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<h2> CHAPTER XVI. FIRST QUESTION—DID THE WOMAN DIE POISONED? </h2>
<p>THE proceedings began at ten o'clock. The prisoner was placed at the Bar,
before the High Court of Justiciary, at Edinburgh. He bowed respectfully
to the Bench, and pleaded Not Guilty, in a low voice.</p>
<p>It was observed by every one present that the prisoner's face betrayed
traces of acute mental suffering. He was deadly pale. His eyes never once
wandered to the crowd in the Court. When certain witnesses appeared
against him, he looked at them with a momentary attention. At other times
he kept his eyes on the ground. When the evidence touched on his wife's
illness and death, he was deeply affected, and covered his face with his
hands. It was a subject of general remark and general surprise that the
prisoner, in this case (although a man), showed far less self-possession
than the last prisoner tried in that Court for murder—a woman, who
had been convicted on overwhelming evidence. There were persons present (a
small minority only) who considered this want of composure on the part of
the prisoner to be a sign in his favor. Self-possession, in his dreadful
position, signified, to their minds, the stark insensibility of a
heartless and shameless criminal, and afforded in itself a presumption,
not of innocence, but of guilt.</p>
<p>The first witness called was John Daviot, Esquire, Sheriff-Substitute of
Mid-Lothian. He was examined by the Lord Advocate (as counsel for the
prosecution); and said:</p>
<p>"The prisoner was brought before me on the present charge. He made and
subscribed a Declaration on the 29th of October. It was freely and
voluntarily made, the prisoner having been first duly warned and
admonished."</p>
<p>Having identified the Declaration, the Sheriff-Substitute—being
cross-examined by the Dean of Faculty (as counsel for the defense)—continued
his evidence in these words:</p>
<p>"The charge against the prisoner was Murder. This was communicated to him
before he made the Declaration. The questions addressed to the prisoner
were put partly by me, partly by another officer, the procurator-fiscal.
The answers were given distinctly, and, so far as I could judge, without
reserve. The statements put forward in the Declaration were all made in
answer to questions asked by the procurator-fiscal or by myself."</p>
<p>A clerk in the Sheriff-Clerk's office then officially produced the
Declaration, and corroborated the evidence of the witness who had preceded
him.</p>
<p>The appearance of the next witness created a marked sensation in the
Court. This was no less a person than the nurse who had attended Mrs.
Macallan in her last illness—by name Christina Ormsay.</p>
<p>After the first formal answers, the nurse (examined by the Lord Advocate)
proceeded to say:</p>
<p>"I was first sent for to attend the deceased lady on the 7th of October.
She was then suffering from a severe cold, accompanied by a rheumatic
affection of the left knee-joint. Previous to this I understood that her
health had been fairly good. She was not a very difficult person to nurse
when you got used to her, and understood how to manage her. The main
difficulty was caused by her temper. She was not a sullen person; she was
headstrong and violent—easily excited to fly into a passion, and
quite reckless in her fits of anger as to what she said or did. At such
times I really hardly think she knew what she was about. My own idea is
that her temper was made still more irritable by unhappiness in her
married life. She was far from being a reserved person. Indeed, she was
disposed (as I thought) to be a little too communicative about herself and
her troubles with persons like me who were beneath her in station. She did
not scruple, for instance, to tell me (when we had been long enough
together to get used to each other) that she was very unhappy, and fretted
a good deal about her husband. One night, when she was wakeful and
restless, she said to me—"</p>
<p>The Dean of Faculty here interposed, speaking on the prisoner's behalf. He
appealed to the Judges to say whether such loose and unreliable evidence
as this was evidence which could be received by the Court.</p>
<p>The Lord Advocate (speaking on behalf of the Crown) claimed it as his
right to produce the evidence. It was of the utmost importance in this
case to show (on the testimony of an unprejudiced witness) on what terms
the husband and wife were living. The witness was a most respectable
woman. She had won, and deserved, the confidence of the unhappy lady whom
she attended on her death-bed.</p>
<p>After briefly consulting together, the Judges unanimously decided that the
evidence could not be admitted. What the witness had herself seen and
observed of the relations between the husband and wife was the only
evidence that they could receive.</p>
<p>The Lord Advocate thereupon continued his examination of the witness.
