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Martin’s Close
We set out; John
Hill is not a man to withhold such information as he
possesses on any point, and you may gather from him much that is of
interest
about the people of the place and their talk. An unfamiliar word, or
one that
he thinks ought to be unfamiliar to you, he will usually spell — as
c-o-b cob,
and the like. It is not, however, relevant to my purpose to record his
conversation before the moment when we reached Martin’s Close. The bit
of land
is noticeable, for it is one of the smallest enclosures you are likely
to see —
a very few square yards, hedged in with quickset on all sides, and
without any
gate or gap leading into it. You might take it for a small cottage
garden long
deserted, but that it lies away from the village and bears no trace of
cultivation. It is at no great distance from the road, and is part of
what is
there called a moor, in other words, a rough upland pasture cut up into
largish
fields. ‘Why is this little
bit hedged off so?’ I asked, and John Hill (whose
answer I cannot represent as perfectly as I should like) was not at
fault.
‘That’s what we call Martin’s Close, sir: ‘tes a curious thing ‘bout
that bit
of land, sir: goes by the name of Martin’s Close, sir. M-a-r-t-i-n
Martin. Beg
pardon, sir, did Rector tell you to make inquiry of me ‘bout that,
sir?’ ‘Yes,
he did.’ ‘Ah, I thought so much, sir. I was tell’n Rector ‘bout that
last week,
and he was very much interested. It ‘pears there’s a murderer buried
there, sir,
by the name of Martin. Old Samuel Saunders, that formerly lived yurr at
what we
call South-town, sir, he had a long tale ‘bout that, sir: terrible
murder done
‘pon a young woman, sir. Cut her throat and cast her in the water down
yurr.’
‘Was he hung for it?’ ‘Yes, sir, he was hung just up yurr on the
roadway, by
what I’ve ‘eard, on the Holy Innocents’ Day, many ‘undred years ago, by
the man
that went by the name of the bloody judge: terrible red and bloody,
I’ve
‘eard.’ ‘Was his name Jeffreys, do you think?’ ‘Might be possible ’twas
— Jeffreys
— J-e-f — Jeffreys. I reckon ’twas, and the tale I’ve ‘eard many times
from Mr
Saunders — how this young man Martin — George Martin — was troubled
before his
crule action come to light by the young woman’s sperit.’ ‘How was that,
do you
know?’ ‘No, sir, I don’t exactly know how ’twas with it: but by what
I’ve ‘eard
he was fairly tormented; and rightly tu. Old Mr Saunders, he told a
history
regarding a cupboard down yurr in the New Inn. According to what he
related, this
young woman’s sperit come out of this cupboard: but I don’t racollact
the
matter.’ This was the sum of
John Hill’s information. We passed on, and in due
time I reported what I had heard to the Rector. He was able to show me
from the
parish account-books that a gibbet had been paid for in 1684, and a
grave dug
in the following year, both for the benefit of George Martin; but he
was unable
to suggest anyone in the parish, Saunders being now gone, who was
likely to
throw any further light on the story. Naturally, upon my
return to the neighbourhood of libraries, I made
search in the more obvious places. The trial seemed to be nowhere
reported. A
newspaper of the time, and one or more news-letters, however, had some
short
notices, from which I learnt that, on the ground of local prejudice
against the
prisoner (he was described as a young gentleman of a good estate), the
venue
had been moved from Exeter to London; that Jeffreys had been the judge,
and
death the sentence, and that there had been some ‘singular passages’ in
the
evidence. Nothing further transpired till September of this year. A
friend who
knew me to be interested in Jeffreys then sent me a leaf torn out of a
second-hand bookseller’s catalogue with the entry: JEFFREYS, JUDGE: Interesting
old MS. trial for murder, and so forth, from which I gathered, to
my
delight, that I could become possessed, for a very few shillings, of
what
seemed to be a verbatim report, in shorthand, of the Martin trial. I
telegraphed for the manuscript and got it. It was a thin bound volume,
provided
with a title written in longhand by someone in the eighteenth century,
who had
also added this note: ‘My father, who took these notes in court, told
me that
the prisoner’s friends had made interest with Judge Jeffreys that no
report
should be put out: he had intended doing this himself when times were
better,
and had shew’d it to the Revd Mr Glanvil, who incourag’d his design
very
warmly, but death surpriz’d them both before it could be brought to an
accomplishment.’ The initials W. G.
