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                  <text>THE

LAST TRIAL FOR ATHEISM
IN ENGLAND.

of ^ufobiogrup^g.

&amp;

BY GEORGE JACOB HOLYOAKE.

■“I was present in the Court, to witness the Trial of George Jacob Holyoake. I
heard Wooler and Hone defend themselves successfully in 1817; but I would prefer
to be declared guilty with Holyoake to being acquitted on the ground of Wooler and
Hone.”—Riohabd Carlile.

[fourth

EDITION, REVISED.]

/

LONDONi

TRUBNER &amp; Co., 60, PATERNOSTER ROW.

1871.

�TO

WILLIAM JOHN BIRCH, M.A.,
OF NEW INN HALL, OXON,

WHO, IN THE “ EVIL DAVS ” OF FREE DISCUSSION,

WAS

ITS

COURAGEOUS

AND

LIBERAL

DEFENDER,

AND WAS FIRST TO HELP US

WHEN

A

FRIEND

IS

TWICE

A

FRIEND,

WHEN WE WERE UNKNOWN AND STRUGGLING,

THIS HISTORY OF SIX MONTHS’ IMPRISONMENT

Inscribe}),
BY

GEORGE JACOB HOLYOAKE.

�CONTENTS.

PAGE

...

Chap. I.—Before the Imprisonment

9

Chap. II.—The Trial....................................
Chap. IIL—After the Sentence

Chap. IV.—After the Liberation

-

*
-

-

•

-

30
83

-

-

104

�iv.

To the First Edition, 1850, Abridged.

The events narrated in this “ History ” are related from
notes and impressions of the events. All the conversations
did not take place with the brevity with which they are given
here. In the lapse of eight years there is much which I must
have forgotten; but what I have told I distinctly remember,
and the actors living will not, I think, contradict it.
As, by a creditable improvement in English law, the re­
commencement of prosecutions for (ir)religious opinion can
originate with the Attorney-General alone, I have ventured to
hope that, if this narrative should fall into the hands of that
officer for the time being, it may present some reasons to him
why this “ Last Trial for Atheism ” should be the last.
These pages are simply a record of bygone events, from
which, at times, I thought I would omit all incidents of feeling;
but I felt that, if I did so, the narrative would not represent
the whole (personal) truth of these proceedings; and, as they
stand, they may at least serve to suggest to some a doubt of
the correctness of the coarse and brutal oft-repeated assertion
of the Rev. Robert Hall, that “Atheism is a bloody and
a ferocious system, which finds nothing above us to excite
awe, nor around us to awaken tenderness.”
Whether these are sufficient reasons for the purpose, I
know not; but this I know—they are the true ones. As I
very much dislike being an object of pity, those will mistake
me who suppose that this narrative has been written to excite
it. In my estimation, imprisonment was a matter of con­
science. I neither provoked prosecution nor shrank from it;
and I am now as far from desiring it as I trust I ever shall
be from fearing it. I do not pretend to despise public
approval, but I think it should be regarded as a contingent

�PREFACE.

V.

reward, not as the sole motive of action; for he who only
works while the public (which has constantly new things to
think of) care to remember him, is animated by a very
precarious patriotism. It is sufficient encouragement to me
that others may profit by any public principle I may assist in
maintaining; but my interest in it is personal also. Though
no one else desired freedom, it is enough for me that I desire
it; and I would maintain the conflict for it, as best I could,
though no one else cared about it; and, as I choose to make
the purchase, I do not higgle about the price. Tyranny has
its soldiers, and why not Freedom ? While thousands daily
perish at the shrine of vice, of vanity, and of passion, what is
the pain of a sacrifice now and then for a public principle ?
G. J. H.
Woburn Buildings, Tavistock Square, London,
December, 1850.

�To the Third Edition, 1861.

