a politician, who has little
-time to spare for the consideration of criminal cases, and furthermore
-must see to it that his conduct does not injure his party. Thus he is
-often deterred from interfering with verdicts and sentences by sheer
-timidity. When he affirms a sentence he can throw the greater part
-of the blame on others if he is afterward proved to be wrong; but
-when he reverses either verdict or sentence, he must take the whole
-responsibility upon himself. This is, I believe, the true explanation
-of the secret and partial reversals which are not unusual at the
-Home Office. The Home Secretary, as well as his subordinates, must
-frequently let &#8220;dare not wait upon I would.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>If a crime is committed and no one is brought to justice,
-the police are blamed;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152"
-id="Page_152">[152]</a></span> but if a person is convicted the police
-are praised, without regard as to whether the right person has been
-convicted. Hence there is usually a strong effort to beat up evidence
-against the person suspected, as in my case and that of Adolf Beck
-(see page 155), and to keep back anything in favor of the prisoner
-that comes to the knowledge of the police. When an appeal is made
-from the verdict to the Home Secretary, the first step is to consult
-the very judge who is responsible, in nine cases out of ten, for the
-erroneous verdict. It is easy to see that, where such reference is
-made, the judge is liable to be biased in support of his own rulings.
-How much more the ends of justice would be furthered by having the case
-retried!</p>
-
-<p>God only knows how many men and women have been innocent of the
-charges brought against them, and for which they have been unjustly
-punished. I will mention a few only of many cases on record.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153"
-id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A man, Hebron by name, was convicted at Manchester, of murder. He
-was sentenced to death, but fortunately this was commuted to penal
-servitude for life. After serving two years the real murderer, a
-man named Peace, was discovered, and Hebron was &#8220;graciously
-pardoned.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Another cruel case was that of John Kensall, who was convicted
-of murder, but, through action taken by the late Lord Chief Justice
-Russell, was shown to be innocent. The Home Office could not at first
-&#8220;see its way to interfere,&#8221; and had it not been for Lord
-Russell&#8217;s clear head and splendid generalship, by which the
-authorities at the Home Office were outwitted, he would not have been
-released so soon.</p>
-
-<p>The case of the man Hay, wrongly convicted, was of a serious
-nature, showing that he was the victim of a conspiracy; yet had
-it not been for Sir William Harcourt&#8217;s instituting an
-investigation independent of the Home Office, it is very doubtful
-whether Hay would have been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154"
-id="Page_154">[154]</a></span> able to establish his innocence. But he
-did so, and a pardon was granted him.</p>
-
-<p>It looks almost as if justice in England were growing of late
-more than ordinarily blind. Thrice, within three years, has the Home
-Secretary&#8217;s &#8220;pardon&#8221; been granted to men found to
-have been wrongfully convicted.</p>
-
-<p>The average man takes it for granted that these hideous mistakes
-must, of necessity, be few and far between; but the criminologist knows
-better. He, at all events, is well aware that every year a number
-of innocent people are sentenced to suffer either an ignominious
-death upon the scaffold, or the long-drawn-out living death of penal
-servitude.</p>
-
-<p>Many of these judicial miscarriages never come to light at
-all. Others are purposely glossed over by the powers that be. But
-occasionally one occurs of so appalling a nature that it rivets the
-attention and shocks the conscience of the entire civilized world, as
-in the case of Adolf Beck.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155"
-id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Case of Adolf Beck</span></h3>
-
-<p>Adolf Beck was twice convicted for crimes committed by a man who
-somewhat resembled him. He served his first sentence and had been
-convicted for a second crime on &#8220;misrepresented identity&#8221;
-when his innocence was providentially established. The case is too
-lengthy for detailed account in these pages, and I shall content
-myself in giving the summing-up of Mr. George R. Sims in the pamphlet
-reprinted from his presentation of the case in the columns of <cite>The
-Daily Mail</cite> of London:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;I have told in plain words the story of a foul wrong done to
-an innocent man.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved beyond all question that Adolf Beck was in
-1896, by the Common Sergeant, Sir Forrest Fulton, at the Old Bailey,
-sentenced to seven years&#8217; penal servitude for being an ex-convict
-named John Smith.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that he was <em>not</em> found guilty of being John
-Smith by the jury.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156"
-id="Page_156">[156]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The former conviction for which Mr. Adolf Beck was sentenced
-and punished was not only never submitted to the jury, but they were
-warned by the judge that they were not to take the issue of Beck being
-Smith into consideration in arriving at their verdict. They were to
-dismiss it completely from their minds.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that if this issue had been left for the
-jury to consider they must have acquitted Mr. Beck, who showed by an
-indisputable alibi that he could not be Smith, the man convicted in
-1877.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that this terrible mockery of justice, the
-conviction of an innocent man for a series of crimes that it was quite
-impossible he could have committed, was brought about by the action of
-the leading counsel for the Treasury, which action was supported by the
-Common Sergeant, Sir Forrest Fulton.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that the evidence of the policeman, Eliss
-Spurrell, which was used at the police-court to assist in getting Beck
-committed for trial, was kept out at the Old Bailey, where it would
-have insured Beck&#8217;s acquittal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157"
-id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that at the police-court in 1896 Mr. Gurrin,
-the Treasury expert, reported that all the documents connected with the
-1896 frauds were in the handwriting of John Smith of 1877.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that at the 1896 trial at the Old Bailey Mr.
-Gurrin swore that, to the best of his belief, all the documents were in
-the disguised handwriting of Mr. Beck.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that no one in his senses could at the trial
-have accepted the theory that Adolf Beck was John Smith after listening
-to the evidence of Major Lindholm, Gentleman of the Chamber to the King
-of Denmark, Col. Josiah Harris, and the Consul-General for Peru at
-Liverpool.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Common Sergeant accepted as true their evidence of a
-complete alibi for Mr. Beck, so far as 1877 and the years Smith was in
-prison were concerned, or he would, it is to be presumed, have taken
-measures to have those gentlemen prosecuted for committing wilful and
-corrupt perjury in order to defeat the ends of justice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that Beck, after his imprisonment,<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-compelled the Home Office authorities to acknowledge that he was
-not Smith, and to admit the physical impossibility of his being
-Smith&mdash;Smith was a Jew, and he, Beck, was not&mdash;and that
-therefore, by the evidence of the Treasury witnesses, he had been
-wrongfully committed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that Beck was stripped and officially examined
-for body marks before his trial, in order that such marks might be
-compared with those on the record in the possession of the authorities
-as the body marks of John Smith.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that Adolf Beck had none of the body marks of
-John Smith, the man in whose handwriting Mr. Gurrin had declared the
-incriminating documents of 1896 to be.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that all the petitions setting forth these
-facts and others, which fully established Beck&#8217;s innocence, met
-with no consideration.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that when the frauds of 1877 and 1896 were
-repeated in 1904, and the incriminating documents were found to be
-in the handwriting of 1877, stroke for<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span> stroke, peculiarity for
-peculiarity, almost word for word, the fact that the authorities had
-admitted that Mr. Beck <em>could not be</em> the author of the 1877 frauds
-or the writer of the 1877 documents was utterly ignored, and the
-responsible authorities, with every proof of Mr. Beck&#8217;s innocence
-in their possession, allowed him to be arrested, charged, tried, and
-convicted again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that the identification of Mr. Beck by the
-female witnesses as the man who robbed them was a monstrous farce.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that, so far from Mr. Beck being the
-&#8216;double&#8217; of John Smith, he was utterly unlike him, except
-that each had a gray mustache. Beck had neither the noticeable scar
-at the point of the jaw nor the noticeable wart over one eye that are
-striking marks of identity in John Smith&mdash;marks which would not
-escape the most casual observer.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that Beck&#8217;s conviction in 1896 was
-secured by a device which was utterly unworthy of a British court
-of justice&mdash;a device so unfair and unjust that an innocent
-and inoffensive foreigner, a Norwegian<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span> who had sought the
-hospitality of our shores, was by its employment sent into penal
-servitude for seven years for the crimes of another man.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have proved that Mr. Beck was in 1904 convicted of
-repeating letter for letter, word for word, trick for trick, check for
-check, false address for false address, false name for false name, the
-frauds of 1877 and 1896, of which the authorities had absolute proof
-that he was innocent, and of which, though they had never remitted one
-day of his sentence, they had <em>admitted</em> that he was innocent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have been careful to keep to the main issue, and have
-refrained from examining the side issues, some of which reveal most
-lamentable features in connection with our criminal procedure.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I will prove one thing more, and leave the facts I have
-established to the judgment of the public.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At the end of the report of the second trial of Adolf Beck,
-which took place at the Old Bailey on June 27, 1904 (Sessions Paper
-CXL., Part 837), are these words, printed as I give them below:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161"
-id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;GUILTY. <i>He then PLEADED GUILTY to a conviction of
-obtaining goods by false pretenses at this Court on February 26, 1896.
-Judgment respited.</i>&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pleaded guilty to a former conviction! Adolf Beck pleaded
-guilty to nothing. How could he plead guilty, being an innocent man! He
-cried aloud when the charge of the first conviction was read aloud to
-him, &#8216;As God is my witness, I was innocent then as I am innocent
-now.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The epilogue to the tragedy of our English Dreyfus is written
-in those damning words in the Sessions Paper, the official minutes of
-evidence in Central Criminal Court trials.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Beck&#8217;s last hope had perished. Once more a merciless
-fate had blinded the eyes and closed the ears of Justice to his
-innocence. He was to be immured in a convict cell for ten, perhaps
-for fourteen, years; he was to pass the closing years of his life a
-branded felon amid all the horrors of a convict prison. In all human
-probability he would die without ever seeing the light of freedom
-again, for he could not have borne this second torture.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162"
-id="Page_162">[162]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;His voice, crying aloud for freedom, would be heard no more.
-Petitions for a reinvestigation of his case would be hopeless. He had
-been robbed of his last earthly chance of proving his innocence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Those words, &#8216;The prisoner pleaded guilty to a former
-conviction,&#8217; would have damned him to the last day of his
-life.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My painful task is ended.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A foreigner, a stranger within our gates, a man of kindly
-heart and gentle ways, has been foully wronged. There is but one
-reparation we can make him. The people of this country owe him a
-testimonial of sympathy that shall endure and remain. On the site of
-his martyrdom there should rise a national monument. Let that monument
-take the form of a Court of Criminal Appeal. That is the one reparation
-that the English people can make to Adolf Beck for the foul wrong he
-has suffered in their midst.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>In a sense the innocent man who is hanged may be regarded as better
-off than he who is called upon to endure lifelong imprisonment. There
-are plenty of examples<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163"
-id="Page_163">[163]</a></span> of these judicial murders. Over a
-score of undoubted cases occurred in the first two decades of the
-last century, and since then there have been twice as many more. A
-notorious and awful case was that of Eliza Fenning, who, at eighteen
-years of age, was sent to the gallows upon the perjured evidence of an
-accomplice of the real murderer. The latter afterward confessed.</p>
-
-<p>Another similar case occurred in 1850, when a man named Ross was
-executed for poisoning his young wife by mixing arsenic with her food.
-A few years later certain facts came to light, proving conclusively
-that the real criminal was a female acquaintance and confidante of the
-dead woman.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas Perryman, again, was found guilty in 1879 of the murder
-of his aged mother on the very flimsiest of evidence. His sentence
-was commuted to penal servitude for life, and in the ordinary
-course of events he should now be free. More than 100,000 people
-have, at different times,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164"
-id="Page_164">[164]</a></span> petitioned for the release of this
-convict, and the highest judicial authorities have expressed their
-belief in his entire innocence of the crime imputed to him. Yet he has
-been compelled to drink his terrible cup to the bitter dregs.</p>
-
-<p>In 1844 a gentleman named Barker was sentenced to penal servitude
-for life for a forgery of which he was afterward proved to have been
-wholly innocent. He served four years, and was then released and
-readmitted to practise as an attorney. In 1859, eleven years after
-having been &#8220;pardoned,&#8221; he was, upon the recommendation
-of a Select Committee of the House of Commons, voted a sum of
-&pound;5,000, &#8220;as a national acknowledgment of the wrong he had
-suffered from an erroneous prosecution.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The famous Edlingham case will doubtless be fresh in the minds
-of most people. In February, 1879, the village vicarage was
-entered by burglars, and a determined attempt was made to murder
-the aged incumbent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165"
-id="Page_165">[165]</a></span> For this outrage two men, Brannagham
-and Murphy, were sentenced to lifelong imprisonment. After a lapse of
-nine years the crime was confessed to by two well-known criminals named
-Richardson and Edgell, the result being that the innocent convicts were
-released, with an honorarium of &pound;800 apiece.</p>
-
-<p>The eminent King&#8217;s Counsel, Sir George Lewis, has openly
-said that he will not allow himself to speak of the way in which
-the &#8220;Edalji&#8221; trial was conducted, and he further adds:
-&#8220;I have it on undoubted authority that every &#8216;M.P.&#8217;
-connected with the legal profession believes as I do that that man
-is innocent. And yet a declaration from such a source is allowed by
-the public to pass unnoticed. As I have before stated, &#8216;it is
-not the business of the public, nor of individual citizens, to prove
-the innocence of any unhappy person whom the process of law selects
-for punishment; but it is the business of every citizen to see that
-the courts incontestably<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166"
-id="Page_166">[166]</a></span> prove the guilt of any person accused
-of a crime before sentence is passed.&#8217; Neither condition was
-fulfilled in the case of the prisoner. I have studied the evidence, and
-say, from knowledge gained by fifteen years&#8217; association with
-criminals, that this unfortunate young man is <em>innocent</em>.&#8221; Surely
-after the disclosures of the Adolf Beck case this one, on the word of
-Sir George Lewis, ought to receive unbiased consideration from the Home
-Office.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="sub">CHAPTER EIGHT<br />
-
-Religion in Prison Life</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Dedication of New Chapel</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">On</span> our arrival at
-Aylesbury Prison there was no chapel. Divine service was held in
-one of the halls, in which the prisoners assembled each morning for
-twenty minutes of service. This arrangement had many disadvantages,
-and one of the ladies on the Board of Visitors came nobly to our
-relief with an offer to provide the prison with a chapel. The Home
-Office &#8220;graciously&#8221; accepted this generous proposition,
-and twelve months later it was completed and dedicated by the Lord
-Bishop of Reading. (It was burned to the ground since my departure from
-Aylesbury.)</p>
-
-<p>On the day preceding the ceremony I<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span> was asked to assist in
-decorating the chapel with flowers kindly sent by Lady Rothschild. It
-was a delicate expression of sympathy for the prisoners, which she
-repeated on all high festival days. She was deeply affected when I told
-her how profoundly the women appreciated her recognition of a common
-humanity.</p>
-
-<p>On the appointed day all work was suspended to enable the prisoners
-to be present. In the galleries were seated the families of the
-governor, chaplain, and doctor; at the right of the altar the generous
-donor of the chapel, Adeline, Duchess of Bedford, was seated with
-her friends. The organist played a prelude, and then the bishop,
-accompanied by the chaplain and the clergymen of the diocese, entered
-the chapel. After a hymn had been sung, a short service followed,
-and then the bishop stepped forward and, facing the altar, read the
-&#8220;dedication service.&#8221; It was most impressive. Then followed
-a prayer and a hymn, and the service was over. The prisoners<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span> filed
-back to their respective cells and the visitors made the tour of the
-prison.</p>
-
-<p>I was a patient in the infirmary at the time, but had received
-permission to attend the chapel. Before the Bishop of Reading left the
-prison he visited the sick, and as he passed my cell he stopped and
-spoke to me words of hope and encouragement, adding his blessing.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Influence of Religion upon Prisoners</span></h3>
-
-<p>Another occasion on which the Bishop of Reading visited the prison
-was the holding of a confirmation service. Many women of earnest
-minds in prison sought in this manner to prove the sincerity of their
-repentance and their resolution to live godly lives; and, with one
-exception, all those confirmed that day have remained true to their
-profession.</p>
-
-<p>Penal servitude is a fiery test of one&#8217;s religious
-convictions. One&#8217;s faith is either strengthened and
-deepened or else it goes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170"
-id="Page_170">[170]</a></span> under altogether. I have witnessed many
-a sad spiritual shipwreck within those walls.</p>
-
-<p>On a dark, gloomy day in October the rain pattered against the
-window of my cell and the wind howled dismally around that huge
-&#8220;house of sorrow.&#8221; Now and then the sound of weeping broke
-upon the stillness, and I prayed in my heart for the poor souls in
-travail whose pains had broken through the enforced rule of silence.
-There is no sound in all the world so utterly unnerving as the hopeless
-sob of the woman in physical isolation who may not be spiritually
-comforted. Separated from loved ones, beyond the reach of tender hands
-and voices, she has no one, as in former years, to share her sufferings
-or minister to her pain. Alone, one of a mass, with no one to care but
-the good God above; for &#8220;to suffer&#8221; thus is the punishment
-that man has decreed.</p>
-
-<p>The humanizing influences, in my opinion, can be brought to bear
-upon prisoners with beneficial results only when supported<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-by the advantages of religious teachings. During the early part of
-my sentence there were Scripture readers, laymen and laywomen, in
-all convict prisons, to assist the chaplain in his arduous duties;
-but, on the ground of expense, these have been dispensed with, thus
-practically removing the only means of administering the moral medicine
-which is essential to the cure of the habitual prisoner&#8217;s mental
-disease.</p>
-
-<p>A large amount of crime is due to physical and mental degeneration.
-Nevertheless, crime is also the result of lovelessness, when it is not
-a disease, and the true curative system should give birth to love in
-human souls. There is not a man or woman living so low but we can do
-something to better him or her, if we give love and sympathy in the
-service and have an all-embracing affection for both God and man.</p>
-
-<p>If the future system is to treat the criminal in a curative
-or reformative way,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172"
-id="Page_172">[172]</a></span> rather than by punitive methods, the
-means to this end must certainly be increased. Even the worst woman
-can be approached through the emotional side of her nature. A kind
-word, a sympathetic look, a smile, a little commendation now and then,
-given by the officers in charge, would soon gain the respect and
-confidence of the prisoner, and thereby render her the more amenable
-to rules and regulations. A prisoner with whom I worked, and whose
-inner life by near association was revealed to me, had got into a very
-morbid, depressed state of mind. She was under close observation by
-the doctor&#8217;s orders. Her penal record was not a good one; her
-hasty temper was continually getting her into trouble, and when she was
-punished she would brood over it.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Suicide of a Prisoner</span></h3>
-
-<p>One day she asked for permission to see me; the permission
-was refused. She made the request a second time, and, the<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span> fact
-coming to the knowledge of the chaplain, he advised that it be granted,
-believing, from his personal knowledge of my influence in the prison,
-that it would have a beneficial effect. I was allowed to see her, and
-after a few minutes&#8217; conversation she appeared brighter. I told
-her that the people of God have a promise of a Comforter from heaven to
-come to them and abide with them, even in tribulation and in prison.
-She promised me she would try to be more submissive and accept her
-punishment in a better spirit. For several days after she seemed to
-improve. But one afternoon she once more made the request to be allowed
-to see me. As none of the authorities were in the building at the time,
-and the chief matron could not take upon herself the responsibility
-of granting the request, it was refused. I felt rather anxious about
-it, but was helpless. At five o&#8217;clock that evening, just before
-supper was served, the woman was found dead in her cell; she had
-hanged herself to the window.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174"
-id="Page_174">[174]</a></span> She was only twenty-four years of age,
-and was serving a five years&#8217; sentence for shooting her betrayer
-under great provocation. The tragedy was naturally kept quiet; none of
-the prisoners knew of it until the following morning. How the truth
-got abroad I do not know, but when the doors were unlocked after
-breakfast, instead of the women passing out of their cells in the usual
-orderly way, they rushed out, shouting excitedly at the top of their
-voices: &#8220;M&mdash;&mdash; has hanged herself; ... she was driven
-to it!&#8221; In vain the officers tried to pacify them or to explain
-the true state of things; they would not listen, and continued to
-scream: &#8220;Don&#8217;t talk to us&mdash;you are paid to say that!
-If you did not say that it was all right you would be turned out of the
-gates!&#8221; And the uproar increased. As I have already stated, the
-&#8220;Star Class&#8221; was sandwiched between two wards of habitual
-criminals, and we had the benefit of every disturbance. During the
-excitement one of the ringleaders caught<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span> sight of me and shouted:
-&#8220;Mrs. Maybrick, is it true that M&mdash;&mdash; was driven to
-it?&#8221; The tumult was increasing and was growing beyond the control
-of the warder, when the chief matron, becoming alarmed, sent up word
-that I might explain to the women. Accompanied by an officer, I did
-so, and in a few minutes the uproar calmed down and the women returned
-quietly to their cells. I have reason to believe that I always had
-the full confidence of my fellow prisoners; they were quick to know
-and appreciate that I had their welfare at heart, and that I never
-countenanced any disobedience or breach of the rules. A first offender,
-under sentence for many years, will suffer from the punishment
-according as she maintains or damages her self-respect.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Tragedies in Prison</span></h3>
-
-<p>Above others there are four tragic prison episodes which, once
-witnessed, can never be forgotten:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176"
-id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>1. Breaking bad news to a prisoner&mdash;telling her that a dear one
-in the outside world is dying, and that she may not go to him; that
-she must wait in terrible suspense until the last message is sent, no
-communication in the mean time being permitted.</p>
-
-<p>2. Receiving an intimation of the death of a beloved father, mother,
-brother or sister, husband or child, whose visits and letters have been
-the sole comfort and support of that prisoner&#8217;s hard lot.</p>
-
-<p>3. The loss of reason by a prisoner who was not strong enough to
-endure the punishment decreed by Act of Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>4. The suicide, who prefers to trust to the mercy of God rather than
-suffer at the hands of man.</p>
-
-<p>Why should a woman be considered less loving, less capable
-of suffering, because she is branded with the name of
-&#8220;convict?&#8221; She may be informed that her nearest and
-dearest are dying, but the rules will permit no departure to relieve
-the heart-breaking suspense. In the world at large telegrams<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span> may
-be sent and daily bulletins received, but not in the convict&#8217;s
-world.</p>
-
-<p>Death is a solemn event under any circumstances, and reverence for
-the dead is inculcated by our religion, but to die in prison is a thing
-that every inmate dreads with inexpressible horror. When a prisoner is
-at the point of death, she is put into a cell alone, or into a ward,
-if there is one vacant. There she lies alone. The nurse and infirmary
-officers come and go; her fellow prisoners gladly minister to her;
-the doctor and chaplain are assiduous in their attentions; but she is
-nevertheless alone, cut off from her kin, tended by the servants of the
-law instead of the servants of love, and it is only at the very last
-that her loved ones may come and say their farewell. Oh! the pathos,
-the anguish of such partings&mdash;who shall describe them? And when
-all is over, and the law has no longer any power over the body it has
-tortured, it may be claimed and taken away.</p>
-
-<p>The case of the prisoner who becomes<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span> insane is no less
-harrowing. She is kept in the infirmary with the other patients for
-three months. If she does not recover her reason within that period,
-she is certified by three doctors as insane and then removed to the
-criminal lunatic asylum. In the mean time the peace and rest of the
-other sick persons in the infirmary are disturbed by her ravings, and
-their feelings wrought upon by the daily sight of a demented fellow
-creature.</p>
-
-<p>And the suicide! To see the ghastly and distorted features of a
-fellow prisoner, with whom one has worked and suffered, killed by
-her own hands&mdash;such scenes as these haunted me for weeks; and
-it needed all my reliance on God to throw off the depression that
-inevitably followed.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Moral Effect of Harsh Prison Regime</span></h3>
-
-<p>Have you ever tried to realize what kind of life that must
-be in which the sight of a child&#8217;s face and the sound of
-a child&#8217;s voice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179"
-id="Page_179">[179]</a></span> are ever absent; in which there are
-none of the sweet influences of the home; the daily intercourse with
-those we love; the many trifling little happenings, so unimportant in
-themselves, but which go so far to make up the sum of human happiness?
-It commences with the clangor of bells and the jingling of keys, and
-closes with the banging of hundreds of doors, while the after silence
-is broken only by shrieks and blasphemies, the trampling of many feet,
-and the orders of warders.</p>
-
-<p>In the winter the prisoners get up in the dark, and breakfast in
-the dark, to save the expense of gas. The sense of touch becomes
-very acute, as so much has to be done without light. Until I had
-served three years of my sentence I had not been allowed to see my
-own face. Then a looking-glass, three inches long, was placed in my
-cell. I have often wondered how this deprivation could be harmonized
-with a purpose to enforce tidiness or cleanliness in a prisoner. The
-obvious object in depriving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180"
-id="Page_180">[180]</a></span> prisoners of the only means through
-which they can reasonably be expected to conform to the official
-standard of facial cleanliness is to eradicate woman&#8217;s assumed
-innate sense of vanity; but whether or no it succeeds in this, certain
-it is that cleanliness becomes a result of compulsion rather than of
-a natural womanly impulse. Also she must maintain the cleanliness of
-her prison cell on an ounce of soap per week. After I left Aylesbury
-I heard that the steward had received orders from the Home Office to
-reduce this enormous quantity. If true it will leave the unfortunate
-prisoners with three-quarters of an ounce of soap weekly wherewith
-to maintain that cleanliness which is said to be next to godliness.
-The prisoners are allowed a hot bath once a week, but in the interval
-they may not have a drop of hot water, except by the doctor&#8217;s
-orders.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181"
-id="Page_181">[181]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Attacks of Levity</span></h3>
-
-<p>All human instincts can not be crushed, even by an act of
-Parliament, and sometimes the prisoners indulge in a flight of levity,
-which is, however, promptly stopped by the officer in charge. But
-even wilfulness and levity are to some a relief from the perpetual
-silence. A young girl, fifteen years of age, came in on a conviction
-of penal servitude for life. In a fit of passion she had strangled
-a child of which she had charge. In consideration of her youth and
-the medical evidence adduced at her trial, sentence of death was
-commuted. She was in the &#8220;Star Class,&#8221; and it aroused my
-indignation to witness her sufferings. A mature woman may submit to
-the inevitable patiently, as an act of faith or as a proof of her
-philosophy; but a child of that age has neither faith nor philosophy
-sufficient to support her against this repressive system of torture.
-At times, however, the girl had attacks of levity which manifested
-themselves in most amusing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182"
-id="Page_182">[182]</a></span> ways. One day she was put out to work
-in the officers&#8217; quarters and told to black-lead a grate. With a
-serious face she set to work. Presently the officer asked whether she
-had finished her task, to which she meekly replied &#8220;Yes,&#8221;
-at the same time lifting her face, which, to the utter amazement of the
-female warder, had been transformed from a white to a brightly polished
-black one.</p>
-
-<p>On another occasion she was told that she would be wanted in the
-infirmary. She was suffering great pain at the time, and had begged the
-doctor to extract a tooth. When the infirmary nurse unlocked her door
-she was found in bed. This is strictly against the rules, unless the
-prisoner has special permission from the doctor to lie down during the
-day. Of course, the officer ordered her to get up at once, to which
-she replied, &#8220;I can&#8217;t.&#8221; &#8220;Why not?&#8221; asked
-the officer. &#8220;Because I can&#8217;t,&#8221; the girl repeated.