Christina Ormsay resumed her evidence as follows:</p>
<p>"My position as nurse led necessarily to my seeing more of Mrs. Macallan
than any other person in the house. I am able to speak from experience of
many things not known to others who were only in her room at intervals.</p>
<p>"For instance, I had more than one opportunity of personally observing
that Mr. and Mrs. Macallan did not live together very happily. I can give
you an example of this, not drawn from what others told me, but from what
I noticed for myself.</p>
<p>"Toward the latter part of my attendance on Mrs. Macallan, a young widow
lady named Mrs. Beauly—a cousin of Mr. Macallan's—came to stay
at Gleninch. Mrs. Macallan was jealous of this lady; and she showed it in
my presence only the day before her death, when Mr. Macallan came into her
room to inquire how she had passed the night. 'Oh,' she said, 'never mind
how <i>I</i> have slept! What do you care whether I sleep well or ill? How
has Mrs. Beauly passed the night? Is she more beautiful than ever this
morning? Go back to her—pray go back to her! Don't waste your time
with me!' Beginning in that manner, she worked herself into one of her
furious rages. I was brushing her hair at the time; and feeling that my
presence was an impropriety under the circumstances, I attempted to leave
the room. She forbade me to go. Mr. Macallan felt, as I did, that my duty
was to withdraw, and he said so in plain words. Mrs. Macallan insisted on
my staying in language so insolent to her husband that he said, 'If you
cannot control yourself, either the nurse leaves the room or I do.' She
refused to yield even then. 'A good excuse,' she said, 'for getting back
to Mrs. Beauly. Go!' He took her at her word, and walked out of the room.
He had barely closed the door before she began reviling him to me in the
most shocking manner. She declared, among other things she said of him,
that the news of all others which he would be most glad to hear would be
the news of her death. I ventured, quite respectfully, on remonstrating
with her. She took up the hair-brush and threw it at me, and then and
there dismissed me from my attendance on her. I left her, and waited below
until her fit of passion had worn itself out. Then I returned to my place
at the bedside, and for a while things went on again as usual.</p>
<p>"It may not be amiss to add a word which may help to explain Mrs.
Macallan's jealousy of her husband's cousin. Mrs. Macallan was a very
plain woman. She had a cast in one of her eyes, and (if I may use the
expression) one of the most muddy, blotchy complexions it was ever my
misfortune to see in a person's face. Mrs. Beauly, on the other hand, was
a most attractive lady. Her eyes were universally admired, and she had a
most beautifully clear and delicate color. Poor Mrs. Macallan said of her,
most untruly, that she painted.</p>
<p>"No; the defects in the complexion of the deceased lady were not in any
way attributable to her illness. I should call them born and bred defects
in herself.</p>
<p>"Her illness, if I am asked to describe it, I should say was troublesome—nothing
more. Until the last day there were no symptoms in the least degree
serious about the malady that had taken her. Her rheumatic knee was
painful, of course—acutely painful, if you like—when she moved
it; and the confinement to bed was irksome enough, no doubt. But otherwise
there was nothing in the lady's condition, before the fatal attack came,
to alarm her or anybody about her. She had her books and her writing
materials on an invalid table, which worked on a pivot, and could be
arranged in any position most agreeable to her. At times she read and
wrote a good deal. At other times she lay quiet, thinking her own
thoughts, or talking with me, and with one or two lady friends in the
neighborhood who came regularly to see her.</p>
<p>"Her writing, so far as I knew, was almost entirely of the poetical sort.
