Page:Henry Northcote (IA henrynorthcote00snairich).pdf/129

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not without its effect on these astonished minions of the law. "And I want you both to stand back a yard or two against the railings, while I advance to the curb; and further, I want you for a few minutes to imagine that you are the jury, and I will rehearse the opening of my speech for the defence. I shall begin something like this."

"Oh, will you now?" muttered Z9 to his companion. "Well, if this don't beat cock-fighting!"

Both these constables, overawed already by the authentic manner of the advocate, were now devoured by curiosity.

"Listen," said he. "I rise in my place with this bundle of papers in my hand, which I shall not consult, but shall cling to to gain confidence, and I shall say: May it please your lordship and gentlemen of the jury, this is a dreadful issue you are sworn to try. Indeed it would be difficult for the human conscience to conceive an ordeal more repugnant to the moral nature of man, one in sharper antagonism to those principles that are his priceless inheritance, than is revealed to you by the situation in which you stand. It is not by your own choice that you come to take your places in this assembly. It is not in obedience to your own instincts that you have left your toil to subscribe to a law which is not of your own making. I venture to affirm this without fear, for is not this ordeal into which you are thrown in deadly conflict with the behests of that unfearing spirit who, nineteen centuries ago, discovered the only possible faith for His kind?

"It is as the inheritors, gentlemen, of an inimitable tradition, not as administrators of a penal