登陆注册
4717800000009

第9章 CAPITAL PUNISHMENT(1)

I will take for the subject of this letter, the effect of Capital Punishment on the commission of crime, or rather of murder; the only crime with one exception (and that a rare one) to which it is now applied. Its effect in preventing crime, I will reserve for another letter: and a few of the more striking illustrations of each aspect of the subject, for a concluding one.

The effect of Capital Punishment on the commission of Murder.

Some murders are committed in hot blood and furious rage; some, in deliberate revenge; some, in terrible despair; some (but not many)

for mere gain; some, for the removal of an object dangerous to the murderer's peace or good name; some, to win a monstrous notoriety.

On murders committed in rage, in the despair of strong affection (as when a starving child is murdered by its parent) or for gain, I

believe the punishment of death to have no effect in the least. In the two first cases, the impulse is a blind and wild one, infinitely beyond the reach of any reference to the punishment. In the last, there is little calculation beyond the absorbing greed of the money to be got. Courvoisier, for example, might have robbed his master with greater safety, and with fewer chances of detection, if he had not murdered him. But, his calculations going to the gain and not to the loss, he had no balance for the consequences of what he did.

So, it would have been more safe and prudent in the woman who was hanged a few weeks since, for the murder in Westminster, to have simply robbed her old companion in an unguarded moment, as in her sleep. But, her calculation going to the gain of what she took to be a Bank note; and the poor old woman living between her and the gain; she murdered her.

On murders committed in deliberate revenge, or to remove a stumbling block in the murderer's path, or in an insatiate craving for notoriety, is there reason to suppose that the punishment of death has the direct effect of an incentive and an impulse?

A murder is committed in deliberate revenge. The murderer is at no trouble to prepare his train of circumstances, takes little or no pains to escape, is quite cool and collected, perfectly content to deliver himself up to the Police, makes no secret of his guilt, but boldly says, "I killed him. I'm glad of it. I meant to do it. I

am ready to die." There was such a case the other day. There was such another case not long ago. There are such cases frequently.

It is the commonest first exclamation on being seized. Now, what is this but a false arguing of the question, announcing a foregone conclusion, expressly leading to the crime, and inseparably arising out of the Punishment of Death? "I took his life. I give up mine to pay for it. Life for life; blood for blood. I have done the crime. I am ready with the atonement. I know all about it; it's a fair bargain between me and the law. Here am I to execute my part of it; and what more is to be said or done?" It is the very essence of the maintenance of this punishment for murder, that it does set life against life. It is in the essence of a stupid, weak, or otherwise ill-regulated mind (of such a murderer's mind, in short), to recognise in this set off, a something that diminishes the base and coward character of murder. "In a pitched battle, I, a common man, may kill my adversary, but he may kill me. In a duel, a gentleman may shoot his opponent through the head, but the opponent may shoot him too, and this makes it fair. Very well. I take this man's life for a reason I have, or choose to think I have, and the law takes mine. The law says, and the clergyman says, there must be blood for blood and life for life. Here it is. I pay the penalty."

A mind incapable, or confounded in its perceptions--and you must argue with reference to such a mind, or you could not have such a murder--may not only establish on these grounds an idea of strict justice and fair reparation, but a stubborn and dogged fortitude and foresight that satisfy it hugely. Whether the fact be really so, or not, is a question I would be content to rest, alone, on the number of cases of revengeful murder in which this is well known, without dispute, to have been the prevailing demeanour of the criminal: and in which such speeches and such absurd reasoning have been constantly uppermost with him. "Blood for blood", and "life for life", and such like balanced jingles, have passed current in people's mouths, from legislators downwards, until they have been corrupted into "tit for tat", and acted on.

Next, come the murders done, to sweep out of the way a dreaded or detested object. At the bottom of this class of crimes, there is a slow, corroding, growing hate. Violent quarrels are commonly found to have taken place between the murdered person and the murderer:

usually of opposite sexes. There are witnesses to old scenes of reproach and recrimination, in which they were the actors; and the murderer has been heard to say, in this or that coarse phrase, "that he wouldn't mind killing her, though he should be hanged for it"--in these cases, the commonest avowal.