-Whereupon the officer lifted off the bed covering to see<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span> what
-was amiss. To her astonishment she saw that the child had got inside
-the mattress (which I described in the beginning as a long sack stuffed
-with the fiber of the coconut), and had drawn the end of it on a string
-around her neck, so that nothing but her head was visible.</p>
-
-<p>It has been said that no apples are so sweet as those that are
-stolen, and the great pleasure the women in prison derive from their
-surreptitious levity is because it can so rarely be indulged in, and
-the opportunities for its expression must always be stolen.</p>
-
-<p>There is an axiom in prison, &#8220;The worse the woman, the better
-the prisoner.&#8221; As one goes about the prison, and observes those
-women who are permitted little privileged tasks, such as tidying the
-garden, cleaning the chapel, or any of the light and semi-responsible
-tasks which convicts like, one will notice the privileged are
-not, as a rule, the young or respectably brought up, but old,
-professional criminals. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184"
-id="Page_184">[184]</a></span> know the rules of the prison, they spend
-the greater part of their lives there, and they know exactly how to
-behave so as to earn the maximum of marks; their object is to get out
-in the shortest possible time, and to have as light work as possible
-while they are in. The officers like them because they know their work
-without having to be taught. &#8220;There is no servant like an old
-thief,&#8221; I have heard it said. &#8220;They do good work.&#8221;
-This is quite typical of a certain kind of prisoner who is the mainstay
-of the prisons.</p>
-
-<p>The conviction of young girls to penal servitude is shocking, for
-it destroys the chief power of prevention that prisons are supposed to
-possess, and accustoms the young criminal to a reality which has far
-less terror for her than the idea of it had. Prison life is entirely
-demoralizing to any girl under twenty years of age, and it is to
-prevent such demoralizing influence upon young girls that some more
-humane system of punishment should be enacted.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185"
-id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Self-Discipline</span></h3>
-
-<p>In saying a word on what is, perhaps, best described as
-&#8220;prison self-discipline,&#8221; I trust the reader will acquit
-me of any motive other than a desire that it may result in some
-sister in misfortune deriving benefit from a similar course. That the
-state of mind in which one enters upon the life of a convict has some
-influence on conduct&mdash;whether she does so with a consciousness
-of innocence or otherwise&mdash;should, perhaps, go without saying.
-Nevertheless, innocent or guilty, a proper self-respect can not fail
-to be helpful, be the circumstances what they may; and from the moment
-I crossed Woking&#8217;s grim threshold until the last day when I
-passed from the shadow and the gloom of Aylesbury into God&#8217;s
-free sunlight, I adhered strictly to a determination that I would
-come out of the ordeal&mdash;if ever&mdash;precisely as I had entered
-upon it; that no loving eyes of mother or friends should detect in
-my habits, manners, or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186"
-id="Page_186">[186]</a></span> modes of thought or expression the
-slightest deterioration.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly I set about from the very start to busy myself&mdash;and
-this was no small helpfulness in filling the dreary hours of the
-seemingly endless days of solitary confinement&mdash;keeping my cell
-in order and ever making the most of such scant material for adornment
-as the rules permitted. Little enough in this way, it may be imagined,
-falls to a convict&#8217;s lot. Indeed, the sad admission is forced
-that nearly every semblance of refinement is maintained at one&#8217;s
-peril, for &#8220;motives&#8221; receive small consideration in the
-interpretation of prison rules, however portentously they may have
-loomed in the process that placed an innocent woman under the shadow
-of the scaffold, and only by grace of a commutation turned her into a
-&#8220;life&#8221; convict.</p>
-
-<p>Come what would, I was determined not to lose my hold on the
-amenities of my former social position, and, though I had only a wooden
-stool and table, they were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187"
-id="Page_187">[187]</a></span> always spotless, my floor was ever
-brightly polished, while my tin pannikins went far to foster the
-delusion that I was in possession of a service of silver.</p>
-
-<p>Confinement in a cell is naturally productive of slothful habits
-and indifference to personal appearance. I felt it would be a
-humiliation to have it assumed that I could or would deteriorate
-because of my environment. I therefore made it a point never to
-yield to that feeling of indifference which is the almost universal
-outcome of prison life. I soon found that this self-imposed regimen
-acted as a wholesome moral tonic, and so, instead of falling under
-the naturally baneful influences of my surroundings, I strove, with
-ever-renewed spiritual strength, to rise above them. At first the
-difference that marked me from so many of my fellow prisoners aroused
-in them something like a feeling of resentment; but when they came
-to know me this soon wore off, and I have reason to believe that my
-example of unvarying neatness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188"
-id="Page_188">[188]</a></span> and civility did not fail in influencing
-others to look a bit more after their personal appearance and to
-modify their speech. At any rate, it had this effect: Aylesbury Prison
-is the training-school for female warders for all county prisons.
-Having served a month&#8217;s probation here, they are recommended,
-if efficient in enforcing the prison &#8220;discipline,&#8221; for
-transference to analogous establishments in the counties. It happened
-not infrequently, therefore, that new-comers were taken to my cell as
-the model on which all others should be patterned.</p>
-
-<p>I partook of my meals, coarse and unappetizing as the food might be,
-after the manner I had been wont in the dining-room of my own home;
-and, though unseen, I never permitted myself to use my fingers (as
-most prisoners invariably did) where a knife, fork, or spoon would be
-demanded by good manners. Neither did I permit myself, either at table
-(though alone) or elsewhere, to fall into slouchy attitudes,<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span> even
-when, because of sickness, it was nearly impossible for me to hold up
-my head.</p>
-
-<p>I speak of this because of the almost universal tendency among
-prisoners to mere animality. &#8220;What matters it?&#8221; is the
-general retort. Accordingly, the average convict keeps herself no
-cleaner than the discipline strenuously exacts, while all their
-attitudes express hopeless indifference, callous carelessness, to a
-degree that often lowers them to the behavior of the brutes of the
-field. The repressive system can neither reform nor raise the nature or
-habits of prisoners.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Need of Women Doctors and Inspectors</span></h3>
-
-<p>Women doctors and inspectors should be appointed in all female
-prisons. Otherwise what can be expected of a woman of small mental
-resources, shut in on herself, often unable to read or write with any
-readiness; of bad habits; with a craving for<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span> low excitement; whose
-chief pleasure has been in the grosser kind of animal delight? The mind
-turns morbidly inward; the nerves are shattered. Although the dark
-cell is no longer used, mental light is still excluded. Recidivation
-is more frequent with women than with men. The jail taint seems to
-sink deeper into woman&#8217;s nature, and at Aylesbury numbers of the
-more abandoned ones are seldom for long out of the male warders&#8217;
-hands.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Chastening Effect of Imprisonment on the
-Spirit</span></h3>
-
-<p>For a considerable period I was given work in the officers&#8217;
-mess. Their quarters are in a detached building within the prison
-precincts, and are reached by crossing a small grass-plot which
-separates it from the prison. Each officer has a small bedroom,
-in which she sleeps and passes her time when off duty. All meals
-are served in the mess-room, and consist of breakfast at<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-seven o&#8217;clock, lunch on turn between nine and eleven, dinner at
-twelve-thirty, tea at five, and supper whenever they are off duty.
-The cooking is excellent and varied. A matron is in charge of the
-commissariat department, and has four prisoners of the &#8220;Star
-Class&#8221; working under her. I did scullery work, which consisted
-of washing up all the crockery, glass, knives, forks, and spoons used
-at these five meals, besides all the pots and pans required in their
-preparation. As a staff of twenty-five sat down to these frequent
-meals daily, the work was very hard and quite beyond my strength. The
-&#8220;Star Class&#8221; of workers should not be kept at it more than
-six months at a time. Some of the life women have been in the kitchen
-and mess-room as long as three and four years, and, as neither the
-culinary arrangements nor the ventilation are modern, the consequent
-physical and mental depression arising from these defects, and the
-monotony of the work, is only too apparent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192"
-id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I was not feeling well at the time, and soon after I had a long
-illness&mdash;a nervous breakdown, due partly to insomnia and partly to
-the unrelieved strain and stress of years of hard labor. My recovery
-was very slow. I was in the infirmary about eighteen months, and was
-glad when finally discharged, as the intervals between my letters
-and visits were shorter when I was in discipline quarters and could
-earn more marks. During the long years of my imprisonment I learned
-many lessons I needed, perhaps, to have learned during my earlier
-life; but, thank God, I was no criminal! I was being punished for
-that of which I was innocent. I believe it is God&#8217;s task to
-judge and ours to endure, but I could not understand what his plans
-and his purposes were. I believed they were good, although I could
-not see how eternity itself could make up for my sufferings. Perhaps
-they were intended to work out some good to others, by ways I should
-never know, until I saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193"
-id="Page_193">[193]</a></span> with the clear eyes of another world.
-Still, the external conditions of life acted on my body and mind, and
-I scarcely knew at times how to bear them. I could not have endured
-them without God&#8217;s sustaining grace. I used often to repeat these
-lines:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
-<p>&#8220;With patience, then, the course of duty run;</p>
-<p class="i1">God never does nor suffers to be done</p>
-<p class="i1">But that which you would do if you could see</p>
-<p class="i1">The end of all events as well as he.&#8221;</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">A Death-bed Incident</span></h3>
-
-<p>A woman lay dying in a near-by cell. Of the sixty years of her
-life she had spent forty within prison walls. What that life had been
-I will not say, but when she was in the agony of death she called to
-me: &#8220;I don&#8217;t know anything about your God, but if he has
-made you tender and loving to a bad lot like me, I know he will not be
-hard on a poor soul who never had a chance. Give me a kiss, dear lass,
-before I go. No one has kissed me since my mother died.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="sub">CHAPTER NINE<br />
-
-My Last Years in Prison</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">I am Set to Work in the Library</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">When</span> I recovered from my
-nervous breakdown, by medical order I was given lighter employment, and
-went into the library. I was now the only prisoner in the building who
-had suffered under the hardships of the old system at Woking Prison,
-all the rest of those who came with me having in the interim returned
-to the world. In fact, I was the only one who had served over ten
-years.</p>
-
-<p>My task in the library was to assist the schoolmistress and to
-change the library books twice a week. They were carried from cell
-to cell, and this represented the handling of over two hundred and
-fifty books. In addition to this, I had to be<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span> &#8220;literary
-nurse,&#8221; whose duties were to attend to worn-out books, binding up
-their wounds and prolonging their days of usefulness; doing cataloguing
-and entry work; to print the name of each prisoner on a card placed
-over her cell door; to copy hymns, and to make scrap-books for the
-illiterate prisoners, besides other miscellaneous duties.</p>
-
-<p>The library was a very good one and contained not only the latest
-novels, but philosophical works and books for study; also a limited
-number in French and German. To these were added religious works,
-especially poetry, and sermons for Sunday reading. I found a choice
-collection to help me support the Sabbath day, for the suspended
-animation makes a day of misery of the &#8220;day of rest.&#8221; One
-could not read all day without tiring, and the absence of week-day
-work usually made it a day of heavy, creeping depression. There
-are two periods of exercise, and chapel morning and afternoon. The
-remainder of the time the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196"
-id="Page_196">[196]</a></span> prisoners are locked in their cells.
-Reading was my only solace; from first to last I read every moment that
-I could call my own. The best index of the quality of the books was
-that every volume was read or examined by the chaplain and his staff
-before it was admitted to the library. If it contained any articles
-on prison life or matters relating to prisoners, these were always
-carefully cut out.</p>
-
-<p>From my observations I consider that prison schoolmasters and
-schoolmistresses are overburdened with miscellaneous and incompatible
-duties. No one needs to be told that the average prisoner is a slow
-learner, and that even a dull boy or girl is a better pupil than a
-grown man or woman plodding along in the first steps of knowledge, and
-who is taught, not in a class, but in a cell. Yet the schoolmaster
-or schoolmistress has to devote hours daily to teaching, to help in
-letter-writing, in the office work, in the distribution of library
-books, in the library work; and now that their<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span> number is likewise
-reduced on the ground of expense, the pressure of their work is out
-of all proportion to the hours within which it can be reasonably
-performed.</p>
-
-<p>I have always been fond of reading, and during my leisure hours
-I got through a large number of books. This was between noon and
-half-past one, and seven and eight in the evening, when my light had to
-be put out.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Newspapers Forbidden</span></h3>
-
-<p>The rules forbid that any public news be conveyed to the prisoners,
-either at visits or by letters. This seems to be a very short-sighted
-view to take of the matter. To allow newspapers in the prison might,
-of course, lead to cipher communications to prisoners from their
-friends; but no harm can possibly come of allowing information
-regarding public affairs of national interest to be conveyed through
-the legitimate channels of letters and visits. It would give the
-prisoners fresh food for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198"
-id="Page_198">[198]</a></span> thought, and tend greatly to relieve
-that vacuity of mind which is the outcome of lack of knowledge of
-external things, and of the monotony of their lives; it would also make
-a pause in their broodings over their cases, which is the sole subject
-of their thoughts and conversations when permitted to converse at
-all.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">How Prisoners Learn of Great Events</span></h3>
-
-<p>The lowering of the prison flag told us of the death of Queen
-Victoria, although we had heard several days before that she was
-sinking. When King Edward was dangerously ill it was talked of among
-the officers, and the prisoners, through me, asked that special prayers
-might be said in the chapel.</p>
-
-<p>When Mafeking was relieved and when peace with the Boers was
-declared, flags were hoisted. Jubilee and Coronation days were the
-only occasions I remember<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199"
-id="Page_199">[199]</a></span> when we had any relaxation of prison
-rules, and then there was much disappointment, since in lieu of a
-mitigation of our sentences, as was the case in India, they gave us
-extra meat and plum pudding.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Strict Discipline of Prison Officers</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have served under three governors, each of whom was an intelligent
-and conspicuously humane man. They knew their prisoners and tried to
-understand them, but there is not much a governor can do for them of
-his own initiative. I consider that he who holds this responsible
-position should have more of a free hand, and be allowed to use his
-discretion in all ordinary matters pertaining to the prison discipline
-and welfare of the prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>They were all advanced disciplinarians. The routine reeled
-itself off with mechanical precision. The rules were enforced
-and carried out to the letter. The deadly monotony never varied;
-all days are alike;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200"
-id="Page_200">[200]</a></span> weeks, months, years slowly accumulate,
-and, in the mean time, the mental rust is eating into the weary brain,
-and the outspoken cry rises up daily&mdash;&#8220;How long, O Lord! how
-long?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The officers are almost as keen as the governor in their efforts to
-keep things up to the mark. It is seldom they allow prisoners under
-their observation or supervision any slight relaxation which nature may
-demand, but the rules forbid. They dislike to punish a woman, and in
-their hearts make many excuses for the black sheep.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Their High Character</span></h3>
-
-<p>As a class, with few exceptions, the prison staff is worthy of
-respect and confidence, and might be trusted with any task. The
-patience, civility, and self-control which the officers exhibit under
-the most trying circumstances, as a rule, mark them as men and women
-possessing a high sense of duty, not only as civil servants, but as
-Christians.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Nervous Strain of Their Duties</span></h3>
-
-<p>The hours of work are long, the nervous strain is incessant. I
-could wish that those in high places showed a little more appreciation
-of what these faithful servants do, and were not so sparing of their
-praise and commendation. The small remuneration they receive can not
-make up for the deprivation of the amenities of life which the prison
-service entails. Two writers on prison life have expressed themselves
-in widely different ways regarding the warders and officers. One writer
-compares them to slave-and cattle-drivers; another expresses surprise
-that they are as good as they are. As, I trust, an impartial observer,
-I agree with the latter opinion. Experience has taught me that, in
-most cases, if the prisoner is amiable and willing, the officer on
-her part is ready to meet the prisoner fully half way&mdash;at all
-events, as far as circumstances and duty will permit, for the continual
-daily changes of duty, from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202"
-id="Page_202">[202]</a></span> ward to ward and hall to hall, make it
-nearly impossible for any officer to acquire a true knowledge of the
-character of those under her charge.</p>
-
-<p>It would be interesting if a trained psychologist could watch
-and report upon the insidious effect of the repressive rules and
-regulations of a prison on the more impressionable officers and
-prisoners. When such officers first enter this service they are natural
-women with a natural demeanor and expression of countenance. After a
-time, however, the molding effects of &#8220;standing orders&#8221;
-become apparent in the sternness of their expression, the harsh tones
-of their voices, and the abruptness of their manner.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Standing Orders for Warders</span></h3>
-
-<p>These &#8220;standing orders&#8221; may be paraphrased as
-follows:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must not do this or say that, or look sympathetic
-or friendly, or converse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203"
-id="Page_203">[203]</a></span> with prisoners in any way. You must
-always suspect them of wishing to do something underhand, sly, and
-contrary to orders. You must never let them for a moment out of
-your sight, or permit them to suppose that you have either trust or
-confidence in them. It is your duty to see that the means of punishment
-devised by the Penal Code are faithfully carried out. You are not to
-trouble yourself about the result upon the prisoner&mdash;that is the
-affair of the Government.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Any familiarity on the part of an officer with a prisoner is
-strictly forbidden by the rules of prison service, and the slightest
-manifestation of the sort would entail serious punishment on the
-officer. Surely this is not as it should be; on the contrary, greater
-discretionary power should be permitted to officers in their relations
-with prisoners, for the influence for good which a kind, well-disposed
-officer could exert upon a prisoner is incalculable. But all this
-possible influence for good is denied<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span> expression by the
-spirit of mistrust and suspicion which pervades the entire prison
-administration. This is one of the most regrettable features of the
-system. No officer is trusted by her superior, and no prisoner, however
-exemplary her conduct, may be trusted by any one officially connected
-with the institution.</p>
-
-<p>An officer who commits a breach of any rule laid down for her may be
-fined a sum varying from one to ten shillings, and if the offense is a
-grave one she may be discharged.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Crime a Mental Disease</span></h3>
-
-<p>When will those connected with prisons awake to the fact that the
-criminal is mentally diseased? Ninety-nine out of a hundred criminals,
-when not such by accident, through poverty, or environment, come to
-their lot through inherited, malformed brains. It ought to be the
-sacred duty of earnest men to deal kindly, intelligently, <span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>and
-patiently with them. The prison, which is now a dreadful place of
-punishment and humiliation, ought to be made a home of regeneration and
-reformation, in which intelligent effort is made to raise the prisoner
-to a higher level; and this surely is not done by withdrawing all the
-refining influences.</p>
-
-<p>I hope the time is not far off when men and women will take more
-of a heart interest in prisoners, and when, no matter how low they
-may have sunk, an opportunity to live honestly will be given them on
-their release; when the society against which they have sinned will
-treat them so kindly that for very shame they will seek to do better,
-and repentance shall enter into the most darkened soul. The &#8220;eye
-for an eye and tooth for a tooth&#8221; doctrine is not a part of the
-Christian dispensation. Our Lord Jesus Christ gave his last supreme
-lesson, as he turned toward the thief at his side on the cross, and
-there put an end to that old law forever.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206"
-id="Page_206">[206]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Something Good in the Worst Criminal</span></h3>
-
-<p>There is some good to be found in the worst criminal, which, if
-nourished by patience and sympathy, will grow into more good. I speak
-from a large, intimate personal experience, for during my imprisonment
-it was my happy fortune to evoke kindly reciprocations from some of the
-worst and most degraded characters. I will cite an instance.</p>
-
-<p>One day I was crossing the hall when a fight occurred. I can not
-describe it&mdash;it was too horrible. The crowd surged toward me, and
-I was being drawn in among the combatants, when one of them, catching
-sight of me, stepped out with a face streaming with blood, and pushed
-me into an open cell, closing the door after me. When I thanked her the
-next day she replied:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, bless your heart, Mrs. Maybrick, did you think I would
-let them hurt a hair of your head?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207"
-id="Page_207">[207]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I believe I had the sympathy and respect of all my fellow prisoners,
-and when I left Aylesbury, my feelings were those of mingled relief
-and regret. I could not but feel attached to those with whom I had
-lived and suffered and worked for so many weary years. I knew, perhaps,
-more of the life history of these poor women, their inner thoughts and
-feelings, than any one else in the prison. In suffering, in sympathy,
-in pity, we were all akin. In the association hour they would bring me
-their letters from home to read, and show me the photographs of their
-children or other dear ones, while tears would course down their cheeks
-at the memory of happier days.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Need of Further Prison Reform</span></h3>
-
-<p>Many opinions have been written regarding prisons, but with few
-exceptions they are the observations of outsiders, which means, they
-must of necessity be to a certain extent superficial.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208"
-id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I have touched only a few spots of the great diseased system of
-prison management, but what public opinion did to ameliorate past
-abuses, public opinion can still do to improve the treatment of
-to-day&#8217;s criminal. A little over a hundred years ago there were
-thirty-four offenses in England punishable by capital punishment.
-To-day there is only one. Charles Dickens did more than any agency
-toward doing away with imprisonment for debt, yet last year there were
-no less than eleven thousand prisoners in confinement for debt in
-English prisons. How many of these have since joined the ranks of the
-criminals through loss of self-respect? What has been the effect upon
-their wives and families? Why is a man imprisoned for debt? Certainly
-not to enable him to pay it. He can earn nothing while in prison, where
-he is supported at the expense of the state; and if he has a wife or
-family, they either become dependent on the rates, or incur debts
-which he will have to pay<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209"
-id="Page_209">[209]</a></span> on his release. Again, he may not
-improbably lose his employment, and have to look out for another when
-liberated, and his imprisonment does not make it more easy, either to
-procure work or to perform it efficiently. The ground of imprisonment
-is dishonesty. But is not actual dishonesty sufficiently met by the
-criminal law? In what sense is the debtor dishonest? Is it meant that
-he has money in his pocket and refuses to pay his debts? Is it not
-rather that he ought to have had money? It is proved perhaps that
-he is earning so much per week, possibly, but how long had he been
-earning and how long was he out of employment before that? Has he
-had sickness? There have been many instances where a man was in the
-hospital when the committal order was made, and was seized and carried
-off to prison immediately on discharge. If non-payment of a debt is
-not a crime, why is he in prison for it? If it is a crime, why has he
-not the benefit of a trial by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210"
-id="Page_210">[210]</a></span> jury on the ability or inability of
-paying his debts? And why should not the Home Office or other appellate
-tribunal have the power of revising his sentence? If the debtor has
-goods that can be seized, let them be seized; if there is money coming
-to him, let the creditor attach it; if it comes within the scope of
-the bankruptcy law, let him be adjudicated and examined on oath to
-every shilling that he has received or spent. But why, in the name of
-justice and humanity, treat him as a criminal, prevent him from earning
-his bread, and make him an incumbrance on the State, exposing his
-wife and daughter to ruin, degrading him, lowering his self-respect,
-and subjecting him to the taint of the prison atmosphere, without
-satisfactory evidence of his ability to pay at the time of committal?
-Several prisoners that I came in contact with were made criminals
-because their husbands had left their families destitute because
-imprisoned for debt.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="sub">CHAPTER TEN<br />
-
-My Release</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">I Learn the Time When My Sentence Will
-Terminate</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">After</span> I had been
-incarcerated for a few years I found out that it was usual in the
-case of a life convict who has earned good marks to have her sentence
-brought up for consideration after she has served fifteen years. A life
-sentence usually means twenty years, and three months is taken off each
-year as a reward for good conduct. In February, 1903, I was definitely
-informed that my case would follow the ordinary course. I have been
-accused of obtaining my release by &#8220;trickery,&#8221; but these
-facts speak for themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The impression has also been given by the press that great
-leniency was shown in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212"
-id="Page_212">[212]</a></span> my case, and that through the
-intervention of friends the Home Office released me before the
-expiration of my sentence. No exceptional leniency whatever was shown
-in my case. It depends upon the prisoner herself whether she is
-released at an earlier period or serves the full term of her sentence.
-By an unbroken record of good conduct I reduced my life sentence, which
-is twenty years, to fifteen years; this expired on the 25th of July,
-1904.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Dawn of Liberty</span></h3>
-
-<p>As a giant refreshed by sleep, the prison awakens to life,
-and the voices of officers, the clang of doors, the ringing of
-bells echo throughout the halls. What does it portend? Is it the
-arrival of some distinguished visitor from the Home Office? Then I
-hear the sound of approaching footsteps, as they come nearer and
-nearer and then stop at my cell door. The governor ushers in three
-gentlemen&mdash;one tall and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213"
-id="Page_213">[213]</a></span> dark and handsome, but with a stern
-face; another short, with a white beard and blue eyes which looked
-at me somewhat coldly; of the third I have no distinct recollection.
-The tall gentleman conversed pleasantly for several minutes about my
-work and myself, then passed out on his tour of inspection. I did not
-know at the time who these visitors were, but learned later that the
-gentleman who spoke to me was the Secretary of State, Sir Matthew
-White-Ridley; one of his companions was Sir Kenelm Digby, and the other
-Sir Evelyn Ruggles-Brise, the chairman of the Prison Committee, who
-takes a really humane interest in the welfare of the convicts.</p>
-
-<p>One morning, a week later, I was summoned to appear before the
-governor. It is an ordeal to be dreaded by any one who has broken
-the rules, but I knew I had not, and therefore concluded that I was
-wanted in connection with my work. When I entered the office he looked
-up with a kindly smile, which was also reflected in the face<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span> of
-the chief matron. My attention was arrested. I stood silently waiting
-for him to speak. After searching among some papers on the table, he
-picked up one and read something to the following effect: &#8220;The
-prisoner, P 29, Florence E. Maybrick, is to be informed that the
-Secretary of State has decided to grant her discharge from prison when
-she has completed fifteen years of her sentence, conditional upon her
-conduct.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For a moment I failed to grasp the full meaning of these words,
-but when I did&mdash;how shall I describe the mingled feelings of joy
-and thankfulness, of relief and hope, with which I was overwhelmed! I
-returned to my cell dazed by the unexpected message for which for so
-many long, weary years I had hoped and prayed.</p>
-
-<p>How anxiously I waited for those last few months to pass!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215"
-id="Page_215">[215]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Release</span></h3>
-
-<p>It was Christmas Eve of 1903. I had helped to decorate the chapel
-with evergreens, which is the only way in which the greatest festival
-of the church&#8217;s year is kept in prison. There is no rejoicing
-allowed prisoners; no festival meal of roast beef and plum pudding,
-only the usual prison diet; and the sad memories of happier days
-are emphasized by our bare cells with their maximum of cleanliness
-and minimum of comfort. But to me it was the last Christmas in that
-&#8220;house of sorrow,&#8221; and my heart felt the dawning of a
-brighter day. Only four weeks more and I would have passed out of its
-grim gates forever! How I counted those days, and yet how I shrank from
-going once more into the world that had been so cruel, so hostile,
-so unmerciful, in spite of the fact that there was no proof that I
-was the guilty woman they assumed me to be! But kind friends<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-and loving hearts were waiting to greet me, to give me refuge and
-comfort.</p>
-
-<p>On Saturday, the 23d of January, my mother visited me at Aylesbury
-Prison for the last time. How many weary and sad hours we had passed in
-that visiting-room! Our hearts were too full for much conversation, and
-it was with broken voices that we discussed the arrangements made for
-my departure on the following Monday.</p>
-
-<p>The last Sunday I spent in prison I felt like one in a dream. I
-could not realize that to-morrow, the glad to-morrow, would bring
-with it freedom and life. In the evening I was sent for to say
-&#8220;Good-by&#8221; to the governor. Besides the chief matron and the
-one who was to be my escort to Truro, no one was aware of the day or
-hour of my departure from Aylesbury. Not a word had been said to the
-other prisoners. I should like to have said farewell to them, also to
-the officers whom I had known for fourteen years (for several had come
-with us from Woking Prison);<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217"
-id="Page_217">[217]</a></span> but I thought it best to pass into my
-new life as quietly as possible. At my earnest request the Home Office
-consented to allow my place of destination to be kept a secret. I felt
-that I should derive more benefit from the change of my new environment
-and association with others, if my identity and place of retreat were
-not known to the public.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 537px;">
-<a id="plate8"></a>
-<img src="images/i237.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="noindent f80">Copyright by the London Stereoscopic Co.</p>
-
-<p class="center noindent">RIGHT HON. A. AKERS DOUGLAS, M.P.,<br />
-British Home Secretary at time of Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s release.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On Monday, the 25th of January, I was awakened early, and after
-laying aside, for the last time, the garments of shame and disgrace,
-I was clothed once more in those that represent civilization and
-respectability. I descended to the court below, and, accompanied by the
-chief matron and my escort, passed silently through the great gates and
-out of the prison. At half-past six a cab drove quietly up, and the
-matron and I silently stepped in and were driven away to the Aylesbury
-Station. On our arrival in London we proceeded at once to Paddington
-Station. The noise and the crowds of people everywhere bewildered
-me.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218"
-id="Page_218">[218]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">In Retreat at Truro</span></h3>
-
-<p>After an uneventful journey we arrived at Truro at six <span
-class="smcap">P.M.</span>, and drove at once to the Home of the
-Community of the Epiphany, where I stayed during the remainder of
-my term of six months. I am told that some comment has been made on
-the fact that the Home was a religious retreat, and that I ought to
-have been sent to a secular one instead. I went there entirely of my
-own desire. On our arrival there I bade a last farewell to my kind
-companion&mdash;one of the sweetest women it has been my privilege to
-meet. The Mother Superior, who had visited me three months previously
-at Aylesbury Prison, received me tenderly, and at once conducted me
-to my room. How pure and chaste everything looked after the cold,
-bare walls of my prison cell! How the restful quiet soothed my
-jarred and weakened nerves, and, above all, what comforting balm
-the dear Mother Superior<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219"
-id="Page_219">[219]</a></span> and the sweet sisters poured into the
-wounds of my riven soul!</p>
-
-<p>I look back upon the six months spent within those sacred walls as
-the most peaceful and the happiest&mdash;in the true sense&mdash;of my
-life. The life there is so calm, so holy, and yet so cheerful, that
-one becomes infected, so that the sad thoughts flee away, the drooping
-hands are once more uplifted, and the heart strengthened to perform the
-work that a loving God may have ordained.</p>
-
-<p>I passed several hours of each day working in the sewing-room with
-the sisters. During my leisure time I read much, and when the weather
-was fine delighted in taking long walks within the lovely grounds that
-surround the Home. I did not go out in the country, nor attend the
-services on Sunday at the Cathedral.</p>
-
-<p>I left Truro on the 20th of July a free woman&mdash;with
-a ticket-of-leave, it is true, but as I am exempt from
-police supervision<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220"
-id="Page_220">[220]</a></span> even in England, I have no need to
-consider it in America or elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>By the courtesy of the American Ambassador, the Hon. Joseph H.
