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John BELLINGHAM
Early
life
The details of Bellingham's early
life are unclear, as few sources survive, and most post-assassination
biographies of him included speculation as fact.
Recollections of family and friends allow some details
to be stated with confidence. Bellingham was certainly
born in St Neots, Huntingdonshire, and later brought up
in London, where he was apprenticed to a jeweller, James
Love, at the age of fourteen.
Two years later, he was sent as a
midshipman on the maiden voyage of the Hartwell
from Gravesend to China. There was a mutiny on board on
May 22, 1787, which led to the ship running aground and
sinking.
In 1794, a John Bellingham opened a
tin factory on London's Oxford Street, but the business
failed and he was declared bankrupt that March. It has
not been definitely established that this is the same
person.
Bellingham certainly worked as a
clerk in a counting house in the late 1790s, and around
1800 he went to Archangel in Russia as an agent for
importers and exporters.
He returned to England in 1802, and
worked in Liverpool as a merchant broker. He married
Mary Neville in 1803. In the summer of 1804, Bellingham
again went to Archangel to work for a short time as an
export representative.
Russian
imprisonment
In autumn 1803, a Russian ship
Soleure insured at Lloyd's of London was lost in the
White Sea. The owners (the house of R. Van Brienen)
attempted to claim on their insurance but an anonymous
letter informed Lloyd's that the ship had been sabotaged.
Soloman Van Brienen suspected Bellingham was the author,
and decided to retaliate by accusing him of a debt of
4,890 roubles to a bankrupt for which he was an assignee.
Bellingham, on the verge of leaving
for Britain on November 16, 1804, had his travelling
pass withdrawn because of the debt.
Van Brienen also persuaded the
Governor-General of the area to imprison Bellingham. A
year later Bellingham secured his release and managed to
get to St. Petersburg, where he attempted to impeach the
Governor-General.
This provoked the Russian authorities
and he was charged with leaving Archangel in a
clandestine manner, and again imprisoned. He was in
prison until October 1808 when he was put out onto the
streets, but without permission to leave. In his
desperation he personally petitioned the Tsar. He was
permitted to leave in 1809 and arrived back in England
in December.
Assassination of the Prime Minister
Back in England Bellingham began to
petition the United Kingdom Government for compensation
for his imprisonment, but was refused (the United
Kingdom had broken off diplomatic relations with Russia
in November 1808). His wife tried to persuade him to
drop the issue and Bellingham went back into work.
In 1812 Bellingham again went to work
in London, where he renewed his attempts to win
compensation. On April 18 he went in person to the
offices of the Foreign Office where a civil servant
called Hill told him he was at liberty to take whatever
measures he thought proper.
Bellingham had already started
preparations for resolving the matter in another way,
and on April 20 he bought two half-inch calibre (12.7 mm)
pistols from W. Beckwith, gunsmith of 58 Skinner Street.
He also arranged with a tailor to have a secret inside
pocket put on his coat. Around this time, he was often
seen in the lobby of the House of Commons.
After taking the family of a friend
to see a water-colour painting exhibition on May 11,
1812, Bellingham casually remarked that he had some
business to attend to, and made his way to Parliament.
He waited in the lobby until the
Prime Minister, Spencer Perceval appeared, then stepped
forward and shot him through the heart. Bellingham then
calmly sat on a bench. He was immediately detained by
those present and identified by Isaac Gascoyne, MP for
Liverpool.
Bellingham was tried on Wednesday May
13 at the Old Bailey where he argued that he would have
preferred to kill the British Ambassador to Russia, but
that he was entitled as a wronged man to kill the
representative of those he saw as his oppressors. He
gave a formal statement to the court, saying:
"Recollect, Gentlemen, what was
my situation. Recollect that my family was ruined
and myself destroyed, merely because it was Mr
Perceval's pleasure that justice should not be
granted; sheltering himself behind the imagined
security of his station, and trampling upon law and
right in the belief that no retribution could reach
him. I demand only my right, and not a favour; I
demand what is the birthright and privilege of every
Englishman. Gentlemen, when a minister sets himself
above the laws, as Mr Perceval did, he does it as
his own personal risk. If this were not so, the mere
will of the minister would become the law, and what
would then become of your liberties? I trust that
this serious lesson will operate as a warning to all
future ministers, and that they will henceforth do
the thing that is right, for if the upper ranks of
society are permitted to act wrong with impunity,
the inferior ramifications will soon become wholly
corrupted. Gentlemen, my life is in your hands, I
rely confidently in your justice."
Evidence that Bellingham was insane
was put forward by witnesses, but not by Bellingham
himself, and was discounted by the trial judge, Sir
James Mansfield. Bellingham was found guilty and his
sentence was handed down:
"That you be taken from hence to the place from
whence you came, and from thence to a place of execution, where you
shall be hanged by the neck until you be dead; your body to be
dissected and anatomized."
The hanging was carried out in public on Monday, 18
May. According to René Martin Pillet, a Frenchman who wrote an account
of his ten years in England, the sentiment of the very large crowd that
gathered at Bellingham's execution was:
"Farewell poor man, you owe satisfaction to the
offended laws of your country, but God bless you! you have rendered an
important service to your country, you have taught ministers that they
should do justice, and grant audience when it is asked of them."
A subscription was raised for the widow and children
of Bellingham, and "their fortune was ten times greater than they could
ever have expected in any other circumstances".
Trivia
In the 1983 general election, his
descendant Henry Bellingham was elected to
Parliament for North West Norfolk. In the 1997
election, one of Bellingham's opponents was Roger
Percival, a descendant of Spencer Perceval.
Bellingham lost his 1997 seat but won it back in
2001 and 2005.
The song Spencer Perceval
by Leeds based rock band iLiKETRAiNS is about the
murder of Perceval from Bellingham's point of view.
The song features on their 2007 debut album
Elegies to Lessons Learnt.
Notes
In 1984, Patrick Magee made a serious
attempt on the life of Margaret Thatcher in the Brighton
Bombing. There were also serious attempts on the lives
of King George III and Queen Victoria, and the Gunpowder
Plot to bomb the Palace of Westminster.
References
'Assassination of the Prime
Minister: The shocking death of Spencer Perceval'
by Molly Gillen (Sidgwick and Jackson, London,
1972).
Wikipedia.org
John Bellingham
John Bellingham, the author of this crime, was
brought up in a counting-house in London, and afterwards went to
Archangel, where he lived during a period of three years in the service
of a Russian merchant. Having returned to England, he was married to a
Miss Nevill, the daughter of a respectable merchant and shipbroker, who
at that time resided at Newry, but who subsequently removed to Dublin.
Bellingham, being a person of active habits and of
considerable intelligence, was subsequently employed by some merchants
in the Russian trade, by whom he was induced again to visit Archangel,
and he in consequence proceeded thither, accompanied by his wife, in the
year 1804. His principal dealings were with the firm of Dorbecker & Co.;
but before twelve months had expired a misunderstanding arose between
them, and each party made pecuniary claims upon the other. The subject
was referred by the Governor-General to the decision of four merchants,
two of whom Bellingham was allowed to select from his countrymen
resident on the spot, and by the award of these arbitrators Bellingham
was found to be indebted to the house of Dorbecker & Co. in the sum of
two thousand roubles; but this sum he refused to pay, and appealed to
the Senate against the decision.