are appended; I am advised that the original
reporter may have been T. Gurney, who appears in that capacity in more
than one
State trial. This was all that I
could read for myself. After no long delay I heard
of someone who was capable of deciphering the shorthand of the
seventeenth
century, and a little time ago the typewritten copy of the whole
manuscript was
laid before me. The portions which I shall communicate here help to
fill in the
very imperfect outline which subsists in the memories of John Hill and,
I
suppose, one or two others who live on the scene of the events. The report begins
with a species of preface, the general effect of
which is that the copy is not that actually taken in court, though it
is a true
copy in regard to the notes of what was said; but that the writer has
added to
it some ‘remarkable passages’ that took place during the trial, and has
made
this present fair copy of the whole, intending at some favourable time
to
publish it; but has not put it into longhand, lest it should fall into
the
possession of unauthorized persons, and he or his family be deprived of
the
profit. The report then
begins: This case came on to
be tried on Wednesday, the 19th of November,
between our sovereign lord the King, and George Martin Esquire, of (I
take
leave to omit some of the place-names), at a sessions of oyer and
terminer and
gaol delivery, at the Old Bailey, and the prisoner, being in Newgate,
was
brought to the bar. Clerk of the
Crown. George Martin, hold up thy hand (which
he
did). Then the indictment
was read, which set forth that the prisoner, ‘not
having the fear of God before his eyes, but being moved and seduced by
the
instigation of the devil, upon the 15th day of May, in the 36th year of
our
sovereign lord King Charles the Second, with force and arms in the
parish
aforesaid, in and upon Ann Clark, spinster, of the same place, in the
peace of
God and of our said sovereign lord the King then and there being,
feloniously,
wilfully, and of your malice aforethought did make an assault and with
a
certain knife value a penny the throat of the said Ann Clark then and
there did
cut, of the which wound the said Ann Clark then and there did die, and
the body
of the said Ann Clark did cast into a certain pond of water situate in
the same
parish (with more that is not material to our purpose) against the
peace of our
sovereign lord the King, his crown and dignity.’ Then the prisoner
prayed a copy of the indictment. L.C.J. (Sir George Jeffreys). What is this? Sure you know that is
never
allowed. Besides, here is as plain indictment as ever I heard; you have
nothing
to do but to plead to it. Pris. My lord, I apprehend there may be matter of law arising out
of the
indictment, and I would humbly beg the court to assign me counsel to
consider
of it. Besides, my lord, I believe it was done in another case: copy of
the
indictment was allowed. L.C.J. What case was that? Pris. Truly, my lord, I have been kept close prisoner ever since I
came up
from Exeter Castle, and no one allowed to come at me and no one to
advise with. L.C.J. But I say, what was that case you allege? Pris. My lord, I cannot tell your lordship precisely the name of
the case,
but it is in my mind that there was such an one, and I would humbly
desire — L.C.J. All this is nothing. Name your case, and we will tell you
whether
there be any matter for you in it. God forbid but you should have
anything that
may be allowed you by law: but this is against law, and we must keep
the course
of the court. Att.-Gen. (Sir Robert Sawyer). My lord, we pray for the King that he
may be
asked to plead. Cl. of Ct. Are you guilty of the murder whereof you
stand indicted, or not guilty? Pris. My lord, I would humbly offer this to the court. If I plead
now, shall
I have an opportunity after to except against the indictment? L.C.J. Yes, yes, that comes after verdict: that will be saved to
you, and
counsel assigned if there be matter of law, but that which you have now
to do
is to plead. Then after some
little parleying with the court (which seemed strange
upon such a plain indictment) the prisoner pleaded Not Guilty. Cl. of Ct. Culprit. How wilt thou be tried? Pris. By God and my country. Cl. of Ct. God send thee a good deliverance. L.C.J. Why, how is this? Here has been a great to-do that you
should not be
tried at Exeter by your country, but be brought here to London, and now
you ask
to be tried by your country. Must we send you to Exeter again? Pris. My lord, I understood it was the form. L.C.J. So it is, man: we spoke only in the way of pleasantness.
Well, go on
and swear the jury. So they were sworn.
I omit the names. There was no challenging on the
prisoner’s part, for, as he said, he did not know any of the persons
called.