-Choate, I was provided with an escort to accompany me and my companion
-on our journey from Truro to Rouen, France.</p>
-
-<p>The Hon. John Hay, Secretary of State, Washington; the Hon. Joseph
-H. Choate, Mr. Henry White, Charg&eacute; d&#8217;Affaires, and
-Mr. Carter, Secretary of Embassy, at London, have always been most
-earnest in my cause. I deeply appreciate their untiring efforts in my
-behalf.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">I Come to America</span></h3>
-
-<p>After staying with my mother for three weeks, on the advice of my
-counselors, Messrs. Hayden &amp; Yarrell, of Washington, District
-of Columbia, I decided to return to America with Mr. Samuel V.
-Hayden and his charming wife. I longed to be once more with my
-own people, and it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221"
-id="Page_221">[221]</a></span> only physical weakness and nervous
-prostration that prevented me from doing so immediately upon my
-release. I met these good friends at Antwerp, Belgium, and sailed from
-there on the Red Star Line steamship <cite>Vaderland</cite> for New York. My
-name was entered on the passenger list as Rose Ingraham, that I might
-secure more quiet and privacy; but when we were a few days out the
-fact of my identity became known, and with few exceptions the greatest
-courtesy, consideration, and delicacy were shown in the demeanor of the
-passengers toward me. If any of these should read these lines I would
-herewith express to them my grateful thanks and appreciation; while
-toward the captain and officers of the <cite>Vaderland</cite> I feel especially
-indebted for their unwearied courtesy and consideration.</p>
-
-<p>When I first caught sight of the Statue of Liberty, I, perhaps more
-than any one on board, realized the full meaning of what it typifies,
-and I felt my heart stirred to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222"
-id="Page_222">[222]</a></span> its depths at the memory of what all my
-countrymen and countrywomen had done for me during the dark days of my
-past, to prove that they still carried me in their hearts, though the
-great ocean rolled between, and that I had not been robbed of the high
-privilege of being an American citizen.</p>
-
-<p>We arrived at New York on the 23d of August. It was a
-&#8220;red-letter&#8221; day. Once more, after many years of suffering
-and when I had long despaired of ever seeing the beloved faces of my
-friends again, my feet once again pressed the sacred soil of my native
-land.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">My Lost Years</span></h3>
-
-<p>A time will come when the world will acknowledge that the verdict
-which was passed upon me is absolutely untenable. But what then? Who
-shall give back the years I have spent within prison walls; the<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-friends by whom I am forgotten; the children to whom I
-am dead;<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a
-href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> the sunshine; the
-winds of heaven; my woman&#8217;s life, and all I have lost by
-this terrible injustice?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224"
-id="Page_224">[224]</a></span> Time may heal the deepest wounds when
-the balm of love and sympathy is poured into them. It is well; for
-if mental wounds proved as fatal as those of the body, the prison
-death-roll would indeed be a long one.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="sub">PART TWO<br />
-
-<span class="ph3">ANALYSIS OF THE MAYBRICK CASE</span></h2>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<h2>Introduction</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Petitions for a Reprieve</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">The</span> jury&#8217;s verdict
-of guilty was rendered on August 7, 1889. The evidence at the trial,
-as well as the learned judge&#8217;s &#8220;summing up,&#8221; was
-reported almost verbatim in the English press. The result was that,
-not only in Liverpool, but in almost every city, town, and village of
-the United Kingdom, men and women of every class and grade of society
-arrived at the conclusion that the verdict was erroneous&mdash;as not
-founded upon evidence, but upon the biased and misleading summing
-up of the case by the mentally incompetent<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span> judge. Within a few days
-my lawyers, the Messrs. Cleaver, of Liverpool, who had notified the
-press that they would supply forms of petition, were inundated with
-applications. For the first two days they issued one thousand a day,
-and I have been informed that no less than five thousand petitions for
-a reprieve, representing nearly half a million signatures, were sent to
-the Home Secretary within the following ten days. In response to these,
-the Home Office issued to the press the following decision:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;After the fullest consideration, and after taking the best
-medical and legal advice that could be obtained, the Home Secretary
-advised Her Majesty to respite the capital punishment of Florence
-Elizabeth Maybrick and to commute the punishment to penal servitude for
-life; inasmuch as, although the evidence leads to the conclusion that
-the prisoner administered and attempted to administer arsenic to her
-husband with intent to murder him, yet it does<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span> not wholly exclude
-a reasonable doubt <em>whether his death was in fact caused by the
-administration of arsenic</em>.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Illogical Position of Home Secretary</span></h3>
-
-<p>Thus it will be seen that the Home Secretary, Mr. Matthews,
-ignored the important statement of the judge at the trial, when, in
-giving emphasis to his remarks, he told the jury that: &#8220;It
-is <em>essential</em> to this charge <em>that the man died of arsenic</em>. This
-question must be the foundation of a judgment unfavorable to the
-prisoner, that he died of arsenic.&#8221; Then Mr. Matthews, on
-reviewing the evidence given at the trial, finding it impossible to
-justify the verdict, because the evidence &#8220;does not wholly
-exclude a reasonable doubt whether his [James Maybrick&#8217;s] death
-was in fact caused by the administration of arsenic,&#8221; which
-question was to be the foundation of a judgment unfavorable to me,
-instead of giving his prisoner the benefit of the reasonable<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-doubt, took it upon himself to apply the spirit of the law and of the
-constitution, by making use of a wrongful conviction for one offense
-charged in order to punish me for a different offense for which I
-had never been tried, but with which he, without any public trial,
-charged me, viz., &#8220;administering and attempting to administer
-arsenic&#8221; to my husband.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">New Evidence of Innocence Ignored</span></h3>
-
-<p>These charges, made by Mr. Matthews in 1889, have never been
-defined; nor has any statement been submitted to me or my legal
-advisers of the evidence relied on to prove them; nor have I been
-afforded an opportunity of being heard by counsel in answer to
-them, nor of pleading anything in reply to them. Had a second trial
-been granted me, I should have seen the evidence upon which the
-new charges were made against me, and in open court I could <span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>have
-confronted the witnesses. But Mr. Matthews sentenced me to penal
-servitude for life (without giving me a chance to defend myself against
-the charges) which involved nine months&#8217; solitary confinement in
-my case&mdash;in itself a most excessive punishment for the untried
-and, consequently, unproven charges. He sent me to suffer fourteen and
-one-half years on suspicion&mdash;a suspicion not warranted by any
-evidence given at the trial. The new evidence, which has been obtained
-since my conviction, is admitted by all fair-minded persons to be of
-such a nature that it would satisfy any intelligent jury that I was
-not only wrongfully found guilty of murder, but was most wrongfully
-treated by Mr. Matthews. It completely exonerates me from the charge
-of murder as well as &#8220;administering and attempting to administer
-arsenic.&#8221; Since this evidence was published, no one has attempted
-to justify the conviction or the sentence passed upon me.</p>
-
-<p>Had the jury, instead of finding a verdict of &#8220;guilty&#8221;
-of murder, returned a verdict<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230"
-id="Page_230">[230]</a></span> in the same terms as the finding of Mr.
-Matthews, the judge must have entered it as &#8220;not guilty&#8221;
-and discharged me.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Lord Russell&#8217;s Letter</span></h3>
-
-<p>Well might the Lord Chief Justice Russell of Killowen write me, as
-he did on the 27th of June, 1895, telling me that he had never relaxed
-his efforts to urge my release, and saying:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Royal Court</span>, 27th June, 1895.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Maybrick</span>,</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Madam</span>: I have been absent on
-circuit; hence my delay in answering your letter.</p>
-
-<p>I beg to assure you that I have never relaxed my efforts where
-any suitable opportunity offered to urge that your release ought to
-be granted. I feel as strongly as I have felt from the first that
-you ought never to have been convicted, and this opinion I have very
-clearly expressed to Mr. Asquith, but I am sorry to say hitherto
-without effect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231"
-id="Page_231">[231]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Rest assured that I shall renew my representations to the incoming
-Home Secretary, whoever he may be, as soon as the Government is formed
-and the Home Secretary is in a position to deal with such matters.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="mr11">I am,</span><br />
-<span class="mr8">Faithfully,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap mr1">Russell of Killowen</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This also seems to be the opinion of the leading counsel for the
-prosecution, Mr. Addison, Q.C., M.P. (now Judge Addison, of the
-Southwark County Courts), who is reported to have said, after the
-summing up, that &#8220;the jury could not, especially in view of the
-medical evidence, find a verdict of guilty.&#8221; This statement will
-be found in Sir Charles Russell&#8217;s protest to Mr. Matthews.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Efforts for Release</span></h3>
-
-<p>The public are not probably fully aware how much intensity of
-feeling and earnest work has been expended on my case during<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span> the
-fourteen and one-half years of my imprisonment. The Home Office knows.
-Men in high positions in both political parties in England have often
-united in demanding a new trial. The almost invariable reply has been
-that the best means to effect my release was to obtain new facts or
-evidence, and submit these to the Home Secretary for his consideration.
-Those well-meaning advisers seemed to forget that the half million
-of petitioners for my reprieve or free pardon in England&mdash;not
-to count those in America&mdash;were not moved thereto by new facts
-or evidence, but by the absence of facts or evidence sufficient to
-prove that the alleged crime had been committed by any one, or that
-either guilt or complicity in that crime, if crime it were, attached
-to me. Surely it is not the business of the public nor of individual
-citizens to prove the innocence of any unhappy person whom process
-of law selects for punishment, while it <em>is</em> the business of every
-citizen to see that the courts incontestably<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span> prove the guilt of any
-person accused of a crime before sentence is passed, in the following
-manner:</p>
-
-<p>1. It must be proved that a crime has been committed.</p>
-
-<p>2. It must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused
-person is the one who committed it.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Even New Evidence Superfluous</span></h3>
-
-<p>Neither condition has yet been fulfilled in my case. The evidence on
-which a half million petitioners said and say I was unjustly condemned
-is sufficient in itself. While it is true if a new trial had been
-granted me I could have produced new evidence that overwhelmingly
-demonstrated my innocence, it is also true that more facts or new
-evidence were not requisite to enable justice to be done.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Doctors&#8217; Doubt</span></h3>
-
-<p>The doctors who gave evidence in favor of death by arsenical
-poisoning all stated that they would not have felt certain on the
-subject if the one-tenth of a grain of arsenic had not been found
-in the body. Therefore, since the presence of that arsenic could
-be otherwise accounted for, I was entitled to an acquittal even
-on the evidence of the Crown medical witnesses. Moreover, the
-symptom on which two or three doctors for the prosecution laid most
-stress&mdash;continuous vomiting&mdash;was referred by the third to
-morphia administered by himself. All three were examined before any
-evidence of Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s habit of arsenic taking was given.
-Had they believed him to be an arsenic eater, they might have arrived
-at a different conclusion. The doctors for the defense, who declared
-that Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s symptoms were not those of arsenical
-poisoning, were men of far more experience as regards poisons<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span> than
-the Crown medical witnesses. The quantity of arsenic found in the
-body was, in their opinion, quite consistent with administration in
-medicinal doses, and might have been introduced a considerable time
-before.</p>
-
-<p>The proved administration of poison with intent to kill
-is punishable by penal servitude, but not necessarily for
-life&mdash;sometimes for only three years; but the charge must be
-proved in open court to be a felonious attempt by some means actually
-used to effectuate the intent, and it remains with the prosecution to
-produce the necessary evidence that the means used were sufficient for
-the accomplishment of the effect.</p>
-
-<p>The medical evidence proved that the quantity of
-arsenic&mdash;one-tenth of a grain&mdash;found in Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s
-body was not sufficient to have produced death.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236"
-id="Page_236">[236]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Public Surprise at Verdict</span></h3>
-
-<p><cite>The Times</cite> of August 8, 1889, declared that, of the hundreds of
-thousands of persons who followed the case with eager interest and
-attention, not one in three was prepared for the verdict. The large
-majority had believed that, in the presence of such contradictory
-evidence, the jury would give the prisoner the benefit of the doubt and
-bring in a verdict as much like the Scotch &#8220;not proven&#8221; as
-is permitted by English law.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Character of Jury</span></h3>
-
-<p>There was strong prejudice against me, due to the numerous false and
-sensational reports circulated by the press during the interval between
-the arrest and the trial. The jury belonged to a class of men who
-were not competent to weigh technical evidence,<a name="FNanchor_5_5"
-id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>
-and no doubt attached great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237"
-id="Page_237">[237]</a></span> weight to the opinions of the local
-physicians, one of whom was somewhat of a celebrity. But the main
-element in the conviction was Justice Stephen, whose mind, undoubtedly
-owing to incipient insanity (he died insane a year later), was
-incapable of dealing with so intricate a case.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The &#8220;Mad Judge&#8221;</span></h3>
-
-<p>The Liverpool <cite>Daily Post</cite>, as I am told, had been hostile rather
-than favorable toward me, but, on the death of Lord Chief Justice
-Russell, that journal, in articles of August 13 and 14, 1900, showed
-that it fully appreciated the unfairness of my trial, for it stated
-that no human being ought to be handed over to be tried by a &#8220;mad
-judge.&#8221; The following is taken from <cite>The Post</cite> of August 13,
-1900:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;The death of the Lord Chief Justice may have recalled to
-the minds of some Liverpool folk a sad and sordid tragedy<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-enacted among them eleven years ago, in which he was a principal
-performer. To those who were there, a vivid recollection still
-persists of that bright July morning when a thronged court, hushed in
-expectancy, awaited the beginning of the Maybrick trial. In fancy one
-still hears the distant fanfare of the trumpets as the judges with
-quaint pageantry passed down the hall, and still with the mind&#8217;s
-eye sees the stately crimson-clad figure of the great mad judge as he
-sat down to try his last case. A tragedy, indeed, was played upon the
-bench no less than in the dock.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Few who looked upon the strong, square head can have
-suspected that the light of reason was burning very low within; yet
-as the days of the trial dragged by&mdash;days that must have been
-as terrible to the judge as to the prisoner&mdash;men began to nod
-at him, to wonder, and to whisper. Nothing more painful was ever
-seen in court than the proud old man&#8217;s desperate struggle to
-control his failing faculties. But the struggle was unavailing.
-It was clear that the growing volume of facts was unassorted,
-undigested in his mind; that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239"
-id="Page_239">[239]</a></span> his judgment swayed backward and forward
-in the conflict of testimony; that his memory failed to grip the most
-salient features of the case for many minutes together. It was shocking
-to think that a human life depended upon the direction of this wreck of
-what was once a great judge.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Justice Stephen&#8217;s Biased Charge</span></h3>
-
-<p>The charge of Mr. Justice Stephen to the jury positively teemed with
-misstatements as to the evidence given during the trial. I quote a
-statement from the same journal in its issue of August 17, 1900:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;I should be very sorry to think that the same number of
-errors as to the matters of fact given in the evidence had ever
-been made in any judge&#8217;s charge. It simply swarms with them,
-and as the jury at the end of a long trial is likely to prefer the
-judge&#8217;s r&eacute;sum&eacute; to their own recollection, I doubt
-if the verdict in the Maybrick case was founded on the evidence at
-all. And if I am right in thinking that the jurors founded their
-verdict on the judge&#8217;s recapitulation<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span> of the evidence rather
-than on the evidence itself, I do not see how any counsel could have
-saved the prisoner.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>That the jury &#8220;did not hear the whole of the evidence very
-distinctly&#8221; is admitted by one of them in the Liverpool <cite>Daily
-Post</cite> of August 10, 1889. Consequently they were likely to be unduly
-influenced by the judge&#8217;s charge. There is no evidence that the
-jury detected the judge&#8217;s misstatements, as a more intelligent
-jury certainly would have done. Their minds were &#8220;taken
-captive&#8221; by the charge of Justice Stephen, and they were as
-&#8220;clay in the hands of the potter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Lord Russell&#8217;s Memorandum
-Quashed</span></h3>
-
-<p>The Lord Chief Justice sent the Home Secretary a memorandum
-consisting of twenty folios, in which he stated the strong opinion
-that &#8220;Mrs. Maybrick ought to be released at once.&#8221; The
-Lord Chief Justice also requested that the contents of his<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-memorandum be made public. Yet when asked in the House of Commons to
-lay the document on the table of the House in order that it might be
-accessible to the members, the Home Secretary emphatically declined.
-The London <cite>Daily Mail</cite>, in a leader on this incident, said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;The only conceivable reasons for declining to give publicity
-to the letter, which was actually intended for publication, are
-apparently official red tape and the fear of giving new life to the
-agitation in favor of Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s release. This result will
-be almost as effectually achieved by surrounding the case with further
-mystery and leaving upon the public mind the grave suspicion that
-justice may not have been done.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Repeated Protests of Lord Russell</span></h3>
-
-<p>The following extracts are taken from the &#8220;Life of Lord
-Russell of Killowen&#8221; by R. Barry O&#8217;Brien.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;In November, 1895, he [Lord Russell] wrote to Sir Matthew
-White-Ridley (page 260), conveying his strong and emphatic opinion
-that Florence Maybrick ought never to have been convicted; that her
-continued imprisonment is an injustice which ought promptly to be
-ended, and added: &#8216;I have never wavered in this opinion. After
-her conviction I wrote and had printed a memorandum, which I presume
-is preserved at the Home Office. Lest it should not be, I herewith
-transmit a copy.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As is known, what happened was that Mr. Matthews, after
-consultation with the present Lord Chancellor, Lord Salisbury, and Mr.
-Justice Stephen, and after seeing Dr. Stephenson, the principal Crown
-witness, and also the late Dr. Tidy, respited the capital sentence on
-the expressed ground that there was sufficient doubt whether death had
-been caused by arsenical poisoning to justify the respite.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It will be seen (1) that such a doubt existed as to the
-commission of the offense for which Florence Maybrick was tried as
-rendered it improper, in the opinion of the Home Secretary and his
-advisers, that the capital sentence should be carried out; and<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span> (2)
-that for more than six years Florence Maybrick has been suffering
-imprisonment on the assumption of Mr. Matthews that she committed an
-offense for which she was never tried by the constitutional authority
-and of which she has never been adjudged guilty.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>From page 261: &#8220;This is in itself a most serious state of
-things. It is manifestly unjust that Florence Maybrick should suffer
-for a crime in regard to which she has never been called upon to answer
-before any lawful tribunal.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is it not obvious that if the attempt to murder had been
-the offense for which she was arraigned, the course of the defense
-would have been different? I speak as her counsel of what I know. Read
-the report of the defense, and you will see that I devoted my whole
-strength to and massed the evidence upon the point that the prosecution
-had misconceived the facts, that the foundation on which the whole case
-rested was rotten, for that, in fact, there was no murder; that, on the
-contrary, the deceased had died from natural causes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is true that incidental reference was<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span> made
-to certain alleged acts of Florence Maybrick, but the references were
-incidental only; the stress of my argument being, in fact, that <em>no
-murder had been committed, because the evidence did not warrant the
-conclusion that the deceased had died from arsenical poisoning</em>. On
-the other hand, had the Crown counsel suggested the case of attempt to
-murder by poison, it would have been the duty of counsel to address
-himself directly and mainly to the alleged circumstances which, it was
-argued, pointed to guilty intent. That these alleged circumstances were
-capable in part of being explained, in part of being minimized, and
-in part of being attacked as unreliably vouched, can not, I think, be
-doubted by any one who has with a critical eye scanned the evidence. I
-do not deny that my feelings are engaged in this case. It is impossible
-that they should not be, but I have honestly tried to judge the case,
-and I now say that <em>if I was called upon to advise in my character of
-head of the Criminal Judicature of this country, I should advise you
-that Florence Maybrick ought to be allowed to go free</em>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245"
-id="Page_245">[245]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>From page 262: &#8220;I think it my duty to renew my protest against
-the continued imprisonment of Florence Maybrick. I consider the history
-of the case reflects discredit on the administration of the criminal
-law. I think my protest ought to be attended to at last. The prisoner
-has already undergone punishment for a period four times as long, or
-more, as the minimum punishment fixed by law for the commission of
-the crime, of which she has never been convicted or for which she has
-never been tried, but for which she has been adjudged guilty by your
-predecessor in the office of Home Secretary.&#8221;</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The American Official Petition</span></h3>
-
-<p>The following is quoted from the American Official Petition sent to
-the Rt. Hon. Henry Matthews, Q.C., M.P., Her Majesty&#8217;s principal
-secretary for the Home Department:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;As Florence Elizabeth Maybrick is an American woman,
-without father, brother,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246"
-id="Page_246">[246]</a></span> husband, or kin in England, except two
-infant children, enduring penal servitude for life in Woking Prison;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As the conduct of her trial resulted in a profound impression
-of a miscarriage of justice, in an earnest protest against the verdict,
-and the execution of the sentence of death, and its commutation to
-penal servitude for life on the ground of reasonable doubt whether a
-murder had been committed;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As a careful legal scrutiny of the evidence given at the
-trial by eminent solicitors, barristers, queen&#8217;s counsel, and
-members of Parliament, and the production of facts not in evidence at
-the trial have resulted in a final decision of counsel that the case
-is one proper for the grave consideration of a criminal appellate
-tribunal&mdash;if such a tribunal existed;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Therefore, we earnestly ask that the Rt. Hon. Henry Matthews,
-Q.C., M.P., Her Majesty&#8217;s principal secretary of state for the
-Home Department, will advise Her Majesty to order the pardon and
-release of the prisoner, who has now suffered an imprisonment of three
-years.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247"
-id="Page_247">[247]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Levi P. Morton</span>,
-Vice-President of the United States, President of the Senate.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Charles T. Crisp</span>,
-Speaker of the House of Representatives.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Charles Foster</span>,
-Secretary of the Treasury.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">James G. Blaine</span>,
-Secretary of State.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">S. B. Elkins</span>,
-Secretary of War.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">W. H. Miller</span>,
-Attorney-General.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">John Wanamaker</span>,
-Postmaster-General.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">B. T. Tracy</span>,
-Secretary of the Navy.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">John B. Noble</span>,
-Secretary of the Interior.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">G. M. Rusk</span>, Secretary
-of Agriculture.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">J., Cardinal
-Gibbons.</span></p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">J. M. Scofield</span>,
-Major-General Commanding the Army.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">A. W. Truly</span>,
-Brigadier-General-in-Chief, Signal Office.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Thomas Lincoln Casey</span>,
-Brigadier-General-in-Chief of Engineers.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Joseph Cabell
-Breckenridge</span>, Brigadier-General, Infantry-General.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">J. O. Kelton</span>,
-Brigadier-General, Adjutant-General.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248"
-id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>&#8220;<span class="smcap">William
-Smith</span>, Paymaster-General.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">H. M. Batchelder</span>,
-General-Quartermaster-General.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">B. DuBarry</span>, General
-and Commanding General Infantry.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">O. Sutherland</span>,
-General Infantry General.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">D. W. Flagler</span>, Chief
-of Ordnance.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">J. Norman Lisber</span>,
-Acting Judge-Advocate-General.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Thomas Ewing</span>,
-Brevet-Major-General, U. S. A., and many others.&#8221;</p>
-</div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Secretary Blaine&#8217;s Letter to Minister
-Lincoln</span></h3>
-
-<p>I will conclude by quoting the letter of Secretary Blaine to Mr.
-Robert Lincoln, then Minister to the Court of St. James. It will be
-seen that Mr. Blaine was of opinion that I had lost my citizenship.
-Since this letter was written it has been decided by the Supreme Court
-of the United States that a woman married to a foreigner, on the death
-of her husband can, on application, be reinstated to citizenship.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 536px;">
-<a id="plate9"></a>
-<img src="images/i271.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="center noindent">HON. JAMES G. BLAINE,<br />
-American Secretary of State, 1889-1892.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="right">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Department of State,
-Washington</span>,<br />
-
-<span class="mr2">&#8220;March 7, 1892.</span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">My dear Mr. Lincoln</span>: As Mrs.