It seems to me, that in this well-known scrap of evidence, there is a deeper meaning than is usually attached to it. I do not know, but it may be--I have a strong suspicion that it is--a clue to the slow growth of the crime, and its gradual development in the mind. More than this; a clue to the mental connection of the deed, with the punishment to which the doer of that deed is liable, until the two, conjoined, give birth to monstrous and misshapen Murder.

The idea of murder, in such a case, like that of self-destruction in the great majority of instances, is not a new one. It may have presented itself to the disturbed mind in a dim shape and afar off;

同类推荐
  • 花月尺牍

    花月尺牍

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 洗冤集录

    洗冤集录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说发菩提心破诸魔经

    佛说发菩提心破诸魔经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 同治甲戌日兵侵台始末

    同治甲戌日兵侵台始末

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 君臣下

    君臣下

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 泰山和蚁人(人猿泰山系列)

    泰山和蚁人(人猿泰山系列)

    人猿泰山系列是一部让中小学生开阔眼界、丰富想象力的书,是一部教给孩子动物是朋友、大自然是家园的温情冒险小说,是一部中小学图书馆和孩子的书架上不得不放的书,是父母与孩子共同阅读的睡前故事。小说情节奇谲精彩,主人公强悍而无畏,为孩子们打开了一扇充满着浪漫英雄主义的丛林世界大门。译者的话:上世纪四十年代,我们在读初中时,《人猿泰山》作为世界名著,曾经风靡一时。每逢课间十分钟,同学们几乎满教室争说泰山。当时,这部奇趣曼妙的小说,已经在我们心里扎根了。1988年,我俩六十岁退休后,曾到各地旅游,顺便到各省大图书馆、大学图书馆查询此书,不但译本遍寻不得,连原文本也没有了。
  • 江南读本(大夏书系)

    江南读本(大夏书系)

    花是有灵性的,雨是有灵性的,季节是有灵性的,物候是有灵性的,地域也是有灵性的。只有某一种花卉或季节最适合表现某一个地域。“杏花春雨江南”,改为梅花、桃花,便觉不好。虽然梅花、桃花都很美。“人难再得始为佳”。只有难以再得的结合,才是真正的良偶佳侣。江南的姿韵、风情、美学特征、地域性格,有了杏花、春雨的陪伴,就像是宝玉有了晴雯,黛玉有了紫鹃。
  • 时间决定成败

    时间决定成败

    本书对于每一个觉得 就要被生活击垮的人来讲,都是一个绝妙的指导。这是一本神奇的书,它将告诉你怎样将“要做”的事情完成,怎样开始充满激情的一天,如何改正浪费时间 的习惯,如何得到两倍甚至三倍的工作效率……尤其是,《时间决定成败》将教会你如何驾驭你的生活、 工作、人际关系,而不是让它们成为你成功路上的绊脚石。
  • 首席总裁,乖乖臣服

    首席总裁,乖乖臣服

    六年前,人/事不醒的她被丈夫亲手送入他的怀抱。翌日,他匆匆离开,奔赴异国他乡,她在丈夫的怀中醒来。月余,她琅珰入狱,他在国外完婚。八个月后,她在狱中产下死/胎。========六年后,他低调归国,她狼狈出狱,两条平行线重新纠葛在一起。本不应该相见的两人以云泥之差再次相遇。起起落落,离合难测。什么?!她身旁那个超帅的小帅哥是他的儿子?顾径凡讳莫如深的眸子微微眯起,指着那粉雕玉琢一般的娃儿,“你确定我有这么大的儿子?”小家伙傲气的抱起胳膊,在妈咪的脸上亲了又亲,反问身旁的女人,“妈咪,你确定这个又老又难看的男人是我爹地?”==========花絮一:离婚后再遇,宋辽远拉着她的手不肯放开,“老婆,我后悔了。”顾径凡摇了摇身旁儿子的小手,“儿子,有人想占你妈咪便宜,怎么办?”“咬他!”小家伙想也不想,朝着宋辽远就冲过去,一口咬在了他的手背上,鲜血横流。顾径凡挑眉,“宋先生,再sao扰我女人,下次流血的就是一条腿了…”花絮二:顾径凡正在洗澡,电/话响起,他示意秦轻接电/话。对方坦言:“我是顾径凡老婆…”秦轻疑惑:“可他登记在册的配偶栏里写的是我的名字…”简介无能,请看正文。不断更,不弃坑,正常一天两更,上午一更,下午一更,收藏单天过一百,加更
  • 哲学的慰藉(译林人文精选)

