Part 2 (1/2)

The last doc.u.ment of the series, ”The Examination of Francis Gropptty,” dated 3rd February, 1752, tells for the first time the story of the fugitive's escape. This was the man employed by the Cranstoun family to get their disreputable relative quietly out of England. The delicate negotiation was conducted by the Rev. Mr. Home, brother of Lord Home, and a certain Captain Alexander Hamilton. It was represented to Gropptty, who had ”lived with Lord Home several years”

and then ”did business for him,” that such a service would ”very much, oblige Lord Cranstoun, Lord Home, and all the Family,” and that, as there were no orders to stop Cranstoun at Dover, by complying with their request he, personally, ran no risk; accordingly he consented to see the interesting exile as far as Calais. On 2nd September Captain Hamilton produced Cranstoun at Gropptty's house in Mount Street. Our old acquaintance characteristically explained that he was without funds for the journey, having been ”rob'd” of his money and portmanteau on his way to town. Gropptty was induced to purchase for the traveller ”such, necessaries as he wanted,” and Captain Hamilton went to solicit from Lord Ancrum a loan of twenty pounds for expenses.

His lords.h.i.+p having unaccountably refused the advance, the guileless Gropptty agreed to lend ten guineas upon Captain Hamilton's note of hand, which, as he in his examination complained, was still ”unsatisfied.” He and Cranstoun then set out in a post-chaise for Dover, where they arrived next morning at nine o'clock. On 4th September they embarked in the packet for Calais, paying a guinea for their pa.s.sage; and Gropptty, having seen his charge safely bestowed in lodgings ”at the Rate of Fifty Livres a Month,” returned to London.

Informed of the successful issue of the adventure, the Rev. Mr. Home evinced a holy joy, and, in the name of his n.o.ble kinsman and of Lord Cranstoun, promised Gropptty a handsome reward for his trouble. That gentleman, however, said he had acted solely out of grat.i.tude to Lord Home, and wanted nothing but his outlays; so he made out an ”Acct. of the Expences he had been at,” amounting, with the sum advanced by him, to eighteen pounds, for which Captain Hamilton obligingly gave him a bill upon my Lord Cranstoun. By a singular coincidence this doc.u.ment of debt also remained ”unsatisfied”; his lords.h.i.+p, after keeping it for six weeks, ”returned it unpaid, and the Examt. has not yet recd.

the money”! Thus, in common with all who had any dealings with the Hon. William Henry Cranstoun, Gropptty in the end got the worse of the bargain.

While her gallant accomplice, having successfully stolen a march upon the hangman, was breathing the free air of the French seaport, Miss Blandy, in her cell in Oxford Castle, was preparing for her trial. She had at first entrusted her defence to one Mr. Newell, an attorney of Henley, who had succeeded her late father in the office of town-clerk; but the lawyer, at one of their consultations, untactfully expressing astonishment that she should have got herself into trouble over such ”a mean-looking little ugly fellow” as Cranstoun, his client took umbrage at this observation as reflecting upon her taste in lovers, dispensed with his further services, and employed in his stead one Mr. Rivers of Woodstock. From the day of her arrest all sorts of rumours had been rife regarding so sensational a case. She had poisoned her mother; she had poisoned her friend Mrs. Poc.o.c.k--how and when that lady in fact died we do not know; she was still in correspondence with Cranstoun; she was secretly married to the keeper's son, a step to which the circ.u.mstances of their acquaintance left her no alternative; her fortune was being employed to bribe the authorities; the princ.i.p.al witnesses against her had been got out of the way; she had (repeatedly and in divers ways) escaped; finally, as she herself, with reference to these reports, complained--”It has been said that I am a wretched drunkard, a prophane swearer, that I never went to chapel, contemned all holy ordinances, and in short gave myself up to all kinds of immorality.” The depositions of the witnesses before the coroner were published ”by some of the Friends and Relations of the Family, in order to prevent the Publick from being any longer imposed on with fict.i.tious Stories,” but both Miss Blandy and Mr.

Ford, her counsel, took great exception to this at the trial.

Pamphlets, as we shall presently see, poured from the press, and even before she appeared at the bar the first instalments of a formidable library of _Blandyana_, had come into being.