-Maybrick lost her American citizenship by her English marriage, and as
-I fear she does not resume it by her widowhood, I can not instruct you
-officially as to the course you should pursue toward her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But her American and Southern birth, her connection with many
-families of the highest respectability and even of prominence in the
-country&#8217;s service, have attracted much attention to her fate.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have no other interest in her than an interest which you
-and I share in common with all our countrymen&mdash;the desire to help
-an American woman in distress. That she may have been influenced by the
-foolish ambition of too many American girls for a foreign marriage,
-and have descended from her own rank to that of her husband&#8217;s
-family, which seems to have been somewhat vulgar, must be forgiven to
-her youth, since she was only eighteen at the time of her marriage.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is a wide and widening belief in this country that
-she is legally innocent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250"
-id="Page_250">[250]</a></span> and illegally imprisoned. The official
-charge of the judge that murder must be proved and the official
-announcement of the Home Secretary that the evidence leaves a
-&#8216;reasonable doubt&#8217; of murder are the premises of but one
-conclusion&mdash;the discharge of the prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The fact that she was never indicted or tried by a jury
-of her peers on a specific count of felonious attempt to administer
-arsenic, yet is condemned to penal servitude for life on the Home
-Secretary&#8217;s statement that she evidently made such an attempt,
-can never be reconciled to the English principle that an accused person
-shall be tried by a jury of his peers. Lawyers here are among the
-strongest believers in the illegality of her imprisonment. Indeed, the
-sense of injustice is developing and deepening into horror.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Officially I could only instruct you on behalf of a multitude
-of American citizens to investigate her case. Personally I beg to
-express to you my deep interest in it, and pray you, if possible, to
-communicate with Messrs. Lumley and Sir Charles Russell as to any
-method of American cooperation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251"
-id="Page_251">[251]</a></span> which may seem to them desirable.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Messrs. Lumley have made a very able brief, which I am sure
-would interest you, and which seems to me unanswerable. Sir Charles
-Russell, whose reputation you know, is her counsel. Consult with them
-what best can be done, from an American point of view, to secure Mrs.
-Maybrick&#8217;s release. And if you shall have read Lumley&#8217;s
-brief, I am sure that conviction will lead you to personal activity in
-her behalf.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can communicate with me in strict confidence, as from
-one American citizen to another, for the relief of an American woman
-helplessly enduring a great wrong.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="mr8">&#8220;Believe me, etc.,</span><br />
-
-<span class="mr1">&#8220;<span class="smcap">James G. Blaine</span>.&#8221;</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And yet it required the time from March 7, 1892, until July 20,
-1904, to attain my liberation; and then it was accomplished by time
-limit and by no act of grace or concession on the part of the English
-Government.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Henry W. Lucy on Lord Russell</span></h3>
-
-<p><cite>The Strand Magazine</cite>, London, in its November number, 1900,
-published an article by Henry W. Lucy, Esq., who, speaking of the late
-Lord Chief Justice Russell, says:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;The most remarkable episode in Charles Russell&#8217;s career
-at the bar undoubtedly was his defense of Mrs. Maybrick.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I happened to find myself in the same hotel with him at
-Liverpool on the morning of the day set down for the opening of the
-trial. At breakfast he spoke in confident terms of his client&#8217;s
-innocence and of the surety of her acquittal. He did not take into
-account the passing mood of the judge who tried the case, and so found
-himself out of his reckoning; but the verdict of the jury, still less
-the summing-up of Fitz-James Stephen, did not shake his conviction.
-Sir Charles Russell was of all men least likely to be misled by
-appearances or deliberate deception; having<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span> probed the case to the
-bottom, having turned his piercing eyes on the woman in the dock,
-having talked to her in private and studied her in public, he was
-convinced of her innocence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Lord Landoff was a lawyer of high position at the English bar
-when, as Mr. Henry Matthews, he came into the Home Office.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The verdict of the jury was &#8216;guilty,&#8217; and her
-sentence was death, which was a real surprise, as was afterward
-learned, even to the judge, Sir Fitz-James Stephen. If Mr. Matthews
-believed her guilty, he should not have commuted her sentence upon the
-ground that he assigned. If she was guilty she well deserved death on
-the scaffold. The evidence, however, satisfied Mr. Matthews that there
-was reasonable doubt that the death of Mr. Maybrick was due to arsenic.
-In this view, as is well known, he was sustained by Justice Stephen. If
-such a doubt really came into Mr. Matthews&#8217;s mind, as was made
-the ground of the commutation of the sentence, <em>under English law that
-doubt entitled the accused to acquittal</em>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254"
-id="Page_254">[254]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why he lacked the courage of his convictions can only be
-surmised. At all events he did not dare to take the responsibility of
-allowing her to be executed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The intercession of the American Government through Mr.
-Blaine, Secretary of State, was urgent, strong, and most intense. It is
-incredible that Mr. Matthews desired any loophole to release her. The
-case was full of them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sir Matthew White-Ridley was not a lawyer, and there is no
-probability that he ever read the evidence in the case, which was
-voluminous. He could not have read the papers in three days if he had
-attempted it. He simply followed his predecessor&#8217;s line and was
-not able to take up the case on its merits.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Lord Russell&#8217;s Conviction of Mrs.
-Maybrick&#8217;s Innocence</span></h3>
-
-<p>This statement of Mr. Lucy is of great value as an answer to the
-assault made on Lord Russell&#8217;s memory after his death, on his
-firm belief in my innocence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255"
-id="Page_255">[255]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Lord Hugh Cecil wrote to a constituent:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;I believe I am right in stating that he (Lord Russell) never
-said that he believed Mrs. Maybrick to be innocent.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>When this was shown Lord Russell by Mr. A. W. McDougall, Esq., the
-Chief Justice exclaimed:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;Does Lord Hugh Cecil suppose that I would abandon all the
-traditions of the Bar and put forward publicly as an argument in such
-a case my personal belief in this, that, or the other thing? Does he
-suppose that I would have made all the efforts I have been making to
-obtain her freedom if I believed her to be guilty?&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Explanation of Attitude of Home
-Secretaries</span></h3>
-
-<p>&#8220;Personal Rights,&#8221; of November 15, in commenting on the
-statement of Mr. Lucy in <cite>The Strand Magazine</cite>, says:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;We do not share the belief that Sir Fitz-James Stephen was
-insane in any plenary sense at the time of the trial; but we are
-convinced that he was not fully sane. His charge to the jury, the
-report of which is reproduced in full in Mr. Levy&#8217;s book, is
-grotesquely inaccurate; and if the jury took it to be a compendium
-of the evidence&mdash;as they probably did&mdash;the result of their
-deliberation is fully accounted for. Indeed, if the facts were such as
-the judge stated, the verdict could hardly be impugned. How different
-they were may be seen by any one who compares the evidence with the
-judge&#8217;s charge, in the book already referred to. To take a single
-instance: the judge stated that, according to the evidence of Alice
-Yapp, at the commencement of Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s illness, he was very
-sick and in great pain immediately after some medicine was given to
-him by his wife. Alice Yapp swore nothing of the kind. She saw neither
-any administration of medicine nor any sickness. We could give other
-instances of gross inaccuracy, generally leading to the conclusion of
-the prisoner&#8217;s guilt; but, for our<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span> present purpose, the
-above incident will suffice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If this was the character of the judge&#8217;s charge to the
-jury, what confidence can be placed in his notes? Still upon those
-notes was probably based the conclusions of successive Home Secretaries
-or of the officials employed by them. When Mr. Lucy holds up his hands
-in astonishment at the marvelous consensus of opinion of various Home
-Secretaries, he seems to us to manifest remarkable blindness&mdash;for
-one so long behind the Speaker&#8217;s chair&mdash;as to the vicarious
-nature of that opinion. It is more than possible that the conclusions
-of Mr. Matthews, Mr. Asquith, and Sir Matthew White-Ridley were all
-drawn for them by the same gentleman, or, at least, that the same
-gentleman helped these various Home Secretaries to come to the same
-conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We hope that Mr. Ritchie, the new Home Secretary, will
-judge this matter for himself. Let him read the salient portions, at
-least, of Mr. Levy&#8217;s book, and, per contra, the article of X.
-Y. Z. in <cite>The Contemporary Review</cite> of September last. If he<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span> likes
-to make the inquiry, he will find that X. Y. Z. is one of his new
-permanent staff, and that the doctrines put forward in the article are
-the embodiment of Home Office practise. This is a matter which does
-not concern the Maybrick case alone. Scarcely a month passes without
-some new manifestation of injustice brought about by adherence to the
-traditions of the department over which Mr. Ritchie now presides. If
-he will seek out this hydra and slay it, he will leave for himself
-an immortal name among Secretaries of State, and&mdash;what he will
-hold of more importance&mdash;he will cut off a permanent source of
-injustice, give releasement and joy to the innocent pining in prison,
-and breathe a new life into a department which is sadly in need of a
-renovating spirit.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 536px;">
-<a id="plate10"></a>
-<img src="images/i281.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="center noindent f80">HON. ROBERT T. LINCOLN,<br />
-American Ambassador to Court of St. James, 1889-1893.</p>
-</div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Upholding the Justiciary</span></h3>
-
-<p>In the same number of this journal is an article from
-&#8220;Lex,&#8221; a well-known writer in English journals, which we
-reproduce:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259"
-id="Page_259">[259]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">Sir</span>: May I call attention to the
-two articles in the Liverpool <cite>Post</cite> of August 13 and 14, in which
-the utter incompetence of the judge at the Maybrick trial is strongly
-asserted? The writer is distinctly hostile to the prisoner, and writes
-without any intention of raising the question whether the trial was not
-null and void; but as the English system consists of trial by judge and
-jury, the total incompetence of either element should clearly vitiate
-it. Moreover, Mr. Ruggles-Brise, on the occasion of a visit to America
-in 1897, stated that the reason of the steadfast refusal of <em>the
-Home Secretary to release the prisoner was his desire to uphold the
-wholesome authority of the English justiciary</em>. That authority can not
-be regarded as wholesome if the judge was insane. Lord Russell, who was
-present throughout the trial, was of different opinion from that of the
-judge. He was undoubtedly sane. If Sir J. F. Stephen was insane, the
-public will, I think, be of opinion that the sane judge should have had
-the most influence with the executive.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Need of Court of Criminal Appeal</span></h3>
-
-<p>Lord Esher, in <cite>The Times</cite> of August 17, 1889, strongly advocated
-a court of criminal appeal, and <cite>The Times</cite>, in an article of the
-same date, supported the views expressed by Lord Esher and by Lord
-Fitzgerald, as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;A court of appeal, as Lord Esher sketches it, would not
-be open to the objections which can be fairly urged against our
-present informal method of procedure. The Home Secretary, as a
-quasi court of appeal, is, as Lord Fitzgerald remarks, not a judge
-and has not the power of a judge.... The judgment pronounced by a
-strong court of criminal appeal, such as Lord Esher&#8217;s letter
-suggests, would do more to satisfy the public mind than the best
-efforts of the Home Secretary could possibly do. The reform which
-Lord Esher advocates has been long called for, and Lord Fitzgerald
-did well to press it on the Government.... What the public feel is
-that they would rather have the fallibility<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span> of trained judges than
-the fallibility of an individual sitting without any of the apparatus
-with which a court of law is enabled to detect truth from falsehood,
-and perhaps unconsciously confusing the prerogative of mercy with
-justice.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>THE BRIEF OF MESSRS. LUMLEY &amp; LUMLEY</h2>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">This</span> brief of Messrs.
-Lumley &amp; Lumley, characterized in the preceding letter of Secretary
-Blaine as &#8220;very able&#8221; and &#8220;unanswerable,&#8221; is
-too long for reproduction in these pages in its entirety, and hence
-only the main points are given. The document was prepared at the
-instance of Lord Russell of Killowen for submission to himself and
-three other Queen&#8217;s Counsel, with a view of obtaining a new
-trial. It may interest the reader to know that the money required to
-make this searching analysis by Messrs. Lumley &amp; Lumley was raised
-by a popular subscription in America, through the good offices of the
-New York <cite>World</cite>. The eminent Queen&#8217;s counsel, after a full
-consideration of the analysis of the case, submitted the following
-opinion:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263"
-id="Page_263">[263]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Opinion&mdash;Re F. E. Maybrick</span></h3>
-
-<p>&#8220;Having carefully considered the facts stated in the elaborate
-case submitted to us by Messrs. Lumley &amp; Lumley, and the law
-applicable to the matter, we are clearly of opinion that there is
-no mode by which in this case a new trial or a &#8216;<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">venire de
-novo</i>&#8217; can be obtained, nor can the prisoner be brought up on a
-&#8216;habeas corpus,&#8217; with the view to retrying the issue of her
-innocence or guilt.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We say this notwithstanding the case of Regina <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">vs.</i> Scarfe
-(17 Q. B., 238, 5; Cox, C. C., 243; 2 Den., C. C., 281).</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We are of opinion that in English criminal procedure there
-is no possibility of procuring a rehearing in the case of felony
-where a verdict has been found by a properly constituted jury upon an
-indictment which is correct in form. This rule is, in our opinion,
-absolute, unless circumstances have transpired, and have been entered
-upon the record, which, when there appearing, would invalidate
-the tribunal and reduce the trial to a nullity by reason<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span> of
-its not having been before a properly constituted tribunal. None of the
-matters proposed to be proved go to this length.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We think it right to add that there are many matters stated
-in the case, not merely with reference to the evidence at and the
-incidents of the trial, but suggesting new facts, which would be
-<em>matters proper for the grave consideration of a Court of Criminal
-Appeal</em>, if such a tribunal existed in this country.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="noindent">(Signed)</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<span class="ml5">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Charles Russell</span>, Q.C.</span><br />
-<span class="ml5">&#8220;<span class="smcap">I. Fletcher Moulton</span>, Q.C.</span><br />
-<span class="ml5">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Harry Bookin Poland</span>, Q.C.</span><br />
-<span class="ml5">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Reginald Smith</span>, Q.C.</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="f80">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Lincoln&#8217;s Inn</span>, 12th April, 1892.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>This opinion was based upon the following points, presented by
-Messrs. Lumley &amp; Lumley:</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Justice Stephen&#8217;s Misdirections</span></h3>
-
-<p>The <em>misdirections</em> which are selected for consideration may be
-conveniently classed, among others, under these headings:</p>
-
-<p>1. As to the facts disclosed in the evidence<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span> of
-the procuring and possession of arsenic by Mrs. Maybrick and of her
-administering it.</p>
-
-<p>2. As to the cause of death.</p>
-
-<p>A perusal of the summing-up from beginning to end impresses the mind
-with the feeling that, whenever Mr. Justice Stephen approached any fact
-offered by the defense which threw light upon <em>the possession</em> and <em>an
-alleged</em> administration of arsenic by Mrs. Maybrick, he drew the minds
-of the jury away from it; he played, in fact, the part of the peewit,
-which swoops and screams in another part of the field on purpose to
-hide where its nest is, and to draw the attention of the passers-by
-from the right spot.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Justice Stephen pointed out to the jury in his summing-up:
-&#8220;You must begin the whole subject of poison with this, which
-is a remarkable fact in the case and which it seems to me tells
-favorably rather than otherwise for the prisoner. You must take notice
-of it and consider what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266"
-id="Page_266">[266]</a></span> inference you draw from it. In the whole
-case, from first to last, there is <em>no evidence</em> at all of her having
-<em>bought</em> any poison, or definitely having had anything to do with
-procuring any, with the exception of fly-papers. But there is evidence
-of a considerable quantity having been found in various things, which
-were kept some here and some there&mdash;kept principally, as I gather,
-in the inner room.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a
-href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> ... There is evidence
-about a considerable quantity of poison in this house, and more
-particularly about one or two receptacles which were in the inner
-room, Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s dressing-room, as it has been pointed
-out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirection as to Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s
-Symptoms</span></h3>
-
-<p>From the testimony it appears that on the 27th of April James
-Maybrick, before starting to the Wirrall Races, was sick. There is no
-actual evidence of vomiting,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267"
-id="Page_267">[267]</a></span> but he is described as sick, and as
-feeling a numbness in his legs while walking downstairs, which was an
-old-standing complaint of his of many years. Both he himself and Mrs.
-Maybrick told the servants that this was due to a double dose of some
-London medicine. He got wet through at the races and dined in his wet
-clothes at a friend&#8217;s (Mr. Hobson), on the other side of the
-Mersey, and did not return home till after the servants had retired
-to bed; but the next morning, Sunday, the 28th of April, he was taken
-ill, and Mrs. Maybrick sent a servant off hurriedly for Dr. Humphreys,
-who had not attended her husband before, but who was the doctor living
-nearest the house, and in the mean time got some mustard and water,
-telling him to take it, as it would remove the brandy at all events.
-Dr. Humphreys attended James Maybrick on the 28th, but was not told by
-him that he had vomited the day before.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Justice Stephen, when referring to<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span> this, said: &#8220;The
-Wirrall Races were followed by symptoms which were described to be
-arsenical.&#8221; It is submitted that this was a <em>misdirection</em>, the
-symptom there referred to being sickness, and there was no evidence
-of vomiting on any of the days immediately succeeding the Wirrall
-Races. But on the 28th of April the mustard and water was given him
-by Mrs. Maybrick for the purpose of <em>producing</em> sickness and removing
-the brandy, and if he had been sick it would have been attributable to
-<em>mustard and water</em>, not to arsenic.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the medical evidence showed that gastro-enteritis
-might have been set up either by improper food or drink, or an excess
-of either; or, again, by such a wetting through as deceased got at the
-Wirrall Races. On the 8th of May Alice Yapp communicated to Mrs. Briggs
-and Mrs. Hughes her suspicions that James Maybrick&#8217;s illness was
-due to Mrs. Maybrick poisoning him with <em>fly-papers</em>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269"
-id="Page_269">[269]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirection as to Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s Access
-to Poisons</span></h3>
-
-<p>The purchase and soaking of fly-papers is the only direct evidence
-of the possession of arsenic in any form by Mrs. Maybrick, but the
-judge told the jury, and it is submitted it is a <em>gross misdirection</em>,
-that Mrs. Maybrick &#8220;<em>undoubtedly had access to considerable
-quantities of arsenic in other forms</em>,&#8221; inasmuch as the <em>only
-evidence as to such access</em> was that after the death of James Maybrick
-these two women, Mrs. Briggs and Alice Yapp, who exhibited the most
-unfriendly feeling toward her, said they had found in the house certain
-stores of arsenic.</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted for the serious consideration of counsel that
-the circumstances under which these two women produced these stores
-of arsenic are so suspicious as to justify the suggestion that that
-arsenic was not there before his death, and that Mrs. Maybrick never
-did have any access to it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270"
-id="Page_270">[270]</a></span> or knowledge of it at all. There was
-no evidence as to where or by whom this arsenic was obtained, nor was
-there any evidence that the police had made any effort to discover
-where, when, or by whom that arsenic was procured.</p>
-
-<p>[<span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;How and when this arsenic
-may have been procured by Mr. Maybrick himself will appear further on
-as a part of the new evidence.]</p>
-
-<p>The places in which arsenic was found were open and accessible to
-every one in the house, and no person gave any evidence that he or she
-had ever seen it in the house before these two women found it after
-death.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the black powder (arsenic mixed with charcoal) and the
-two solutions of arsenic produced by Mrs. Briggs and Alice Yapp, Mr.
-Davies, the analyst, gave evidence that, when analyzing the contents
-of the various bottles, he had searched diligently and microscopically
-for any traces, and could find no trace of charcoal having<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span> been
-introduced into any of them. So this circumstantial evidence may be
-eliminated.</p>
-
-<p>As regards white arsenic, also produced by these women, it must
-be observed that not only was it not shown that Mrs. Maybrick had
-purchased any, but it is submitted that the judge <em>ought to have
-pointed out to the jury</em>, as the fact is, that it would have been
-almost impossible for her or any woman to have obtained any white
-arsenic at all. No shopkeeper dare sell it to any one except to a
-medical man, and even then under the stringent restrictions of the Sale
-of Poison Act.</p>
-
-<p>At the trial a wholesale druggist (Thompson, of Liverpool) gave
-evidence that James Maybrick constantly visited his cousin, who had
-been in his employment at his stores, where he could have obtained
-white arsenic from him without any difficulty; and it will be observed
-that it was found in his hatbox.</p>
-
-<p>It is a remarkable thing in this connection that, while Edwin
-Maybrick called the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272"
-id="Page_272">[272]</a></span> police in on Sunday night, and gave them
-the black solutions and white solutions which Mrs. Briggs had found on
-the Sunday morning, he did not give them the black powder which Alice
-Yapp had found on the-night before; and, in fact, that Michael Maybrick
-did not give it to the police until Tuesday, the 14th.</p>
-
-<p>It is also a remarkable fact that, although these black solutions
-and that white solution of arsenic and that solid arsenic which Mrs.
-Briggs had found, were not handed by the police to the analyst until
-several days afterward, and were therefore <em>not known to be arsenic
-by anybody, yet Mrs. Briggs was able to inform Mrs. Maybrick on
-Tuesday, the 14th, as was testified to, that these bottles contained
-arsenic</em>.</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that Mrs. Briggs could not have known that without
-some other means of knowledge than looking at them.</p>
-
-<p>The importance of this <em>misdirection</em> of the judge as to the
-question of possession of arsenic by Mrs. Maybrick can not be<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-overstated. It was <em>conclusively</em> shown that no decoction of fly-papers
-or of the black powder was the source of the arsenic with which certain
-articles found in the house and office were said to be infected,
-because the analyst said he had searched for the fibers of the papers
-and for the charcoal, <em>and could not find any traces of either</em>. If
-Mrs. Maybrick knew of the pure arsenic, why should she have bought the
-fly-papers, either for a cosmetic purpose or murder, and what should
-she have wanted with &#8220;poison for cats?&#8221;</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirection as to &#8220;Traces&#8221; of Arsenic</span></h3>
-
-<p>Out of the list submitted by the police, therefore, the only two
-things which could have been the source of the arsenic were the bottle
-of saturated solution, No. 10 in the Police List, and the bottle of
-solid arsenic, No. 11 in the Police List.</p>
-
-<p>It may be observed that if all the arsenic or &#8220;traces&#8221;
-of the same, with which various<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span> things were said to be
-infected, were collected together, it would not constitute a fatal
-dose, the smallest fatal dose recorded being two grains, and this in
-the case of a woman, and surely not in the case of a person addicted to
-large doses of arsenic.</p>
-
-<p>At the inquest Mr. Davies defined what he meant by the word
-&#8220;trace.&#8221; He said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It means something under 1/100 part of a grain. It does not
-mean something which I could not weigh, but something which I could
-<em>not</em> guarantee to be absolutely free from other things; but anything
-under 1/100 part of a grain I should not consider satisfactory. If I
-said <em>distinct traces</em>, I should say it meant something between 1/100
-and 1/1000 part of a grain, while a <em>minute trace</em> is less than 1/1000
-part of a grain.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In reference to Reinsch&#8217;s test which Mr. Davies used in these
-experiments, this passage occurs in Taylor&#8217;s &#8220;Medical
-Jurisprudence,&#8221; vol. i., p. 268: &#8220;The mere presence
-of a gray deposit on pure copper affords <em>no absolute proof</em> of
-the presence of arsenic.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275"
-id="Page_275">[275]</a></span> Bismuth, antimony, and mercury all yield
-deposits with Reinsch&#8217;s test. The gray deposit of bismuth may
-easily be taken for arsenic.&#8221; And again: &#8220;The errors into
-which the faulty methods of applying Reinsch&#8217;s test lead have led
-its reliability to be much discredited, and, although in skilful hands
-the results are trustworthy, it would be perhaps unsafe to rely upon it
-in an important criminal investigation.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that the evidence relating to the articles which
-Mr. Davies said were infected with arsenic only to the extent of <em>an
-unweighable trace</em> could not and ought not to be regarded as proof
-that any arsenic at all was there, or as being anything more <em>than a
-suspicion</em> upon this analyst&#8217;s mind that what he saw was arsenic,
-and that it was a <em>misdirection</em> on the part of Mr. Justice Stephen
-to treat a mere expression of opinion of that kind as proof of the
-presence of arsenic.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirection as to Arsenic in Solution</span></h3>
-
-<p>It will be observed that the only things of which James Maybrick
-could have partaken [but did not], in which arsenic in a weighable
-form was present, were the bottle of Valentine&#8217;s meat juice and
-the pot of glycerin, and that the arsenic found in them was found in a
-state of solution.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the half grain of arsenic found in the <em>meat juice</em>,
-scientific evidence will be forthcoming that it is a physical
-impossibility for any person to dissolve half a grain of solid arsenic
-in 411 grains of Valentine&#8217;s meat juice, which is all the liquid
-that was in the bottle when it was handed to Mr. Davies.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Davies, moreover, found that (although he used very loose and
-unscientific language in his evidence) the specific gravity of the meat
-juice was considerably reduced, thereby showing that the half grain
-of arsenic found in it had been introduced in the form of <em>arsenic in
-solution</em>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277"
-id="Page_277">[277]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It will now be observed that the <em>only arsenic in solution</em> which
-was <em>available</em>, among the stores of arsenic found in the house, was
-the <em>bottle No. 10</em> in the police list, and it is submitted that bottle
-No. 11 (solid arsenic) must, like the black solutions, <em>be eliminated</em>
-from any store of arsenic which Mrs. Maybrick, whether she had access
-to it or not, could have employed for the purpose of infecting any of
-the things found in the house to be infected.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Davies described the bottle No. 10 as a saturated solution of
-white arsenic, and he stated that it had been dissolved with water,
-some of the crystals remaining at the bottom undissolved.</p>
-
-<p>At the inquest he stated, in reply to a question by the coroner:
-&#8220;The bottle No. 10, which was also in the box, contained a
-saturated solution of arsenic and solid arsenic at the bottom. There
-was no label on it. It contained, solid and liquid, perhaps two
-grains&mdash;a grain at all events.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><i>So it is evident that there was not a fatal<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span> dose
-even in the stores which Mrs. Maybrick could have used had she had
-access to it.</i></p>
-
-<p>As regards this bottle, Mr. Justice Stephen told the jury: &#8220;A
-saturated solution is a solution which has taken up as much arsenic
-as it can, the water becoming saturated with arsenic; the remainder
-of the arsenic is found at the bottom. In this case there was a
-saturated solution of arsenic in the water and a small portion of
-arsenic at the bottom. With regard to that these questions arise:
-What was it for? Who is wanting such a quantity of strong solution
-of arsenic? Who has put it there and how is it to be used? These are
-the questions, in the solution of which I can not help you. There is
-nothing definite about it to connect Mr. Maybrick with it certainly.<a
-name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7"
-class="fnanchor">[7]</a> If he was in the habit of arsenic eating he
-would not keep it saturated in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279"
-id="Page_279">[279]</a></span> water in quantities he could not
-possibly use.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Davies found that this bottle &#8220;contained in solid and
-liquid perhaps two grains&mdash;a grain at all events.&#8221; Now
-arsenic can be dissolved in water by two processes. In cold water by
-shaking it constantly for several hours (and the strongest solution
-that can be obtained by the cold-water process is a one-per-cent.
