THE CULPRIT
M E R C E R
After Sentence
The vast crowd that collected outside the Supreme Court, after sentence of death was passed on Mercer, to see the unhappy wretch as he passed out, was doomed to disappointment, because by a judicious, and as it turned out, successful ruse on the part of the police and prison authorities, he had left the Courthouse for the railway station several minutes before many persons were aware of his departure.
It was anticipated that on making his appearance in the open air, Mercer would be received by demonstrations of a kind that would give expression to the opinion popularly entertained, that the verdict of the jury was a just and proper one, and the one only that could be arrived at on evidence disclosing one of the most brutal, hideous, and abominable crimes to be found on the criminal records of the colony.
To avoid this manifestation of popular feeling, the authorities ordered an omnibus to the doorway through which prisoners ordinarily pass to and from the Courthouse.
Towards this point, the crowd eagerly pressed, and here they patiently waited, expecting every moment to see the culprit make his appearance.
In order that the pre-arranged plan might be carried out with perfect success, the police exerted themselves in a make-believe kind of way, to keep a passage clear from the doorway to the bus, and the eager throng never for a moment suspected that Mercer would be taken out by another door.
Meanwhile a cab had been ordered to the opposite side of the Courthouse, and before the public knew anything to the contrary, the murderer was on his way to the railway station, in charge of Mr. Reston, chief gaoler, and Sergeant-Major O'Grady.
At the Railway Station
As a considerable time had to elapse before starting of the 5:20 p.m. train for Lyttelton, Mercer was admitted into the manager's room, and kept there until a moment or two before the starting of the train.
All this time his demeanour was marked the same amount of sang-froid and apparent unconcern as characterised his attitude in the dock throughout the trial, which but a few minutes before, had culminated in his condemnation.
A large number of persons collected on the platform, and the prisoner was hooted on being taken out of the room at the station and placed in the railway carriage; in fact, Sergeant-Major O'Grady and
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Constable Wallace, who walked on either side of him, thought it necessary to lay hands on him, and push him into the carriage before them.
It was a single compartment of a second-class carriage, or one of those compartments that are occasionally used by the guard, that the condemned man was put into, the other occupants being Sergeant-Major O'Grady, Constable Wallace, some of the gaol authorities, and two prisoners awaiting trial.
Mercer's Deportment in the Carriage
Shortly after the train started, Mercer evinced every desire to enter into conversation with those around him, but very little encouragement was given to him in this respect.
He requested one of the company to fill his pipe afresh, and on the request being complied with, he lighted it and continued smoking all the way to Lyttelton, with a degree of nonchalance that was perfectly inconsistent with his terrible position.
He frequently looked out of the carriage windows as the train proceeded, now and then beat time with his feet, as to a tune, on the floor, and addressing himself at one period to Constable Wallace, said, "Well, Wallace, Farewell; I suppose I will not see you after tonight in this world, but I hope I'll see you in the next."
Another remark which Mercer made was, that they (meaning, it is presumed, those engaged in the trial), had made it warm for him; and it is related that he expressed disappointment a the Judge, cutting him so short - "If I had not been taken so short," said he, "I would have said more than I did; I would have said that I forgave all my enemies."
Our reporter cannot understand this statement of Mercer's about the Judge cutting him so short, as it seemed to him, that the Judge gave him ample time to make any statement he desired.
There was an interval of silence between the conclusion of the prisoner's statement and the commencement of the Judge's address to the prisoner in passing sentence.
Scene in Lyttelton
The news that the man had been condemned preceded his arrival in Port, and the result was that hundreds of persons waited about the station in order to see the prisoner; and on the arrival of the train, those so inspired, had their wish gratified, the prisoner being escorted up to the gaol in the midst of a body of constables, and it is to be regretted that this was done amidst the groans of the population
Before the new pos office was reached, a gentleman prominent in commercial circles, was seen to go quite close to Mercer and hoot him.
Mercer, turning around uttered the words, "Oh. you ---Hound," with great bitterness.
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