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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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iay a posfc * chaiaB to - Stafford , in order to get the train there for the purpose of conveying the jai £ to London . fife , went to the poet-boy who was to drive the fly and said , '' They : have' no business to take the jar—I don ' t knowwhat they Will pat in it . Cannot you upset the fly Mad break the jar ? 1 will give you 10 / . " The boy said he could not think of such a thing . The prisoner replied , , i * I will make it all right ; " but the boy ' s answer still UntBy " Certainly not ; I shall do no such thing . " There were one or two other matters of minor importanoe to . which it was necessary to refer . la the course of the coroner ' s inquiry , Palmer sent presents on two or three occasions to the coroner . It also appeared that a letter—from Dr . Taylor , of Guy ' s Hospital , to Mr ;
Gardener , of , Rugeley , ( the , solicitor for the father-in-law , Stephens . ) , stating , the result of the analysis—had been betrayed to . talmer , whp then sat down and wrote a note tothe cojroner , telling him that ; Dr . Taylor had failed to find poison * and asking him to take a certain course with regard to the examination of witnesses . Why- should he do that if there was not an uneasiness in his mind on the subject ?^ , Ije , ( the Attorney-iGeneral ) did not desire to attach' more than due weight to tlio 3 e matters , but still bye tbVpugiit they r . ought , not . < k > -be . entirely overlooked . In additi 9 p . to aljt these , facts , it should be mentioned that I ^ e ^ prwo ' ne ^ ^ d . ^ ri ^; money prior , to , tbe Shrewsbury race ' s , but was afterwards . flush of cash .. He paid , l $ Ql . to' jffie bant at Rugeley ,, sums . of 50 / . to , two or three
persons' jri . t ^ he nei ghbourhood , and also money to Mr . ftrait , ' ati L , onidon ; and sornething like 400 ? . would be traced ' to its ^ possession . Cooke had between 7001 . and { $ 07 . on . Thursday morning when he left Shrewsbury , and iione of it w » 3 found . ., ^ he At ] tqrn ey - ( General having finished his speech , whjch , pccupied ^ four hours in the delivery , the Court adjourned for a short time in order that Judges and ji ^ rv rnijjht obtain some refreshment . On reassem ] bi [ ing , the . examination of the witnesses cominiel » Qe ^ ;' . tou ^ , ' . the facts thus deposed to were necessafily the . same as those narrated by the Attorney- < jen , eral , and as the cross-examination did
floe elicit anything of note , we need not encumber ouy space with an analysis of the evidence . n ; ! I 1 ie Gfotjrii'rosd at half-pas ' fe six o ' clock , the prorc ^ etJmgfff being ' ad ^ dur ^ ed . tin ' the .. next day at ten b ^ ojek . ' ~ Tbe jSry , ' as J > usual in . such cases , were taken in cKat ' ge df ah officer to the London CoffeehjouBfc ;; ¦ ¦ ¦ . ¦ ¦• ¦ ¦ ' : ¦ ¦ " ' ¦ ¦ ' ¦" - ^ The witnesses brought forward on Thursday were not cross-examined at any great length ; and only a few additional particulars came out . Mrs . Ann Brookes , a married woman residing at Manchester , and in the habit qfattending races ( though , she stated , not with her hust > janTd , , wh . o did . not sanction races ) , said that on the 14 th of November she went to the Raven Hotel at Shrewsbury
and ; ' * gaw . JPalmer standing by a table in the passage with a tupjbler glass in his hand , which appeared to contain some liquid of the colour of water . He shook up the jfhxidtbat was in the glass , and then held it up as if to the , l'ght , and looked at it , and he then said that he would -Ve with me presently . He stood by the table a minute , or two longer , and looked at the glass once or twice ^ and I saw him shake it now and then . The prisoner then went into a sitting-room , the door of which was partially open , taking the glass with him , and he remained , there two or three minutes . When he came put , he still had the glass and the fluid it contained in fco ^ t&nd , and ho then went into his own sitting room , and ^ emaiped .. there three or four minutes , and he then came to mi ? ; an 4 < h rpught me some brandy and water . I drank ' ifl but 7 it produced no bad . effect on me . " (^ L law / h . )
She ' . d > 4 npt know whether the glass was or was not the same as that in which Palmer had been mixing the fluid , ^ e added that " , a great many racing people were taken ill at Sbrewabu ^ y ,. and £ b , ey , thought it was occasioned ^ y ' th . o ^ ater . . They were . affected by sickness and purging . ., ' A lady who came tp meet mo was attacked in this manjner . " .,. Elizabeth Mills , the chambermaid at the Tajbpt , Arms ( where Cookp ,, died ) , was taken ill , with vomiting after drinking spine of the broth with which ' jjalnjer , supplied Cooke . From the evidence of Mr . W . tt , ( JfoheSj , surgeon , it appeared that Cooke was slightly affected jyith an infectious disease , and that he had taken ^ wc ^ jty . ' fpr it ; ,, but Dr . Savage , physician , was of pmnion that there Was nothing of the character of the rHRniiRn in ' nutation about him . " Ho WHS a
weakminded wan , and was easily persuaded to take medicines roriop jjis . order under which ho imagined he waslabourvjharl ^ a Newton , assistant to Mr . Suit , surgeon at Kugeloyj in , giving the particulars of Palmor ' n eonvcrsation , ' witty , . hjin on the subject of strychnino ( which ho had "not ' related to the coroner ) , said that Palmer , after he had been told that no influminution would result from the use of strychnine , snapped his fingers , and exclaimed to hunself , " All right ! " With respect to his previous suppression of this evidence , this witness said : —" The reason I did not mention what hud occurred beforo was that my master and Mr . Palmer wore * not" friendly , and I thought , ho would have been angry if ho hud known that thad . supplied anything to Palmer . I have also stated ihat tho reason I did not make tho statement wub that J was afraid I should bo indicted for perjury . I
had heard that George Palmer , the prisoner ' s brother , had threatened to transport one of the witnesses upon the inquest npon Walter Palmer , because he had sworn that he had sold the prisoner prussic acid , and h&d not entered it in hia book , and could not prove it . I had made no entry of the sale of the strychnine in Mr . Salt ' s book , and what I heard alarmed me . " The trial was then adjourned to Friday .