-solution, which is no stronger than the ordinary Fowler&#8217;s
-solution as sold in the shops). That is called a &#8220;saturated
-solution&#8221; by the cold-water process. A solution of three or
-even four per cent. can be obtained with boiling water, but only when
-the water is kept on the constant boil for several hours; and that is
-also called a &#8220;saturated solution,&#8221; so that the phrase
-&#8220;saturated solution&#8221; may mean either a weak solution of
-one per cent., such as is gained by the cold-water process, or a
-stronger solution of three per cent. by the boiling-water process,
-and Mr. Justice Stephen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280"
-id="Page_280">[280]</a></span> <em>misdirected</em> the jury as to the meaning
-of the phrase &#8220;saturated solution.&#8221; He should have told
-them that a &#8220;saturated solution&#8221; of arsenic is one which
-has by any particular process taken up as much arsenic and <em>retained
-it in solution</em> as is possible by that particular process, and that it
-might consequently be either a weak or a stronger solution, according
-as it has been dissolved by the cold-water or boiling-water process, by
-shaking for hours or boiling for hours.</p>
-
-<p>The questions put to the jury by Mr. Justice Stephen upon the
-interpretation of the phrase &#8220;saturated solution&#8221; which
-he gave, namely, &#8220;How is it to be used?&#8221; &#8220;Who is
-wanting such a quantity of <em>strong</em> solution of arsenic?&#8221; are
-<em>misdirections</em>.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Mr. Clayton&#8217;s Experiments</span></h3>
-
-<p>Counsel are referred to experiments made with solutions of
-arsenic by Mr. E. Godwin Clayton, of the firm of Hassall &amp;<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-Clayton. From these it will be seen that by the experiment there marked
-B, where the arsenic was shaken at intervals of twenty minutes for six
-hours, the result shows that it would require 186&frac12; grains of
-water to carry half a grain of arsenic. And that by experiment C, which
-is the strongest possible solution by the cold-water process, namely,
-one-per-cent. strength (equal to Fowler&#8217;s solution), it would
-require 50 grains of water to carry half a grain, but to obtain this
-the arsenic has to be shaken with cold water <em>at frequent intervals for
-four days</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Godwin Clayton, in his report as to these experiments, remarks:
-&#8220;I think, however, that as few people outside a chemical
-laboratory would have the patience or opportunity to make a solution by
-shaking it at short intervals during four days, the solution obtained
-in experiment B&mdash;namely, an arsenical strength of 0.268 per
-cent.&mdash;might be described in a popular<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span> sense, though not
-with strict scientific accuracy, as &#8216;saturated solution of
-arsenic.&#8217;&#8221; But then if that be so, that is only about a
-quarter of the strength of Fowler&#8217;s solution! The evidence of Mr.
-Davies as to the specific gravity of the meat juice being considerably
-reduced ought, it is submitted, <em>not</em> to have been received as
-scientific evidence, and it was a <em>misdirection</em> to treat it as
-such, because without the slightest difficulty, as will be seen by a
-reference to Mr. Godwin Clayton&#8217;s experiments, Mr. Davies&#8217;s
-evidence ought to have been scientifically exact, because he could have
-shown that (for example) if a solution of the strength of experiment
-B had been used, the 411 grains of liquid would have contained
-186&frac12; of solution of arsenic and 244&frac12; grains of meat
-juice; and, further, that the specific gravity of the meat juice
-would, in that case, have been lowered from 1.2143 to 1.1263; and it
-was, therefore, not only possible, but the duty of Mr. Davies, as an
-expert, to have shown, by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283"
-id="Page_283">[283]</a></span> comparing the specific gravity of the
-bottle No. 10 and the specific gravity of Valentine&#8217;s meat juice,
-that the &#8220;arsenic in solution&#8221; which had been introduced
-into it had been introduced into it out of that particular bottle, No.
-10.</p>
-
-<p>Then, again, it will be seen from these experiments of Mr. Godwin
-Clayton that if the solution in bottle No. 10 had been a strong
-hot-water solution of three per cent., the specific gravity would not
-have been considerably reduced, because the meat juice would in that
-case have contained only 15&frac12; grains of arsenical solution.
-To have obtained such a solution, the &#8220;arsenic powder&#8221;
-must have been boiled with distilled water for four hours; and it is
-submitted that it would have been <em>impossible</em>, in the first place,
-for Mrs. Maybrick, or any person outside a laboratory, to have adopted
-such a process of dissolving arsenic without the knowledge of the
-servants or anybody else; and, further, that even if she could have
-done this, she could not have possibly<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span> weighed out exactly half
-a grain of it, which is what Mr. Davies found; and it is suggested
-that the only way in which that half grain of arsenic could possibly
-have been measured into that bottle, must have been by introducing
-Fowler&#8217;s solution, <em>and no Fowler&#8217;s solution was found in
-the house</em>&mdash;and in no way was it suggested that Mrs. Maybrick had
-any access to any, though others in that house may have been able to
-procure such a medicinal dose of it.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirection as to Arsenic in
-Glycerin</span></h3>
-
-<p>As regards the glycerin, Inspector Baxendale said he found this
-bottle in the lavatory on the 18th of May. There was no evidence that
-this bottle had ever been in Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s hands, and there was
-no evidence that any part of it had been used by James Maybrick. There
-was evidence that it was a freshly opened bottle. Scientific evidence
-will be forthcoming that it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285"
-id="Page_285">[285]</a></span> <em>an absolute impossibility</em> for any
-person to distribute arsenic evenly through a pound of glycerin.</p>
-
-<p>It is suggested that there is no possible means by which that
-glycerin could have been administered with a felonious intent to James
-Maybrick; the mere moistening the lips with small quantities of it
-could not have operated in that way.</p>
-
-<p>Scientific evidence will be forthcoming that glycerin, when kept in
-glass bottles, generally does contain arsenic, which it extracts from
-the glass of the bottle.</p>
-
-<p>In 1888 Jahns drew attention to arsenic being present in
-glycerin&mdash;<i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Chemische Zeitung</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In 1889 Vulpius also drew attention to it&mdash;<i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Apotheker
-Zeitung</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Siebold (see <cite>Pharmaceutical Journal</cite>, 5th October, 1889) said, at
-the Pharmaceutical Conference, on the 11th September, 1889, that his
-experiments were made with toilet and pharmaceutical glycerin, and that
-the majority showed presence of arsenious<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span> acid, varying from 1
-grain in 4,000 to 1 grain in 5,000.</p>
-
-<p>It may be pointed out that this is <em>a larger quantity</em> than Mr.
-Davies found, which was only &#8220;about 1/10 of a grain in 1,000
-grains.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The evidence relating to the administration of glycerin was that of
-Nurse Gore and Nurse Callery, and was to the effect that on Thursday
-night they refreshed James Maybrick&#8217;s mouth with <em>glycerin and
-borax mixed in a saucer</em> that was on the table in the sick-room, and
-that Mrs. Maybrick had brought the glycerin that was used either from
-the medicine cupboard in her room or from the washstand drawer.</p>
-
-<p>The attention of counsel is called to the fact that this saucer
-of mixed glycerin and borax which was actually used <em>was not
-produced</em> at the trial, but Justice Stephen, when summing up to the
-jury, said: &#8220;Then you get the <em>blue</em> bottle which contained
-Price&#8217;s glycerin. Here is the bottle, which there is no
-evidence to show that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287"
-id="Page_287">[287]</a></span> Mrs. Maybrick had even seen or touched;
-a considerable portion is still left. That glycerin was found in the
-lavatory outside, and if the bottle were filled and the same proportion
-of arsenic added, there would be two-thirds of a grain of arsenic in
-it. You have heard already that his mouth was moistened with glycerin
-and borax apparently the night before he died. If that be so, and the
-glycerin be really poison, it is certainly a very shocking result to
-arrive at.&#8221; Sir Charles Russell: &#8220;I think the evidence of
-Nurse Gore is that the bottle that was used the night before was taken,
-not from the lavatory, but from the cupboard of the washstand.&#8221;
-His Lordship: &#8220;It does not follow that that was the same
-bottle. One does not know the history of that bottle or where it
-went to. It may or may not have been the glycerin which was used for
-the purpose I have mentioned, namely, for moistening the lips. But
-it does appear in the case that a bottle was found in the lavatory,
-and that it contained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288"
-id="Page_288">[288]</a></span> a grain of arsenic, and that his mouth
-was moistened with glycerin and borax during the night in question; but
-the identity between that bottle and the bottle which contained the
-glycerin is not established and not proved.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that the above was an <em>unfair and
-inflammatory suggestion</em>, and amounts to a gross <span
-class="smcap">MISDIRECTION</span>, especially after all the evidence
-about the condition of deceased&#8217;s tongue and his complaining of a
-sensation as of a hair in his throat.</p>
-
-<p>This concludes the whole of the evidence to any articles containing
-arsenic which were found in the house, in which the arsenic was present
-in anything except as <em>unweighable &#8220;traces.&#8221;</em></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirection as to Evidence of
-Physicians</span></h3>
-
-<p>Justice Stephen further summed up: &#8220;The witness
-(Dr. Stevenson) stated: &#8216;I should say more arsenic
-was administered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289"
-id="Page_289">[289]</a></span> on the 3d of May.&#8217;&#8221; It will
-be seen, by a reference to Dr. Stevenson&#8217;s evidence, that Dr.
-Stevenson <em>did not</em> say this.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 471px;">
-<a id="plate11"></a>
-<img src="images/i315.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="noindent f80">Copyright, 1904, by Pach Bros., New York.</p>
-<p class="center noindent">HON. JOHN HAY,<br />
-American Secretary of State, 1898&mdash;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dr. Humphreys was the only medical man in attendance at that time.
-The only symptoms on Friday, the 3d, were that he had &#8220;vomited
-twice.&#8221; At the inquest Dr. Humphreys said as to this:</p>
-
-<p>Q. &#8220;Did he say anything about his lunch on the previous day,
-Thursday, the 2d?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A. &#8220;Yes; he said some inferior sherry had been put into it,
-and that it had made him as bad as ever again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And that also appears in Dr. Stevenson&#8217;s evidence at the
-trial:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He told the doctor he had not been well since the previous
-day, when I learn he had his lunch at the office.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It can not be suggested that the fact that the man vomited
-twice on Friday night was attributable to any arsenic taken
-at midday on Thursday, for Dr. Stevenson testified that the
-vomiting, which is a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290"
-id="Page_290">[290]</a></span> symptom of arsenic, usually follows the
-administration in about <em>half an hour</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Carter, who was not called in to the patient until Tuesday, May
-7th, in his evidence, however, suggested that:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I judge that the fatal dose must have been given on Friday,
-the 3d, but a dose might have been given after that. When he was so
-violently ill on the Friday, I thought it would be from the effects
-of the fatal dose, but there might have been subsequent doses&#8221;;
-and in cross-examination he explained that he had made this suggestion
-about the fatal dose because: &#8220;I was <em>told</em> he was unable to
-retain anything on his stomach for several days.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that the judge, when summing up, <span
-class="smcap lowercase">MISDIRECTED</span> the jury by ignoring entirely the
-evidence and substituting for it this reckless suggestion of Dr.
-Carter&#8217;s.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirection as to Times When Arsenic May Have
-Been Administered</span></h3>
-
-<p>The only occasions on which it was possible to suggest any act of
-administration of arsenic were the medicine on the 27th of April and
-the food at the office on May 1st and May 2d; and the judge told the
-jury:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The argument that the prisoner administered the arsenic
-is an argument depending upon the combination of a great variety of
-circumstances of suspicion. The theory is that there was poisoning
-by successive doses, and it is rather suggested that there may have
-been several doses. But I do not know that there was any effort
-made to point out the precise times at which doses may have been
-administered.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Under such circumstances it is submitted that the statement
-of the judge as to the medicine on the 27th of April, and as to
-the food at office, and as to the statement that &#8220;Friday
-(3d May) was the day<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292"
-id="Page_292">[292]</a></span> on which began the symptoms of what may
-be called the fatal dose,&#8221; <em>are misdirections of vital importance
-to this case</em>, and such as to entitle Mrs. Maybrick to have the verdict
-set aside and have a new trial ordered.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirection as to Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s
-Changing Medicine Bottles</span></h3>
-
-<p>As regards the question of attempts to administer arsenic, the
-occasions upon which such conduct was imputed are changing medicine
-from one bottle into another and the Valentine&#8217;s meat juice. As
-regards the changing the bottle, there were two occasions when evidence
-was given as to Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s doing this. The first was on the
-7th of May, when Alice Yapp said that some of the medicines were kept
-on a table near the bedroom door and some in the bedroom, and that on
-Tuesday, 7th of May, she saw Mrs. Maybrick on the landing near the
-bedroom door, and what was she doing? She was<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span> apparently pouring
-something out of one bottle into another. They were medicine
-bottles.</p>
-
-<p>That is the whole evidence as to the incident, and as all the
-bottles in the house were analyzed, and none found to contain
-<em>even a trace of arsenic</em> except the Clay and Abraham&#8217;s
-bottle&mdash;which James Maybrick was not taking at that time&mdash;the
-judge could not properly direct the jury to regard it as a matter of
-suspicion; <em>but he did do so</em>. He referred to this incident thus:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;On the 28th April (the day after the Wirrall Races) Mrs.
-Maybrick sent for Dr. Humphreys, and afterward she was seen pouring
-medicine from one bottle into another.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that this was <em>a serious misdirection</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The other occasion was on Friday, the 10th of May, when
-Michael Maybrick, seeing Mrs. Maybrick changing a medicine from
-one bottle to another in the bedroom, took the bottles away and
-had the prescription<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294"
-id="Page_294">[294]</a></span> made up again, saying: &#8220;Florrie,
-how dare you tamper with the medicine?&#8221; Mrs. Maybrick explained
-that she was only putting the medicine into a larger bottle because
-there was so much sediment. Nurse Callery was present and there was
-no concealment about what she was doing, and the bullying conduct
-of Michael was absolutely without any sort of justification. <em>These
-bottles were analyzed and found to be harmless.</em></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Justice Stephen turned this incident, which occurred on
-the afternoon before death, and after she had been prevented from
-attending on her husband, against Mrs. Maybrick, thus&mdash;quoting
-Michael&#8217;s evidence: &#8220;In the bedroom I found Mrs.
-Maybrick pouring from one bottle into another and changing the
-labels, and I said, &#8216;Florrie, how dare you tamper with the
-medicine?&#8217;&#8221; And Justice Stephen continued: &#8220;Verily,
-this was a strange&mdash;I don&#8217;t say strange considering
-the circumstances&mdash;but dreadfully unwelcome remark to<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span> make
-to a lady in her own house, when she was in attendance on her husband,
-and something which showed the state of feeling in his mind, and must
-have attracted her attention.&#8221; It is submitted that this was a
-<em>misdirection</em>.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirection as to Administration With Intent
-to Kill</span></h3>
-
-<p>There was also an attempt by the prosecution to suggest an attempt
-to administer medicine, arising out of an occasion when James Maybrick
-said to her, &#8220;You have given me the wrong medicine again,&#8221;
-from which it appears that on the Friday, the day before death, Mrs.
-Maybrick was not giving him anything at all, but was trying to get him
-to take some medicine from Nurse Callery, who was endeavoring to induce
-him to take it. This was one of the medicines ordered by Dr. Humphreys,
-<em>and was found free from arsenic</em>. The <span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>judge did not refer to
-this in his summing-up,<br /> <span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">but
-reference to it is introduced here</span><br /> because it exhausts
-the whole evidence, with the exception of the Valentine&#8217;s meat
-juice incident, as to any suggestions or even of any occasions of
-attempt to administer, while Mr. Matthews advised the Queen that
-&#8220;the evidence leads clearly to the conclusion that the prisoner
-administered and attempted to administer arsenic to her husband with
-intent to murder,&#8221; which formed his ground for consigning this
-woman to penal servitude for life. <em>No evidence, either of any act
-of administration or of any act of attempt to administer either with
-or without felonious attempt, was given at the trial, which possibly
-could have led any person to any such conclusion</em>, with the single
-exception of the Valentine&#8217;s meat juice; and as none of that
-was administered after it had been in Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s hands,
-the utmost that could be said of it (assuming that she did put any
-arsenic into it) is that it was an <em>attempt</em> to administer, either
-feloniously or otherwise.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297"
-id="Page_297">[297]</a></span> It is submitted that the judge
-<em>misdirected</em> the jury as to this incident, in that he did not tell
-them that the mere evidence of an attempt to administer arsenic was
-not sufficient&mdash;that they must be satisfied that the attempt to
-administer was with a <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">mens rea</i> and with an intent to murder.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Exclusion of Prisoner&#8217;s
-Testimony</span></h3>
-
-<p>Mrs. Maybrick voluntarily told her solicitors, Mr. Arnold and Mr.
-Richard Cleaver, directly she was arrested and even before the inquest,
-that she had, at her husband&#8217;s urgent request, put a powder into
-a bottle of Valentine&#8217;s meat juice, but that she did not know,
-until Mrs. Briggs informed her that arsenic had been found in a bottle
-of meat juice, that the powder she had put in was assumably arsenic.
-[At the trial both Mr. Richard and Mr. Arnold Cleaver, her solicitors,
-offered to give evidence to this effect, but Justice Stephen refused
-to admit it.] She also tried to tell<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span> Mrs. Briggs the same
-thing, but the policeman stopped the conversation; and she also told
-it to her mother on her arrival. Mrs. Maybrick made no attempt at
-concealment about having put this powder in, although no one had seen
-her do it, and her solicitors, instead of relying as a line of defense
-on showing there was no &#8220;mens rea&#8221; in what she had done,
-kept back her account of what she had done. At the trial, however,
-after all the evidence for the prosecution had been concluded without a
-single witness speaking of her having put anything into anything, she
-<em>insisted</em> on telling the jury, as she had told her solicitors, that
-she did put a powder into a bottle of meat juice, in accordance with
-an urgent request of her husband&#8217;s, but that she did not know it
-was arsenic. If she did not know, there was no &#8220;mens rea.&#8221;
-Upon that evidence, and upon certain suspicious circumstances connected
-with her conduct in taking the meat juice into the dressing-room
-and replacing it in the bedroom, the<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span> judge, as it is
-submitted, <em>misdirected</em> the jury in the following passage:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Michael Maybrick says: &#8216;Nothing was given to my
-brother out of that.&#8217; That is to say, nothing was given to him
-out of the bottle of Valentine&#8217;s meat juice, which undoubtedly
-had arsenic in it. Its presence was detected, but of that bottle which
-was poisoned he certainly had none. He had a small taste of it <em>before
-it was poisoned</em>, given him by Nurse Gore.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that the words &#8220;before it was poisoned&#8221;
-is <em>a gross misdirection</em>.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirection as to Identity of Meat-Juice
-Bottle</span></h3>
-
-<p>It may be convenient here to interpose the following remarks on
-the subject of the identity of the bottle. Counsel will observe
-that the judge referred to the evidence at the inquest and at the
-magisterial inquiry, which, it is suggested, enables a reference to any
-discrepancies in the evidence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300"
-id="Page_300">[300]</a></span> of the witnesses on the three
-occasions&mdash;inquest, magisterial inquiry, and trial.</p>
-
-<p>The identity of the half-used bottle, which was found to contain
-&#8220;half a grain of arsenic in solution,&#8221; with the bottle
-which Mrs. Maybrick took into the dressing-room, was not proved. It was
-assumed alike by the prosecution and the defense, and by Mrs. Maybrick
-herself, <em>but it was not proved</em>. It was proved that there was another
-half-used bottle, of which James Maybrick had partaken on Monday, 6th
-of May, when Dr. Humphreys said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Some of the Valentine&#8217;s meat juice had been taken, but
-it did not agree with the deceased and made him vomit. Witness did not
-remember him vomiting in his presence, but he complained of it. Witness
-told deceased to stop the Valentine&#8217;s meat juice, and said he was
-not surprised at it making Mr. Maybrick sick, as it made many people
-sick.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was, therefore, another half-used<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span> bottle. The attention of
-counsel is strongly directed to the question of the identity of this
-half-used bottle.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the one in which the arsenic was detected, there was another
-half-used bottle produced at the trial, which was found by Mrs.
-Briggs after death in one of James Maybrick&#8217;s hatboxes in the
-dressing-room, together with the black solutions and white solutions of
-arsenic, and this bottle was found free of arsenic.</p>
-
-<p>As to the bottle which Mrs. Maybrick had in her hands on the night
-of the 9th-10th of May, and which she took into the dressing-room, and
-as to which she volunteered the statement that she had put a powder
-in, as to which evidence was given by Nurse Gore, was thus voluntarily
-corroborated by Mrs. Maybrick in her statement to the jury. From
-this it appears that Nurse Gore, on her arrival for duty on Thursday
-night, opened a fresh bottle of meat juice, which had been given to
-her the night before by Edwin Maybrick, and<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span> gave the patient one
-or two spoonfuls, and then placed it on the table, from which she
-shortly afterward saw Mrs. Maybrick remove it and take it into the
-dressing-room, the door of which was not shut, and then return with
-it into the bedroom and replace it on the table. Nurse Gore thought
-she did this in a stealthy way. It must be remembered that Nurse
-Gore was naturally suspicious, as is shown by the fact that on two
-previous occasions she suggested suspicions with regard to changes
-in medicines by Mrs. Maybrick, which on analysis were proved to be
-free from arsenic. When the patient, a short time afterward, awoke,
-Mrs. Maybrick came into the bedroom again and <em>removed</em> the bottle
-from the table and placed it on the washstand, where there were only
-the ordinary jugs and basins, and there left it. Nurse Gore&#8217;s
-usual suspicions were aroused and she gave the patient none of it,
-nor did Mrs. Maybrick ask her to give him any. When Nurse Gore was
-relieved by Nurse Callery the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303"
-id="Page_303">[303]</a></span> next morning (Friday, the 10th), at 11
-o&#8217;clock, she called her attention to it and asked her to take <em>a
-sample of it</em>, which Callery did, and put it into an ordinary medicine
-bottle, which Nurse Gore gave her for the purpose. Nurse Gore left
-the bottle on the washstand where Mrs. Maybrick had placed it. Nurse
-Gore did not mention the circumstance to Dr. Humphreys when he came
-to see the patient at 8:30 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, nor to
-Michael Maybrick, whose attention she directed to a bottle of brandy
-instead, which on analysis was found harmless; and she then went into
-Liverpool and saw the matron, and on her return to the house at 2
-o&#8217;clock told Callery to throw away the sample in accordance with
-the matron&#8217;s orders, which Callery did. The bottle in which that
-sample was taken was not specially identified, though it must have
-remained on the premises. It ought to have been produced, because, if
-arsenic was detected in the sample, the bottle of Valentine&#8217;s
-meat juice would have been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304"
-id="Page_304">[304]</a></span> identified by that means, and it would
-have been shown that the arsenic was in the meat juice which Mrs.
-Maybrick had taken into the dressing-room. On the other hand, as all
-the bottles which were in the house were analyzed and found free of
-arsenic, there is negative evidence that there was no arsenic in the
-sample taken.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirection in Excluding Corroboration of
-Prisoner&#8217;s Statement</span></h3>
-
-<p>Now the serious, most serious, consideration of counsel is asked for
-in comparing the evidence of these three witnesses&mdash;Gore, Callery,
-and Michael Maybrick&mdash;as given at the coroner&#8217;s inquest,
-as it appears in the coroner&#8217;s depositions, at the magisterial
-inquiry, as it appears in the magistrates&#8217; depositions,
-and as given at the trial. It will be seen that there are great
-discrepancies as to the place in the room from which Michael Maybrick
-took the half-used bottle in which Mr. Davies, the analyst,<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-subsequently detected one-tenth of a grain of arsenic in solution.
-It is suggested that Mr. Michael&#8217;s evidence at the inquest is
-the true account of where he got the bottle, and that his evidence at
-the trial is <em>cooked</em>, to suit the evidence of Gore, <em>and that the
-identity of the bottle is not established</em>. The statement, which in
-her statement to the jury Mrs. Maybrick said she was prevented by the
-policeman from making to Mrs. Briggs, the moment that person told her
-about arsenic being found in the meat juice, was communicated by Mrs.
-Maybrick at once to her solicitors, Mr. Arnold and Richard Cleaver; and
-it is submitted that it was a <em>misdirection</em> of the judge to exclude
-their evidence in corroboration of such a material and important fact
-in her favor, <em>and a misdirection in refusing to allow corroboration in
-that way</em> of what was in evidence, and did corroborate it&mdash;thereby
-constituting a matter which the jury should have had before them, as
-having a bearing on her statement.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirections to Jury to Draw Illegal
-Inferences</span></h3>
-
-<p>The judge referred to the Valentine&#8217;s meat-juice incident, the
-most vital point in the trial, in the following extraordinary manner at
-the end of his summing-up:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I may say this, however: supposing you find a man
-dying of arsenic, <em>and it is proved</em> that a person put arsenic
-in his plate, and if he gives an explanation which you do not
-consider satisfactory&mdash;that is a very strong question to be
-considered&mdash;how far it goes, what its logical value is, I am not
-prepared to say&mdash;I could not say, and unless I had to write my
-verdict I should not say how I should deal with the verdict; but being
-no juryman, but only a judge, I can only say this, it is a matter for
-your serious consideration.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that this was a <em>gross misdirection</em> and
-<em>a cruel taunt</em> to <em>drive the jury into finding a verdict</em>
-against the prisoner<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307"
-id="Page_307">[307]</a></span> upon that ground, <em>and it is submitted
-that so monstrously unfair an utterance can not be found in the reports
-of any summing-up by any judge in any criminal case</em>. See also another
-<em>misdirection</em> where the judge read the examination of Nurse Gore and
-omitted reference to the sample, but said of the bottle, &#8220;In
-point of fact, <em>it remained where it was</em> until taken away by Mr.
-Michael Maybrick,&#8221; when it is in evidence that Nurse Callery
-had taken a sample of it during the eighteen hours it remained on the
-washstand, and that others beside Mrs. Maybrick had access to it.</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that, apart from the question of the identity of the
-bottle, there was no evidence, except Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s statement,
-that she had put anything into the bottle, which justified Mr. Justice
-Stephen in using the words, &#8220;He had a small taste of it <em>before</em>
-it was poisoned,&#8221; inasmuch as, except Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s own
-voluntary statement that she had put a powder into a bottle of meat
-juice, there was nothing to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308"
-id="Page_308">[308]</a></span> show that the arsenic, detected by Mr.
-Davies in the bottle he analyzed, had not been in the bottle when Edwin
-Maybrick gave it to Nurse Gore and which she opened when she gave the
-patient &#8220;one or two spoonfuls.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Another <em>misdirection</em> in reference to the meat-juice incident will
-be found in the summing-up in the words:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It has a sort of very remote bearing upon the statement which
-she made on Monday.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Instead of &#8220;a sort of very remote bearing,&#8221; it was a
-<em>matter of the greatest importance</em> that it should be shown that <em>at
-the very instant</em> she heard that arsenic had been found in some meat
-juice, before even the inquest, <em>and before any arsenic had been found
-in the body</em>, she should have attempted to tell Mrs. Briggs that she
-had put a powder into some meat juice, but did not know what it was;
-and, in connection with this, the attention of counsel is called to
-the fact that Mr. Justice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309"
-id="Page_309">[309]</a></span> Stephen <em>refused to allow evidence
-showing that she had made this statement from the very first</em>.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirections Regarding the Medical
-Testimony</span></h3>
-
-<p>As to the cause of James Maybrick&#8217;s death, there was a
-most remarkable conflict of medical opinion. It was not until the
-post-mortem examination, held on Monday, the 13th of May, by Drs.