Thereupon the prisoner asked for the use of pen, ink, and paper, to
which the
L. C. J. replied: ‘Ay, ay, in God’s name let him have it.’ Then the
usual
charge was delivered to the jury, and the case opened by the junior
counsel for
the King, Mr Dolben. The Attorney–General
followed: May it please your
lordship, and you gentlemen of the jury, I am of
counsel for the King against the prisoner at the bar. You have heard
that he
stands indicted for a murder done upon the person of a young girl. Such
crimes
as this you may perhaps reckon to be not uncommon, and, indeed, in
these times,
I am sorry to say it, there is scarce any fact so barbarous and
unnatural but
what we may hear almost daily instances of it. But I must confess that
in this
murder that is charged upon the prisoner there are some particular
features
that mark it out to be such as I hope has but seldom if ever been
perpetrated
upon English ground. For as we shall make it appear, the person
murdered was a
poor country girl (whereas the prisoner is a gentleman of a proper
estate) and,
besides that, was one to whom Providence had not given the full use of
her
intellects, but was what is termed among us commonly an innocent or
natural:
such an one, therefore, as one would have supposed a gentleman of the
prisoner’s quality more likely to overlook, or, if he did notice her,
to be
moved to compassion for her unhappy condition, than to lift up his hand
against
her in the very horrid and barbarous manner which we shall show you he
used. Now to begin at the
beginning and open the matter to you orderly: About
Christmas of last year, that is the year 1683, this gentleman, Mr
Martin,
having newly come back into his own country from the University of
Cambridge,
some of his neighbours, to show him what civility they could (for his
family is
one that stands in very good repute all over that country), entertained
him
here and there at their Christmas merrymakings, so that he was
constantly
riding to and fro, from one house to another, and sometimes, when the
place of
his destination was distant, or for other reason, as the unsafeness of
the
roads, he would be constrained to lie the night at an inn. In this way
it
happened that he came, a day or two after the Christmas, to the place
where
this young girl lived with her parents, and put up at the inn there,
called the
New Inn, which is, as I am informed, a house of good repute. Here was
some
dancing going on among the people of the place, and Ann Clark had been
brought
in, it seems, by her elder sister to look on; but being, as I have
said, of
weak understanding, and, besides that, very uncomely in her appearance,
it was
not likely she should take much part in the merriment; and accordingly
was but
standing by in a corner of the room. The prisoner at the bar, seeing
her, one
must suppose by way of a jest, asked her would she dance with him. And
in spite
of what her sister and others could say to prevent it and to dissuade
her — L.C.J. Come, Mr Attorney, we are not set here to listen to tales of
Christmas
parties in taverns. I would not interrupt you, but sure you have more
weighty
matters than this. You will be telling us next what tune they danced to. Att. My lord, I would not take up the time of the court with what
is not
material: but we reckon it to be material to show how this unlikely
acquaintance begun: and as for the tune, I believe, indeed, our
evidence will
show that even that hath a bearing on the matter in hand. L.C.J. Go on, go on, in God’s name: but give us nothing that is
impertinent. Att. Indeed, my lord, I will keep to my matter. But, gentlemen,
having now
shown you, as I think, enough of this first meeting between the
murdered person
and the prisoner, I will shorten my tale so far as to say that from
then on
there were frequent meetings of the two: for the young woman was
greatly
tickled with having got hold (as she conceived it) of so likely a
sweetheart,
and he being once a week at least in the habit of passing through the
street
where she lived, she would be always on the watch for him; and it seems
they
had a signal arranged: he should whistle the tune that was played at
the
tavern: it is a tune, as I am informed, well known in that country, and
has a
burden, ‘Madam, will you walk, will you talk with me?’ L.C.J. Ay, I remember it in my own country, in Shropshire. It runs
somehow
thus, doth it not? [Here his lordship whistled a part of a tune, which
was very
observable, and seemed below the dignity of the court. And it appears
he felt
it so himself, for he said:] But this is by the mark, and I doubt it is
the
first time we have had dance-tunes in this court. The most part of the
dancing
we give occasion for is done at Tyburn. [Looking at the prisoner, who
appeared
very much disordered.] You said the tune was material to your case, Mr
Attorney, and upon my life I think Mr Martin agrees with you. What ails
you,
man? staring like a player that sees a ghost! Pris. My lord, I was amazed at hearing such trivial, foolish
things as they
bring against me. L.C.J. Well, well, it lies upon Mr Attorney to show whether they be
trivial
or not: but I must say, if he has nothing worse than this he has said,
you have
no great cause to be in amaze. Doth it not lie something deeper? But go
on, Mr
Attorney. Att. My lord and gentlemen — all that I have said so far you may
indeed
