Most righteous judge! a
sentence.—Come, prepare.
Merchant of Venice.
It is by no means my intention to
describe minutely the forms of a Scottish criminal
trial, nor am I sure that I could draw up an account
so intelligible and accurate as to abide the criticism
of the gentlemen of the long robe. It is enough
to say that the jury was impanelled, and the case
proceeded. The prisoner was again required to
plead to the charge, and she again replied, “Not
Guilty,” in the same heart-thrilling tone as
before.
The crown counsel then called two
or three female witnesses, by whose testimony it was
established, that Effie’s situation had been
remarked by them, that they had taxed her with the
fact, and that her answers had amounted to an angry
and petulant denial of what they charged her with.
But, as very frequently happens, the declaration of
the panel or accused party herself was the evidence
which bore hardest upon her case.
In the event of these tales ever finding
their way across the Border, it may be proper to apprise
the southern reader that it is the practice in Scotland,
on apprehending a suspected person, to subject him
to a judicial examination before a magistrate.
He is not compelled to answer any of the questions
asked of him, but may remain silent if he sees it
his interest to do so. But whatever answers he
chooses to give are formally written down, and being
subscribed by himself and the magistrate, are produced
against the accused in case of his being brought to
trial. It is true, that these declarations are
not produced as being in themselves evidence properly
so called, but only as adminicles of testimony, tending
to corroborate what is considered as legal and proper
evidence. Notwithstanding this nice distinction,
however, introduced by lawyers to reconcile this procedure
to their own general rule, that a man cannot be required
to bear witness against himself, it nevertheless usually
happens that these declarations become the means of
condemning the accused, as it were, out of their own
mouths. The prisoner, upon these previous examinations,
has indeed the privilege of remaining silent if he
pleases; but every man necessarily feels that a refusal
to answer natural and pertinent interrogatories, put
by judicial authority, is in itself a strong proof
of guilt, and will certainly lead to his being committed
to prison; and few can renounce the hope of obtaining
liberty by giving some specious account of themselves,
and showing apparent frankness in explaining their
motives and accounting for their conduct. It,
therefore, seldom happens that the prisoner refuses
to give a judicial declaration, in which, nevertheless,
either by letting out too much of the truth, or by
endeavouring to substitute a fictitious story, he
almost always exposes himself to suspicion and to contradictions,
which weigh heavily in the minds of the jury.
The declaration of Effie Deans was
uttered on other principles, and the following is
a sketch of its contents, given in the judicial form,
in which they may still be found in the Books of Adjournal.
The declarant admitted a criminal
intrigue with an individual whose name she desired
to conceal. “Being interrogated, what her
reason was for secrecy on this point? She declared,
that she had no right to blame that person’s
conduct more than she did her own, and that she was
willing to confess her own faults, but not to say
anything which might criminate the absent. Interrogated,
if she confessed her situation to any one, or made
any preparation for her confinement? Declares,
she did not. And being interrogated, why she
forbore to take steps which her situation so peremptorily
required? Declares, she was ashamed to tell her
friends, and she trusted the person she has mentioned
would provide for her and the infant. Interrogated
if he did so? Declares, that he did not do so
personally; but that it was not his fault, for that
the declarant is convinced he would have laid down
his life sooner than the bairn or she had come to
harm. Interrogated, what prevented him from keeping
his promise? Declares, that it was impossible
for him to do so, he being under trouble at the time,
and declines farther answer to this question.
Interrogated, where she was from the period she left
her master, Mr. Saddletree’s family, until her
appearance at her father’s, at St. Leonard’s,
the day before she was apprehended? Declares,
she does not remember. And, on the interrogatory
being repeated, declares, she does not mind muckle
about it, for she was very ill. On the question
being again repeated, she declares, she will tell
the truth, if it should be the undoing of her, so
long as she is not asked to tell on other folk; and
admits, that she passed that interval of time in the
lodging of a woman, an acquaintance of that person
who had wished her to that place to be delivered,
and that she was there delivered accordingly of a male
child. Interrogated, what was the name of that
person? Declares and refuses to answer this question.
