[Prisoner for Blasphemy by George William Foote]@TWC D-Link book
Prisoner for Blasphemy

CHAPTER VI
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PREPARING FOR TRIAL.
There were many reasons why I did not wish to be tried at the Old Bailey.

First, it is an ordinary criminal court, with all the vulgar characteristics of such places: swarms of loud policemen, crowds of chattering witnesses, prison-warders bent on recognising old offenders, ushers who look soured by long familiarity with crime, clerks who gabble over indictments with the voice and manner of a town-crier, barristers in and out of work, some caressing a brief and some awaiting one; and a large sprinkling of idle persons, curious after a fresh sensation and eager to gratify a morbid appetite for the horrible.

How could the greatest orator hope to overcome the difficulties presented by such surroundings?
The most magnificent speech would be shorn of its splendor, the most powerful robbed of more than half its due effect.
In the next place, I should have to appear in the dock, and address the jury from a position which seems to require an apology in itself.

And, further, that jury would be a common one, consisting almost entirely of small tradesmen, the very worst class to try such an indictment.
For these and other reasons I resolved to obtain, if possible, a _certiorari_ to remove our Indictment to the Court of Queen's Bench; and as the first Indictment had been so removed, I did not anticipate any serious difficulty.


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