Classic Audiobook Collection - The Notting Hill Mystery by Charles Warren Adams ~ Full Audiobook [mystery]
Episode Date: December 25, 2023The Notting Hill Mystery by Charles Warren Adams audiobook. Genre: mystery Charles Felix was the pseudonym of Charles Warren Adams, an English Lawyer and publisher and is now known to have been the a...uthor of 'The Notting Hill Mystery', thought to be the first full length detective novel in English. The story first appeared as an eight part serial in a weekly magazine in 1862, and was subsequently published as a single volume novel in 1865. The story deals with the then newly emerging field of 'mesmerism' which we now know as hypnotism, and its use in the planning and execution of three truly devious crimes. The novel, unusually, is written wholly in the form of a series of letters and reports gathered by the investigator from the various witnesses in the case, and the reader is left to decide themselves the guilt or otherwise of the chief suspect. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:11:50) Chapter 02 (00:37:38) Chapter 03 (01:11:13) Chapter 04 (01:47:42) Chapter 05 (02:23:00) Chapter 06 (02:58:22) Chapter 07 (03:39:36) Chapter 08 (04:15:42) Chapter 09 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Notting Hill Mystery by Charles Felix, pseudonym.
Introduction
It is unnecessary for us to state by what means the following papers came into our hands,
and it would be no complement to the penetration of our readers
if we indicated beforehand the nature of the mystery they are supposed to unravel.
It will, however, require a very close attention to names and dates
to comprehend the view of the compiler as to the case he is investigating.
and, so far, it is requisite to rely on the reader's patience and discernment.
The whole particulars of the case will extend to some seven or eight numbers of once a week,
and some things which are dark at first will appear clearer in the sequel.
If the compiler has really discovered a new species or description of crime,
it is natural that the evidence of it, which is circumstantial, should be somewhat difficult of acceptance.
The illustrations are simply added to make the reader's task.
more agreeable, but of course it is not pretended that they were made simultaneously with the events they represent.
Mr. R. Henderson to the Secretary of the Blank Life Assurance Association.
Private Inquiry Office Clements Inn, 17th of January 1858.
Gentlemen, in laying before you the extraordinary revelations arising from my examination into the case of the late Madame R,
I have to apologise for the delay in carrying out your instructions of November last.
It has been occasioned, not by any neglect on my part, but by the unexpected extent and intricacy
of the inquiry into which I have been led.
I confess that after this minute and laborious investigation, I could still have wished
a more satisfactory result, but a perusal of the accompanying documents on the accuracy
and completeness of which you may fully rely, will, I doubt, not satisfy you of the unusual
difficulty of the case.
My inquiries have had reference to a policy of assurance for £5,000, the maximum amount
permitted by your rules, on the life of the late Madame R, effected in your office by her
husband, the Baron R, and bearing date 1st November 1855.
similar policies were held in the blank of Manchester, the blank of Liverpool, the blank of Edinburgh and the blank of Dublin.
The whole amounting to £25,000.
The dates, 23rd of December, 1855, 10th of January, 25th of January, and 15th of February 1856, respectively, being in effect almost identical.
These companies joined in the instructions under which I have been acting, and from the voluminous
nature of this letter and its enclosures I shall be obliged by your considering my present reply,
as addressed to them conjointly with yourselves. Before entering upon the subject of my
investigations, it may be as well to recapitulate the circumstances under which they were
originated. Of these the first was the coincidence of dates,
above-noticed, and an apparent desire on the part of the assurer to conceal from each of the various offices the fact of similar policies having been elsewhere simultaneously effected.
On examining further into the matter, your board was also struck with the peculiar conditions under which the marriage appeared to have taken place,
and the relation in which Madame R had formerly stood to the Baron.
To these points, therefore, my attention was especially directed, and the facts, thus elicited,
form a very important link in the singular chain of evidence I have been enabled to put together.
The chief elements of suspicion, however, was to be found in the very unusual circumstances
attended on the death of Madame R, especially following so speedily as it did on the assurance
for so large an aggregate amount.
This lady died suddenly on the 15th of March, 1857, from the effects of a powerful acid taken,
it is supposed, in her sleep, from her husband's laboratory. In the Baron's answers to the usual
preliminary inquiries, forwarded for my assistance, and herewith returned, there is no
admission of any propensity to somnambulism. Shortly, however, after the occurrence had been noticed
in the public prints, a letter to the Secretary of the Association, from a gentleman recently lodging
in the same house with Baron R, gave reason to suspect that, in this respect, at least,
some concealment had been practised, and the matter was then placed in my hands.
On receipt of your instructions I at once put myself in communication with Mr. Aldridge,
the writer of the letter in question, that gentleman's evidence certainly goes to show
that, within at least a very few months after the date of the latest policy, Baron R. was not
only himself aware of such a propensity in his wife, but desirous of concealing it from others.
Mr. Aldridge's statements are also to a certain extent supported by those of two other
witnesses, but unfortunately there are, as will be seen, circumstances calculated to throw considerable
doubt upon the whole of this evidence, and especially on that of Mr.
Aldridge, from which alone the more important part of the inference is drawn. The same must,
unfortunately, be said with regard to some other parts of the evidence, as will be more clearly
seen when the case itself is before you. From his statement, however, in conjunction with
other circumstances, I learned enough to induce me to extend my researches to another very singular
case, which not long since had given rise to considerable comment. You will no doubt remember
that in the autumn of 1856, a gentleman of the name of Anderton was arrested on suspicion of
having poison his wife, and that he committed suicide whilst awaiting the issue of a chemical
inquiry into the cause of her death. This inquiry resulted in an acquittal, no traces of the
suspected poison being found, and the affair was hushabye.
up as speedily as possible. Many of Mr. Anderton's connections being of high standing in society
and naturally anxious for the honour of the family. I must, however, acknowledge the readiness
with which, in the interest of justice, I have been furnished by them with every facility for
pushing my inquiries, the results of which are now before you. In reviewing the whole
facts, and more especially the series of remarkable coincidences of dates, etc., to which I beg
to direct your most particular attention, two alternatives present themselves. In the first we must
altogether ignore a chain of circumstantial evidence so complete and close-fitting in every respect
as it seems almost impossible to disregard, in the second we are inevitably led to a conclusion
so at variance with all the most firmly established laws of nature as it seems almost equally
impossible to accept. The one leaves us precisely at the point from which we started, the other
involves the imputation of a series of most horrible and complicated crimes. Between these
alternatives I am constrained to confess my own inability, after long and careful study, to decide.
I have determined, therefore, simply to submit for your consideration the facts of the case
as they appear in the depositions of the several parties from whom my information.
has been obtained. These I have arranged as far as possible in the form in which they would be
laid before counsel, should it ultimately be deemed advisable to bring the affair into court.
In view, however, of the extreme length of the case, I have given, in a condensed form,
the substance of such of the depositions as did not seem likely to suffer from such treatment.
The more important I have left to tell their own tale, and in any case my abysions my abysions
abstract may be at once checked by the originals, all of which are enclosed.
Should your conclusions be such as have been forced upon myself, further deliberations
will yet be required with reference to the course to be pursued, a point on which, in such
case, I confess myself almost equally unable to advise. Whether in a matter so surrounded
with suspicion it might not be well in any event to resist the claim, it is certain that
a question to be considered. On the other hand, even assuming the fullest proof of the terrible
crimes involved, it is a matter calling for no less careful consideration whether they would be
found of a nature to bring the criminal within reach of the law. For the present, however,
our concern is with the facts of the case, and ulterior questions had better be left on one
side until that issue is decided, when I conclude I shall hear further from you on the subject.
In conclusion, I must trouble you with a few words on a point which seems to require explanation.
I allude to the apparent prominence I have been compelled to afford to the workings of what is called mesmeric agency.
Those, indeed, who are so unfortunate as to be the victims of this delusion, would doubtless find in it a simple, though terrible solution of the mystery we are endeavouring to solve.
But while frankly admitting that it was the passage from the Zoist magazine, quoted in the course of the evidence, which first suggested to my mind, the only conclusion I have as yet been able to imagine, I beg at the outset, most distinctly, to state that I would rather admit my own researches to have been baffled by an illusory coincidence than lay myself open to the imputation of giving the slightest credit to that impudent imposter.
We must not, however, forget that those whose lives have been passed in the deception of others
not unfrequently end by deceiving themselves.
There is therefore nothing incredible in the idea that the Baron R
may have given sufficient credence to the statement of the Zoist, above-mentioned,
for the suggestion to his own mind of a design which, by the working,
of a true, though most mysterious law of nature, may really have been carried out.
Such, at least, is the only theory by which I can attempt in any way to elucidate this otherwise unfathomable mystery.
Awaiting the honour of your further commands, I am, gentlemen, very faithfully yours, Ralph Henderson.
End of introduction.
Section 1 of the Notting Hill mystery by Charles Felix.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Section 1. The Case
extracts from correspondence of the Honourable Catherine B
Footnote
Great Aunt of the late Mrs. Anderton
The object of going so far back will presently appear
Item 1
From Lady Bolton to Honourable C.B.
Undated
About October or November of 1832
Oh, Auntie, Auntie, what shall I do?
For three nights I have not closed my eyes.
and I would not write even to you, Auntie, dear, because I kept hoping that, after all, things
might come right and he would come back again. Oh, how I have listened to every sound,
and watch the road till my poor eyes ache, and now this is the fourth day since he went away,
and, oh, auntie, I am so frightened, for I am sure he is gone after that dreadful man,
and, oh, if he should meet him, I know something terrible will happen,
for you can't tell how he looked, poor Edward,
I mean when he went away.
But, indeed, Auntie, you must not be angry with him, for I know it was all my own fault,
for I ought to have told him everything long ago,
though, indeed, indeed I never cared for him, and I do love dear Edward so dearly.
I was afraid, here the manuscript becomes in places very blotted and illegible,
and I thought it was all at an end, and then—
And only a fortnight ago we were.
were so happy, married hardly seven months, and—
But you must not think I am complaining of him, dear auntie, for you don't know how—
Only if you can, come to me, for I feel getting so ill, and you know it is only, God bless you, auntie.
Oh, do come to me if you can, Gertrude Bolton.
Item two, extract of letter from the same to the same, written about four days later.
later.
I am so sorry to hear you are so ill.
Don't try to come, darling, auntie.
I shall do, somehow, and, if not, anything, is better than this horrible suspense.
No tidings yet, but I cannot write more, for I can hardly see to guide the pen, and my poor
head seems to open and shut.
God bless you, auntie, gee.
I opened my letter to thank you so much for sending dear kind Mrs. Ward.
She came in so unexpectedly, in a blue...
footnote scratched out just as if she had come from heaven i wonder if she has seen ed here the manuscript ends suddenly item three from mrs ward to honourable c b enclosing the above
beechwood footnote the residence of sir edward bolton tuesday night my dear catherine i fear i have but a poor account to give you of our dear
Bertrude. Poor child! When I came into the room and saw her looking so pale and wan, and with
great black circles around her eyes, I could scarcely keep in my own tears. She gave a little
cry of joy when she saw me, and threw herself upon my neck, but a moment after turned to
the writing-table and tore open the letter, I send you with this, and which was lying ready
for the post. The long-continued strain seems to have been too much for her, and she had
hardly written a line when her head began to wander, as you will see from the conclusion of her
postscript, and in trying to write her husband's name, she broke down altogether, and went off
into a fit of hysterics, which lasted for several hours. She is now, I am thankful to say,
comparatively calm again, though at times her head still wanders, and she seems quite unable to
close her eyes, but lies in her bed, looking straight before her, and occasionally talking to herself
in a low voice, but without seeming to notice anything.
I have endeavoured, as far as I dared, to draw from her the history of this sad affair,
but can get nothing, poor child, but eager assurances that it was all her fault,
and that, indeed, indeed, he was not to blame.
It seems as though my coming, though certainly a great relief to her,
had had the effect of putting her on her guard, lest anything should escape her
unfavourable to her husband, and her whole faculties seem to be concentrated in the endeavour
to shield him from reproach. I fear, however, there can be no doubt that he has been very
seriously to blame. Indeed, from all I can gather, the fault seems to have been entirely on
his side. What is the precise history of this unhappy business I have not been able to
learn? But it seems that Sir Edward, who is certainly a most violent young man,
and I fear also of a most jealous temperament,
contracted some suspicion with regard to that Mr. Hawker,
who so perseveringly persecuted for Gertrude the winter before last,
and who have left Beechwood after a very distressing scene in pursuit of him.
Mr. Hawker is supposed to be on the continent,
and it is known that Sir Edward took the Dover Road,
which, as you know, passes close by this place.
This is all I can at present learn with any certainty,
"'Though I hear but too much from the servants,
"'who are all in such a state of indignation at Sir Edward's treatment of their mistress,
"'that I have the utmost difficulty in restraining it from finding some open vent.
"'Should I hear more, I will of course let you know at once,
"'but meanwhile I cannot conceal from you my deep anxiety for our dear Gertrude,
"'whose poor little heart seems quite broken,
"'and for whom I am in hourly dread of the effect,
"'but too likely to be produced,
in her present delicate state, by the anxiety and terror from which she is suffering.
You know how much I always disliked the match, and I feel more than ever the impropriety of
consigning so young and sensitive a girl to the care of a man of such notoriously
uncontrollable temper. Poor thing! This is evidently not the first time she has suffered
from it, and even should she herself escape without permanent injury to her constant
I dread the effect upon the child.
And now I must close this long and sad letter, but will write again should anything fresh occur.
Meantime, I cannot be longer away just now from Gertrude's side.
I hope your own health is improving, my love to little Henry, and tell him to be very good
while I am away.
Your affectionate, Helen Ward
Item 4
The Same to the Same, Beachwood, Monday morning
my dear catherine i am sorry to say that i can still send you no better account of poor gertrude since i last wrote by saturday evening's post footnote this letter is omitted as containing nothing of any importance
Very little change has taken place, though she is certainly more restless, poor child, and I fear also, if anything, weaker. She now constantly asks for letters and seems impressed with the idea that we are keeping them from her, as, indeed, in her present state, I should, I think, take the responsibility of doing, if any arrived. The newspaper I have always kept from her until it has first been carefully examined. I am dreading fever, though by the
doctor's advice I have not attempted to dissuade her from getting up. The exertion, however,
is almost more than she can bear, and I am looking anxiously for his next visit. She lies all day
on the sofa, looking out of the window which commands a view of the Dover Road. This morning
she seems growing more and more restless, and I am waiting with inexpressible anxiety for
Dr. Travers.
11 o'clock. The doctor has been, and confirms my fear of approaching fever, which has
However, he says, my possibly pass off. He has ordered me to lie down at once for some hours,
as I have hardly been in bed since I arrived, and he says, if fever should come on, I shall want all
the strength I can get. I shall keep this letter open to send you by the evening's post the latest
account. Wednesday. All is over. I can hardly command myself sufficiently to write,
and yet I must tell you what has happened.
Oh my dear Catherine, how shall I ever forgive myself for leaving, poor dear Gertrude, and yet I know that this is foolish, for I was ordered to do so for her sake.
But I must come at once to the sad news I have to tell. I left poor Gertrude in the charge of her maid with strict injunctions to call me, if there should be any change, but the poor child seems suddenly to have grown quieter, and at length to have fallen asleep.
The maid watched her until just four o'clock, when, overcome with weariness, she herself dropped
off into a doze, and on waking, at a little before five, was horrified to find herself alone.
She flew at once to me, but I had hardly got to the top of the stairs when someone came running
up to say that the postman was below, and had just met with poor Gertrude, who had been watching
for him at the gate. She inquired eagerly after letters, and on being told there were none,
asked for the newspaper which she at once hurried away with
into a part of the grounds called the wilderness,
while the postman, fearing from her manner that something was amiss,
came on to the house to tell what had occurred.
I need not tell you, with what anxiety I hastened to the wilderness,
and there poor girl we found her, stretched upon the turf,
close by the edge of the lake, with the fatal newspaper in her hand.
I had her taken carefully to the house,
and a man dispatched on horseback for the doctor.
But before he arrived, she had recovered consciousness,
only, poor child, to be at once seized with the signs of her approaching trouble.
From that moment until she breathed her last, an hour ago,
I have never left her side.
After nearly thirty hours of the most terrible suffering I have ever witnessed,
she at length gave birth to two poor little girls,
both so small and weak-looking that it is quite piteous to see them.
The elder, in especial, which was born about an hour before the second, is so weak and sickly
that the doctor says it is scarcely possible it can live, and indeed one can hardly hope that
it may. The second seems stronger, but both are very small and weakly, even considering their
premature birth. Poor Gertrude now sank rapidly, and though every means was tried,
and she still lingered on for three or four hours, she at last sank altogether, passing away at the last so quietly that we hardly knew that she was gone.
Poor darling, I always loved her as being such a favourite with you all. One word before I close as to the paper which was the unhappy cause of this terrible blow.
It contained, as I had feared, the long-dreaded intelligence of Sir Edward's fatal quarrel with Mr. H.
and I send it off by the same post, as you will wish to know the sad particulars.
I cannot write more now, for I am fairly worn out, and must take some rest.
You know how deeply I sympathise with you.
Most affectionately yours, Helen Ward.
Item 5. Extract From the Morning Herald of the 12th of November, 1832.
Fatal duel at Dieppe.
We learn from the Paris Papers that an extraordinary
and fatal duel took place some days since in the neighbourhood of Dieppe between two Englishmen,
neither of whom, have as yet been identified. It appears that the parties encountered each other
in the courtyard of the Hotel de Europe, where one of them, whose linen bears the mark of C.G.H.
had been staying for some days. The newcomer at once assailed the other, evidently with the most
approbrious language, to which Mr. H replied with equal warmth, but the conversation being
carried on in English was unfortunately not understood by anyone present.
The altercation at length grew so warm that the landlord was compelled to interfere,
and the parties then left the hotel together.
A few hours afterwards Mr. H. returned, and, calling for his bill,
hastily packed his portmanteau and departed.
He has since been traced to Paris, where he was lost sight of altogether.
Early the next morning a rumour spread that the body of an Englishman had been found
in a vineyard about a mile distant from the town, and on inquiry it proved that the victim
was no other than the gentleman with whom the dispute had occurred on the previous night.
It was evident on examination that the unfortunate man must have fallen in fair fight,
though no seconds appeared to have been present during the encounter.
A pistol, recently discharged, was firmly grasped in the hand of the dead man,
and at a dozen paces distant lay its fellow, evidently the weapon,
with which he had been killed.
The fatal wound, too, was exactly in that portion of the chest,
which would be exposed to an adversary's fire,
and had evidently pierced the heart,
so that death must have been instantaneous.
The weapons, too, with which the fatal duel was fought,
appear to have been the property of the deceased.
They were a very handsome pair of dueling pistols,
hair triggers, and evidently of English make.
On the butt of each was a small silver shield,
bearing the initials E.B.
And an armed hand grasping a crossbow.
The initials of the unfortunate gentleman's opponent were, as we have said, C.G.H.
And we have reason to fear that the victim was a young baronet of considerable landed property,
with whose sudden departure for the continent, rumour has for some time been busy.
Since our first edition went to press, we have received further particulars,
which leave no room for doubt that the victim of the above fatal occurrence was, as we feared,
Sir Edward Bolton, Baronet, of Beechwood, Kent, but the cause of the jewel and the name
of his opponent still remain a mystery. The unfortunate gentleman leaves behind him a young wife,
to whom he was united but a few months since. Failing a male heir, the baronetcy,
will now, we understand, become extinct, while the bulk of the estates will pass to a distant
connection. The widow, however, is, we believe, in possession of a considerable independent
property. Item 6. Mrs. Ward to Honourable C. B. July 1836.
My dear Catherine, you ask me whether I am satisfied with what I saw the other day of poor
Gertrude Bolton's little ones. To say that I am satisfied with their appearance would,
poor little things, be hardly true, for they are still anything but healthy. Poor Gertie,
especially looked like a faded lily. The younger, however, is certainly improved, and will,
I hope, do well, and I quite think that they both are better where they are than they could
possibly be elsewhere. It is indeed, sad, poor things, that they should have no near relation
with whom they could live, but I quite agree with you that, in your state of health, it would
not only be too great an undertaking for yourself, but would be by no means beneficial to them.
Indeed, I am convinced that on every account they are best where they are.
The air of Hastings seems to suit them, and in the higher part of the town where Mrs. Taylor lives is bracing without being too cold.
Mrs. Taylor herself is a most excellent person and extremely fond of them.
She seems especially interested in poor Gertie, and never wearies of relating instances of the wonderful sympathy between the twins.
This sympathy seems even more physical than mental.
According to Mrs. Taylor, every little ailment that affects the one is immediately felt also by the other,
though with this difference that your namesake, Katie, is but very slightly affected by Gertie's troubles,
while she, poor child, I suppose from the greater delicacy of her constitution, is rendered seriously ill
by every little indisposition of her sister. I have often heard of the strong physical sympathies
between twins, but never met myself with so marked an instance. Both, unfortunately, are sadly
nervous, though here too the elder is the greater sufferer, while in the younger it seems to
take the form of extreme quickness of perception. Of course, as they grow up, they should be
placed with someone in our own rank of life, but for the present I think poor Mrs. Taylor
will do very well. I shall be at Hastings again next month, and will write when I have seen
them. Affectionately yours, Helen Ward
Item 7
From Mrs Taylor to Honourable C.B.
About January 1837
Honoured Miss
With my humble duty to your ladyship
I am truly sorry to say as
Miss Gertrude have took a terrible bad cold
Which I was a fear that she would do
As Miss Catherine have likewise had one for two days past
Which I am sorry to say her
As Miss Gertrude is worse than Miss Gertrude,
Catherine, but hoping she will be well again soon, which, as I have told your honoured
ladyship, they as allahs the same troubles, only poor Miss Gertrude, alas haven't
worst.
Honoured Miss, the Doctor Habeena, which he says, as Miss Catherine has quite well again,
he says, honoured miss, he hopes Miss Gertrude will soon be well too.
Honoured Miss, your humble servant to command, Sarah Taylor.
8. From the same to the same, about June 1837. Honoured Miss, with my humble duty to your
ladyship, and I am truly thankful to say, the dear children are both quite well, which Miss
Catherine made herself hill on Tuesday, and poor Miss Gertrude were very bad in consequence
for three days, but he's now quite well again, Honoured Miss, your ladyship's humble servant
to command, Sarah Taylor.
Item 9.
from same to same July 1837
Honoured Miss
With my humble duty is your ladyship
And would you please come directly
Which something dreadful have happened
To poor Miss Katrie nodded miss
Your ladyship's humble servant to command
Sarah Taylor
Item 10
Mr Ward to Honourable CB
Marine Hotel Hastings
12th of July
1837
Dear Miss B
Helen was unfortunately
prevented from leaving home at the time your letter arrived.
So, as the matter seemed urgent, I thought it best to come myself.
I am sorry to have to send you such very unsatisfactory intelligence.
Poor little Catherine has been lost.
Stolen, I am afraid, by gypsies, and I have hitherto been quite unable to find any clue to
their whereabouts.
It appears that Mrs. Taylor took them for a trip with some friends of hers to fairly down,
where they fell in with a gang of gypsies,
of whom, however,
they did not take any particular notice.
They had taken their dinner with them,
and after finishing it sat talking for some time,
when suddenly the child was missed,
and though they hunted in every direction for several hours,
no trace of her could be found.
On returning to the place where the gypses had been seen,
the camp was found broken up,
and the track, after passing near where they had been sitting,
was lost on the hard road.
Unfortunately, poor Mrs. Taylor, who seems quite distracted by what has happened, could think
of nothing at first but writing to you, and it was only by the gossip of her friends, who
live at some distance from the town, that the intelligence at length reached the police.
Inquiries were being set on foot when I arrived last night, but I fear that, from the time
that has been lost, there is now but little chance of recovering the poor child.
I have advertised in all directions, and offered a large reward, but I have to have to be
little hope of the result, nor are the police more sanguine than myself.
Unfortunately, poor Catherine's dark, gypsy-like complexion and black eyes and hair
will render it easy to disguise her features, while her quick intelligence and lithe active
figure will make her only too valuable an acquisition to the band.
I need not tell you how grieved I am at this fresh trouble to these poor children,
and I fear Gertrude will suffer severely from the loss of her sister, with whom she has, as you
no, so extraordinary a bond of sympathy.
I am going now to the police station to consult on further measures,
and we'll write to you again by tomorrow's morning post.
Ever, dear Miss B, very truly yours, Henry Ward.
Item 11. Mrs. Vancetart to the Honourable C.B.
Grove Hill House Academy, Hampstead Heath, Wednesday, May the 1st, 1842.
Madam, I have much pleasure in compliance.
with your requests for a monthly report of the health and progress of my very interesting
young friend and pupil, Miss Bolton. In a moral and educational point of view, nothing
would possibly be more satisfactory. Of my dear young friend's health, I am compelled,
however, to lament my inability to address you in the same congratulatory terms, which in all
other matters I am happily so well-authorized to employ. Notwithstanding the extreme salubrity
of the atmosphere by which in this justly celebrated locality she is surrounded, and I trust
I may venture to add the unremitting attention she has experienced, both at my own hands,
and those of my medical and educational assistants, her general health is still, I regret to say,
very far from having attained to that condition of entire convalescence at which I trust
she may get, with the advantage of a prolonged residence upon the heath, before very long a
arrive. My medical adviser, Dr. Wynne Stanley, a physician of European reputation, and one in whom
I can repose the most entire confidence, informs me that Miss Bolton is suffering from no especial
ailment, though subject from time to time to fits of illness, to which it is often difficult
to assign any sufficient cause, and which after a while disappear as strangely as they arose.
He trusts with me that the pure air of the heath, which, so far as we can venture to
to believe has already been beneficial to his interesting patient, will, in course of time,
effect a radical cure. The loss of her young sister, of which you informed me on her first
joining our little society, inflicted beyond doubt a very serious blow upon her naturally feeble
constitution, but I trust that its effects are already passing away. I shall, of course,
adhere strictly to your instructions never in any way to allude to the sad occurrence
in conversation with Miss Belton, and have thought it devisable not to acquaint her companions
with the fact.
On the first of next month I shall again do myself the honour of acquainting you with the progress
made by my interesting young friend, and have little doubt of being at that time able to furnish
you with a satisfactory account of her physical, no less than of her moral and intellectual
advancement.
For the present, dear madam, permit me to subscribe myself.
your very faithful and obliged servant, Amelia Dorothea, VanCetard.
To the Honourable Catherine B.
Item 12. Mrs. Ward to the Honourable C.B.
14th of June, 1851.
My dear Catherine, very many thanks for your early intelligence of dear Gertrude's engagement.
I congratulate you most heartily, though, as you have yourself alluded to it,
I cannot deny that I should have been better pleased had Mr. Anderton,
in addition to all his other good qualities, possess that of a somewhat less nervous and excitable temperament.
I have always liked him much, but with poor Gertrude's own delicate constitution,
I cannot but fear the results of such an union upon both.
However, it is impossible to have everything, and in all other respects he seems more than
unexceptionable, so once more I congratulate you heartily.
Are you really thinking of coming up to the exhibition?
Give my best love to dear Gertrude, and say all that is kind.
in proper for us to her fiancée.
Ever, dear Catherine,
affectionately yours, Helen Ward.
End of Section 1.
Section 2 of the Notting Hill mystery.
By Charles Felix.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Section 2. Item 1.