-Carter and Humphreys (the medical men who had attended the deceased
-during his illness), and Dr. Barron, that the cause of death was
-ascertained, and it was then found to be exhaustion, caused by
-gastro-enteritis or acute inflammation of the stomach and intestines,
-which, in their opinion, had been set up by an irritant poison, but
-might have been set up by his getting wet through.</p>
-
-<p>These doctors agreed that by the phrase &#8220;irritant
-poison&#8221; they meant any unwholesome food or drink.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310"
-id="Page_310">[310]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Up to the time of death the doctors, Messrs. Humphreys and Carter,
-had supposed and treated the patient for dyspepsia, notwithstanding
-that suggestions had been made to them by Michael Maybrick that the
-patient was being poisoned; and they said in their evidence that <em>but
-for the discovery of arsenic on the premises, they would have given a
-certificate of death from natural causes</em>.</p>
-
-<p>At the post-mortem examination they selected such portions of the
-body for analysis as they considered necessary, including, among other
-things, the stomach and its contents; and the analyst employed by the
-police (Mr. Davies) <em>found no arsenic in the stomach or its contents</em>,
-and was unable to discover any weighable traces of arsenic in any other
-portions of the body.</p>
-
-<p>About three weeks afterward the body was, by order of the Home
-Secretary, exhumed, and fresh portions of it were taken for analysis,
-some of which were examined by Mr. Davies and other parts<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span> by
-Dr. Stevenson, one of the Crown analysts.</p>
-
-<p>In those portions taken at the exhumation, the total result of the
-search for arsenic in the body was that Mr. Davies actually found
-unweighable arsenic, 2/100 of a grain, in the liver, and Dr. Stevenson
-76/1000 of a grain in the liver and 15/1000 in the intestines, making,
-when all added together, the total amount as found by Mr. Davies and
-Dr. Stevenson about one-tenth of a grain, made up of minute fractional
-portions of one-hundredths and one-thousandths.</p>
-
-<p>It was shown in evidence that the smallest fatal dose of arsenic
-ever recorded was two grains, which was in the case of a woman, and who
-presumably was not an arsenic-eater.</p>
-
-<p>It was shown in evidence that in the year 1888 Mrs. Maybrick had
-asked Dr. Hopper (who was at that time, and had been for many years,
-their regular medical attendant) to speak to Mr. Maybrick and prevent
-him taking certain medicines, which were<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span> doing him harm; that
-early in March she made the same appeal to Dr. Humphreys, suggesting
-at the time that Mr. Maybrick was taking a <em>white powder</em>, which she
-thought was strychnin.</p>
-
-<p>At the magisterial inquiry Dr. Humphreys stated that Mrs. Maybrick
-had, on the occasion of his being called in to the patient on the
-28th of April, also spoken to him about her husband taking this white
-powder, and that in consequence of this he asked Mr. Maybrick about
-taking strychnin and nux vomica.</p>
-
-<p>Counsel will find proof, in the evidence given at the trial by Dr.
-Hopper, Mr. Heaton, Nicholas Bateson, Esq., Capt. Richard Thompson,
-Thomas Stansell, and Sir James Poole, ex-Mayor of Liverpool, as to the
-arsenic habit of James Maybrick and his opportunities for obtaining
-the drug. [To which must now be added the statutory declaration of
-Valentine Charles Blake, son of the late Sir Valentine Blake, M.P.,
-that he, about two months prior to Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span> Maybrick&#8217;s death,
-had procured him 150 grains of arsenic.] It may be stated here that
-from the appearance of the little bottles in which the white arsenic
-was found, they had been in use for a long time and were such as would
-be found as sample bottles in the offices of business houses to which
-it is unlikely Mrs. Maybrick would have access.</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that the discovery of such a tiny quantity of
-arsenic in the body of a man addicted to such extraordinary habits
-might reasonably be accounted for by those habits.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Conflict of Medical Opinion</span></h3>
-
-<p>The conflict of medical opinion which was exhibited on this trial
-arose upon the point as to whether arsenic had been the cause of the
-gastro-enteritis, of which it was admitted that the man died.</p>
-
-<p>There was <em>no</em> conflict of medical opinion on the facts that
-the quantity found in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314"
-id="Page_314">[314]</a></span> body <em>was insufficient to cause death</em>,
-nor that gastro-enteritis might be set up by a vast variety of things
-besides arsenic&mdash;in fact, by any impure food or by excessive
-alcohol or by getting wet through. It was shown in evidence that Mr.
-Maybrick got wet through at the Wirrall Races on the 27th of April, and
-that he afterward went in his wet clothes to dinner at a friend&#8217;s
-on the other side of the Mersey.</p>
-
-<p>The conflict of medical opinion amounted to this, that the Crown
-called Drs. Carter and Humphreys, who both admitted that <em>they had
-never previously attended a case of arsenical poisoning, nor had
-ever before attended a post-mortem examination of a person whose
-death had been attributed to arsenic</em>&mdash;in short, that they had
-had no experience whatever. The Crown also called Dr. Stevenson (who
-had not attended the deceased, but had conducted the analysis of
-parts of the body) as an expert in poisoning, and he said, as to the
-symptoms during life: &#8220;<em>There is no distinctive diagnostic<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
-symptom of arsenical poisoning.</em> The diagnostic thing is finding the
-arsenic.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Crown also had Dr. Barron, who had attended the post-mortem, and
-who expressed himself unable to say that arsenic was the cause of the
-gastro-enteritis.</p>
-
-<p>These witnesses, it may be observed, gave their evidence both as to
-the symptoms during life and as to the appearances at the post-mortem
-<em>before</em> the medical evidence for the defense had been called.</p>
-
-<p>The witnesses called for the defense had none of them attended the
-deceased, but were called as experts in poisoning, viz., Dr. Tidy, a
-Crown analyst, Dr. Macnamara, and Professor Paul, who all gave positive
-evidence that neither the symptoms during life nor the appearance after
-death were such as <em>could be attributed to arsenical poisoning</em>; that,
-in fact, they pointed <em>away from</em>, instead of toward, arsenic being the
-cause of death.</p>
-
-<p>The evidence of these witnesses was<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span> summarized very fairly
-by Mr. Justice Stephen.</p>
-
-<p>In the face of such a conflict of medical opinion, it is submitted
-that Mr. Justice Stephen should have refused to allow the jury to
-return any verdict of guilty at all.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirections as to Cause of Death</span></h3>
-
-<p>On the first day of his summing-up, however, Mr. Justice Stephen
-told the jury as to the law under which they were to return their
-verdict: &#8220;You have been told that if you are not satisfied in
-your minds about poisoning&mdash;if you think he died from some other
-disease&mdash;then the case is not made out against the prisoner. It
-is a necessary step&mdash;it is <em>essential</em> to this charge&mdash;that
-the man <em>died of poison</em>, and the poison suggested is arsenic.
-This is the question you have to consider, and it must be the
-foundation of a judgment unfavorable to the prisoner that he died of
-arsenic.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317"
-id="Page_317">[317]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that Mr. Justice Stephen <em>misdirected</em> the jury when
-he told them to satisfy their minds whether he died from any other
-disease, inasmuch as the only question before the jury was whether <em>the
-cause of death was arsenic</em>.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The question for you is by what the illness was caused. Was
-it caused by arsenic or by some other means?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that that is a <em>misdirection</em>. It might have been
-put to a coroner&#8217;s jury, but it was not a question which should
-have been put to a jury at a criminal trial.</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that he <em>misdirected</em> the jury in not also telling
-them that it was <em>essential</em> to a verdict unfavorable to the prisoner
-that the arsenic of which he died <em>had been administered by her</em>,
-and also in not telling the jury that it was essential to a verdict
-unfavorable to the prisoner that, if she had administered any, she had
-done it with intent to destroy life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318"
-id="Page_318">[318]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misdirection to Ignore Medical
-Testimony</span></h3>
-
-<p>Mr. Justice Stephen then proceeded: &#8220;Now, let us see what the
-doctors say. Some say death was caused by arsenic, and others that
-it was not by arsenic&mdash;that he died of gastro-enteritis&#8221;;
-and he spoke of the medical evidence in a way which amounted to a
-direction to the jury that they were to treat it as <em>tainted with
-subtle partisanship</em>, and as evidence to which it was not necessary
-for them to attach <em>serious importance</em>. He, in fact, stated, and
-in so doing <em>misdirected</em> the jury, that though it was essential
-to a verdict unfavorable to the prisoner that he died of arsenic,
-that question was one which they, the jury, could come to <em>their own
-opinion about, without taking into consideration the opinion of the
-medical experts, who had positively stated that arsenic was not the
-cause of death</em>. In other words, he directed the jury that, as the
-medical experts could not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319"
-id="Page_319">[319]</a></span> agree that the cause of death was
-arsenical poisoning, it was for them to decide that question from their
-own &#8220;<em>knowledge of human nature</em>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>On the second day of the summing-up the judge told the jury (and
-it is submitted that it contains <em>gross misdirections</em>): &#8220;You
-must consider the case as <em>a mere medical case</em>, in which you are to
-decide whether the man did or did not die of arsenic according to
-the medical evidence. You must not consider it as <em>a mere chemical
-case</em>, in which you decide whether the man died from arsenic which was
-discovered as the result of a chemical analysis. You must decide it
-as <em>a great, high, and important case</em>, involving in itself not only
-medical and chemical questions, but embodying in itself <em>a most highly
-important moral question</em>&mdash;and by that term, moral question, I
-do not mean a question of what is right and wrong in a moral point of
-view, but questions in which human nature enters and in which <em>you
-must rely on your knowledge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320"
-id="Page_320">[320]</a></span> of human nature</em> in determining the
-resolution you arrive at.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have, in the first place, to consider&mdash;far be it
-from me to exclude or try to get others to exclude from their own minds
-what I must feel myself vividly conscious of&mdash;the evidence in
-this matter. I think every human being in this case must feel vividly
-conscious of what you have to consider, but I had almost better say
-you ought not to consider, for fear you might consider it too much,
-the horrible nature of the inquiry in which you are engaged. I feel
-that it is a dreadful thing that you are deliberately considering
-whether you are to convict that woman of really as horribly dreadful
-a crime as ever any poor wretch who stood in the dock was accused of.
-If she is guilty&mdash;I am saying if my object is rather to heighten
-your feeling of the solemnity of the circumstances, and in no way to
-prevent you from feeling as you do feel, and as you ought to feel. I
-could say a good many other things about the<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span> awful nature of the
-charge, but I do not think it will be necessary to do any one thing.
-Your own hearts must tell you what it is for a person <em>to go on
-administering poison</em> to a helpless, sick man, upon whom she has
-already inflicted a dreadful injury&mdash;an injury fatal to married
-life; the person who could do such a thing as that must be destitute of
-the least trace of human feeling.&#8221; And further on: &#8220;We have
-to consider this not in an unfeeling spirit&mdash;far from it&mdash;but
-in the spirit of people resolved to solve <em>by intellectual means an
-intellectual problem of great difficulty</em>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 529px;">
-<a id="plate12"></a>
-<img src="images/i349.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="noindent f80">Copyright by G. G. Rockwood, New York.</p>
-
-<p class="center noindent">HON. JOSEPH H. CHOATE,<br />
-American Ambassador at the Court of St. James, 1899&mdash;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Justice Stephen, in short, instead of putting to the jury for
-separate answers each of the following three questions:</p>
-
-<p>1. Did this man die of arsenic?</p>
-
-<p>2. Did Mrs. Maybrick administer that arsenic?</p>
-
-<p>3. Did she do it feloniously?</p>
-
-<p>invited them to return a verdict of &#8220;guilty&#8221; or
-&#8220;not guilty&#8221; upon a direction of law, wherein he
-told them that they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322"
-id="Page_322">[322]</a></span> were to decide it as <em>an intellectual
-problem</em>, on the question which, it is submitted, can be formulated
-thus:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Might this man have died of arsenic notwithstanding the
-opinion of the medical experts that he did <em>not</em> die of arsenic?&#8221;
-And the jury answered &#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that this was <em>a gross misdirection</em>.</p>
-
-<p>It may be interesting and applicable to quote from a paper read
-by Sir Fitzjames Stephen himself at the Science Association in 1884:
-&#8220;It is not to be denied that, so long as great ignorance exists
-on matters of physical and medical science in all classes, physicians
-will occasionally have to submit to the mortification of seeing not
-only the jury, but the bar and bench itself, receive with scornful
-incredulity or with self-satisfied ignorance evidence which ought to
-be received with respect and attention.&#8221; How prophetic this was
-as exemplified by his own attitude in this trial need not be pointed
-out.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323"
-id="Page_323">[323]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Misreception of Evidence</span></h3>
-
-<p>Under the head of Misreception of Evidence may be classed the
-observations of the judge, where, apparently in order to prevent
-the jury from being influenced <em>in favor of the prisoner</em>, owing to
-the small quantity of arsenic found in the body of the deceased, he
-mentioned <em>an instance of a dog</em> being poisoned, in the body of which,
-though it had taken a large number of grains of arsenic, no arsenic
-was found after its death. The judge, in other words, turned himself
-into a witness for the prosecution. The unfairness to the prisoner of
-such a course is obvious. Had the judge been an ordinary witness he
-might have been cross-examined to show, <i>e.g.</i>, that arsenic <em>passes
-away from the body of a dog much more quickly than from that of a
-man</em>, or that the circumstances as to time and quantity taken were
-such as to prove that there was no analogy between the two cases. As
-the matter stands, the judge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324"
-id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>&#8217;s recollection of an experiment
-<em>on a dog</em>, which had been made many years before, was meant to rebut
-a proposition much relied on by the defense, viz., that the small
-quantity of arsenic found in the body of the deceased was consistent
-with the view that he was <em>in the habit of taking arsenic</em>, rather than
-with the case for the Crown that he had been intentionally poisoned.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Cruel Misstatement by the Coroner</span></h3>
-
-<p>The inquest was formally opened by taking the evidence of the
-identification of the deceased by his brother, Michael Maybrick, and
-then adjourned for a fortnight, the coroner announcing that there
-had been a post-mortem examination by Dr. Humphreys, and that the
-result of that examination was that poison was found in the stomach
-of the deceased in such quantities as to justify further examination;
-that the stomach of the deceased, and its contents, would meanwhile
-be chemically analyzed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325"
-id="Page_325">[325]</a></span> and on the result of that analysis would
-depend the question whether or not criminal proceedings against some
-person would follow. Now the announcement that &#8220;poison had been
-found in the stomach of the deceased&#8221; was <em>contrary to fact</em>, and
-in consequence of this <em>cruel misstatement</em> the proceedings caused an
-immense amount of popular excitement and prejudice against the accused,
-who, being too ill to be removed, remained at Battlecrease House, in
-charge of the police, till the following Saturday morning, the 18th
-May, when a sort of court inquiry was opened in Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s
-bedroom by Colonel Bidwell, one of the county magistrates.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Medical Evidence for the Prosecution</span></h3>
-
-<p>The evidence of Dr. Arthur Richard Hopper, who had been Mr. and Mrs.
-Maybrick&#8217;s medical adviser for about seven years, was taken.
-He had not attended Mr. Maybrick during his last illness, but<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
-spoke about Mrs. Maybrick having asked him the year before to check
-her husband from taking <em>dangerous drugs</em>, and that Mr. Maybrick had
-admitted to him that he used to dose himself with anything his friends
-recommended, and <em>that he was used to the taking of arsenic</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Richard Humphreys spoke as to the symptoms of the illness and
-his prescriptions, and that he had not suspected poisoning until
-it was suggested to him and his colleague, Dr. Carter, and that he
-had <em>himself administered arsenic</em> to the deceased, in the form of
-Fowler&#8217;s solution, on the Sunday or Monday before death, and that
-he refused <em>a certificate of death only because arsenic had been found
-on the premises</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. William Carter spoke of being called the Tuesday before death,
-and he agreed with Dr. Humphreys that an irritant poison, most probably
-arsenic, was the cause of death.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Alexander Barron gave evidence to<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span> the effect that he was
-unable to ascertain <em>any particular poison</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Edward Davies, the analyst, was called, and gave evidence to the
-effect that he had found <em>no weighable arsenic</em> in the portions of the
-body selected at the post-mortem, but that he had subsequently <em>found
-one fiftieth of a grain of arsenic</em> in a part of the liver, nothing
-in the <em>stomach or its contents, but traces, not weighable</em>, in the
-intestines, and that he had found arsenic in some of the bottles and
-things found in the house after death and in the Valentine&#8217;s meat
-juice.</p>
-
-<p>The first issue which the jury at the trial had to determine was
-whether it was proved beyond <em>reasonable</em> doubt that the deceased died
-from arsenical poisoning.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Justice Stephen, in his summing-up, put this issue to the jury
-in the following words:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is <em>essential</em> to this charge that the man
-<em>died</em> of arsenic. This question must be the foundation of a
-verdict unfavorable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328"
-id="Page_328">[328]</a></span> to the prisoner, that he <em>died of
-arsenic</em>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It must be assumed that this was a question exclusively for medical
-experts, notwithstanding which the judge, in summing up, told the
-jury:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must not consider this <em>as a mere medical case</em>, in which
-you are to decide whether the man <em>did</em> or <em>did not die of arsenic
-poisoning according to the medical evidence</em>. You must <em>not consider
-it as a mere chemical case</em>, in which you decide whether the man
-<em>died from arsenic which was discovered as the result of a chemical
-analysis</em>. You must decide it as a <em>great and highly important case</em>,
-involving in itself not only medical and chemical questions, but
-involving in itself a most highly important <em>moral question</em>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Maybrick Died a Natural Death</span></h3>
-
-<p>Dr. Humphreys gave it as his opinion that the appearances at the
-post-mortem were <em>consistent with congestion</em> of the stomach<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span> not
-<em>necessarily caused by an irritant poison</em>, and that the symptoms
-during life were also consistent with congestion not caused by an
-irritant poison, but with acute inflammation of the stomach and
-intestines, produced by any cause whatever, and which would produce
-similar pathological results. He thought death was caused by some
-irritant poison, most likely arsenic, but he <em>would not like to swear
-that it was</em>. Dr. Humphreys&#8217; evidence, therefore, amounted
-to this, that the deceased died from gastro-enteritis, a natural
-disease, attributable to a variety of causes, and that, apart
-from the suggestions already referred to, he would have certified
-accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Humphreys&#8217; evidence was confirmed by that of Dr.
-Carter, who stated he came to the same conclusion as Dr. Humphreys,
-&#8220;but in a more positive manner.&#8221; Dr. Carter had
-assisted at the post-mortem examination, besides being in close
-attendance on the deceased for the five days preceding his death,
-which he attributed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330"
-id="Page_330">[330]</a></span> taking some irritant wine or decomposed
-meat, or to some grave error of diet; and when pressed as to whether
-he had any reason to suppose the article taken was poison, he
-explained that he did, but that by poison he meant something that was
-bad&mdash;it might be tinned meat, which the deceased had partaken of
-at the race dinner, or wine, or something which had set up gastritis.
-This witness&#8217;s account of the post-mortem was that they <em>found no
-arsenic</em>, but merely evidence of an irritant poison in the stomach and
-intestines, probably arsenic. Dr. Carter&#8217;s evidence was therefore
-<em>against poisoning by arsenic</em> being conclusively accepted as the
-cause of death, <em>although subsequently he said he had no doubt it was
-arsenic</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Barron&#8217;s evidence as to the cause of death was that he
-considered from the post-mortem appearances that death was due to
-inflammation of the stomach and bowels, due to some irritant poison,
-but that he was unable to point to the particular poison,<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span> apart
-from what he heard; and, pressed as to what he meant by poison, the
-witness stated that poison might be bad tinned meat, bad fish, mussels,
-or generally bad food of any kind, or alcohol taken in excess.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Chief Witness for the
-Prosecution</span></h3>
-
-<p>Dr. Stevenson expressed his opinion that the deceased died from
-arsenic poisoning, giving as his reasons that the main symptoms were
-those attributable to an irritant poison, and that they more closely
-resembled those of arsenic than of any other irritant of which he
-knew. He stated that he had known a great number of cases of poisoning
-by arsenic in every shape, and that he acted officially for the Home
-Office and Treasury in such cases. Dr. Stevenson was the witness of the
-prosecution, and gave his evidence <em>before</em> he had heard the evidence
-for the defense.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Stevenson also stated that the general<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span> symptoms of arsenic
-poisoning appeared <em>within half an hour</em> of taking some article of
-food or medicine, and were nausea, with a sinking sensation of the
-stomach; vomiting, which, unlike that produced by any ordinary article
-of food or drink that disagrees, afforded as a rule no relief and
-often came on again; that there was most commonly pain in the stomach,
-diarrhea; after a time the region of the stomach becomes tender under
-pressure, the patient becomes restless, often bathed in perspiration;
-the throat is complained of; pain in the throat, extending down to
-the stomach; the tongue becomes very foul in appearance and furred.
-There is not a bad smell as in the ordinary dyspeptic tongue, a
-rapid and feeble pulse, thirst, great straining at stool, vomits
-and evacuations frequently stained with blood. Of fourteen symptoms
-of arsenic poisoning named by Dr. Stevenson, Mr. Maybrick exhibited
-<em>only one</em>, according to the testimony of Dr. Stevenson. With the
-exception of the foul<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333"
-id="Page_333">[333]</a></span> tongue with malodorous breath, none of
-these symptoms coincided with those given by Drs. Humphreys and Carter,
-who were in attendance on the patient, while Dr. Stevenson <em>never saw
-him</em>.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Medical Evidence for Defense</span></h3>
-
-<p>Then came the evidence for the defense, rebutting the presumption
-that death was caused by arsenic. First in order being Dr. Tidy, the
-examiner for forensic medicine at the London Hospital, and also, like
-Dr. Stevenson, employed as an analyst by the Home Office. This witness
-stated that, within a few years, close upon <em>forty cases of arsenical
-poisoning</em> had come before him, which enabled him to indicate the
-recurring and distinctive indications formed in such cases.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Tidy describes the symptoms of arsenic poisoning as purging and
-vomiting in a very excessive degree; a burning pain in the abdomen,
-more marked in the pit of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334"
-id="Page_334">[334]</a></span> the stomach, and increased considerably
-by pressure, usually associated with pain in the calves of the legs;
-then, after a certain interval, suffusion of the eyes&mdash;the eyes
-fill with tears; great irritability about the eyelids; frequent
-intolerance of light.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Tidy added that there were three symptoms, such as cramps,
-tenesmus, straining, more or less present, but the prominent symptoms
-were those he had mentioned, especially the sickness, violent,
-incessant sickness, and that poisoning by arsenic was extremely simple
-to detect. Further, that he (Dr. Tidy) had known cases where one or
-more of the four symptoms mentioned had been absent, but he had never
-known a case in which all four symptoms were absent; and stated that he
-had followed every detail of the Maybrick case so far as he could, and
-had read all the depositions before the coroner and magistrate, and the
-account of the vomiting did not agree with his description of excessive
-and persistent vomiting, and was certainly<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span> not that kind of
-vomiting that takes place in a typical case of arsenical poisoning.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Tidy further stated that, taking the whole of the symptoms,
-they undoubtedly were <em>not</em> those of arsenical poisoning, nor did
-they point to such, but were perfectly consistent with death from
-gastro-enteritis, not caused by arsenical poisoning at all; and
-that, had he been called upon to advise, he should have said it was
-undoubtedly not arsenical poisoning, and that his view had been
-very much strengthened, to use his own words, by the result of the
-post-mortem, which distinctly pointed <em>away</em> from arsenic.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was the evidence, in the same direction, of Dr.
-Macnamara, the president of the Royal College of Surgeons, and its
-representative on the General Medical Council of the Kingdom, which is
-summed up in the general question put to him and his answer:</p>
-
-<p>Question: Now, bringing your best judgment to bear on the
-matter&mdash;you having<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336"
-id="Page_336">[336]</a></span> been present at the whole of this trial
-and heard the evidence&mdash;in your opinion, was this death from
-arsenical poisoning?</p>
-
-<p>Answer: <em>Certainly not</em>.</p>
-
-<p>In cross-examination Dr. Macnamara stated that, to the best of his
-judgment, Mr. Maybrick died of gastro-enteritis, not connected with
-arsenical poisoning, and which might have been caused by the wetting at
-the Wirrall races.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Paul, professor of medical jurisprudence at University College,
-Liverpool, and pathologist at the Royal Infirmary, stated he had made
-and assisted at something like three or four thousand post-mortem
-examinations, and that the symptoms in the present case agreed with
-cases of <em>gastro-enteritis pure and simple</em>; that the finding of
-the arsenic in the body, in the quantity mentioned in the evidence,
-was quite consistent with the case of a man who had taken arsenic
-medicinally, but <em>who had left it off for some time, even for several
-months</em>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337"
-id="Page_337">[337]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">A Toxicological Study</span></h3>
-
-<p>So positive were Dr. Tidy and Dr. Macnamara of their position as
-to the effect of arsenic on the human system, that they subsequently
-published &#8220;A Toxicological Study of the Maybrick Case,&#8221;
-thus challenging medical critics the world over to refute them. From
-this study the following, in tabular form, is taken, in order to
-contrast the symptoms from which Mr. Maybrick suffered with those
-which, it will be generally admitted, are the usual symptoms of
-arsenical poisoning:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="comparison of Mr. Maybrick's symptoms with those of arsenical poisoning">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc"><span class="smcap">Arsenical Poisoning</span></td>
- <td class="tdc"><span class="smcap">Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s Case</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Countenance tells of severe suffering.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not so described.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Very great depression an early symptom.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not present until toward the end.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Fire-burning pain in stomach.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not present.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Pain in stomach increased on pressure.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Pressure produced no pain.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Violent and uncontrollable vomiting independent of ingesta.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">&#8220;Hawking rather than vomiting;&#8221; irritability of stomach increased by ingesta.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Vomiting not relieved by such treatment as was used in Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s case.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Vomiting controlled by treatment.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">During vomiting burning heat and constriction felt in throat.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not present.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Blood frequently present in vomited and purged matter.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not present.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Intensely painful cramps in calves of the legs.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not present.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Pain in urinating.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not present.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Purging and tenesmus an early symptom.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not present until twelfth day of illness, and then once only.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Great intolerance of light.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not present.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Eyes suffused and smarting.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not present.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Eyeballs inflamed and reddened.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not present.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Eyelids intensely itchy.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not present.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Rapid and painful respiration an early symptom.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not present.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Pulse small, frequent, irregular, and imperceptible from the outset.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not so described until approach of death.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Arsenic easily detected in urine and f&aelig;ces.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Not detected, <em>although looked for</em>.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Tongue fiery red in its entirety, or fiery red at tip and margins and foul toward base.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Tongue not red; &#8220;simply filthy.&#8221;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl br">Early and remarkable reduction of temperature generally.</td>
- <td class="tdl hangtbl pl2">Temperature normal up to day preceding death.</td>
-</tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<p class="p2">&#8220;Maybrick&#8217;s symptoms are as unlike poisoning
-by arsenic <em>as it is possible for a case of dyspepsia to be. Everything
-distinctive of arsenic is absent.</em> The urine contained no arsenic. The
-symptoms are not even consistent with arsenical poisoning.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Regarding the treatment adopted by<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span> the medical men, and
-more especially Dr. Carter&#8217;s action with regard to the meat
-juice, we are justified in assuming that the doctors themselves, even
-<em>after</em> a certain suggestion had been made to them, did not come to the
-conclusion that the illness of Maybrick was the result of arsenic.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is noteworthy (1) that none was found in the stomach;
-(2) that Maybrick was in the habit of taking drugs, and among them
-arsenic.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thus two conclusions are forced upon us:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;(1) That the arsenic found in Maybrick&#8217;s body may have
-been taken in merely medicinal doses, and that probably it was so
-taken.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;(2) That the arsenic may have been taken a considerable
-time before either his death or illness, and that probably it was so
-taken.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Our toxicological studies have led us to the three following
-conclusions:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;(1) That the symptoms from which Maybrick suffered are
-consistent with any form of acute dyspepsia, but that they point
-<em>away</em> from, rather than toward, arsenic<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span> as the cause of such
-dyspeptic condition.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;(2) That the post-mortem appearances are indicative of
-inflammation, but that they emphatically point away from arsenic as the
-cause of death.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;(3) That the analysis fails to find more than <em>one-twentieth</em>
-part of a fatal dose of arsenic, and that the quantity so found <em>is
-perfectly consistent with its medicinal ingestion</em>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Medical Weakness of the
-Prosecution</span></h3>
-
-<p>Such was the complete evidence of the cause of death. The quantity
-of arsenic found in the body was <em>one-tenth</em> of a grain, and upon
-this evidence rests the first issue the jury had to consider, namely,
-whether it was proved beyond reasonable doubt that the deceased died
-from arsenical poisoning.</p>
-
-<p>As to the value of the medical testimony on both sides, Dr.