very reasonably reckon as having an appearance of triviality. And, to
be sure,
had the matter gone no further than the humouring of a poor silly girl
by a
young gentleman of quality, it had been very well. But to proceed. We
shall
make it appear that after three or four weeks the prisoner became
contracted to
a young gentlewoman of that country, one suitable every way to his own
condition, and such an arrangement was on foot that seemed to promise
him a
happy and a reputable living. But within no very long time it seems
that this
young gentlewoman, hearing of the jest that was going about that
countryside
with regard to the prisoner and Ann Clark, conceived that it was not
only an
unworthy carriage on the part of her lover, but a derogation to herself
that he
should suffer his name to be sport for tavern company: and so without
more ado
she, with the consent of her parents, signified to the prisoner that
the match
between them was at an end. We shall show you that upon the receipt of
this
intelligence the prisoner was greatly enraged against Ann Clark as
being the
cause of his misfortune (though indeed there was nobody answerable for
it but
himself), and that he made use of many outrageous expressions and
threatenings
against her, and subsequently upon meeting with her both abused her and
struck
at her with his whip: but she, being but a poor innocent, could not be
persuaded to desist from her attachment to him, but would often run
after him
testifying with gestures and broken words the affection she had to him:
until
she was become, as he said, the very plague of his life. Yet, being
that
affairs in which he was now engaged necessarily took him by the house
in which
she lived, he could not (as I am willing to believe he would otherwise
have
done) avoid meeting with her from time to time. We shall further show
you that
this was the posture of things up to the 15th day of May in this
present year.
Upon that day the prisoner comes riding through the village, as of
custom, and
met with the young woman: but in place of passing her by, as he had
lately
done, he stopped, and said some words to her with which she appeared
wonderfully pleased, and so left her; and after that day she was
nowhere to be
found, notwithstanding a strict search was made for her. The next time
of the
prisoner’s passing through the place, her relations inquired of him
whether he
should know anything of her whereabouts; which he totally denied. They
expressed to him their fears lest her weak intellects should have been
upset by
the attention he had showed her, and so she might have committed some
rash act
against her own life, calling him to witness the same time how often
they had
beseeched him to desist from taking notice of her, as fearing trouble
might
come of it: but this, too, he easily laughed away. But in spite of this
light
behaviour, it was noticeable in him that about this time his carriage
and
demeanour changed, and it was said of him that he seemed a troubled
man. And
here I come to a passage to which I should not dare to ask your
attention, but
that it appears to me to be founded in truth, and is supported by
testimony deserving
of credit. And, gentlemen, to my judgement it doth afford a great
instance of
God’s revenge against murder, and that He will require the blood of the
innocent. [Here Mr Attorney
made a pause, and shifted with his papers: and it was
thought remarkable by me and others, because he was a man not easily
dashed.] L.C.J. Well, Mr Attorney, what is your instance? Att. My lord, it is a strange one, and the truth is that, of all
the cases
I have been concerned in, I cannot call to mind the like of it. But to
be
short, gentlemen, we shall bring you testimony that Ann Clark was seen
after
this 15th of May, and that, at such time as she was so seen, it was
impossible
she could have been a living person. [Here the people
made a hum, and a good deal of laughter, and the Court
called for silence, and when it was made] — L.C.J. Why, Mr Attorney, you might save up this tale for a week; it
will be
Christmas by that time, and you can frighten your cook-maids with it
[at which
the people laughed again, and the prisoner also, as it seemed]. God,
man, what
are you prating of — ghosts and Christmas jigs and tavern company — and
here is
a man’s life at stake! [To the prisoner]: And you, sir, I would have
you know
there is not so much occasion for you to make merry neither. You were
not
brought here for that, and if I know Mr Attorney, he has more in his
brief than
he has shown yet. Go on, Mr Attorney. I need not, mayhap, have spoken
so
sharply, but you must confess your course is something unusual. Att. Nobody knows it better than I, my lord: but I shall bring it
to an end
with a round turn. I shall show you, gentlemen, that Ann Clark’s body
was found
in the month of June, in a pond of water, with the throat cut: that a
knife
belonging to the prisoner was found in the same water: that he made
efforts to
recover the said knife from the water: that the coroner’s quest brought
in a
verdict against the prisoner at the bar, and that therefore he should
by course
have been tried at Exeter: but that, suit being made on his behalf, on
account
that an impartial jury could not be found to try him in his own
country, he
hath had that singular favour shown him that he should be tried here in
London.
