[The Gilded Age Part 7. by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner]@TWC D-Link bookThe Gilded Age Part 7. CHAPTER LVIII 7/17
The novelist who would turn loose upon society an insane murderess could not escape condemnation.
Besides, the safety of society, the decencies of criminal procedure, what we call our modern civilization, all would demand that Laura should be disposed of in the manner we have described.
Foreigners, who read this sad story, will be unable to understand any other termination of it. But this is history and not fiction.
There is no such law or custom as that to which his Honor is supposed to have referred; Judge O'Shaunnessy would not probably pay any attention to it if there were.
There is no Hospital for Insane Criminals; there is no State commission of lunacy. What actually occurred when the tumult in the court room had subsided the sagacious reader will now learn. Laura left the court room, accompanied by her mother and other friends, amid the congratulations of those assembled, and was cheered as she entered a carriage, and drove away.
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