-Humphreys <em>admitted that he never attended a case of arsenical<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
-poisoning in his life</em>, nor of any irritant poison, and that he would
-have given a certificate of death from natural causes had he not been
-told of arsenic found in the meat juice.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Carter laid <em>no claim to any previous experience of poisoning by
-arsenic</em>, and was unable to say from the post-mortem examination that
-arsenic was the cause of death, which he could only attribute to an
-irritant of some kind, and he admitted that it was the evidence of Mr.
-Davies, as to the finding of arsenic in the body, which led him to the
-conclusion that arsenical poisoning had taken place.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Barron did not see the patient, but assisted at the post-mortem
-examination, and stated that, judging by the appearances and apart from
-what he had heard, he was unable to identify arsenic as the particular
-poison which had set up the inflammation.</p>
-
-<p>Now, assuming for a moment that this issue as to the cause of
-death rested entirely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342"
-id="Page_342">[342]</a></span> upon the uncontradicted testimony of
-these three doctors called for the prosecution, Humphreys, Carter,
-and Barron, the jury would not have been justified in coming to the
-conclusion that there was <em>no reasonable doubt</em> that arsenic poisoning
-was the cause of death. The doctors themselves had admitted that they
-were unable to arrive at that conclusion, apart from the evidence that
-arsenic was found in the body. <em>The idea of arsenical poisoning never
-occurred to them from the symptoms, until the use of arsenic was first
-suggested.</em></p>
-
-<p><em>The doctors could not say that</em> death resulted from arsenic
-poisoning, <em>and yet the jury have actually found that it did</em>, in the
-face of the opinions of three eminent medical experts, who say it did
-not.</p>
-
-<p>Even if these doctors had never been called at all for the
-defense, the jury were yet not justified in taking the evidence
-of Drs. Humphreys, Carter, and Barron, in the terms which they
-themselves never intended<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343"
-id="Page_343">[343]</a></span> to pledge themselves to, namely, to
-exclude <em>a reasonable doubt</em> that death was due to arsenic.</p>
-
-<p>Let us consider the position of the medical men called for the
-defense: Drs. Tidy, Macnamara, and Paul <em>are the highest authorities
-on medical and chemical jurisprudence in Great Britain</em>. No sort of
-hesitation or doubt attached to the opinions of any of them, and their
-experience of post-mortem examinations was referred to, as including
-in the practise of Dr. Tidy, the Crown analyst, some forty cases of
-arsenic poisoning alone. Dr. Macnamara indorsed the opinion of Dr.
-Tidy. In addition to that, there was on the same side the evidence
-of Dr. Paul, professor of medical jurisprudence and toxicology at
-University College, Liverpool, with an experience of three or four
-thousand post-mortem examinations. It is impossible to conjecture
-<em>by what process of reasoning</em> the jury could have come to the
-conclusion, upon the evidence before them, that it <em>was beyond a<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
-reasonable doubt that Mr. Maybrick</em> had met his death by arsenical
-poisoning.</p>
-
-<p><em>This volume of evidence before the jury pointed not only to a
-doubt as to the cause of death, but to a reasonable</em> conclusion that
-it was <em>not due to arsenical poisoning. It is inconceivable that the
-jury should have</em> found as they did, <em>except under the mandatory
-direction of the judge, which left them apparently no alternative but
-to substitute his opinions and judgment for</em> their own, so that on
-that <em>issue the finding was not so much the finding of the jury, to
-which the prisoner was by law entitled, but the finding of</em> the judge,
-<em>of whom the jury, abrogating their own functions, became the mere
-mouthpieces</em>.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Administration Of Arsenic</span></h3>
-
-<p>The consideration of the facts as given in evidence also
-covers the second issue which the jury had to determine, namely,
-whether, if arsenic poisoning was the cause of death, it was the
-prisoner who administered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345"
-id="Page_345">[345]</a></span> it with criminal intent. The evidence on
-this point was most inconclusive.</p>
-
-<p><em>No one saw the prisoner administer arsenic to her husband.</em></p>
-
-<p>She had no opportunity of giving her husband anything since one or
-two o&#8217;clock on Wednesday afternoon (8th of May), after which
-she was closely watched by the nurses. <em>It was not shown that any
-food or drink administered to the deceased by the prisoner contained
-arsenic.</em> It was not shown that the prisoner <em>had placed arsenic in
-any food or drink intended for her husband&#8217;s use</em>. Nor, in fact,
-was any found, although searched for, in any food or medicine of
-which Mr. Maybrick partook during his illness, <em>except the arsenic in
-Fowler&#8217;s solution, prescribed and administered by Dr. Humphreys
-himself</em>.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">The Fly-paper Episode</span></h3>
-
-<p>The episode of the fly-papers may be considered as one of the
-most important factors in the whole case. It supplies, so<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span> to
-speak, the only link between Mrs. Maybrick and arsenic, which, it
-is well known, forms their chief ingredient. It was proved she had
-purchased the fly-papers without any attempt at concealment, and,
-while soaking, they were exposed to everybody&#8217;s view, quite
-openly, in a room accessible to every inmate of the house. It was
-not suggested that Mrs. Maybrick bought the other large quantity of
-arsenic, between seventy and eighty grains, found in the house after
-death, <em>and no one came forward to speak to any such purchase</em>. It
-was found in the most unlikely places for Mrs. Maybrick to have
-selected, if she had intended to use it, and the evidence against her
-on this point is of <em>a particularly vague and indefinite character</em>.
-[Justice Stephen, commenting on the quantity of arsenic found on the
-premises, himself observed that it was a remarkable fact in the case,
-and which, it appeared to him, told most favorably than otherwise for
-the prisoner, as in the whole case, from first to last, there<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span> was
-no evidence at all that she had bought any poison, or had anything to
-do with the procuring of any, with the exception of those fly-papers.]
-The accusation rests entirely <em>on suspicion, insinuation, and
-circumstantial suggestions; not one tittle of evidence was adduced
-in support of it</em>, and yet the jury came to the conclusion, without
-allowing of any doubt in the matter, <em>that it was her hand which
-administered the poison</em>.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">How Mrs. Maybrick Accounts for The
-Fly-Papers</span></h3>
-
-<p>On this question the prisoner made a statement. She accounted
-for the soaking of the fly-papers upon grounds which were not only
-probable, but were corroborated by other incidents. That she was in
-the habit of using arsenic as a face wash is shown by the prescription
-in 1878, before her marriage, and of which the chemist made an entry
-in his books, which came to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348"
-id="Page_348">[348]</a></span> light, after the trial, under the
-following circumstances:</p>
-
-<p>Among the few articles which Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s brothers
-allowed to be taken from the house, they being the legatees of the
-deceased, was a Bible which had belonged to Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s
-father, and which, with some other relics, came into the hands of
-Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s mother, the Baroness von Roques, who, months
-afterward, happening to turn over the leaves of the Bible, came across
-a small piece of printed paper, evidently mislaid there, being a New
-York chemist&#8217;s label, with a New York doctor&#8217;s prescription
-written on the back, for an arsenical face wash &#8220;for external
-use, to be applied with a sponge twice a day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This prescription contained Fowler&#8217;s solution of arsenic,
-chlorate of potash, rose-water, and rectified spirits; and was
-again made up, on the 17th of July, 1878, by a French chemist, Mr.
-L. Brouant, 81 Avenue D&#8217;Eylau, Paris. It corroborates Mrs.
-Maybrick&#8217;s statement at the trial<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span> that the fly-papers
-were being soaked for the purpose alleged by her. If Mrs. Maybrick had
-obtained or purchased the seventy or eighty grains of arsenic found in
-the house after the death, it is inconceivable that she should have
-openly manufactured more arsenic with the fly-papers. At the time she
-prepared the statement she had reason to believe that the prescription
-had been lost. She knew, therefore, it would be impossible for her to
-corroborate her story about the face wash, and she could have omitted
-that incident altogether, and contented herself by saying that she
-learned the preparation while at school in Germany.</p>
-
-<p>[In further explanation I desire to state that during my
-girlhood, as well as subsequently, I suffered occasionally, due
-to gastric causes, from an irritation of the skin. One of my
-schoolmates, observing that it troubled me a good deal, offered me
-a face lotion of her own preparation, explaining that it was much
-more difficult to obtain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350"
-id="Page_350">[350]</a></span> an arsenical ingredient abroad than
-in America, and to avoid any consequent annoyance she extracted the
-necessary small quantity of arsenic by the soaking of fly-papers. I had
-never had occasion to do so myself, as I had a prescription from Dr.
-Bay; but when I discovered that I had mislaid or lost this, I recalled
-the method of my friend, being, however, wholly ignorant of what
-quantity might be required. The reason why I wanted a cosmetic at this
-time was that I was going to a fancy dress ball with my husband&#8217;s
-brother, and that my face was at that time in an uncomfortable state of
-irritation.&mdash;F. E. M.]</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Administration of Arsenic not Proved</span></h3>
-
-<p>Dealing with the question, did Mrs. Maybrick administer the arsenic,
-there is absolutely no evidence <em>that she did. It was not for the
-prisoner to prove her innocence.</em> She was seen neither to administer
-the arsenic nor to put it in the food or<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span> drink taken by the
-deceased, and this issue was found against her in the absence of any
-evidence in support.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Intent to Murder not Proved</span></h3>
-
-<p>Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s statement also bears strongly upon the
-question of administering with intent to murder. It is equally
-inconceivable that a guilty woman would have said anything about the
-white powder in the meat juice. She had nothing to gain by making such
-a statement, which could only land her in the sea of difficulties
-without any possible benefit, and here again the probabilities are
-entirely in her favor. It is beyond a doubt that Mr. Maybrick was in
-the habit, or had at some time or other been in the habit, of drugging
-himself with all sorts of medicines, including arsenic, and assumably
-he had obtained relief from it, or he would not have continued the
-practise.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Justice Stephen, in his summing-up,<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span> animadverted in very
-strong terms on the testimony of arsenic being used for cosmetic
-purposes, although expert chemists had certified to large use of
-arsenic for such a purpose. An immense degree of speculation must have
-entered the minds of the jury before they could find as they did, and
-bridge the gulf between the soaking of the fly-papers and the death
-of Mr. Maybrick, for it is quite evident that the soaking of the
-fly-papers was the one connection between the arsenic and the prisoner
-upon which all the subsequent events turned; and, if that be so, the
-importance is seen at once of the statement she made regarding that
-incident, and conclusive evidence as to which was subsequently found in
-the providentially recovered prescription.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 537px;">
-<a id="plate13"></a>
-<img src="images/i383.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="center noindent">SAMUEL V. HAYDEN,<br />
-Of Hayden &amp; Yarrell, American counsel of Mrs. Maybrick.</p>
-</div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Absence of Concealment by Prisoner</span></h3>
-
-<p>Another remarkable circumstance is the absence of any attempt at
-concealment on the prisoner&#8217;s part. The fly-papers were<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
-purchased openly from chemists who knew the Maybricks well, and they
-were left soaking in such a manner as at once to refute any suggestion
-of secrecy; and her voluntary statement about the white powder which
-she placed in the meat juice, as to which there was absolutely no
-evidence to connect her with its presence there, seems inconsistent
-with the theory the prosecution attempted to build upon <em>a number of
-assumptions of which the accuracy was not proved</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The question of the prisoner&#8217;s guilt was not capable of being
-reduced to any issue upon which the prosecution could bring to bear
-direct evidence; the most they were capable of doing was to show that
-the prisoner had <em>opportunities</em> of administering poison, which she
-<em>shared with every individual in the house</em>; further, that she had
-arsenic in her possession (and this was an <em>open secret</em>, as we have
-already explained with reference to the fly-papers); and, lastly,
-that she had the possibility of extracting<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span> arsenic in sufficient
-quantities to cause death, which was, however, extremely doubtful;
-and then the prosecution tried to complete this indirect evidence by
-proving that Mr. Maybrick died from arsenic poisoning, <em>which they
-signally failed to do</em>. The strong point of the prosecution, as they
-alleged, was that a bottle of Valentine&#8217;s meat juice had been
-seen in her hands on the night of Thursday, the 9th of May, and she
-replaced it in the bedroom, where it was afterward found by Michael
-Maybrick, and analyzed by Mr. Davis, who found half a grain of
-&#8220;arsenic in solution&#8221;; but there was <em>no direct proof</em>,
-such as is absolutely necessary to a conviction in a criminal case,
-<em>of the identity of the bottle</em> seen in Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s hands
-and that given to the analyst, and there was evidence that it had
-remained in the bedroom <em>within reach of anybody, Mr. Maybrick himself
-included</em>, for eighteen hours, and did not until the next day reach the
-hands of the analyst. These bottles are all alike in appearance,<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span>
-of similar turnip-like shape as the bovril bottles now sold, and it
-is clear there was more than one, because Dr. Humphreys says in his
-evidence that on visiting his patient on the 6th of May he found some
-of the Valentine&#8217;s meat extract had made Mr. Maybrick sick, which
-he was not surprised at, as it often made people sick; while Nurse
-Gore, speaking of the bottle seen in the hands of Mrs. Maybrick, said
-it was a <em>fresh, unused bottle</em>, which she had herself opened only an
-hour before.</p>
-
-<p>No evidence was given of what became of the opened bottle, and the
-presence of the arsenic having already been accounted for, and the fact
-recorded that the meat juice was not given to Mr. Maybrick, there is
-nothing to add to what has already been said, except that the account
-exactly dovetails with the prisoner&#8217;s own voluntary statement.</p>
-
-<p>Can any one, closely following the evidence throughout,
-fail to be impressed with the <em>inconsistency of Mrs.
-Maybrick&#8217;s conduct<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356"
-id="Page_356">[356]</a></span> in relation to her husband&#8217;s
-illness with a desire to murder him?</em> In all recorded cases of
-poisoning, the utmost precautions to screen the victim from observation
-have been observed. In the present instance it would seem as if just
-the reverse object had been aimed at. We find the prisoner <em>first
-giving the alarm about the attack</em> of illness; first sending for
-the doctors, brothers, and friends; first suggesting that something
-taken by her husband, some drug or medicine, was at the bottom of the
-mischief. We find the very first thing she does is to administer a
-mustard emetic&mdash;the last thing one would have expected if there
-had been a desire to poison him. If the prisoner <em>had wished to put
-everybody in the house, and the doctors themselves, on the scent of
-poison, she could not have acted differently</em>.</p>
-
-<p>[See also &#8220;Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s Own Analysis of the
-Meat-Juice Incident,&#8221; page <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357"
-id="Page_357">[357]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Some Important Deductions from Medical
-Testimony</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">From</span> Dr.
-Humphreys&#8217; testimony it appears that, after the days when he was
-away from the patient, and when Mrs. Maybrick had undisturbed access to
-her husband, <em>no symptoms whatever of arsenical poisoning appeared</em>.
-If, then, arsenic was administered by Mrs. Maybrick under the
-doctors&#8217; eyes, without their detecting it, <em>what value can attach
-to the testimony of the medical attendants</em> as to the cause of death,
-apart from the post-mortem examination, by which they practically admit
-<em>they allowed their judgment to be governed</em>?</p>
-
-<p>Does not the only alternative present itself that Drs. Humphreys
-and Carter are driven to the admission: &#8220;That the deceased
-died of arsenical poisoning we deduce, not from the <em>symptoms during
-life</em>, but from the fact that <em>arsenic was found in the body after
-death</em>&#8221;?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358"
-id="Page_358">[358]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Symptoms Due to Poisonous Drugs</span></h3>
-
-<p>From the medical testimony it appears that the following list of
-<em>poisonous drugs</em> was prescribed and administered to Mr. Maybrick
-shortly before his death:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>April 28, 1899, diluted prussic acid; April 29, Papaine&#8217;s
-iridin; May 3, morphia suppository; May 4, ipecacuanha; May 5, prussic
-acid; May 6, Fowler&#8217;s solution of arsenic; May 7, jaborandi
-tincture and antipyrin; May 10, sulfonal, cocain, and phosphoric
-acid.</p>
-
-<p>Also, during the same period, the following were prescribed:
-bismuth, double doses; nitro-glycerin; cascara; nitro-hydrochloric acid
-(composed of nux vomica, strychnin, and brucine); Plummer&#8217;s pills
-(containing antimony and calomel); bromide of potassium; tincture of
-hyoscyamus; tincture of henbane; chlorin.</p></div>
-
-<p>Now it will be observed that up to May 6, when Fowler&#8217;s
-solution of arsenic was administered, no symptom whatever had<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span> been
-observed <em>at all compatible with the effects of arsenic</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The sickness produced by the morphia continued after the taking of
-arsenic, and down the unfortunate man&#8217;s throat prussic acid,
-papaine, iridin, morphia, ipecacuanha, and arsenic, some of the most
-powerful drugs known to the pharmacop&#339;ia, had found their way by
-the advice of Dr. Humphreys, in less than a week, while he was told to
-eat nothing, and allay his thirst with a damp cloth; and the charge of
-poisoning is made against the prisoner because he is suggested to have
-had an irritant poison in his stomach, and minute traces of arsenic in
-some other organs, within five days afterward.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Death from Natural Causes</span></h3>
-
-<p>The whole history of the case, from its medical aspect, is
-consistent with the small quantity of arsenic found in the body being
-part of that prescribed by Dr. Humphreys,<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span> or the remains of that
-taken by the deceased himself, <em>there being no particle of evidence
-to show that he discontinued the habit of drugging himself almost up
-to the day of his death</em>. This is also in accord with the evidence of
-Dr. Carter, who attended at a later period, and, taken as a whole, the
-evidence of both of these doctors, as well as their treatment of the
-deceased, points to <em>death from natural causes</em>.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Prosecution&#8217;s Deductions from Post-mortem
-Analysis Misleading</span></h3>
-
-<p>The evidence of the prosecution in connection with the analysis
-was thoroughly <em>unreliable and misleading</em>. Dr. Stevenson&#8217;s
-difficulty was that, while two grains of arsenic was the smallest
-quantity capable of killing, the analyst had found only one-tenth of
-a grain, or the twentieth part of the smallest fatal dose, and, in
-substance, Dr. Stevenson proceeds to argue as follows:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) I found 0.015 grain of arsenic in 8 ounces of intestines.
-(There is no record as to what part of the intestines he examined.) I
-have weighed the intestines of some other person (not Mr. Maybrick),
-and find their entire weight to be so much. If, then, 8 ounces of Mr.
-Maybrick&#8217;s intestines yield 0.015 grain, the entire intestines
-(calculated from the weight of some one else&#8217;s intestines), had I
-analyzed them, would have yielded one-eleventh of a grain.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) Dr. Stevenson then proceeds to argue: &#8220;I found 0.026
-grain of arsenic in 4 ounces of liver. The entire liver weighed
-48 ounces, <em>therefore the entire liver contained 0.32 grain of
-arsenic</em>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) Dr. Stevenson argues further: &#8220;The intestines and liver,
-therefore, may be taken to contain together four-tenths of a grain of
-arsenic, and, having found four-tenths of a grain, I <em>assume</em> that
-the body at the time of death <em>probably contained a fatal dose of
-arsenic</em>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Such was the deduction Dr. Stevenson<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span> arrived at,
-<em>necessitating the assumption that arsenic was equally distributed in
-the intestines and liver</em>, whereas it is within the <em>personal knowledge
-of eminent men</em> (such as Drs. Tidy and Macnamara) that arsenic may be
-found after death <em>in one portion of the intestines, and not a trace
-of it in any other part</em>. That in arsenical poisoning the arsenic may
-be found in the rectum and in the duodenum, and in no other part, is
-beyond dispute, and the <em>fallacy of Dr. Stevenson&#8217;s process must
-be self-evident</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The witnesses for the prosecution themselves supply the proof of the
-unequal distribution of the arsenic in the liver.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Davies calculates the quantity in the whole liver as 0.130
-grain.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Stevenson, in his first experiment, puts it at 0.312 grain,
-and in his second experiment at 0.278 grain; in other words, Dr.
-Stevenson finds <em>double in one experiment</em> and considerably <em>more
-than double in another experiment, the quantity found by Mr. Davies,
-and it is upon this glaring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363"
-id="Page_363">[363]</a></span> miscalculation and discrepancy that
-the case for the prosecution was made</em> to rest, and Mrs. Maybrick was
-convicted.</p>
-
-<p>But with all this miscalculation the approximate amount of arsenic
-<em>can only be swelled up to four-tenths of a grain, less than one-fourth
-of a fatal dose</em>, and it was demonstrated that every other part of the
-body, urine, bile, stomach, contents of stomach, heart, lungs, spleen,
-fluid from mouth, and even bones, <em>were all found to be free from
-arsenic</em>.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Recapitulation Of Legal Points</span></h3>
-
-<p>The legal points of the case may thus conveniently be recapitulated
-under the following short heads:</p>
-
-<p>There <em>was no conclusive</em> evidence that Mr. Maybrick died from other
-than natural causes (the word &#8220;conclusive&#8221; being used in
-the sense of <em>free from doubt</em>).</p>
-
-<p>There was no conclusive evidence that he died from arsenical
-poisoning.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364"
-id="Page_364">[364]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There was no evidence that the prisoner administered or attempted to
-administer arsenic to him.</p>
-
-<p>There was no evidence that the prisoner, if she did administer or
-attempt to administer arsenic, did so with intent to murder.</p>
-
-<p>The judge, while engaged in his summing-up, placed himself in a
-position where his mind was open to the influence of public discussion
-and prejudice, to which was probably attributable the evident change in
-his summing-up between the first and second days; and he also <em>assumed
-facts against the prisoner which were not proved</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The jury were <em>allowed to separate</em> and frequent places of public
-resort and entertainment during such summing-up.</p>
-
-<p>The verdict was <em>against the weight of evidence</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The jury <em>did not give the prisoner the benefit of the doubt</em>
-suggested by the disagreement of expert witnesses on a material issue
-in the case.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365"
-id="Page_365">[365]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Home Secretary should have remitted the entire sentence by
-reason of his being satisfied that there existed a <em>reasonable doubt of
-her guilt</em>, which, had it been taken into consideration at the time,
-would have entitled <em>her to an acquittal</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The indictment contained no specific account of felonious
-administration of poison, and consequently the jury found the prisoner
-guilty of an offense <em>for which she was never tried</em>.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="sub">Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s Own Analysis<br />
-
-<span class="smcap f80">Of The Meat-Juice Incident</span></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot f90">
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">I said</span> in my statement
-to the Court, regarding this meat juice, that: &#8220;On Thursday
-night, the 9th, after Nurse Gore had given my husband beef juice, I
-went and sat on the bed by the side of him. He complained to me of
-feeling very sick, very weak, and very depressed, and again implored
-me to give him a powder, which he had referred to early in the evening
-and which I had then declined to give him. I was overwrought, terribly
-anxious, miserably unhappy, and his evident distress utterly unnerved
-me. He told me the powder would not harm him, and that I could put it
-in his food. I then consented. My lord, I had not one true or honest
-friend in the house. I had no one to consult and no one to advise me.
-I was deposed from my position as mistress in my own house and from
-the position of attending on my own husband, notwithstanding that he
-was so ill. Notwithstanding the evidence of nurses and servants, I may
-say that he wished to have me with him. [This desire was corroborated
-by the testimony of Nurse Callery.] He missed me whenever I was not
-with him. Whenever I went out of the room he asked for me, and for four
-days before he died I was not allowed to give him even a piece of ice
-without its being taken from my hand. When I found the powder I took it
-into the inner room, and in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367"
-id="Page_367">[367]</a></span> pushing through the door I upset the
-bottle, and, in order to make up the quantity of fluid spilled, I added
-a considerable quantity of water. On returning to the room I found my
-husband asleep, and I placed the bottle on the table by the window.
-When he awoke he had a choking sensation in his throat and vomiting.
