[Prisoner for Blasphemy by George William Foote]@TWC D-Link bookPrisoner for Blasphemy CHAPTER XV 3/13
As I said in one of my three letters from prison: "For the first time juries have disagreed, and chances are already slightly against a verdict of Guilty. Now the jury is the hand by which the enemy grasps us, and when we have absolutely secured the twelfth man we shall have amputated the _thumb_." On May 1 the following letter from Admiral Maxse appeared in the _Daily News_: "TO THE EDITOR OF THE 'DAILY NEWS.' SIR,--Foote's brilliant defence last week will probably have awakened some fastidious critics to their error in having depicted him as a low and coarse controversialist, while Lord Coleridge's judgment will have convinced the public that had Lord Coleridge occupied the place of Justice North, the defendant would have escaped with a mild penalty.
In the meantime, Mr.Foote continues to undergo what is virtually 'solitary confinement' in a cell, and is condemned to this punishment for a year.
A more wicked sentence, or a more wicked law, than the one which Mr.Foote and his companions suffer from, is, in my opinion, impossible to conceive, that is to say in a country which professes to enjoy religious liberty.
His crime consisted in caricaturing a grotesque representation of a religion which has certainly a higher side.
People who are truly religious should be obliged to Mr.Foote, if he managed to shock some people concerning any feature of religion which is gross and degrading to that religion. I know something of Mr.Foote, and I am quite certain he would not say anything to shock a refined interpretation of religion. Refined Christians are anxious themselves to get rid of the excrescences of their creed.
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