One legislative point was gained by this Trial in 1842. The
power of trying persons indicted for “ blasphemy ” was taken
away from Quarter Sessions, where local prejudice and
bigotry frequently influenced the sentence of the Court. This
discredit was set at rest by 5 and 6 Viet., cl 38—an Act to
Define the Jurisdiction of Justices, etc. (June 30, 1842), which
says:—
“Whereas it is expedient that the powers of justices, in
general and quarter sessions, of the peace with respect to the
trial of offences be better defined: Be it enacted that after
the passing of this Act, neither the justices of the peace acting
for and in any county, riding, division or liberty, nor the
recorder of any borough, shall, at any session of the peace, or
any adjournment thereof, try any person or persons for any
treason, murder, or capital felony .... or for any of the fol­
lowing offences; that is to say—Blasphemy, and offences
against religion. Composing, printing, or publishing blas­
phemous, seditious, or defamatory libels.”
The Act was passed after my committal by the Chelten­
ham magistrates, and who, save for it, would have been my
judges. I was the first person tried under it. (See p. 27).
The imprisonment of Thomas Pooley, of Liskeard, in
Cornwall, for alleged blasphemy (consisting of some inco­
herent words chalked on the field-gate of the Rev. Paul Bush,
of Duloe), occurred in 1857. It was followed by the extra­
ordinary sentence of twenty-one months’ imprisonment pro­
nounced by Mr. Justice Coleridge * (which called forth the
indignant, generous, and memorable protest by Henry
Thomas Buckle, in Fraser's Magazine); it was discovered
* His son, the present Solicitor-General, was prosecuting Counsel.—
Note, 1871.

�PREFACE.'

vn.

that the arrangement mentioned in the previous Preface,
by which the power of instituting these prosecutions was
transferred to, and restricted to, the Attorney-General, was
never carried into effect. The power of indictment for blas­
phemy is still in the hands of any clerical or common informer.
When Mr. Henry Hetherington, acting under the advice
of Mr. Francis Place, indicted Mr. Moxon, Lord Denman, a
judge of dignified liberality, expressed an opinion that this
power of indictment should be abrogated or restricted. Mr.
Justice Talfourd—then Mr. Serjeant Talfourd—was under­
stood to be the organ of a promise by the Government of the
day that this should be done. In the case of the Queen v.
Moxon, Mr. Serjeant Talfourd appeared for Mr. Moxon, and
on publishing his speech on the occasion, Mr. Serjeant
Talfourd appended this note:—
“ In the month of April, 1840, an indictment was preferred
against Mr. Henry Hetherington, a bookseller in the Strand,
at the instance of the Attorney-General, for selling certain
numbers of a work, entitled ‘ Haslam’s Letters to the Clergy
of all Denominations,’ sold each at the price of One Penny, and
charging them as libels on the Old Testament. The cause
came on to be tried before Lord Denman, in the Court of
Queen’s Bench, on December 8th, 1840, when the defence
was conducted with great propriety and talent by the
defendant himself, who rested it mainly on a claim of unqua­
lified right to publish all matters of opinion, and on the argu­
ment that the work charged as blasphemous came fairly
within the operation of that principle. Mr. Hetherington
was, however, convicted, and ultimately received judgment,
under which he underwent an imprisonment of four months in
the Queen’s Bench Prison.
“While this prosecution was pending, Mr. Hetherington
appears to have adopted the design of becoming, in his turn,
the prosecutor of several booksellers for the sale of the com­
plete edition of Shelley’s works, which had recently been
issued by Mr. Moxon.
“ The success of such a prosecution, proceeding from such
a quarter, gives rise to very serious considerations; for
although in determining sentences, judges will be able to
diminish the evil by a just discrimination between the publica­
tion of the complete works of an author of established fame,
for the use of the studious, and for deposit in libraries, and
the dissemination of cheap irreligion directed to no other

�viii.