She was a great hand at composing poetry. On one occasion only she showed
me some of her poems. I am no judge of such things. Her poetry was of the
dismal kind, despairing about herself, and wondering why she had ever been
born, and nonsense like that. Her husband came in more than once for some
hard hits at his cruel heart and his ignorance of his wife's merits. In
short, she vented her discontent with her pen as well as with her tongue.
There were times—and pretty often too—when an angel from
heaven would have failed to have satisfied Mrs. Macallan.</p>
<p>"Throughout the period of her illness the deceased lady occupied the same
room—a large bedroom situated (like all the best bedrooms) on the
first floor of the house.</p>
<p>"Yes: the plan of the room now shown to me is quite accurately taken,
according to my remembrance of it. One door led into the great passage, or
corridor, on which all the doors opened. A second door, at one side
(marked B on the plan), led to Mr. Macallan's sleeping-room. A third door,
on the opposite side (marked C on the plan), communicated with a little
study, or book-room, used, as I was told, by Mr. Macallan's mother when
she was staying at Gleninch, but seldom or never entered by any one else.
Mr. Macallan's mother was not at Gleninch while I was there. The door
between the bedroom and this study was locked, and the key was taken out.
I don't know who had the key, or whether there were more keys than one in
existence. The door was never opened to my knowledge. I only got into the
study, to look at it along with the housekeeper, by entering through a
second door that opened on to the corridor.</p>
<p>"I beg to say that I can speak from my own knowledge positively about Mrs.
Macallan's illness, and about the sudden change which ended in her death.
By the doctor's advice I made notes at the time of dates and hours, and
such like. I looked at my notes before coming here.</p>
<p>"From the 7th of October, when I was first called in to nurse her, to the
20th of the same month, she slowly but steadily improved in health. Her
knee was still painful, no doubt; but the inflammatory look of it was
disappearing. As to the other symptoms, except weakness from lying in bed,
and irritability of temper, there was really nothing the matter with her.
She slept badly, I ought perhaps to add. But we remedied this by means of
composing draughts prescribed for that purpose by the doctor.</p>
<p>"On the morning of the 21st, at a few minutes past six, I got my first
alarm that something was going wrong with Mrs. Macallan.</p>
<p>"I was awoke at the time I have mentioned by the ringing of the hand-bell
which she kept on her bed-table. Let me say for myself that I had only
fallen asleep on the sofa in the bedroom at past two in the morning from
sheer fatigue. Mrs. Macallan was then awake. She was in one of her bad
humors with me. I had tried to prevail on her to let me remove her
dressing-case from her bed-table, after she had used it in making her
toilet for the night. It took up a great deal of room; and she could not
possibly want it again before the morning. But no; she insisted on my
letting it be. There was a glass inside the case; and, plain as she was,
she never wearied of looking at herself in that glass. I saw that she was
in a bad state of temper, so I gave her her way, and let the dressing-case
be. Finding that she was too sullen to speak to me after that, and too
obstinate to take her composing draught from me when I offered it, I laid
me down on the sofa at her bed foot, and fell asleep, as I have said.</p>
<p>"The moment her bell rang I was up and at the bedside, ready to make
myself useful.</p>
<p>"I asked what was the matter with her. She complained of faintness and
depression, and said she felt sick. I inquired if she had taken anything
in the way of physic or food while I had been asleep. She answered that
her husband had come in about an hour since, and, finding her still
sleepless, had himself administered the composing draught. Mr. Macallan
(sleeping in the next room) joined us while she was speaking. He too had
been aroused by the bell. He heard what Mrs. Macallan said to me about the
composing draught, and made no remark upon it. It seemed to me that he was
alarmed at his wife's faintness. I suggested that she should take a little
wine, or brandy and water. She answered that she could swallow nothing so
strong as wine or brandy, having a burning pain in her stomach already. I
put my hand on her stomach—quite lightly. She screamed when I
touched her.</p>
<p>"This symptom alarmed us. We went to the village for the medical man who
had attended Mrs. Macallan during her illness: one Mr. Gale.</p>
<p>"The doctor seemed no better able to account for the change for the worse
in his patient than we were. Hearing her complain of thirst, he gave her
