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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume IV

JOHN ELLIOT, M.D.

Acquitted of a Serious Crime, he killed himself, by Hunger-
Striking because of a Vindictive Sentence for a
Minor Offence

DR ELLIOT was tried upon an indictment under the
Black Act, with wilfully and maliciously discharging
two pistols, loaded with powder and divers balls, at the
person of Miss Mary Boydell. The second count charged
him with firing one pistol, loaded with powder and one or
more bullets, at the said Miss Boydell.

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   The evidence produced for the prosecution was as
follows.
   Mr George Nicol, bookseller to his Majesty, swore that,
when walking up Prince's Street in company with Miss
Boydell, he heard the loud explosion of a pistol close to his
ear. It was so near, and the concussion of the air so
strong, that it struck his ear like a blow. He turned round
and, seeing the prisoner quite close to him with a pistol in
his hand, which afterwards, however, turned out to be two
pistols strongly tied together, seized him by the throat and
said: "Are you the villain that fired ? " The man said
he was, and a footman who came up at the same moment
either wrenched the pistols out of his hand or took them up
as he dropped them. Then, having seen the lady taken into
a shop, Mr Nicol went with the prisoner to Justice Hyde's.
In going there the prisoner expressed great joy at what he
had done, and, in particular, said that now he should die in
peace, as he had sent the lady before him. Two more pistols
were found in his pocket, apparently loaded to the muzzle,
and those Mr Nicol delivered into the hands of  Justice
Hyde, and had not seen since. During the examination
a lady came into the office and said she was happy to find
that Miss Boydell was not dangerously wounded; upon
which the prisoner, clashing his hands together, seemingly
in an agony of disappointment, exclaimed, " Is she not
dead? " and from this time, and during the continuance
of the examination, he burst into a torrent of abuse against
the lady, the alderman and his family.
   These facts were clearly and circumstantially corroborated
by the evidence of the livery-servant, and of Mr Griffith, a
shoemaker in Prince's Street, who saw him fire the pistol,
and who assisted in securing him.
   Mr Nicol then swore that almost one half of the lady's
cloak was burned, and that there were two marks on her
gown, just below the shoulders, which seemed to correspond
with the marks of the pistols as they were tied together.
   A surgeon swore that Miss Boydell had two contusions
just below the shoulder-blades which corresponded with the

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marks on the gown, and which evidently proceeded from
blows received from some hard substance. Being asked
if pistols loaded with bullets discharged so near the body
could have made such marks he said he did not know;
but it was certain that a pistol put quite close home to
any resisting body, and discharged so as not to have the
assistance of the air, lost much of its force.
   Mr Silvester, on the part of the prisoner, called a Dr
Symmonds to prove that he was insane. The doctor gave
it as his opinion that he was so, and he had formed this
opinion from a letter he had received from him in January,
the purport of which was a philosophical hypothesis that
the sun was not specifically a ball of fire, but that his heat
proceeded from the quality of the atmosphere that sur-
rounded his body. Some part of this paper was read, and,
so far from betraying symptoms of insanity, it had all the
marks of quick and cultivated parts. The hypothesis, how-
ever false, was ably argued ; and as to the absurdity of the
doctrine itself, the recorder aptly asked the doctor whether,
if he judged of his intellect merely from a vague supposi-
tion as to the nature of the sun's heat, he might not equally
declare Buffon and many other philosophers to be mad.
   Mr O'Donnell, the successor of Mr Elliot, said he had
observed symptoms of insanity in him, although he attended
his patients very regularly and very properly. This incon-
sistency drew from Mr Garrow some sharp questions, which
Mr O'Donnell said did not, by the way in which they were
put, enable him to give so clear an account of the case as he
otherwise would do if not puzzled by the counsel.
   Two people with whom he lodged also said they re-
marked insanity; but he was a good, quiet lodger, and they
saw no harm in him.
   The recorder said it was necessary that the jury should
be convinced that one or both pistols was loaded with ball.
It was evident, first from the exultation, and afterwards
the disappointment, expressed by Elliot, as well as by his
declarations, that his intention was to take away the life of
the lady -- that he had deliberated on the fact, and had coolly

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prepared the means, But it was for them to inquire whether,   
in the anxiety incident to so horrid a project, he had not  
either blundered in the loading, or had chosen the wrong  
pair of pistols ; for if they were not convinced that one or       
both of them was loaded with ball they must acquit the
prisoner. Here one of the jurymen said: " Surely, my  
Lord, nothing can be more clear than that the pistols were  
not loaded with ball." On this the recorder said that if they
were all of this opinion it was needless for him to enumerate       
the evidence in defence of the prisoner.
   The jury, after some consultation, brought in a verdict  
of guilty of shooting, but they did not find that there was  
ball. On this the recorder directed them to acquit the     
prisoner, which they did.   
   The recorder said this was no ground for exultation to  
the prisoner. His crime in the eye of Heaven was the   
same, and he should order him to be detained to be tried for  
the assault; and it was a duty which the prosecutors owed to  
society to bring him to his trial in that way.
   This officiousness of justice proved fatal to poor Elliot.   
He was a man of extreme sensibility, and being convicted  
of the assault, and a vindictive sentence passed, he adopted  .
a determination to starve himself to death ; and, in spite   
of entreaty and force, persisted in not swallowing any sus-  
tenance, till he died a victim of the misplaced punctilio of  
law.

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Newgate Calendar Vol. IV Table of Contents / The Complete Newgate Calendar