On Monday, 2nd March, 1752, the grand jury for the county of Oxford found a true bill against Mary Blandy. The Town Hall, where the a.s.sizes were usually held, was ”then rebuilding,” and as the University authorities had refused the use of the Sheldonian Theatre, the trial was appointed to take place next morning in the beautiful hall of the Divinity School. Owing to the insertion overnight--by a mischievous undergraduate or other sympathiser with the day's heroine--of some obstacle in the keyhole, the door could not be opened, and the lock had to be forced, which delayed the proceedings for an hour. The judges meanwhile returned to their lodgings. This initial difficulty surmounted, at eight o'clock on Tuesday, 3rd March, Mary Blandy was placed at the bar to answer the grave charges made against her. There appeared for the Crown the Hon. Mr. Bathurst and Mr. Serjeant Hayward, a.s.sisted by the Hon. Mr.

Barrington and Messrs. Hayes, Nares, and Ambler. The prisoner was defended by Mr. Ford, with whom were Messrs. Morton and Aston. The judges were the Hon. Heneage Legge and Sir Sidney Stafford Smythe, two of the Barons of His Majesty's Court of Exchequer.

As the following pages contain a verbatim reprint of the official report of the trial, published by permission of the judges, it is only necessary here briefly to refer to the proceedings. The trial lasted thirteen hours. It is, says Mr. Ainsworth Mitch.e.l.l, in his _Science and the Criminal_, ”remarkable as being the first one of which there is any detailed record, in which convincing scientific proof of poisoning was given.” The indictment charged the prisoner with the wilful murder of Francis Blandy by administering to him white a.r.s.enic at divers times (1) between 10th November, 1750, and 5th August, 1751, in tea, and (2) between 5th and 14th August, 1751, in water gruel. The prisoner pleaded not guilty, a jury was duly sworn, and the indictment having been opened by Mr. Barrington, Bathurst began his address for the Crown. Though promoted later to the highest judicial office, he has been described as ”the least efficient Lord Chancellor of the eighteenth century.” Lord Campbell, in his _Lives of the Chancellors_, says that Bathurst's address was much praised for its eloquence, and ”as it certainly contains proof of good feeling, if not of high talent and refined taste,” his lords.h.i.+p transcribes for the benefit of his readers certain of its purpler pa.s.sages. It was deemed worthy, at the time, of publication in separate form, with highly eulogistic notes, wherein we read that by its eloquent appeal both judges and counsel ”were moved to mourn, nay, to weep like tenderest infants.” The prisoner, however, heard it dry-eyed, nor will its effect be more melting for the modern reader. At the outset the learned counsel observed, with reference to the heinous nature of the crime, that he was not surprised ”at this vast concourse of people collected together,” from which it appears there were few vacant seats that morning in the Divinity School. s.p.a.ce will not permit us to accompany the future Lord Chancellor through his ”most affecting oration,” which presents the case for the Crown with moderation and fairness, and concludes with a tribute to the ”indefatigable diligence” of the Earl of Macclesfield and Lord Cadogan ”in inquiring into this hidden work of darkness.” He was followed by Serjeant Hayward, who, employing a more rhetorical and florid style, was probably better appreciated by the audience, but added little to the jury's knowledge of the facts.

In an ”improving” pa.s.sage he besought ”the young gentlemen of this University,” who seem to have been well represented, to guard against the first insidious approaches of vice. ”See here,” said he, ”the dreadful consequences of disobedience to a parent.”

We need not examine in detail the evidence led for the prosecution; from the foregoing narrative the reader already knows its main outlines and may study it at large in the following report. The Crown case opened with the medical witnesses, Drs. Addington and Lewis, and Mr. Norton, who clearly established the fact that a.r.s.enic was the cause of Mr. Blandy's death, that a.r.s.enic was present in the remains of his gruel, and that a.r.s.enic was the powder which the prisoner had attempted to destroy. The appearance of Mrs. Mounteney in the witness-box occasioned the only display of feeling exhibited by the accused throughout the whole trial. This lady was her G.o.dmother, and as she left the Court after giving her evidence, she clasped her G.o.d-child by the hand, exclaiming ”G.o.d bless you!” For the moment Mary's brilliant black eyes filled with tears, but after drinking a gla.s.s of wine and water, she resumed her air of stoical indifference.

Susan Gunnell, ”wore down to a Skelliton” by the effects of her curiosity, but sufficiently recovered to come into Court, was the princ.i.p.al witness for the prosecution. In addition to the material facts which we have before narrated, Susan deposed that the prisoner often spoke of her father as ”an old villain,” and wished for his death, and had complained that she was ”very awkward,” for, if he were dead, ”she would go to Scotland and live with Lady Cranstoun.”