Interrogated, where she lives? Declares, she
has no certainty, for that she was taken to the lodging
aforesaid under cloud of night. Interrogated,
if the lodging was in the city or suburbs? Declares
and refuses to answer that question. Interrogated,
whether, when she left the house of Mr. Saddletree,
she went up or down the street? Declares and
refuses to answer the question. Interrogated,
whether she had ever seen the woman before she was
wished to her, as she termed it, by the person whose
name she refuses to answer? Declares and replies,
not to her knowledge. Interrogated, whether this
woman was introduced to her by the said person verbally,
or by word of mouth? Declares, she has no freedom
to answer this question. Interrogated, if the
child was alive when it was born? Declares, that—God
help her and it!—it certainly was alive.
Interrogated, if it died a natural death after birth?
Declares, not to her knowledge. Interrogated,
where it now is? Declares, she would give her
right hand to ken, but that she never hopes to see
mair than the banes of it. And being interrogated,
why she supposes it is now dead? the declarant wept
bitterly and made no answer. Interrogated, if
the woman, in whose lodging she was, seemed to be a
fit person to be with her in that situation?
Declares, she might be fit enough for skill, but that
she was an hard-hearted bad woman. Interrogated,
if there was any other person in the lodging excepting
themselves two? Declares, that she thinks there
was another woman; but her head was so carried with
pain of body and trouble of mind, that she minded
her very little. Interrogated, when the child
was taken away from her? Declared that she fell
in a fever, and was light-headed, and when she came
to her own mind, the woman told her the bairn was dead;
and that the declarant answered, if it was dead it
had had foul play. That, thereupon, the woman
was very sair on her, and gave her much ill language;
and that the deponent was frightened, and crawled out
of the house when her back was turned, and went home
to Saint Leonard’s Crags, as well as a woman
in her condition dought.
i.e. Was able to do.
Interrogated, why she did not tell
her story to her sister and father, and get force
to search the house for her child, dead or alive?
Declares, it was her purpose to do so, but she had
not time. Interrogated, why she now conceals
the name of the woman, and the place of her abode?
The declarant remained silent for a time, and then
said, that to do so could not repair the skaith that
was done, but might be the occasion of more.
Interrogated, whether she had herself, at any time,
had any purpose of putting away the child by violence?
Declares, never; so might God be merciful to her—and
then again declares, never, when she was in her perfect
senses; but what bad thoughts the Enemy might put into
her brain when she was out of herself, she cannot
answer. And again solemnly interrogated, declares,
that she would have been drawn with wild horses, rather
than have touched the bairn with an unmotherly hand.
Interrogated, declares, that among the ill-language
the woman gave her, she did say sure enough that the
declarant had hurt the bairn when she was in the brain
fever; but that the declarant does not believe that
she said this from any other cause than to frighten
her, and make her be silent. Interrogated, what
else the woman said to her? Declares, that when
the declarant cried loud for her bairn, and was like
to raise the neighbours, the woman threatened her,
that they that could stop the wean’s skirling
would stop hers, if she did not keep a’ the founder.
i.e. The quieter.
And that this threat, with the manner
of the woman, made the declarant conclude, that the
bairn’s life was gone, and her own in danger,
for that the woman was a desperate bad woman, as the
declarant judged from the language she used.
Interrogated, declares, that the fever and delirium
were brought on her by hearing bad news, suddenly told
to her, but refuses to say what the said news related
to. Interrogated, why she does not now communicate
these particulars, which might, perhaps, enable the
magistrate to ascertain whether the child is living
or dead; and requested to observe, that her refusing
to do so, exposes her own life, and leaves the child
in bad hands; as also that her present refusal to
answer on such points is inconsistent with her alleged
intention to make a clean breast to her sister?
