The Trial of Richard Patch for the Wilful Murder of Isaac Blight, at Rotherhithe, on the 23rd of September 1805: At the Session House, Newington, Surrey, on Saturday the Fifth of April 1806 |
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Page 19
... answer , certainly in the front parlor , in which the family always sat , and were naturally to be found . - But , on this evening , they were sit- ting in the back parlor ; and at eight o'clock you will find the Prisoner Patch quitting ...
... answer , certainly in the front parlor , in which the family always sat , and were naturally to be found . - But , on this evening , they were sit- ting in the back parlor ; and at eight o'clock you will find the Prisoner Patch quitting ...
Page 23
... answer to give . There is no motive that * Pointing to the privy , and other parts of the premises , on the model , as described on the plan annexed to the trial . can be adequate to make its impression upon a virtu- B 4 23 in which, if ...
... answer to give . There is no motive that * Pointing to the privy , and other parts of the premises , on the model , as described on the plan annexed to the trial . can be adequate to make its impression upon a virtu- B 4 23 in which, if ...
Page 25
... answer to the interrogatory of Mr. Cooper was this , " Mr. Patch has mentioned to me that there is reason to suspect one Webster . " - Mr . Patch tells ne , there is reason to suspect one Webster - Upon what ground does Mr. Patch ...
... answer to the interrogatory of Mr. Cooper was this , " Mr. Patch has mentioned to me that there is reason to suspect one Webster . " - Mr . Patch tells ne , there is reason to suspect one Webster - Upon what ground does Mr. Patch ...
Page 27
... answer , it was to possess himself of the business of Mr. Blight , either entirely , for that ap pears sometimes to have been his object , or at least of one - third of it , without paying the remainder of the consideration , and of ...
... answer , it was to possess himself of the business of Mr. Blight , either entirely , for that ap pears sometimes to have been his object , or at least of one - third of it , without paying the remainder of the consideration , and of ...
Page 29
... answer of the Prisoner ? He tells the wife that that sum of 1000l . has been paid , and that Goom had promised to come to breakfast with Mr. Blight on the morning of the Tuesday , at eight o'clock , and came within five minutes after ...
... answer of the Prisoner ? He tells the wife that that sum of 1000l . has been paid , and that Goom had promised to come to breakfast with Mr. Blight on the morning of the Tuesday , at eight o'clock , and came within five minutes after ...
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Common terms and phrases
15th of July aforesaid afterwards appearance asked Astley Cooper ball Bankers believe bill of parcels Blight was shot Blight's death Blight's house Blight's premises body boots called candle circumstances COMMON SERJEANT Coroner counting house counting-house Cross-examination deceased Deptford draft evidence Examinant feet front Frost GARROW gate Gentlemen gone Goom Goom's grog guilt GURNEY hand hear heard Hester Kitchener husband Isaac Blight James Berry knew L. C. B. MACDONALD Lordship maid Margate master MICHAEL WRIGHT minutes Monday Morgan morning murder never night o'clock observation paid papers parlor passed person pistol was fired POOLEY prisoner ramrod recollect returned RICHARD FROST Richard Patch Rotherhithe September SERJEANT BEST servant shew shut shutter sitting soner stockings suppose suspicion sworn tell thing Thursday told town transaction vessel Webster wharf window witness wound yard
Popular passages
Page 5 - Columbia, laborer, not having the fear of God before his eyes, but being moved and seduced by the instigation of the devil...
Page 5 - Lord 1823, with force and arms, at the parish of Aldenham aforesaid, in the County of Hertford aforesaid, in and upon William Weare, in the peace of God and our said Lord the King, then and there being, feloniously, wilfully, and of his malice aforethought, did make an assault, and that the said John Thurtell, with a certain pistol of the value of 10*.
Page 6 - Lightfoot then and there instantly died, and so the jurors aforesaid, upon their oath aforesaid, do say, that the said David Beckett, the said John Lightfoot, in manner and form aforesaid, feloniously, wilfully, and of his malice aforethought, did kill and murder, against the form of the statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the state of Ohio.
Page 161 - ... more satisfactory sort than that which is direct. In some lamentable instances it has been known that a short story has been got by heart by two or three witnesses ; they have been consistent with themselves, they have been consistent with...
Page 5 - Third, by the grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland king, defender of the Faith, with force and arms at the parish aforesaid, in the county aforesaid, in and upon one...
Page 162 - ... each other, swearing positively to a fact, which fact has turned out afterwards not to be true. It is almost impossible for a variety of witnesses, speaking to a variety of circumstances, so to concert a story, as to impose upon a jury by a fabrication of that sort, so that where it is cogent, strong, and powerful, where the witnesses do not contradict each other, or do not contradict themselves, it MAY BE evidence more satisfactory than even direct evidence ; and there are more instances than...
Page 6 - ... at the parish aforesaid, in the county aforesaid, did languish, and languishing did live ; on which said day of in the year aforesaid, the said M, at the parish aforesaid, in the county aforesaid, of the mortal wound aforesaid, died...
Page 171 - ... correctness small portions of time ; and that if any one were to examine with a watch which marks the seconds, how much longer a space of time a few seconds or a few minutes really are than people in general conceive them to be, they would be surprised : but that in general, when we speak of a minute, or an instant, we can hardly be understood to mean more than that it was a very short space of time...
Page 6 - Wound aforesaid did die and so the Jurors aforesaid upon their Oath aforesaid do say that the said...
Page 197 - William Joyce, the sentence of the Court upon you is, that you be taken from this place to a lawful prison, and thence to a place of execution, and that you be there hanged by the neck until you are dead; and that your body be afterwards buried within the precincts of the prison in which you shall have been confined before your execution. And may the Lord have mercy on your soul.