Susan gave her evidence with perfect fairness, and showed no animus against her former mistress. Equal in importance was the testimony of Betty Binfield, which, perhaps, is more open to Miss Blandy's objection as being ”inspired with vindictive sentiments.” When communicating to the maids Mrs. Morgan's prophecy regarding the duration of their master's life, the prisoner, said witness, expressed herself glad, ”for that then she would soon be released from all her fatigues, and be happy.” She was wont to curse her father, calling him ”rascal and villain,” and on one occasion had remarked, ”Who would grudge to send an old father to h.e.l.l for 10,000?” ”Exactly them words,” added the scrupulous cook, though in this instance her zeal had probably got the better of her memory. In cross-examination Betty was asked whether she had any ill-will against her mistress. ”I always told her I wished her very well,”

was the diplomatic reply. ”Did you,” continued the prisoner's counsel, ”ever say, 'd.a.m.n her for a black b.i.t.c.h! I should be glad to see her go up the ladder and be hanged'”? but Betty indignantly denied the utterance of any such ungenteel expressions.

The account given by this witness of the admissions made by her mistress to Dr. Addington in her presence led to the recall of that gentleman, who, in his former evidence, had not referred to the matter. The prisoner's counsel invited Dr. Addington to say that Miss Blandy's anxiety proceeded solely from concern for her father; the doctor excused himself from expressing any opinion, but, being indiscreetly pressed to do so, said that her agitation struck him as due entirely to fears for herself: he saw no tokens of grief for her father. On re-examination, it appeared that the doctor had attended professionally both Susan Gunnell and Ann Emmet; their symptoms, in his opinion, were those of a.r.s.enical poisoning. Alice Emmet was next called to speak to her mother's illness, the old charwoman herself being in no condition to come to Court. Littleton, old Blandy's clerk, gave his evidence with manifest regret, but had to admit that he frequently heard Miss Blandy curse her parent by the unfilial names of rogue, villain, and ”toothless old dog.” Harman, the footman, to whom Mary had offered the 500 bribe, and Mr. Fisher and Mr. and Mrs. Lane, who spoke to the incidents at the Angel Inn on the day of her attempted flight, were the other witnesses examined; the intercepted letter to Cranstoun was put in, and the Crown case closed.

According to the practice of the time, the prisoner's counsel, while allowed to examine their own, and cross-examine the prosecutor's witnesses, were not permitted to address the jury. Mary Blandy therefore now rose to make the speech in her own defence. Probably prepared for her beforehand, it merely enumerates the various injustices and misrepresentations of which she considered herself the victim. She made little attempt to refute the d.a.m.ning evidence against her, and concluded by protesting her innocence of her father's death; that she thought the powder ”an inoffensive thing,”

and gave it to procure his love. In this she was well advised, for she was shrewd enough to see that upon the question of her knowledge of the quality and effect of the powder the verdict would turn.

[Ill.u.s.tration: Miss Blandy (_From a Mezzotint by T. Ryley after L. Wilson, in the Collection of Mr. A.M. Broadley_.)]

Eight witnesses were called for the defence. Ann James, who washed for the family, stated that before Mr. Blandy's illness there was ”a difference between Elizabeth Binfield and Miss Blandy, and Binfield was to go away.” After Mary's removal to Oxford gaol (Sat.u.r.day, 17th August), the witness heard Betty one day in the kitchen make use of the unparliamentary language already quoted. Mary Banks deposed that she was present at the time, and heard the words spoken. ”It was the night Mr. Blandy was opened” (Thursday, 15th August); she was sure of that; Miss Blandy was then in the house. Betty Binfield, recalled and confronted with this evidence, persisted in her denial, but admitted the existence of ”a little quarrel” with her mistress.

Edward Herne, Mary's old admirer, gave her a high character as an affectionate, dutiful daughter. He was in the house as often as four times a week and never heard her swear an oath or speak a disrespectful word of her father. In cross-examination the witness admitted that in August, 1750, Miss Blandy told him that Cranstoun had put powder in her father's tea. He had visited her in prison, and on one occasion, a report having reached her that ”the Captain was taken,” she wrung her hands and said, ”I hope in G.o.d it is true, that he may be brought to justice as well as I, and that he may suffer the punishment due to his crime, as I shall do for mine.”

