The Gilded Age


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the person's life. [It afterwards came out that the chief expert for the  
defense, was paid a thousand dollars for looking into the case.]  
The prosecution consumed another day in the examination of experts  
refuting the notion of insanity. These causes might have produced  
insanity, but there was no evidence that they have produced it in this  
case, or that the prisoner was not at the time of the commission of the  
crime in full possession of her ordinary faculties.  
The trial had now lasted two weeks. It required four days now for the  
lawyers to "sum up." These arguments of the counsel were very important  
to their friends, and greatly enhanced their reputation at the bar but  
they have small interest to us. Mr. Braham in his closing speech  
surpassed himself; his effort is still remembered as the greatest in the  
criminal annals of New York.  
Mr. Braham re-drew for the jury the picture, of Laura's early life; he  
dwelt long upon that painful episode of the pretended marriage and the  
desertion. Col. Selby, he said, belonged, gentlemen; to what is called  
the "upper classes:" It is the privilege of the "upper classes" to prey  
upon the sons and daughters of the people. The Hawkins family, though  
allied to the best blood of the South, were at the time in humble  
circumstances. He commented upon her parentage. Perhaps her agonized  
father, in his intervals of sanity, was still searching for his lost  
daughter. Would he one day hear that she had died a felon's death?  
Society had pursued her, fate had pursued her, and in a moment of  
604  


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602 603 604 605 606

Quick Jump
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