Declares, that she kens the bairn is now dead, or,
if living, there is one that will look after it; that
for her own living or dying, she is in God’s
hands, who knows her innocence of harming her bairn
with her will or knowledge; and that she has altered
her resolution of speaking out, which she entertained
when she left the woman’s lodging, on account
of a matter which she has since learned. And
declares, in general, that she is wearied, and will
answer no more questions at this time.”
Upon a subsequent examination, Euphemia
Deans adhered to the declaration she had formerly
made, with this addition, that a paper found in her
trunk being shown to her, she admitted that it contained
the credentials, in consequence of which she resigned
herself to the conduct of the woman at whose lodgings
she was delivered of the child. Its tenor ran
thus:—
“Dearest Effie,—I
have gotten the means to send to you by a woman who
is well qualified to assist you in your approaching
streight; she is not what I could wish her, but I
cannot do better for you in my present condition.
I am obliged to trust to her in this present calamity,
for myself and you too. I hope for the best,
though I am now in a sore pinch; yet thought is free—I
think Handie Dandie and I may queer the stifler* for
all that is come and gone.
* Avoid the gallows.
You will be angry for me writing this
to my little Cameronian Lily; but if I can but live
to be a comfort to you, and a father to your babie,
you will have plenty of time to scold.—Once
more, let none knew your counsel—my life
depends on this hag, d—n her—she
is both deep and dangerous, but she has more wiles
and wit than ever were in a beldam’s head, and
has cause to be true to me. Farewell, my Lily—Do
not droop on my account—in a week I will
be yours or no more my own.”
Then followed a postscript. “If
they must truss me, I will repent of nothing so much,
even at the last hard pinch, as of the injury I have
done my Lily.”
Effie refused to say from whom she
had received this letter, but enough of the story
was now known, to ascertain that it came from Robertson;
and from the date, it appeared to have been written
about the time when Andrew Wilson (called for a nickname
Handie Dandie) and he were meditating their first
abortive attempt to escape, which miscarried in the
manner mentioned in the beginning of this history.
The evidence of the Crown being concluded,
the counsel for the prisoner began to lead a proof
in her defence. The first witnesses were examined
upon the girl’s character. All gave her
an excellent one, but none with more feeling than
worthy Mrs. Saddletree, who, with the tears on her
cheeks, declared, that she could not have had a higher
opinion of Effie Deans, nor a more sincere regard
for her, if she had been her own daughter. All
present gave the honest woman credit for her goodness
of heart, excepting her husband, who whispered to
Dumbiedikes, “That Nichil Novit of yours is
but a raw hand at leading evidence, I’m thinking.
What signified his bringing a woman here to snotter
and snivel, and bather their Lordships? He should
hae ceeted me, sir, and I should hae gien them sic
a screed o’ testimony, they shauldna hae touched
a hair o’ her head.”
“Hadna ye better get up and
tryt yet?” said the Laird. “I’ll
mak a sign to Novit.”
“Na, na,” said Saddletree,
“thank ye for naething, neighbour—that
would be ultroneous evidence, and I ken what belangs
to that; but Nichil Novit suld hae had me ceeted debito
tempore.” And wiping his mouth with his
silk handkerchief with great importance, he resumed
the port and manner of an edified and intelligent
auditor.
Mr. Fairbrother now premised, in a
few words, “that he meant to bring forward his
most important witness, upon whose evidence the cause
must in a great measure depend. What his client
was, they had learned from the preceding witnesses;
and so far as general character, given in the most
forcible terms, and even with tears, could interest
every one in her fate, she had already gained that
advantage. It was necessary, he admitted, that
he should produce more positive testimony of her innocence
than what arose out of general character, and this
he undertook to do by the mouth of the person to whom
she had communicated her situation—by the
mouth of her natural counsellor and guardian—her
sister.—Macer, call into court, Jean, or
Jeanie Deans, daughter of David Deans, cowfeeder,
at Saint Leonard’s Crags!”