In the meantime a criminal suit had been instituted
against him by the owners of a Russian ship which had been lost in the
White Sea. They accused him of having written an anonymous letter to the
underwriters in London, stating that the insurances of that ship were
fraudulent transactions; in consequence of which the payment for her
loss was resisted. No satisfactory proof being adduced, Bellingham was
acquitted; but before the termination of the suit he attempted to quit
Archangel, and being stopped by the police, whom he resisted, he was
taken to prison, but was soon after liberated, through the influence of
the British consul, Sir Stephen Sharp, to whom he had made application,
requesting to be protected from what he considered the injustice of the
Russian authorities.
Soon after this the Senate confirmed the award of the
arbitrators, and Bellingham was delivered over to the College of
Commerce, a tribunal established, and acknowledged by treaty, for taking
cognisance of commercial matters relating to British subjects. He was to
remain in custody till he discharged the debt of the two thousand
roubles; but his confinement was by no means severe, for he had
permission to walk wherever he pleased, attended by an officer belonging
to the College. Lord Granville Leveson Gower being at this time
ambassador at the Russian Court, Bellingham made frequent application,
and at various times received from his secretary small sums of money to
support him during his confinement, One night, in particular, he rushed
into his lordship's house at St Petersburg, and requested permission to
remain all night to avoid being secured by the police, whom he had
escaped. This was granted, although the ambassador had no authority to
protect him from a legal arrest; but it appears he was afterwards
retaken, and, being confined by the authorities of the country, the
British ambassador could have no pretence to solicit his release. His
lordship, however, in a conversation with the Minister for Foreign
Affairs, expressed a personal wish that the Russian Government, seeing
no prospect of recovering the money from Bellingham, would liberate him
on condition of his immediately returning to England; but we are not
told what effect was produced, as the ambassador soon after quitted the
Russian Court.
Bellingham having, by some means or other, procured
his liberation, in the year 1809 returned to England, and at Liverpool
commenced the business of an insurance-broker. It appears, however, that,
from a constant recital of the circumstances which had occurred in
Russia, his complaints were aggravated in his own mind into grievances,
and he at length began to talk of demanding redress from the Government
for what he termed the culpable misconduct of the officer, Lord
Granville Leveson Gower, and his secretary, in omitting to defend his
rights as a British subject. He eventually wrote to the Marquis
Wellesley, setting forth the nature of his case and the grounds upon
which he expected that some compensation would be made. By the noble
Marquis he was referred to the Privy Council, and by that body to the
Treasury. His efforts being unattended with success in either quarter,
he determined to proceed to the Chancellor of the Exchequer (Mr Perceval),
with a view to obtaining his sanction and support for his demand. Mr
Perceval, however -- having made himself master of the case submitted to
him -- declined to interfere, and Mr Bellingham was then advised by his
friends that the only resource left to him was a petition to Parliament.
As an inhabitant of Liverpool, he applied to General Gascoyne, then
Member for that city, to present a petition to the House of Commons; but
that honourable gentleman, having ascertained upon inquiry that the case
was unsupported by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, refused to have
anything to do with it. Driven now to pursue a course quite unusual in
such cases, he petitioned the Prince Regent; but from him he was
referred again to the Treasury, and he again received an intimation that
all applications from him must be futile. Three years had now been spent
in these constant and fruitless attacks upon the Government, but the
unfortunate and misguided gentleman appeared even yet to cherish hopes
that his case would be attended to. On one occasion, it is reported, he
carried his wife -- who had in vain striven to wean him from what she
considered to be his malady -- and another lady to the Secretary of
State's office for the purpose of showing them the success with which
his exertions were attended; and although he then, as he had before,
received a flat denial of his claims, he yet continued to assure them
that he did not in the least doubt that ere long all his hopes would be
made good, and he would receive compensation for his sufferings. He now
adopted a new, and certainly an unprecedented, mode of attack. He wrote
to the police magistrates of Bow Street in the following terms:-
TO THEIR WORSHIPS THE POLICE MAGISTRATES OF THE
PUBLIC OFFICE IN BOW STREET
SIRS, --
I much regret its being my lot to have to apply to your worships
under most peculiar and novel circumstances. For the particulars of the
case I refer to the enclosed letter of Mr Secretary Ryder, the
notification from Mr Perceval, and my petition to Parliament, together
with the printed papers herewith. The affair requires no further remark
than that I consider his Majesty's Government to have completely
endeavoured to close the door of justice, in declining to have, or even
to permit, my grievances to be brought before Parliament for redress,
which privilege is the birthright of every individual. The purport of
the present is, therefore, once more to solicit his Majesty's Ministers,
through your medium, to let what is right and proper be done in my
instance, which is all I require. Should this reasonable request be
finally denied, I shall then feel justified in executing justice myself
-- in which case I shall be ready to argue the merits of so reluctant a
measure with his Majesty's Attorney-General, wherever and whenever I may
be called upon so to do. In the hopes of averting so abhorrent but
compulsive an alternative I have the honour to be, sirs, your very
humble and obedient servant,
JOHN BELLINGHAM.
No. 9 NEW MILLMAN STREET,
March 23, 1812
This letter was at once conveyed to the Members of
the Government, but it was treated by them as a mere threat, and no
further notice was taken of it than, on Mr Bellingham's again presenting
himself, by a fresh refusal being given to him by Mr Read. Once more he
applied to the Treasury, and again he was told that he had nothing to
expect; and, according to his statement, Mr Hill, whom he now saw, told
him that he might resort to whatever measures he thought fit. This he
declared he considered a carte blanche to take justice into his own
hands, and he accordingly determined to take such measures of revenge as
he madly supposed would effectually secure that attention and
consideration for his case which he deemed it had not received, and to
which it was in his opinion fully entitled.
This unhappy determination being made, he began to
make the necessary preparations for the foul deed which he contemplated.
His first step was to make himself acquainted with the persons of those
Ministers who had seats in the House of Commons, and for this purpose he
nightly visited the House, and there usually took his seat in the
gallery appropriated to strangers; and, having obtained a general
knowledge of their persons, he afterwards posted himself in the lobby of
the House, in order to be able to identify them. He then purchased a
pair of pistols, with powder and ball, and had an additional pocket made
in his coat for carrying them the more conveniently.
On the evening of the 11th of May, 1812, he took his
station behind the folding-doors leading into the body of the House, and
at five o'clock, as Mr Perceval advanced up the lobby, he presented one
of his pistols and fired. His aim was true, and the ball entered the
left breast of his victim and passed through his heart. Mr Perceval
reeled a short distance, and exclaiming, "Murder!" in a low tone of
voice, fell to the ground. He was instantly picked up by Mr Smith,
Member for Norwich, and another gentleman, and carried into the office
of the Speaker's secretary, where he expired almost immediately. Loud
cries of "Shut the door; let no one out!" were heard immediately after
the shot was fired, and several persons exclaimed: "Where's the murderer?"
