The Gilded Age


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Our repeated predictions are verified. The pernicious doctrines  
which we have announced as prevailing in American society have been  
again illustrated. The name of the city is becoming a reproach.  
We may have done something in averting its ruin in our resolute  
exposure of the Great Frauds; we shall not be deterred from  
insisting that the outraged laws for the protection of human life  
shall be vindicated now, so that a person can walk the streets or  
enter the public houses, at least in the day-time, without the risk  
of a bullet through his brain.  
A fourth journal began its remarks as follows:--  
The fullness with which we present our readers this morning the  
details of the Selby-Hawkins homicide is a miracle of modern  
journalism. Subsequent investigation can do little to fill out the  
picture. It is the old story. A beautiful woman shoots her  
absconding lover in cold-blood; and we shall doubtless learn in due  
time that if she was not as mad as a hare in this month of March,  
she was at least laboring under what is termed "momentary insanity."  
It would not be too much to say that upon the first publication of the  
facts of the tragedy, there was an almost universal feeling of rage  
against the murderess in the Tombs, and that reports of her beauty only  
heightened the indignation. It was as if she presumed upon that and upon  
her sex, to defy the law; and there was a fervent, hope that the law  
would take its plain course.  
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506 507 508 509 510

Quick Jump
1 170 341 511 681