When he uttered these words, the poor
prisoner instantly started up, and stretched herself
half-way over the bar, towards the side at which her
sister was to enter. And when, slowly following
the officer, the witness advanced to the foot of the
table, Effie, with the whole expression of her countenance
altered, from that of confused shame and dismay, to
an eager, imploring, and almost ecstatic earnestness
of entreaty, with outstretched hands, hair streaming
back, eyes raised eagerly to her sister’s face,
and glistening through tears, exclaimed in a tone which
went through the heart of all who heard her,—“O
Jeanie, Jeanie, save me, save me!”
With a different feeling, yet equally
appropriated to his proud and self-dependent character,
old Deans drew himself back still farther under the
cover of the bench; so that when Jeanie, as she entered
the court, cast a timid glance towards the place at
which she had left him seated, his venerable figure
was no longer visible. He sate down on the other
side of Dumbiedikes, wrung his hand hard, and whispered,
“Ah, Laird, this is warst of a’—if
I can but win ower this part—I feel my head
unco dizzy; but my Master is strong in his servant’s
weakness.” After a moment’s mental
prayer, he again started up, as if impatient of continuing
in any one posture, and gradually edged himself forward
towards the place he had just quitted.
Jeanie in the meantime had advanced
to the bottom of the table, when, unable to resist
the impulse of affections she suddenly extended her
hand to her sister. Effie was just within the
distance that she could seize it with both hers, press
it to her mouth, cover it with kisses, and bathe it
in tears, with the fond devotion that a Catholic would
pay to a guardian saint descended for his safety;
while Jeanie, hiding her own face with her other hand,
wept bitterly. The sight would have moved a heart
of stone, much more of flesh and blood. Many
of the spectators shed tears, and it was some time
before the presiding Judge himself could so far subdue
his emotion as to request the witness to compose herself,
and the prisoner to forbear those marks of eager affection,
which, however natural, could not be permitted at
that time, and in that presence.
The solemn oath,—“the
truth to tell, and no truth to conceal, as far as
she knew or should be asked,” was then administered
by the Judge “in the name of God, and as the
witness should answer to God at the great day of judgment;”
an awful adjuration, which seldom fails to make impression
even on the most hardened characters, and to strike
with fear even the most upright. Jeanie, educated
in deep and devout reverence for the name and attributes
of the Deity, was, by the solemnity of a direct appeal
to his person and justice, awed, but at the same time
elevated above all considerations, save those which
she could, with a clear conscience, call Him to witness.
She repeated the form in a low and reverent, but distinct
tone of voice, after the Judge, to whom, and not to
any inferior officer of the Court, the task is assigned
in Scotland of directing the witness in that solemn
appeal which is the sanction of his testimony.
When the Judge had finished the established
form, he added in a feeling, but yet a monitory tone,
an advice, which the circumstances appeared to him
to call for.
“Young woman,” these were
his words, “you come before this Court in circumstances,
which it would be worse than cruel not to pity and
to sympathise with. Yet it is my duty to tell
you, that the truth, whatever its consequences may
be, the truth is what you owe to your country, and
to that God whose word is truth, and whose name you
have now invoked. Use your own time in answering
the questions that gentleman” (pointing to the
counsel) “shall put to you.—But remember,
that what you may be tempted to say beyond what is
the actual truth, you must answer both here and hereafter.”
The usual questions were then put
to her:—Whether any one had instructed
her what evidence she had to deliver? Whether
any one had given or promised her any good deed, hire,
or reward, for her testimony? Whether she had
any malice or ill-will at his Majesty’s Advocate,
being the party against whom she was cited as a witness?
To which questions she successively answered by a
quiet negative. But their tenor gave great scandal
and offence to her father, who was not aware that they
are put to every witness as a matter of form.
“Na, na,” he exclaimed,
loud enough to be heard, “my bairn is no like
the Widow of Tekoah—nae man has putten
words into her mouth.”
One of the judges, better acquainted,
perhaps, with the Books of Adjournal than with the
Book of Samuel, was disposed to make some instant
inquiry after this Widow of Tekoah, who, as he construed
the matter, had been tampering with the evidence.