Bellingham, who still held the pistol in his hand, answered, "I am the
unfortunate man," and he was immediately seized and searched. Mr V. G.
Dowling was among the first who went up to him, and on his examining his
person he found in his left-hand trousers-pocket a pistol loaded with
ball and primed. There were also found upon him an opera-glass, with
which he had been accustomed to examine the persons of the Members of
the House while sitting in the gallery, and a number of papers. Upon his
being interrogated as to his motives for committing such an act he
replied: "Want of redress, and denial of justice."
During his examination before the magistrates
upstairs in the House of Commons he still retained his self-possession,
and even corrected a witness as to an omission in his evidence. He
persisted in denying any personal enmity to Mr Perceval, for whose death
he expressed the greatest sorrow, separating, by a confusion of ideas,
the man from the Minister; and seemed to think he had not injured the
individual though he had taken away the life of the Chancellor of the
Exchequer.
This event excited the greatest sensation in the
country. A Cabinet Council was called, and the mails were stopped, until
instructions were prepared to secure tranquillity in the districts; for
at first it was apprehended that the assassin was instigated by
political motives, and that he was connected with some treasonable
association.
Measures being provided for securing order through
the country and the metropolis, Bellingham was removed, under a strong
military escort, about one o'clock in the morning, to Newgate, and
conducted to a room adjoining the chapel. One of the head turnkeys and
two other persons sat up with him all night. He retired to bed soon
after his arrival at the jail; but he was disturbed during the night,
and had no sound sleep. He rose soon after seven o'clock, and requested
some tea for breakfast, of which, however, he took but little. No
private persons were admitted to see him, but he was visited in the
course of the day by the sheriffs and some other public functionaries.
He conversed very cheerfully with the sheriffs and others who were in
his room, and stated that the question would soon be tried, when it
would be seen how far he was justified. He considered the whole as a
private matter between him and the Government, who gave him a carte
blanche to do his worst, which he had done.
Alderman Combe, as one of the committing magistrates,
was very active in his endeavours to trace Bellingham's connexions and
habits, and for that purpose went to the house of a respect able woman
where he lodged in New Millman Street, but could learn from her nothing
that indicated any conspiracy with others. His landlady represented him
as a quiet inoffensive man, though at times rather eccentric, which she
instanced by observing that when he had lodged there only three weeks,
at 10s 6d per week, she was surprised to find that he had given her
servant-maid half-a-guinea for herself. On being told the deed which he
had perpetrated, she said that was impossible, for that she had met him
a few minutes before the stated time, when he told her that he had just
been to buy a prayer-book. She represented him as of a religious turn of
mind.
In jail the prisoner requested to have pen, ink and
paper, to write some letters to his friends, and he accordingly wrote
one to his family at Liverpool, which was delivered open to Mr Newman.
The following was sent to Mrs Roberts, No 9 New Millman Street, the lady
at whose house he lodged. It will serve to show the state of his mind in
the miserable situation to which he had reduced himself:
Tuesday morning, Old Bailey
DEAR MADAM -- Yesterday midnight I was escorted to this neighbourhood
by a noble troop of Light Horse, and delivered into the care of Mr
Newman (by Mr Taylor, the magistrate and M.P.) as a state prisoner of
the first class. For eight years I have never found my mind so tranquil
as since this melancholy but necessary catastrophe, as the merits or
demerits of my peculiar case must be regularly unfolded in a criminal
court of justice to ascertain the guilty party, by a jury of my country.
I have to request the favour of you to send me three or four shirts,
some cravats, handkerchiefs, night-caps, stockings, &c, out of my
drawers, together with comb, soap, tooth-brush, with any other trifle
that presents itself which you think I may have occasion for, and
inclose them in my leather trunk, and the key please to send sealed, per
bearer; also my great-coat, flannel gown, and black waistcoat: which
will much oblige,
'Dear madam, your very obedient servant,
'JOHN BELLINGHAM.
'To the above please to add the prayer-books.'
Soon after two o'clock the wretched prisoner ate a
hearty dinner, and requested that in future he might dine at about the
same hour, and after passing the rest of the day in a tranquil manner,
he retired to bed at twelve and slept until seven the next morning,
being attended by two persons during the night. He breakfasted at about
nine o'clock, and appeared perfectly composed, and on the sheriffs
revisiting him, accompanied by several gentlemen, he was found to be
unaltered in his demeanour. On his being spoken to on the subject of his
trial, he conversed with apparent indifference, but on the melancholy
fact of Mr Perceval's murder being alluded to, he became less tranquil,
persisted in vindicating the act, and said that when his trial came on
before a jury of his countrymen, it would be for them to determine how
far a minister of the crown was justified in refusing justice to an
injured individual. He declared that if he had a thousand lives to lose,
he would have risked them in the pursuit of justice in the same way. He
spoke of the result of his trial with the utmost confidence, and on his
being asked whether he had any commands to his wife at Liverpool, he
declared that he had not, and that in a day or two he should join her in
that city.
On the 15th of May, 1812, four days after the death
of Mr Perceval, the trial of the prisoner came on at the Old Bailey. The
judges at ten o'clock took their seats on each side of the Lord Mayor;
and the recorder, the Duke of Clarence, the Marquis Wellesley and almost
all the aldermen of the City of London occupied the bench. The court was
crowded to excess, and no distinction of rank was observed, so that
Members of the House of Commons were forced to mingle in the throng.
There were also present a great number of ladies, all led by the most
intense curiosity to behold the assassin, and to hear what he might urge
in defence or in palliation of his atrocious act.
At length Bellingham appeared, and advanced to the
bar with a firm step, and quite undismayed. He bowed to the Court most
respectfully, and even gracefully; and it is impossible to describe the
impression which his appearance, accompanied by this unexpected
fortitude, produced. He was dressed in a light brown surtout coat and
striped yellow waistcoat; his hair plainly dressed, and without powder.
Before the prisoner was called on regularly to plead,
Mr Alley, his counsel, made application to have the trial postponed, for
the purpose of procuring proofs of his client's insanity, which was
alleged in two affidavits he held: he said that he had no doubt, if time
were allowed, that the prisoner could be proved to be insane. Mr Alley
was here interrupted by the court, who refused to hear him until the
prisoner had first pleaded.
The indictment was then read, and the usual question,
'Guilty, or not guilty?' was put to Bellingham, when he addressed the
court: 'My lords -- Before I can plead to this indictment, I must state,
in justice to myself, that by hurrying on my trial I am placed in a most
remarkable situation. It so happens that my prosecutors are actually the
witnesses against me. All the documents on which alone I could rest my
defence have been taken from me and are now in possession of the Crown.
