登陆注册
15323100000011

第11章 A FAIR NECK FOR THE MAIDEN(3)

Lady Warriston was found guilty, and four days after the murder, on the 5th of July, was taken to the Girth Cross of Holyrood, at the foot of the Canongate, and there decapitated by that machine which rather anticipated the inventiveness of Dr Guillotin--the Maiden.'' At the same time, four o'clock in the morning, Janet Murdo, the nurse, and one of the serving- women accused with her as accomplices were burned on the Castle Hill of the city.

There is something odd about the early hour at which the executions took place.The usual time for these affairs was much later in the day, and it is probable that the sentence against Jean ran that she should be executed towards dusk on the 4th of the month.The family of Dunipace, however, having exerted no influence towards saving the daughter of the house from her fate, did everything they could to have her disposed of as secretly and as expeditiously as possible.In their zeal to have done with the hapless girl who, they conceived, had blotted the family honour indelibly they were in the prison with the magistrates soon after three o'clock, quite indecent in their haste to see her on her way to the scaffold.In the first place they had applied to have her executed at nine o'clock on the evening of the 3rd, another unusual hour, but the application was turned down.The main idea with them was to have Jean done away with at some hour when the populace would not be expecting the execution.Part of the plan for privacy is revealed in the fact of the burning of thenurse and the hyred woman'' at four o'clock at the Castle Hill, nearly a mile away from the Girth Cross, so--as the Pitcairn Trials footnote says-that the populace, who might be so early astir, should have their attentions distracted at two opposite stations...and thus, in some measure, lessen the disgrace of the public execution.''

If Jean had any reason to thank her family it was for securing, probably as much on their own behalf as hers, that the usual way of execution for women murderers should be altered in her case to beheading by the Maiden.'' Had she been of lesser rank she would certainly have been burned, after being strangled at a stake, as were her nurse and the serving-woman.This was the appalling fate reserved for convicted women in such cases, and on conviction even of smaller crimes.The process was even crueller in instances where the crime had been particularly atrocious.The criminal,'' says the Pitcairn account of such punishment, was `brunt quick'!''

Men convicted of certain crimes were also subject to the same form of execution adulterating and uttering base coins (Alan Napier, cutler in Glasgow, was strangled and burned at the stake in December 1602) sorcery, witchcraft, incantation, poisoning (Bailie Paterson suffered a like fate in December 1607).For bestiality John Jack was strangled on the Castle Hill (September 1605), and the innocent animal participator in his crime burned with him.

Altogether, the Dunipace family do not exactly shine with a good light as concerns their treatment of the condemned girl.Her father stood coldly aside.The quoted footnote remarks:

It is recorded that the Laird of Dunipace behaved with much apathy towards his daughter, whom he would not so much as see previous to her execution; nor yet would he intercede for her, through whose delinquency he reckoned his blood to be for ever dishonoured.

Jean herself was in no mind to be hurried to the scaffold as early as her relatives would have had her conveyed.She wanted (poor girl!) to see the sunrise, and to begin with the magistrates granted her request.It would appear, however, that Jean's blood-relations opposed the concessionso strongly that it was almost immediately rescinded.The culprit had to die in the grey dark of the morning, before anyone was likely to be astir.

In certain directions there was not a little heart-burning about the untimely hour at which it was manoeuvred the execution should be carried out.The writer of a Memorial, from which this piece of information is drawn, refrains very cautiously from mentioning the objectors by name.But it is not difficult, from the colour of their objections, to decide that these people belonged to the type still known in Scotland as the `unco guid.' They saw in the execution of this fair malefactor a moral lesson and a solemn warning which would have a salutary and uplifting effect upon the spectators.

Will you,'' they asked the presiding dignitaries, and the blood- relations of the hapless Jean, deprive God's people of that comfort which they might have in that poor woman's death? And will you obstruct the honour of it by putting her away before the people rise out of their beds? You do wrong in so doing; for the more public the death be, the more profitable it shall be to many; and the more glorious, in the sight of all who shall see it.''