And so we will proceed to call our evidence. Then the facts of
the acquaintance between the prisoner and Ann Clark
were proved, and also the coroner’s inquest. I pass over this portion
of the
trial, for it offers nothing of special interest. Sarah Arscott was
next called and sworn. Att. What is your occupation? S. I keep the New Inn at — . Att. Do you know the prisoner at the bar? S. Yes: he was often at our house since he come first at
Christmas of
last year. Att. Did you know Ann Clark? S. Yes, very well. Att. Pray, what manner of person was she in her appearance? S. She was a very short thick-made woman: I do not know what
else you
would have me say. Att. Was she comely? S. No, not by no manner of means: she was very uncomely, poor
child! She
had a great face and hanging chops and a very bad colour like a puddock. L.C.J. What is that, mistress? What say you she was like? S. My lord, I ask pardon; I heard Esquire Martin say she looked
like a
puddock in the face; and so she did. L.C.J. Did you that? Can you interpret her, Mr Attorney? Att. My lord, I apprehend it is the country word for a toad. L.C.J. Oh, a hop-toad! Ay, go on. Att. Will you give an account to the jury of what passed between
you and
the prisoner at the bar in May last? S. Sir, it was this. It was about nine o’clock the evening
after that Ann
did not come home, and I was about my work in the house; there was no
company
there only Thomas Snell, and it was foul weather. Esquire Martin came
in and
called for some drink, and I, by way of pleasantry, I said to him,
“Squire,
have you been looking after your sweetheart?” and he flew out at me in
a
passion and desired I would not use such expressions. I was amazed at
that,
because we were accustomed to joke with him about her. L.C.J. Who, her? S. Ann Clark, my lord. And we had not heard the news of his
being
contracted to a young gentlewoman elsewhere, or I am sure I should have
used
better manners. So I said nothing, but being I was a little put out, I
begun
singing, to myself as it were, the song they danced to the first time
they met,
for I thought it would prick him. It was the same that he was used to
sing when
he came down the street; I have heard it very often: ‘Madam, will
you walk,
will you talk with me?’ And it fell out that I needed something
that was in
the kitchen. So I went out to get it, and all the time I went on
singing, something
louder and more bold-like. And as I was there all of a sudden I thought
I heard
someone answering outside the house, but I could not be sure because of
the
wind blowing so high. So then I stopped singing, and now I heard it
plain,
saying, ‘Yes, sir, I will walk, I will talk with you,’ and I
knew the
voice for Ann Clark’s voice. Att. How did you know it to be her voice? S. It was impossible I could be mistaken. She had a dreadful
voice, a
kind of a squalling voice, in particular if she tried to sing. And
there was
nobody in the village that could counterfeit it, for they often tried.
So,
hearing that, I was glad, because we were all in an anxiety to know
what was
gone with her: for though she was a natural, she had a good disposition
and was
very tractable: and says I to myself, ‘What, child! are you returned,
then?’