-After that he appeared a little better. As he did not ask for the
-powder again, and as I was not anxious to give it to him, I removed
-the bottle from the small table, where it would attract his attention,
-to the top of the washstand, where he could not see it. There I left
-it until I believe Mr. Michael Maybrick took possession of it. Until a
-few minutes before Mr. Bryning made the terrible charge against me, no
-one in that house had informed me of the fact that a death certificate
-had been refused, or that a post-mortem examination had taken place,
-or that there was any reason to suppose that my husband died from
-other than natural causes. It was only when Mrs. Briggs alluded to the
-presence of arsenic in the meat juice that I was made aware of the
-[supposed] nature of the powder my husband had asked me to give him. I
-then attempted to make an explanation to Mrs. Briggs, such as I am now
-making to your lordship, when a policeman interrupted the conversation
-and put a stop to it.&#8221;</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Some time after my conviction there was found among my effects
-a prescription for a face wash containing arsenic (the existence
-of which Justice Stephen in his summing up flouted as an invention
-of mine to cover an intent to poison). This, together with the
-fact that on analysis no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368"
-id="Page_368">[368]</a></span> trace of &#8220;fiber&#8221; was
-discovered in the body or in any of the things containing poison found
-in the house, should remove the &#8220;fly-paper incident&#8221; from
-all serious consideration in its bearing on the case (although it was
-the source of all &#8220;suspicions&#8221; before death).</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illus" style="max-width: 536px;">
-<a id="plate14"></a>
-<img src="images/i401.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="center noindent">LEONIDAS D. YARRELL,<br />
-Of Hayden &amp; Yarrell, American counsel of Mrs. Maybrick.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>There remain only as &#8220;circumstantial evidence of guilt&#8221;
-what has come to be known as the &#8220;motive,&#8221; and the
-Valentine&#8217;s meat-juice incident. The &#8220;motive,&#8221;
-however regarded, was surely no incentive to murder, as inasmuch if
-I wanted to be free there was sufficient evidence in my possession
-(in the nature of infidelity and cruelty) to secure a divorce, and it
-was with regard to steps in that direction that I had already taken
-that I made confession to my husband after our reconciliation, and
-to which I referred as to the &#8220;wrong&#8221; I had done him,
-because of the publicity and ruin to his business it involved. The
-&#8220;motive,&#8221; which was introduced into the case in the form
-of a letter written by me on the 8th of<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span> May, in which I said
-that my husband was &#8220;sick unto death,&#8221; was made much of by
-the prosecution, and it led Justice Stephen to say, in his summing-up,
-&#8220;that I could not have known that my husband was dying (except
-I knew something others did not suspect), inasmuch as the doctors,
-from the diagnosis, did not consider the case at all serious.&#8221;
-The justice either did not or would not understand (though it was
-testified to) that the phrase, &#8220;sick unto death,&#8221; is
-an American colloquialism, especially of the South, and commonly
-employed with reference to any illness at all serious. Aside from the
-fact that all in attendance (save and except the doctors per their
-medical testimony) did regard it as serious&mdash;a witness for the
-prosecution, Mrs. Briggs, testified that she regarded him on that
-day as &#8220;dangerously ill,&#8221; and Mr. Michael Maybrick said
-that when he saw his brother on the evening of the same day &#8220;he
-was shocked by his appearance&#8221;&mdash;I may say here that the
-phrase &#8220;sick unto death,&#8221; in<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span> connection with other
-causes for apprehension, was prompted by the fact that my husband
-had told me that very morning that &#8220;he thought he was going to
-die&#8221;; and that this was his feeling is conclusively shown by the
-evidence of Dr. Humphreys at the inquest, when he testified that he
-had remarked to Mr. Michael Maybrick on this same Wednesday, the 8th
-of May: &#8220;I am not satisfied with your brother, and I will tell
-you why [not because the symptoms seemed serious to him, it will be
-observed]. <em>Your brother tells me he is going to die.</em>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>That I regarded the case as really serious is surely further
-supported by the fact that, notwithstanding the easy-going attitude
-of Dr. Humphreys, I had persisted in urging a consultation, which
-accordingly took place on the 7th. As to what the attending physicians
-<em>knew</em> or <em>did not know</em> about the medical aspects of the case, I
-confidently refer the reader to their own remarkable testimony.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371"
-id="Page_371">[371]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There then remains for serious consideration only what is known as
-the &#8220;Valentine meat-juice incident.&#8221; Of this I know no
-more now than is included in my statement at the trial&mdash;namely,
-that at my husband&#8217;s urgent, piteous request I placed a powder
-(which by his direction I took from a pocket in his vest, hanging in
-the adjoining room, which room until his sickness had been his private
-bedroom, he having been removed to mine as being larger and more airy)
-in a bottle of meat juice, no part of the contents of which were given
-him, and hence at the very most there could only have legally arisen
-from this act a charge of &#8220;intent to poison.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I do not assume that I can solve a problem that has puzzled so many
-able minds, but I trust I shall make clear that the prosecution can
-not acquit itself of the inference of &#8220;cooking&#8221; up a case
-against me with reference to this meat-juice incident:</p>
-
-<p>1. At the inquest, only a few days after<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span> the occurrence, Nurse
-Gore testified, &#8220;I could and did see <em>clearly</em> what Mrs. Maybrick
-did with the bottle,&#8221; though she failed to tell what she saw;
-and it is remarkable she was not further questioned on this point. At
-the magisterial inquiry and trial, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">per contra</i>, she testified that
-&#8220;she [I] pushed the door to conceal (note the animus) her [my]
-movements&#8221;; but on cross-examination she so far corrected herself
-as to say: &#8220;Mrs. Maybrick did <em>not</em> shut the dressing-room
-door.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>2. When I returned with the bottle to the sick-room, she
-testified that I placed it on the table in a &#8220;<em>surreptitious
-manner</em>,&#8221; though this action, according to her own testimony,
-happened while &#8220;she [I] raised her right hand and replaced the
-bottle on the table, while she [I] was talking to me [her].&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>If one wanted to do such an act &#8220;surreptitiously,&#8221; would
-one choose the moment of all others when by conversation one is calling
-attention to oneself? Do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373"
-id="Page_373">[373]</a></span> not the two things involve a direct
-contradiction?</p>
-
-<p>3. It is in evidence that an hour after I had placed the bottle on a
-little table in the window, I returned to the room and removed it from
-the table to the washstand (where it remained during most of the next
-day), lest the sight of it should renew Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s desire for
-it, as he had just awakened. Note how this bottle is juggled with by
-the witnesses for the prosecution.</p>
-
-<p>Michael Maybrick, at the inquest, in answer to the question,
-&#8220;Where did you find the Valentine&#8217;s meat juice?&#8221;
-replied: &#8220;I found it on a <em>little table mixed up</em> with
-<em>several other bottles</em>.&#8221; Note the particularity of this
-bottle being <em>mixed up with several other bottles</em>. Obviously he at
-this time, only a few days after the event, had a clear picture of
-the situation in his mind. In corroboration of this testimony that
-the bottle <em>he took</em> was on the table and <em>not on the washstand</em>,
-there is the testimony of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374"
-id="Page_374">[374]</a></span> Nurse Callery, who at the inquest
-stated: &#8220;My attention was called by her [Nurse Gore] to a
-bottle of Valentine&#8217;s meat juice, which was on <em>a table</em> in
-Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s room. I took a sample. I don&#8217;t know what
-became of the bottle of meat juice. I saw Mr. Michael Maybrick in the
-room before going off duty at 4.50 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> on
-Friday, but did not see him take the meat juice away.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nurse Gore gave her testimony at the inquest <em>after</em> the two
-others, and deposed that Mr. Michael Maybrick took the bottle from
-the <em>washstand</em> where I had placed it, thus contradicting Michael
-Maybrick, and in a way also Nurse Callery, who testified that Nurse
-Gore called her attention to a bottle on the <em>small table</em>. Obviously
-this difference introduces <em>two</em> bottles; but this would never answer
-the prosecution, and accordingly Mr. Michael Maybrick at the trial
-dropped <em>the table</em> sworn to at the inquest and fell in line with
-Nurse Gore in so far as to say: &#8220;It was standing on the<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
-<em>washstand</em>, and it was <em>among some other bottles</em>.&#8221; Note
-that, while he substitutes the <em>washstand</em> for the <em>table</em>, he still
-clings to the <em>bottles</em>&mdash;a most important circumstance&mdash;as
-it was indubitably shown that there were on the <em>washstand</em> only the
-&#8220;ordinary basins and jugs&#8221; (water pitchers). Obviously
-Mr. Michael Maybrick had not fully comprehended the purpose of the
-prosecution in &#8220;harmonizing&#8221; the testimony with that of
-Nurse Gore; the &#8220;bottles&#8221; were too clearly in his mind to
-be dropped without a distinct effort, and he naturally introduced them
-again; and, to fit in with the Nurse Gore and the amended Mr. Michael
-Maybrick evidence, Nurse Callery also changed front at the trial, and
-the <em>table</em> of her inquest testimony is also turned into a washstand.
-It is in evidence that as late as the 6th of May my husband took
-meat juice out of a bottle then in the room, the contents of which,
-however, did not agree with him, and upon the <em>order of Dr. Humphreys</em>
-its giving was discontinued, he adding that he was &#8220;not<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span>
-surprised,&#8221; as it was known not to agree with some people.</p>
-
-<p>Although this was the doctor&#8217;s order, Mr. Edwin Maybrick took
-it upon himself to procure a fresh bottle, and, distinctly against
-the same order, Nurse Gore set about to administer its contents.
-Subsequently a bottle of meat juice, half full, was found in a small
-wooden box with other bottles (one of them containing arsenic in
-solution) in my husband&#8217;s hat-box.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, though we are here undeniably dealing with <em>three</em>
-meat-juice bottles, only two were accounted for at the trial. What
-became of the third bottle? And which of the <em>three</em> was missing? Now,
-furthermore, it is in evidence that Nurse Callery handled one of these
-bottles (between the time that I placed one on the washstand and the
-time when Mr. Michael Maybrick, more than twelve hours later, took one
-either from the <em>table</em> or the <em>washstand</em> for analysis), for she took
-a sample of it, which she afterward threw away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377"
-id="Page_377">[377]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As all Valentine&#8217;s meat-juice bottles look alike, Mr. Michael
-Maybrick showed sufficient caution to say he could not identify
-the bottle shown him; but Nurse Gore, to whom every act of mine,
-however innocent, was fraught with &#8220;surreptitiousness&#8221;
-and &#8220;suspicion,&#8221; balked at no such scruples, but boldly
-testified that the bottle produced in court was the identical one that
-Mr. Michael Maybrick &#8220;took from the washstand,&#8221; even though
-at the inquest, when his memory was freshest, he testified that he took
-it from the <em>table</em>.</p>
-
-<p>It should be remembered that my statement to the court was to the
-effect that I put a powder (its nature unknown to me) in the meat-juice
-bottle I had in my hands. Yet no bottle containing a powder, or in
-which a powder had been dissolved, appeared in evidence. According
-to the analyst, the bottle submitted to him contained arsenic that
-had been put in in a state of solution. Now it resolves itself to
-this: either I uttered a falsehood about the<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span> powder and really
-introduced a solution, or another bottle was substituted for the one I
-had for two minutes in my possession.</p>
-
-<p>The contention of the prosecution was that I &#8220;invented&#8221;
-the powder, precisely as it was contended I &#8220;invented&#8221;
-the face-wash prescription which was found after the trial. If I
-&#8220;invented&#8221; the powder, how did I come by the solution? If
-I had had arsenic in solution in my possession, would I have gone to
-the trouble of making a solution for a face wash by the clumsy method
-of soaking fly-papers? Is not the proposition quite absurd on its
-face&mdash;that I should openly call attention to a method of arsenic
-extraction with the object of murder, when I already had the means at
-my command?</p>
-
-<p>Finally, let it be borne in mind, as stated by Justice Stephen
-himself as a remarkable fact, that no arsenic was traced to my
-procurement or found in my personal belongings (save and except
-the innocuous fly-papers), and I may add that no arsenic was<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span>
-traced to any one connected with the case, except to my husband.</p>
-
-<p>I say it is absolutely clear that the bottle of Valentine&#8217;s
-meat juice which Mr. Michael Maybrick took possession of and handed
-to Dr. Carter is not the same bottle which Nurse Gore saw me place on
-the washstand. There should be no flaw in the identity of the bottle
-which was handed to the analyst and the one which was in my hands, and
-I think the reader will say that it is impossible to conceive a greater
-<em>flaw in any evidence of identity</em> than shown by these witnesses of the
-prosecution at the inquest, when their minds were freshest as to their
-respective parts in this incident, and at the trial.</p>
-
-<p>Those of my readers who follow the analysis of the testimony as
-presented by Messrs. Lumley &amp; Lumley can hardly have failed
-to be impressed by the fact that I was surrounded by unscrupulous
-enemies, by people who not only had extraordinary knowledge as
-to where to look for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380"
-id="Page_380">[380]</a></span> deposits of arsenic, but also remarkable
-intuitions that arsenic had been administered before any evidence of
-the presence of poison had been analytically proven.</p>
-
-<p>In the above I have not aimed to make an analysis of the testimony,
-such as, for example, on the evidence now available, Lord Russell could
-have made; I have simply endeavored to satisfy my readers that I have
-substantial grounds for asserting my innocence before the world.</p>
-
-<p class="right mr2"><span class="smcap">Florence Elizabeth
-Maybrick.</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>MEMORIALS FOR RESPITE OF SENTENCE</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">From the Physicians of Liverpool</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">In</span> a memorial for
-respite of sentence of Mrs. Maybrick, which was signed by leading
-medical practitioners of Liverpool, the petitioners say in part:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;3. It was admitted by the medical testimony on behalf of
-the prosecution that the symptoms during life and the post-mortem
-appearances were in themselves insufficient to justify the conclusion
-that death was caused by arsenic, and that it was only the discovery of
-traces of that poison in certain parts of the viscera which eventually
-led to that conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;4. The arsenic so found in the viscera was less in quantity
-than <em>that found in any previous case of arsenical poisoning in which
-arsenic has been found at all</em>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382"
-id="Page_382">[382]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;5. There was indisputable evidence on the part of the defense
-that the deceased had been in the habit of taking arsenic, both
-medicinally and otherwise, for many years, and that the small quantity
-found in the viscera was inconsistent with the theory of a fatal dose
-at any time or times during the period covered by the illness of the
-deceased.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;6. Lastly, your memorialists agree with the evidence given
-by Dr. Tidy, Dr. Macnamara, and Mr. Paul on behalf of the defense,
-that the medical evidence on behalf of the prosecution <em>had entirely
-failed to prove that the death was due to arsenical poisoning at
-all</em>.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">From the Bars of Liverpool and
-London</span></h3>
-
-<p>Leading members of the Bars of Liverpool and London signed a
-memorial praying a reprieve of Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s sentence &#8220;on
-the ground ... of the great conflict of medical testimony as to the
-cause of death&#8221; of Mr. Maybrick.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">From Citizens of Liverpool</span></h3>
-
-<p>A petition for reprieve of Mrs. Maybrick&#8217;s sentence was signed
-by many and influential citizens of Liverpool. Among the reasons urged
-were:</p>
-
-<p>3. Lack of direct evidence of administration of arsenic.</p>
-
-<p>4. The weak case against prisoner on general facts unduly prejudiced
-by evidence of motive.</p>
-
-<p>5. Preponderance of medical testimony that death was ascribable to
-natural causes.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot f90">
-
-<p>[I feel a deep respect for the noble avowal given in the petition
-of the medical practitioners of Liverpool, who must have felt the
-honor of their profession at stake, and that their individual dignity
-and humanity were concerned. The feeling among the Bar on receipt
-of the verdict was an almost universal, if not a quite unanimous,
-one of surprise. I have already mentioned (in Part One), the change
-of attitude of the citizens of Liverpool toward me, as the trial
-progressed, from hostility to belief in my innocence.&mdash;F. E.
-M.]</p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384"
-id="Page_384">[384]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>NEW EVIDENCE</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Arsenic Sold to Maybrick by Druggist</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap2">MR. EDWIN GARNETT HEATON, a retired chemist
-(druggist), formerly carried on business at 14 Exchange Street East,
-Liverpool, for seventeen years; he retired from business in 1888. He
-testified at the trial:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Maybrick called frequently at my shop for about
-ten years or more, off and on. He used to get the tonic called
-&#8216;pick-me-up.&#8217; He would come to the shop, get it, and drink
-it up. He gave me a prescription which altered it, which I put up
-with <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">liquor arsenicalis</i>. He brought the prescription for the first
-few times; I used afterward to give it him at once, when he came into
-the shop and gave his order. I prepared the &#8216;pick-me-up&#8217;
-and added the stuff. At the beginning of giving it to<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span>
-him, a certain quantity of <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">liquor arsenicalis</i> was given, and as it
-continued it was gradually increased from first to last, so at the last
-it was 75 per cent. greater in quantity than it was originally. He used
-to get it from two to five times a day, and each containing 75 per
-cent. increase.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>This testimony of Mr. Heaton&#8217;s was challenged by the
-prosecution, and considerably nullified by the fact that he did not
-know Mr. Maybrick, his customer, by name, but identified him by a
-photograph. To show how inexorably one fatality after another was
-woven into the web of my tragic case, it is in order to state that Mr.
-Heaton&#8217;s connection with Mr. Maybrick could and would undoubtedly
-have been perfectly established but for what in the circumstances
-can be characterized only as a criminal blunder on the part of the
-police. In the printed police list of the score or more medicine
-bottles found locked in the private desk of Mr. Maybrick at his office
-was one entered as follows: &#8220;Spirit of salvolatile,<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span> Edwin
-G. Easton, Exchange Street East, Liverpool.&#8221; This misprint of
-Easton for Heaton escaped the attention of everybody at the trial, and
-thus prevented the defense from identifying most circumstantially Mr.
-Maybrick with Mr. Heaton&#8217;s customer who had the arsenic habit.</p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Arsenic Supplied to Maybrick by Manufacturing
-Chemist</span></h3>
-
-<p>About ten years ago Mr. Valentine Charles Blake, of Victoria
-Embankment, son of a well-known baronet and Member of Parliament,
-made a voluntary statutory declaration [corroborated on oath in every
-possible essential by William Bryer Nation, of No. 7 Lion Street, a
-manufacturing chemist and patentee], that Mr. Maybrick, about two
-months before his death, procured through him (Mr. Blake), from Mr.
-Nation&#8217;s supplies, as much as 150 grains of arsenic in various
-forms. Mr. Nation, assisted by Mr. Blake, had made certain<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span>
-chemical experiments in preparing ramie, the fiber of rhea grass, to
-serve as a substitute for cotton. Among other ingredients used was
-arsenic, some in pure form (white arsenic), some mixed with soot, and
-some mixed with charcoal. In January, 1889, the process was perfected,
-and some time during the same month Mr. Nation sent Mr. Blake to see
-Mr. Maybrick, to get his assistance in placing the product on the
-market. Mr. Maybrick was interested in the proposition and inquired
-closely into the nature of the process, what ingredients were used,
-etc. The deponent told him that, among other materials, arsenic was
-employed.</p>
-
-<p>Then, to quote the exact words of the deposition, Mr. Blake went on
-to say:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;14. The said Mr. Maybrick shortly afterward, during
-discussion at the same interview, asked me whether I had heard that
-many inhabitants of Styria, in Austria, habitually took arsenic
-internally and throve upon it. I said that I had heard so.<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span>
-He then spoke to me of De Quincey, the author of &#8216;Confessions
-of an Opium-Eater,&#8217; and asked me had I read the work. I said,
-&#8216;Yes,&#8217; and that I wondered De Quincey could have taken
-such a quantity as 900 drops of laudanum in a day. The said James
-Maybrick said, &#8216;One man&#8217;s poison is another man&#8217;s
-meat, and there is a so-called poison which is like meat and liquor to
-me whenever I feel weak and depressed. It makes me stronger in mind
-and in body at once,&#8217; or words to that effect. I ventured to ask
-him what it was. He answered, &#8216;I don&#8217;t tell everybody, and
-wouldn&#8217;t tell you, only you mentioned arsenic. It is arsenic. I
-take it when I can get it, but the doctors won&#8217;t put any into my
-medicine except now and then a trifle, that only tantalizes me,&#8217;
-or words to that effect. After a pause, during which I said nothing,
-the said James Maybrick said: &#8216;Since you use arsenic, can you
-let me have some? I find a difficulty in getting it here.&#8217; I
-answered that I had some by me, and that, since I had only used it
-for experiments which were now perfected, I had no further use for
-it, and he (Maybrick) was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389"
-id="Page_389">[389]</a></span> welcome to all I had left. He then asked
-me what it was worth, and offered to pay for it in advance. I replied
-that I had no license to sell drugs, and suggested that we should make
-it a <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">quid pro quo</i>. Mr. Maybrick was to do his best with the ramie
-grass product, and I was to make him a present of the arsenic I had.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;15. It was finally agreed that when I came to Liverpool
-again, as arranged I should bring with me and hand him the arsenic
-aforesaid.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;16. <i>In February, 1889</i>, I again called at the office of
-the said James Maybrick, in Liverpool, and, as promised, I handed
-him all the arsenic I had at my command, amounting to about 150
-grains, some of the &#8216;white&#8217; and some of the two kinds
-of &#8216;black&#8217; arsenic, in three separate paper packets. I
-told him to be careful, as he had &#8216;almost enough to poison
-a regiment.&#8217; When we separated the said James Maybrick took
-away the said arsenic with him, saying he was going home to his
-house at Aigburth, to which he invited me. Having a train to catch,
-I declined the invitation, promising to accept it on my next<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span> visit
-to Liverpool, but before that occurred I read of his death.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;17. After the wife of the said James Maybrick had been
-accused of his alleged murder, I wrote to Mr. Cleaver, her then
-solicitor, of Liverpool, to the effect that I could give some evidence
-which might be of use to his client, and I posted such letter but
-received no reply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;18. At this time I was intensely anxious as to the fate of
-my only son, Valentine Blake, who had in the previous year sailed
-on board the ship <cite>Melanasia</cite> from South Shields for Valparaiso,
-which ship was then very long overdue and unheard of. I eventually
-learned, as a result of a Board of Trade inquiry, that the said ship
-must have foundered with all hands, my only son included. At the
-time I wrote as aforesaid to Mr. Cleaver, my entire attention was
-engrossed in endeavoring to get news as to the ship which never came
-home, and I felt little interest in any other subject. Receiving
-no reply to my said letter to Mr. Cleaver, I took no further steps
-in the matter until, seeing recently in a newspaper that Mr.
-Jonathan E. Harris, of 95<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391"
-id="Page_391">[391]</a></span> Leadenhall Street, in the city of
-London, was now acting for Mrs. James Maybrick and her mother, the
-Baroness de Roques, I called at the offices of the said Mr. Harris and
-made to him a statement.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Depositions as to Mr. Maybrick&#8217;s Arsenic
-Habit</span></h3>
-
-<p>On August 10, Henry Bliss, former proprietor of Sefton Club and
-Chambers, Liverpool, made a sworn deposition, in which he said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Maybrick lived in the chambers on and off several months,
-and was in the habit of dosing himself. On one occasion he asked me
-to leave a prescription at a well-known Liverpool chemist&#8217;s to
-be made up by the time he left &#8216;Change. The chemist remarked:
-&#8216;He ought to be very careful and not take an overdose of
-it.&#8217;&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>On March 31, 1891, Franklin George Bancroft, artist and
-writer, of Columbia,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392"
-id="Page_392">[392]</a></span> S. C., made a sworn deposition, in which
-he said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;1. Between the years 1874 and 1876 I was personally
-acquainted with James Maybrick, late of Battlecrease House, Aigburth,
-near Liverpool, merchant, deceased, who was then living in Norfolk, Va.
-I was frequently in his company, and from time to time I have <em>seen
-him take from his vest pocket a case resembling a cigarette case,
-which contained a packet of white powders</em>, and place the contents of
-one such powder on several occasions into the glass of wine (usually
-Chablis, claret, or champagne) he was at the time drinking, and swallow
-the same.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;2. Seeing him take this powder, I did, on one occasion, ask
-him what it was, and the said James Maybrick replied, &#8216;Longevity
-and fair complexion, my boy!&#8217; and he subsequently informed me
-that the said white powders were composed of <em>arsenic</em> among other
-ingredients.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393"
-id="Page_393">[393]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Justice Stephen&#8217;s Retirement</span></h3>
-
-<p>There are also facts in relation to the judge who tried the case
-which, had they been anticipated at the time of the trial, could not
-have failed to have had some weight, directly or indirectly, on the
-minds of the jury; that is to say, his retirement from the Bench
-not long afterward, in April, 1891, when, to quote his own words in
-addressing the Bar, of whom he was taking leave, &#8220;he had been
-made acquainted with the fact that he was regarded by some as no longer
-physically capable of discharging his duties&#8221;; and it will be no
-matter of surprise, to those who have read critically the summing-up of
-Mr. Justice Stephen on this trial, to notice the entire change from a
-favorable bias between his address to the jury on the first days of the
-trial to the violent hostility shown at its conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>This change of front can be in a manner accounted for, as
-it had been suggested to the prisoner&#8217;s friends, by
-a conversation on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394"
-id="Page_394">[394]</a></span> the case between Mr. Justice Stephen and
-another member of the Bench, Mr. Justice Grantham, at a social meeting
-of an entirely private character.</p>
-
-<p>A mental malady was developed in the judge so soon after the trial
-that it was properly said to have been caused <em>by his brooding over
-it</em>, and this condition increased so rapidly and markedly that his
-<em>resignation was demanded</em>. It is but reasonable to suppose that
-the judge&#8217;s mental incapacity reached farther back than its
-discovery, and that the illogical and unjust summing-up was connected
-with the mental overthrow of the otherwise able judge. And it may be
-here added that Justice Stephen himself, in the second edition of the
-&#8220;General Views of the Criminal Law of England, 1890,&#8221; says,
-at page 173, that out of 979 cases tried before him, from January,
-1885, to September, 1889, &#8220;the case of Mrs. Maybrick was the only
-case in which there could be any doubt about the facts.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<p class="ph2">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a
-href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> May 12,
-1889.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a
-href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> A convict
-employed in washing, or other exceptional hard work, may have daily
-an extra allowance of 3 ounces bread, and cheese 1 ounce, as an
-intermediate meal between breakfast and dinner, and an extra allowance
-of 1 ounce of meat (uncooked) four times a week. A convict on entering
-the second-class will have the choice of 1 pint of tea (made of 1/6
-ounce tea, &frac12; ounce of sugar, 2 ounces milk) and 2 ounces
-additional bread instead of gruel for supper; and a convict on entering
-the first or special class will have, in addition to the above, the
-choice of 4 ounces of baked mutton cooked in its own liquor, not
-flavored or thickened, instead of boiled meat or soup, if she takes tea
-instead of gruel. The food is wholesome, but spoiled by overcooking.
-But oh, how jaded the palate becomes!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a
-href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Reproduced in
-the Introduction to Part Two.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a
-href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> The
-innocents&mdash;my children&mdash;one a baby of three years, the other
-a boy of seven, I had left behind in the world. They had been taught to
-believe that their mother was guilty, and, like their father, was to
-them dead. They have grown up to years of understanding under another
-name. I know nothing about them. When the pathos of all this touches
-the reader&#8217;s heart he will realize the tragedy of my case. </p>
-
-<p>During the early years of my imprisonment I received my
-children&#8217;s photographs once a year; also several friendly letters
-from Mr. Thomas Maybrick, with information about them. But as time
-passed on, these ceased altogether. When I could endure the silence no
-longer I instructed Mr. R. S. Cleaver, of Liverpool&mdash;who had been
-the solicitor in my case, and to whose unwavering faith and kindness
-I owe a debt I can never hope to repay&mdash;to write to Mr. Michael
-Maybrick to forward fresh photographs of my boy and girl. To this
-request Mr. Thomas Maybrick replied that Mr. Michael Maybrick refused
-to permit it. When the matter was further urged Mr. Michael Maybrick
-himself wrote to the governor to inform me that my son, who had been
-made acquainted with the history of the case, did not wish either his
-own or his sister&#8217;s photograph to be sent to me.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a
-href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> The jury was
-composed of three plumbers, two farmers, one milliner, one wood-turner,
-one provision dealer, one grocer, one ironmonger, one house-painter,
-and one baker.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a
-href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Mr.
-Maybrick&#8217;s dressing-room.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a
-href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Later evidence
-showed that Mr. Maybrick secured as much as 150 grains from one person,
-only about two months before his death.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="tnotes">
-
-<p class="ph3">Transcriber&#8217;s Note</p>
-
-<p>Minor punctuation errors (i.e. missing periods) have been corrected.
-Variations in hyphenation (i.e. hatbox and hat-box) present in the
-original text have been retained.
-
-In the illustration caption <a href="#plate7">following page 144</a>,
-Miss Mary A. Dodge was incorrectly referred to as &#8220;Miss Mary F.
-Dodge.&#8221; This has been corrected.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of My Fifteen Lost Years, by
-Florence Elizabeth Maybrick
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY FIFTEEN LOST YEARS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 55773-h.htm or 55773-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/5/7/7/55773/
-
-Produced by Cindy Horton and The Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law 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. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/bracer_72.png b/old/55773-h/images/bracer_72.png
deleted file mode 100644
index af07ee2..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/bracer_72.png
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index beb74c4..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i004.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i004.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 821bf97..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i004.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i005.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i005.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index fd370e5..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i005.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i039.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i039.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index fda2faa..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i039.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i057.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i057.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index b4f63dc..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i057.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i063.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i063.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index bbb4e1a..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i063.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i069.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i069.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index dae7c22..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i069.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i127.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i127.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index ce5567e..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i127.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i145.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i145.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index c55d23b..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i145.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i163.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i163.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 1f44f61..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i163.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i237.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i237.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index fc24088..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i237.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i271.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i271.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index bc9b7c4..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i271.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i281.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i281.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 1bb47b3..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i281.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i315.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i315.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 941a9cb..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i315.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i349.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i349.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index f63c8c6..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i349.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i383.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i383.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index f3102c4..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i383.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55773-h/images/i401.jpg b/old/55773-h/images/i401.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 1de3bf5..0000000
--- a/old/55773-h/images/i401.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