some milk. Not long after taking it she was sick. The sickness appeared to
relieve her. She soon grew drowsy and slumbered. Mr. Gale left us, with
strict injunctions to send for him instantly if she was taken ill again.</p>
<p>"Nothing of the sort happened; no change took place for the next three
hours or more. She roused up toward half-past nine and inquired about her
husband. I informed her that he had returned to his own room, and asked if
I should send for him. She said 'No.' I asked next if she would like
anything to eat or drink. She said 'No' again, in rather a vacant,
stupefied way, and then told me to go downstairs and get my breakfast. On
my way down I met the housekeeper. She invited me to breakfast with her in
her room, instead of in the servants' hall as usual. I remained with the
housekeeper but a short time—certainly not more than half an hour.</p>
<p>"Coming upstairs again, I met the under-housemaid sweeping on one of the
landings.</p>
<p>"The girl informed me that Mrs. Macallan had taken a cup of tea during my
absence in the housekeeper's room. Mr. Macallan's valet had ordered the
tea for his mistress by his master's directions. The under-housemaid made
it, and took it upstairs herself to Mrs. Macallan's room. Her master, she
said, opened the door when she knocked, and took the tea-cup from her with
his own hand. He opened the door widely enough for her to see into the
bedroom, and to notice that nobody was with Mrs. Macallan but himself.</p>
<p>"After a little talk with the under-housemaid, I returned to the bedroom.
No one was there. Mrs. Macallan was lying perfectly quiet, with her face
turned away from me on the pillow. Approaching the bedside, I kicked
against something on the floor. It was a broken tea-cup. I said to Mrs.
Macallan, 'How comes the tea-cup to be broken, ma'am?' She answered,
without turning toward me, in an odd, muffled kind of voice, 'I dropped
it.' 'Before you drank your tea, ma'am?' I asked. 'No,' she said; 'in
handing the cup back to Mr. Macallan, after I had done.' I had put my
question, wishing to know, in case she had spilled the tea when she
dropped the cup, whether it would be necessary to get her any more. I am
quite sure I remember correctly my question and her answer. I inquired
next if she had been long alone. She said, shortly, 'Yes; I have been
trying to sleep.' I said, 'Do you feel pretty comfortable?' She answered,
'Yes,' again. All this time she still kept her face sulkily turned from me
toward the wall. Stooping over her to arrange the bedclothes, I looked
toward her table. The writing materials which were always kept on it were
disturbed, and there was wet ink on one of the pens. I said, 'Surely you
haven't been writing, ma'am?' 'Why not?' she said; 'I couldn't sleep.'
'Another poem?' I asked. She laughed to herself—a bitter, short
laugh. 'Yes,' she said, 'another poem.' 'That's good,' I said; 'it looks
as if you were getting quite like yourself again. We shan't want the
doctor any more to-day.' She made no answer to this, except an impatient
sign with her hand. I didn't understand the sign. Upon that she spoke
again, and crossly enough, too—'I want to be alone; leave me.'</p>
<p>"I had no choice but to do as I was told. To the best of my observation,
there was nothing the matter with her, and nothing for the nurse to do. I
put the bell-rope within reach of her hand, and I went downstairs again.</p>
<p>"Half an hour more, as well as I can guess it, passed. I kept within
hearing of the bell; but it never rang. I was not quite at my ease—without
exactly knowing why. That odd, muffled voice in which she had spoken to me
hung on my mind, as it were. I was not quite satisfied about leaving her
alone for too long a time together—and then, again, I was unwilling
to risk throwing her into one of her fits of passion by going back before
she rang for me. It ended in my venturing into the room on the
ground-floor called the Morning-Room, to consult Mr. Macallan. He was
usually to be found there in the forenoon of the day.</p>
<p>"On this occasion, however, when I looked into the Morning-Room it was
empty.</p>
<p>"At the same moment I heard the master's voice on the terrace outside. I
went out, and found him speaking to one Mr. Dexter, an old friend of his,
and (like Mrs. Beauly) a guest staying in the house. Mr. Dexter was
sitting at the window of his room upstairs (he was a cripple, and could
only move himself about in a chair on wheels), and Mr. Macallan was
speaking to him from the terrace below.</p>
<p>"'Dexter!' I heard Mr. Macallan say. 'Where is Mrs. Beauly? Have you seen
anything of her?'</p>
<p>"Mr. Dexter answered, in his quick, off-hand way of speaking, 'Not I. I
know nothing about her.'</p>
<p>"Then I advanced, and, begging pardon for intruding, I mentioned to Mr.