and I ran into the front room, and said to Squire Martin as I passed
by,
‘Squire, here is your sweetheart back again: shall I call her in?’ and
with
that I went to open the door; but Squire Martin he caught hold of me,
and it
seemed to me he was out of his wits, or near upon. ‘Hold, woman,’ says
he, ‘in
God’s name!’ and I know not what else: he was all of a shake. Then I
was angry,
and said I, ‘What! are you not glad that poor child is found?’ and I
called to
Thomas Snell and said, ‘If the Squire will not let me, do you open the
door and
call her in.’ So Thomas Snell went and opened the door, and the wind
setting
that way blew in and overset the two candles that was all we had
lighted: and Esquire
Martin fell away from holding me; I think he fell down on the floor,
but we
were wholly in the dark, and it was a minute or two before I got a
light again:
and while I was feeling for the fire-box, I am not certain but I heard
someone
step ‘cross the floor, and I am sure I heard the door of the great
cupboard
that stands in the room open and shut to. Then, when I had a light
again, I see
Esquire Martin on the settle, all white and sweaty as if he had
swounded away,
and his arms hanging down; and I was going to help him; but just then
it caught
my eye that there was something like a bit of a dress shut into the
cupboard
door, and it came to my mind I had heard that door shut. So I thought
it might
be some person had run in when the light was quenched, and was hiding
in the
cupboard. So I went up closer and looked: and there was a bit of a
black stuff
cloak, and just below it an edge of a brown stuff dress, both sticking
out of
the shut of the door: and both of them was low down, as if the person
that had them
on might be crouched down inside. Att. What did you take it to be? S. I took it to be a woman’s dress. Att. Could you make any guess whom it belonged to? Did you know
anyone who
wore such a dress? S. It was a common stuff, by what I could see. I have seen many
women
wearing such a stuff in our parish. Att. Was it like Ann Clark’s dress? S. She used to wear just such a dress: but I could not say on
my oath it
was hers. Att. Did you observe anything else about it? S. I did notice that it looked very wet: but it was foul
weather
outside. L.C.J. Did you feel of it, mistress? S. No, my lord, I did not like to touch it. L.C.J. Not like? Why that? Are you so nice that you scruple to feel
of a wet
dress? S. Indeed, my lord, I cannot very well tell why: only it had a
nasty ugly
look about it. L.C.J. Well, go on. S. Then I called again to Thomas Snell, and bid him come to me
and catch
anyone that come out when I should open the cupboard door, ‘for,’ says
I,
‘there is someone hiding within, and I would know what she wants.’ And
with
that Squire Martin gave a sort of a cry or a shout and ran out of the
house
into the dark, and I felt the cupboard door pushed out against me while
I held
it, and Thomas Snell helped me: but for all we pressed to keep it shut
as hard
as we could, it was forced out against us, and we had to fall back. L.C.J. And pray what came out — a mouse? S. No, my lord, it was greater than a mouse, but I could not
see what it
was: it fleeted very swift over the floor and out at the door. L.C.J. But come; what did it look like? Was it a person? S. My lord, I cannot tell what it was, but it ran very low, and
it was of
a dark colour. We were both daunted by it, Thomas Snell and I, but we
made all
the haste we could after it to the door that stood open. And we looked
out, but
it was dark and we could see nothing. L.C.J. Was there no tracks of it on the floor? What floor have you
there? S. It is a flagged floor and sanded, my lord, and there was an
appearance
of a wet track on the floor, but we could make nothing of it, neither
Thomas
Snell nor me, and besides, as I said, it was a foul night. L.C.J. Well, for my part, I see not — though to be sure it is an
odd tale she
tells — what you would do with this evidence. Att. My lord, we bring it to show the suspicious carriage of the
prisoner
immediately after the disappearance of the murdered person: and we ask
the
jury’s consideration of that; and also to the matter of the voice heard
without
the house. Then the prisoner
asked some questions not very material, and Thomas
Snell was next called, who gave evidence to the same effect as Mrs
Arscott, and
added the following: Att. Did anything pass between you and the prisoner during the
time Mrs
Arscott was out of the room? Th. I had a piece of twist in my pocket. Att. Twist of what? Th. Twist of tobacco, sir, and I felt a disposition to take a
pipe of
tobacco. So I found a pipe on the chimney-piece, and being it was
twist, and in
regard of me having by an oversight left my knife at my house, and me
not
having over many teeth to pluck at it, as your lordship or anyone else
may have
a view by their own eyesight — L.C.J. What is the man talking about? Come to the matter, fellow!
Do you
think we sit here to look at your teeth? Th. No, my lord, nor I would not you should do, God forbid! I
know your
honours have better employment, and better teeth, I would not wonder. L.C.J. Good God, what a man is this! Yes, I have better
teeth, and
that you shall find if you keep not to the purpose. Th. I humbly ask pardon, my lord, but so it was. And I took upon
me,
thinking no harm, to ask Squire Martin to lend me his knife to cut my
tobacco.
And he felt first of one pocket and then of another and it was not
there at
all. And says I, ‘What! have you lost your knife, Squire?’ And up he
gets and
feels again and he sat down, and such a groan as he gave. ‘Good God!’
he says,
‘I must have left it there.’ ‘But,’ says I, ‘Squire, by all appearance
it is not
there. Did you set a value on it,’ says I, ‘you might have it cried.’