PREFACE.

object but to unsettle the belief of the reader, the power of
prosecuting- to conviction every one who may sell, or give, or
lend any work containing passages to which the indictable
character may be applied, is a fearful engine of oppression.
Should such prosecutions be multiplied, and juries should not
feel justified in adopting some principle of distinction, like
that for which I have feebly endeavoured to contend, they
must lead to some alteration of the law, or to some restriction
of the right to set it in action.”
The West End could not be reconciled to the idea of an
aristocratic publisher picking oakum for the crime of sellingEnglish classics, and the amendment of the law was therefore
promised. Since 1842, no prosecution for blasphemy was
instituted until 1857.
The Attorney-General—frequently
applied to by clerical zealots who believed the power of
indictment to be transferred to the chief law officer of the
crown—always refused to undertake this disreputable office.
Bigotry slept fifteen years in England. ■ It never enjoyed so
protracted and creditable a sleep before. It would have
slept on, had not Mr. Justice Coleridge performed the ill
office of arousing it. If another case like that of Thomas
Pooley, or prosecution of any kind, take place, we will do
what Mr. Hetherington did—we will apply the law as it
stands, and indict other Mr. Moxons until the promised
amendment of 1840 is carried out.
In 1858 the Law Amendment Society discussed very
liberally, but uselessly, the best means of amending the law
of blasphemy. Restrict its action to the hands of the
Attorney-General, and it will be practically abolished. No
responsible officer of the Crown will ever lend himself as the
instrument of discreditable intolerance, ignorance, or inca­
pacity.
G. J. H.
147, Fleet Street, London, E.C., April

1861.

�ix.

To the Fourth Edition of 1871.

In the completer sense of the term Atheism, as I understand
it now, that for which I was tried was controversial rather
than intrinsic. The indictment of my friend, Mr. Southwell,
had forced my attention to the grounds of Theism, then
current, and I was surprised how inconclusive they seemed.
The bitterness and alacrity with which prosecutions for
hesitancy upon the subject were entered upon by Christians,
gave me the impression that they had no confidence them­
selves in their reasons for Theism. I always dissented from
my colleague, Mr. Chilton, who argued the impossibility of
Theism being true. Atheism declaring “ there is no God,”
seemed to me to imply the same logical omniscience as that
assumed by Theism, when it says “ there is.” The search
for God is one to which, sooner or later, every thinker bends
his highest powers; and there is more reverence in the reti­
cence which faithfulness to the understanding compels than in
dogmatism on what lies beyond. In the days when the Trial,
recorded in these pages, took place, any hesitation as to
accepting Theism was treated as flagrant Atheism. I had
too little knowledge of the subject then to define clear con­
ditions of dissent; and if I had I should not have used it.
When the right of Free Thought was in question, critical
niceness of defence would have seemed like higgling with the
enemy. I therefore accepted the imputation of Atheism in
any sense, that none might say I shrank from any consequence
of honest and relevant Free Thought.
My own actual
Atheism was not the denial that there was a God, but the
denial that we knew there was one.
*
* The phrase imputed to me, “ I do not believe there is such a thing as a
God,” I never used. Before any proceedings were taken, I wrote to the
Oracle of Reason, and denied it. (See Oracle of Reason, vol. i., p. 200).

�X.

PREFACE.