But the presiding Judge, better versed in Scripture
history, whispered to his learned brother the necessary
explanation; and the pause occasioned by this mistake
had the good effect of giving Jeanie Deans time to
collect her spirits for the painful task she had to
perform.
Fairbrother, whose practice and intelligence
were considerable, saw the necessity of letting the
witness compose herself. In his heart he suspected
that she came to bear false witness in her sister’s
cause.
“But that is her own affair,”
thought Fairbrother; “and it is my business
to see that she has plenty of time to regain composure,
and to deliver her evidence, be it true, or be it
false—valeat quantum.”
Accordingly, he commenced his interrogatories
with uninteresting questions, which admitted of instant
reply.
“You are, I think, the sister of the prisoner?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Not the full sister, however?”
“No, sir—we are by different mothers.”
“True; and you are, I think, several years older
than your sister?”
“Yes, sir,” etc.
After the advocate had conceived that,
by these preliminary and unimportant questions, he
had familiarised the witness with the situation in
which she stood, he asked, “whether she had not
remarked her sister’s state of health to be
altered, during the latter part of the term when she
had lived with Mrs. Saddletree?”
Jeanie answered in the affirmative.
“And she told you the cause
of it, my dear, I suppose?” said Fairbrother,
in an easy, and, as one may say, an inductive sort
of tone.
“I am sorry to interrupt my
brother,” said the Crown Counsel, rising; “but
I am in your Lordships’ judgment, whether this
be not a leading question?”
“If this point is to be debated,”
said the presiding Judge, “the witness must
be removed.”
For the Scottish lawyers regard with
a sacred and scrupulous horror every question so shaped
by the counsel examining, as to convey to a witness
the least intimation of the nature of the answer which
is desired from him. These scruples, though founded
on an excellent principle, are sometimes carried to
an absurd pitch of nicety, especially as it is generally
easy for a lawyer who has his wits about him to elude
the objection. Fairbrother did so in the present
case.
“It is not necessary to waste
the time of the Court, my Lord since the King’s
Counsel thinks it worth while to object to the form
of my question, I will shape it otherwise.—Pray,
young woman, did you ask your sister any question
when you observed her looking unwell?—take
courage—speak out.”
“I asked her,” replied Jeanie, “what
ailed her.”
“Very well—take your
own time—and what was the answer she made?”
continued Mr. Fairbrother.
Jeanie was silent, and looked deadly
pale. It was not that she at any one instant
entertained an idea of the possibility of prevarication—it
was the natural hesitation to extinguish the last
spark of hope that remained for her sister.
“Take courage, young woman,”
said Fairbrother.—“I asked what your
sister said ailed her when you inquired?”
“Nothing,” answered Jeanie,
with a faint voice, which was yet heard distinctly
in the most distant corner of the Court-room,—such
an awful and profound silence had been preserved during
the anxious interval, which had interposed betwixt
the lawyer’s question and the answer of the
witness.
Fairbrother’s countenance fell;
but with that ready presence of mind, which is as
useful in civil as in military emergencies, he immediately
rallied.—“Nothing? True; you
mean nothing at first—but when you
asked her again, did she not tell you what ailed her?”
The question was put in a tone meant
to make her comprehend the importance of her answer,
had she not been already aware of it. The ice
was broken, however, and with less pause than at first,
she now replied,—“Alack! alack! she
never breathed word to me about it.”
A deep groan passed through the Court.
It was echoed by one deeper and more agonised from
the unfortunate father. The hope to which unconsciously,
and in spite of himself, he had still secretly clung,
had now dissolved, and the venerable old man fell
forward senseless on the floor of the Court-house,
with his head at the foot of his terrified daughter.
The unfortunate prisoner, with impotent passion, strove
with the guards betwixt whom she was placed.
“Let me gang to my father!—I will
gang to him—I will gang to him—he
is dead—he is killed—I hae killed
him!”—she repeated, in frenzied tones
of grief, which those who heard them did not speedily
forget.