It is only two days since I was told to prepare for my defence, and when
I asked for my papers, I was told they could not be given up. It is
therefore, my lords, rendered utterly impossible for me to go into my
justification, and under the circumstances in which I find myself, a
trial is absolutely useless. The papers are to be given to me after the
trial, but how can that avail me for my defence? I am, therefore, not
ready for my trial.'
The Attorney-General was proceeding to explain to the
court what had been done with reference to the prisoner's papers, when
Chief Justice Mansfield interrupted him, observing, it was necessary the
prisoner should first plead.
The prisoner was again interrogated, when he pleaded
'Not guilty' to both counts of the indictment.
The Attorney-General -- 'I will now answer what has
fallen from the prisoner. He says that he has been denied access to his
papers. It is true that Government, for the purposes of justice, has
retained them -- but it is also true that he has been informed that if
he asked for them at the time of his trial they should be ready, and any
of them, which he might think useful to his defence, should be given to
him: and in the meantime, if he considered it necessary, he might have
copies of them. This we are ready to verify on oath.'
The clerk of the arraigns, Mr Shelton, then read the
indictment, which charged the prisoner in the usual way with the murder
of the Right Hon Spencer Perceval, with which he was also charged on the
coroner's inquisition.
Mr Abbott having opened the case, the Attorney-General
addressed the jury. He said that a lamentable and painful task devolved
upon him to state to the jury the circumstances of this horrid murder --
a crime perpetrated on a man whose whole life, he should have thought,
would have guarded and protected him against such an attack, who, he was
sure, if enough of life had been left him to see by whose hand he had
fallen, would have spent his last moment in uttering a prayer for the
forgiveness of his murderer. But It was not a time for him to dwell on
the public loss, which had been sustained -- its brightest ornament had
been torn from the country, but the country had done justice to his
memory. These were not considerations, however, by which they must be
swayed. It was not revenge, nor was it resentment, that ought to have
any influence on their consideration of the question. They were to
satisfy public justice -- to take care, by their verdict, that the
public should not be exposed to such horrid crimes. With respect to the
prisoner, he knew nothing, nor did he know how his life had been spent,
except so far as related to the circumstances of the case. He had been
in business and had acted as a merchant, in the course of which he had
shown himself a man of sound understanding in every act which he
performed; and he had not only conducted his own affairs with
understanding, but he had been selected by other persons to manage
theirs.
Having stated the main facts of the case as we have
already detailed them, he entreated the jury to consider it not as the
murder of so eminent a person, but as the murder of a common individual
-- to suppose the meanest subject to have suffered as Mr Perceval had
suffered, and to return their verdict as they would upon that case. Was
he or was he not guilty? To that point they must direct their attention,
and he knew of no reason to cause even a doubt. But what remained? This
only -- the attempt which had been made that day to put off the trial of
the prisoner, on the ground of his being fit for this or any other crime,
as he was afflicted with insanity. Let them consider this a little. The
prisoner was a man conducting himself like others in all the ordinary
circumstances of life -- who carried on business, none of his family or
friends interfering -- no pretence being suggested that he was unable to
superintend his own affairs. What clearer proofs, then, could be given
to show, contrary to the defence set up, that he was not what the law
called non compos mentis -- that he was an accountable being?
He knew the cases where the plea of insanity would be
received -- where for instance a murder was committed by a person whose
mental infirmity might be considered as very nearly the absence of all
mind. Against their defence there was no argument. But he was this day
to learn whether the wickedness of the act which the prisoner was called
on to answer was to be considered an excuse for its perpetration.
Travelling through his whole life, what ground could they adduce for
such a plea? His every act appeared rational except one, and that was
only irrational, because it was so horrid that the imagination of man
could not fancy to itself the existence of so atrocious a deed. But how
far must this argument go? It must arrive at this conclusion -- that
every act of gross and unusual atrocity would carry its defence along
with it, that every act of peculiar horror would have within itself a
certain defence, for the barbarity of the deed would be considered as a
proof that the mind which directed it was not in a state of sufficient
security to judge whether the action was right or wrong. If the mind
possessed the power of forming that judgement, the prisoner was
criminally accountable for the act. A man might be infirm in mind,
insufficient to dispose of his property or to judge of the claims of his
respective relatives, and if he were in that situation, the management
of his affairs might be taken from him and vested in trustees: but such
a man was not discharged from criminal acts because he could not
transact civil business. Many cases had occurred within his memory in
courts of law, in which it was proved that a person in many respects had
evinced symptoms of insanity up to a certain time; but the question then
was, whether that insanity was of such a description as precluded or
permitted the knowledge of right or wrong? In every one of the cases
which recurred to his memory, though a certain degree of madness was
proved, still as the parties seemed to have sufficient sense to
distinguish right from wrong at the time of the perpetration of the acts
charged against them, they were held to be criminally accountable. Here
there was no deficiency of understanding whatever. No opinion of others
to that effect was adduced: on the contrary, he was entrusted with the
management of his own and others' affairs. the question was, whether at
the time the murder was perpetrated he possessed sufficient sense to
distinguish between right and wrong? What conclusion could they draw in
favour of the idea which had been suggested? Let them take from their
recollection the frightful nature of the act with the commission of
which he was charged, let them take from it its accumulated horrors, and
time prisoner stood before them in a state of sanity, and fully
accountable for the act, of which, he thought, little doubt could be
entertained he had been guilty.
The learned gentleman concluded by expressing his
satisfaction at the fact that the prisoner stood alone on that occasion,
that he was unconnected with, and unaided and uninfluenced by, any other
person or party in the country, and that this deed could not therefore
be attributed to any but the personal feelings which he entertained
towards His Majesty's Government. On him, and on him only, did the
disgrace which he had excited rest, and the character of the country was
entirely free from any participation in it.
The first witness called on time part of the Crown
was:
Mr William Smith (M.P. for Norwich) who, being sworn,
deposed as follows:
He was on his way to attend the House of Commons on
the evening of Monday the 11th of May, and was going through the lobby
towards the door of the house, when he heard the report of a pistol,
which appeared to have been fired close to the entrance door of the
lobby. Immediately on the report, he turned towards the place from
whence the noise appeared to proceed, and observed a tumult and probably
a dozen or more persons about the spot. Almost in the same instant he
saw a person rush hastily from among the crowd, and heard several voices
cry out, 'Shut the doors -- let no one escape.' The person came towards
him from the crowd, looking first one way, then another, rather like one
seeking for shelter than a person wounded. But taking two or three steps
towards the witness, he reeled by him and almost instantaneously fell on
the floor with his face downward, Before he fell, witness heard him cry,
though not very distinctly, and in what he uttered, he heard the word 'murder!'
or something very like it. When he first fell, witness thought that he
might have been slightly wounded, and expected to see him make an effort
to rise. But gazing on him for a few moments, he observed that he did
not stir at all, and he, therefore, immediately stooped down to raise
him front the ground, requesting the assistance of a gentleman close by
him for the purpose. As soon as they had turned his face upwards, and
not till then, he found that it was Mr Perceval. They then took him into
their arms, and carried him into the office of the Speaker's secretary,
where they seated themselves on the table, with Mr Perceval between them,
also sitting on the table, and resting on their arms. His face was now
perfectly pale, the blood issuing in small quantities from each corner
of his mouth, and probably in two or three minutes from the firing of
the pistol all signs of life had ceased. The eyes of the unfortunate
gentleman were open, but he did not appear to know witness, nor to take
any notice of any person about him, nor did he utter the least
articulate sound from the moment he fell. A few convulsive sobs, which
lasted perhaps three or four moments, together with a scarcely
perceptible pulse, were the only signs of life which appeared then, and
those continued but a very short time longer. When witness felt Mr
Perceval's pulse for the last time, just before Mr Lynn, the surgeon,
arrived, it appeared to him that he was quite dead. Witness remained
supporting the body until it was conveyed into the Speaker's house, but
he was unable to give any account of what passed in the lobby.