Memorandum by Mr. Henderson.
We now come to that portion of Mrs. Anderton's footnote.
the late Miss Bolton, history, which embraces the period between her marriage and the commencement
of her last illness. For this I have been compelled to have recourse to various quarters.
The information thus afforded is very complete, and taken in conjunction with what we have
already seen in Miss B's correspondence of the previous life of this unfortunate lady,
throws considerable light upon two important points to be hereafter noticed. The deposition
however, unavoidably run to a greater length than at this stage of the proceedings their bearing on the main points of this case would render necessary, and I have therefore condensed them for your use in the following memorandum.
Any portion, not sufficiently clear, may be elucidated by reference to the originals enclosed.
Mr. Anderton was a gentleman of good origin, closely connected with some of the first families in Yorkshire, where he had formed
the acquaintance of Miss Bolton, while staying at the house of her great-aunt, Miss B.
He appears to have been of a most gentle and amiable disposition, though unfortunately so shy and
retiring as to have formed comparatively few intimacies. All, however, who could be numbered
among his acquaintance, seem to have been equally astonished at the charge brought against him
on the death of his wife, with whom he was always supposed, though from his retired habits
little was positively known, to have lived upon terms of the most perfect felicity.
As the event proved, the case would in effect never have come on for trial, but had it done
so the defence would have brought forward overwhelming evidence of the incredibility of such
a crime on the part of one of so gentle and affectionate disposition.
During the four and a half years of their married life there does not appear to have been
a cloud upon their happiness. Mrs. Anderton's letters to her great aunt, Miss B., to whom I am
indebted for almost the whole of the important information I have been able to collect,
respecting the family, are full of expressions of attachment to her husband and instances of
his devotion to her. Copies of several of these letters are enclosed, and from these it will
be seen how unvarying was their attachment to each other. Throughout the entire series,
extending over the whole period of her married life, there is not a single expression which could
lead to any other conclusion. It is, however, evident that the delicate health with which
Mrs. Anderson had been afflicted from her birth still continued, and in two instances we
have indications of the same mysterious attacks, noticed in the letter of Mrs. Van Sittart,
before quoted. These, however, appear to have been but very slight. They had, for
some years, been of more and more rare occurrence, and, from this date October 1852,
we have no further record of anything of the kind. Still, Mrs. Anderton's general health
continued very unsatisfactory, and almost everything seems to have been tried by her for its
improvement. Among the enclosed correspondence are letters dated from Barden, Ems, Luka,
Cairo, and other places to which the Andertons had, at different times gone for the health,
of one or other, Mr. Anderson being also, as stated in Mrs. Ward's letter of the 14th
of June 1851, extremely delicate. Of this gentleman all accounts agree in stating that the
chief ailment was a constitutional nervousness, mental, as well as physical. The latter
showed itself in the facility with which, though by no means deficient in courage, he could
be startled by any sudden occurrence, however simple. The former
in his extreme sensitiveness to the opinions of those about him,
and his dread of the slightest shadow of reproach on the name of which he was so justly proud.
In the accompanying documents you will find instances of both these idiosyncrasies.
In the summer of 1854, Mr. Anderson's attention seems to have been drawn to the subject of mesmerism.
They had been spending some weeks at Malvern, where this science seems particularly invoven,
and had there made acquaintance with several of the patients at the different water-cure establishments,
by some of whom Mr. Anderton was strongly urged to have recourse to mesmeric treatment,
both for Mrs. Anderson and himself.
The constant solicitations of these enthusiastic friends seem at length to have produced their effect,
and the favourite operator of the neighbourhood was requested to try his skill on these new patients.
on Mr. Anderton the only result seems to have been the inducing of such a state of irritation
as might not unreasonably have been expected from so nervously excitable temperament,
in presence of the manipulations to which the votaries of mesmerism are subjected.
In the case of Mrs. Anderton, however, the result was, or was supposed to be different.
Whether from some natural cause that at that time escaped attention, or whether solely from that
force of imagination from which such surprising results are often found to arise, I cannot
of course say, but it is certain that some short time after the mesmeric seances had
commenced, a decided, though slight improvement, was perceptible.
This continued until the departure of the operator for Germany, which country he had only recently
left on a short visit to England. Notwithstanding the worse than failure in his own case,
the certainly curious coincidence of his wife's recovery seems to have entirely imposed on Mr.
Anderton, whose susceptibility of disposition appears indeed to have laid him especially
open to the practices of quacks of every kind. So great now was his faith in this new remedy
that he actually proposed to accompany the professor to Germany, rather than the,
that his wife should lose the benefit of the accustomed manipulations.
He had proceeded to London for the purpose of making the necessary preparations
when he was induced to pause by the remonstrances of several of his friends,
who represented to him that a winter in the severe climate of Dresden,
the place to which the professor was bound,
would probably be fatal to one of Mrs. Anderton's delicate constitution.
His medical advisor also, though himself professing belief in mesmerism, gave a similar opinion,
while at the same time he obviated the difficulty respecting the mesmeric treatment of Mrs. Anderson
by offering an introduction to one of the most powerful mesmerists in Europe,
who had recently arrived in London, and who eventually proved to be the so styled Baron R.
This introduction appears to have finally decided Mr. Anderson,
underton against the Dresden expedition, and after a brief experience of his manipulations,
Mrs. Anderson herself seems to have derived, in imagination at least, more benefit from them
than even from those of her late attendant. So thoroughly were they both impressed with the
beneficial results of the Baron's passes, etc., that Mr. Anderton, who had now resolved to
settle in London for the autumn and winter, went so far as to take a ready furnished house at
Notting Hill, for the express purpose of having his new professor in his immediate neighbourhood.
Here the seances were continued often twice or three times a day, and, though, of course,
no one in his senses could really attribute such a result to the exercises of the Baron,
it is certain that, from some cause or other, the health of Mrs. Anderton,
continued steadily to improve.
Matters had continued in this position for some weeks.
when objections were raised by some of Mr. Anderton's relations
to what they not unnaturally considered it the very questionable propriety of the proceeding.
There seems to have been a good deal of discussion on this point,
in which, however, Mr. Anderton's constitutional susceptibility
finally carried the day against his newly conceived predilections
with respect to, a practice so obviously calculated to expose him to unpleasant comment.
The Baron, however, was not disposed.
so easily to relinquish a patient from whom he derived such large and regular profits.
On being made acquainted with the decision respecting the cessation of his visits,
he at once declared that his own direct manipulations were unnecessary,
and that, if considered improper for one of the opposite sex,
they could easily be made available at second-hand.
Having once swallowed the original imposition,
any additional absurdity was of course easily disposed of,
and it was now determined to avoid all occasion for offence.
Mrs. Anderton should henceforth be operated upon
through the medium of a certain Mademoiselle Rosalie,
a clairvoyant in the employment of the Baron,
who, after being placed en rapport with the patient,
was to convey to her the benefit of the manipulations
to which she was herself subjected by the operator.
In to the precise modus operandi,
I need not now enter,
but will only remark upon the fresh instance of the extraordinary powers of the imagination
displayed in the still more rapid improvement of Mrs. Anderton under this new form of treatment,
and the marvellous sympathy so rapidly induced between her and the Baron's medium.
Mademoiselle Rosalie was a brunette rather below the medium height,
with a slight but beautifully proportioned and active figure,
sallow complexion and dark hair and eyes.
The only fault a connoisseur would probably find with her person would be the extreme breadth of her feet,
though this might perhaps be accounted for by her former occupation to be noticed later on.
It is necessary for our purpose that this peculiarity should be kept in mind.
In appearance she was at that time about thirty years old,
but might very possibly have been younger, as the nature of her profession would probably entail a premature appearance of age.
Altogether, she formed a remarkable contrast to Mrs. Anderton, who was slight but tall and very
fair, with a remarkably small feet, and, notwithstanding her ill health, still looking a year or two
less than her age. Between these very different persons, however, if we are to credit the
enclosed letters, such a sympathy sprang up as would, on all ordinary hypotheses, be perfectly
unaccountable. Mrs. Anderson would feel, or imagined that she felt, the approach of Mademoiselle
Rosalie even before she entered the room. The mere touch of her hand seemed to afford immediate benefit,
and within a very few weeks she became perfectly convalescent and stronger than she had ever been
before. At this point I must again refer you to the depositions themselves, that of Mr. Morton,
which here follows, being of too much importance.
to admit of condensation.
Item 2.
Statement of Frederick Morton, Esquire,
late Lieutenant, R.A.
My name is Frederick George Morton.
In 1854, I was a lieutenant in the Royal Artillery,
and was slightly wounded at the Battle of Incomen,
on the 5th of November that year,
the day after my arrival in the Crimea.
It was before joining the battery to which I was appointed.
I have since,
I quitted the service on the death of my father, and am now residing with my mother at Leeds.
I was an old-school friend of the late Mr. William Anderton, and knew him intimately for nearly 15 years.
I was present at his marriage with Miss Bolton in August 1851, and have since frequently visited their house.
During the time I was at Woolwich Academy, I spent every leave-out day with them, and frequently a good portion of the vacations.
My father encouraged the intimacy, and I was as much at home in their house as in our own.
My father was junior partner to one of the large manufacturing firm in Leeds.
The Andertons generally lived in London, when they were not abroad, and on one occasion I went
with them to Viesbaden.
I saw very little of them in 1854 as they were away, the earlier part of the year, first
at Ilfracom and then at Malvern, but I spent the 13th of October with them.
I particularly remember the date, as I was on my way to the Crimea, where I was afterwards
wounded, and the order had come very suddenly. When it came, I had just gone to a friend's
house for some pheasant shooting, and I remember I was obliged to leave the second morning,
and I spent the night at Anderton's, and embarked the next morning. I was to have gone
for the first, but could not get away, and I lost the shooting altogether. It was on a Saturday
that I embarked, because I remember we had church parade next day.
That was the last time I saw Anderton.
I was in Italy all that winter, with my wound and rheumatic fever,
and in the summer of 1855 I was sent for to my father,
who was ill for several months before he died,
and after that I could not leave my mother.
We only took in a weekly paper,
and I did not hear of his having been taken up till three or four days after.
I started to see him immediately, but it was too late.
It was not on account of any quarrel that we had not met, quite the reverse.
We were as good friends as ever to the last, and I would have given my life to serve him.
I was on the most friendly terms with Mrs. Anderson.
He was dotingly fond of her.
I used to laugh and say I was jealous of her, and they used to laugh too.
I never saw two people so fond of one another.
He was the best and kindest-hearted fellow I ever knew, only awfully nervous and very
sensitive about his family and his name.
The only time we ever quarrelled
was once at school, when I tried to chaff him
by pretending to doubt something he had said
it made him quite ill.
He often said that he would rather die
than have any stain upon his name,
which he was very proud of.
On the day I speak of,
13th of October, 1854,
I telegraphed to them, at Notting Hill,
that I would dine and sleep there on my way out.
I found Mrs. Anderson
better than I had ever seen her before,
She said it was all Baron R's doing, and that since Rosalie came she had got well faster than ever.
She wanted to put off the Baron for that night that we might have a quiet talk, but I would not let her,
and besides I wanted to see him and Rosalie.
They came at about nine o'clock, and Mrs. Anderton lay on the sofa,
and Rosalie sat on a chair by her side and held her hand while the Baron sent her to sleep.
It was Rosalie he put to sleep, not Mrs. Anderson.
The latter did not go to sleep, but lay quite still on the sofa.
While Anderton and I sat together at the farther end of the room, because he said we might
cross the mesmeric fluid.
I don't know what he meant.
Of course, I know that it was all nonsense, but I don't think Rosalie was shamming.
I should go to sleep myself if a man went on that way.
When it was over, Mrs. Anderson said, she felt much better, and I couldn't help laughing.
Then, Anderton sent her up to bed, and he and I and the Baron sat talking for an hour and more.
I never saw Mrs. Anderton again, for I went away before she was up, but I used to hear of her from
Anderton. What we talked of after she was gone was mismerism. Of course, I did not believe in it,
and I said so, and And Anderton and the Baron tried to persuade me it was true.
We were smoking, but Rosalie was there, and said she did not mind it.
She always seemed to say whatever the Baron wanted, but I don't think she liked him.
She did not join in the conversation.
She said, or at least the Baron said, she could not speak English, but I am quite sure she
must have understood it, or at all events a good deal.
I have learned German, and sometimes I said something to her, and she answered, and once
I saw her luck up so quickly when Anderton said something about Julie, and the Baron said
directly in German, not your Julie child. I asked her, as she was going away, who Julie was,
and she had just told me that she was her great friend and a dancing girl, when the Baron
gave her a look, and she stopped. That was as they were leaving. Before that, Rosalie was doing
crochet, and we three were talking about mesmerism. They tried to make me believe it, and the
Baron was telling all sorts of stories about a wonderful clairvoyant.
That was his Julie, not Rosalie.
Of course I laughed at all, and then they got talking about sympathies,
and what a wonderful sympathy there was between twins,
and the Baron told some more extraordinary stories.
And when I wouldn't believe it, Anderton got quite vexed,
and reminded me about the twin sister his wife had,
and who had been stolen by gypsies.
And then the Baron asked him about it,
and he told him the whole story, only making him promise not to tell it again, because they were
afraid of her being reminded of it, and that was why it was never spoken of. The Baron seemed
quite interested, and drew his chair close in between us. We were speaking low that Rosalie might not hear.
I remember the Baron said, it was so curious he must make a note of it, and he wrote it all down
in his pocket-book. He took down the dates, and all about it. He was very particular about it. He was very
particular about the dates. I am sure Rosalie could have heard nothing of all this, not even if she had
understood English. We had gone to the window and were too far off. Besides, we spoke low. Afterwards,
the Baron seemed thoughtful and did not speak for some time. Anderton and I got to mesmerism again,
and he got a number of some magazine, the Zoist or something of that sort, to prove to me something.
He read me some wonderful story about eating by deputy, and when I would not believe it, he called the baron and asked if it was not true, and he said perfectly. He had known it himself. He started when Anderton spoke to him as if he had been thinking of something else, and he had to repeat it again. I know it was something about eating by deputy, because afterwards when I was wounded and had the fever, I used to think of it and wish I could take physic that way. You will find it in the
zoist for that month, October, 1854. Footnote, an extract from the magazine he quoted,
will be given on later in the case. I remember saying at the time that it was lucky for the
young woman that the fellow didn't eat anything unwholesome, and Anderton laughed at it.
The baron did not laugh. He stood for ever so long without saying a word, and looking quite odd.
I thought that I had offended him by laughing. Anderson spoke to him, and he jumped again,
and I saw this time he had let his cigar out.
I remember that because he tried to light it again by mine,
and his hands shook so he put mine out instead.
He said he was cold and shut the window.
He would not have another cigar, but said he must go away, for it was late.
Anderton and I sat smoking for some time.
I tried to persuade him to give up mesmerism,
and he said Mrs. Anderton was so well now he thought she could do without it,
and that she would give it up in a few weeks.
I heard from him afterwards, in November, that the Baron had left town for some weeks.
When I was ill at Scutari, after my wound, I wrote to ask him to meet me in Naples,
and he started with Mrs. Anderson in December, but was stopped at Dover by Mrs. Anderson's illness.
I have had several letters from him since, and I am quite ready to give copies of them,
all but the bits that are private.
I have read over this statement, and it is all quite true.
I am quite ready to swear to it in a court of justice, if required.
I wish to add that I am quite certain poor Anderson had nothing to do with his poor wife's death.
I will swear to that.
Item 3. Statement of Julie.
Footnote.
The difficulty of tracing this witness, from the slight clue afforded by Mr. Morton's statement,
occasioned considerable delay.
Manchester 3rd of August, 1857.
"'Dare, sir, in compliance with your instructions of the 11th Alt,
"'I forward the deposition of Julia Clark,
"'Elius Julie, alias Miss Montgomery, etc.,
"'at present of the Theatre Royal, Julia tested.
"'Dear Sir, yours faithfully, William Smith.
"'I am a dancer, and my name is Julia Clark.
"'I've performed under the name of Julie and other names.
"'I am at present called Miss Montgomery.
"'I knew the girl called Rosalie.
"'She was my particular friend.
We were for several years together in Signor Leopoldo's company.
I forget how many.
She did the tightrope business and had ten shillings a week and her keep.
In her company she was called Little Wonder.
Her real name was Charlotte Brown.
She was about ten years old when I joined the company.
I do not know her history.
She did not know it herself.
She often told me so.
She would have told me if she did.
She passed as the niece of old Mrs. Brown.
Mrs. Brown was the money-taker.
She took Lottie's money and found her in clothes.
Lottie is Rosalie.
Some of our ladies said she had been bought from a tramp.
Of course I did not believe it.
They said it out of spite.
Lottie did the tightrope business for about five years after I knew her.
She was a beautiful figure, only her feet were very broad.
All tightrope dancers are.
The rope spreads some.
Otherwise a figure was perfect.
She was nervous.
Not very, but rather.
She used to tremble before she went on.
It was not from fear.
She was ill sometimes, not often.
Sometimes she caught cold from sitting on the damp ground
to undress when she was hot with dancing.
She got stronger as she grew up.
Sometimes she felt ill and did not know why.
She had bad headaches.
When she was in that way, physic was no good, only brandy.
Brandy took away the headaches.
She used to drink brandy sometimes,
but not like some of our ladies.
our ladies. I never saw her the worse for liquor. Her headaches were not from drinking,
certainly not. They came and went away again. Brandy took them away. I only know of once that
she has been ill since she left the company, she wrote and told me of it. I have the letter
still, it is not dated, but there was an extract from a newspaper in it about her which is dated
sometime in October, 1852. The day of the month is cut off. She gave up the type-wrote business
because of a fall. That was from being nervous. She was not drunk. She had not been drinking.
She was nervous. A glass dropped fell from the chandelier and frightened her. That was all.
She was very much hurt. One foot was sprained and the doctors at the hospital said she must
never go on the wire again. She was two months there. When she came out, the circus was shut
up. The company was all dispersed except her and me and Mr. Rogers and the gentleman who did
the comic business. Mr. Rogers was Signor Leopoldo. He took a music hall. I think it was in Liverpool.
He got another singing lady and gentlemen, and we gave entertainments. Every evening Mr. Rogers
gave a short lecture on mesmerism, and Lottie was his subject. She was very clever at that.
Of course she was not really asleep. One night she stopped in the middle. The manager was very
angry. She tried to go on, but she fainted, and had to be carried off. She said, some gentlemen
in the stalls had done it.
Next morning the gentleman called and took her away.
He gave Signor fifty pounds.
He was the Baron R.
I knew it from Lottie.
She has written to me several times.
These are letters.
They rubbed at the edges.
It's from keeping them in my pocket.
I do not think she ever left the Baron,
but I do not know.
The last letter I ever had from her was from his house.
It was in the first week of November, 1854.
I got it in Plymouth.
It was the only week I was there before I went to Dublin for the pantomime.
She said she was going to be married, but must not tell me who to just yet.
I never heard from her since.
I've written several times, but my letters have been returned.
I have no idea who she married.
It could not have been the Baron.
She disliked him too much.
She stayed with him because he paid her well.
Partly that and partly because she said she couldn't help doing what he told her.
She said he really did mesmerise her.
and that she could see in her sleep.
She did not live with the Baron as his wife, only as his medium.
If she had she would have told me, I'm quite sure she would.
I was quite certain there was never any connections between her and the Baron,
except what I have said.
Of course, I cannot swear she did not marry him,
but I should think it very unlikely.
Why should she when she disliked him so much?
All this is true.
I believe Signor Leopoldo is now somewhere abroad.
signed julia clark alias julie read over to the depondent and signed by her in the presence of william burton j p second of august eighteen fifty seven item four statement of leopoldo
n b this statement was obtained with some difficulty and only on an express promise of immunity from any legal proceeding in respect of the depondent's relations with the girl rosalie alias
Angelina Fitz Eustace,
alias the Little Wonder,
alias Charlotte Brown.
The statement was enclosed in the following note.
Signor Leopoldo, Trigidian, etc., etc.,
presents his compliments to R. Henderson-Exquire
and, in consideration of the assurance that
what is done cannot be now amended,
I have the honour to forward the required information
in confidence that you will not keep the word of promise to the ear
and break it to the hope, and thus my simple truth shall be abused.
Sir, your most humble servant, signed.
Thomas Rogers
Deposition of Signor Leopoldo, Tragedian,
Professor of Fencing and Elocution, equestrian, gymnastic, and fanambulistic artist,
sole proprietor and manager of the great Olympian circus, etc, etc., etc.
I, Signore Leopeldo, Tragedian, etc., etc., etc., do hereby depose, and declares
and declare that the girl Charlotte Brown, commonly known as the celebrated Little Wonder,
was transferred to me to my celebrated Olympian company in the month of July 1837 at Lewis in the
County of Sussex, where the celebrated Olympian circus was at that time performing with
great success and crowded houses, and this deponent further maketh oath and saith that I,
the said, Signor Leopoldo, Tragedian, etc., etc., did in consideration,
of the services of the said Charlotte Brown, commonly known as the celebrated little wonder,
pay to a certain person or persons, claiming to be the parent or parents of the said Charlotte
Brown, commonly known as the celebrated little wonder, the sum of five pounds, which person or
persons were of the tribe or tribes commonly known as gypsies or Egyptians.
And this deponent, furthermore, maketh oath and saith that I, Signore Leopoldo,
etc, etc., etc., cannot tell whether they said Charlotte Brown, commonly known as the Little Wonder,
was really the child of the person or persons, gypsy or gypsies aforesaid,
or that her name was Charlotte Brown, or any other of the particulars herein before stated and deposed,
but only that her linen was marked C.B., which initials do set forth and represent the name
of Charlotte Brown. Witness our hand and seal this fourth day of January, in the year of grade,
It's 1,858, signed Thomas Rogers.
Item 5
Statement of Edward Morris
Cleric in the Will Office, Doctor's Commons
My name is Edward Morris. I'm a clerk in the will office at Doctors Commons
and our duty is to assist those who wish to search wills deposited in our office.
On the 14th of October 1854, Baron R. came to the office and searched in several
wills. One was the will of a Mr. Wilson, copy of which is herewith enclosed. I remember this will
particularly because I had an altercation with the Baron respecting his wish to copy parts of it.
He wished to make extracts, and I told him that was not allowed, only the date and the names
of the executors. He persisted, and I said I must report it. He then laughed and said it did not
matter, and he tapped his forehead, and said he could make a note of it there.
He read parts of the will over two or three times and gave it back to me.
He then said,
You shall see my friend, and laughed again,
and he made me follow him while he repeated several pages of the will by rote.
He laughed again when he had done, and asked if he might copy it now.
I said no, and he laughed again, and wrote for some time in his notebook,
looking up at me every now and then, and laughing.
I was angry, partly because he laughed,
and partly because he kept me there,
when I wanted to get away.
I had leave for a week to go to the Isle of White to see my aunt.
I wanted to get there that night because the next day was my birthday.
He made me miss the train.
And as the next day was Sunday, I did not get there till late.
That is how I remember the date.
I am sure of the year because my aunt only went to the Isle of White the November previously
and died in the spring of 1855.
I am quite sure it was the Baron.
I should recognise him anywhere.
He is a short stout man with a rather florid complexion and reddish hair rather light.
He has large fat hands, white and well kept, and an immense head.
He dresses all in black and wears large spectacles of light blue.
I don't think it is because his eyes are weak.
I am sure it is not, for when he takes off his spectacles I never saw such extraordinary eyes.
I can't describe them, only that they are very large and bright.
I never could look at them long enough to make out the colour, but they are very dark, I think black, and they put one out to look at them. Otherwise, there is nothing very remarkable about him. I recognised him that day from having seen him before at a mesmeric lecture when I asked his name.
Item 6. Memorandum by Mr. Henderson
I enclose the will of which the following is unabstract. Mr. Wilson, of the firm of Privy of President.
and Wilson, Calcutta, who died in 1825, leaves the sum of 25,375 pounds, 3% consoles,
to his niece, Gertrude Wilson, afterwards Lady Bolton, and to her children, if any,
or their heirs in regular succession, whether male or female. In default of any such heirs,
the money to be made over to the trustees, selected by the Governor-General of India, for the
time being, from among the leading merchants of Calcutta, for the purpose of founding under certain
restrictions, an institution among the hills, for the children of those who could not afford to
send them home to England. The will also provides that should any female, taking under it,
die during her coverture, the husband shall retain a life interest in the property.
End of Section 2. Section 3 of the Notting Hill Mystery by Charles Felix. This
Librivox recording is in the public domain.
Section 3
Item 1
Extract from Mrs. Anderton's Journal
August 13, 1854
Here we are then, finally established at Notting Hill.
Jane laughs at us for coming to town, just as everyone else is leaving it,
but in my eyes, and I am sure in dear Williams too, that is the pleasantest time for
us. Poor Willie, he grows more and more sensitive to blame from anyone, and has been sadly
worried by this discussion about our Dresden trip. The new professor to-morrow, I wonder what
he will be like. August 14th. And so that is the new professor. I do not think I was ever so
astonished in my life, that little stout, squab man, the most powerful mesmerist in Europe.
and yet he certainly is powerful, for he had scarcely made a pass over me, before I felt a glow
through my whole frame.
There is something about him, too, when one comes to look at him more closely, which puzzles me
very much.
He certainly is not the commonplace man he appears, though it would be difficult just now to say
what makes me so sure of it.
August 25th.
Quite satisfied now.
How could I have ever thought the Baron,
commonplace. And yet, at first sight, his appearance is certainly against him. He is not a man
with whom I should like to quarrel. I don't think he would have much compunction in killing anyone
who offended him or who stood in his way. How quietly he talks of those horrid experiments in
the medical schools, and the tortures they inflict on the poor hospital patients. Willie says
it is all nonsense, and says all doctors talk so, but I can't help feeling that there is
something different about him.
he is certainly doing me good.
September 1st, better and better, and yet I cannot
conquer the strange feeling which is growing upon me about the Baron.
He is certainly an extraordinary man.
What a grasp he takes of anything on which he rests his hand even for a moment,
and how perfectly he seems to disregard anything that stands in his way.
This morning I was at the window when he came,
and I was quite frightened when I saw him, as I thought so nearly run over,
but I might have spared my anxiety for my gentleman just quietly walked on,
while the poor horse started almost across the road.
Had it caught sight of those wonderful green eyes of his that it seemed so frightened?
What eyes they are!
You can hardly ever see them, but when you do!
And yet the man is certainly doing me good.
September the 11th
So it is settled that the Baron is not to mesmerise me himself any
more. Am I sorry or glad? At all events I hope they will not now worry poor William.
September 13th. First day of Mademoiselle Rosalie. Seems a nice person enough, but it feels
very odd to lie there on the sofa while someone else is being mesmerized for one.
September 15th. This new plan is beginning to answer, I think, I feel the mesmerism even more
than when I was mesmerized myself, and this way one gets all the pleasures and none of the
disagreeables.
It is so delicious.
Looked back today at my Malvern journals, so odd to see how I dislike the idea at first,
and now I could hardly live without it.
September 29th.
I think we shall soon be able to do without the Baron altogether.
I am sure Rosalie and I could manage very well by ourselves.
What a wonderful thing this mesmerism is!
to think that the mere touch of another person's hand should soothe away pain and fill one with health and strength.
Really, if I had not always kept a journal, I should feel bound to keep one now as a record of the wonderful effects of this extraordinary cure.