Macallan the difficulty I was in about going back or not to his wife's
room without waiting until she rang for me. Before he could advise me in
the matter, the footman made his appearance and informed me that Mrs.
Macallan's bell was then ringing—and ringing violently.</p>
<p>"It was then close on eleven o'clock. As fast as I could mount the stairs
I hastened back to the bedroom.</p>
<p>"Before I opened the door I heard Mrs. Macallan groaning. She was in
dreadful pain; feeling a burning heat in the stomach and in the throat,
together with the same sickness which had troubled her in the early
morning. Though no doctor, I could see in her face that this second attack
was of a far more serious nature than the first. After ringing the bell
for a messenger to send to Mr. Macallan, I ran to the door to see if any
of the servants happened to be within call.</p>
<p>"The only person I saw in the corridor was Mrs. Beauly. She was on her way
from her own room, she said, to inquire after Mrs. Macallan's health. I
said to her, 'Mrs. Macallan is seriously ill again, ma'am. Would you
please tell Mr. Macallan, and send for the doctor?' She ran downstairs at
once to do as I told her.</p>
<p>"I had not been long back at the bedside when Mr. Macallan and Mrs. Beauly
both came in together. Mrs. Macallan cast a strange look on them (a look I
cannot at all describe), and bade them leave her. Mrs. Beauly, looking
very much frightened, withdrew immediately. Mr. Macallan advanced a step
or two nearer to the bed. His wife looked at him again in the same strange
way, and cried out—half as if she was threatening him, half as if
she was entreating him—'Leave me with the nurse. Go!' He only waited
to say to me in a whisper, 'The doctor is sent for,' and then he left the
room.</p>
<p>"Before Mr. Gale arrived Mrs. Macallan was violently sick. What came from
her was muddy and frothy, and faintly streaked with blood. When Mr. Gale
saw it he looked very serious. I heard him say to himself, 'What does this
mean?' He did his best to relieve Mrs. Macallan, but with no good result
that I could see. After a time she seemed to suffer less. Then more
sickness came on. Then there was another intermission. Whether she was
suffering or not, I observed that her hands and feet (whenever I touched
them) remained equally cold. Also, the doctor's report of her pulse was
always the same—'very small and feeble.' I said to Mr. Gale, 'What
is to be done, sir?' And Mr. Gale said to me, 'I won't take the
responsibility on myself any longer; I must have a physician from
Edinburgh.'</p>
<p>"The fastest horse in the stables at Gleninch was put into a dog-cart, and
the coachman drove away full speed to Edinburgh to fetch the famous Doctor
Jerome.</p>
<p>"While we were waiting for the physician, Mr. Macallan came into his
wife's room with Mr. Gale. Exhausted as she was, she instantly lifted her
hand and signed to him to leave her. He tried by soothing words to
persuade her to let him stay. No! She still insisted on sending him out of
her room. He seemed to feel it—at such a time, and in the presence
of the doctor. Before she was aware of him, he suddenly stepped up to the
bedside and kissed her on the forehead. She shrank from him with a scream.