But he
sat there and put his head between his hands and seemed to take no
notice to
what I said. And then it was Mistress Arscott come tracking back out of
the
kitchen place. Asked if he heard
the voice singing outside the house, he said ‘No,’
but the door into the kitchen was shut, and there was a high wind: but
says
that no one could mistake Ann Clark’s voice. Then a boy, William
Reddaway, about thirteen years of age, was called,
and by the usual questions, put by the Lord Chief Justice, it was
ascertained
that he knew the nature of an oath. And so he was sworn. His evidence
referred
to a time about a week later. Att. Now, child, don’t be frighted: there is no one here will
hurt you if
you speak the truth. L.C.J. Ay, if he speak the truth. But remember, child, thou art in
the
presence of the great God of heaven and earth, that hath the keys of
hell, and
of us that are the king’s officers, and have the keys of Newgate; and
remember,
too, there is a man’s life in question; and if thou tellest a lie, and
by that
means he comes to an ill end, thou art no better than his murderer; and
so
speak the truth. Att. Tell the jury what you know, and speak out. Where were you
on the
evening of the 23rd of May last? L.C.J. Why, what does such a boy as this know of days. Can you mark
the day,
boy? W. Yes, my lord, it was the day before our feast, and I was to
spend
sixpence there, and that falls a month before Midsummer Day. One of the Jury. My lord, we cannot hear what he says. L.C.J. He says he remembers the day because it was the day before
the feast
they had there, and he had sixpence to lay out. Set him up on the table
there.
Well, child, and where wast thou then? W. Keeping cows on the moor, my lord. But, the boy using
the country speech, my lord could not well apprehend
him, and so asked if there was anyone that could interpret him, and it
was
answered the parson of the parish was there, and he was accordingly
sworn and
so the evidence given. The boy said: ‘I was on the moor
about six o’clock, and sitting behind a bush of
furze near a pond of water: and the prisoner came very cautiously and
looking
about him, having something like a long pole in his hand, and stopped a
good
while as if he would be listening, and then began to feel in the water
with the
pole: and I being very near the water — not above five yards — heard as
if the
pole struck up against something that made a wallowing sound, and the
prisoner
dropped the pole and threw himself on the ground, and rolled himself
about very
strangely with his hands to his ears, and so after a while got up and
went
creeping away.’ Asked if he had had
any communication with the prisoner, ‘Yes, a day or
two before, the prisoner, hearing I was used to be on the moor, he
asked me if
I had seen a knife laying about, and said he would give sixpence to
find it.
And I said I had not seen any such thing, but I would ask about. Then
he said
he would give me sixpence to say nothing, and so he did.’ L.C.J. And was that the sixpence you were to lay out at the feast? W. Yes, if you please, my lord. Asked if he had
observed anything particular as to the pond of water,
he said, ‘No, except that it begun to have a very ill smell and the
cows would
not drink of it for some days before.’ Asked if he had ever
seen the prisoner and Ann Clark in company
together, he began to cry very much, and it was a long time before they
could
get him to speak intelligibly. At last the parson of the parish, Mr
Matthews,
got him to be quiet, and the question being put to him again, he said
he had
seen Ann Clark waiting on the moor for the prisoner at some way off,
several
times since last Christmas. Att. Did you see her close, so as to be sure it was she? W. Yes, quite sure. L.C.J. How quite sure, child? W. Because she would stand and jump up and down and clap her
arms like a
goose [which he called by some country name: but the parson explained
it to be
a goose]. And then she was of such a shape that it could not be no one
else. Att. What was the last time that you so saw her? Then the witness
began to cry again and clung very much to Mr Matthews,
who bid him not be frightened. And so at last he
told his story: that on the day before their feast
(being the same evening that he had before spoken of) after the
prisoner had
gone away, it being then twilight and he very desirous to get home, but
afraid
for the present to stir from where he was lest the prisoner should see
him,
remained some few minutes behind the bush, looking on the pond, and saw
something dark come up out of the water at the edge of the pond
farthest away
from him, and so up the bank. And when it got to the top where he could
see it
plain against the sky, it stood up and flapped the arms up and down,
and then
run off very swiftly in the same direction the prisoner had taken: and
being
asked very strictly who he took it to be, he said upon his oath that it
could
be nobody but Ann Clark. Thereafter his
master was called, and gave evidence that the boy had
come home very late that evening and been chided for it, and that he
seemed