Got up this morning with a nasty headache.
No appetite for breakfast, eyes heavy, and pulse low.
Poor William, in terrible tribulation, when low in comes little Mademoiselle, Rosalie and the Baron.
The gentleman makes a pass or two.
The lady pops her little, dry, monkey-looking pore upon my forehead, and, presto, the headache has vanished, and I'm calling for chocolate and toast.
September 30th.
A blank day.
Headache again this morning, and looking out anxiously, for my little brown good angel, when in comes the baron, with the news that she cannot come.
A poor night with a dying lady, and so fagged this morning, that he is afraid she would be.
do me more harm than good. I am sure she cannot feel more fagged than I do, poor girl.
But after all, in spite of the delight of doing so much good, what a life it must be!
October 1st! Rosalie here again! Headache vanished! Everything bright as the October
sun outside! I am getting quite fond of that girl! How I wish she could speak something besides
German! October 4th! It is quite extraordinary! What a hold that poor!
girl Rosalie is taking upon me, and I am even beginning to dream of her at night.
October 6. Headache again this morning, and a message that Rosalie cannot come. How
provoking that it is on the same day!
October 12th. I think I shall really soon begin to know when poor Rosalie has been overworked,
headache again today, and I had a presentiment that she would not be able to come.
October 20th. So, now
the Baron is going to leave us. Well, I am indeed thankful that he can now so well be spared.
Jane Morgan here today, and of course laughing at the idea of mesmerism doing any good.
She could not deny, though, how wonderfully better I am. And indeed, but for those tiresome headaches,
which always seem to come just when poor Rosalie is too tired to take them away, I am really
quite well and strong.
October 31st. Something evidently wrong between poor Rosalie and the Baron.
she has evidently been crying and i suppose it must be from sympathy but i feel exactly as if i had been crying too very little satisfaction from the mesmerism to-day it seems rather as if it had given me some of poor rosalie's depression
how i wish she could speak english or that i could speak german and then i would find out what is the matter perhaps she is to lose her work when the baron goes memo to ask him to-morrow november first no he is to
He says he shall certainly take her with him to Germany, and he hopes that may have a beneficial effect.
What can that mean?
He says she is quite well, but throws out mysterious insinuations as to something being wrong with her.
How I do wish I could speak German.
November 3rd.
Still that uncomfortableness between Baron and Rosalie.
I am sure there is something wrong and that she wants to speak to me about it, but is afraid of him.
It certainly is strange that he should never leave us alone.
A memo to ask William to get him out of the way a little while tomorrow.
Though what good that will be when she and I cannot understand each other I hardly know after all.
November 4th!
What a day this has been!
I feel quite tired out with the excitement,
and yet I cannot make up my mind to go to bed until I have written it all down.
In the first place, this is to be my last visit from Rosalie,
at all events till they come back from the continent.
I cannot help perceiving that William is not altogether sorry that she is going.
Dear fellow, I do really believe that he is more than half jealous of my extraordinary feeling for her,
and certainly it is extraordinary that a woman, quite in another class of life, of whom one knows nothing,
should have taken such a hold upon one.
I suppose it must be the mesmerism, which certainly is a very mysterious thing.
If it is so, it is at all events very fortunate it did not take that turn with the Baron himself.
Oh, I can really begin to understand now all the objections I thought so foolish and so tiresome
three or four months ago before Rosalie first came.
And yet, after all, I don't think, in spite of mesmerism or anything else, one need ever
have been afraid of liking the Baron too much.
I could quite understand being afraid of him.
Rosalie evidently is, and to own the truth, so am I a little, or I should not have been beaten in that way today.
Today was my last saiance with Rosalie, and I had made up my mind to get the Baron out of the way and try to get something out of Rosalie.
They came at two o'clock as usual, and as I thought I would not lose a chance.
I had got dear William to lie in wait in his study, and called to the Baron as he passed in hopes that Rosalie would come up alone.
That was no use, however, for the Baron kept his stout little self, perseveringly between her and the staircase.
And when I went, thinking to be very clever, to the top of the staircase, and called her to come up,
it only gave him an excuse for breaking away from poor William altogether,
and coming straight up to me before her.
I was so provoked. I could hardly be civil.
Well, of course, the Baron was in a great hurry, and we went to work at once with the mesmerising.
when that was done we both tried to keep them talking, and I made signs to William to get the
Baron out of the way. I was really beginning to get quite anxious about it, and kept on repeating
over and over to myself the two German words I had learned on purpose from Jane Morgan this morning.
It was no use, however, and I began to grow quite nervous, and I am quite sure Rosalie saw what I was
wanting, for she seemed to get fidgety too, and then that made me more nervous still.
At last the Baron declared he must go, and they both got up to leave.
William would have given it up, but he says,
I looked so imploringly at him he could not resist,
so made one more effort by asking the Baron to come into his study for a short private consultation.
This he refused, saying he had not the time,
but could say anything needful where we were.
Then William told me to take Rosalie into the next room,
but the Baron would not have that either,
though he laughed when he said,
he could not trust to a lady's punctuality in this case, but if I would leave Rosalie, she would
not understand anything that was said. Of course this would not do, and at last William,
with more presence of mind and determination than I should have thought him capable of,
took him by the button-hole and fairly drew him away into the further window, where he began
whispering eagerly to him to draw off his attention. I suppose it was the consciousness of a sort
of stratagem, but my heart beat quite fast as I brought out my heart.
my two words,
Givstvas?
And I could see that hers was so too.
She seemed surprised at my speaking to her in German,
and certainly I was no less so to hear her answer in English,
with a slight accent certainly, but still in quite plain English.
Don't seem to listen, I am.
And then she stopped suddenly and turned quite pale,
and I could feel all my own blood rush back to my heart with such a throb.
I looked up, and there were the Baron's eyes,
fixed upon us. Poor Rosalie seemed quite frightened, and I declare I felt so too. At all events
we neither of us ventured on another word, and the next minute the Baron succeeded in fairly
shaking off poor William and taking his leave. So there's an end of my little romance about
Rosalie. I am sure there was something in it. Why, if she had nothing particular to say,
should she have taken the trouble of learning that little bit of English? And why? But I must
not sit here all night speculating about this, which, after all, is, I dare say nothing at all.
It is positively just twelve o'clock.
November 6th!
How strange!
There is certainly some mystery about Rosalie and the Baron.
I am quite certain I saw them in a cab together this morning, and yet they were to cross on
Saturday night and be in Paris yesterday.
I wonder whether they were late, after all, and yet an hour and a half is surely time enough
to London Bridge, and if he had missed this time.
the train, I should think he would have come to us yesterday. At all events, he might have gone
early this morning. It is very odd. November 7th. I wonder whether anyone ever had such a husband
as I have got. Yesterday he must needs worry himself with the idea that I am fretting about the
loss of my mesmerism, as if I could possibly think a moment about the loss of anything when I had
got him with me. So nothing would satisfy him, but that we must go to the Hamar.
to see Paul Pry and the Spanish dancers.
I have not laughed so much for many a long day.
I don't like all that violent dancing,
so we came away directly after the absurd little farce,
how to pay the rent,
how we did laugh at it to be sure,
and the absurdities of that little monkey, Clark.
Right, too, in Paul Pry is quite inimitable.
Dear William, how good it was of him.
December 5th.
Just going to the theatre again,
when news came of poor Harry Morton's illness.
My own dear William, how good he is to everyone, and so prompt too,
touch his heart or his honour, and the Duke himself could not be more quick and decided.
The news only came as we were dressing, and to-morrow we are off to Naples,
to meet poor Mr. Morton and nurse him.
December 6th, there is no one like Willie.
After all the scramble we have had to get ready, he would not take me across when it was so rough.
We have taken two dear little rooms from day to day because Willie cannot bear the publicity of a hotel, and I am sure I hate it too, and we are to wait until it is fine enough to cross.
December 9th.
Still here, but the wind has gone down almost suddenly within the last three hours, and tomorrow morning I hope we really shall cross.
Dear William is getting quite worried.
I persuaded him to take me to a lecture that was going on.
And while we were there, the wind went down, and we have been packing up ever since.
"'12 o'clock, and William calling to me,
"'I must just put down about Mr.—'
"'Good heaven.
"'What is the matter?
"'I feel so ill.
"'Quite.
"'Item two.'
"'Statement of Dr. Watson.
"'My name is James Watson,
"'and I'm a physician of about thirty years standing.
"'In 1854 I was practising at Dover.
"'On the night of the 9th of December that year,
"'I was sent for hurriedly to see a lady
"'of the name of Ander to-Tor-Taner.
who had been taken suddenly ill immediately after her return from a lecture at the town hall which she had attended with her husband the message was brought by the servant from the lodgings where they were living on our way to the house she told me that the lady was dying and the poor gentleman quite distracted
on arriving at the house i found mr anderton supporting his wife in his arms he seemed greatly agitated and cried for god's sake be quick i think she has got the cholera mrs anderton was on
on the couch in her dressing-room, partially undressed, but with two or three blankets thrown over
her, as she seemed shivering with the cold. There was a good fire in the room, but notwithstanding
this and the blankets, her hands and feet were both quite chilly. Footnote. This portion of Dr. Watson's
statement, relating entirely to the symptoms of Mrs. Anderton's case, though some details are
excluded, necessarily contains much that must be interesting only to the medical profession, and
disagreeable to the general reader. The following paragraph may therefore be passed over, merely
noting that the symptoms were such as would be compatible with antimonyal poisoning.
I asked Mr. Anderton why she had not been got to bed, to which he replied that she had
been vomiting until within a very few moments so violently that they had been unable to move her.
Almost immediately on my arrival the vomiting recommenced, though there appeared to be now
hardly anything left in the stomach to come away. The retching continued with unabated violence
for more than an hour after the stomach had been evidently completely emptied, and was accompanied
with great purging and severe cramps, both in the stomach and the extremities. I at once sent
to my house for a portable bath, I happened to have hired for my own wife's use, and on its
arrival placed Mrs. Anderton in it at a temperature of 98 degrees, having previously added
three-quarters of a pound of mustard.
While waiting for the bath, I administered 30 drops of laudanum in a wine-glassful of hot brandy and water,
but without in any degree checking the purging which continued almost incessantly and was of a most watery character.
It was accompanied also by violent pains and great swelling of the epigastrum.
A fresh dose of opium was equally unsuccessful,
nor was any amelioration of symptoms produced by the exhibition of prussic acid and creosote.
On removing the patient from the warm bath, I had her carefully placed in bed, shortly after which she began to perspire profusely, but without any relief to the other symptoms.
I now began to fear that some deleterious substance had been unconsciously swallowed, the more especially, as the patient had, up to the very moment of her seizure, been in unusually good health.
I therefore made careful examinations with the view to detecting the presence of arsenic,
and instituted by the aid of Mr. Anderton the strictest inquiries as to whether there was in the
house any preparation containing this or any other irritant poison.
Nothing of the kind could, however, be found, nor were such tests I was at the time in a
position to apply, able to detect anything of the kind to which my suspicions were directed.
Deliberate poisoning proved, moreover, on consideration entirely out of the question,
as there could be no doubt that of Mr. Anderson's devoted attachment to his wife,
and the people of the house were entire strangers to her.
Moreover, the length of time since any food had been taken was almost conclusive against such a supposition.
Mrs. Anderton had dined at six o'clock, and between that hour and midnight,
when the attack came on, had eaten nothing but a biscuit and part of a glass of sherry.
and water, the remainder of which was in the glass upon the dressing-room table when I arrived.
Since then I have removed portions of all the matters tested, as well as the remaining
wine and water, and have had them thoroughly examined by a scientific chemist, but equally
without result. I am compelled, therefore, to believe that the symptoms arose from some
natural, though undiscovered cause. Possibly, from a sudden chill in coming from the heated rooms
into the night air, though this seems hardly compatible with the fact that she never complained
of cold during the long drive home, and that she was seated comfortably in her dressing-room,
making her customary entries in her journal when the attack came on. Another very suspicious
circumstance was that, afterwards mentioned by her, of a strong metallic taste in the mouth,
a symptom sometimes occasioned, and in conjunction likewise with the others noticed in her case
by the exhibition of excessive doses of antimony in the form of an emetic tartar.
This medicine, however, has never been prescribed for her,
nor was there any possibility of her having had access to any in-mistake?
At Mr. Anderton's request, however, I exhibited the remedies used in such a case as
port wine, infusion of oak bark, etc., but with as little effect as the other medicines.
indeed the remedies of whatever kind were precluded from exercising their full action by the extreme irritability of the stomach, by which they were ejected almost as soon as swallowed.
This being the case, I abandoned any further attempt at the exhibition of the heavy doses I had hitherto employed, or indeed of drugs of any kind, and confined myself until the irritation of the epigastrum should have been in some measure allayed, to a treatment I have occasionally found successful in somewhat similar cases, the administration, that is to say, of simple soda water, in repeated doses of a teaspoonful at a time.
I have often found this to remain with good effect upon the stomach, when everything else was at once rejected, nor was I disappointed in the present case.
About an hour after commencing this treatment, the first violence of the symptoms began to subside,
and by the next afternoon the case had resolved itself into an ordinary one of severe gastroenteritis,
which I then proceeded to treat in the regular manner.
After quite a short period, as I could possibly have expected, this also was a very much.
was subdued, leaving the patient, however, in a state of great prostration and subject to
night perspiration of a most lowering character. I now began to throw in tonics, and to resort,
though very cautiously, to more invigorating diet. Under this treatment she continued steadily
to improve, though the perspiration still continued, and her constitution cannot be said to have
at all recovered the severe shock it had sustained by the month of April, 1855.
when they left Dover, by my recommendation, for a change of air.
Since that time I have not seen her.
I am quite unable to account for the seizure from any cause but that of a chill,
and hypothesis which I must admit rests its authority,
almost solely on the fact that no other can be found.
Item 3. Extracts from Mrs. Anderton's journal continued.
January 20, 1855,
At last I get back once more to my own.
old brown friend."
— footnote.
Apparently the journal, which is bound in brown Russian leather.
Dear old thing, how pleasant its old face seems.
Very little today, though, only a word or two, just to say it is done.
Oh, how it tries one!
January 25th!
My own dear husband's birthday!
And thank heaven I am once more able to sit with him!
Oh, how kind he has been through all these weary weeks!
When I have been so fretful and impatient!
Why should buffering make one cross?
God knows I have suffered.
I never thought to live through that terrible night.
It makes me shudder to think of it.
And then that horrid, death-like, leaden taste, that was the worst of all.
Well, thank God I am better now, but so weak.
I'm quite tired with writing even these few lines.
February 12th.
How weak I still am!
Walked out today with dear William for the first time upon the
appear, but had scarcely got to the end of it when I felt so tired I was obliged to sit down
while poor William went to fetch a chair to take me home. February 13th I have been quite
startled to-day. I was talking to Dr. Watson about my being so tired yesterday, and about how
very weak I still was, and how ill I had been, and at last he let slip that at the time. He
thought I had been poisoned. He gave me quite a turn, and then he tried to make us talk of something
else, but I could not get it out of my head, and kept coming back and back to it, and wondering
who could have had any possible interest in poisoning, poor me. And so we went on talking,
and at last Dr. Watson said something which let out that at first he had suspected William,
my own William, my precious, precious husband. Oh, I thought I should have choked on the spot.
I don't know what I said, but I do know I could not have said too much, and poor William
tried to laugh it off and said,
Who else would have gained anything by it?
Would he not have had that miserable
25,000 pounds?
And besides him, there was no one but the
charities in India,
and they could not have done it,
because they would not exist till we were gone.
But I could see how he winced at the idea,
and I felt as though my blood were really boiling in my veins.
And then that man,
oh, how thankful, I should be glad when we get away from him,
tried to persuade me that,
He had not really thought it.
I should think not indeed, and that he soon saw it was impossible, and all that, and at last I fairly burst out crying with passion and ran out of the room.
And I could cry now to think of my poor, dear Willie, being—
And I shall, too, if I go on thinking about it any longer, so I will write no more to-night.
February 15th.
No journal yesterday I really could not trust myself to write.
And poor Willie, though he tried to laugh at it, I could say.
see how bitterly he felt the imputation.
Would heaven think if that wretched man had really charged him with it?
It would have killed him, I know it would,
and he would rather have died a thousand times.
Well, I must not think of it any more.
Only, once more, thank heaven, we shall soon be going away.
April 7th.
Back once more at home, thank heaven.
But how slow, how very slow this convalescence, as they call it.
Oh, shall I ever be well again?
as I was last year before that horrid day at Dover
May the 3rd
So we are to leave England for a time
And try the German baths
I am almost thankful for it
I have grown very fond too of this dear little
luxurious house
Though I could hardly say why
It is like my wonderful fancy for Rosalie
Oh poor Rosalie
I wonder where she is now
And when they will return
I cannot help thinking that she might do me some good
But as I was saying
"'fond as I am of this dear little house,
"'I shall be really glad to leave it for a time
"'and see what change of air will do for me.
"'If I could only get rid of those terrible night perspiration,
"'it is that they pull me down so and make me so weak and miserable.
"'Oh, what would I not give to be well once more
"'if it were only to get rid of the memory of that time?
"'July 7th, safe at Barden Barden,
"'and too early as yet for the majority of the English pleasure-seekers.
What a delicious place it is.
I declare I feel myself better already.
September the 11th.
Really almost well again.
Quite a comfortable talk today with dear Willie about that foolish Dr. Watson.
The first time the subject has been mentioned between us since that day when I got into such a passion about it.
Poor man, he was hardly worth going into a rage about.
We heard today of his having made some terrible blunder in the new place he has gone to
and lost all his practice by killing some poor old woman through it.
It was this made us talk of his poisoning notion, and, oh, how glad I was to see that dear Willie had quite got over his nervousness about it.
We had quite a long talk, and at last he promised me faithfully never to say a word more about it to anyone.
October 10th, home again at last, and in our own dear little house, and really I feel once more as well and strong as this time last year.
Dear William, too, how happy he is.
The shadow seems quite to have passed away.
God grant it may not return.
October 30th.
An eventful day, all the morning at the Crystal Palace,
and just as we returned, who should walk in, but the Baron are!
It was just a year since he left us,
but he had not altered in the very least.
I do not think that short square figure,
with the impenetrable rosy face and the large white hands
and those wonderful great green eyes that you can so rarely catch
and when you have caught, so invariably wish you had let alone, can ever change.
I am afraid I was not very cordial to him.
I ought to be, for he has done great things for me,
and yet somehow when I saw him I felt quite a cold shudder run all through me.
Dear William saw it and asked if I was ill,
and when I laughed and said,
No, it was only someone walking over my grave.
I could not help fancying that for a moment
the Baron's lips seemed to turn quite white,
and I just caught one glance from those awful eyes
that seemed as if it would read me through and through.
And yet, after all, it may have been only fancy,
for the next moment he was talking in his rich, quiet voice,
as though nothing could ever disturb him.
So, Rosalie is gone.
That is clear at all events,
though what has exactly become of her,
I cannot quite so well understand. From all I can make out she seems, poor girl, to have
married very foolishly, and it was that, that was the matter between them when they went
away last year. The Baron seemed indeed to hint at something even worse, but he would not
speak out plainly, and I would defy anyone to make that man say one word more than he may
choose. Poor Rosalie! I hope she has not come to any harm.
November 1st
Another visit from the Baron
To say goodbye before he returns to
His wife
How strange that we should never have heard of her before
And even now I cannot make out
Whether he has married since he left us
Or whether he was always so
Certainly that man is a mystery
And just now it pleases him to talk
Especially in enigmas
He does not seem disposed however
To put up with vague information on our part
I thought he would never have
have done questioning poor William and me about my illness, and at last he drew it out of me,
not out of William, dear fellow, what that foolish Dr. Watson had said.
After all, I am not sorry I told him, for it was quite a relief to hear him speak so strongly
of the absurdity of such an idea, and I am sure it was a comfort to poor William.
He, the Baron, spoke very strongly, too, about the danger of setting such ideas about,
and particularly cautioned, dear Willie, not to mention it to anyone.
I knew he would not have done so in any way, but this will make him more comfortable.
April 3rd.
Such a delightful day, and so tired.
I never saw Richmond look so lovely, and how dear Willie and I did enjoy ourselves in that lovely park.
But, oh, I'm so sleepy.
Not a word more.
April 5th, another lovely day, strolling about Lord Holland's Park all the morning,
and this evening some music in our own dear little drawing-room.
How happy! How very happy!
Good heaven! What is this? That old horrible, leaden taste!
And, oh, so deadly sick!
April 6th! Thank heaven the attack seems to have passed away!
Oh, how it frightened me! Thank heaven too I was able to keep the worst from dear William,
and he did not know how like it was to that other dreadful time.
April 20th! Again, that horrible sickness, and worse!
Oh, far worse. Still that awful, deadly, leaden taste. Worse this time, too, than the last.
In bed all day yesterday. Poor Willie, terribly anxious. Pray heaven it may not come again.
May the 6th. Another attack. God help me. If this should go on, I do not know what will become of me.
Already I am beginning to feel weaker and weaker.
poor Willie
These last three days have been terrible ones for him
However the doctor says it will all pass off
Pray heaven it may
May 25th
More sickness, more derangement
More of that horrible leaden taste
The doctor himself is beginning to look uncomfortable
And I can see that poor Willie's mind
Is reverting to that terrible suggestion
A year ago
Thank heaven
I have as yet managed to conceal from him
man from Dr. Dodsworth, that horrid, deadly taste which made such an impression on Dr. Watson.
Oh, when will this end?
June 10th. A horrible suspicion is taking possession of me. What can this mean?
I look back through my journal, and it is every fortnight that this fearful attack returns.
The 5th and 18th of April, 3rd and 21st of May, and now again the 7th of this month,
and that terrible lead and taste which is now almost cut.
constantly in my mouth, and with every attack my strength failing and failing.
Oh, God, what can it be?
June 26th.
Another fortnight, another attack.
There must be foul play somewhere, and yet who could, who would do such a thing?
Thank heaven I have still concealed from my poor William, that worst symptom of all, the
horrible leaden taste, which is now never out of my mouth.
My precious Willie, how kind, how good he is to me.
July 12th I cannot hold out much longer now.
Each time the attack returns I lose something of the little strength that is left.
God help me, I feel now that I must go.
The baron came today, and for a moment my poor boy's face lighted up with hope again.
They had a long discussion, before the doctor would consent to consult with him,
but after that they seemed to change the medicines.
But something must have gone wrong,
I have never seen Dr. Dodsworth look so grave.
August 1st, I think the end is drawing very near now.
This last attack has weakened me more than ever,
and I write this in my bed.
I shall never rise from it again.
My poor, poor Willie,
three days I have been in bed now,
and I have taken nothing from any hand but his.
August 17th, this is, I think, almost.
the last entry I shall make.
Another fortnight, and I shall be too weak
to hold the pen. If indeed
I am still here. September
5th. Another attack.
Strange how this weary body
bears up against all this pain.
Would that it were over, and yet
my poor, poor boy.
He too is almost worn out.
Night and day he never leaves me.
I take the things from his hand, but I cannot
taste them now.
nothing but lead
September 27th
Farewell my husband
My darling
My own precious Willie
Think of me
Come soon to me
God bless you
God comfort you
My darling
My own
In the hand of Mr. Anderton
On this day
My darling died
October 12th 1856
End of Section 3
Section 4 of the Notting Hill mystery by Charles Felix.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Section 4
Item 1
Memorandum by Mr Henderson
In the following certificate
You will perceive that the lady is described as of
Acacia Cottage Kensington
Certificate
1854
Marriage solemnised at the parish
Church in the parish of Kensington in the County of Middlesex.
Date 6th of November 1854.
Name and surname Carl Schwartz.
Age, full age.
Condition, bachelor.
Rank or profession, gentlemen.
Residents Windermere Villars Notting Hill.
Father's name, Carl Schwartz.
Rank or profession of father, gentleman.
name and surname Charlotte Brown. Age, full age. Condition Spinster. Residents, Acacia Cottage.
Father's name, not known. Rancel profession of father, not known. Married in the parish church
according to the rites and ceremonies of the established church, afterbans, by me, J.W. Edwards,
B.A. This marriage was solemnized between us, Carl Schwartz, Charlotte Brown, in the presence of us,
Thomas Jones, Frederick Coleman. The above is a copy from the Register of Marriages
belonging to this church. Witness My Hand, 7th Day of November 1854, R. Johnson.
The identity of the name, with that given by both Julie and Leopoldo, as the proper designation
of the Baron's medium, confirmed my suspicion that it was in fact to the girl, Rosalie,
that the Baron was married under that name, notwithstanding the strong opinion of Julie
as to the impossibility of such being the case. Still, however, it was possible that this might,
after all, be a mere coincidence, and I therefore proceeded to make such inquiries as seemed
most likely to elucidate the point. I had considerable difficulty in finding the house,
which two or three years back was included in the regular numbering of the row of similar tenements in which it stands,
but I at last succeeded in identifying it.
I found the landlady a very deaf old person,
whose memory was evidently failing,
and was at first unable to extract from her any kind of information of the subject,
except that she had had a great many lodgers and couldn't be expected to know all about all of them.
In the course of a second visit, however, I succeeded in persuading her to favour me with the site of her books,
and looking back to October and November 1854, I found the sum of £2.5 shillings,
entered as payment from Miss C. Brown of three weeks' rent, from the 18th of October to the 8th of November.
On further examining the books, I found that at this time, while the other lodger was charged sundry sums for fire,
Miss Brown, though occupying the principal sitting-room, had no fire at all, during the whole time of her tenancy,
though the commencement of November in that year was unusually cold. There were also sundry other
little charges, invariable in the other cases, but omitted in the case of Miss Brown, and at length,
on these things being pointed out to her, the old lady managed to remember that the rooms had been
taken by a gentleman for a lady, who was to give lessons in drawing.
The gentleman had paid the three weeks rent in advance, and had specially requested that they might be kept vacant for her, as the time of her arrival was uncertain.
He had also begged that any letters or messages received for her should be sent to a certain address immediately.
After a great deal of searching, this address was at length found, and proved to be the square glazed card which I enclose.
Item 2. Letters or messages for Miss Brown to be forwarded immediately to the care of Baron R. Post Office, Notting Hill. The old lady further stated that she never saw the gentleman again, and that she had never seen at the lady at all. In fact, after payment of the money, nothing further had been heard of either of the parties concerned, and as no inquiries had been made for Miss Brown, the subject had altogether passed from her mind.
being thus pretty well satisfied of the identity of Madam R, my next care was to trace the proceedings of the Baron between the time of his marriage and the death of his wife, which took place, as you are aware, in London, about two years and a half subsequently. The insurances having, as you well know, been effected at about the middle of this period. The information afforded me by Dr. Jones, the medical man, who signed the certificate to your office in connection
with the policy on the life of Madame R, first gave me the required clue, and you will,
I think, find in the depositions immediately following, sufficient at all events to justify,
if not entirely to corroborate, the suspicions, which first gave rise to my inquiries.
It is certainly unfortunate that, here too, as in the case of Mr. Aldridge, whose letter first
aroused these suspicions, the witness on whose evidence the principal stress must be laid,
is not one whose testimony would probably carry much weight with the jury.
Such, however, as it is, I have felt it my duty to lay it before you,
and I will now leave it with such others as I have been able to collect to tell its own tale.
Item three. Statement of Mrs. Whitworth.
