[Prisoner for Blasphemy by George William Foote]@TWC D-Link bookPrisoner for Blasphemy CHAPTER XIV 16/27
"You must learn one more lesson, Mr. Foote, and that is, that one judge cannot hear another judge censured, or even commended." I was checkmated, but taking it with a good grace, I said: "My lord, thank you for the correction.
And I will simply confine the observations I might have made on that subject to the emphatic statement that I have learnt to-day, for the first time--although this is the second time I have had to answer a criminal charge--how a criminal trial should be conducted." His lordship did not interrupt me again.
During the whole of my long defence he leaned his head upon his hand, and looked steadily at me, without once shifting his gaze. To put the jury in a good frame of mind I told them that two months before I fell among thieves, and congratulated myself on being able to talk to twelve honest men.
In order, also, that they might be disabused of the idea that we were being treated as first-class misdemeanants, I informed them of the discipline we were really subjected to; and I saw that this aroused their sympathy. Those who wish to read my defence _in extenso_ will find it in the "Three Trials for Blasphemy." I shall content myself here with a few points.
I quoted heretical, and, as I contended, blasphemous passages from the writings of Professor Huxley, Dr.Maudsley, Herbert Spencer, John Stuart Mill, Matthew Arnold, Lord Amberly, the Duke of Somerset, Shelley, Byron, James Thomson, Algernon Swinburne, and others; and I urged that the only difference between these passages and the incriminated parts of my paper consisted in the price t which they were published.
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