very much amazed, but could give no account of the reason. Att. My lord, we have done with our evidence for the King. Then the Lord Chief
Justice called upon the prisoner to make his
defence; which he did, though at no great length, and in a very halting
way,
saying that he hoped the jury would not go about to take his life on
the
evidence of a parcel of country people and children that would believe
any idle
tale; and that he had been very much prejudiced in his trial; at which
the
L.C.J. interrupted him, saying that he had had singular favour shown to
him in
having his trial removed from Exeter, which the prisoner acknowledging,
said
that he meant rather that since he was brought to London there had not
been
care taken to keep him secured from interruption and disturbance. Upon
which
the L.C.J. ordered the Marshal to be called, and questioned him about
the safe
keeping of the prisoner, but could find nothing: except the Marshal
said that
he had been informed by the underkeeper that they had seen a person
outside his
door or going up the stairs to it: but there was no possibility the
person
should have got in. And it being inquired further what sort of person
this
might be, the Marshal could not speak to it save by hearsay, which was
not
allowed. And the prisoner, being asked if this was what he meant, said
no, he
knew nothing of that, but it was very hard that a man should not be
suffered to
be at quiet when his life stood on it. But it was observed he was very
hasty in
his denial. And so he said no more, and called no witnesses. Whereupon
the Attorney–General
spoke to the jury. [A full report of what he said is given, and, if
time
allowed, I would extract that portion in which he dwells on the alleged
appearance of the murdered person: he quotes some authorities of
ancient date,
as St Augustine de cura pro mortuis gerenda (a favourite book
of
reference with the old writers on the supernatural) and also cites some
cases
which may be seen in Glanvil’s, but more conveniently in Mr Lang’s
books. He
does not, however, tell us more of those cases than is to be found in
print.] The Lord Chief
Justice then summed up the evidence for the jury. His
speech, again, contains nothing that I find worth copying out: but he
was
naturally impressed with the singular character of the evidence, saying
that he
had never heard such given in his experience; but that there was
nothing in law
to set it aside, and that the jury must consider whether they believed
these
witnesses or not. And the jury after a
very short consultation brought the prisoner in
Guilty. So he was asked
whether he had anything to say in arrest of judgement,
and pleaded that his name was spelt wrong in the indictment, being
Martin with
an I, whereas it should be with a Y. But this was overruled as not
material, Mr
Attorney saying, moreover, that he could bring evidence to show that
the
prisoner by times wrote it as it was laid in the indictment. And, the
prisoner
having nothing further to offer, sentence of death was passed upon him,
and
that he should be hanged in chains upon a gibbet near the place where
the fact
was committed, and that execution should take place upon the 28th
December next
ensuing, being Innocents’ Day. Thereafter the
prisoner being to all appearance in a state of
desperation, made shift to ask the L.C.J. that his relations might be
allowed
to come to him during the short time he had to live. L.C.J. Ay, with all my heart, so it be in the presence of the
keeper; and Ann
Clark may come to you as well, for what I care. At which the
prisoner broke out and cried to his lordship not to use such
words to him, and his lordship very angrily told him he deserved no
tenderness
at any man’s hands for a cowardly butcherly murderer that had not the
stomach
to take the reward of his deeds: ‘and I hope to God,’ said he, ‘that
she will
be with you by day and by night till an end is made of you.’ Then the
prisoner
was removed, and, so far as I saw, he was in a swound, and the Court
broke up. I cannot refrain
from observing that the prisoner during all the time
of the trial seemed to be more uneasy than is commonly the case even in
capital
causes: that, for example, he was looking narrowly among the people and
often
turning round very sharply, as if some person might be at his ear. It
was also
very noticeable at this trial what a silence the people kept, and
further
(though this might not be otherwise than natural in that season of the
year),
what a darkness and obscurity there was in the court room, lights being
brought
in not long after two o’clock in the day, and yet no fog in the town. It was not without
interest that I heard lately from some young men who
had been giving a concert in the village I speak of, that a very cold
reception
was accorded to the song which has been mentioned in this narrative: ‘Madam,
will you walk?’ It came out in some talk they had next morning with
some of
the local people that that song was regarded with an invincible
repugnance; it
was not so, they believed, at North Tawton, but here it was reckoned to
be
unlucky. However, why that view was taken no one had the shadow of an
idea. |