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S BIGOTRY TRIUMPHANT . Let Zion Chapel sing a hymn of thanksgiving ; let Little Bethel wax jubilant ; let Exeter Hall , with a goodly choir of moral young men and glorified old ladies , rejoice with a great joy not to be exceeded ; and thereto let the public-houses and " Tom-and-Jerry " shops add their notes of gratulation ; for Bigotry has had a great triumph this week , and mighty will be the accession to holiness—and to drunkenness . On Sunday last , 80 , 830 human sinners paraded Kensington Gardens , to hear the band play ; in the Regent ' s Park , for the same corrupt object , there were 92 , 492 lost , sheep . ; , and in Victoria Park there were 85 , 191 : making a total of 258 , 513 souls with the stamp of perdition on them . These children of Satan behaved
with a degree of decorum and quietness remarkable for beings of so diabolical a parentage ; but it was thought necessary by our English Pope , the Archbishop of Canterbury , to prevent their assembling in the same way again . So he addressed a letter to Lord Palmerston , " pointing out , " as a contemporary waggishly observes , " the violation of the feelings of the people caused by the playing of the bands in the parks on Sunday , and the evil effects which ( in . the opinion of the primate ) this had produced , and was likely to produce , in the minds of the people ; and imploring him to reconsider his decision . " The Premier did reconsider his decision , and , replying to the Pope of Canterbury , observed that although he still retained his own opinions on the subject , yet , " as he found his plan had been received with
such great repugnance—as there was , at ail- events , so much difference of opinion , and as even the working people themselves appeared to be indifferent on the subject—in . deference to public opinion , and to -the religious feelings of . the community ^ he , would : . . oldart that the playing of the bands , on Sunday , s ^ ott ^ 4-b , e . 7 djLsc , ontiriuea . " r ( 3 ucS ls'tHe' abstract given by the' Morning Post of Lord Palmerstbn ' s reply ; and the reader will observe that the " indifference of the working classes , " and the evidence of " public opinion" as against the performances are to be found in the attendance of the 258 , 513 persons in the various parks last Sunday . However , bigotry had a grand success ; and the fact was announced , amidst loud cheers from excited good young men and impeccable old ladies , by Lord Shaftesbury , at the annual meeting of the Protestant Alliance ..
In commenting upon this subject , Mr . Baines , of Leeds , writes : ' ¦ " I cannot understand how any man can doubt that the whole question of the character of the Sabbath , for England , for her dependencies , and for all the countries whom she may influence , is now at stake . The performance of military bands on the Sunday may seem a small thing . But it is n 6 t small even in jjtself , etill less in the principle which it involves , or in the consequences to which it must lead . That cannot be a small thing which collects ninety thousand persons in the first city of the world , and is likely to collect still larger numbers as the season advances , and when the attraction is presented in several other parts of the metropolis . There may bo many respectable persons in
such a crowd , but there are sure to be great numbers of vicious persons of both sexes , who come to seduce the young and unsuspecting . This will be their chief hunting-ground . Here they will reap thcirfuUest harvest . Can any man who has over walked London streets have a doubt on the subject ? The love of music is all but universal ; in itself it is innocent and lawful , but it may be used for the worst purposes , as well as for the best . The strains of martial music cause the pulse to bound and fire the imagination , and they are wholly out of accordance with the sacred repose of the Sabbath . It is , howover , their fascination which here constitutes their chief danger . Crowds are sure to follow thorn :
and among these crowds , arrayed in their Sunday nner 3 , thousands of young girls and young men , with no more than the average amount of vanity and weakness , will bo brought into circumstances of oxtremo peril . At these places , I fear , thousands of Sunda } ' scholars will first lenrn to desert the school and the place of worship , and enter on the downward path of folly and vice . Tho danger may be scoffed at by thoughtless persons ; but is there any Christian father or mother who would willingly lot their children or servants attend such scones ? Is there any Sunday school teacher who would not feel that the ' scholars wore lost to tho school and to tho sanctuary when they had begun to frequent tho military performances in tho park ?"
