that whosoever stains the virtue of his threshold, has violated the highest of human laws and must appeal to the mercy of God, if mercy there be for him anywhere in the universe."
The point of Delmas' whole argument was that Stanford White deserved his fate; that Harry Thaw in shooting the architect had acted as the champion of purity and goodness, and that he had slain a foul monster that had preyed upon the virtue of women.
The closing part of the summing up by Delmas was as follows:
"I will relieve the long suspense which has been occasioned
by your labors by announcing that I will shortly
leave the fate of this defendant in your hands. Before
entering upon the remarks which I propose making it may
be useful to cast a rapid glance over what I have already
said, so that you may connect what I shall have to say
with what I have already said.
"I have endeavored to lay before the eyes of the jury the picture of the fate of these two young people. I had tried to show the unfortunate occurrence which befell her when she narrated to him in the summer of 1903 her awful story of what had happened. I have shown, or at least have endeavored to convince you, first, that the facts which she swears she then related were true and, secondly, that it was true that she did relate them to the defendant at that time."
Here Mr. Delmas endeavored to prove these facts.
"Gentlemen, I shall prove to you from a number of sources, and first, without adding any words of my own, in the very language in which it was told by Evelyn when she was testifying before you.