OCKET, Esquire (Advocate),} (otherwise the Prisoner)
MR. THORNIEBANK, W. S.,}
MR. PLAYMORE, W. S., } Agents for the Panel.
The Indictment against the prisoner then followed. I shall not copy the
uncouth language, full of needless repetitions (and, if I know anything
of the subject, not guiltless of bad grammar as well), in which my
innocent husband was solemnly and falsely accused of poisoning his first
wife. The less there is of that false and hateful Indictment on this
page, the better and truer the page will look, to _my_ eyes.
To be brief, then, Eustace Macallan was "indicted and accused, at the
instance of David Mintlaw, Esquire, Her Majesty's Advocate, for Her
Majesty's interest," of the Murder of his Wife by poison, at his
residence called Gleninch, in the county of Mid-Lothian. The poison was
alleged to have been wickedly and feloniously given by the prisoner to
his wife Sara, on two occasions, in the form of arsenic, administered
in tea, medicine, "or other article or articles of food or drink, to the
prosecutor unknown." It was further declared that the prisoner's wife
had died of the poison thus administered b y her husband, on one or
other, or both, of the stated occasions; and that she was thus murdered
by her husband. The next paragraph asserted that the said
Eustace Macallan, taken before John Daviot, Esquire, advocate,
Sheriff-Substitute of Mid-Lothian, did in his presence at Edinburgh
(on a given date, viz., the 29th of October), subscribe a Declaration
stating his innocence of the alleged crime: this Declaration being
reserved in the Indictment--together with certain documents, papers and
articles, enumerated in an Inventory--to be used in evidence against the
prisoner. The Indictment concluded by declaring that, in the event
of the offense charged against the prisoner being found proven by the
Verdict, he, the said Eustace Macallan, "ought to be punished with the
pains of the law, to deter others from committing like crimes in all
time coming."
So much for the Indictment! I have done with it--and I am rejoiced to be
done with it.
An Inventory of papers, documents, and articles followed at great length
on the next three pages. This, in its turn, was succeeded by the list
of the witnesses, and by the names of the jurors (fifteen in number)
balloted for to try the case. And then, at last, the Report of the Trial
began. It resolved itself, to my mind, into three great Questions. As it
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