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    Curious Republic Of Gondour, And Other Curious Whimsical Sketches

    Page 5
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      Imparting committee of the city of New York, and have nothing to do but

      sit on the platform, solemn and imposing, along with Peter Cooper, Horace

      Greeley, etc., etc., and shed momentary fame at second hand on obscure

      lecturers, draw public attention to lectures which would otherwise clack

      eloquently to sounding emptiness, and subdue audiences into respectful

      hearing of all sorts of unpopular and outlandish dogmas and isms. That

      is what I desire for the cheer and gratification of my gray hairs. Let

      me but sit up there with those fine relics of the Old Red Sandstone

      Period and give Tone to an intellectual entertainment twice a week, and

      be so reported, and my happiness will be complete. Those men have been

      my envy for long, long time. And no memories of my life are so pleasant

      as my reminiscence of their long and honorable career in the Tone-

      imparting service. I can recollect that first time I ever saw them on

      the platforms just as well as I can remember the events of yesterday.

      Horace Greeley sat on the right, Peter Cooper on the left, and Thomas

      Jefferson, Red Jacket, Benjamin Franklin, and John Hancock sat between

      them. This was on the 22d of December, 1799, on the occasion of the

      state' funeral of George Washington in New York. It was a great day,

      that--a great day, and a very, very sad one. I remember that Broadway

      was one mass of black crape from Castle Garden nearly up to where the

      City Hall now stands. The next time I saw these gentlemen officiate was

      at a ball given for the purpose of procuring money and medicines for the

      sick and wounded soldiers and sailors. Horace Greeley occupied one side

      of the platform on which the musicians were exalted, and Peter Cooper the

      other. There were other Tone-imparters attendant upon the two chiefs,

      but I have forgotten their names now. Horace Greeley, gray-haired and

      beaming, was in sailor costume--white duck pants, blue shirt, open at the

      breast, large neckerchief, loose as an ox-bow, and tied with a jaunty

      sailor knot, broad turnover collar with star in the corner, shiny black

      little tarpaulin hat roosting daintily far back on head, and flying two

      gallant long ribbons. Slippers on ample feet, round spectacles on

      benignant nose, and pitchfork in hand, completed Mr. Greeley, and made

      him, in my boyish admiration, every inch a sailor, and worthy to be the

      honored great-grandfather of the Neptune he was so ingeniously

      representing. I shall never forget him. Mr. Cooper was dressed as a

      general of militia, and was dismally and oppressively warlike. I

      neglected to remark, in the proper place, that the soldiers and sailors

      in whose aid the ball was given had just been sent in from Boston--this

      was during the war of 1812. At the grand national reception of

      Lafayette, in 1824, Horace Greeley sat on the right and Peter Cooper to

      the left. The other Tone-imparters of the day are sleeping the sleep of

      the just now. I was in the audience when Horace Greeley Peter Cooper,

      and other chief citizens imparted tone to the great meetings in favor of

      French liberty, in 1848. Then I never saw them any more until here

      lately; but now that I am living tolerably near the city, I run down

      every time I see it announced that "Horace Greeley, Peter Cooper, and

      several other distinguished citizens will occupy seats on the platform;"

      and next morning, when I read in the first paragraph of the phonographic

      report that "Horace Greeley, Peter Cooper, and several other

      distinguished citizens occupied seats on the platform," I say to myself,

      "Thank God, I was present." Thus I have been enabled to see these

      substantial old friends of mine sit on the platform and give tone to

      lectures on anatomy, and lectures on agriculture, and lectures on

      stirpiculture, and lectures on astronomy, on chemistry, on miscegenation,

      on "Is Man Descended from the Kangaroo?" on, veterinary matters, on all

      kinds of religion, and several kinds of politics; and have seen them give

      tone and grandeur to the Four-legged Girl, the Siamese Twins, the Great

      Egyptian Sword Swallower, and the Old Original Jacobs. Whenever somebody

      is to lecture on a subject not of general interest, I know that my

      venerated Remains of the Old Red Sandstone Period will be on the

      platform; whenever a lecturer is to appear whom nobody has heard of

      before, nor will be likely to seek to see, I know that the real

      benevolence of my old friends will be taken advantage of, and that they

      will be on the platform (and in the bills) as an advertisement; and

      whenever any new and obnoxious deviltry in philosophy, morals, or

      politics is to be sprung upon the people, I know perfectly well that

      these intrepid old heroes will be on the platform too, in the interest

      of full and free discussion, and to crush down all narrower and less

      generous souls with the solid dead weight of their awful respectability.

      And let us all remember that while these inveterate and imperishable

      presiders (if you please) appear on the platform every night in the year

      as regularly as the volunteered piano from Steinway's or Chickering's,

      and have bolstered up and given tone to a deal of questionable merit and

      obscure emptiness in their time, they have also diversified this

      inconsequential service by occasional powerful uplifting and upholding of

      great progressive ideas which smaller men feared to meddle with or

      countenance.