    哲学的慰藉(译林人文精选)

    《哲学的慰藉》既是一部论述哲学和神学问题的经典名著,也是文学史上的伟大篇章,以散文与诗歌交替的形式描述作者在狱中绝境对人生终极问题的思考。涉及命运与天命、上帝的预知与自由意志、上帝的永恒性与时间等重大问题。
  • 良夫晚成:纨绔太子妃

    良夫晚成:纨绔太子妃

    一朝穿越,她成了大晋朝最恶名昭彰的苏家三少。女扮男装,横霸京都,没事杀杀人,做做生意,顺便再撩撩汉。一不小心,撩到个妖孽。他,生性凉薄,阴鸷无情,清贵高冷,不近女色。世家大族频频向他示好,名门贵女个个痴恋追随,而他,偏偏只对一人上了心。“我是男人,男人!”某女紧拽衣襟,誓死保卫清白。他笑得人畜无害:“管你男人女人,总之……”俊容俯下,倾身覆上:“你是孤的人!”【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 生存的基本竞争

    生存的基本竞争

    认真分析我们平时生活中的种种欲望,不难发现,它们之间有一个共同的特点,即:它们通常是达到目的的手段而非目的本身。例如,我们需要钱,目的是买一辆汽车,原因是邻居有汽车,而我们又不愿意觉得低人一等,所以我们也需要一辆,这样我们就可以维护自尊心并且得到别人的爱和尊重。
  • 胡桃匣子守护神

    胡桃匣子守护神

    她在学院大冒险时捡到古老的胡桃匣子,打开匣子,出现一个守护神。是天降好运,还是恶灵缠身?对恋爱充满憧憬的新闻系女生上野晴,无意中释放出被关在胡桃匣子中的守护神克瑞斯,从此过上与神同居、不得安宁的精彩生活。
  • 毒步天下

    毒步天下

    她是一名亡命之徒,更是一名惟利是图的雇佣兵。一朝穿越,魂穿异世。她是苍域国的右相千金,亦是未来太子妃。不料,却遭到歹人暗算,被人烙下低贱的‘奴’字印记。醒来之后,她不再是她。为取自保,她韬光养晦,养精蓄锐。不仅制造兵器,怂恿奴隶,更是挑起战事,令烽火四起。当她身上’奴’印被人揭开,沦为低贱奴隶。接踵而来的是太子退婚,爹娘断决关系,受到众人唾气。怎么——她看起来像就是这么好欺负的人吗?他们该不会以为——身上烙有‘奴’印,就一定会是低贱的奴隶?身上烙有‘奴’印,就能与她撇清关系?身上烙有‘奴’印,就可以任由他们嘲她讽她、辱她轻她?可知在群雄逐鹿、奴隶乱世,她凭着一双纤纤素手就能翻手为云,覆手为雨,金戈铁马、倾覆天下!那时...可还记得曾被他们鄙弃过的怯弱相府小姐?↓↓保证内容比简介更精彩,喜欢的请点下面的(加入书架)↓↓↓↓↓↓↓
  • 诡村(下)

    诡村(下)

    陕西关中这个地方是一片神奇的土地,作为十六朝古都,这里民间流传着“江南才子关中将,陕西黄土埋皇上”的说法,而一些诡异的事件跟它厚重的历史一样,成为陕西民间文化的重要组成部分。“我”、“五叔”、“五爷”是阴阳世家“任家”的后人,在祖传的职业之下,成为阴阳先生,又经历了一系列惊险刺激的灵异之旅……