This in but a poor compliment to tho school und tho aanctuary ; but Mr . Humes adds : — " I huvo not tho least hesitation in saying that tho opening of the British Museum and tho National Gallory would have been fur less mischievous , because there tho numbers assembled would have been fewer , and the
attendant circumstances would have been calculated more to excite the intellect and less to stimulate the passions . Sir Benjamin Hall , therefore , not only presumed to set the decision of the House of Commons at defiance , but to do a worse thing than that which the House forbade . " Sir Benjamin Hall has addressed the following letter to Lieutenant-Colonel Dickson : — " 9 , Great Stanhope-street , May 13 . " Dear Sir , —It is with much regret that I am under the necessity of informing you that I have received instructions not to allow the bands to play any more in
the parks or gardens on Sunday afternoons . I beg again to thank you for your consideration in offering the band of your regiment for the gratification of the working classes of Spitalfields and Bethnal-green and the densely-populated neighbourhood of Victoria Park . I was very glad to meet you in Victoria Park on Sunday last , as you were thus a witness , as well as myself , of the excellent conduct of the 85 , 191 persons there assembled , and who so . thoroughly enjoyed the music you were so good as to provide for them . . ' ¦ * " I am , dear Sir , yours faithfully , "B . Halt ~
" Lieutenant-Colonel Dickson . This " excellent conduct" has received the testimony of a professor of religion , who , under the signature of " Incumbent , " writes to the Times to defend the performances , which are now suppressed . He states : — " I went into Kensington-gardens this afternoon ( Sunday last ) . I had been told that the crowd that usually assembled there Was not of the class whose improvement is sought . Knowing not a little of the habits of this class , I can now safely say that of the vast crowd I witnessed full seventy out of every hundred were such as would be found in places where they ought not to be , were it not for the innocent and uncriminal recreation- thus afforded them . Its softening and civilizing effects , the admirable
behaviour of every individual there , your own correspondent will describe to you better than I can . But what I would respectfully ask of you is to use some of your great influence on behalf of the poor wretches whose position , morally , socially , and religiously , will be so much benefited by this movement There is a struggle evidently at hand between the real and puritanical observance of the Sabbatli . The lower orders of the people ( whose chief concern it is ) are too sensual , too ignorant , and too debased , to take any part of importance in it The question is , will those who really feel the necessity of improving the state of the working
classes allow this great but simple movement of the Government to be swamped , because a few active followers of John Knox so desire it ? Yet swamped it will be , unless a corresponding activity shall be raised on . the other side . I am neither High Church , Low Church , nor Broad Church ; but I am convinced of . this , that we shall never get the working people to our churches until we first wean them from the public-houses . Our empty seats show that our sermons have failed to do this . Let us open and soften their minds by harmless and innocent recreations ; we shall then prepare them better to receive our sermons . "
Another correspondent of the Times contributes an edifying anecdote of Sir Peter Laurie , in connexion with the playing of the bands . He writes : — "Business took me this ( Tuesday ) morning to tho Guildhall Policecourt , where Sir Peter Laurie was presiding . A man was brought up , charged with having robbed a chapel of some hymn-books . In his possession was found a memorandum-book , relating to the fellow's engagements . Sir Peter , after reading some extracts , then said , There is one mitigating circumstance in your case- —you were not , as far as appears from this book , at any of the parks where tlf t bands were playing , I see , ' &c . Your reporter will , doubtless , confirm , mo . So it appears the worthy magistrate thinks it a mqro heinous offence to go to a public park to hear music , than to go tho house of prayer to commit robbery . Comment ia superfluous . " The question now ia—How will tho People act against tho Sectarians ?
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THE MARQUIS OF DALHOUSIE . Tub arrival of Lord Dulhousie in England , which we announce in another column , gives ua an opportunity of laying beforo our reudors a brief sketch of the antecedents , both English and Indian , of " the groat Annexander of our ago . " Tho name of Dolhousio was not unknown in India when his lordship entered on hia duties as govornorgoneral just eight years since . Tho lato Earl , a Peninsular and Waterloo oilicor of inoro than average merit , held
tho command of tho British forces in Bengal for some few years previous to 1832 . Early in lifo Lord Dalhousio had married an heiress of tho Brouns of Colstoun , llnddingtonshiro , a family which , tracing its origin to tlio ancient Counts of Poiotou , has produced twenty-three titled branches in England , France , and Scotland , and has hold tho rank of l'Voo Barons of Scotland since tho twelfth century . Tho liumaaya are of Saxon origin , but their name is ono which has long boen mixed up with Scottish history . By tho doath of hia two elder brothers , tho present Marquis became heir to the title and property
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), May 17, 1856, page 461, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2141/page/5/
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