      OUR PRECIOUS LUNATIC

      [From the Buffalo Express, Saturday, May 14, 1870.]

      New YORK, May 10.

      The Richardson-McFarland jury had been out one hour and fifty minutes.

      A breathless silence brooded over court and auditory--a silence and a

      stillness so absolute, notwithstanding the vast multitude of human beings

      packed together there, that when some one far away among the throng under

      the northeast balcony cleared his throat with a smothered little cough it

      startled everybody uncomfortably, so distinctly did it grate upon the

      pulseless air. At that imposing moment the bang of a door was heard,

      then the shuffle of approaching feet, and then a sort of surging and

      swaying disorder among the heads at the entrance from the jury-room told

      them that the Twelve were coming. Presently all was silent again, and

      the foreman of the jury rose and said:

      "Your Honor and Gentleman: We, the jury charged with the duty of

      determining whether the prisoner at the bar, Daniel McFarland, has been

      guilty of murder, in taking by surprise an unarmed man and shooting him

      to death, or whether the prisoner is afflicted with a sad but

      irresponsible insanity which at times can be cheered only by violent

      entertainment with firearms, do find as follows, namely:

      That the prisoner, Daniel McFarland, is insane as above described.

      Because:

      1. His great grandfather's stepfather was tainted with insanity, and

      frequently killed people who were distasteful to him. Hence, insanity is

      hereditary in the family.

      2. For nine years the prisoner at the bar did not adequately support his

      family. Strong circumstantial evidence of insanity.

      3. For nine years he made of his home, as a general thin
    g, a poor-house;

      sometimes (but very rarely) a cheery, happy habitation; frequently the

      den of a beery, drivelling, stupefied animal; but never, as far as

      ascertained, the abiding place of a gentleman. These be evidences of

      insanity.

      4. He once took his young unmarried sister-in-law to the museum; while

      there his hereditary insanity came upon him to such a degree that he

      hiccupped and staggered; and afterward, on the way home, even made love

      to the young girl he was protecting. These are the acts of a person not

      in his right mind.

      5. For a good while his sufferings were so great that he had to submit

      to the inconvenience of having his wife give public readings for the

      family support; and at times, when he handed these shameful earnings to

      the barkeeper, his haughty soul was so torn with anguish that he could

      hardly stand without leaning against something. At such times he has

      been known to shed tears into his sustenance till it diluted to utter

      inefficiency. Inattention of this nature is not the act of a Democrat

      unafflicted in mind.

      6. He never spared expense in making his wife comfortable during her

      occasional confinements. Her father is able to testify to this. There

      was always an element of unsoundness about the prisoner's generosities

      that is very suggestive at this time and before this court.

      7. Two years ago the prisoner came fearlessly up behind Richardson in

      the dark, and shot him in the leg. The prisoner's brave and protracted

      defiance of an adversity that for years had left him little to depend

      upon for support but a wife who sometimes earned scarcely anything for

      weeks at a time, is evidence that he would have appeared in front of

      Richardson and shot him in the stomach if he had not been insane at the

      time of the shooting.

      8. Fourteen months ago the prisoner told Archibald Smith that he was

      going to kill Richardson. This is insanity.

      9. Twelve months ago he told Marshall P. Jones that he was going to kill

      Richardson. Insanity.

      10. Nine months ago he was lurking about Richardson's home in New

      Jersey, and said he was going to kill Richardson. Insanity.

      11. Seven months ago he showed a pistol to Seth Brown and said that that

      was for Richardson. He said Brown testified that at that time it seemed

      plain that something was the matter with McFarland, for he crossed the

      street diagonally nine times in fifty yards, apparently without any

      settled reason for doing so, and finally fell in the gutter and went to

      sleep. He remarked at the time that McFarland acted strange--believed he

      was insane. Upon hearing Brown's evidence, John W. Galen, M.D., affirmed

      at once that McFarland was insane.

      12. Five months ago, McFarland showed his customary pistol, in his

      customary way, to his bed-fellow, Charles A. Dana, and told him he was

      going to kill Richardson the first time an opportunity offered. Evidence

      of insanity.

      13. Five months and two weeks ago McFarland asked John Morgan the time

      of day, and turned and walked rapidly away without waiting for an answer.

      Almost indubitable evidence of insanity. And--

      14. It is remarkable that exactly one week after this circumstance, the

      prisoner, Daniel McFarland, confronted Albert D. Richardson suddenly and

      without warning, and shot him dead. This is manifest insanity.

      Everything we know of the prisoner goes to show that if he had been sane

      at the time, he would have shot his victim from behind.

      15. There is an absolutely overwhelming mass of testimony to show that

      an hour before the shooting, McFarland was ANXIOUS AND UNEASY, and that

      five minutes after it he was EXCITED. Thus the accumulating conjectures

      and evidences of insanity culminate in this sublime and unimpeachable

      proof of it. Therefore--

      Your Honor and Gentlemen--We the jury pronounce the said Daniel McFarland

      INNOCENT OF MURDER, BUT CALAMITOUSLY INSANE.