But perhaps one does those worthies an injustice in attributing cant motives to their desire that as many people as possible should see Jean die.It had probably reached them that the Lady Warriston's repentance had been complete, and that after conviction of her sin had come to her her conduct had been sweet and seemly.They were of their day and age, those people, accustomed almost daily to beheadings, stranglings, burnings, hangings, and dismemberings.With that dour, bitter, fire-and- brimstone religious conception which they had through Knox from Calvin, they were probably quite sincere in their belief that the public repentance Jean Livingstone was due to make from the scaffold would be for thecomfort of God's people.'' It was not so often that justice exacted the extreme penalty from a young woman of rank and beauty.Withdreadful objects so familiar'' in the way of public executions, it was likely enough that pity in the commonalty was choked with custom of fell deeds.'' Something out of the way in the nature of a dreadful object- lesson might stir the hearts of the populace and make them conscious ofthe Wrath to Come.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 玉真公主山居

    玉真公主山居

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 尚雪,曦恋

    尚雪,曦恋

    妙言,一个要长相没长相要成绩没成绩的女生,误打误撞的考进了锦岚中学,学习了三年,可是一次变故,她遭遇车祸,毁容了。这是一场阴谋,妙言的生活和不容易,凭借着自己的努力,考上了好的高中,但是很不爱说还,开学几天,学校里就来了一个大帅哥,妙言和他成为好朋友,一起寻找身世之谜……
  • 铁血长河

    铁血长河

    这是一支神秘的军队,这是一支敢于在鬼子头上跳舞的威武之师,运河抗日支队,谱写运河两岸的抗战传奇。
  • 带着系统闯天庭

    带着系统闯天庭

    当宁小星睁开眼时,他发现自己的人生改变了。从此,西游记中一个个耳熟能详的神仙纷纷与他结下不解之缘……我是太上老君、玉皇大帝、王母娘娘指定揍人使者,天庭太白府、玉面小白龙、水陆空三军总司令宁小星啊!帅到掉渣
  • 枭雄再世

    枭雄再世

    只因一场虚假的梦,他走上一天巅峰的路。只因一块石头,他便重新星河。此小说讲诉的是主人公在得到缘故帮助后,经理种种磨难,一步步登上世界巅峰的故事。若是大家觉得此小说不错,请分享朋友圈、qq群作者:落花一殇
  • 占星师奇遇记

    占星师奇遇记

    她是二十三世纪的占星师,一夜星象,卜吉凶,知未来,一夕穿越,成为了神魔大陆的一介废柴。没有身法,受人漠视?很好,她很快就让这帮愚蠢的大陆人后悔莫及!占星大法,天下我有!她就要利用占星,不管是现世还是这个大陆上的人们都臣服于她,受万人敬仰!包罗万象生,各路神仙尽显灵。但是这个一直寄居在她体内的腹黑宿主是怎么一回事……说好的当一方霸主玩虐八方呢,怎么似乎不太一样?!
  • 我给江青当秘书:庭院深深钓鱼台

    我给江青当秘书:庭院深深钓鱼台

    本书记述了作者自1967年10月调任江青机要秘书到1973年6月被江青打成“反革命”,在钓鱼台工作近六年的经历,通过作者自己的观察、感受、思考,为读者描述了一个较为真实可信的江青形象:她的性格、品质、外表、内心她的作风、习惯、情感,等等。
  • 邪皇之极品炼器

    邪皇之极品炼器

    俗话说“人不与天斗,民不与官斗”。优胜劣汰的“生物进化论”!但是,一个哑巴的孤儿,别人眼中的“野种”和“灾星”。却是神农一族尊贵血统,高呼着“我命由我不由天”。逆天修炼,稀里糊涂的踏上修真之路,炼出“升级版”极品仙器,所向披靡,逍遥于天地之间。
  • 驭兽狂妃:邪王的绝色辣妻

    驭兽狂妃:邪王的绝色辣妻

    明歌,二十一世纪古武世家的第一继承人,懂驭兽,精通卜卦之术。一次意外穿越,号称第一废材的明家大小姐就此浴火重生,锋芒毕露,人不犯我,我不犯人,人若犯我,杀他全家!他是宛如九天神祗一般强大的存在,看似狂傲不羁,实则腹黑冷情,却在第一眼看见她后,将她示若珍宝,一路保她,护她,看着她一步步走向王者巅峰!且看第一废材,重生而来,邪王护航,何人敢欺?
  • 御手狂医

    御手狂医

    神秘少年进入都市,凭借绝世无双医术,巧整二代,救美人入怀,“混”,他是认真的!!