Mr. Gale interfered, and led him out of the room.</p>
<p>"In the afternoon Doctor Jerome arrived.</p>
<p>"The great physician came just in time to see her seized with another
attack of sickness. He watched her attentively, without speaking a word.
In the interval when the sickness stopped, he still studied her, as it
were, in perfect silence. I thought he would never have done examining
her. When he was at last satisfied, he told me to leave him alone with Mr.
Gale. 'We will ring,' he said, 'when we want you here again.'</p>
<p>"It was a long time before they rang for me. The coachman was sent for
before I was summoned back to the bedroom. He was dispatched to Edinburgh
for the second time, with a written message from Dr. Jerome to his head
servant, saying that there was no chance of his returning to the city and
to his patients for some hours to come. Some of us thought this looked
badly for Mrs. Macallan. Others said it might mean that the doctor had
hopes of saving her, but expected to be a long time in doing it.</p>
<p>"At last I was sent for. On my presenting myself in the bedroom, Doctor
Jerome went out to speak to Mr. Macallan, leaving Mr. Gale along with me.
From that time as long as the poor lady lived I was never left alone with
her. One of the two doctors was always in her room. Refreshments were
prepared for them; but still they took it in turns to eat their meal, one
relieving the other at the bedside. If they had administered remedies to
their patient, I should not have been surprised by this proceeding. But
they were at the end of their remedies; their only business the seemed to
be to keep watch. I was puzzled to account for this. Keeping watch was the
nurse's business. I thought the conduct of the doctors very strange.</p>
<p>"By the time that the lamp was lighted in the sick-room I could see that
the end was near. Excepting an occasional feeling of cramp in her legs,
she seemed to suffer less. But her eyes looked sunk in her head; her skin
was cold and clammy; her lips had turned to a bluish paleness. Nothing
roused her now—excepting the last attempt made by her husband to see
her. He came in with Doctor Jerome, looking like a man terror-struck. She
was past speaking; but the moment she saw him she feebly made signs and
sounds which showed that she was just as resolved as ever not to let him
come near her. He was so overwhelmed that Mr. Gale was obliged to help him
out of the room. No other person was allowed to see the patient. Mr.
Dexter and Mrs. Beauly made their inquiries outside the door, and were not
invited in. As the evening drew on the doctors sat on either side of the
bed, silently watching her, silently waiting for her death.</p>
<p>"Toward eight o'clock she seemed to have lost the use of her hands and
arms: they lay helpless outside the bed-clothes. A little later she sank
into a sort of dull sleep. Little by little the sound of her heavy
breathing grew fainter. At twenty minutes past nine Doctor Jerome told me
to bring the lamp to the bedside. He looked at her, and put his hand on
her heart. Then he said to me, 'You can go downstairs, nurse: it is all
over.' He turned to Mr. Gale. 'Will you inquire if Mr. Macallan can see
us?' he said. I opened the door for Mr. Gale, and followed him out. Doctor
Jerome called me back for a moment, and told me to give him the key of the
door. I did so, of course; but I thought this also very strange. When I
got down to the servants' hall I found there was a general feeling that
something was wrong. We were all uneasy—without knowing why.</p>
<p>"A little later the two doctors left the house. Mr. Macallan had been
quite incapable of receiving them and hearing what they had to say. In
this difficulty they had spoken privately with Mr. Dexter, as Mr.