      The scene that ensued almost defies description. Hats, handkerchiefs and

      bonnets were frantically waved above the massed heads in the courtroom,

      and three tremendous cheers and a tiger told where the sympathies of the

      court and people were. Then a hundred pursed lips were advanced to kiss

      the liberated prisoner, and many a hand thrust out to give him a

      congratulatory shake--but presto! with a maniac's own quickness and a

      maniac's own fury the lunatic assassin of Richardson fell upon his

      friends with teeth and nails, boots and office furniture, and the amazing

      rapidity with which he broke heads and limbs, and rent and sundered

      bodies, till nearly a hundred citizens were reduced to mere quivering

      heaps of fleshy odds and ends and crimson rags, was like nothing in this

      world but the exultant frenzy of a plunging, tearing, roaring devil of a

      steam machine when it snatches a human being and spins him and whirls him

      till he shreds away to nothingness like a "Four o'clock" before the

      breath of a child.

      The destruction was awful. It is said that within the space of eight

      minutes McFarland killed and crippled some six score persons and tore

      down a large portion of the City Hall building, carrying away and casting

      into Broadway six or seven marble columns fifty-four feet long and

      weighing nearly two tons each. But he was finally captured and sent in

      chains to the lunatic asylum for life.

      (By late telegrams it appears that this is a mistake.--Editor Express.)

      But the really curious part of this whole matter is yet to be told. And

      that is, that McFarland's most intimate friends believe that the very

      next time that it ever occurred to him that the insanity plea was not a

      mere politic pretense, was when the verdict came in. They think that the

      startling thought burst upon him then, that if twelve good and true men,

      able to comprehend all the baseness of perjury, proclaimed under oath

      that he was a lunatic, there was no gainsaying such evidence and that he

      UNQUESTIONABLY WAS INSANE!

      Possibly that was really the way of it. It is dreadful to think that

      maybe the most awful calamity that can befall a man, namely, loss of

      reason, was precipitated upon this poor prisoner's head by a jury that

      could have hanged him instead, and so done him a mercy and his country a

      service.

      POSTSCRIPT-LATER

      May 11--I do not expect anybody to believe so astounding a thing, and yet

      it is the solemn truth that instead of instantly sending the dangerous

      lunatic to the insane asylum (which I naturally supposed they would do,

      and so I prematurely said they had) the court has actually SET HIM AT

      LIBERTY. Comment is unnecessary. M. T.

      THE EUROPEAN WARS --[From the Buffalo Express, July 25, 1870.]

      First Day

      THE EUROPEAN WAR!!!

      NO BATTLE YET!!!

      HOSTILITIES IMMINENT!!!

      TREMENDOUS EXCITEMENT.

      AUSTRIA ARMING!

      BERLIN, Tuesday.

      No battle has been fought yet. But hostilities may burst forth any week.

      There is tremendous excitement here over news from the front that two

      companies of French soldiers are assembling there.

    &n
    bsp; It is rumoured that Austria is arming--what with, is not known.

      .......................

      Second Day

      THE EUROPEAN WAR

      NO BATTLE YET!

      FIGHTING IMMINENT.

      AWFUL EXCITEMENT.

      RUSSIA SIDES WITH PRUSSIA!

      ENGLAND NEUTRAL!!

      AUSTRIA NOT ARMING.

      BERLIN, Wednesday.

      No battle has been fought yet. However, all thoughtful men feel that the

      land may be drenched with blood before the Summer is over.

      There is an awful excitement here over the rumour that two companies of

      Prussian troops have concentrated on the border. German confidence

      remains unshaken!!

      There is news to the effect that Russia espouses the cause of Prussia and

      will bring 4,000,000 men to the field.

      England proclaims strict neutrality.

      The report that Austria is arming needs confirmation.

      .........................

      Third Day

      THE EUROPEAN WAR

      NO BATTLE YET!

      BLOODSHED IMMINENT!!

      ENORMOUS EXCITEMENT!!

      INVASION OF PRUSSIA!!

      INVASION OF FRANCE!!

      RUSSIA SIDES WITH FRANCE.

      ENGLAND STILL NEUTRAL!

      FIRING HEARD!

      THE EMPEROR TO TAKE COMMAND.

      PARIS, Thursday.

      No battle has been fought yet. But Field Marshal McMahon telegraphs thus

      to the Emperor:

      "If the Frinch army survoives until Christmas there'll be throuble.

      Forninst this fact it would be sagacious if the divil wint the rounds of

      his establishment to prepare for the occasion, and tuk the precaution to

      warrum up the Prussian depairtment a bit agin the day.

      MIKE."

      There is an enormous state of excitement here over news from the front to

     


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