My name is Jane Whitworth. I'm a widow, and gain my living by letting furnished apartments at Bogner, Sussex.
The principal season at Bogner is during the Goodwood races,
and there are very few visitors there in the autumn and winter.
On the 6th of October 1854,
I let the whole upper part of my house to a lady and gentleman
who arrived there late that evening.
They gave some foreign name, I forget what,
it was some long German name.
They did not give the name at first,
not till I asked for it.
I don't know that the gentleman was particularly unwilling.
I said I wanted it for my bill,
and he laughed,
and said it did not matter anything would do. Then I said, if letters came, and he said,
Oh, there won't be any letters, and went on reading the paper. I went down the stairs,
and as I was going down, he rang, and I went back, and he told me of his own accord.
That was at the end of the first week when I was making out my bill. They said they intended
remaining for some weeks. It was the gentleman who said this. The lady took no part in the business,
and seemed out of spirits, and very much afraid of her husband.
He settled with me to take the apartments at thirty shillings a week.
He was, to remain as long as he liked.
Not beyond the next race week, of course.
We never let over the race week.
He also made an agreement with me about bored.
I was to fine for him and the lady and the servant for two pounds, fifteen shillings a week.
That was without wine, beer, or spirits.
It is not a usual arrangement.
We do it sometimes, not often.
The gentleman said it was because his wife was not well and could not be troubled.
The servant was his.
It was a maid.
She did not come with them.
The gentleman hired her at Brighton.
That is not a usual arrangement.
Certainly not.
I never made such a one before, and I told him so.
He said it was because he was so particular about his servants.
He said he never would live where the servants were not under his own hand, where he could not turn them away.
I said I did not like it, it was not the custom.
He said he was sorry, but he could not take the apartments without it, and then I gave way.
Afterwards he followed me downstairs and gave me to understand it was something about his wife.
At first I thought she was not quite right in her head.
That was from what he told me.
I said I should be afraid to have her in the house.
but he laughed and said it was not that i then supposed it must be temper he was very pleasant about it he was always very pleasant to me i don't know what he may have been to other people i always had my money to the day and he was always pleasant
i can't say better than that he got a servant a few days after they came i did not turn away my own i had none at the time the season being over it was a great chance whether i let again and i was a very chance whether i let again and
I sent my servant away and did for myself.
A charwoman did for the gentleman until he got a servant.
He got one from Brighton.
I recommend it two or three in Bogner, but they did not suit.
The one he got was a girl about twenty.
Her name was Sarah, something.
I did not think much of her.
I used sometimes to think my tea and sugar went very fast.
I never caught her taking anything.
She was very quiet and civil-spoken.
She stayed with the gentleman about a month, not quite.
She was sent away for giving the lady a dose of physic in her arrowroot to make her sick.
The lady was very bad indeed.
We thought she would have died.
She was dreadfully sick and had the cholera awfully bad.
This was the 9th of December.
Footnote.
Compare Mrs. Anderton's journal, December 9th.
I know it from my books.
The gentleman sent out for brandy of.
several things, and they are down in my book.
On the following morning he sent for some stuff from the chemist.
Footnote.
On inquiry, I find this to have been
the decoction of Peruvian bark, R.H.
Before that, he had given her some medicine himself.
I don't know what it was.
He had a lot of chemicals and things.
He kept them in the back room.
The lady had a doctor.
Not at first, not till the Monday after she was ill.
I asked him to send for one, but he said he was a doctor himself.
She continued very ill, and on the Sunday night I asked him again.
He said, if she was not better next morning, he would.
I wanted him to send for Dr. Pesketh or Dr. Thompson, but he would not.
He said they were no good.
I have always heard them very highly spoken of.
Dr. Pesketh I have always heard of as a first-rate doctor.
He is since dead.
Dr. Thompson is a very good doctor, too, but Dr. Besketh perhaps had most practice.
I don't think the gentleman knew anything about either of them.
He sent for a Dr. Jones, who was in lodgings in the Stain.
I believe he lived in London.
He prescribed for the lady while he stayed in Bognar.
He went away the week after.
He was only there a fortnight.
The gentleman heard of him through a friend of mine in the Stain.
He asked me to find out
whether there was no London doctor in the place
He would not have anyone who belonged to the place
He said country doctors were no good
The lady got better but very slowly
She was ill several weeks
When she was strong enough they went away
He was very attentive to her
Never left her alone for a minute hardly
She did not seem very fond of him
I think she was afraid of him but I don't know why
He was very kind to her
And always particularly similar
Sometimes she seemed quite put out, like, by his civility.
I thought sometimes she would have flown out at him.
She never did fly out.
He always seemed able to stop her.
I don't know how he did it.
He never said anything, only looked at her, but it was quite enough.
I thought she must have been doing something wrong,
and he had brought her to Bognor to be out of the way.
I do not know exactly what made me think so.
It was the way they went on, and what he said to me.
He never told me so.
It was from the things he said.
I did not talk much to the lady.
I thought a very ungrateful when he was so kind.
Then she was hardly ever alone,
only once when the gentleman went out for something.
Then she was left about an hour.
She was writing part of the time.
She borrowed writing materials of me.
There was none in the sitting-room.
They usually were,
but the gentleman had sent the inkstand downstairs.
He said it was sure to be upset.
I lent the lady the things and she gave me two letters for the post.
She did not say anything to me, only asked me to post them immediately.
One was addressed to Notting Hill, I noticed it because I have a sister living there,
the other was to some theatre, I forget where.
It struck me because I thought it odd that a lady should write to a theatre.
I didn't think it was right.
I would rather not say what I thought.
well it was that she was connected with someone there in properly of course
the letter was not addressed to a man it was miss somebody but that might be a blind
I thought this might account for her behaviour to her husband I was very angry a woman
has no business to go on so it is particularly bad when she has such a good husband
I did not say this to her I did not notice the address till I got downstairs
I kept the letters and told the gentleman when he came in.
He seemed very much vexed.
He took the letters and was very much obliged to me.
He put the letter to the theatre into the fire without opening it.
The other he said he would post himself.
I don't know whether he did post it or not.
I suppose so, of course.
I think he spoke to the lady about it.
I'm sure he did.
For that night when I went up I could see she had been crying
and she would never speak to me again.
never speak to me again. She spoke English quite well. The letters were addressed in English.
When she spoke to the gentleman it was generally in some foreign language, but she could speak
English perfectly. I do not know what became of the girl, Sarah. I think she went into service
again at Brighton. I know the gentleman gave her a character. He was very kind to her. He was
always very kind. He was the pleasantest and most civil-spoken gentleman I ever met, and I think
his wife behaved very bad to him.
Item 4. Statement of Dr. Jones
of Gower Street, Bedford Square.
I am a physician, residing in Gower Street, Bedford Square.
In the beginning of December, 1854,
I was suffering from a severe cold, and being unable to shake it off,
went for a fortnight to the sea for change of air.
I selected Bogner because I had been in the habit of spending my holidays there for two or three years.
I was lodging in the stain. Some few days after my arrival I received a message requesting
me to call and see a lady who was dangerously ill at a lodging in another part of the town.
At first I declined to go, not wishing to interfere with the established practitioners of the place.
A gentleman then called upon me who gave the name of Baron R. He informed me that the lady in
question was his wife and that she was dangerously ill.
the effects of a considerable quantity of emetic tartar, administered to her by the maid.
He was very urgent with me to attend, saying that he was in the greatest anxiety about his wife,
and that he could not, in such a case, sufficiently rely upon the skill of any country doctor.
He pressed me so strongly that I at length consented to accompany him to his lodgings.
I found the patient in a very exhausted condition, and evidently suffering from the effects of some
irritant poison. From what the Baron told me, the symptoms were much abated, but the purging still
continued, accompanied with severe griping pains and profuse perspirationes. I learned from the
Baron that being himself a good amateur chemist, and having accidentally discovered at the outset
the origin of his wife's illness, he had so far treated her himself, rather than trust to the
chance of a country physician. He described his treatment, which appeared to me perfectly correct.
On becoming satisfied of the course of the disturbance, he first promoted vomiting as much as
possible by the exhibition of tepid water and afterwards of warm water with a small quantity of
mustard. When no more food appeared to be left in the stomach, he then administered large
quantities of a saturated infusion of green tea, of which he had a few pounds at hand.
for his own drinking. And finally, at the time of my arrival, was exhibiting considerable doses
of decoction of Peruvian bark, both which remedies are recommended by Professor Taylor
in cases of antimonyal poisoning. Their action left no doubt on my mind as to the origin of
the symptoms, but by desire of the Baron I proceeded to analyze with him portions of the vomited
and excreted matter, as also a portion of the arrow root in which the tartarized antimony was supposed
to have been administered. To all of these we together applied the usual tests, viz nitric acid,
ferocyanide of potassium, and hydrosulfureate of ammonia, and succeeded in ascertaining
beyond doubt the presence of antimony in all three. The quantity, however, appears to have been small.
So far as we could ascertain, there could not have been more than one, or, at the most, two grains of tartarized antimony in the arrow root, of which not more than three parts was eaten.
I cannot account for the violent action of so small a quantity. I have frequently administered much larger doses in cases of inflammation of the lungs without ill effect.
Two grains is by no means an unusual dose when intended to act as an emetic, but the action of
antimony varies greatly with different constitutions. Having certified ourselves of the presence of
the suspected poison, the question was, as to the person by whom it had been administered.
The Baron said he had no doubt that it was a trick on the part of the servant made,
between whom and her mistress there had been some dispute a few days since. We therefore
determined on taxing her with it, but before doing so proceeded to examine a bottle of prepared
tartar emetic, which, as the Baron informed me, he kept for his own use being subject to
digestive derangement. He was, I believe, addicted to the pleasures of the table, and was in the
habit of taking an occasional emetic. The bottle was not in its usual place, but was standing
on the table at the side of the dressing-case, in which it was usually kept. It was labelled
the emetic one teaspoonful to be taken as directed.
I remarked that it should be labelled poison, and the Baron quite agreed with me,
and immediately wrote the word in large characters on a piece of paper and gummed it around the bottle.
We then weighed the contents of the bottle, from which three doses only had been taken by the Baron,
and on comparing the results, we found that a quantity equivalent to about one grain and a half
of the tartarized antimony had been abstracted in excess of this amount.
The servant-maid was the only person besides the Baron, who usually had access to the apartment,
and we had once sent for her and taxed her with having administered it to Madame R.
in the Arrow Route before mentioned.
My own counsel was to give her immediately in charge, but the Baron pointed out very justly
that there was nothing to show the girl that she was doing anything that could possibly affect
life, and that in the absence of any motive for such a crime, it was only fair to conclude that
nothing was intended beyond a foolish, practical joke. He said the same to the girl, and spoke
to her very kindly indeed. At first she altogether denied it, and pretended to be quite
astonished at such an imputation. The Baron, however, looked steadily at her and said,
Take care, Sarah, remember what I said to you only three days ago. She did,
not attempt then to deny it any longer, but said she was very sorry, but she hoped the
Baron would forgive her. The Baron said he could not possibly retain her in his service,
and then she begged of him not to send her away without a character. At this time I interfered,
and said he would be very wrong to send her into any other family after playing such a trick.
She again protested she had meant no harm, and the subject then dropped, the Baron saying he would
take time to consider of it. From that time I attended Madam R until my return to London when
she was clearly recovering. I did not enter into any conversation with her, as she seemed
very reserved and of an unsociable disposition. The Baron seemed an unusually attentive
husband. Talking over the subject of the seizure a day or two afterwards, he informed me that
the death of his wife would also have been a severe loss in a pecuniary point of view.
"'as if she lived, she would inherit a considerable fortune.
"'I asked him why he did not ensure her life,
"'and he said he should now certainly do so,
"'but he had not before thought of it.
"'He called upon me about two months later,
"'in passing through town,
"'and informed me that he intended to travel abroad for some months.
"'I recommended the German baths,
"'and on his objecting to the crowds of English there,
"'suggested Grisbach or Rippoldzau.
in the Black Forest, where Englishmen are rarely to be encountered. It was too early for either
place at that time, and I recommended the south of France until the season was sufficiently advanced.
I did not see him again until October, 1855, when he again called upon me with Madame R., who seemed
perfectly restored, and of whom I had no difficulty in reporting most favourably to the
blank life assurance association, as also some weeks later to the blank life office of Dublin,
when applied to for my professional opinion. I think Madam Ars was an excellent life,
and there could be no better proof of it than her entire recovery in the course of a very few
months, or indeed weeks, from so severe an illness. The sensitiveness to antimony would not affect
this opinion. Indeed, Professor Taylor, in his work on
poisons, points out distinctly the idiosyncratic action of antimony and other medicinals
on certain constitutions, as conferring on an ordinary medicinal dose a poisonous instead of a curative
action. I have a copy of his work now before me, in which he says that, daily experience
teaches us that some persons are more powerfully affected than others by an ordinary dose of opium,
arsenic antimony and other substances.
And again in considering the probable amount of the fatal dose,
he speaks of that ever-varying condition of idiosyncrasy,
in which, as it is well known,
there is a state of constitution more liable to be affected
by antiminal compounds than other individuals apparently
in the same conditions as to health, age, etc.
I did not therefore, nor do I now consider the
sensitiveness of Madame R.'s
Constitution to that medicine
any objection to her life,
especially in view of the immense
vitality shown by her recovery.
With regard to the sleepwalking,
I have had no hint from the Baron
of such a propensity on the part of
Madame R. Certainly, it was never suggested
that she could have poisoned herself in that way.
Indeed, the servant girl admitted the act.
The mode of Madam R's death
does not in any degree shake my
confidence in my former opinion, as such an occurrence might have happened, though by no means likely
to do so. To any one in the habit of walking in their sleep, a propensity which in Madam R's case
I had no means of ascertaining. I have been enabled to be thus precise in my statement,
from the fact that the interesting nature of the case led me to make a special memorandum of it
in my diary, from which the above is taken. I shall therefore have no difficulty,
in confirming any portion of it upon oath.
Item 5. Statement of Mrs. Throgmorton
Mrs. Throgmorton presents her compliments to Mr. R. Henderson,
and begs to inform him that the girl Sarah Newman, who is still in her service,
and continues to give entire satisfaction in every way,
came to her about Christmas 1854, with a written character from the Baron R.,
then residing at Bognor, and with whom she had been as housemaid,
and Parliament made for some weeks. The character given by the Baron was a most satisfactory
one, but on Mrs. Throgmorton's desiring to know the reason of Sarah Newman's leaving
the situation, she was informed by the Baron that it was on account of her having played
a foolish trick upon her late mistress, by administering an emetic to her without authority,
a highly reprehensible proceeding which rendered Mrs. Throgmorton very much indisposed
to receive her into her family. On further correspondence,
with Sarah Newman's late master, however, Mrs. Throgmorton received the impression that
the fault had, in point of fact, been chiefly on the side of Madame R., though, of course,
as a gentleman, impossible to say so directly, with respect to his own wife, and Mrs.
Throgmorton therefore agreed to take Sarah Newman on trial, as she appeared truly penitent
for her most reprehensible conduct, and has since proved a very valuable servant in every
respect. Mrs. Throgmorton trusts that this information will be satisfactory.
to Mr. Henderson as he appears interested in Sarah Newman's welfare, in whom Mrs. Throgmorton
herself takes great interest, Cliftonville. Item 6. Statement of Mr. Andrews
Sir, in reply to your letter of the 25th, Ultimo, I beg to inform you that the girl
Sarah Newman certainly was in my service at Brighton for a month or two in the summer of 1854,
but was discharged, I think, in September of that year for various petty thefts.
She was a very interesting girl, and took us in completely,
but was accidentally discovered by one of our children,
and after full proof of her delinquencies turned away without a character.
My own wish was to prosecute her,
which indeed I considered almost a duty to others
by whom she might hereafter be plundered,
but I was persuaded to relinquish my intention by my wife,
who had taken a great fancy to her.
About two months after her dismissal,
a gentleman who gave some German name,
I cannot now remember it,
called to inquire our reasons for discharging her,
and I then informed him of the whole case.
He questioned me pretty closely as to my real opinion of the girl,
stating that he was philanthropically disposed,
and would give her a chance for reform
if there was any likelihood of her availing herself of it.
I told him frankly of my opinion, viz, that the girl was a hardened offender, but my wife was very eager that she should have another chance, and I have very little doubt the German gentleman took her. He was, so far as I remember, a stout good-natured looking man, and he had with him a young lady whom he left in the carriage and who was he said his wife. I think the name you mention Baron R. is the same name as that given, or a man.
at least something like it, but cannot be quite sure. I am, dear sir, faithfully yours,
Charles Andrews. P.S. My wife begs me to ask that, should you know anything of the after-career of
her protege, you will kindly communicate it to us, our Henderson, Esquire, etc, etc.,
Clements in W.C. Item 7. Statement of Sarah Newman
N.B. This statement was not obtained without considerable difficult
and must be taken for whatever it may be worth.
The girl was naturally anxious to be secured
against the possible consequences of her own admissions,
and I only at last succeeded in inducing her to speak out
by means of both a promise on the part of Mrs. Throgmorton
not to discharge her,
and a threat of police interference,
if she did not confess the whole truth.
I have myself, no doubt,
whatever of the correctness of her statement as it now stands,
and it is, as you will see,
corroborated in several very important particular
but whether it could be produced before a jury, or if it were so, what effect it would have upon their minds, are both very doubtful questions, R. H.
My name is Sarah Newman. I was in the service of Mr. Andrews at Brighton for three months. I was discharged by him for stealing tea and shugger. Mr. Andrews wanted to take the law off me, but my mistress would not let him. My mistress would have kept me on, but Master said no. She was always very kind to me.
and it was very ungrateful of me to rob her i would never do so again my present mistress is very kind to me too i have never robbed her of a pin i declare to goodness i have not nor i never will steal from nobody again
i have often wanted to tell mrs andrew so since but did not know where she was i did not say it to her when i left i felt quite hard like because of master i was out of place two months after that no one would take me to take me to her when i left i felt quite hard like because of master i was out of place two months after that no one would take me
me without a character. At last a friend in Bognor told me of a gentleman and I got
her to speak to him. It was the Baron. He came to see me one day when he was at Brighton. He insisted
on knowing all about me where I had been and why I had left Mr. Andrews. He was very kind
and said it was hard a poor girl should be ruined for one false step. He said if I would
promise never to steal again he would give me a trial. I promised him faithfully and he at last
took me down to Bognor with him.
I do not know whether he made any inquiries about me.
I think not.
He did not tell me he had.
I meant to keep my promise.
Indeed I did, and I did keep it, almost.
I mean, I only took one little thing,
and I really did not think that was stealing.
Nothing was ever locked up.
The Baron always insisted on having the tea-chest
and other things left open in case he wanted some.
I never took any.
I might have taken a great deal, but I did not.
I used to think sometimes things were left on purpose to tempt me, but of course that was fancy.
Often there were coppers left about, but I never touched them.
I did take one thing at last.
I did not think it was stealing.
It was only some orange marmalade.
I am very fond of sweet things.
One day there was a pot of orange marmalade.
It was left on the table.
It was after they had gone away from breakfast.
I couldn't help it.
It looked so nice.
I just put in my finger, that was all. I declared to goodness that was all. I did not even taste it. The baron came back and caught me. He did not say anything. He just shut the door close and walked straight up to me. I was so frightened I could not move. He took hold of my wrist and held at my hand. I burst out crying. He said it was no use crying. I had deceived him and must go. He said if he did his duty, he ought to give me up to the police. I said indeed I had taken nothing but only that little taste of sweat.
He said, who would believe me with my character?
He spoke very kind but very stern, and I was dreadfully frightened.
I begged of him not to give me up, and he said he would give me one chance more,
but I must go away.
I said if he turned me out without a character, I might as well dry myself at once.
I begged him to let me stay, but he said that was impossible.
Then I begged him not to say why I was sent away.
He said, what else should he say?
I begged him again very hard.
At last he said he would think over it.
He said he would try and make some other excuse for my going,
but I must go next day, positive.
He told me, if he did make an excuse for me,
to be very careful not to contradict him.
I was very grateful to him.
He is a kind, good gentleman,
and I shall always bless him for it.
I did not go next day.
I was kept by my mistress's illness.
She was very bad indeed.
I did all I could for her.
I hope the Baron had forgotten and would let me stay.
He sent for me two or three days afterwards.
There was another gentleman with him.
He was the doctor.
He charged me with having given some stuff to my mistress to make a sick.
Of course I denied it.
I never gave her anything.
I never had any quarrel with her at all.
She was always very good-natured to me.
But I did not like her much.
I don't know why.
I think it was because she did not like Master.
I said I'd given her nothing.
No more I had.
I never saw the bottle
I don't know what it was
I cannot read at all
I saw a master look at me
and he said something about two or three days ago
I knew then that he was making an excuse to send me away
he made signs at me to abide by what he said
and I did abide by it
the other gentleman was very hard
but of course he did not know
what the baron said was given as a reason
for my going away
that was all
the real reason was my taking the marmalade
if you ask the baron ill
tell you so. I hope you'll tell him how grateful I am for his kindness to me.
End of Section 4. Section 5 of the Notting Hill Mystery by Charles Felix.
This Librivox recording is in the public domain.
Section 5
Item 1
Memorandum by Mr. Henderson
We have now reached a point in this mysterious story
at which I must again direct your attention most particularly to the coincidences of dates
etc, on which indeed depends entirely, as I have before said, the only solution at which I have
found it possible to arrive. The length to which these depositions have run has obliged me
to divide them into distinct sections, each of which should bear more directly upon some
particular phase of the case. For this purpose I have taken, as you will have perceived,
first the early history of Mrs. Anderton, and, as we may, I think, fairly assume, of Madame R,
also thus establishing, at the outset, the initiatory link of that chain of connection
between these two extraordinary cases, which, inexplicable as either is in itself,
will nevertheless, I cannot but imagine, each help to elucidate the other.
The second division placed us in possession of the histories, both of Mrs. Anderson and
Madame R, up to the point at which the thread of their singular destinies crossed, showing
also how the Baron became aware of his wife's probable relationship to Mrs. Anderton,
and of the benefit thereby accruing to her upon the death, without issue, of her sister and
Mr. Anderton.
The third section deals with the first illness of Madame R, to the date and circumstances of which
I felt it right to direct your most particular attention.
In the fourth division of the evidence, we then then,
reviewed the circumstances attending the fatal illness of Mrs. Anderton, which led to her husband's
arrest on suspicion of murder, and finally to his suicide while awaiting investigation.
A considerable portion of the evidence connected with this phase of the subject, I have thought
it best to keep back, for insertion in that division of the case which bears more particularly
upon the conduct and death of Mr. Anderton, and which will follow that on which we are now about
to enter. The narrative, therefore, of Mrs. Anderton's last illness has been thus far confined
to the mention of it in the unfortunate lady's own diary, with the note at its termination
in which her husband records the fact of her decease. With this, however, I have coupled
an account drawn partly from an earlier portion of the same diary, and partly from the statement
of the medical man by whom she was at the time attended of a previous illness, very similar
in general character to that by which she was finally carried off, and apparently of an equally
unaccountable description. The object with which I have thus placed in juxtaposition, the first
attacks respectively of Madame R. and Mrs. Anderson will probably be sufficiently apparent.
I have now to direct your attention to a second illness of Madame R, occurring under what I
cannot but feel to be most suspicious circumstances, but a very few months before her demise.
in proceeding with this portion of the case the extreme importance attaching to a thorough and correct appreciation of the dates of the various occurrences will become more obvious at every step and to them i must again request your utmost attention
i had at first proposed to submit to you in a tabular form the singular coincidences to which i allude but on reflection such a course appeared objectionable as tending to place too strongly before you a view of the subject with which i must confess myself thoroughly dissatisfied
I have therefore preferred leaving entirely to yourselves the comparison of the various dates, etc., limiting myself strictly to a verification of their accuracy.
In many instances this has been no easy task, and more particularly in establishing satisfactorily the exact date, 5th of April, 1856, at which the symptoms of Madam R's second illness first appeared, wherein I have experienced a difficulty only compensated by the importance of the result.
I have therefore to request that the depositions here following may be carefully compared with the concluding portion of Mrs. Anderson's diary, and also with a statement of Dr. Dodsworth.
In making this comparison, you will notice, besides the points I have already referred to respecting dates, various discrepancies between facts as actually occurring and as represented to Mr. and Mrs. Anderson by the Baron.
these I need not hear particular eyes, as they will be sufficiently obvious on a perusal of the depositions themselves,
but it is as well to draw your attention generally to them, as they seem to have a significant bearing upon other parts of the case.
I must also request you to bear in mind the relation in which the Baron and his wife were supposed to stand towards each other previously to their marriage,
and will now proceed to lay before you the depositions relating, as I have said, to the second it is a matter of the second issue.
illness of the latter.
Item 2. Statement of Mrs. Brown
My name is Jane Brown. I am a widow, and my poor dear husband was a clerk in the city.
I don't know in whose house. I did know, but I forget. My memory is very bad.
I live in Russell Place. The house is my own, not hired. My poor dear husband left it
to me in his will. I sometimes let it off in lodgings, not always, only when I can get
quiet lodgers.
Last year, footnote
1856, R.H.
I let the first and second floors to Baron R.
The ground floor was let to Dr. Marsden.
He had it several years.
He does not live there.
He has a practice near London.
He comes to Russell Place every Monday and Friday to see his patients.
He used to live with us.
That was in my poor dear husband's lifetime.
Baron R. took the rest of the house except the attics.
I lived there myself.
i cannot remember when the baron came it was some time in february or march i am sure i cannot remember i have no means of ascertaining i don't keep any accounts my poor dear husband always kept the accounts i have kept none since he died
i dare say i lose money by it but i can't help it i have no head for it i am pretty sure it was in february or march i think about the beginning of march footnote clearly so the baron was in dublin on twenty fifth of february r h
there was no other lodger then not till my son went away from home again he was away from home then he came home some time in march or april i suppose it was in march he came from melbourne to liverpool he was at home for some weeks
I can't tell how many.
He went away again in April, or it may have been May.
I am almost sure it was not later than May.
Not so late, I think.
Mrs. Trowbridge could tell you.
Richard married her daughter.
Richard is my son.
He married Ellen Trowbridge.
That was while he was at home last year.
They had been engaged ever so long.
He came home on purpose to marry her.
He had got a promise of something at Melbourne,
and was obliged to go back directly.
He worked his passage home from Melbourne.
I do not know what ship he came in.
I don't think he shipped in his own name.
I forget why it was.
Something about not liking to have it known.
I don't know why not.
I don't know at all what name he took.
I cannot remember when he came home or when he went.
I do not know when he left Melbourne.
He brought home one paper.
There is only a small piece of it left.
He was with me all the time.
He was at home except Saturdays and Sundays.
He used to go down to Brighton then to see Ellen.
She was in a shop there.
He used to go by the excursion train
and stay with her mother from Saturday to Monday.
All the rest of the time, he was with me.
That is all I can tell you about him.
The other lodger was a friend of his.
He had known him in Australia.
He asked him to his wedding.
That was at our house.
It was on Monday and he came the Saturday before.
They all came up together from Brighton.
The Baron let us use his rooms.
He went away somewhere to give his lady change of air.
I think it was because she had been ill, I cannot be sure.
She was ill several times at my house.
She died there.
I forget when was the first time she was ill there.
It was while my son was in England.
I remember talking to him about it.