The Court was not sparing itself in imputation which sur­
prised me. The judg-e took my evidence against myself and
used it to the jury. He quoted from my report in the Oracle of
Reason (See p. 200, Vol. 1.), the expression, “ I flee the Bible as
a viper.” It was not in evidence before the Court, nor had the
jury ever heard of it. My reference was to the Bible with the
employer, or priest, or judg-e behind it, prepared to dismiss,
or traduce, or sentence any who expressed an unfavourable
opinion of it. But his lordship withheld from the jury this
information.
Considerable clerical criticism has been directed to show
that my acquittal was offered me by the Court. For instance,
where Mr. Justice Erskine said (See p. 59):—“ If I could
convince the jury of that, he would tell them I oug-ht not to be
convicted.” But how was I to know when I had convinced
the jury? It was indispensable that I went on with my
defence, and took my chance. Of another point (See p. 67),.
he said, “ No need of that.” Here, had I been a more expe­
rienced, a better informed, or a less suspicious prisoner, I
might have profited by this suggestion.
Silly adversaries, with a craze for imputation, have striven
to represent me as apologizing- for suicide in the remarks
occurring on p. 91; whereas I have always had a contempt
for common self-killers, who are not even decent in their
death, generally leaving a horror behind them, besides
selfishly deserting some duty. Let those who want to die
betake themselves to the dangerous services of humanity and
perish reputably. Only insanity and political generosity (as
when Italian prisoners have killed themselves lest torture
should affect their minds and lead to betrayal of comrades,)
seem to justify suicide. I remember there was a passage in
Plutarch often in my mind during my imprisonment—the one
in which he says, “Eumenes could not avoid his chains, yet
after the indignity of chains he wanted to live; so that he.
could neither escape death nor meet it as he ought to have
done; but, by having recourse to mean applications and
entreaties, put his mind into the power of the man who was
only master of his body.”
The events of this Trial have been subjects of recent refer­
ence in the Legislature Assembly of Australia, in discussions
upon the conviction of Mr. William Lorando Jones, a sculptor,
who has been sentenced to two years imprisonment in Dar­
linghurst Gaol, and to pay a fine of £100. He was trepanned

�PREFACE.

XI.

into some explicit speaking about the Bible by amateur
preachers, under circumstances very similar to those occurring
in Cheltenham in 1840, as related in these pages.
The two semi-clerical witnesses against Mr. William Lorando Jones were one Winian Melville, Jun., a Domain
preacher, understood to have applied for a preachership from
the Independents, and a Joseph Kingsbury, an elder and inner
light preacher. It was a Mr. Justice Simpson who pronounced
the sentence at the Paramatta Quarter Sessions, February
18th, 1871.
As the candid sculptor was manifestly a sincere and serious
man, the people of Australia have, to their credit, been scan­
dalized by a sentence which recals those passed upon Richard
Carlile half a century ago in this country. If we may credit
recent telegrams, the sentence against Mr. Jones has been
cancelled.
The Parliament of Australia may effectually prevent the
recurrence of these scandals upon civilization, by placing the
power of future indictments in the hands of the AttorneyGeneral alone, who, being responsible to Parliament and
liable to interrogation there, would not institute Trials unless
they were defensible to the good sense of the country.
G. J. H.
20, Cockspur Street, S.W.,
June, 1871.

�xii.

FIRST LECTURE IN LONDON.

The Right of Free Discussion.—On Wednesday evening last Mr.
Holyoake delivered a lecture upon this subject to a crowded audience at
the Rotunda, Blackfriars Road. The Lecturer commented upon the treat.ment he had experienced some weeks ago at Cheltenham, and of which
due mention was made in the columns of this journal. The magistrates,
on that occasion, declared that they did not care of what religion he might
be so long as he did not propagate his sectarian doctrines—“which,” as
Mr. Holyoake observed, “ was as much as to tell him to go to hell his own
way, and no one would mind how, provided he did not take others with
him.” He then expatiated very eloquently upon this selfish principle.
Thus a man may see the errors of certain systems, and yet not point out
emendation. Our ideas, argued the Lecturer, are mainly engendered by the
objects around us, and with which we come in immediate contact; and if we
are prosecuted by law for the expression of these ideas, it is just the same
as indicting or prosecuting the external objects which give us our ideas. For
any class of men to take upon themselves to say to the millions, “ If you
think in a manner which militates against our ideas, you must not express
your sentiments,” is degrading. Without that constant interchange of
ideas which freedom of discussion can alone encourage, no new plans of
utility can be introduced; and had not opinions been more or less
freely circulated at different times, humanity would not be characterized
by progressive civilization. Our wealth, our knowledge, our power, are
to be attributed to the Press and to the diffusion of opinions. The Press
has converted the entire world into one large conversational party, whose
views, wishes, and opinions are thereby communicated to each other.
Speculative opinions beget the most important truths, and useful systems
are founded most frequently upon ideas that were at first but wild theories.
If the law describes a magic circle around the radii of men’s ideas, it
naturally forbids the entertainment of progressive measures, and enforces a
stationary and sedentary position, to which the activity of the human mind
and the nature of human interests are both averse. New generations have
new interests, and those can only be defined and settled by legislative
enactment, after due and unchecked discussion. All the learning which
our greatest men have ever possessed would little avail posterity, unless
their assertions might be duly canvassed. It is a very singular fact that we
may discuss astronomy, chemistry, botany, geology, and other sciences, but
our sentiments must be curbed by the law when once we touch upon
politics or religion. Such was the subject of Mr. Holyoake’s lecture, in the
course of which he uttered many striking truths of an original character,
which elicited considerable applause.— Weekly Dispatch^ July, 184.0.