Even in this moment of agony and general
confusion, Jeanie did not lose that superiority, which
a deep and firm mind assures to its possessor under
the most trying circumstances.
“He is my father—he
is our father,” she mildly repeated to those
who endeavoured to separate them, as she stooped,—shaded
aside his grey hairs, and began assiduously to chafe
his temples.
The Judge, after repeatedly wiping
his eyes, gave directions that they should be conducted
into a neighbouring apartment, and carefully attended.
The prisoner, as her father was borne from the Court,
and her sister slowly followed, pursued them with
her eyes so earnestly fixed, as if they would have
started from their sockets. But when they were
no longer visible, she seemed to find, in her despairing
and deserted state, a courage which she had not yet
exhibited.
“The bitterness of it is now
past,” she said, and then boldly, addressed
the Court. “My Lords, if it is your pleasure
to gang on wi’ this matter, the weariest day
will hae its end at last.”
The Judge, who, much to his honour,
had shared deeply in the general sympathy, was surprised
at being recalled to his duty by the prisoner.
He collected himself, and requested to know if the
panel’s counsel had more evidence to produce.
Fairbrother replied, with an air of dejection, that
his proof was concluded.
The King’s Counsel addressed
the jury for the crown. He said in a few words,
that no one could be more concerned than he was for
the distressing scene which they had just witnessed.
But it was the necessary consequence of great crimes
to bring distress and ruin upon all connected with
the perpetrators. He briefly reviewed the proof,
in which he showed that all the circumstances of the
case concurred with those required by the act under
which the unfortunate prisoner was tried: That
the counsel for the panel had totally failed in proving,
that Euphemia Deans had communicated her situation
to her sister: That, respecting her previous
good character, he was sorry to observe, that it was
females who possessed the world’s good report,
and to whom it was justly valuable, who were most
strongly tempted, by shame and fear of the world’s
censure, to the crime of infanticide: That the
child was murdered, he professed to entertain no doubt.
The vacillating and inconsistent declaration of the
prisoner herself, marked as it was by numerous refusals
to speak the truth on subjects, when, according to
her own story, it would have been natural, as well
as advantageous, to have been candid; even this imperfect
declaration left no doubt in his mind as to the fate
of the unhappy infant. Neither could he doubt
that the panel was a partner in this guilt. Who
else had an interest in a deed so inhuman? Surely
neither Robertson, nor Robertson’s agent, in
whose house she was delivered, had the least temptation
to commit such a crime, unless upon her account, with
her connivance, and for the sake of saying her reputation.
But it was not required of him, by the law, that he
should bring precise proof of the murder, or of the
prisoner’s accession to it. It was the very
purpose of the statute to substitute a certain chain
of presumptive evidence in place of a probation, which,
in such cases, it was peculiarly difficult to obtain.
The jury might peruse the statute itself, and they
had also the libel and interlocutor of relevancy to
direct them in point of law. He put it to the
conscience of the jury, that under both he was entitled
to a verdict of Guilty.
The charge of Fairbrother was much
cramped by his having failed in the proof which he
expected to lead. But he fought his losing cause
with courage and constancy. He ventured to arraign
the severity of the statute under which the young
woman was tried. “In all other cases,”
he said, “the first thing required of the criminal
prosecutor was to prove unequivocally that the crime
libelled had actually been committed, which lawyers
called proving the corpus delicti. But this
statute, made doubtless with the best intentions,
and under the impulse of a just horror for the unnatural
crime of infanticide, ran the risk of itself occasioning
the worst of murders, the death of an innocent person,
to atone for a supposed crime which may never have
been committed by anyone. He was so far from
acknowledging the alleged probability of the child’s
violent death, that he could not even allow that there
was evidence of its having ever lived.”