Mr William Lynn, a surgeon in Great George Street, de
posed that he was called to the deceased, hut on his arrival he was
quite dead. There was blood upon his white waistcoat and shirt, and upon
his examining the body, he found that there was an opening in the skin,
he probed the wound three inches down wards, and entertained no doubt
that the pistol-ball passed into the heart, and was the cause of death.
Mr Henry Burgess, a solicitor who was in the lobby,
stated, that after having seen Mr Perceval fall, as had been already
described, he heard someone exclaim, 'That's the man!' and saw a hand
pointing towards the bench by the fire-place which is on one side of the
lobby, he immediately went over to the bench and saw the prisoner at the
bar sitting on it in great agitation. There were one or two persons by
him. He looked at his hands, and saw his left hand on the bench; and
near or under his other hand he saw a pistol, which he took, and asked
the prisoner what had induced him to do such a deed? He replied, 'Want
of redress of grievances and refusal by government', or words to that
effect. Witness then said to the prisoner, 'You have another pistol?' he
replied, 'Yes.' Witness asked if it was loaded, to which he answered in
the affirmative. Witness then saw some person take the other pistol from
his person. The pistol which witness took from the prisoner was warm,
and appeared as if it had been recently discharged. The lock was down
and the pan open. (Here the pistol was produced, and recognized by the
witness.) He then stated, that he put his hand into the right waist coat-pocket
of the prisoner, from which he took a small penknife and a pencil, and
from his left-hand waistcoat-pocket he took a bunch of keys and some
money. The prisoner was detained in custody, and examined shortly
afterwards above stairs in the House of Commons before the magistrates.
Witness related in the presence of the prisoner, on that occasion, the
facts which he had now detailed. When he had concluded, the prisoner
made an observation to this effect, as well as he could recollect. 'I
wish to correct Mr Burgess' statement in one point; but I believe he is
perfectly correct in every other. Instead of my hand being, as Mr
Burgess stated, upon or near the pistol, I think he took it from my hand
or upon it.'
James Taylor, a tailor, at No 11 North Place, Gray's
Inn Lane, deposed that he had been employed by the prisoner to repair
some clothes. He was afterwards in Guildford Street, when the prisoner
called him, and took him to his lodgings in Millman Street, and there
directed him to put a side-pocket into a coat, which he gave him, of a
particular length which he pointed out. He completed the job on the same
night, and carried the coat home.
Mr John Morris stated that he often attended in the
gallery appropriated for strangers, and went down to the House on Monday,
the 11th of May, for that purpose. he passed into the lobby about the
hour of five in the afternoon. He observed the prisoner at the bar
standing in the lobby near the outer door: he was standing beside that
part of the door which is generally closed, it was a double door, and
one half was usually closed, within which half tile prisoner was
standing, and anyone to have entered the lobby must have passed him at
unit's length. He observed the prisoner as if watching for somebody
coming, and he appeared to look anxiously towards the door. As well as
the witness recollected, the prisoner had his right hand within the left
breast of his coat. Witness passed on to the staircase of the gallery,
and almost immediately after he got into the upper lobby, he heard the
report of a pistol, and found soon after that it was connected with the
fatal event which occurred on that evening. He had frequently seen the
prisoner before in the gallery, where gentlemen who report the
parliamentary proceedings resorted, and about the passages of the House
of Commons.
John Vickery, a Bow Street officer, said that he went
on Monday afternoon to New Millman Street, to the lodgings of the
prisoner, which he searched, and found, in the bedroom upstairs, a pair
of pistol-bags, and in the same drawer a small powder-flask and some
powder in a small paper, a box with some bullets, and some small flints
wrapped in paper. There was also a pistol-key to unscrew the pistol for
the purpose of loading, and some sand-paper and a pistol-mould. The
witness on comparing e bullet found in the loaded pistol with the mould,
and the screw with the pistols, found them all to correspond.
Mr Vincent George Dowling was next called. He stated
that he was in the gallery on the afternoon in question, and ran down
into the lobby on hearing the report of a pistol. He saw the prisoner at
the bar sitting on a stool, and going to him, he seized him and began to
search his person. he took from his left—hand small-clothes pocket a
small pistol, which he produced and which, on his examining it, he found
to be loaded with powder and ball. It was primed as well as loaded. The
pistol which had been discharged and that which he took from the
prisoner were in his belief a brace: they were of the same size and bore,
and were marked with the same maker's name. The witness had seen the
prisoner several times before in the gallery and in the avenues of the
house, and to the best of his recollection the last the he saw him was
six or seven days before the death of Mr Perceval, He was frequently in
the gallery during the debates, and upon several occasions entered into
conversation with the witness. He had often asked for information as to
the names of the gentlemen speaking, and also as to the persons of the
members of His Majesty's Government.
Other witnesses from Newgate produced tile coat worn
by the prisoner at the tine of his apprehension, amid it was identified
by Taylor as the same one which he had put the side-pocket.
Lord Chief Justice Mansfield then addressed the
prisoner, and told him, that the case on the part of the Crown being now
gone through, the period was come for him to make any defence he might
wish to offer.
The prisoner asked whether his counsel had nothing to
urge in his defence?
Mr Alley informed him that his counsel were not
entitled to speak.
The prisoner then said that the documents and papers
necessary to his defence had been taken out of his pocket, and had not
since been restored to him.
Mr Garrow said that it was the intention of the
counsel for the Crown to restore him his papers, having first proved
them to be the same which were taken from him, and that they had not
suffered any subtraction: his solicitor already had copies of them.
General Gascoigne and Mr Hume (M.P. for Weymouth)
proved that the papers were those which had been taken from the person
of the prisoner, and that they had been in their custody ever since, and
had suffered no subtraction.
The papers were then handed to the prisoner, who
proceeded to arrange and examine them.