Macallan's old friend, and the only gentleman then staying at Gleninch.</p>
<p>"Before bed-time I went upstairs to prepare the remains of the deceased
lady for the coffin. The room in which she lay was locked, the door
leading into Mr. Macallan's room being secured, as well as the door
leading into the corridor. The keys had been taken away by Mr. Gale. Two
of the men-servants were posted outside the bedroom to keep watch. They
were to be relieved at four in the morning—that was all they could
tell me.</p>
<p>"In the absence of any explanations or directions, I took the liberty of
knocking at the door of Mr. Dexter's room. From his lips I first heard the
startling news. Both the doctors had refused to give the usual certificate
of death! There was to be a medical examination of the body the next
morning."</p>
<p>There the examination of the nurse, Christina Ormsay, came to an end.</p>
<p>Ignorant as I was of the law, I could see what impression the evidence (so
far) was intended to produce on the minds of the jury. After first showing
that my husband had had two opportunities of administering the poison—once
in the medicine and once in the tea—the counsel for the Crown led
the jury to infer that the prisoner had taken those opportunities to rid
himself of an ugly and jealous wife, whose detestable temper he could no
longer endure.</p>
<p>Having directed his examination to the attainment of this object, the Lord
Advocate had done with the witness. The Dean of Faculty—acting in
the prisoner's interests—then rose to bring out the favorable side
of the wife's character by cross-examining the nurse. If he succeeded in
this attempt, the jury might reconsider their conclusion that the wife was
a person who had exasperated her husband beyond endurance. In that case,
where (so far) was the husband's motive for poisoning her? and where was
the presumption of the prisoner's guilt?</p>
<p>Pressed by this skillful lawyer, the nurse was obliged to exhibit my
husband's first wife under an entirely new aspect. Here is the substance
of what the Dean of Faculty extracted from Christina Ormsay:</p>
<p>"I persist in declaring that Mrs. Macallan had a most violent temper. But
she was certainly in the habit of making amends for the offense that she
gave by her violence. When she was quiet again she always made her excuses
to me, and she made them with a good grace. Her manners were engaging at
such times as these. She spoke and acted like a well-bred lady. Then,
again, as to her personal appearance. Plain as she was in face, she had a
good figure; her hands and feet, I was told, had been modeled by a
sculptor. She had a very pleasant voice, and she was reported when in
health to sing beautifully. She was also (if her maid's account was to be
trusted) a pattern in the matter of dressing for the other ladies in the
neighborhood. Then, as to Mrs. Beauly, though she was certainly jealous of
the beautiful young widow, she had shown at the same time that she was
capable of controlling that feeling. It was through Mrs. Macallan that
Mrs. Beauly was in the house. Mrs. Beauly had wished to postpone her visit
on account of the state of Mrs. Macallan's health. It was Mrs. Macallan
herself—not her husband—who decided that Mrs. Beauly should
not be disappointed, and should pay her visit to Gleninch then and there.
Further, Mrs. Macallan (in spite of her temper) was popular with her
friends and popular with her servants. There was hardly a dry eye in the
house when it was known she was dying. And, further still, in those little
domestic disagreements at which the nurse had been present, Mr. Macallan
had never lost his temper, and had never used harsh language: he seemed to
be more sorry than angry when the quarrels took place."—Moral for
the jury: Was this the sort of woman who would exasperate a man into
poisoning her? And was this the sort of man who would be capable of
poisoning his wife?</p>
<p>Having produced this salutary counter-impression, the Dean of Faculty sat
down; and the medical witnesses were called next.</p>
<p>Here the evidence was simply irresistible.</p>
<p>Dr. Jerome and Mr. Gale positively swore that the symptoms of the illness
were the symptoms of poisoning by arsenic. The surgeon who had performed
the post-mortem examination followed. He positively swore that the
appearance of the internal organs proved Doctor Jerome and Mr. Gale to be
right in declaring that their patient had died poisoned. Lastly, to
complete this overwhelming testimony, two analytical chemists actually
produced in Court the arsenic which they had found in the body, in a
quantity admittedly sufficient to have killed two persons instead of one.
In the face of such evidence as this, cross-examination was a mere form.
The first Question raised by the Trial—Did the Woman Die Poisoned?—was
answered in the affirmative, and answered beyond the possibility of doubt.</p>
<p>The next witnesses called were witnesses concerned with the question that
now followed—the obscure and terrible question, Who Poisoned Her?</p>
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