The upper outside corner of page 15 and 16 has been torn from the hardcopy. The spots are marked with?? and a best guess at missing words is in brackets. Footnotes have been moved from end of page to end of paragraph positions, sequentially numbered.
Contents
INTRODUCTION
THE LIFE OF CHARLES PEACE:
I. HIS EARLY YEARS II. PEACE IN LONDON III. HIS TRIAL AND EXECUTION
THE CAREER OF ROBERT BUTLER:
I. THE DUNEDIN MURDERS II. THE TRIAL OF BUTLER III. HIS DECLINE AND FALL
M. DERUES:
I. THE CLIMBING LITTLE GROCER II. THE GAYE OF BLUFF
DR. CASTAING:
I. AN UNHAPPY COINCIDENCE II. THE TRIAL OF DR. CASTAING
PROFESSOR WEBSTER
THE MYSTERIOUS MR. HOLMES:
I. HONOUR AMONGST THIEVES II THE WANDERING ASSASSIN
PARTNERSHIP IN CRIME:
I. THE WIDOW GRAS 1. THE CHARMER 2. THE WOUNDED PIGEON II. VITALIS AND MARIE BOYER III. THE FENAYROU CASE IV. EYRAUD AND BOMPARD
A BOOK OF REMARKABLE CRIMINALS
Introduction
"The silent workings, and still more the explosions, of human passion which bring to light the darker elements of man's nature present to the philosophical observer considerations of intrinsic interest; while to the jurist, the study of human nature and human character with its infinite varieties, especially as affecting the connection between motive and action, between irregular desire or evil disposition and crime itself, is equally indispensable and difficult."--_Wills on Circumstantial Evidence_.
I REMEMBER my father telling me that sitting up late one night talking with Tennyson, the latter remarked that he had not kept such late hours since a recent visit of Jowett. On that occasion the poet and the philosopher had talked together well into the small hours of the morning. My father asked Tennyson what was the subject of conversation that had so engrossed them. "Murders," replied Tennyson. It would have been interesting to have heard Tennyson and Jowett discussing such a theme. The fact is a tribute to the interest that crime has for many men of intellect and imagination. Indeed, how could it be otherwise? Rob history and fiction of crime, how tame and colourless would be the residue! We who are living and enduring in the presence of one of the greatest crimes on record, must realise that trying as this period of the world's history is to those who are passing through it, in the hands of some great historian it may make very good reading for posterity. Perhaps we may find some little consolation in this fact, like the unhappy victims of famous freebooters such as Jack Sheppard or Charley Peace.
But do not let us flatter ourselves. Do not let us, in all the pomp and circumstance of stately history, blind ourselves to the fact that the crimes of Frederick, or Napoleon, or their successors, are in essence no different from those of Sheppard or Peace. We must not imagine that the bad man who happens to offend against those particular laws which constitute the criminal code belongs to a peculiar or atavistic type, that he is a man set apart from the rest of his fellow-men by mental or physical peculiarities. That comforting theory of the Lombroso school has been exploded, and the ordinary inmates of our prisons shown to be only in a very slight degree below the average in mental and physical fitness of the normal man, a difference easily explained by the environment and conditions in which the ordinary criminal is bred.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Book of Remarkable Criminals by Irving
- 2: The present head of the Criminal Investigation Department
- 3: Those whose guilt remains undiscovered
- 4: Suspected of being successful murderers
- 5: Castaing is a man of sensibility
- 6: If Othello has played his Ancient false
- 7: Were powerful aids to Claudius
- 8: To Banquo a somewhat similar intimation is given
- 9: So Armand Peltzer plots to murder the husband
- 10: Cassius is a criminal by instinct
- 11: Of hitherto exemplary character
- 12: Hesitates to commit a possibly unnecessary crime
- 13: But Peace has one grievance against posterity
- 14: There was born to John Peace in Sheffield a son
- 15: Neil was lamented in appropriate verse
- 16: In Sheffield his children attended the Sunday School
- 17: The year in which Peace came to Darnall
- 18: Peace had not forgotten his friends at Darnall
- 19: Of the summing up the jury convicted William Habron
- 20: Dyson found herself confronted by Peace
- 21: He took the first train in the morning for Beverley
- 22: Adamson to dispose of a box of cigars for him
- 23: Thompson insisting on her joining him
- 24: Thompson would give occasionally to friendly neighbours
- 25: The disturber of the peace of Blackheath
- 26: Brion complied with the request of the mysterious John Ward
- 27: And was charged with the murder of Arthur Dyson
- 28: And then you would have buried me at Darnall
- 29: And it was at Darnall that he had first met Mrs
- 30: Dyson was firm in her repudiation of them
- 31: Lockwood put it to her that she had not come to Darnall
- 32: Brassington answered that he did not
- 33: Dyson left England for America
- 34: Dyson quitted the shores of England
- 35: Brion visited him in Armley Jail