He was away from home at the time.
There was no one in the house but myself.
I remember it because I was so frightened.
There was nobody at all, not even a servant.
I generally have a servant.
I was without one then, for.
two or three months. I got a charwoman to come in the day. The reason was my servant got tipsy.
She had to be taken away by the police, and I was afraid for a long while to get another.
I can't at all remember when that was. I think it must have been before the baron came. I can't
be sure. I am quite sure it was before Madame R. was taken ill. I am sure of that because I remember
so well how frightened I was. I think Dr. Marsden attended Madame R. He used to be very friendly with
the baron, everybody liked him. He was so good-natured, and so very kind to his wife.
We did not think much of her. She was very quiet, but she did not seem to care about him.
She seemed frightened, like. I sometimes thought she was not quite right in her head.
The baron was always kind to her. He was good-natured with everybody. I never heard him say
a hard word of anyone but once, and that was young Aldridge. He was Richard's friend who lodged
with us. Footnote. This portion of Mrs.
Brown's evidence affects more particularly a part of the case to be hereafter referred to in
part seven, but I have thought it best to preserve it intact, R. H. He made a noise and disturbed
Madame R. He came home one night quite intoxicated, and the Baron asked me to give him notice.
He said if Mr. Aldridge did not go, he must. Of course I gave him notice directly. He said it was
all spite. Of course I knew that was not true. He said he was not drunk, but the policeman found him
lying on the doorstep. I forget what he said. It was some foolish story about the baron.
I do not know of any reason why they should have quarreled. I remember he said something once
about Madame R. walking in her sleep. I don't know what it was. I don't think that could have
had anything to do with it. Of course it could not. The baron complained of being disturbed,
that was all. I do not remember that I was ever disturbed myself. His room was next to mine.
I might have been disturbed without remembering it.
I certainly was that night he came home intoxicated.
He might have disturbed Madame R and I slept through it.
I sleep heavy sometimes.
I forget when this was and when he left the house.
I cannot remember the exact dates of anything.
My poor dear husband always did everything of that sort for me.
He was a very exact man.
I have no sort of books or papers of any kind to which I could refer.
This is all I can tell you about it.
Item 3. Statement of Mrs. Trowbridge
My name is Ellen Trowbridge. My husband is a seafaring man. He is captain of a small collier.
We live at Shoreham near Brighton. I have one daughter whose name is Ellen. She is married to a man in the name of Richard Brown. He is in Australia. He went out to Australia in 1856. I forget the exact date. It was sometime in April or May. The ship's name was the Maria Soames. She's
sailed from Gravesend. My daughter was married on the 14th of April. That was not very long
before they sailed. She had been engaged to young Brown for three or four years. He came home
on purpose to marry her. I don't remember exactly when he came home. It must have been about a
month before. Something of that kind. He was in a great hurry to get out again. He wanted to marry by
license so as to be quicker, but I told him it was a foolish expense. He had the bands put up
the first Sunday he was at home. I think it was the first, but he was the first.
I cannot be quite sure.
My daughter was then in service.
She was at a shop in Brighton.
During the week she used to sleep at a friend's house,
and on Saturdays she used to come home to us for Sundays.
Brown used always to come down on Saturdays.
He used to come by the cheap excursion train.
He used to go to Brighton and call for Nellie,
and walk with her to shore him.
He used to walk back with her early Monday morning and go on to town.
He never came at other times.
It was no good.
Nellie was only home at Sundays.
he wanted her to leave and go to his mother's. She would not leave the shop until her time was out.
I would not let him be at Brighton. I was afraid people might talk. So far as I know, he was at home
all the rest of the time. The marriage took place from Mrs. Brown's house. She had a lodger then,
a foreigner, I think. He went out of town for two or three days and lent her his rooms.
After the wedding, young Brown and my daughter went to South End for a few days. I cannot say exactly
how long, about a week or fortnight.
On the Saturday, before they sailed,
we all went out at Gravesend to meet them and see them off.
The ship was to have sailed on the Sunday.
We all went to Rocheville and slept at Gravesend that night.
I had some friends there who gave us beds.
Mrs. Brown went back on Sunday, but I stayed.
A young man, by the name of Aldridge was with us.
He was a friend of Brown's.
I did not much like him.
He went back with Mrs. Brown.
I think he took lodgings in her house.
I cannot call to mind the exact day young Brown came home.
I think it must have been some time in March.
Item 4. Statement of Dr. Marsden.
My name is Anthony Marsden.
I am a physician and formerly resided at Mrs. Brown's house in Russell Place.
Some three or four years ago, I found the atmosphere of London beginning to tell upon my health,
and determined to remove into the suburbs.
I bought a small practice in the neighbourhood of St John's Wood
and gave up the greater portion of my London patients.
I was, however, desirous of not altogether relinquishing that connection
and with this object rented two rooms at Mrs. Brown's,
where I might be consulted by such patience
as I still retained in that neighbourhood.
I used to drive up for this purpose every Monday and Thursday morning.
I had been doing this for some time,
when the first and second floor
apartments were taken by the Baron R. I did not at first much like him, I thought him an
imposter. He seemed, however, to wish to make my acquaintance, and I found that he was, at all
events, a very highly informed man on all matters of science. We had frequent conversations
respecting mesmerism. He certainly seemed to be himself a believer in it. Were I not myself
thoroughly satisfied of its impossibility, I am not at all sure, but that he might have convinced
me on the subject. I am quite unable to account for many of the phenomena exhibited. They were,
however, of course, to be accounted for in some way. He seemed a very excellent chemist,
and we used at times to pursue our investigations together. There was a small room at the back
of the house, on the basement floor, which he used as a laboratory. He invited me to make
use of it, and I was frequently there. He was always engaged in experiments of one kind or another,
and had various ingenious projects in hand. In the laboratory was a large assortment of chemicals
and medicines of various kinds. In the case of poor patients, I have sometimes asked him to make
a prescription, and he has done so. At the time at which I knew him, he was engaged in a series of
experiments on the metals, and more especially on mercury, antimony, lead and
zinc. I think he must have had almost every preparation of these that is made. I believe that his
researches were for the purpose of finding a specific against the disease so prevalent among
painters, which is known by the name of lead colic. The laboratory was at the back of the house
and quite detached from all of the other rooms. There was an open space between it and the rest
of the house, with only a passage communicating with the offices. The passage was shut off by a
door, and there was a wooden door at the end into the laboratory. Both these doors were always
kept closed. They were not usually locked. I told the Baron I thought they should be, but he said
no one would go there. He had a wait put onto the laboratory door to close it. The glass
door had a spring already. I frequently made use of his laboratory sometimes when he was
absent. I might go there with or without him whenever I pleased. There was no attempt at concealing
from me anything whatever that was done there. It was all quite open. I attended Madame
R. through greater part of her illness. It was a very long affair, and of a very singular character.
I cannot be at all certain as to the date at which it commenced. I was not regularly called in
at the time, and did not notice it in my book. The Baron only consulted me in a friendly way about
it. Two or three days afterwards. It was certainly as much as that. I think it was the third day.
I cannot be sure of that, but I am quite sure it was at least the second.
By being the second day I mean that at least one clear day had intervened
between the night on which she was ill and the day on which I was consulted by the Baron.
I cannot swear to more than one, but I think it must have been.
From what the Baron told me of the symptoms,
I remember concluding it to be a case of English cholera,
but she was almost recovered at the time I first heard of it,
and I did not prescribe for her.
About a fortnight or three weeks after this she had another slight attack, for which the Baron himself also prescribed.
He acquainted me on my visit to town with the course he had pursued, and I entirely concurred in his treatment of the case.
The attack, however, returned, I think, more than once, and he then asked me to see and prescribe for her.
I first saw her professionally on the 23rd of May, 1856.
Footnote. Compare Journal of Mrs. Anderton, 25th of May and 10th of June. See Section 3, Part 3. This was two days after the third or fourth attack which occurred on the night of 21st of May. As soon as I regularly took up her case, I made notes of it in my diary. Extracts from this are enclosed. V-Day 5 herewith, showing the progress of the case from time to time. I attended her throughout her illness.
The attacks occurred, as will be seen from my diary, about every fortnight.
They increased in intensity up to the 10th of October, 1856.
At this time she was apparently, for three or four days, almost inarticulo mortis,
and I was unable to hold out any hope of her recovery.
Another attack would certainly have been fatal.
Happily, the disease appeared to have spent itself,
and at the expiration of the fortnight,
no renewal of the more acute symptoms was experienced.
From this date, Madam R. progressed steadily but slowly to convalescence, and would, no doubt,
have ultimately entirely recovered, but for the unfortunate accident which put an end to her life.
Madame R's case was one of great difficulty. It was apparently one of chronic gastritis,
but its recurrence in an acute form at stated intervals was a very abnormal incident.
The case presented, in fact, all the more prominent features of that of chronic antimonial point.
"'Poisoning,' recorded by Dr. Mayerhofer in Heller's Archive, 1846,
"'and alluded to by Professor Taylor in his work on Poisons,' page 539.
"'There were also strong points of general resemblance to the other cases of McMullen and Hardman,
quoted by Professor Taylor on the same page, and recorded in Guy's Hospital reports for October 1857.
As matters progressed I took the opportunity of pointing this out as delicately as I could to the Baron
and asked if he had any suspicions of foul play. He seemed at first almost amused by the suggestion,
but upon further consultation was inclined to take a graver view of the matter. We went carefully
through the cases in question, the Baron translating that of Dr. Mayerhofer for my benefit,
as I was not a German scholar. At his suggestion we determined to analyse the various excretion
etc., and an examination was accordingly instituted in the Baron's laboratory.
He was always very particular in keeping up the supply of medicine,
and would never allow the bottles, etc., to be thrown away.
There was therefore some remnant of every medicine that had been made up for her.
These we tested carefully, as well as the excreter, etc., both for arsenic and for antimony,
but without finding the slightest trace of either.
The analysis was conducted by the Baron, who took the greatest interest,
interest in it. I could not, perhaps, have done it myself. Such matters have not come within my
line of practice. In such a case I should certainly not trust my own manipulations. I trusted
those of the Baron because I knew him to be an expert, practical chemist, and in the daily
habit of such operations. My own share in them was limited to the observation of results and
their comparison with those pointed out by Professor Taylor. I did not take any special pains to ascertain
the purity of the chemical tests employed, or their being, in fact, what they were assumed to be.
That is to say, when a colourless liquid with all the apparent characteristics of nitric acid
was taken from a bottle, labelled nit-ac, I took for granted that nitric acid was being employed.
Similarly, of course, were the other chemical agents. It never occurred to me to do otherwise,
nor did I take any especial precautions to identify the matters examined. Others might certainly
have been substituted, but, if so, it must have been done by the Baron himself.
It was perhaps possible that he might have conducted his investigations,
under such supervision as I then exercised, with fictitious tests,
and it was quite so to substitute other matters and mislead me,
by subjecting them to a real analysis.
That is to say, this would have been possible to be done by the Baron.
No one else could, under the circumstances, have done it,
or at least without his direct connivance.
I had no ground for any suspicion of the kind, nor do I see any now.
I think it most unwarrantable.
Every circumstance that came under my notice goes equally to contravene such a supposition.
The Baron was devotedly attached to his wife.
He supplied her liberally with professional advice, as also with nurses, medicine, and every necessary.
His care for her led him to precautions which, in their incidental results, must have inevitably
exposed any attempt at the administration of poison.
During the severer period of the disorder, he had no opportunity of attempting such a crime
as he universally insisted on both food and medicine being both prepared and administered by the nurses.
He himself rendered every assistance in the endeavour to detect any such attempt,
when its possibility had been suggested by myself.
And, lastly, Madame R did not die, although the investigation had already
removed all suspicion. I think such an imputation wholly unwarranted and unwarrantable from any one
circumstance of the case. Item 5. Extracts from Dr. Marsden's diary. Footnote. These extracts will of
course be chiefly interesting to the medical profession and may be passed over by the general reader.
Some details are necessarily excluded. The notes also relating to the treatment adopted by Dr. Marsden,
not materially affecting the question at issue which is concerned only with the symptoms of disorder are omitted as irrelevant and therefore confusing see note to statement of dr watson section three item two
may twenty third madam r nausea vomiting tendency to diarrhoea profuse perspiration and general debility pulse low one hundred spirits depressed burning pain in stomach abdomen tender on pressure tongue discoloured
26th, Madam R. slightly better, less nausea and pain.
30th. Madam R. improvement continues.
June 2nd, Madam R. improving.
June 6th, ditto.
9th. Recurrence of symptoms on Saturday evening.
Footnote, 7th of June, R.H.
Increased nausea, vomited matter yellow with bile.
Pulse low, 105.
throat sore and slight constriction tongue foul 13th symptoms slightly ameliorated
treatments continued 16th ditto tongue slightly clearer pulse 100 20th improvement
continued pulse slightly firmer 23rd ditto 24th special visit return of symptoms last night
great increase of nausea and vomiting very yellow with bio
throat sore and tongue foul abdomen very tender on pressure slight diarrhea tingling
sensation in limbs 27th slight improvement 30th continued but slight pulse firmer
July the 3rd improvement continued especially in throat perspiration still
distressing less tingling in limbs sixth improvement continued pulse somewhat firmer
110. 10th to 20th absent in Gloucestershire.
20th. A slight rally. Baran says attack shortly after last visit, but recovery for time
more rapid. 24th. Improvement continues, but less rapid. Pulse 110.
27. Recurrence yesterday. Vomiting, purging, amounting to diarrhea,
Sornous and athus state of mouth and throat
Perspiration pain in abdomen
Complains of taste in mouth like lead
Pulse low 115
Query Antimony
Speak Baron
31st
Analysis Satisfactory
Symptoms slightly abated
August 3rd
Improvement continued
Pulse 112
112 firmer
7th
Same 10th
Return of vomiting and purge
of vomiting and purging, general aggravation of symptoms, much prostrated.
24th, 28th, 31st. Slight improvement.
September 4th, improvement continued, but slight.
7th. Return of severe symptoms. Vomiting, extremely yellow, much bile, diarrhea, pulse low
and fluttering, 120, violent perspiration, slight wandering, extreme soreness and constriction
of throat, slight convulsive twitchings in limbs, great exhaustion and prostration.
10th, 14th and 18th, very slight abatement of symptoms.
21st, violence of symptoms increased.
Pulse 1-2-5, great prostration.
25th and 28th.
Very slight amelioration, Pulse 125, wandering.
October 1st, 4th and 8th.
Symptoms slightly less severe.
11th. Aggravation of all symptoms. Pulse 132. Low and fluttering. Face, flushed and pale.
Much convulsive twitching in limbs. Power of speech, quite gone. Entire prostration can hardly live
through night. 12th, 13th, special visits. No perceptible change.
15th. Pulse a shade firmer. 136.
N.B. From this date, recovery is slow but steady.
Item 6. Memorandum by Mr. Henderson
From the very vague nature of the foregoing evidence, so far as dates are concerned,
it was, as you will at once perceive, no very easy task to determine the precise day of
Madame R's first attack. To the view of the case, however, which I was even then inclined to
adopt, this was a matter of the last importance, and I determined to spare no effort to elucidate
it, if possible, from the very loose data furnished by the depositions. In this,
I have, I think, been successful, but, as the process has been somewhat complicated, I must ask you
to follow me through it step by step. The difficulty of tracing the truth seemed at first sight
not a little augmented by the fact that no one had been in the house but Mrs. Brown herself,
whose memory, even had it afforded any clue, could not have been relied on. On further consideration,
however, I began to fancy myself mistaken in this respect, and finally conceived a hope that this
very fact might, if probably handled, prove an assistance instead of an obstacle to my investigation.
The following was the course of reasoning I pursued. There are only two points on which Mrs. Brown
appears to be certain, her son's presence in England, and her being herself alone in the house,
on the actual day in question. The only chances of success, therefore, seem to be,
first in ascertaining precisely the limit of time within which such a combination was possible,
and second, in determining by a process of elimination, the actual day or days on which such a
combination could fall. The result has been far more complete than at the outset of the
investigation I could venture to hope. First, for the period of time to which our researchers
should be directed. This was obviously limited by the residents of Richard Brown in England,
first efforts were therefore directed towards determining the exact dates of his arrival
and departure. 1. On Inquiry at Liverpool I found that the only vessels which had arrived
from Melbourne during the month of March 1856 were as follows. Ship James Baines, Captain
MacDonald, owners James Baines and Company, arrived 4th of March. Ship Lightning, Captain
Enright. Owners James Baines and Co.
arrived 24th of March
ship Emma
Captain Underwood
Owners Pilkington Brothers
arrived 27th of March
Of these
The James Baines left Melbourne on the 28th of November
And the lightning on the 28th of December
The exact date of sailing of the Emma
I have not been able to ascertain
But it is immaterial to the case
The fragment of newspaper preserved by Mrs. Brown
Has no date
Nor could I at first find any clue
by which it might be determined. The last paragraph, however, commences as follows.
Seasonable weather. The thermometer has, for the last four days, never been lower than 80 degrees in the shade.
We wonder what our friends in England would say to singing their chris carols in such a...
The remainder is torn off, but the missing syllables are clearly Christmas carols.
And this shows clearly that the paper must have been published after the departure of the James Baines on the 28th of November.
Richard Brown must therefore have come home either in the Lightning or the Emma, the earliest of which reached Liverpool on the evening of 24th of March.
The 25th of March, therefore, is the earliest date from which our examination need commence.
2. From Mrs. Trowbridge, mother of the young woman to whom Richard Brown was married during his stay in England,
I learned that the young couple sailed for Sydney in the Maria Soames.
Mrs. Brown was unable to give me the date of this vessel's departure, but a search through the file of
the Times for 1856 shows that she left Gravesend on the 23rd of that month. The period to be
analysed is therefore confined to the interval between the 25th of March and the 25th of April 1856.
3. During this period, as we learn from Mrs. Brown's statement, Richard Brown was at home
every day except Saturdays and Sundays. These were respectively the 29th and 30th of March
and the 5th, 6th, 12th, 13th, 19th and 20th of April.
4. Dr. Marsden, in his evidence, states most distinctly that he did not see Madam R.
until at least one clear day had elapsed after her attack.
Dr. Marsden's visits take place on the Monday and Friday of each week.
Madam R's seizure therefore did not occur on a Sunday.
This reduces the days on which it may have happened to the 29th of March and the 5th, 12th,
and 19th of April.
5. From Mrs. Traubridge's evidence, we learn that Mrs. Brown and the whole party slept at Gravesend
on the Saturday night previous to the sailing of the Maria Soames. Mrs. Brown was therefore
absent from the town on the 19th of April. The issue is thus narrowed to the 29th of March
and the 5th and 12th of April. 6. From Mrs. Brown's statement, we learn that on the Saturday and Sunday
preceding the wedding, her son's friend Aldridge slept at the house. The wedding took place on
the 14th of April. On the 12th of April, therefore, Mrs. Brown was not alone. The only days, therefore,
on which the occurrence, as described, could have taken place on the 29th of March and the 5th of
April. At this point I feared for some time that my clue was at an end. This would, however, have been
most unsatisfactory, as the possible error of a week in point of date would have seriously detracted
from the trustworthiness of the entire case.
The only possible chance of determining the point
seemed to lie in ascertaining the precise date of this servant's dismissal,
and it at length occurred to me that this might be accomplished
by means of the police records of the court before which she was carried.
From them I found, seven, that the offence for which she was discharged
was committed on Sunday the 30th of April, on the 29th, therefore,
she was still in Mrs. Brown's house.
The only day, therefore, on which Madame R.'s,
first seizure could have taken place, as stated, during Richard Brown's stay in England,
and on a night when Mrs. Brown was alone in the house was the 5th of April.
The importance of this date, thus fixed, you will, I think, at once perceive.
End of Section 5. Section 6 of the Notting Hill Mystery by Charles Felix.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Section 6
Item 1
Memorandum by Mr. Henderson
We have now arrived at a point in this extraordinary case
at which I must again direct your attention to the will of the late Mr. Bolton
By this will £25,000 was, as we have seen, bequeathed to Miss Bolton,
afterwards Mrs. Anderton, with a life interest after her death to her husband.
at his decease and failing children by his marriage with Miss Bolton, the money passed to the second sister,
whom, as I have before said, we may, I think, be justified in identifying with the late Madam R.
It seems at all events clear both from the circumstances attending the marriage of the Baron,
and from the observation made by him at Bogner to Dr. Marsden,
relative to the pecuniary loss he would have sustained by the death of his wife,
that the Baron himself believed, and was prepared to maintain this relationship,
and that the various policies of assurance,
affected on the life of Madame R, to the gross amount of £25,000,
the exact sum in question,
were intended to cover any risk of her death before that of her sister.
This is all that we need at the present to require.
What import should be attached to the degree of mystery
with which the whole affair, both of the marriage and of the assurance seems to have been so carefully
surrounded, will, of course, be matter for consideration, when reviewing the whole circumstances
of the case. It is enough for our present purpose that the Baron clearly looked upon his wife
as the sister of Mrs. Anderton, and calculated upon participation through her in the legacy
of Mr. Bolton. The lives of Mr. and Mrs. Anderton thus alone intervened between, and to be
this legacy and the Baron's family, and we have thus established on his part a direct interest in their decease.
On the death of Mrs. Anderton and under the circumstances detailed in an earlier portion of the case,
the life of her husband only now stood in the way of Baron R's succession,
and it is important to bear this in mind in considering, as we are now about to do,
the various circumstances attendant on the death of that gentleman.
The chain of evidence on which hangs, as I have so often said, the sole hypothesis by which
I can account for the mysterious occurrences that form the subject of our inquiry, is not
only of a purely circumstantial character, but also of a nature at once so delicate and
so complicated that the failure of a single link would render the remainder altogether worthless.
Unless the case can be made to stand out clearly, step by step in all its details, from the commencement
to the end, its isolated portions become at once a mere chaos of coincidences, singular indeed
in many respects, but not necessarily involving any considerable element of suspicion. It is for
this reason that I have, as before stated, endeavoured to lay before you in a distinct and separate
form each particular portion of the subject. Hitherto our attention has been entirely occupied
with the death of Mrs. Anderton, and with various attendant circumstances. The best of the
of which upon that occurrence will be more clearly shown hereafter.
We have now to consider the very singular circumstances attending the lapse of the second
life, that of Mr. Anderton, intervening, as we have seen, between Mr. Bolton's legacy
and Madame R. For the purpose of this enquiry, I propose adducing pretty much the same
evidence as that given in the inquests held on the bodies of Mrs. and Mr. Anderton.
The final result of the former of these inquests was, as you are aware, a verdict of, died
from natural causes, though the case was at first adjourned for a fortnight in order to admit
of a more searching examination of the body, during which time Mr. Anderton remained in custody
in his own house.
In the latter case, the jury, after some hesitation, returned a verdict of temporary insanity,
on by extreme distress of mind at the death of his wife, and suspicions respecting it,
which subsequently proved to have been unfounded.
Our present concern, however, being with the conduct of the Baron, rather than with that of
Mr. Anderton, I have omitted portions not directly bearing upon this part of the matter,
and have endeavoured to procure such additions to the evidence of Dr. Dodsworth, and others,
as might serve to further elucidate the subject of our inquiry.
I now therefore lay before you this portion of the case with a special reference to its bearing upon the proceedings of Baron R.
Item 2, Dr. Dodsworth's statement.
I was in attendance on the late Mrs. Anderson during the illness which terminated fatally on the 12th of October 1856.
I was first sent for by Mr. Anderton on the night of 5th of April in that year.
I found her suffering apparently from a slight attack of English.
cholera, but was unable to ascertain any cause to which it might be attributed.
There was nothing to lead to any suspicion of poisoning.
Indeed, this seemed to be rendered almost impossible by the length of time that had elapsed
since the last time of taking food, and that at which the attack commenced.
This was at least three or four hours.
Whereas, had the symptoms arisen from the action of any poisonous substance, they would have
shown themselves much earlier.
This is only my impression from after consideration. No idea of poison occurred to me at the time,
nor should I now entertain any, were I called into a similar case. I prescribe the usual
remedies for the complaint under which I supposed Mrs. Anderton to be suffering. They appeared
to have their effect, though not so rapidly as I should have expected. The symptoms appeared rather
to wear themselves out. I visited her several times, as the debility which she had been
ensued seemed greater than, under ordinary circumstances, should have followed on such an attack.
About a fortnight later she had a fresh seizure of a very similar kind. This time, however,
the symptoms were aggravated, and accompanied by others of a more alarming character.
Of these the most conspicuous were nausea, vomiting, violent perspiration, and increasing tendency
to diarrhoea. The patient also complained of great sinking of the heart.
and of terrible lowness of spirits, almost amounting to a conviction that death was at hand.
In the course of another fortnight or three weeks there was a fresh re-occurrence of the symptoms.
The tong, which in the former attacks, had been clammy and dry, was now covered thickly with dirty mucus,
and there was a greatly increased flow of saliva.
The condition of the tong became greatly aggravated as the disease progressed,
the mouth and throat, becoming ultimately very sore, with great constriction of the latter.
The abdomen was distended, and very tender to the touch, the liver also being very full and tender,
pulse, low and rapid, decreasing in fullness as the disease progressed,
and reaching finally to 130 or 140, and the depression of spirits and sinking up the heart
considerably increased. The patient appeared to be daily losing strength,
and at each attack which seemed to return periodically at intervals of about a fortnight,
the same symptoms appeared more severely than before.
Mr. Anderton seemed to be in the deepest distress.
From the time when the symptoms first became serious,
he hardly ever left her side,
administering both food and medicine with his own hand.
So far as I am aware, Mrs. Anderton took nothing of any kind from any other person
throughout the greater portion of her illness.
I have heard her say this herself in his presence shortly before her death.
For the last few weeks she took scarcely any nourishment
and could with difficulty swallow her medicine.
The principal cause of this difficulty lay in the extreme nausea,
which followed any attempt to swallow,
but it was greatly increased by the painful and constricted state of the throat,
which was extremely rough and raw,
rendering swallowing very painful.
As the disease progressed,
the vomited matter became strongly coloured with bile
and was of a strong yellow colour.
The oppression on the heart also increased
until at length respiration was almost impeded.
The heart and pulses also gradually lost power.
And latterly, the lower portion of the body
was almost paralysed,
the limbs being stiff,
and the whole frame, from the waist downward,
very heavy and cold.
The patient also suffered from severe cold perspiration as well as from heat and irritation of the upper portion of the body,
and from entire inability to sleep.
A very remarkable feature in the case was that, notwithstanding this general sleeplessness,
each fresh attack of the malady was preceded by a sound slumber of some hour's duration,
from which she appeared to be aroused by the return of the more active symptoms of the disorder.
all the usual remedies indicated by such symptoms, but without any permanent effect, and I was
a good deal perplexed by the anomalous appearance of the case, and especially by its intermittent
character, the symptoms recurring, as I have said, with increased severity at regular intervals
of about a fortnight. I mentioned my difficulty to Mr. Anderton, and asked if he would wish
further advice. At his urgent request I consented, though with some hesitation, to meet
Baron R, who holds, as I was given to understand, a regular diploma from several of the
foreign universities, but whose practice has been of a somewhat irregular character.
I first consulted with him on the 12th of July.
Footnote, see Section 5, Item 5.
Nocted Odsworth here details at some length how he became convinced of the Baron's great
skill and knowledge of chemistry, and was finally persuaded to meet him in consultation.
