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One day however he heard that a certain Durochat was arrested for a recent robbery and was confined in the Sainte Pelagie; and remembering that Durochat was the name of the one designated by Couriol as having taken the place beside the courier under the false name of Laborde
At the epoch of the trial of Lesurques it came out that several persons amongst them an inspector of the _administration des postes_ had seen the false Laborde at the moment that he was awaiting the mail and had preserved a distinct recollection of his person
M
Daubenton on ascertaining the day of Durochat's approaching trial for robbery went to the _administration des postes_ and obtained through the _Chef_ the permission to send for the inspector who had seen the false Laborde and who was no longer in Paris
The _juges du tribunal_ had also been warned of the suspicions which rested on Durochat
The day of trial arrived and he was condemned to fourteen years' imprisonment and was about being led from the court when the inspector arrived and declared that Durochat was the man whom he had seen on the 8th Floreal mount beside the courier under the false name of Laborde
Durochat only opposed feeble denials to this declaration and was consequently taken to the _Conciergerie_
On the morrow Durochat was transferred to Versailles where he was to be judged
Daubenton and a huissier departed with the prisoner and four gendarmes
As they reached the village of Grosbois he demanded some breakfast for he had eaten nothing since the preceding day
They stopped at the first _auberge_ and there Durochat manifested a desire to speak to the magistrate in private
Daubenton ordered the gendarmes to leave them together and even the huissier though he made him understand by a sign the danger of being alone with so desperate a villain was begged to retire
A breakfast was ordered for the two
It was brought--but by order of the huissier only _one_ knife was placed on the table
Daubenton took it up and began carelessly to break an egg with it
Durochat looked at him fixedly for a moment and said "Monsieur le juge you are afraid?" "Afraid!" replied he calmly "and of whom?" "Of me " said Durochat
"Folly!" continued the other breaking his egg
"You are
You arm yourself with a knife " said he sarcastically
"Bah!" replied Daubenton presenting him the knife "cut me a piece of bread and tell me what you have to communicate to me respecting the murder of the courier of Lyons
" There is something in the collected courage of a brave man more impressive than any menace; and courage is a thing which acts upon all natures however vile
Strongly moved by the calm audacity of the magistrate the ruffian who had seized the knife with menacing vivacity now set it down upon the table and with a faltering voice said "_Vous etes un brave citoyen_!" then after a pause "I am a lost man--it's all up with me; but you shall know all
" He then detailed the circumstances of the crime as we have related them above and confirmed all Couriol's declarations naming Couriol Rossi Vidal and Dubosq as his accomplices
Before the tribunal he repeated this account adding "that he had heard an individual named Lesurques had been condemned for the crime but that he had neither seen him at the time of the deed nor subsequently
He did not know him
" He added that it was Dubosq whose spur had been broken and was mended where they had dined; for he had heard them talk about it and that he had lost it in the scuffle
He had seen the other spur in his hand and heard him say that he intended throwing it in the river
He further gave a description of Dubosq's person and added that on that day he wore a flaxen peruke
Towards the end of the year 8--four years after the murder of the courier of Lyons--Dubosq was arrested for robbery; and was transferred to Versailles there to be judged by the _Tribunal Correctionnel_
The president ordered that he should wear a flaxen peruke and be confronted with the witnesses from Mongeron and Lieursaint who now unanimously declared that he was the man they had seen
This coupled with the declarations of Couriol Durochat and Madelaine Breban sufficed to prove the identity; and he did not deny his acquaintance with the other culprits
He was therefore condemned and perished on the scaffold for the crime
Vidal was also arrested and executed though persisting in his innocence; and finally Rossi was shortly after discovered and condemned
He exhibited profound repentance and demanded the succours of religion
To his confessor he left this declaration--"I assert that Lesurques is innocent; but this must only be made public six months after my death
" Thus ends this strange drama; thus were the proofs of Lesurques's innocence furnished beyond a shadow of doubt; and thus we may add were seven men executed for a crime committed by five men; two therefore were innocent--were victims of the law
VIII
--THE WAY IN WHICH FRANCE RECTIFIES AN ERROR
It is now forty years since the innocence of Lesurques has been established and little has been done towards the rehabilitation of his memory the protection of his children and the restitution of his confiscated goods! Forty years and his wretched widow has only recently died having failed in the object of her life! Forty years has the government been silent
M
Daubenton who took so honourable and active a part in the detection of the real criminals consecrated a great part of his life and fortune to the cause of the unfortunate widow and her children
The declaration he addressed to the Minister of Justice commenced thus:-- "The error on which was founded the condemnation of Lesurques arose neither with the judges nor the jury
The jury convinced by the depositions of the witnesses manifested that conviction judicially; and the judges after the declaration of the jury pronounced according to the law
"The error of his condemnation arose from the mistake of the witnesses--from the fatal resemblance to one of the culprits not apprehended
Nothing gave reason to suspect at that time the cause of the error in which the witnesses had fallen
" We beg to observe that the whole trial was conducted in a slovenly and shameful manner
A man is condemned on the deposition of witnesses;--witnesses be it observed of such dulness of perception and such confidence in their notions that they persisted in declaring Guesno to be one of the culprits as well as Lesurques
Yet the _alibi_ of Guesno was proved beyond a doubt
How then could the jury with this instance of mistake before their eyes and which they themselves had condemned as a mistake by acquitting Guesno--how could they place such firm reliance on those self-same testimonies when applied to Lesurques? If they could convict Lesurques upon such evidence why not also convict Guesno on it? Guesno proved an _alibi_--so did Lesurques; but because one foolish friend perjured himself to serve Lesurques the jury hastily set down all his friends as perjurers; they had no evidence of this; it was a mere indignant reaction of feeling and as such a violation of their office
The case ought to have been sifted
It was shuffled over hastily