The prisoner, who had been hitherto sitting, now rose
and, bowing respectfully to the court and jury, went into his defence,
in a firm tone of voice, and without any appearance of embarrassment. He
spoke nearly to the following effect:
'I feel great personal obligation to the Attorney-General
for the objection which he has made to the plea of insanity. I think it
is far more fortunate that such a plea as that should have been
unfounded, than that it should have existed in fact. I am obliged to my
counsel, however, for having thus endeavoured to consult my interest, as
I am convinced the attempt has arisen from the kindest motives. That I
am or have been insane is a circumstance of which I am not apprised,
except in the single instance of my having been confined in Russia: how
far that may be considered as affecting my present situation, it is not
for me to determine. This is the first time that I have ever spoken in
public in this way. I feel my own incompetency, but I trust you will
attend to the substance, rather than to the manner, of my investigating
the truth of an affair which has occasioned my presence at this bar.
'I beg to assure you that the crime which I have
committed has arisen from compulsion rather than from any hostility to
the man whom it has been my fate to destroy. Considering the amiable
character and universally admitted virtues of Mr Perceval, I feel, if I
could murder him in a cool and unjustifiable manner, I should not
deserve to live another moment in this world. Conscious, however, that I
shall be able to justify everything which I have done, I feel some
degree of confidence in meeting the storm which assails me, and shall
now proceed to unfold a catalogue of circumstances which, while they
harrow up my own soul, will, I am sure, tend to the extenuation of my
conduct in this honourable court. This, as has already been candidly
stated by the Attorney—General, is the first instance in which the
slightest imputation has been cast upon my moral character. Until this
fatal catastrophe, which no one can more heartily regret than I do, not
excepting even the family of Mr Perceval himself, I have stood alike
pure in the minds of those who have known me, and in the judgement of my
own heart. I hope I see this affair in the true light.
The prisoner then read various documents containing
the statement of the whole of his affairs in Russia. In the course of
narrating these hardships, he took occasion to explain several points,
adverting with great feeling to the unhappy situation in which he was
placed, from the circumstance of his having been lately married to his
wife, then about twenty years of age, with an infant at her breast, and
who had been waiting for him at St Petersburgh, in order that she might
accompany him to England, a prey to all those anxieties which the
unexpected and cruel incarceration of her husband, without any just
grounds, was calculated to excite. (He was here much affected.) He also
de scribed his feelings at a subsequent period, when his wife, from an
anxiety to reach her native country (England) when in a state of
pregnancy, and looking to the improbability of his liberation, was
obliged to quit Petersburgh unprotected, and under take the voyage at
the peril of her life, while Lord L. Gower and Sir S. Sharp suffered him
to remain in a situation worse than death. 'My God! my God!' he
exclaimed, 'what heart could bear such excruciating tortures, without
bursting with indignation at conduct so diametrically opposite to
justice and to humanity. I appeal to you, gentlemen of the jury, as men
-- I appeal to you as brothers -- I appeal to you as Christians --whether,
under such circumstances of persecution, it was possible to regard the
actions of the ambassador and consul of my own country with any other
feelings but those of detestation and horror! In using language thus
strong, I feel that I commit an error; yet does my heart tell me, that
towards men who lent themselves thus to bolster up the basest acts of
persecution, there are no observations, however strong, which the strict
justice of the case would not excuse my using. Had I been so fortunate
as to have met Lord Leveson Gower instead of that truly amiable and
highly lamented individual, Mr Perceval, he is the man who should have
received the ball!'
Bellingham then went on to recount at great length
the history of his various attempts to obtain satisfaction from the
Government, which have already been described, ending with his letter to
the Bow Street magistrates quoted above.
'In the course of two days,' he continued, 'I called
again at Bow Street for an answer to this letter, when I received a
little memorandum, in Mr Reid's writing, in which he states that he
cannot interfere in my affairs, and that he had felt it his duty to
communicate the contents of my packet to the Secretary of State. Had he
done otherwise he would have been extremely reprehensible, as events
have turned out so calamitously -- events which go to my heart to allude
to. (Much affected.) At last, in reply to letter of the 13th of April, 1
received a final and direct answer, which at once convinced me that I
had no reason to expect any adjustment whatever of those claims which I
had on His Majesty's government, for my criminal detention in Russia.
'After this, on personal application at the office of
the Secretary f State, and intimating my intention to take justice in my
own hand, I was told, by the mouth of Mr Hill, that I was at liberty to
take such measures as I thought proper. Who then is to be reprobated in
this case -- those who were regardless of every feeling of honour and of
justice, or him who, spurred on by injury and neglect, and with a due
notice of his intentions, pursued the only course likely to lead to a
satisfactory termination of calamities which had weighed him down to the
lowest ebb of misery? I will now only mention a few observations by way
of defence. You have before you all the particulars of this melancholy
transaction. Believe me, gentlemen, the rashness of which I have been
guilty has not been dictated by any personal animosity to Mr Perceval,
rather than injure whom from private or malicious motives I would suffer
my limbs to be cut from my body. (Here the prisoner seemed again much
agitated.)
'If, whenever I am called before the tribunal of God,
I can appear with as clear a conscience as I now possess in regard to
the alleged charge of the wilful murder of the unfortunate gentleman,
the investigation of whose death has occupied your attention, it would
be happy for me, as essentially securing to me eternal salvation; but
that is impossible. That my arm has been the means of his melancholy and
lamented exit, I am ready to allow. But to constitute murder, it must
clearly and absolutely be proved to have arisen from malice prepense and
with a malicious design, as I have no doubt the learned judge will
shortly lay down, in explaining the law on the subject. If such is the
case, I am guilty: if not, I look forward with confidence to your
acquittal.
'That the contrary is the case has been most clearly
and irrefutably proved. No doubt can rest upon your minds, as my uniform
and undeviating object has been an endeavour to obtain justice,
according to law, for a series of the most long-continued and unmerited
sufferings that were ever submitted to a court of law, without having
been guilty of any other crime than an appeal for redress for a most
flagrant injury offered to my sovereign and my country, wherein my
liberty and property have fallen a sacrifice for the continued period of
eight years, to the total ruin of myself and family (with authenticated
documents of the truth of the allegations), merely because it was Mr
Perceval's plea sure that justice should not be granted, sheltering
himself with the idea of there being no alternative remaining, as my
petition to parliament for redress could not be brought (as having a
pecuniary tendency) without the sanction of His Majesty's ministers, and
that he was determined to oppose my claim, by trampling both on law and
right.
'Gentlemen, where a man has so strong and serious a
criminal case to bring forward as mine has been, the nature of which was
purely national, it is the bounden duty of Government to attend to it;
for justice is a matter of right and not of valour. And when a minister
is so unprincipled and presumptuous at any time, but especially in a
case of such urgent necessity, to set himself above both the sovereign
and the laws, as has been the case with Mr Perceval, he must do it at
his personal risk; for by the law he cannot be protected.
