Part 65 (1/2)
”I should have no objection to Tengelyi's having a separate room,” said the recorder; ”but really there is none. The four cells which are set apart for solitary confinement are taken.”
”Then there _are_ some rooms devoted to that purpose, are there?” cried Mr. James Bantornyi, eagerly. ”Oh, very well! Did I not always tell you we'd come to imitate England? Solitary confinement is introduced for four prisoners! A beginning being once made, I have no doubt but the rest will follow.”
”You are right!” said the recorder, in a mortal fear lest it should be his lot to have a description of the Milbank prison. ”But, after all, who can help that we have but four rooms, and that they are all taken?”
”Taken? By whom are they taken?” inquired Mr. James, who took a praiseworthy interest in prisons and their inmates.
”One of them is retained by the baron,” said Captain Karvay. ”It's now three years since the poor gentleman was sent to prison, and I'll swear to it he's innocent.”
”Is he indeed?”
”Nothing more certain!” said the gallant captain. ”He's a capital fellow, but a little violent, you know: and it may have happened that he has ordered his servant to beat a man; indeed, I don't know, but perhaps he did it himself. It's what everybody does, you know, and n.o.body minds it. But the baron had ill luck. Thirty years ago, he knocked one of his servants on the head, and the fellow died in consequence of the blow. A prosecution was commenced and carried on, and while it was being carried on it was all but forgotten; when, as ill luck would have it, the poor baron chanced to get himself into a fresh sc.r.a.pe. He is fond of his garden. The peasants stole his fruit and flowers. So he swore the first whom he could lay his hand on should have forty stripes. It was a vow, you know. And what happened? The very next morning a young chap was caught stealing cherries. Of course the baron could not think of breaking his vow. The young fellow was not quite ten years of age; he could not stand forty blows, and he died before the thing was fairly over. There was another row, and the county magistrates could not but sentence the baron to be confined for six months; the upper court cancelled the judgment, and gave the poor man four years! Only fancy!
and he's seventy years old. It's an atrocious cruelty, you know, to send such a man to prison, and for four years too!”
”Yes, I remember,” said James Bantornyi. ”I heard it talked about when I returned from England. But I thought he had got over it. Some time ago I saw him on his estate.”
”Why,” replied the recorder, ”if we were not to give him a run now and then, his manager would play the devil with his crops and cattle.”
”The second room,” continued the captain, ”is inhabited by an attorney: he was sent here for forgery. And in the third room lives an engineer, who is likewise accused of forging bank-notes.”
”And did it ever strike you,” asked Mr. James, with great anxiety; ”did it ever strike you that solitary confinement exerts a salutary influence on the prisoners?”
”It certainly does. Ever since the baron has lived with us, he's grown fat; he never complains of any thing except of his ill luck at cards, and that he cannot get any wine which is strong enough for him. He's blunted, you know.”
”Wine and cards are not fit agents to carry out the purposes of solitary confinement: but, after all, the English too have, of late, relaxed the former rigour of their system. But how do the others go on?”
”The attorney acts as middleman between the borrowers and lenders of money, and the engineer is always writing and sketching. I suppose you saw his last _quodlibet_ with the sheriff's portrait, and the autographs of all the magistrates, and with a few bank-notes mixed up with them. It was remarkably well done, especially the notes.”
”Capital!” said James. ”Occupation is the life of prison discipline. It improves the criminals, you know.”
Volgyeshy, who had scarcely kept his impatience within bounds, interrupted this conversation.
”One of the cells is untenanted,” said he; ”why don't you put Tengelyi in that?”
”Impossible!” said the captain, dryly. ”The wors.h.i.+pful magistrates have resolved that one of the rooms must be kept empty, to provide for an emergency.”
”But is not this an emergency?” asked Volgyeshy.
”I don't care whether it is or not!” said the captain, twisting his moustache. ”All I say is, that the wors.h.i.+pful magistrates have instructed me to keep that room empty. I have my orders, sir. Besides, we cannot put the notary into that room to please anybody; for Lady Rety has used it as a larder these three years, and she keeps the key.”
Still Volgyeshy persisted; but the recorder interfered, saying, that the mildness which the sheriff had recommended could not, by any means, be carried to the bursting open and disarranging the larder of the sheriff's wife. And when Volgyeshy told them that, at least, an arrangement might be made by confining two of the three prisoners in one room, and a.s.signing one of their cells to his client, his proposal excited a violent storm of indignation.
”I wish you may get it!” cried Captain Karvay. ”I wonder what the baron would say if I were to force somebody upon him! And I don't know what he would say if I were to tell him it was to make room for a village notary.”
But the decision of the affair was, as usual, brought about by Mr.
Skinner's energy. That great lawyer protested that he could not think of fighting or squabbling for such a self-evident point; that Mr. Volgyeshy had a right to defend the notary as much as he pleased; but that the wors.h.i.+pful magistrates had an equal right not to care for Mr. Volgyeshy or his defence.
The matter being thus settled to the satisfaction of all but the notary's counsel, the recorder said to Karvay: ”But you'll put him somewhere where the crowd is not too great!”