After examination of the patient, however, and some conversation as to the nature of the symptoms and of the remedies employed, I had some difficulty in drawing from him, the Baron, any expression of opinion.
He appeared, however, to agree entirely in the course hitherto pursued, and after some further conversation we separated.
The consultation took place in Mrs. Anderton's dressing-room, and in passing by the wash-hand stand on his way out, the Baron suddenly took up a sort of.
small bottle which was standing there, and, turning sharply upon me, asked if I had tried that.
On taking it from his hand, I found that it contained tincture of tannin, a preparation much
used for the teeth. I was somewhat startled by the suddenness of the question, and replied
in the negative, on which the subject dropped. On my way home, however, I was again struck
by the peculiarity of the Baron's manner in putting the question, and on thinking the matter over,
the idea suddenly flashed across me that Tannic acid was the antidote to antimony,
and that the symptoms of poisoning by tartarized antimony, to which attention had just been drawn by Professor Taylor,
in the case of the Rugeley murder, closely resembled in many respects, those under which Mrs. Anderton was then suffering.
At the first moment this supposition seemed to account for all,
the mysterious part of the case. But on reflection the difficulty returned, for it seemed
impossible that the poison could have been administered by anyone but Mr. Anderton himself,
and I felt it still more impossible to suspect him of such an act, in face of the evident
and extreme affection existing between them. On mature reflection, however, I determined on trying,
at all events for a time, the course suggested by the Baron, and accordingly exhibited large
doses of Peruvian bark, together with other medicines of the same kind.
My suspicions were at first increased by the improvement, apparently affected by these remedies,
and I took occasion to ask Mr. Anderton in a casual way, in presence of the nurse and one
of the servants, whether he had any emetic tartar or antimonyal wine in the house.
The manner of his reply entirely removed from my mind any idea that either of those present,
at least had any knowledge of such an attempt, as seemed implied by the Baron, and on seeing
that gentleman a day or two after, I questioned him as to the true bearing of his suggestion.
He disclaimed, however, any such meaning as I had been disposed to attribute to his words,
stating in a general way that he had before known great benefit to accrue from the exhibition
of such medicines in similar cases, and expressing a hope that they might be successful in the
present instance. Something, however, in his manner, and especially the great stress laid upon
careful watching of the patient's diet while under this course of treatment, led me still to
fancy that he was not so entirely without doubt as he wished me to believe, but that, on the
contrary, his suspicions pointed towards Mr. Anderton, his friendship for whom made him
desirous of concealing them. This opinion was confirmed by the recollection of another
apparent instance of suspicion on the part of the Baron, to which a few days previously, however,
I had not at the time attached any importance. I accordingly continued the bark treatment,
determining should any fresh attack occur to take measures for investigating the matter,
for which purpose I gave private orders to the nurse, on whom I knew that I could thoroughly depend,
to allow nothing to be removed from the room until I had myself seen the patient.
the beneficial effects of the bark continued for about ten or twelve days at the end of which period i was sent for hurriedly in the middle of the night the disease having returned with greater violence than at any previous attack
having done what was in my power to alleviate the immediate pressure of the symptoms i took an opportunity of privately securing portions of the vomited and other matters which i immediately had submitted to a searching chemical analysis no trade
This, however, of antimony, arsenic, or any similar poison could be detected.
And as the Tannic acid appeared now to have lost its remedial power, I came finally to the
conclusion that its apparent efficacy had been due to some other unknown cause, and that
the suspicions of the Baron were altogether without foundation.
I continued the former treatment, varied from time to time, as experience suggested, but without
being able to arrest the progress of the disease, which I am inclined to think must have
been constitutional in its character, and probably hereditary, as I learned from Mr.
Anderton that the patient's mother had also died of some internal disease, the exact
symptoms of which, however, he was unable to call to mind. Towards the close of the case the
patient was almost constantly delirious from debility, and the immediate cause of death was
entire prostration and exhaustion of the system.
I wished Mr. Anderton to allow a post-mortem examination with a view to discovering the true nature of the disorder, but he seemed so extremely sensitive on the subject, and was in such a state of nervous depression that I forbore to press the point.
The Baron also seemed to discourage him from such an idea. Subsequently an order came for an inquest, and I then assisted in the analysis which followed, and which was performed by Mr. Prendergast. We found no traces of anteced.
in any part of the body or its contents. The report of Mr. Prendergast, in which I fully concurred,
will show the result of the analysis. Looking at that, and at all the circumstances of the
case, I was, and still am, convinced that Mr. Anderton was perfectly innocent of the crime
imputed. In answer to the queries forwarded at various times by Mr. Henderson, Dr. Dodsworth
gives the following replies. 1. In questioning the Baron as to his suggestion,
suggestion respecting the tincture of Tannin, I put it plainly to him whether he had been led to make it by any suspicion of poison.
This he disclaimed with equal directness, but with such a hesitation as convinced me that the suspicion was really in his mind.
Two, I told the Baron that I had exhibited bark and other similar remedies, and with what success?
He smiled, and turned the conversation.
Three, the Baron was not present at the post-mortem examinations.
He wished very much to be so, but Mr. Prendergast objected so strongly that I was obliged to refuse him.
I promised, however, to let him know by Telegraph the result of the examination, which took place in Birmingham where Mr. Prendergast was living at the time.
I enclose a copy of the message sent. He offered to assist in removing the intestines, etc., from the body,
but this I also declined, as Mr. Prendergast had particularly requested me to allow no one to come near the body after.
it was opened, but myself and some student or surgeon from one of the great hospitals to render
such assistance as might be necessary. The caution was, I think, a very reasonable one, and I
followed it out strictly. Four, the Baron certainly seemed at first, as I thought,
annoyed at being excluded, but I attributed this to his interest in the case. He did not make
the request as to telegraphing at the time, but wrote to me afterwards on the subject.
5. The object of Mr. Prendergast's precaution was, of course, to prevent the body from being tampered with.
6. By being tampered with, I mean in such manner as to destroy traces of the poison.
7. It would, of course, be possible to manufacture traces of poison where none had previously existed,
but this could only be done with the view of fastening on an innocent person, the guilt of murder,
which had never been committed, and was by no means what we is.
intended to guard against, in the exclusion of his friends.
8.
Certainly, had such a thing been successfully attempted in this instance,
it would have rendered the case conclusive against Mr. Anderton.
9. The other incident to which I have alluded as evincing suspicion on the part of the
baron was as follows.
We were one morning in consultation in Mr. Anderton's room.
I wished to seal a letter.
The baron alighted a taper for me with a piece of paper,
which he took from the wastebasket.
As he did so, he appeared,
struck with something on the paper,
and untwisted it and showed it to me.
There were only a few letters on it,
part having been torn off and part burned.
The letters were
R-T-A-R-E-E,
and part of what was evidently a T.
Beneath was the upper portion of a capital P in writing.
I did not, however, take much note,
of it, and the thing passed from my mind.
Ten, I have no doubt myself that the paper came from the waist-basket.
The Baron said so. I did not actually see him take it out, but I saw him stoop to do so.
There was nothing physically impossible in his having taken the paper from his own pocket,
but I cannot see the slightest reason for such a supposition.
The only object he could possibly have had in such an act would have been that of throwing
suspicion on Mr. Anderton, and his whole disarmament.
evidently, was to conceal the suspicions in his own mind as far as possible.
11. The Baron gave me no other grounds for supposing that he suspected anything.
On the contrary, he was continually pointing out to me the affection of Mr. Anderson for his
wife, and especially the assiduity of his attendance in permitting no one else to administer
either food or medicine.
12. The practical effect of all this was, certainly, I admit, to impress upon my
own mind the suspicious circumstances of the case more strongly, perhaps, than if they had been
pointed out in a directly hostile manner. It is impossible, however, that the Baron could have
reckoned upon this, and I feel bound to add that it seems to me exceeding the limits of legitimate
inquiry to suggest anything of the kind.
Item 3. Statement of Mrs. Edwards
I'm a sick nurse. I was in attendance on poor Mrs. Anderson all through her sickness.
The poor lady was greatly cast down.
She was expecting her death for weeks before it came.
She seemed to think there was a doom on her.
I do not think she had any suspicion that she was being poisoned.
I am sure, poor dear lady, no one would ever think of poisoning her.
Everybody loved her too much.
Mr. Anderton was dotingly fond of her.
I never saw so good a husband in my life.
I could have done anything for him.
He was so good to his poor wife.
I don't think he hardly ever left her.
I used to be vexed sometimes because I said he would not let me do anything for her.
I mean he would not let me give her her slops or her physic.
She took nothing but slops, the best part of the time.
She couldn't feel to relish anything at all.
And meat made her vomit.
For the last two months or better, I don't think she took anything from anybody,
excepting it was from Mr. Anderton himself.
He used to bring her her physic, as regular as the clock struck,
and everything from the kitchen was took first into his room,
he wasn't with the mistress, and he would carry it to her himself. He used to have
rare work sometimes to get her to take anything. I am sure she wouldn't have done it, poor
lady, for any one but him. Not the last few weeks. She was so very sick and ill, and everything
seemed to turn upon her stomach. Mr. Anderton always slept on a mattress in the mistress's
room, so as to be within call. The mattress was put on the floor by the side of the bed, and nobody
could have got to the bed without waking him. He was a very large,
sleeper. The least little sound used to wake him, and I often told him he was going the way to
kill himself, and then what were our poor lady do? Once or twice I persuaded him to go out for a bit,
and then he always insisted on my not leaving the room while he was away. Even when he was in his
study, he always made me stay with the lady, and if I wanted to go out for anything I was to ring
for him. Mrs. Anderson was never left without one or other of us for an hour until the last
six weeks, when she grew so bad, another nurse had to be got.
Then we three did the same way between us.
We were obliged to take her because I was getting quite knocked ship.
However, Mr. Anderton kept up the way he did, I cannot think or say,
but he broke down altogether when the mistress died.
I don't think after that the poor gentleman was ever quite right in his head.
I remember the doctor asking him one day whether he had any tartar emetic in the house.
He said no, but he would get some if it was wanted.
nothing more passed at the time, so far as I know.
It was brought to my mind again by something which happened after the poor lady's death.
It was nothing very particular, only I found in her room a piece of paper with Tata Emetic printed on it.
That was all that was printed, but the word poison was written under it.
I kept the paper and showed it to the Baron.
I don't know why I did so.
I suppose it was because he was in the house at the time.
Afterwards I showed it to the lawyer, and he took charge of it.
I had no particular suspicion, none at all.
I can't tell why I took it up.
I did it without thinking quite promiscuous like.
I didn't show it to the master because he was too ill to be worried.
That was the only reason.
The above is the evidence I gave at the inquest.
I have nothing more to add.
I am quite sure that Mr. and Mrs. Anderton were very fond of each other.
I never saw two people so affectionate like.
The Baron was very fond of both of them.
I don't think Mrs. Anderson liked him much.
she seemed to have a sort of dread of him.
I don't know why. She never said so.
The Baron used often to call on Mr. Hamilton to see the doctor,
but so far as I know he only saw the mistress once.
I think he knew she did not like him and kept away on purpose.
He was a very kind-hearted gentleman.
He was always particularly polite and civil-spoken to me.
He used often to talk to me about master doting so on mistress.
He used to speak about his always giving her her physic and things.
I remember one day his saying it wouldn't be very easy to give her anything unwholesome without his knowing of it, or something of that sort.
He seemed as if he never could say enough in praise of Master, and I am sure he deserved it.
I took him the paper I found, just like I might have taken it to Master, if he had been well enough.
He was in the house at the time.
He had been in the poor lady's room with Dr. Dodsworth just before, and had stayed in the parlour to write something.
He sent me into the room to see if he had left his glove there.
It was in looking for it that I saw the paper.
It was just lying under the bed when I stooped down to look for the glove.
I took it up at first thinking how careless it was to have left it there
when the room was put straight after the poor lady died,
and then I saw what was written upon it.
The glove was lying on the floor close to it.
There was no valance to the bed.
It had been taken off for the sake of sweetness.
I forget exactly what the baron had said when I showed him the paper.
It was something that made me think I might get into trouble
about it. That's why I showed it to the lawyer. My brother had been to him once before about some
money that ought to have come to us. He took the paper to the magistrates, and that was how
the inquest came about. I was very angry about it, and so was the Baron. He asked me how I could
have been so foolish. I don't know what made me think of taking it to him. I think it was something
that Baron said. He did not advise me to do it. He did not advise me anything, but I think
he wanted me to burn it. I offered it to him, but he said he was afraid, or something of that kind,
and I think that was what put it into my head to ask a lawyer about it.
Item 4. Memorandum by Mr. Henderson
The statement of the other nurse, herewith enclosed, merely corroborates that of Mrs. Edwards,
with respect to such matters as came within her cognizance. I have therefore not thought it
necessary to insert it here. Mr. Prendergast's report, also enclosed, is
somewhat lengthy, and of a purely technical character. It is to the following effect.
1. That on examination the body of the late Mrs. Anderson presented in all respects the precise
appearance which would be exhibited in a case of poisoning by antimony. Two, it was nevertheless
possible to account for these appearances as the result of chronic gastritis or gastroenteritis,
though in some respects not such as either of those diseases would be expected to present.
3. The strictest and most thorough examination entirely failed in showing the very slightest trace
of either antimony or arsenic, either in the contents of the various organs or in the tissues.
4. A portion of the medicine last taken by the deceased was also examined but equally without
result. 5. From the lengthened period over which the poisoning, if any, must have extended
and the small doses in which it must have been administered,
it is scarcely possible, but that, had such really mean the case,
some traces of it must have been found in the tissues,
though not perhaps in the contents of the stomach, etc.
6. In a case of poisoning also,
the symptoms would have recurred from their severest form
within a short period of taking the food or medicine
in which it had been administered.
In this case, however, they appear to have uniformly shown themselves
at a late period of the night.
and several hours after either food or medicine had been taken.
7. It is therefore concluded that, notwithstanding the suspicious appearance of the body on this section,
death is to be attributed not to poison, but to an abnormal form of chronic gastroenteritis,
for the peculiar symptoms of which the exceptional constitution of the deceased may in some degree account.
Item 5. Statement of Police Sergeant Edward Redding
I am a sergeant of the detective staff of the Metropolitan Police.
In October 1856 I was on duty at Notting Hill.
I was employed to watch a gentleman by the name of Anderton.
He was in custody on a coroner's warrant for the murder of his lady,
but couldn't be removed on account of being ill.
I was put in the house to prevent his escape.
I did not stay in his room.
I did at first, but it seemed of no use.
So I spoke to our superintendent and got leave from me.
him to stop in the outer room. I did this to make things pleasant. I always try to make things
as pleasant as I can, compatible with duty, especially when it's a gentleman. It comes harder on
them than on the regular hands because they are not so much use to it. In this case,
prisoner seemed to take on terribly. He was very weak and ill, too ill, seemingly, to get out
of bed. He used to lie with his eyes fixed upon one corner of the room, muttering sometimes to
himself, but I couldn't tell what. He never spoke to anyone.
The only time he spoke was once to ask me to let him see the body.
I hadn't the heart to say no, but I went with him and kept at the door.
He could hardly totter along. He was so weakly.
After about half an hour, I thought it was all very quiet and looked in.
He was lying on the floor in a dead faint, and I carried him back.
He never spoke again, but lay just as I have said.
Of course I took every precaution.
Prisoner's room had two doors, one opening on the landing,
and the other into the room where I stopped.
I locked up the outer door and put three or four screws in it from the outside.
The window was too high to break out at,
but our men used to keep an eye upon it from the street.
At night I used to lock the door of my room
and stick open the door between the two.
I was relieved occasionally by Sergeant Walsh.
Footnote.
The evidence of Sergeant Walsh is enclosed,
but it is merely corroborative of the present statement, R.H.
but I mostly preferred seeing to it myself
I like to keep my own work in my own hands
and this was a very interesting case
when I first took charge
I made a careful examination of the premises
and of all papers and the like
I found nothing to criminate the prisoner
I found a journal of the lady who was murdered
with a note at the end in his handwriting
but so far as it went they seemed to be on very good terms
I found also a lot of prescriptions
and notes referring to her illness
but no papers like that found by the nurse nor any traces of powders or drugs of any kind.
I went with the nurse into the bedroom of the murdered party
and made her point out the exact spot where the paper was found.
According to what she said it was lying just under the bed on the right-hand side.
The glove was lying close to it, but not under the bed.
Somehow I didn't quite feel as if it was all on the square.
I thought the business of the paper looked rather queer.
It didn't seem quite feasible like.
I've known a thing of that sort by way of a plant before now, so I thought I'd just go on asking questions.
That's always my way.
I ask all kinds of questions about everything, feeling my way like.
I generally find something turn up that way before I have done.
Something turned up this time.
I don't know that it was much, perhaps not.
I have my own opinion about that.
This is how it was.
After more questions of one kind and another, I got to something that led me to ask the nurse,
which side of the bed Mr. Anderson usually went to give the lady food and physic.
She and the other servants all agreed that, being naturally left-handed like, he always went
to the left-hand side of the bed, so as he could get to feed her with a spoon. He was very
bad with his right hand. Couldn't handle a spoon with it no more than some of us could with
the left. Nurse said she had seen him try once or twice, which she always spilt
everything. I mean, of course, with his right hand. He was a man. He was a man. He was a man. He was
was handy enough with his left. When I heard this I began to suspect we might be on a false
scent. This is the way I looked at it. The glove, as I told you, was lying on the floor by the
right side of the bed, so as anybody who dropped it must have been standing on that side,
which it's the natural side to go as being nearest the door. The paper was close to it,
just under the same side of the bed. Though I took it, as pretty clear, prisoner hadn't put
that paper there for the purpose, but if he'd done it at all, he had dropped it by accident in
giving the stuff. I fancy too he'd naturally be particularly careful in giving that sort of stuff
not to spill it about the place, so he'd be pretty well sure to take his best hand to it. In that case,
he'd have dropped it on the left-hand side of the bed, not the right. Still, of course, it might
have got blown across, or, for the matter of that, kicked, though that was not very likely,
as the bed was a wide one, and put in a sort of recess-like, quite out of any sort of draft.
So I thought I'd have another look at the place, and poking about under the bed, I found a long narrow box, which the servants told me was full of bows and arrows, and hadn't been moved out of its place since they first came to the house.
It took up the whole length of the bed, within a foot or so, and lay right along the middle on the floor.
There was a mark along the floor that showed how long it had been there.
A bit of paper like that never could have got blown right over that without touching it, if there had been ever such a draught.
When I'd got so far, I fancied things began to look very queer,
so I got the bed shifted out of its place altogether.
The coffin was in the way, and I got that move to one side of the room,
and pulled the bed right clear in the box.
As we shifted the coffin, I thought I saw something like a piece of paper under the flannel shroud.
I said nothing at the time but waited till the undertaker's men were out of the room, and I was alone.
Then I opened the shroud and found a small folded paper.
It was put just under the hands which were crossed over the buzzer,
of the corpse. I opened it and found a lock of hair, which I saw directly was Mr. Anderton's,
and there were a few words in writing which I copied down in my notebook. And then I put the hair
and the paper and all back where I found them. The writing was, pray for me, darling, pray for me.
I knew the hand at once for Mr. Andertons. His writing is very remarkable, by reason I suppose
of being so left-handed. Of course that wasn't evidence, but somehow I got an idea out of it,
that a man wouldn't go on in that way with his wife just after he'd been and murdered her.
It struck me that that would be against nature, leastways if he was in his right mind.
And after I had finished with the coffin, I took a look at the box.
As I expected, the top was covered ever so thick with dust,
and it was pretty clear that, at all events, the bit of paper had never lain atop of it.
I put a piece just like it on to try and blew it off again,
and it made a great mark and got all dirty.
The paper picked up by the nurse was quite clean, or very nearly so.
Putting all this together I came pretty nigh a conclusion that,
at all events, it wasn't Mr. Anderton as had dropped the paper there.
The sides of the box were also dusty,
but there were marks on them like as if a brush or a broom had brushed against them.
I put the box and the bed back in their places,
and went down to question the housemaid.
Footnote, the housemaid's deposition corroborates this part of the evidence.
I found that she had put the room tidy the day Mrs. Anderson died,
and had passed a short-haired broom under the bed,
as there were several things lying about.
She said she was quite sure there was no bit of paper there then,
as she had stooped down and looked under.
I tried with the same broom,
and you couldn't reach the box without stooping, as she said.
I then inquired who had been in the room between the time of the death
and the finding of the paper.
No one had been in there but the nurse,
the doctor, the housemaid, and Baron R.
I was determined to hunt it out if possible.
I questioned the nurse and the housemaid, on the quiet, not to excite suspicion,
but felt pretty clear that they knew nothing more about it.
And when next Baron R came, I sounded him about different points.
He did not seem to know that Mr. Anderton was so left-handed,
nor could I get any information from him on the subject.
He didn't seem at first to see what I was driving at,
and of course I didn't mean he should,
but after a while I saw he had struck out at the same of the same of the same
idea as I had about the place where the paper was found, though I had not meant to let him
into that. He seemed quite struck by a heap of it. I fancied at the moment that he turned
regularly pale, but he was just blowing his nose with a large yellow silk handkerchief,
and I could not be sure. He said nothing to me of what he had guessed, nor did I to him.
I like to keep those things as quiet as I can, particularly from party's friends.
I have not been able to get any further clue, but I am convinced that something is to be made out of
that paper business yet. I generally know a cent when I get on one, and my notion is that I am
on one now. I did not see the Baron again till the evening before Mr. Anderton made away with
himself. He came then in a great hurry and insisted on seeing the prisoner. I said I would ask,
but did not expect he could, as Mr. Anderson would see or speak to no one. He seemed to be in
a sad state, partly with exhaustion after waiting on his wife so long, and partly with the
worry of having this hanging over him. He was a very sensitive gentleman, and seemed to take
it more to heart than anyone I ever saw. He wouldn't see anyone, not even his lawyer. When I told
him about the baron, however, he said he might come in, and they were together half an hour or more.
I did not hear anything that passed. When the baron came out, he took me on one side and told me
everything was all right, and his friend was sure to get off. He said he was quite overpowered with
the good news, and particularly begged that he might not be distilled.
by anyone, as he thought he could sleep now. He had hardly slept to wink all the time.
I promised not to disturb him, and he lay quite still all night. I peeped in once or twice to
make sure he was there, but did not speak. I noticed a faint smell like peaches once, but did not
think anything of it. In the morning I went to take him his breakfast, and found him dead,
and quite cold. In his hand was a little bottle, which had contained some prussic acid,
and which had evidently come out of a pocket medicine chest that lay on the bed.
I gave the alarm and the divisional surgeon was sent for, but he was stone dead.
At about nine o'clock the baron's servant came round to know whether he had left a pocket medicine chest the night before.
I questioned the servant and found the baron had given him a list of the places where he had been,
and that he had asked at several already.
The medicine chest wanted proved to be the one found in Mr. Anderson's room.
On the pillow, I found also a piece of paper in Mr. Anderson's handwriting, of which I enclose a copy.
Item six, pencil note found on the pillow of Mr. Anderson.
Let no man condemn me for what I do.
God knows how I have fought against it.
My darling, my own darling, have I not seen you night and day by my side beckoning me to come?
Not while a chance remained.
Not while there was one hope left to escape this doom of hideous disgrace,
which dogs me to the death.
No, darling, my honour,
your husband's honour, before all.
It is over now.
No chance, no hope.
Only ignominy, shame, death.
I come, darling.
You know whether I am guilty of this horrible charge.
My darling, my own darling,
I see you smile at the very thought.
God bless you for that smile.
God pardon me for what I am about to do.
God reunite us, darling
End of Section 6
Section 7 of the Notting Hill mystery by Charles Felix
This Librivox recording is in the public domain
Section 7
Item 1
Statement of Mr Henderson
In the concluding portion of the evidence
We have now a double object in view
First to lay before you the various links
By which the circumstances already detailed
are connected into a single chain, and, secondly, to elucidate the general bearing of the whole
upon the particular case of the death of Madam R, into which it is my more immediate duty to inquire.
It was this apparent connection with the entire story which first led me to investigate matters
otherwise quite beyond my province, and you will, I have no doubt, after reading the evidence,
concur in the propriety of my so doing.
It is unfortunate that, in this important part of the case, as previously with regard to the no less important point of the suspicious circumstances attendant on Madam R's first illness at Bogner, the evidence of the principal witnesses is open to very grave question.
It is not indeed, as then, that the moral character of the individuals themselves rests under any suspicion, for, so far as I have been able to learn, both the service of the servant,
of all work, and her lover, John Stiles, are perfectly respectable people, while the young
man, Aldridge, though certainly a foolish and perhaps rather a dissipated young fellow, has a very
fair character from the house of business in which he is now employed. But the evidence of the
two former is, as will be seen, greatly diminished in value by the circumstances under which it was
obtained. Whilst in the latter there is so clear a suspicion of animus as cannot but throw
still greater doubts upon evidence in itself sufficiently questionable, and rendered yet more
so by other circumstances which will hereafter more fully appear.
It was this man Aldrich, whose letter, as you will remember, led to the investigation,
of which the result is now before you, and his statement here too annexed, that first gave substance
to the suspicion of foul play on the part of the Baron, and in conjunction with the discovery
of the enclosed papers subsequently induced me to extend my inquiries to the cases of Mr and Mrs.
Anderton. I confess that, notwithstanding the doubt with which his statement is surrounded,
I am still inclined to accept it as substantially true, though possibly somewhat coloured by personal
feeling against the Baron. The point, however, has seemed to me of sufficient importance to justify
the occupying of a considerable portion of this present division of the case with such evidence,
as I have been able to gather respecting the circumstances of his final ejectment,
and it will be for you to determine, between the story as told himself and that of Baron R.
With regard to the other two witnesses, who, by one of those singular coincidences that,
in criminal cases seem so often to occur, are able to confirm in some degree the evidence of
Aldridge there is, I think, less difficulty. They had certainly not,
no business where they were, but the circumstances are such as to fully acquit them of any
felonious intent. While even had such existed, it would be difficult to see how the fact of
such intent could have exercised any influence over their present statements. It is, moreover,
quite clear that there has been no collusion upon the subject. I have now only to refer,
in conclusion, to the fragment of paper found in the Baron's room in Russell Place,
and the marked copy of the zoist belonging to the late Mr. Anderton, to which Mr. Morton
referred in his statement, as having formed the subject of discussion at Mr. Anderton's
house on the evening of the 13th of October 1854. The first of these is a portion of a letter
which I have endeavoured so far as possible to complete, admitting that I have done so
correctly, and coupling it, with the fact of the visit which, as I have been able to ascertain,
was paid by Foreign Lady to the Baron very early in the morning, following the death of
Madame R, it appears to throw no inconsiderable light upon the extraordinary circumstances
of the death of Madame R. The bearing of the latter upon the case will be perhaps less clear.
I have no hesitation in admitting that when the connection first suggested itself to my own mind,
I at once dismissed it as too absurd to be entertained for a moment,
but I feel bound to add that the further my inquiries have progressed,
the more strongly this apparent connection has forced itself upon me
as the only clue to a maze of coincidences,
such as it has never before been my lot to encounter,
and that, while even now unable to accept it as a fact,
I find it still more impossible to thrust it altogether on one side.