- 36: Littlewood had known Peace a few years before
- 37: Littlewood admitted that such was his impression
- 38: Littlewood described the prayer as earnest
- 39: William Marwood unlike his celebrated victim
- 40: This statement ex detective Parrock believed
- 41: Sheppard is typical of all this
- 42: Munday attempted to close with him
- 43: Late the same night Constable Hennessy
- 44: Bain saw Butler again in Dunedin on the evening of Saturday
- 45: On the bed lay the body of Dewar
- 46: About fifteen miles from Dunedin
- 47: When Mallard later in the evening visited Butler again
- 48: Butler was not in reality undefended
- 49: Butler did little to shake it in cross examination
- 50: Dewar and asked for the return of his jewellery
- 51: The man who did that murder in Dunedin has
- 52: Evidence rather of his innocence than his guilt
- 53: These bloodstains were almost invisible
- 54: To which the prosecutor had replied Yes
- 55: Caused by Munday picking up a stone and attacking him
- 56: De Lamotte dwelt happily together at Buisson Souef
- 57: Beraud was the son of a small merchant
- 58: Seigneur de Buisson Souef et Valle Profonde
- 59: Derues went down to Buisson Souef with his little girl
- 60: Derues was again sent out shopping
- 61: Ducoudray in the Rue de la Mortellerie
- 62: As a fact the loan from Duclos to Derues was fictitious
- 63: Derues hastened home filled with wrath
- 64: 000 livres to buy Buisson Souef
- 65: De Lamotte as the price of Buisson Souef
- 66: The court condemned Derues to death
- 67: Derues was delivered in the Conciergerie of a male child
- 68: IAN UNHAPPY COINCIDENCEEdme Castaing
- 69: There Castaing paid him frequent visits
- 70: Martignon was prostrated with grief
- 71: By keeping Auguste and Lebret apart
- 72: Lebret had taken all the money
- 73: Pigache returned at three o'clock
- 74: Pigache bled the patient and applied twenty leeches
- 75: Castaing was still in the hotel under provisional arrest
- 76: Percillie have for accusing you
- 77: Castaing was obliged to admit that he had allowed
- 78: Percillie adhered to the truth of her evidence
- 79: Constituted an absence of the corpus delicti
- 80: Roussel concluded his speech at ten o'clock on Sunday night
- 81: Castaing was condemned to death
- 82: Separated this lower laboratory from the dissecting room
- 83: Petersburg Mineralogical Society
- 84: Pettee had paid to him that morning
- 85: Parkman on the Friday afternoon
- 86: This sledge hammer Littlefield never saw again
- 87: On Sunday evening at sunset Littlefield
- 88: Littlefield saw nothing to excite peculiar attention
- 89: Webster spoke to the officers of Parkman's disappearance
- 90: Had Mama better send for Nancy
- 91: Webster addressed the jury himself
- 92: The aggravating persistency of Parkman
- 93: And recognised as a friend by Alice Pitezel
- 94: While Pitezel himself would disappear to Germany
- 95: Pitezel were transferred from Boston to Philadelphia
- 96: Holmes occupied the second floor
- 97: That you have not only murdered Pitezel
- 98: Pitezel was not wholly reassured
- 99: From Cincinnati Geyer went to Indianapolis
- 100: Belonging to the Pitezel children
- 101: But had disappeared in Indianapolis
- 102: But contended that Pitezel had committed suicide
- 103: In February in the following year Pitezel
- 104: It was Pitezel who had introduced to Holmes
- 105: And on the grocer calling one day
- 106: And on the advice of her doctors went to Vittel
- 107: Georges de Saint Pierre idolised his middle aged mistress
- 108: Which she produced and gave to Gaudry
- 109: She had passed the meridian of her life as a charmer of men
- 110: Gaudry called to see the widow
- 111: Gaudry was then sent away till ten o'clock
- 112: Paid a visit to the Rue de Boulogne
- 113: And himself left for Courbevoie
- 114: If any misfortune overtake Gaudry
- 115: Asked if Gaudry had spoken the truth
- 116: But to Gaudry were accorded extenuating circumstances
- 117: At length the unsuspecting Boyer died
- 118: When Marie Boyer came home from Lyons
- 119: Suddenly Madame Boyer fell ill
- 120: To Vitalis dismissal meant ruin
- 121: He asked Vitalis for news of Madame Boyer
- 122: To the examining magistrate Marie Boyer
- 123: Aubert lived with the Fenayrous
- 124: That of Aubert still prosperous
- 125: Had she also come to hate Aubert
- 126: The two men returned to Chatou by the 7
- 127: Could have had no motive for vengeance against Aubert
- 128: Perhaps Aubert knew something against you
- 129: The submissive Lucien had little to say for himself
- 130: Not only was Fenayrou accorded extenuating circumstances
- 131: The day following the disappearance of Gouffe
- 132: Goron made some inquires as to this Michel Eyraud
- 133: Eyraud had proposed that they should murder and rob him
- 134: But Eyraud forgot to return the costly robe
- 135: Eyraud was know sic to have passed as Gorski
- 136: She met in Paris Michel Eyraud
- 137: Eyraud and Bompard were in London
- 138: Eyraud was confronted with his accomplice
- 139: As to the influence of Eyraud over Bompard
- 140: Eyraud noticed that the warders