'Gentlemen, if this is not fact, the mere will of a
minister would be law: it would be this thing today and the other thing
tomorrow, as either interest or caprice might dictate. What would become
of our liberties? Where would be the purity and the impartiality of the
justice we so much boast of? The Government's non-attendance to the
dictates of justice is solely to be attributed the melancholy
catastrophe of the unfortunate gentleman, as any malicious intention to
his injury was the most remote from my heart. Justice, and justice only,
was my object, which Government uniformly objected to grant. The
distress it reduced me to, drove me to despair in consequence, and,
purely for the purpose of having this singular affair legally
investigated, I gave notice at the public office, Bow Street, requesting
the magistrates to acquaint His Majesty's ministers, that if they
persisted in refusing justice, or even to permit me to bring my just
petition into parliament for redress, I should be under the imperious
necessity of executing justice myself, solely for the purpose of
ascertaining, through a criminal court, whether His Majesty's ministers
have the power to refuse justice to a well-authenticated and irrefutable
act of oppression, committed by the consul and ambassador abroad,
whereby my sovereign's and country's honour were materially tarnished,
by my person endeavouring to be made the stalking-horse of justification,
to one of the greatest insults that could be offered to the crown. But
in order to avoid so reluctant and abhorrent an alternative, I hoped to
be allowed to bring my petition to the House of Commons -- or that they
would do what was right and proper themselves. On my return from Russia,
I brought most serious charges to the privy council, both against Sir
Stephen Shairp and Lord Granville Leveson Gower, when the affair was
determined to be purely national, and consequently it was the duty of
His Majesty's ministers to arrange it by acting on the resolution of the
council. Suppose, for instance, the charge I brought could have been
proved to be erroneous, should not I have been called to a severe
account for my conduct? But, being true, ought not I to have been
redressed?
'It is a melancholy fact, that the warping of justice,
including all the various ramifications in which it operates, occasions
more misery in the world, in a immoral sense, than all the acts of God
in a physical one, with which he punishes mankind for their
transgressions -- a confirmation of which, the single, but strong,
instance before you is one remarkable proof.
'If a poor unfortunate man stops another upon the
highway, and robs him of but a few shillings, he may be called upon to
forfeit his life. But I have been robbed of my liberty for years, ill-treated
beyond precedent, torn from my wife and family, bereaved of all my
property to make good the consequences of such irregularities, deprived
and bereaved of everything that makes life valuable, and then called
upon to forfeit it, because Mr Perceval has been pleased to patronize
iniquity that ought to have been punished, for the sake of a vote or two
in the House of Commons, with, perhaps, a similar good turn elsewhere.
'Is there, gentlemen, any comparison between the
enormity of these two offenders? No more than a mite to a mountain. Yet
the one is carried to the gallows, while the other stalks in security,
fancying himself beyond the reach of law or justice: the most honest man
suffers, while the other goes forward in triumph to new and more
extended enormities.
'We have had a recent and striking instance of some
unfortunate men who have been called upon to pay their lives as the
forfeit of their allegiance, in endeavouring to mitigate the rigours of
a prison. But, gentlemen, where is the proportion between the crimes for
which they suffered, and what the Government has been guilty of, in
withholding its protection from me? Even in a Crown case, after the
years of sufferings, I have been called upon to sacrifice all my
property and the welfare of my family, to bolster up the iniquities of
the Crown. And then am prosecuted for my life, because I have taken the
only possible alternative to bring the affair to a public investigation,
for the purpose of being enabled to return to the bosom of my family
with some degree of comfort and honour. Every man within the sound of my
voice must feel for my situation; but by you, gentle men of the jury, it
must be felt in a peculiar degree, who are husbands and fathers, and can
fancy yourselves in my situation. I trust that this serious lesson will
operate as a warning to all future ministers, and lead them to do the
thing that is right, as an unerring rule of conduct, for, if the
superior classes were more correct in their proceedings, the extensive
ramifications of evil would, in a great measure, be hemmed up. A notable
proof of the fact is, that this court would never have been troubled
with the case before it, had their conduct been guided by these
principles.
'I have now occupied the attention of the court for a
period much longer than I intended, yet I trust they will consider the
awfulness of my situation to be a sufficient ground for a trespass which,
under other circumstances, would be inexcusable. Sooner than suffer what
I have suffered for the last eight years, how ever, I should consider
five hundred deaths, if it were possible for human nature to endure them,
a fate far more preferable. Lost so long to all the endearments of my
family, bereaved of all the blessings of life, and deprived of its
greatest sweet, liberty, as the weary traveller, who has long been
pelted by the pitiless storm, welcomes the much desired inn, I shall
receive death as the relief of all my sorrows. I shall not occupy your
attention longer, but, relying on the justice of God, and submitting
myself to the dictates of your conscience, I submit to the fiat
of my fate, firmly anticipating an acquittal from a charge so abhorrent
to every feeling of my soul.'
Here the prisoner bowed, and his counsel immediately
proceeded to call the witnesses for the defence.
Anne Billet, who appeared under the strongest
impressions of grief, being sworn, deposed that she lived in the county
of Southampton: she came to London in consequence of having read in the
newspapers of the prisoner having been apprehended for the murder of Mr
Perceval. She was induced to come to town, from a conviction that she
knew more of him than any other friend. She knew him from a child. He
resided latterly at Liverpool, from whence he came at Christmas last.
She knew him to be a merchant. His father died insane in Titchfield
Street, Oxford Road. She firmly believed that for the last three or four
years the prisoner was in a state of derangement, respecting the
business which he had been pursuing. She had not seen him for twelve
months until the present moment. She always thought him deranged when
his Russian affairs were the subject of conversation.
When cross-examined by Mr Garrow, she deposed that,
when in London with the prisoner about twelve months since, he was going
to different government offices to seek redress of his grievances. He
was then in a state of derangement, as he had been ever since his return
from Russia. There was one instance which occurred at the period to
which she was alluding, which strongly confirmed her in the opinion of
his insanity. About Christmas he told his wife and witness, that now he
was come from Russia he had realized more than 100,000L., with which he
intended to buy an estate in the west of England and to have a house in
London. He admitted that he had not got the money, but said it was the
same as if he had, for he had gained his cause in Russia and our
government would make good all the loss he had sustained. He repeatedly
said to her and to his wife that this was assuredly the fact. Upon one
occasion he took Mrs Bellingham and the witness to the Secretary of
State's office, where they saw Mr Smith, who said if he had not ladies
with him he would not have come to him at all. The prisoner told Mr
Smith, that the reason why he brought them was to convince them that his
claims were just, and that he would very shortly receive the money. Mr
Smith told him he could say nothing upon this subject: he had already
sent him a letter alleging that he had nothing to expect. The prisoner
then requested Mr Smith would answer him one question -- 'My friends say
I am out of my senses. Is it your opinion that I am so?' Mr Smith said
it was a very delicate question, and one he did not wish to answer.
Having then departed, when they got into the carriage which waited for
them, he took hold of his wife's hand and said, 'I hope, now, my dear,
you are convinced all will now end as we wish.' Since that period she
knew that he had been pursuing his object alone, his wife remaining at
Liverpool.