I have therefore left the matter for your decision, merely pointing out, as I have before,
in the opening portion of my report, that even admitting the influence of these passages upon the mind of the baron
and the ultimate success of the plan founded upon their suggestion,
that success, however extraordinary, may not necessarily involve, as at first appears,
the admission of those monstrous assertions of the mesmeric journal on which it was based.
With these observations I now submit to your consideration the concluding portion of the evidence,
after which it will only be necessary for me to take a brief review of the whole case,
before leaving it finally in your hands.
Item 2. Statement of Mrs. Jackson
My name is Mary Jackson. I live in Goswell Street City Road.
a monthly and sick nurse. In June 1856 I was engaged to nurse Madame R. I was recommended to the
Baron by Dr. Marsden, who were lodged in the same house. I have often nursed for him.
Madame R. was not very ill. I don't think she was ill enough to require a nurse. Of course,
she was the better for one, everybody always is, but she could have done without one.
I came by the Baron's wish. He was anxious like. The poor gentleman was very fond.
of his wife. I never saw such a good husband. I'm sure no other husband would have done what he
did, and she's so cold to him. I don't think she cared about him at all. She hardly ever spoke
to him, unless it was when he spoke first. She never spoke much. She always seemed frightened,
especially when the Baron was there. She certainly seemed to be afraid of him, but I can't tell
why. He was always kind to her. He was the nicest and most civil-spoken gentleman I ever knew.
It was not that he was not particular, quite the reverse.
I wish all husbands were half so particular, and then the nurses wouldn't so often get into trouble.
Everything used to be done like clockwork.
Every morning he used to give me a paper what was to be given in the day.
I mean medicine and food.
A list of everything, with the time it was to be taken.
Everything used to be ready, and I used to give it regular.
No one else ever used to give anything.
The Baron never gave anything himself.
never at all I'm quite sure of that he used to say that it was nurse's business and so it is he often said he had seen so much sickness he had learned never twin to fear with the nurse and I only wish all other gentlemen would do the same he used to be very particular about the physic we always have the bottles for our perquisite we get a shilling a dozen for them all round if they are clean the baron objected to this he allowed me a shilling a dozen instead the bottles were all put away in a cupboard
they never used to be quite emptied, the Baron always made a point of having fresh in before the old was quite finished.
He said he always liked to have them to refer to in case of accident or mistake.
He was a very careful gentleman. I nursed Madame R. every day until her recovery.
I am quite certain that during the hours I was there, nothing was ever given to her but what passed through my hands.
Item 3. Statement of Mrs. Ellis
My name is Jean Ellis. I am a sick nurse and living good street, totes.
North Norm Court Road. In about the end of July 1856 I was engaged as night nurse to Madame R.
Perhaps she did not exactly require one. She was ill, but she could help herself.
At times she was very ill. It was much more comfortable for her, and she could afford it.
Baron R. never seemed to spare anything for her. She was generally worse at night.
The worst attacks used to come on about every fortnight. It was generally on a Saturday.
I took turn and turn about with Mrs. Jackson. She was generally,
He took the day work and I took the night.
I used to come at ten o'clock and leave at breakfast time.
During that time I was never out of the room.
It was the Baron's particular desire.
When I first came he made it a condition that I should never leave the room and never go to
sleep.
He was the most particular gentleman I ever nurse for.
I have nothing whatever to say against him.
Quite the contrary, he was always civil and pleasant spoken and behaved most handsome as
gentlemen should do.
He was uncommon fond of the lady.
She didn't seem to care much about him.
She was ill, poor soul, and could not care about anybody.
She seemed quite frightened, like.
When the baron came into the room, she used to follow him about with her eyes,
as if she was afraid of him.
I never heard him say an unkind word.
Other times she would lie quite, quiet, and not speak a word for hours.
She seemed afraid of everybody.
If I moved about the room, I could see her eyes following me about and watching me everywhere.
I think it was part of her complaint.
The Baron was most attentive.
I never saw such an attentive husband.
He used to lie in the next room.
It opened into the bedroom, and he always had the door wide open.
He was a wonderfully light sleeper.
If either of us spoke a word, he would be in the room directly to ask what was the matter.
I couldn't even move across the room, but what he would hear it.
He was a wonderful man.
He seemed to live almost without sleep.
I think it must have been the meat, did it.
He used to eat enormous quoth.
quantities of meat. I never saw a man eat so much. When I first came, he used to joke with me about it.
Madame Arr was not so bad then, and we used to talk sometimes. He told me it was because he was a
mesmerizer. I don't believe in mesmerism, I told him so. He didn't say anything. He only laughed.
One night he offered to send me to sleep. That was when I had been there about a week. I said,
he might try if he could. He looked hard at me ever so long, I made some odd motions with his hands.
I did go to sleep.
I don't believe it was mesmerism.
Of course not.
I think it was looking at his eyes.
I told him so.
He asked if he should do it again.
He did it once more.
That was the night after.
I went to sleep then almost directly.
Of course I knew it was not mesmerism,
but I couldn't help it.
He did not talk about it anymore.
He only said that I must take care
not to go to sleep in my own accord.
I did drop asleep three or four times after that.
That was not from anything
the Baron did. He was not in the room at the time. He must have been in the next room. I suppose the door was open. It always was. The first time I went to sleep about a week after we had talked about the mesmerism. It was on a Saturday night, or Friday, I'm not quite sure which. It was one of the nights when Madame R. was so ill. She had gone to sleep at about 11 o'clock. She seemed very well then. She was sleeping quite quiet. I supposed I must have dropped off. I was awoke by a moaning in a sleep.
That was about one o'clock.
She soon woke up in great pain and had a very bad attack.
The baron came into the room just as I woke.
Something woke him and he came in directly.
He told me what it was that woke him.
It was me snoring, he said so.
I fell asleep again a fortnight after in the same way.
The baron was not there.
Madame R was asleep.
She had not slept for many nights.
I must have dropped off in a doze hearing her so nicely asleep.
The Baron woke me
That was about one o'clock
He was very much displeased
He told me Madame R had been walking in her sleep
And might have killed herself
He said she went into the kitchen
I am certain that was where he said
I can swear it
He asked what I had taken for supper
And tasted what was left of the beer
He seemed very much vexed and disturbed
I was very sorry
And promised to be very careful another time
I never had such a thing happen
in any other case I told him so.
He said he would look over it that time,
but it must never happen again.
He went upstairs afterwards.
I think it was to speak to somebody.
He said somebody had seen her, I think.
Madame R was ill that night.
She began to moan while we were talking
and had a very bad attack.
The baron said she must have caught cold
and I'm afraid she did.
I determined to be particularly careful
for the time to come.
I was very careful for some time,
particularly when she was asleep.
She hardly slept at all for two weeks.
But when she did, I was very careful.
At the end of that time I must have fallen asleep again.
I was hardly aware of it.
I know I must have been asleep,
because when I looked at the clock it was two hours later than I thought.
Madam R was ill again that night.
I was very much vexed.
I began to think somebody was playing tricks upon me.
It was so strange coming every fortnight.
I did not tell the Baron.
I know it was wrong, but I was.
was afraid. Next fortnight I was on the lookout. Madame R. went to sleep again. I was determined
not to go to sleep. I thought somebody must have played tricks with the beer, so I wouldn't drink it.
I ate no supper, and drank nothing but some strong green tea I made for myself. I was quite sure
the tea must keep me awake. It did not. I awoke with a great start about one o'clock, and found
Madame R bad again, as usual. I was very much bothered about it. I made up my mind to tell the
baron if it happened again. It did happen again, but I did not tell him.
Madam R. was so bad that I was really afraid, and after that it never happened again, and she got
well. I know I ought to have told the baron, I'm very sorry I did not. Such a thing never happened
to me before. Of course I have slept in a sick room before, but not when it was against orders.
I was there about three months. I dropped asleep in that way, I think, six times, but I am not quite
sure. It was always while Madame R was asleep. She was always bad afterwards. I did not say anything to her
about it or about her walking. The baron in particular desired I would not. He said it would frighten her.
He never asked me again whether I had been asleep, or I would have told him. I was really going to
tell him once or twice, but something always happened to stop me. I can swear that nothing of the
kind ever happened to me before. There must have been something wrong. I have sick nurse to
twenty years, and have the best characters from many doctors and patients."
Footnote.
This I find to be the case, R.H.
Item 4.
Statement of Mr. Westmacott.
London, 20th of September 1857.
Sir, I have the honour to inform you that in compliance with your request I have submitted
to the most careful and searching examination and analysis the contents of three dozen and seven
43, medicine files forwarded by you for that purpose.
The number and contents of these files correspond exactly with the prescriptions, etc., furnished by
Mrs. Andrews and Emson.
Footnote, the chemists from whom the Baron obtained his medicines.
And after the most exact analysis I have been unable to detect the slightest trace of either
arsenic, antimony, or any similar substance.
I have the honour to be, your means.
most obedient servant Thomas Westmacott, analytical chemist.
Item 5. Statement of Henry Aldrich
My name is Henry Aldrich. I'm a clerk in the employer mess of Simpson and Co. City.
In the summer of 1856 I came to lodge at Mrs. Browns in Russell Place.
I did not come there first as a lodger but as a friend of her son.
I'd known him in Australia.
We were together in the same store in Melbourne and got to be great friends.
We did not come home in the same ship.
That is a mistake.
I came home some weeks before he did,
and was in Liverpool when he arrived.
I think he came in the lightning, but Conna was sure.
I used to board so many ships that I can't call to mind.
I was in a Liverpool house then for a time,
and it was my duty to board every ship as she came up.
I agreed to go with him to London.
I could not go directly as I had to give notice to my employers,
but I was to follow him.
He asked me to stay with him for his wedding at his mother's house.
and I did so. That was how I first came to Russell Place. After that he arranged with his mother
for me to take a room regularly, and I was to pay so much a week, and so much more when I got
a situation. I was not aware of the Baron making any objection. I saw very little of him. I
slept on the floor above. I was always very careful not to make any noise on account of Madame
R. She was ill, and I took particular care not to disturb her. I used sometimes to be out late.
I have been intoxicated in my life, not very often, not at all while I was at Russell Place.
I have been out to my friends while I was there and I've drunk wine and spirits, but never
to be the worst for it. I may have been merry, I don't say I have not been once or twice a little
excited with wine. What I mean is that I have never been in such a state as not to be quite
conscious of what I was doing, and quite able to control myself. I'm quite certain that I never
made the slightest disturbance or could have done so without knowing it.
That I will swear to.
I believe the Baron accused me of it to Mrs. Brown.
He spoke to her several times about it and wished her to turn me out.
She said she had never seen anything wrong and couldn't say anything till she did, because
I was her son's friend.
Alas, he got her to do it.
The reason was I was found by a policeman on the doorstep at twelve o'clock one night,
insensible.
The policeman knocked and rang and woke up the house, and the Baron
said I was drunk. I was perfectly sober, I had nothing whatever but one small bottle of
ale. The facts of the case were these, and I will swear to them. I had been kept late at our
office with some heavy correspondence, and I had then walked home with another clerk from the
same office, William Wells, having taken nothing but one small bottle of ale which I had a public
house in High Hoban, as I felt quite tired. Wells had some brandy and water. He left me at the corner
at Tottenham Court Road, and when I got to Russell place I tried to open the door with my latch
key. But the latch was fastened. Then I rang the bell and I could not make it sound, and the
handle came out loose, as if the wire was broken. I tried the key once more, and was just thinking
whether I should not go to some place, as I did not like to disturb Madame R by knocking,
when the door was opened from the inside. I turned round to go in when something was thrust into
my face, and I can remember nothing more. I must have fallen down,
insensible and the policeman found me. This is the truth. I could not see you open the door.
There was a street lamp close to the area gate, but the person was in the shadow. I cannot
account for it. I made sure at the time it was a trick of the baron to get me turned out. I think so
still, but I am not so sure of it as I was. What I mean is that, on reflection, I don't think
it is certainly enough to accuse him of such a thing. I will swear to the truth of what I have said,
I will swear that I was perfectly sober, as sober as I am now.
My employers and Will Wells can prove it.
I do not know why the Baron should have wished so much to turn me out.
We never had words about anything.
I don't think I ever spoke to him but once.
I mean, not more than good morning, as such like.
That was on the occasion about which I wrote to the assurance office after Madame R's death.
It was one Saturday night.
I had had a half holiday and been up to Putney in a boat with some friends.
We had drunk a good deal of beer and shandy gaff, but I was not drunk.
I was quite sober, though perhaps a little excited.
Nothing to speak of.
I got home at about eleven o'clock.
I had latch-key then, but the lot was hampered,
and when I got back home I found the servant girl sitting up to let me in.
I went up very quietly not to disturb madame R.
I saw a bedroom door ajar as I passed.
The door of the room next to it was wide open,
and there was some sort of lamp burning.
No one moved to said anything as I went back.
by, I took off my shoes to go more softly, but the house was old and it was impossible
to move without the stairs creaking a little.
The stairs below the Baron's room was stone and did not creak.
I had a candle which I shaded carefully with my hand.
I went to bed but I suppose I was overtired, for I could not get to sleep.
The night was very hot.
When I had been in bed about a couple of hours I thought I would have a good wash and see
if that would cool me.
I got up and went to the wash-handstand.
I found the jug empty.
The maid off and forgot to fill it.
I took the jug and went out onto the landing to fill it at the tap.
I went very softly not to disturb Madame R.
As I got onto the landing I saw someone coming out of her room
and went to look over the banister.
From the landing of my room you can see that of the floor below.
I looked over and saw that it was Madame R.
She was in a dressing-gown but had no candle.
She went to the stairs and there I lost sight of her.
As I watched her past the door of the other room, I saw the shadow of a man's head and shoulders
upon the wall, as if somebody was watching her.
I leaned against the banisters to watch her, and it creaked, and the shadow vanished directly.
When I looked up again it was gone, and at first I thought it must have been fancy,
but I'm quite certain about it now.
I was only doubtful for a moment.
It was so sudden.
I could swear to it now.
I saw it perfectly plain.
I saw it all the time Madame I was good.
going down the first flight of stairs, about twelve of them.
She was at the corner when I turned and leaned over to watch her.
I felt convinced that Madame I was walking in her sleep.
The staircase was quite dark beyond the corner, and she had walked straight down.
I was afraid she would hurt herself, and went down to the Baron's door.
He was asleep.
At least I had to knock twice.
He then came to the door, and I told him what I'd seen.
He seemed a good deal annoyed, and at once took up the lamp and went down the stairs.
I looked over the banister and saw him go down
From that place you can see right down to the door
Which leads to the kitchen stairs
There is a glass partition between them and the hall
I saw him going at the door
And I saw the light through the glass
As he went part of the way downstairs
Presently he came up again
And stood back from the door
While Madame Or came up past him
And walked up the stairs
Then he followed her
When I saw her coming up
I went back to my own landing and looked over
She went back to her own room, fast asleep still, as it seemed to me, and he followed.
I heard whispering in the room, and then the Baron came up to me.
He thanked me very much for telling him, and said that Madame R had gone down into the kitchen
and was just coming out as he got to the foot of the stairs.
He particularly begged me never to mention it, as it might come to her ears and do her arm,
and I have never spoken of it to anyone till I wrote to the assurance office.
I had almost forgotten all about it when it was recalled to my mind
by seeing that poor Madame Rha had killed herself in a sleepwalking fit.
I then wrote,
I had no malice against the Baron,
nor have I now.
I don't know why he tried to turn me out,
I suppose he really thought I disturbed his wife.
He was very fond of her,
and I dare say he was anxious and fretful about her.
I was very angry at the time,
but when I come to think of it,
I dare say I was hard upon him.
He never seemed to bear me any grudge about what I'd say,
seen. On the contrary, he always said he was very much obliged to me. This is all I know on the
subject, and I can swear to the truth of every word. I am quite positive, he said Madame R had been
into the kitchen. Item 6. Statement of Miles Thompson
I am a police constable. In August, 1856, I used to be on night duty in Russell Place.
I remember Baron R speaking to me one night and asking me to keep a lookout, as often as I could
of a night to keep the street quiet. He gave me five shillins for my extra trouble. I was on the
beat one night about twelve o'clock when I saw someone lying on the baron's doorstep. It was a young
gentleman, and at first I thought he was dead, but found he was only insensible. I set him up against
the railings and was going to ring the bell when I saw a latch key in his hand. I tried it in the
door and it opened it directly, and I took him into the hall. I then knocked and rang till
somebody came. The bell rang quite well. The Baron came down in his dressing-gown and two or three
other people. I offered to go for a doctor, but the Baron said he was only drunk. I helped to carry
him upstairs and got him into bed. The Baron gave me half-crow for my trouble. He seemed very much
annoyed, as was natural, and said he wished I had to take the young man to the station.
I think he was drunk myself. He smelt a little of beer, but not much. I helped to put him to bed
and went away. That is all I know.
N.B.
By letters from Mrs. Simpson and Mr. Wells,
Mr. Aldridge's assertion that he was sober is borne out,
up to the time of the latter's leaving him
at the corner of Tottenham Court Road,
certainly not more than half an hour before he was found,
as above stated, by Police Constable Thompson, R.H.
Item 7.
Statement of John Johnson
2.
Mr. Anderson
Sir, obedient to your commands.
I have examined the bellwire in rural place,
which, in my humble opinion,
it have been templed with by some hum-professional,
and which are where it have been took off the crank,
and put back all now how like,
which, henny professional,
and would be shamed for to do it.
I am sure your obedient servant, to command,
John Johnson, Plummer and Bellanger, Tottenhamcott Road, London.
Item 8. Statement of Susan Turner
My name is Susan Turner. In August 1856 I was general servant to Mrs. Brown in Russell Place.
I remember the night that Madame R. came downstairs. I had sat up to let Mr. Aldridge in
because the latch was broken. Mistress broke it that afternoon. I don't suppose the Baron
knew anything about it. Mr. Aldrich came in rather late. I cannot justly say the time.
He was quite right. I mean sober. He went straight up to bed.
I did not go up to bed. My young man was in the kitchen. He is very respectful.
young man upon a railway. I don't know what railway. I know he goes to Scotland sometimes
with his engine, that is all. He is what they call a fireman. He was going down with a luggage
train somewhere that night very late and came to see me. Mistress didn't know he was there. He
came in after she was gone to bed. He was to start at two, and we sat till about one. He was
just going away, and we were standing at the kitchen door when we heard somebody in the hall,
and I said, Oh, Laura, that's Mrs. He said,
you'll be coming to look for you, and wanted me to go and meet her while he cut out by the area.
I said, no, that wouldn't do by reason of it being all glass and a gas lamp at top of the
area at steps.
Footnote.
The arrangement alluded to will be seen from the accompanying plan.
The inner partition is entirely of glass, while the outer has a row of large panes along
the top.
I pulled him along to the lumber room.
The lumber room is behind the kitchen and the cellar.
There are some old boxes and things there, but nobody ever goes in.
into it. I thought my mistress would not think a look in there, and just as we got to the
door we saw somebody come from the hall and down the stairs. I whispered to John,
why, that's not Mrs, that's madam. My mistress was very tall and stout, and Madame R
was small and thin. I could see her as she came through the door, because there was some
sort of light in the hall. She came right downstairs and passed where we were. She went right
on into the little place at the end where the baron kept all his bottles and stuff. She did not
go into the kitchen, not at all. I will swear to that. She went into the Baron's place.
The laboratory, I day say it is. I don't know. It was where all the bottles are.
John and me crept up to the window and looked out. The window of the lumber room looks right into
the window of the back room where the bottles are. You could see in quite plain. It was a bright
moonlight night, and there was a sort of tin-looking glass over the back room window to make more
light-like. We saw madam go into the room and take a bottle from a shelf. She poured
out a glass full and drank it. Then she put the bottle back in its place. It was the last
in the second shelf. Then she went out again, and when we turned around, we saw a light shining
into the room from the kitchen stairs. It stayed there till madam had gone past our door again,
and then it went up again. Just as it got to the top of the stairs, I peeped out and saw it
was the baron. Madam was close behind him. I said to John, why John there's the baron? He said
he supposed he had come to look after his wife. After they had gone, John and me,
went into the bottle place. We found the glass on the table. There was a few drops of stuff in
it. John and me smelt it, and it was just like wine. Tasted just like wine, too. Then we looked
at the bottle. It was at the end of the second shelf. It was about half full of stuff that looked like
wine. There was something in gold letters on the bottle. I can't tell what it was. It was
VIN, something. I know that because John and me settled it must mean wine. I think I should know
the rest if I saw it, being here shown several labels, Witness picked out the following,
Vin, Ant, Pot, Tart, designating Antimonyal wine, a mixture of sherry and tartar emetic.
I am pretty sure that was the one. I remember it because they were such funny words.
I remember John and me joking about pots and pies. The stuff in the bottle smelled just like wine.
It was just like sherry wine. I did not taste that. John wouldn't let me. He said I might,
go and poison myself for aught I knew. We put the bottle back, and then John went away.
I said nothing about it to anybody. Not even when madam was taken ill that night. I was afraid
by reason of John. I have never said a word about it to any living soul till I was asked
to-day. Certainly not to Mr. Aldrich, nor he to me. I will swear to the truth of all I have said.
I am quite positive that madam never went near at the kitchen. I am quite positive that the
baron must have seen her come out of the bottle-place. He was standing with the candle in his
waiting for her that i can swear n b the statement of the young man referred to fully corroborates the above statement the accompanying plan will make this witness's evidence more clear
plan of basement floor of baron r's lodgings russell place a windows of lumber room and laboratory referred to in the evidence of john sanders and mary allen b b glass partitions item nine copy of a letter
from a leading mesmerist to the compiler, with reference to the power claimed by mesmeric
operators over those subjected to their influence.
Dorset Square
My dear sir,
Many times after throwing Sarah Partons into the mesmeric state, I have willed her to go into a dark
room and pick up a pin or other article, equally minute, and however powerless she might be at the
time out of the state was quite immaterial.
My will and power being employed was sufficient.
Then, Mr. L, a paralytic under my influence,
without losing consciousness or undergoing any recognisable change,
as many times, with the lame leg,
stepped up onto and down again from an ordinary dining-room chair.
This, of course, was a masterpiece of mesmeric manipulation.
I wish I could write more and better, but my eyes forbid.
With kindest regards, yours most truly,
D. Hands
Item 10. Fragment of letter
found in the Baron's room, after the death of Madame R.
Translation
They would hang thee, would they not, my poor Philip?
Well, by that child, that poor
little angel, who is now,
Is it not so, Philip?
Looking down on us from heaven, and whom we shall never see again,
by that child I swear it to you.
Once more,
Today is the 13th,
on the 15th very early in the morning I shall be at your house.
I must find you alone.
You understand me?
Alone in the world.
Do you not well know the means?
Oh, Philip, I love thee, I love thee.
Knowest thou what a jealous woman is?
Item 11.
Extracts from the Zoist magazine
number 47
for October 1854
Mesmeric cure of a lady
who had been 12 years in the horizontal position
with extreme suffering
by the Reverend R.A.F. Barrett
B.D., Senior Fellow of King's College, Cambridge.
In January 1852,
I was calling upon, blank,
when she happened to tell me
that she had been in considerable pain for a fortnight past,
that the only thing that relieved her was mesmer.
but the friend who used to mesmerize her was gone.
I continued to mesmerize her occasionally for some months.
April 21st, I kept her asleep an hour and a quarter in the morning, and the same in the evening.
She said, footnote,
In a former portion of the case we are told that this patient was clairvoyant and could see her own internal condition, R.H.
Her throat looked parched and feverish.
At her request I ate some of the black currant paste,
which she said moistened it.
She said,
Before you ate, my stomach was contracted,
and had a queer-looking sort of moisture in it.
Now the stomach is its full size and does not look shrunk,
and part of the moisture is gone.
I, but you could not get nourishment so?
Answer,
Yes, I could get all my flesh,
my system once. April 26th. In the evening I kept her asleep one hour and took tea for her.
April 27. I ate dinner and she felt much stronger. I kept her asleep two hours and a quarter in the
morning and one hour in the evening eating for her as usual. End of Section 7. Section 8
of the Notting Hill mystery by Charles Felix. This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Section 8. Conclusion. There now only remains for me, in conclusion, to sum up as briefly
and succinctly as possible, the evidence contained in the preceding statements. In so doing
it will be necessary to adopt an arrangement somewhat different from that which has been
hitherto followed. Each step of the narrative will therefore be accompanied with a marginal
reference to the particular deposition from which it may be taken. First then, for what may be
called the preliminary portions of the evidence.
Section 1
With these we need, here deal but very briefly,
they consist almost entirely of letters furnished by the courtesy
of a near relation of the late Mrs. Anderton,
and read as follows.
Some six or seven and twenty years ago,
the mother of Mrs. Anderton, Lady Bolton,
after giving birth to twin daughters,
under circumstances of a peculiarly exciting
and agitating nature, died in childbed. Both Sir Edward Bolton and herself appear to have been
of a nervous temperament, and the effects of these combined influences is shown in the highly
nervous and susceptible organisation of the orphaned girls, and in a morbid sympathy of constitution
by which each appeared to suffer from any ailment of the other. This remarkable sympathy is
very clearly shown in more than one of the letters I have
submitted for your consideration, and I have numerous others in my position, which, should they
be considered insufficient, will place the matter irregular, as it certainly is, beyond the reach
of doubt. I must request you to bear it particularly and constantly in mind throughout the case.
Almost from the time of the mother's death, the children were placed in the care of a poor but
respectable woman at Hastings. Here, the younger, whose constitution appears to have been
originally much stronger than that of her sister, seems to have improved rapidly in health,
and in so doing to have mastered, in some degree, that morbid sympathy of temperament of which
I have spoken, and which, in the weaker organisation of her elder sister, still maintained its
former ascendancy. They were about six years old, when, whether through the carelessness of the
nurse or not, is immaterial to us now, the younger was lost during a pleasure excursion in the
neighborhood. Every inquiry was made, and it appeared pretty clear that she had fallen into the
hands of a gang of gypsies, who at that time infested the country round, but no further trace of
her was ever discovered. The elder sister, now left alone, seems to have been watched with
redoubled solicitude. There is nothing, however, in the years immediately following Miss C. Bolton's
disappearance, having any direct bearing upon our case, and I have therefore confined my
extracts, from the correspondence entrusted to me, to two or three letters from a lady in whose
charge she was placed at Hampstead, and one from an old friend of her mother, from which
we gather the fact of her marriage. The latter is chiefly notable as pointing out the nervous
and highly sensitive temperament of the young lady's husband, the late Mr. Anderton, to which
I shall have occasion at a later period of the case, more particularly to direct your attention.
The former gave evidence of a very important fact, namely that of the liability of Miss Bolton
to attacks of illness equally unaccountable and unmanageable, bearing a perfect resemblance to
those in which she suffered in her younger days sympathetically with the ailments of her sister,
and therefore to be not improbably attributed to a similar cause.
Thus far for the preliminary portion of the evidence.
Section 2
The second division places before us certain peculiarities in the married life of Mrs. Anderton.
Its more especial object, however, being to elucidate the connection between the parties
whose history we have hitherto been tracing, and the Baron are, with whose proceedings
we are properly concerned.
