登陆注册
26133800000003

第3章 INTRODUCTORY:(2)

A statue was made by Guglielmo della Porta of Julia Farnese, Alexander's beautiful second mistress.It was placed on the tomb of her brother Alessandro (Pope Paul III).A Pope at a later date provided the lady, portrayed in `a state of nature,' with a silver robe--because, say the gossips, the statue was indecent.Not at all: it was to prevent recurrence of an incident in which the sculptured Julia took a static part with a German student afflicted with ***-mania.

I become, however, a trifle excursive, I think.If I do the blame lies on those partisan writers to whom I have alluded.They have a way of leading their incautious latter-day brethren up the garden.They hint at flesh-eating lilies by the pond at the path's end, and you find nothing more prone to sarcophagy than harmless primulas.In other words, the beetle- browed Lucretia, with the handy poison-ring, whom they promise you turns out to be a blue-eyed, fair-haired, rather yielding little darling, ultimately an excellent wife and mother, given to piety and good works, used in her earlier years as a political instrument by father and brother, and these two no worse than masterful and ambitious men employing thepolitical technique common to their day and age.

Messalina, Locusta, Lucretia, Theodora, they step aside in this particular review of peccant women.Cleopatra, supposed to have poisoned slaves in the spirit of scientific research, or perhaps as punishment for having handed her the wrong lipstick, also is set aside.It were supererogatory to attempt dealing with the ladies mentioned in the Bible and the Apocrypha, such as Jael, who drove the nail into the head of Sisera, or Judith, who cut off the head of Holofernes.Their stories are plainly and excellently told in the Scriptural manner, and the adding of detail would be mere fictional exercise.Something, perhaps, might be done for them by way of deducing their characters and physical shortcomings through examination of their deeds and motives--but this may be left to psychiatrists.There is room here merely for a soupcon of psychology--just as much, in fact, as may afford the writer an easy turn from one plain narrative to another.You will have no more of it than amounts, say, to the pinch of fennel that should go into the sauce for mackerel.

Toffana, who in Italy supplied poison to wives aweary of their husbands and to ladies beginning to find their lovers inconvenient, and who thus at second hand murdered some six hundred persons, has her attractions for the criminological writer.The bother is that so many of them have found it out.The scanty material regarding her has been turned over so often that it has become somewhat tattered, and has worn rather thin for refashioning.The same may be said for Hieronyma Spara, a direct poisoner and Toffana's contemporary.

The fashion they set passed to the Marquise de Brinvilliers, and she, with La Vigoureux and La Voisin, has been written up so often that the task of finding something new to say of her and her associates looks far too formidable for a man as lethargic as myself.

In the abundance of material that criminal history provides about women choice becomes difficult.There is, for example, a plethora of women poisoners.Wherever a woman alone turns to murder it is ahundred to one that she will select poison as a medium.This at first sight may seem a curious fact, but there is for it a perfectly logical explanation, upon which I hope later to touch briefly.The concern of this book, however, is not purely with murder by women, though murder will bulk largely.Swindling will be dealt with, and casual allusion made to other crimes.

But take for the moment the women accused or convicted of poisoning.What an array they make! What monsters of iniquity many of them appear! Perhaps the record, apart from those set up by Toffana and the Brinvilliers contingent, is held by the Van der Linden woman of Leyden, who between 1869 and 1885 attempted to dispose of 102 persons, succeeded with no less than twenty-seven, and rendered at least forty-five seriously ill.Then comes Helene Jegado, of France, who, according to one account, with two more working years (eighteen instead of sixteen), contrived to envenom twenty-six people, and attempted the lives of twelve more.On this calculation she fails by one to reach the der Linden record, but, even reckoning the two extra years she had to work in, since she made only a third of the other's essays, her bowling average may be said to be incomparably better.

Our own Mary Ann Cotton, at work between 1852 and 1873, comes in third, with twenty-four deaths, at least known, as her bag.Mary Ann operated on a system of her own, and many of her victims were her own children.She is well worth the lengthier consideration which will be given her in later pages.

Anna Zwanziger, the earlier `monster' of Bavaria, arrested in 1809, was an ******* compared with those three.

Mrs Susannah Holroyd, of Ashton-under-Lyne, charged in September of 1816 at the Lancashire Assizes with the murder by poison of her husband, her own son, and the infant child of Anna Newton, a lodger of hers, was nurse to illegitimate children.She was generally suspected of having murdered several of her charges, but no evidence, as far as I can learn, was brought forward to give weight to the suspicion at her trial.Then there were Mesdames Flanagan and Higgins, found guilty, at Liverpool Assizes in February 1884, of poisoning Thomas Higgins,husband of the latter of the accused, by the administration of arsenic.The ladies were sisters, living together in Liverpool.With them in the house in Skirvington Street were Flanagan's son John, Thomas Higgins and his daughter Mary, Patrick Jennings and his daughter Margaret.