A verdict passed in anger was executed though at the time a strong doubt existed in the minds of the judges as to its propriety! Neither the Directory nor the Consulate neither the Empire nor the Restoration paid attention to the widow's supplications for a revision of the sentence that her husband's name might be cleared and his property restored
In vain did M
Salgues devote ten years to the defence of the injured family; in vain did M
Merilhou in an important _proces_ warmly espouse the cause; the different governments believed themselves incapable of answering these solicitations
Since 1830 the widow again supplicated the _Tribune des Chambres_
Few sessions have passed without some members particularly from the _department du Nord_ calling attention to the subject
All that has been obtained is a restitution of part of the property seized by the _fisc_ at the period of the execution
Madame Lesurques has died unsuccessful because a judicial error cannot be acknowledged or rectified owing to the insufficiency of the Code
A French journal announces that the son and daughter of Lesurques still living pledged themselves on the death-bed of their mother to continue the endeavour which had occupied her forty long years--an endeavour to make the law comprehend that nothing is more tyrannous than the strict fulfilment of its letter--an endeavour to make the world at large more keenly feel the questionable nature of evidence as to personal identity in cases where the witnesses are ignorant and where the evidence against their testimony is presumptive
* * * * * CALEB STUKELY
PART X
THE REVULSION
"_The companion of the wise shall be wise_
" A six months' residence with the religious and self-renouncing minister could not be without its effect on the character and disposition of the disciple newly released from sin and care and worldly calamity
The bright example of a good man is much--that of a good and _beloved_ man is more
I was bound to Mr Clayton by every tie that can endear a man to man and rivet the ready heart of youth in truthful and confiding love
I regarded my preserver with a higher feeling than a fond son may bear towards the mere author and maintainer of his existence
For Mr Clayton whose smallest praise it was that he had restored to me my life in addition to a filial love I had all the reverence that surpassing virtue claims and lowly piety constrains
Months passed over our head and I was still without occupation though still encouraged by my kind friend to look for a speedy termination to my state of dependence
Painful as the thought of separation had become to Mr Clayton my situation was far from satisfactory to myself
I knew not another individual with whom I could have established myself under similar circumstances
The sense of obligation would have been oppressive the conviction that I was doing wrong intolerable to sustain; but the simplicity the truth the affectionate warmth of my benevolent host lightened my load day after day until I became at last insensible to the burthen
At this period of my career the character of Mr Clayton appeared to me bright and fixed as a spotless star
He seemed the pattern of a man pure and perfect
The dazzling light of pious fervour consumed within him the little selfishness that nature to stamp an angel with humanity had of necessity implanted there
He was swallowed up in holiness--his thoughts were of heaven--his daily conduct tinged and illumined with a heavenly hue
Nothing could surpass the intense devotedness of the child of God except perhaps the self-devotion the self-renunciation and the profound humility which distinguished him in the world and in his conversation amongst men
"_The companion of the wise shall be wise_
" I observed my benefactor and listened to his eloquence; I pondered on his habitual piety until roused to enthusiasm by the contemplation of the matchless being I burned to follow in his glorious course to revolve in the same celestial orbit the most distant and the meanest of his satellites
The hand of Providence was traceable in every act which in due course and step by step had brought me to the minister
It could not be without a lofty purpose that I had been plucked a brand as it were from the burning; it was not an aimless love that snatched me from death to life--from darkness to mid-day light--from the depths of despondency to the heights of serenity and joy
It was that I might glorify the hand that had been outstretched on my behalf that I might carry His name abroad proclaim His wondrous works sing aloud His praises and in the face of men give honour to the everlasting Giver of all good
It was for this and these that I had been selected from mankind and made the especial object of a Father's grace
I believed it in all the simplicity and ingenuousness of a mind awakened to a sense of religion and human responsibility
I could not do otherwise
From the moment that I was convinced of the obligation under which I had been brought that I could feel the force of the silent compact which had been effected between the unseen Power and my own soul it would have been as easy for me to annihilate thought to prevent its miraculous presence in the mind as to withstand the urgent prickings of my conscience
I believed in my divine summons and I was at once ready vehement and impatient to obey it
Had I followed the dictates of my will I would have walked through the land and preached aloud the wonderful mercies of God imploring my fellow-creatures to repentance and directing them to the fount of all their blessings and all their happiness
I would have called upon men to turn from error and dangerous apathy before their very strongholds
Powerful in the possession of truth I would have thundered the saving words before their marketplaces and exchanges--at the very fortresses in which the world deems itself chiefly secure with Mammon at its head Satan's chief lieutenant
I would have called around me the neglected and the poor and in the highways and in the fields disclosed to them the tenderness and loving-kindness that I had found that they might feel in all their fulness if they would turn from sin and place their trust in heaven
It was pain and anguish to be silent
Not for my own sake did I yearn to speak
Oh no! There was nothing less than a love of self in the panting desire that I felt to break the selfish silence
It was the love of souls that pressed me forward and the confidence that the good news which it was my privilege to impart would find in every bosom a welcome as warm and ready as it would prove to be effectual
To walk abroad in silence feeling myself to be the depositary of a celestial revelation and believing that to communicate it to mankind would be to ensure their participation in its benefits was hardly to be borne
There was not a man whom I encountered in the street to whom I did not secretly wish to turn and to pour into his ear the accents of peace and consolation; not one whom I did not regard as a witness against me on that great day of trial when every man shall be judged according to his opportunities
I spoke to Mr Clayton
He encouraged the feeling by which I was actuated but he dissuaded me from the manifestation of it in the form which I proposed