It appears, then, that in all respects but one, the married life of Mr. and Mrs. Anderton was
particularly happy. Notwithstanding their retired and often somewhat nomad life, and the limits
necessarily imposed thereby to the formation of friendships, the evidence of their devoted
attachment to each other is perfectly overwhelming. I have no less than 37 letters from
various quarters, all speaking more or less strongly upon this point, but I have thought it
better to select from the mass a small but sufficient number than to overload the case with
unnecessary repetition. In one respect alone their happiness was incomplete. It was, as had been
justly observed by Mrs. Ward, most unfortunate that the choice of Miss Bolton should have fallen upon
a gentleman, who, however, eligible in every other respect, was from his extreme constitutional
nervousness, so peculiarly ill-adapted for a union with a lady of such a very similar organisation.
The connection seems to have borne its natural fruit
in the increased delicacy of both parties,
their married life being spent in an almost continual search after health.
Among the numerous experiments tried,
with this object they at length appear to have had recourse to mesmerism,
becoming finally patients of Baron R,
a well-known professor of that and other kindred impositions.
Mrs. Anderton had not been long under his care,
when the remonstrances of several friends led to the cessation of the Baron's immediate
manipulations. The mesmeric fluid being now conveyed to the patient through the intervention
of a third party, Mademoiselle Rosalie. The medium, thus employed, was a young person
regularly retained by Baron R for that purpose, and of her it is necessary here to say a few
words. She appears to have been about the age of Mrs. Anderton, though looking perhaps a little
older than her years, slight in figure with dark hair and eyes, and in all respects but one,
answering precisely to the description of that lady's lost sister. The single difference alluded
to, that of wide and clumsy feet, is amply accounted for by the nature of her former
avocation. She had been, for several years, a tight-rope dancer, etc.
in the employ of a travelling circus proprietor, who, by his own account, had purchased her for a
trifling sum of a gang of chipses at Lewis, just at the very time when the younger Miss Bolton
was stolen at Hastings by a gang whose course was tracked through Lewis to the westward.
Of him she was again purchased by the Baron, who appears even at the outset, to have exercised
a singular power over her, the fascination of his glance falling on her whilst engaged in
upon the stage having compelled her to stop short in the performance of her part there can I
think be little doubt that this girl Rosalie was in fact the lost sister of Mrs.
Anderton and of this we shall find that the Baron R very shortly became cognizant.
It does not appear that on the first meeting of the sisters he had any idea of the
relationship between them. He was indeed perfectly ignorant of the early history of both.
The extraordinary sympathy, therefore, which immediately manifested itself between them, was
not improbably set down by him as a mere result of the mesmeric rapport, and it was not till
he had been for some weeks in attendance on Mrs. Anderton that accident led him to divine
its true origin. Nor, on the other hand, does this singular sympathy, a sympathy manifested
in a precisely similar manner to that known to have existed years ago between the sisters,
appear to have raised any suspicion of the truth in the mind of either Mrs. Anderton or her husband.
From the former, indeed, all mention of her early life had been carefully kept till she had probably
almost, if not entirely, forgotten the event, while the latter merely remembered it as a tale
which had long since ceased to possess any present interest.
The two sisters were thus for several weeks in the closest contact, the effects of which
may or may not have been heightened by the so-called mesmeric connection between them,
before any suspicion of their relationship crossed the mind of anyone.
One evening, however, and from certain peculiar circumstances,
we are enabled to fix the date precisely to the 13th of October 1854.
The Baron appears beyond all doubt to have become cognizant of the fact.
I must request your particular attention to the circumstances by which his discovery of it
was attended.
On that evening the conversation appears to have very naturally turned upon a certain extraordinary
case professed to be reported in a number of the Zoist Mesmeric magazine published a few days
before. The pretended case was that of a lady suffering from some internal disorder which
forbade her to swallow any food, and receiving sustenance through mesmeric sympathy with
the operator who ate for her from this extraordinary
tale the conversation turned naturally to other manifestations of constitutional sympathy,
as an instance of which Mr. Anderton related the story of Mrs. Anderson's lost sister,
and the singular bond which had existed between them. The conversation appears to have continued
for some time, and in the course of it, a jesting remark was made by one of the party,
in allusion to the story of eating by deputy, to which I am inclined to look as the keynote of
this horrible affair.
I said, deposes Mr. Morton, I said it was lucky for the young woman that the fellow didn't
eat anything unwholesome. From the moment these words were spoken, the Baron appears to have
dropped out of the conversation altogether. More than this, he was clearly in a condition of
great mental preoccupation and disturbance. Mr. Morton goes on to describe the singularity of his
manner, the letting of his cigar expire between his teeth, and the tremulousness of his hands,
so excessive that, in attempting to relight it, he only succeeded in destroying that of his friend.
There can, I think, be no doubt whatever, that from that moment he believed thoroughly
in the identity of Rosalie with the lost sister of Mrs. Anderton.
What other ideas the conversation had suggested to him, we must endeavour to ascertain from
the evidence that follows.
On the morning of the day succeeding that on the evening of which he had become convinced of
Rosalie's identity, we find Baron R at Doctor's Commons inquiring into the particulars of a
will by which the sum of £25,000 had been bequeathed under certain conditions to the children
of Lady Bolton. Section 2 Item 5
Under the provisions of this will, the girl Rosalie was, after her sister and Mr. Anderton,
the heir to this legacy. We need, I think, have no difficulty in connecting the acquisition of
intelligence with the steps by which it was immediately followed. Mr. Anderton at once received an
intimation of the Baron's approaching departure for the continent, and at the end of the third week
from that time leave was taken, and he apparently started upon his journey. In point of fact,
however, his plans were of a very different character. During the three weeks which intervened
between his visit to the Doctor's Commons and his farewell to Mr. Anderton, there had been
advertised in the parish church of Kensington the bands of marriage between himself and his medium,
Rosalie, not indeed in the names by which they were ordinarily known, and which would very
probably have excited attention but in the family name, if so it be, of the Baron, and in that
by which Rosalie was originally known when with the travelling circus. By what means he prevailed
upon his victim to consent to such a step is not important to the matter in.
hand. The general tenor of the subsequent evidence shows clearly that it must have been under some
form of compulsion, and indeed the unfortunate girl seems to have been made by some means altogether
subservient to his will. The marriage thus secretly effected, the Baron and his wife leave
town, not for the continent, as stated to Mr. Anderton, but for Bogner, an out-of-the-way little
watering-place on the Sussex coast, deserted save for the week of the Goodwood Racing.
where at that time of the year
he was not likely to meet with anyone
to whom he was known.
Before endeavouring to investigate
the motive of all this mystery,
it is necessary to bear in mind
one important fact.
Between the wife of Baron R
and Mr Wilson's legacy of
25,000 pounds,
the lives of Mr. and Mrs. Anderton
now alone intervened.
The first few days
of the Baron's stay in Bogner
seemed to have been devoted to the search
for a servant, he having insisted on the unusual arrangement of himself providing one in the house
where he lodged. It is worthy of note that the one finally selected was in a position with
respect to character that placed her entirely in her master's power. It is unfortunate that
this same defect of character necessarily lessens the value of evidence from such a source.
We must, however, take it for what it's worth, remembering at the same time that there is a
total absence of any apparent motive, save that of telling the truth, for the statement she has
made. It appears, then, from her account, that after trying by every means to tempt her into
some repetition of her former error, the Baron at last seized upon the pretext of her taking
from the breakfast-table a single taste of jam upon her finger, to threaten her with immediate
and utter ruin. Only one loophole was left by which she could escape. The alternative was, indeed,
most ingeniously and delicately veiled, under the pretext of seeking a plausible reason for
her dismissal. But in point of fact it amounted to this, that as a condition of her alleged
offence not being recorded against her, she would own to the commission of another, with which
she had nothing whatever to do. The offence to which she was falsely to plead guilty was this.
on the night succeeding the commission of the fault of which, such as it was, she was really guilty,
Madame R. was taken suddenly ill. The symptoms were those of antimonial poisoning. The presence of
antimony in the stomach was clearly shown. In the presence of the medical man who had been
called in, the girl was taxed by the baron with having administered by way of a trick, a dose of
Tata emetic, and she, in obedience to a strong hint from her master, confesses to her.
to the delinquency, and was thereupon dismissed, with a good character in other respects.
Freed from the dread of exposure, she now flatly denies the whole affair, both the trick and
of the quarrel which was supposed to have led to it, and I am bound to say that looking both
to external and internal evidence, her statement seems worthy of credit.
Nevertheless, the poison was unquestionably administered. By whom?
Quibono, certainly, it will be said not for that of the Baron, for until at least the death of Mr. and Mrs. Anderton, his interest was clearly in the life of his wife.
It is not therefore by any means to be supposed that he would, before that event, attempt to poison her.
Of this mystery, then, it appears that we must seek the solution elsewhere.
Section 3
Returning then for a time to Mr. and Mrs. Anderton,
we find that the latter has also suffered from an attack of illness.
Comparing her journal and the evidence of her doctor,
with that given in the case of Madame R,
it appears that the symptoms were identical in every respect,
with this single but important exception,
that in this case there is no apparent cause for the attack,
nor can any trace of poison be found.
A little further inquiry,
and we arrive at a yet more mysterious coincidence.
It is a matter of universal experience,
that almost the most fatal enemy of crime is over precaution.
In this particular case, the precautions of the Baron R
appear to have been dictated by a skill and forethought,
almost superhuman, and so admirably have they been taken
that, save in the concealment of the marriage,
it is almost impossible to recognise that in them any sinister motive whatever.
His course, with respect to the servant-girl,
though dictated, as we believe, by the most criminal designs,
is perfectly consistent with motives of the very highest philanthropy.
Even in the concealment of the marriage, once granting,
as I think may very fairly be granted,
that such a marriage might be concealed without any necessary imputation of evil,
the means adopted were equally simple, effective and unblameable.
They consisted merely in the use of real, instead of the stage names of the contracting parties,
and in the very proper avoidance of all great ones,
ground for scandal by hiring another lodging, in order that, before marriage, the address of both
parties might not be the same. In the illness of Madame R, too, at Bognar, nothing can to all
appearance be more straightforward than the Baron's conduct. He at once proclaims his suspicion
of poison, sends for an eminent physician, verifies his doubts, administers the proper
remedies, and dismisses the servant by whose fault the attack has been occasioned.
Viewed with an eye of suspicion, there is indeed something questionable in the selection of the medical attendant.
Why should the Baron refuse to send for either of the local practitioners,
both gentlemen of skill and reputation, and insist on calling in a stranger to the place,
who in a very few days would leave it and very probably return no more?
Distrust of country doctors, and decided preference for London's skill,
furnishes us, as usual, with a prompt and plausible reply.
It does not, however, exclude the possibility that the expediency of removing as far as possible
all evidence of what has passed may have in some degree affected the choice.
Be that as it may, this precaution, whether originally for good or for evil, has enabled
us to fix, with a certainty, a very important point.
Mrs. Anderton was taken ill, not only with the same symptoms, but at the same time,
with Madame R.
Before proceeding to consider the events which followed, there are one or two points in the history of this first illness of the sisters on which it is needful to remark.
The action of these metallic poisons, among which we may undoubtedly rank antimony, is as yet but very little understood.
We know, however, from the statements of Professor Taylor, footnote, Taylor on Poisons, Second Edition, page 98, and below.
certainly by far the first English authority upon the subject
that peculiarities of constitution or, as they are termed, idiosyncrasies,
frequently assist or impede to a very extraordinary extent the action of such drugs.
The constitution of Mademar appears to have been thus idiosyncratically disposed
to favour the action of antimony.
There can be no doubt that the action of the poison upon her system
was very greatly in excess of that which, under ordinary circumstances, would have been expected
from a similar dose. The poison, therefore, by whomsoever administered, was not intended to prove fatal,
though from the peculiar idiosyncrasy of Madame R., it was very nearly doing so.
The narrowness of Madame R's escape seems to have struck the Baron, and to have exercised
a strong influence over his future proceedings. Whether or not he knew or believed her to
be exposed to any peculiar influences, which might tend to render her life less secure than
that of her delicate and invalid sister, it is impossible positively to say. There was no question,
however, that her death before that of Mrs. Anderton would destroy all prospect of his succession
to the twenty-five thousand pounds, and with this view he proceeded to take, as speedily as possible,
the necessary steps to secure himself against such an event. The obvious course, and
and indeed that suggested at once by Dr. Jones was that of assurance,
and this course he accordingly adopted,
after having previously, by a tour of several months,
restored his wife to a state of health
in which her life would probably be accepted by the offices concerned.
The insurances, therefore, with which we are concerned,
were effected in consequence of a previous administration of poison to Madame R,
producing an illness far more serious than could have been anticipated.
and accompanied by precisely similar symptoms on the part of her delicate sister, Mrs. Anderton,
whose death, if preceding that of Madame R, would more than double the Baron's prospect of succession.
Between him, therefore, and the sum of either £25,000 or £50,000,
there now intervened three lives, those of Mr. and Mrs. Anderton, and of his own wife, Madam R.
and on the order in which they fell depended the amount of his gain by their demise.
The death of Mr. Anderton before that of Mrs. Anderton would open the possibility of a second marriage,
from which might arise issue whose claim would precede his.
That of his own wife preceding that of either Mr. or Mrs. Anderton,
would destroy altogether his own claim to the larger sum.
It was only in the event of Mrs. Anderton's death being followed first by the first by the death,
that of her husband, and afterwards by that of her sister, that the Baron's entire claim
would be secured. Within one year from the time, at which matters assumed this position,
these three lives fell in, and in precisely the order in which the Baron would most largely and
securely profit by their demise. We now proceed to examine the circumstances under which they
fell. Immediately on his return to England, and before apparently completing his arrangements with
respect to the policies of insurance, the Baron we find calls upon Mr. Anderton, and by dint of
minute inquiries, draws from him the entire history of the attack from which Mrs. Anderton
had suffered several months before. Supposing, therefore, that the information was of any
practical interest, the Baron was now fully aware of the perfect similarity, both of time and
symptom between the cases of his wife and her sister. It is essential that this should be born in mind.
Section 5
He now proceeds to establish himself in lodgings in Russell Place, in a house in which, for five days and every night in the week, he is entirely alone.
The only other tenant is a medical man, whose visits are confined to a few hours on two days in the week,
and who lives at too great a distance to be called in on any sudden emergency. Here he has
establishes himself upon the first and second floors with a laboratory in a small detached room upon the basement floor, where his chemical experiments can be carried on without inconvenience to the rest of the house.
It is essential that the position of this laboratory should be very clearly borne in mind, as it plays a most important part in the story which is now to follow.
In these lodgings, then, Madame R. is again taken ill, with a return, though in a greatly mitigated form, of the same simple.
from which she had previously suffered at Bogner. The attack, however, though less violent
in its immediate effects, was succeeded at regular intervals of about a fortnight by others
of a precisely similar character, and here we arrive at what is once the most significant,
the most extraordinary and the most questionable of the evidence we have been able to collect.
It appears then that upon a night in August, a young man of the name of Aldridge, who was
a matter of special favour, had been taken into the house since the arrival of the Baron, saw
Madame R. leave her bedroom, and apparently, in her sleep, walked down the stairs in the dark
to the lower part of the house.
Section 7.
The room in which the Baron slept was next to hers, and on the wall of that room projected
by the night-lamp burning on the table, the young man saw what seemed to be the shadow of a man,
watching Madame R. as she went by. He looked again and the shadow was gone, so rapidly that at
first he could scarcely be leave his eyes and was only, after consideration satisfied,
that it really had been there. He went down to the room, but the Baron was asleep. He told
him what had happened to Madame R, and he at once followed her. Young Aldrich watched him
until he had descended the kitchen stairs and returned, followed closely by the sleep-walker.
He then went back to his room, to which the Baron shortly afterwards came to thank him
for his warning, and to tell him that, in some freak of slumber, Madame R. had visited
the kitchen.
So far the story is simple enough.
There is nothing extraordinary in a sick woman of excitable nerves, taking a sudden fit
of somnambulism, and walking down even into the kitchen of a house that was not her own.
The Baron's conduct, in all respects but that of the watching shadow, was precisely that which,
from a sensible and affectionate husband, might most naturally have been expected.
Nor is it very difficult, even setting aside all idea of malice, to set down the shadow portion
of the story to a mere freak of imagination on the part of the young man, who, though not drunk,
was nevertheless on his own admission, perhaps a little excited, and who had been drinking
a good deal of beer and shandy gaff. But the evidence does not end there. By one of those
extraordinary coincidences by which the simple course of ordinary events so often baffles the
best-laid schemes of crime, there were others in the house besides the young man Aldrich,
who witnessed the movements of the Baron and Madame R. It so happened that on the afternoon
of that particular day the woman of the house had hampered the little latch-lock by which young
Aldridge usually admitted himself, and as this occurred late in the day, it is more than probable
that the Baron was unaware of it, as also of the fact that in consequence the servant girl,
Susan Turner, sat up beyond the usual hour of going to bed for the purpose of letting the
young man in. This girl, it seems, had a lover, a stoker on one of the northern lines, and him
she appears to have invited to keep her company on her watch. Aldridge returned and went up
bed, but the lover, who was to be on duty with his engine at two o'clock, and who was doubtlessly
interrupted in the most interesting conversation by the arrival of the lodger, still remained
in the kitchen, and was only just leaving it when Madame R. came downstairs, taking her at first
to be the mistress of the house, and fearful, lest the street-lamp gleaming through the
glass partition should betray her young man's presence, Susan Turner draws him into the
lumber room, the window of which it appears looks into a sort of well between the house and
the two rooms built out at the back, after a fashion not unusual in London houses. Into this well
also, immediately opposite to the window of the lumber room looks that of the back room or
laboratory, furnished with what the witness describes as a tin looking-glass, but which is really
one of those metal reflectors in common use for increasing the light of rooms in such a position.
The distance between the two windows is little more than eight feet.
The night was clear with the bright full harvest moon,
and its rays thrown by the reflector into the laboratory,
made every part of its interior distinctly visible from the lumber-room.
The door of the latter room was open,
and the staircase illuminated by the Baron's approaching light.
The hiders in the lumber-room could see distinctly the whole proceedings
of both Baron and Madame R, from the time Aldrich lost sight of them,
to the moment they again emerged into his view.
And this is what they saw.
Madam R. never went into the kitchen at all.
She went straight into the laboratory,
and the baron watched her as she came out.
A glance at the place will show the bearing of this evidence
and the impossibility of the baron,
who, if he had not been in the kitchen,
must have least have thoroughly known the position of his own laboratory,
having made any mistake on this point.
What, then, was his motive in thus imposing upon Aldridge, to whose interference he professed
himself so much indebted, with this false statement, of the place to which Madame R. had been?
There does not seem the slightest reason for discrediting the evidence of these two witnesses.
Their story is perfectly simple and coherent.
There is neither malice against the Baron nor collusion with Aldridge, in whose case such
malice is supposed to exist.
The only weak point in their position is the fact that,
that they were both doing wrong in being in that place at that time. But the admission
of this, in truth, rather strengthens than injures the testimony which involves it.
We must seek the clue, then, not in their motives, but in those of the Baron. The errand of
Madame R. in her strange expedition may perhaps afford it. What did she do in the
laboratory? She drank something from a bottle. It smelt and tasted like sherry. It was
marked Vin, Ant, Pot, Tart. That label designates
Antimonial Wine, which is a mixture of sherry and tartar emetic.
Let us see if, from this point, we can feel our way, as it were, backwards, to the
motive for concealment. The life of Madame R was, as we know, heavily insured.
It had already been seriously endangered by the effects of precisely the same drug as that
she was now seen to take.
If the Baron knew or suspected the motive of her visit,
here is at once a motive sufficient,
if not perhaps very creditable,
for the concealment of a fact,
the knowledge of which might very probably
lead to difficulty with respect to payment
of the policy in case of death.
But here another difficulty meets us.
The incident in question occurred
at about the middle of the long illness of Madame R.
That illness consisted of a series of attacks,
occurring as nearly as possible at intervals of a fortnight, and exhibiting the exact symptoms
of the poison here shown to have been taken. One of these attacks followed within a very
few hours of the occurrence into which we are examining. Was it the only one of the kind?
The evidence of the night nurse bears with terrible weight upon this point. Her orders are
strict, on no account, to close her eyes. Her hours of watch are short, and the repose of the
entire day leaves her without the slightest cause for unusual drowsiness. The testimonials of 20 years
bear unvarying witness to her care and trustworthiness. Yet every alternate Saturday, for eight
or ten, or it may even have been nearly twelve weeks, at one regular hour she falls asleep.
It is in vain that she watches and fights against it, in vain even that, suspecting some trick,
she on one occasion abstains entirely from food and drinks nothing but that peculiarly wakeful decoction strong green tea.
On every other night she keeps awake with ease, but surely as the fatal Saturday comes round she again succumbs,
and surely as sleep steals over her it is followed by a fresh attack of the symptoms we so plainly recognise.
She cannot in any way account for such an extraordinary fatality. She is positive that such a thing never happened.
to her before. We are also at an equal loss. We can but pause upon the reflection that twice
before the periodic drowsiness began, a similarly irresistible sleep had been induced by the so-called
mesmeric powers of the Baron himself, and then we passed naturally to her who had been, for years,
habituated to such control, and we cannot but call to mind the statement of Mr. Hans. I have often
willed her, Sarah Parsons, to go into a dark room and pick up a pin or some article equally
minute. And then we again remember the watching shadow on the wall. And yet after all, at what
have we arrived? Grant that the Baron knew the nature of his wife's errand in the laboratory,
that the singular power, call it what we will, by which he had before in jest compelled
the nurse to sleep, was really employed in enabling the somnambulist to elude her watch.
Grant even that the pretensions of the mesmerist are true, and that it was in obedience to his
direct will that Madame R. acted as she did, we are no clearer to a solution than before.
It was not in the Baron's interest that his wife should die.
We must then seek further afield for any explanation of this terrible enigma.
Let us see how it fared with Mrs. Anderton while these events were passing at her sister's house.
Section 3 and 5
And here we seem to have another instance of the manner in which the wisest precautions so often turn against those by whom they are taken.
Admitting that the illness of Madame R was really caused by criminal means,
nothing could be wiser than the precaution which selected for their first essay a night on which they could be tried without fear of
observation. Yet this very circumstance enables us to fix a date of the last
importance which without it must have remained uncertain. Madame R. then was
taken ill on Saturday the 5th of April. On that very night, at as nearly as can be
ascertained, the very same hour Mrs. Anderson was unaccountably seized with an
illness in all respects resembling hers. Like hers too the attacks returned at
fortnightly intervals. For a few days, on the Baron's advice, a particular medicine is given,
and at first with apparently good effect. At the same date, the diary of Dr. Marsden
shows a similar amelioration of symptoms in the case of Madame R. In both cases the amendment
is but short, and the disease again pursues its course. The result in both is utter exhaustion.
In the case of Madame R, reducing the sufferer to death's door, in the weak,
a constitution of her sister terminating in death.
Examination is made, the appearances of the body, no less than the symptoms exhibited in life,
are all those of antimonyal poisoning. No antimony is, however, found, and from this and other
circumstances results the verdict of natural death. On the 12th of October then, Mrs.
Anderton's story ends. From that time dates the recovery of Madam Arndon.
Section 6
The first life is now removed from between Baron R
and the full sum of £50,000.
Let us examine briefly the circumstances attending the lapse of the second.
Here again events, each in itself quite simple and natural,
combined to form a story fraught with terrible suspicion.
I have alluded to the inquest which followed on the death of Mrs. Anderton.
That inquiry originated in circumstances which cast upon her husband,
the entire suspicion of her murder,
to whose agency, whether direct or indirect,
voluntary or involuntary or involuntary,
is an after-question,
may every one of these circumstances be traced.
Mr. Anderton insists on being the only one
from whom the patient shall receive either medicine or food.
It is the baron who applauds and encourages
a line of conduct diametrically opposed to his own,
and tending, more than any other circumstance
to fix suspicion on his friend.
A remedy is suggested, the recommending of which points strongly to the idea of poison, and it is from the Baron that the suggestion comes.
Two papers are found, the one bearing in part, the other in full, the name of the poison suspected to have been used.
The first of these is brought to light by the Baron himself.
The second is found in a place where he has just been, and by a person whom he has himself dispatched to search there for something else.
He draws continual attention to that point
of exclusive attendance from which suspicion chiefly springs.
His replies to Dr. Dodsworth respecting the recommendation of the
antimonial antidote are so given as to confirm the worst interpretation
to which it had given rise, and even when, on the discovery of the second paper,
he advises the nurse that it should be destroyed,
he does so in a manner which ensures not only its preservation,
but its immediate employment in the manner most dangerous to his friend.
The evidence fails.
What is the Baron's connection with the catastrophe that follows?
He knows well the accused man's nervous anxiety for his own good name.
He procures, on the ground of his friendly anxiety,
the earliest intelligence of his friend's probable acquittal.
He enters that friend's room to acquaint him with the good news.
Returning, he takes measures to secure the prisoner throughout the,
the night from interruptions or interference. In the morning Mr. Anderton is a corpse,
and on his pillow is found the file in which the poison had been contained, and a written
statement that the desperate step had been taken in despair of an acquittal. By what marvellous
accident was the hopeful news of the chemical investigation thus misinterpreted? By what negligence
or connivance was the fatal drug placed within his reach? One thing only
we know. It was the Baron
who conveyed the news. It was
from his pocket medicine case
left by him within the sick man's
reach that the poison came.
Thus fell
the second of the two lives which stood
between the Baron and the sum of fifty thousand pounds.
Of this sum
the twenty-five thousand pounds which
accrues from the relationship between
Mrs. Anderton and Madame R
is already his as soon
as claimed, but there is no
immediate necessity for the claim to be preferred.
heard. He may perhaps have thought it better to wait before making such a claim until the first
sensation occasioned by the double deaths through which he inherited had passed away. He may
have been merely putting in train some plausible story to account for his only now proclaiming
a fact of which he had certainly been aware for at least a year. Whatever the reason, however,
he certainly for some weeks after Mr. Anderson's death made no movement to establish his
claim upon the property, and during this time Madame R. was slowly but surely recovering her
strength. Section 7. But while wisdom thus dictated a policy of delay, the irresistible cause of
events hurried on the crisis. A letter comes, filled with threats of the vengeance of jealous love,
if its cause be not that night removed. It is but a fragment of that letter that is preserved,
but its meaning is clear enough,
and it is that, under threat of revelation of some capital crime,
the connection between himself and Madame R
should be finally brought to an end.
That night the condition is fulfilled.
Once more the sleeping lady takes her midnight journey
to her husband's laboratory.
Once more her unconscious hand pours out the deadly draft.
But this time it is no slow poison that she takes,
It is a powerful and burning acid that even as it awakes her from her trance shrivels her with a horrible and instant death.
One shrill and quickly stifled shriek alarms the inmates of the house,
and when they hurry to the spot they find only a disfigured corpse,
lying with bare feet and disordered nightdress in the darkness of the stormy November night,
and with the fatal glass still clasped in its hand.
my task is done in possession of the evidence thus placed before you your judgment of its result will be as good as mine link by link you have now been put in possession of the entire chain is that chain one of purely accidental coincidences or does it point with terrible certainty to a series of crimes in their nature and execution almost too horrible to contemplate that is the first question to be asked and it is one of
to which I confess myself unable to reply.
The second is more strange, and perhaps even more difficult still.
Supposing the latter to be the case are crimes thus committed, susceptible of proof,
or even if proved, are they of a kind for which the criminal can be brought to punishment?
End of Section 8.
Recording by Kevin Green
End of the Notting Hill Mystery by Charles Felix.