Here for the first time the prisoner intervened. Her questions were directed to bring out that she had told Herne on the occasion mentioned that no ”damage” resulted upon Cranstoun's use of the powder, from which fact she inferred its effects harmless, and that the ”suffering” spoken of by her had reference to her imprisonment, though guiltless. For the rest, Thomas Cawley and Thomas Staverton, friends of Mr. Blandy for upwards of twenty years, spoke to the happy relations which to their knowledge subsisted between father and daughter. On her last visit to Staverton's house, Mary had remarked that, although her father ”had many wives laid out for him,” he would not marry till she was ”settled.” Mrs. Davis, the landlady of the Angel, and Robert Stoke, the officer who took the prisoner into custody, said that Miss Blandy did not then appear to them to be attempting night. This concluded the exculpatory evidence. For the defence, Mr. Ford protested against the ”unjustifiable and illegal methods” used to prejudice his client, such as the publication of the proceedings at the inquest, and, particularly, the ”very scandalous reports” concerning her, circulated since her commitment, to refute which he proposed to call ”the reverend gentleman who had attended her,” Parson Swinton. The Court, however, held that there was no need to do so, as the jury would entirely disregard anything not deposed to in Court. Mr.

Bathurst replying for the Crown, maintained that it was proved to demonstration that Francis Blandy died of poison, put in his gruel upon the 5th of August by the prisoner's hand, as appeared not only from her own confession, but from all the evidence adduced. ”Examine then, gentlemen,” said the learned counsel, ”whether it is possible she could do it ignorantly.” In view of the great affection with which it was proved the dying man behaved to her, the prisoner's a.s.sertion that she gave him the powder ”to make him love her” was incredible. She knew what effects the poisoned gruel produced upon him on the Monday and Tuesday, yet she would have given him more of it on the Wednesday. Having pointed out that, when she must have known the nature of the powder, she endeavoured to destroy it, instead of telling the physicians what she had given her father, which might have been the means of saving his life, counsel commented on the terms of the intercepted letter to Cranstoun as wholly inconsistent with her innocence. Further, he remarked on the contradiction as to dates in the evidence of the witnesses who reported Betty Binfield's forcible phrase, which, he contended, was in fact never uttered by her. Finally, he endorsed the censure of the prisoner's counsel upon the spreaders of the scandalous reports, which he asked the jury totally to disregard. On the conclusion of Bathurst's reply, the prisoner made the following statement:--”It is said I gave it [the powder] my father to make him fond of me: there was no occasion for that--but to make him fond of Cranstoun.”

Mr. Baron Legge then proceeded to charge the jury. The manner in which his lords.h.i.+p reviewed the evidence and his exposition of its import and effect, indeed his whole conduct of the trial, have been well described as affording a favourable impression of his ability, impartiality, and humanity. He proceeded in the good old fas.h.i.+on, going carefully over the whole ground of the evidence, of which his notes appear to have been excellent; and after some general remarks upon the atrocity of the crime charged, and the nature and weight of circ.u.mstantial evidence--”more convincing and satisfactory than any other kind of evidence, because facts cannot lie”--observed that it was undeniable that Mr. Blandy died by poison administered to him by the prisoner at the bar: ”What you are to try is reduced to this single question, whether the prisoner, at the time she gave it to her father, knew that it was poison, and what effect it would have?”

If they believed that she did know, they must find her guilty; if, in view of her general character, the evidence led for the defence, and what she herself had said, they were not satisfied that she knew, then they would acquit her. The jury, without retiring, consulted for five minutes and returned a verdict of guilty. Mr.

Baron Legge, having in dignified and moving terms exhorted the unhappy woman to repentance, then p.r.o.nounced the inevitable sentence of the law--”That you are to be carried to the place of execution and there hanged by the neck until you are dead; and may G.o.d, of His infinite mercy, receive your soul.”

It was nine o'clock at night; for thirteen mortal hours Mary Blandy had watched unflinchingly the ”interesting game played by counsel with her life for stakes”; the ”game” was over, and hers was the losing side; yet no sign of fear or agitation was manifested by that strange woman as she rose for the last time to address her judge.

”My lord,” said she, ”as your lords.h.i.+p has been so good to show so much candour and impartiality in the course of my trial, I have one favour more to beg; which is, that your lords.h.i.+p would please to allow me a little time till I can settle my affairs and make my peace with G.o.d”; to which Mr. Baron Legge feelingly replied, ”To be sure, you shall have a proper time allowed you.” So, amid the tense stillness of the crowded ”house,” the curtain fell upon the great fourth act of the tragedy of ”The Fair Parricide.”

On leaving the hall to be taken back to prison, Mary Blandy, we read, ”stepped into the Coach with as little Concern as if she had been going to a Ball”--the eighteenth century reporter antic.i.p.ating by a hundred years his journalistic successor's phrase as to the demeanour of Madeleine Smith in similar trying circ.u.mstances. The result of the trial had preceded her to Oxford Castle, where she found the keeper's family ”in some Disorder, the Children being all in Tears” at the fatal news. ”Don't mind it,” said their indomitable guest, ”What does it signify? I am very hungry; pray, let me have something for supper as speedily as possible”; and our reporter proceeds to spoil his admirable picture by condescending upon ”Mutton Chops and an Apple Pye.”