Other witnesses were called, who deposed to like
facts and to their belief in the insanity of the prisoner, but Lord
Chief Justice Mansfield having summed up the case, the jury, after a
consultation of two minutes and a half in the box, expressed a wish to
retire, and an officer of the court being sworn, accompanied them to the
jury-room. As they passed out, the prisoner regarded them separately
with a look of mingled confidence and complacency. They were absent
fourteen minutes, and, on their return into court, their countenances,
acting as indices to their minds, at once unfolded the determination to
which they had come. The prisoner again directed his attention to them
in the same manner as before.
The prisoner's countenance here indicated surprise,
unmixed, however, with any demonstrations of that concern which the
awfulness of his situation was calculated to produce.
The Recorder then passed the awful sentence of death
on the prisoner in the most feeling manner, and he was ordered for
execution on the following Monday, his body to be anatomized. He
received the sentence without any emotion.
From the time of his condemnation the unfortunate
convict was fed upon bread and water. All means of suicide were removed,
and he was not allowed to be shaved -- a prohibition which gave him much
concern, as he feared he should not appear as a gentleman. He was
visited by the ordinary on Saturday, and some religious gentlemen called
on him on Sunday, with whose conversation he seemed greatly pleased. He
appeared naturally depressed by his situation; but persisted in a
resolute denial of his guilt. He frequently said that he had prepared
himself to go to his Father, and that he should be pleased when the hour
came.
Being informed by Mr Newman that two gentlemen from
Liverpool had called, and left word that his wife and children would be
provided for, he seemed but little affected; but, having requested pen,
ink and paper, he wrote the following letter to his wife:-
MY BLESSED MARY, --
It rejoiced me beyond measure to hear you are likely to be well
provided for. I am sure the public at large will participate in, and
mitigate, your sorrows; I assure you, my love, my sincerest endeavours
have ever been directed to your welfare. As we shall not meet any more
in this world, I sincerely hope we shall do so in the world to come. My
blessing to the boys, with kind remembrance to Miss Stephens, for whom I
have the greatest regard, in consequence of her uniform affection for
them. With the purest intentions, it has always been my misfortune to be
thwarted, misrepresented and ill-used in life; but however, we feel a
happy prospect of compensation in a speedy translation to life eternal.
It's not possible to be more calm or placid than I feel, and nine hours
more will waft me to those happy shores where bliss is without alloy.
Yours ever affectionate,
JOHN BELLINGHAM.
That the unfortunate man was afflicted with a strange
malady, which occasionally rendered him incapable of correct conclusions,
must be evident from the following note, which he wrote the night
preceding his execution: 'I lost my suit solely through the improper
conduct of my attorney and counsel, Mr Alley, in not bringing my
witnesses forward (of whom there were more an twenty): in consequence,
the judge took advantage of the circumstance, and I went on the defence
without having brought forward a single friend -- otherwise I must
inevitably have been acquitted.'
On the Monday morning, at about six o'clock, he rose
and dressed himself with great composure, and read for half-an-hour in
the Prayer Book. Dr Ford being then announced, the prisoner shook him
most cordially by the hand, and left his cell for the room allotted for
the condemned criminals. He repeated the declaration which he had
frequently before made, that his mind was perfectly calm and composed
and that he was fully prepared to meet his fate with resignation. After
a few minutes spent in prayer, the sacrament was administered to him,
and during time whole of the ceremony he seemed to be deeply impressed
with the truths of the Christian religion, and repeatedly uttered some
pious ejaculations. After the religious ceremony was ended, the prisoner
was informed that the sheriffs were ready. He answered in a firm tone of
voice, 'I am perfectly ready also.'
The executioner then proceeded to fasten his wrists
together, and the prisoner turned up the sleeves of his coat, and
clasped his hands together, presenting them to the man who held the cord,
and said, 'So.' When they were fastened, he desired his attendants to
pull down his sleeves so as to cover the cord. The officer then
proceeded to secure his arms behind him. When the man had finished, he
moved his hand upwards, as if to ascertain whether he could reach his
neck, and asked whether they thought his arms were sufficiently fastened,
saying that he might struggle, and that he wished to be so secured as to
prevent any inconvenience arising from it. He was answered that the cord
was quite secure, but he requested that it might be tightened a little,
which was accordingly done. During the whole of the awful scene he
appeared perfectly composed and collected: his voice never faltered, but
just before he left the room to proceed to the place of execution, he
stooped down his head and appeared to wipe away a tear. He was then
conducted by the Lord Mayor, sheriffs, under-sheriffs and officers (Dr
Ford walking with him) from the room, in which he had remained from the
time his irons were taken off; through the press-yard and time prison to
the fatal spot, before the Debtors' door at Newgate.
He ascended the scaffold with rather a light step, a
cheerful countenance, and a confident, a calm, but not an exulting air.
He looked about him a little, lightly and rapidly, which seems to have
been his usual manner and gesture, but made no remark.
Before the cap was put over his face, Dr Ford asked
if he had any last communication to make, or anything particular to say.
He was again proceeding to talk about Russia and his family, when Dr
Ford stopped him, calling his attention to the eternity into which he
was entering, and praying. Bellingham prayed also. The clergyman then
asked him how he felt, and he answered calmly and collectedly, that 'he
thanked God for having enabled him to meet his fate with so much
fortitude and resignation.' When the executioner proceeded to put the
cap over his face, Bellingham objected to it, and expressed a strong
wish that the business could be done without it; but Dr Ford said that
was not to be dispensed with. While the cap was being fastened on, it
being tied round the lower part of the face by the prisoner's
neckerchief, and just when he was tied up, about a score of persons in
the mob set up a loud and reiterated cry of 'God bless you!' 'God save
you!' This cry lasted while the cap was fastening n, and, though those
who raised it were loud and daring, it was joined in by but very few.
The ordinary asked Bellingham if he heard what the mob were saying. He
said he heard them crying out something, but he did not understand what
it was, and inquired what. The cry having by this time ceased, the
clergyman did not inform him what it was. The fastening on of the cap
being accomplished, the executioner retired and a perfect silence ensued.
Dr Ford continued praying for about a minute, while the executioner went
below the scaffold, and preparations were made to strike away its
supporters. The clock struck eight, and while was striking the seventh
time, the clergyman and Bellingham both fervently praying, the
supporters of the internal part of scaffold were struck away, and
Bellingham dropped out of sight down as far as the knees, his body being
in full view. The most perfect and awful silence prevailed; not even the
slightest attempt at a huzza or noise of any kind whatever was made.
The body was afterwards carried in a cart, followed
by a crowd of the lower class, to St Bartholomew's Hospital, and
privately dissected.
The greatest precautions were adopted to prevent
accidents among the crowd. A large bill was placarded at all the avenues
the Old Bailey, and carried about on a pole, to this effect: 'Beware of
entering the crowd! Remember thirty poor creatures pressed to death by
the crowd when Haggerty and Holloway were executed.' But no accident of
any moment occurred.
To prevent any disposition to tumult, a military
force was stationed near Islington and to the south of Blackfriars
Bridge, and all the volunteer corps of the metropolis received
instructions to be under arms during the whole of the day.