同类推荐
  • THE SIGN OF FOUR

    THE SIGN OF FOUR

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 波外乐章

    波外乐章

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 商虫篇

    商虫篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 陶记略

    陶记略

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 余墨偶谈

    余墨偶谈

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 浮城月

    浮城月

    卫司泽:正如何,邪又如何,他这一生所坚守的也不过就那么一件事,只要能达到目的,与这天下为敌又何妨。只是他最不应该的,就是救下大火之中那红衣洌艳的少女。沈千宸:天下人都知道他富可敌国,是各国皇室的座上之宾,是无数春闺少女心心念念的如意郎君,他拥有着世人想要拥有的一切。可是无人知道,他宁愿散尽所有,求遍天地神佛,唯愿她能一世安康,笑颜永存。
  • 我的魔法校园生活

    我的魔法校园生活

    我是风勇,16岁的魔法剑士。A栋601,我看了看报到单。没错,这就是我住的宿舍。真的没弄错吗?这是女生宿舍啊!读者群:35332801,欢迎大家加入“探讨”
  • 独占甜心宝贝

    独占甜心宝贝

    只是在逛街的时候撑了伞,她怎么知道会挡了他狙击枪的瞄准镜——那个变态男人把她抓起来虐待也就算了,他家里居然还把她当成“生孩子的工具”!她只是普通女孩,根本没想惹上黑帮大佬,更不可能是什么间谍!“黑泽凯你放过我好不好!”“除非我爱上你,才会放了你。”
  • 不世天尊

    不世天尊

    本该享尽荣华的阔家少爷,因为一场变故,燃起了他内心的滔天斗志。得古经,成就无上神体,炼妖魔,踏上无上帝君路!林尘,看这青涩少年如何蜕变成一个无敌强者的心路历程!
  • 黑道摄政皇后

    黑道摄政皇后

    黑道千金方雪盈,集高傲、美艳、性感于一身,个性更是火爆刁蛮。竟然一朝穿越,成为一个睿王府中不受宠的第四小妾——方雪盈,年方十六,花儿一般美丽的容颜、摇曳多姿的身段,娇弱怯怯,惹人怜惜,只可惜……她老实无能,懦弱怕事,更缺乏才情,不光不入睿王爷的眼,还被他其他的侍妾们所欺凌和侮辱,沦落的比粗使丫头不如。当某一刻,她冷冷一笑,整个离析大陆都为之撼动的一刻,一切都为之改变,包括那个四国鼎立的朝代。
  • 黑暗武门

    黑暗武门

    万鹏本是一名被恶魔诅咒的少年,在他病愈之后,得到了一扇古时代建造的黑暗武门。黑暗武门内,封印着强大的黑暗斗气,门上还刻满了无数失传已久的古代武技,甚至是传闻中的八大鬼神之力所在地,以及诸多不为人知的宝藏,埋葬在历史里秘密.万鹏掌握着这些,要去干翻全世界的强者。(PS:本文没有千遍一律的学院斗争,主要是以冒险为主)
  • 《若有来生定不负君》

    《若有来生定不负君》

    丫的,别逼我,不然,老娘发飙就把你一巴掌拍到墙上抠都抠不下来!!!看看这彪悍的语气,是谁????废话,不是女猪是谁?女汉子的你们不打,坏笑中。。。
  • 悲伤逆流而上

    悲伤逆流而上

    一对俊美少年表兄弟林夏与丁小乐在不同家庭背景下成长过程中,友谊、亲情、嫉妒、欺骗、挣扎、温暖而美好的故事,单亲家庭女生米雅爱恋的经历,以及夏艾艾与高静两个面临中考的女生内心掀起的汹涌早恋情愫,但又都很快便无疾而终的美好的心路历程——
  • 冷酷总裁的患难青梅

    冷酷总裁的患难青梅

    她是一个孤儿,八岁时来到这个家里。之后,生命里有了他——同样是孤儿的十岁男孩,一直以为,只要坚守,就会得到想要的幸福,然而幸福对于她,却是奢侈品。二十几年的守护,换来的是一次次的伤害和遗弃,二十几年的青春,换来的是他迎娶别人的回报,二十几年的坚持,换来的是愤恨跟厌恶,最后,付出的一切只换回埋怨跟嘲讽。算了吧,是该离开了,爱他,就让他向更高的地方飞去,只要他幸福就够了,何必在乎给他幸福的人是谁?于是送上微笑,送上祝福,挥一挥衣袖,开始新的征程,只是未来的生命中,不再有他,那个叫寒宇奇的男人,那个她曾经最爱的男人。
  • 阴阳天地斗

    阴阳天地斗

    手持神兵战天涯,紫禁之巅看沧桑一个被人所视为家族里最弱的少年却不知身体中蕴含了无穷的力量和不可思议的秘密,前世的轮回,铸就了今世辉煌!一个没有丝毫背景少年他的未来就会是怎样?多少的艰难险阻没有让他止步走向这个大陆的巅峰成为这个大陆的主宰