The six weeks allowed her to prepare for death were all too short for the correspondence and literary labours in which she presently became involved. On 7th March ”a Reverend Divine of Henley-upon-Thames,”

probably, from other evidence, the Rev. William Stockwood, rector of the parish, addressed to her a letter, exhorting her to confession and repentance. To this Miss Blandy replied on the 9th, maintaining that she had acted innocently. ”There is an Account,” she tells him, ”as well as I was able to write, which I sent to my Uncle in London, that I here send you.” Copies of these letters, and of the narrative referred to, are printed in the Appendix. She sends her ”tenderest wishes” to her G.o.d-mother, Mrs. Mounteney, and trusts that she will be able to ”serve” her with the Bishop of Winchester, apparently in the matter of a reprieve, of which Mary is said to have had good hope, by reason that she had once the honour of dancing with the late Prince of Wales--”Fred, who was alive and is dead.” ”Pray comfort poor Ned Herne,” she writes, ”and tell him I have the same friends.h.i.+p for him as ever.” She asks that her letter and its enclosure be returned, as, being in her own handwriting, they may be of service to her character after her death. The object of this request was speedily apparent; on 20th March the whole doc.u.ments were published under the t.i.tle of _A Letter from a Clergyman, to Miss Mary Blandy, &c._, with a note by the publisher intimating that, for the satisfaction of the public, the original MS. was left with him. The fair auth.o.r.ess having thus fired the first shot, a fusilade of pamphlets began--the spent bullets are collected in the Bibliography--which, for volume and verbosity, is ent.i.tled to honourable mention in the annals of tractarian strife. _An Answer to Miss Blandy's Narrative_ quickly followed upon the other side, in which, it is claimed, ”all the Arguments she has advanc'd in Justification of her Innocence are fully refuted, and her Guilt clearly and undeniably prov'd.” This was promptly met by _The Case of Miss Blandy considered, as a Daughter, as a Gentlewoman, and as a Christian_, with particular reference to her own _Narrative_, the author of which is better versed in cla.s.sical a.n.a.logies than in the facts of the case. Mary herself mentions a pamphlet, which she cites as _The Life of Miss Mary Blandy_, and attributes to ”a French usher.”

This may have been one of the 1751 tracts containing accounts ”of that most horrid Parricide,” the t.i.tle of which she deemed too indelicate for exact citation, or, perhaps, an earlier edition of _A Genuine and Impartial Account of the Life of Miss Mary Blandy_, &c., the copy of which in the Editor's possession, including an account of the execution, was published on 9th April, three days after the completion of that ceremony.

The last literary effort of Mary Blandy was an expansion of her _Narrative_, re-written in more detail and at much greater length, the revised version appearing on 18th April under the t.i.tle of _Miss Mary Blandy's Own Account of the Affair between her and Mr.

Cranstoun_, ”from the commencement of their Acquaintance in the year 1746 to the Death of her Father in August, 1751, with all the Circ.u.mstances leading to that unhappy Event.” This ingenious, rather than ingenuous, compilation was, it is said, prepared with the a.s.sistance of Parson Swinton, who had some previous experience of pamphleteering on his own account in 1739. Mr. Horace Bleackley has happily described it as ”The most famous apologia in criminal literature,” and as such it is reprinted in the present volume. Even this _tour de force_ failed to convince a sceptical world, and on 15th April was published _A Candid Appeal to the Publick_ concerning her case, by ”a Gentleman of Oxford,” wherein ”All the ridiculous and false a.s.sertions” contained in Miss Blandy's _Own Account_ ”are exploded, and the Whole of that Mysterious Affair set in a True Light.” But by this time the fair disputant was beyond the reach of controversy, and the Oxford gentleman had it all his own way; though the pamphleteers kept the discussion alive a year longer than its subject.

An instructive feature of Mary's literary activities during her last days is her correspondence with Elizabeth Jeffries. ”That unsavoury person” was, with her paramour, John Swan, convicted at Chelmsford a.s.sizes on 12th March, 1752, of the murder at Walthamstow, on 3rd July, of one Joseph Jeffries, respectively uncle and master to his slayers. Elizabeth induced John to kill the old gentleman, who, aware of their intrigue, had threatened, as the Crown counsel neatly phrased it, ”to alter his will, if she did not alter her conduct.”