The King’s Counsel pointed to
the woman’s declaration; to which the counsel
replied—“A production concocted in
a moment of terror and agony, and which approached
to insanity,” he said, “his learned brother
well knew was no sound evidence against the party
who emitted it. It was true, that a judicial
confession, in presence of the Justices themselves,
was the strongest of all proof, insomuch that it is
said in law, that ’in confitentem nullae
sunt partes judicis.’ But this was true of
judicial confession only, by which law meant that
which is made in presence of the justices, and the
sworn inquest. Of extrajudicial confession, all
authorities held with the illustrious Farinaceus and
Matthaeus, ’confessio extrajudicialis in
se nulla est; et quod nullum est, non potest adminiculari.’
It was totally inept, and void of all strength and
effect from the beginning; incapable, therefore, of
being bolstered up or supported, or, according to
the law phrase, adminiculated, by other presumptive
circumstances. In the present case, therefore,
letting the extrajudicial confession go, as it ought
to go, for nothing,” he contended, “the
prosecutor had not made out the second quality of the
statute, that a live child had been born; and that,
at least, ought to be established before presumptions
were received that it had been murdered. If any
of the assize,” he said, “should be of
opinion that this was dealing rather narrowly with
the statute, they ought to consider that it was in
its nature highly penal, and therefore entitled to
no favourable construction.”
He concluded a learned speech, with
an eloquent peroration on the scene they had just
witnessed, during which Saddletree fell fast asleep.
It was now the presiding Judge’s
turn to address the jury. He did so briefly and
distinctly.
“It was for the jury,”
he said, “to consider whether the prosecutor
had made out his plea. For himself, he sincerely
grieved to say, that a shadow of doubt remained not
upon his mind concerning the verdict which the inquest
had to bring in. He would not follow the prisoner’s
counsel through the impeachment which he had brought
against the statute of King William and Queen Mary.
He and the jury were sworn to judge according to the
laws as they stood, not to criticise, or evade, or
even to justify them. In no civil case would
a counsel have been permitted to plead his client’s
case in the teeth of the law; but in the hard situation
in which counsel were often placed in the Criminal
Court, as well as out of favour to all presumptions
of innocence, he had not inclined to interrupt the
learned gentleman, or narrow his plea. The present
law, as it now stood, had been instituted by the wisdom
of their fathers, to check the alarming progress of
a dreadful crime; when it was found too severe for
its purpose it would doubtless be altered by the wisdom
of the Legislature; at present it was the law of the
land, the rule of the Court, and, according to the
oath which they had taken, it must be that of the jury.
This unhappy girl’s situation could not be doubted;
that she had borne a child, and that the child had
disappeared, were certain facts. The learned
counsel had failed to show that she had communicated
her situation. All the requisites of the case
required by the statute were therefore before the
jury. The learned gentleman had, indeed, desired
them to throw out of consideration the panel’s
own confession, which was the plea usually urged,
in penury of all others, by counsel in his situation,
who usually felt that the declarations of their clients
bore hard on them. But that the Scottish law
designed that a certain weight should be laid on these
declarations, which, he admitted, were quodammodo
extrajudicial, was evident from the universal practice
by which they were always produced and read, as part
of the prosecutor’s probation. In the present
case, no person who had heard the witnesses describe
the appearance of the young woman before she left Saddletree’s
house, and contrasted it with that of her state and
condition at her return to her father’s, could
have any doubt that the fact of delivery had taken
place, as set forth in her own declaration, which was,
therefore, not a solitary piece of testimony, but adminiculated
and supported by the strongest circumstantial proof.
“He did not,” he said,
“state the impression upon his own mind with
the purpose of biassing theirs. He had felt no
less than they had done from the scene of domestic
misery which had been exhibited before them; and if
they, having God and a good conscience, the sanctity
of their oath, and the regard due to the law of the
country, before their eyes, could come to a conclusion
favourable to this unhappy prisoner, he should rejoice
as much as anyone in Court; for never had he found
his duty more distressing than in discharging it that
day, and glad he would be to be relieved from the
still more painful task which would otherwise remain
for him.”
The jury, having heard the Judge’s
address, bowed and retired, preceded by a macer of
Court, to the apartment destined for their deliberation.