�THE

LAST TRIAL FOR ALLEGED ATHEISM.
CHAPTER I.---- BEFORE THE IMPRISONMENT.

That day is chilled in my memory when I first set out for
Cheltenham. It was in December, 1840. The snow had been
frozen on the ground a fortnight. There w'ere three of us,
my Wife, Madeline (our first child), and myself. I had
been residing in Worcester, which was the first station to which
I had been appointed as a Social Missionary. My salary (16s.
per week) was barely sufficient to keep us alive in summer.
In winter it was inherent obstinacy alone which made us believe
that we existed. I feel now the fierce blast which came in at
the train window from “ the fields of Tewkesbury,” on the day
on whieh we travelled from Worcester to Cheltenham. The
intense cold wrapped us round like a cloak of ice.
The shop lights threw their red glare over the snow-bedded
ground as we entered the town of Cheltenham, and nothing
but the drift and ourselves, moved through the deserted streets.
When at last we found a fire we had to wait to thaw before we
could begin to speak. When tea was over we were escorted
to the house where we were to stay for the night. I was told
it was “a friend’s house.” Cheltenham is a fashionable town,
a watering, visiting place, where everything is genteel and
thin. As the parlours of some prudent house-wives are kept
for show, and not to sit in, so in Cheltenham numerous houses
are kept “to be let,” and not to live in. The people who
belong to the apartments are like the supernumeraries on a
stage, they are employed in walking over them. Their clothes
are decent—but they cannot properly be said to wear them:
they carry them about with them (on their backs of course,
because that mode is most convenient) simply to show that
they have such things. In the same manner eating and drink­
ing is partly pantomime, and not a received reality. Such a
house as I have suggested was the “ friend’s house ” to which
we were conducted till lodgings could be found. We were
asked to sit by the kitchen fire on “ the bench in the corner,”
and there we sat from eight till one o’clock, without being

�IO

THE HISTORY OF THE

asked to take anything- to eat. Madeline, deprived of her
usual rest, sucked at the breast till her mother was literally
too exhausted to speak. A neighbouring festivity kept my
“ friends ” up that night till two o’clock—up to which time we
saw no prospect of bed or supper. As we entered the house,
my Wife, with a woman’s prescience, said, “George, you
had better go and buy some food.’’ “ Buy food,” I replied, in
simplicity, “ the people at this fine house will be outraged to
see me bring in food.” Retribution was not far off. I repented
me of my credulity that night. When at last I clearly com­
prehended that we were to have nothing to eat, I proceeded
to take affairs into my own hands, and being too well assured
of the insensibility of my host, I did it in a way that I conceived
suited to his capacity, and began as follows:—
“We have talked all night about social progress, and if you
have no objection we will make some. And if eating” I added,
“ be not an irregular thing in your house, we will take some
supper.”
“I am very sorry to say” he answered, “we have nothing
to offer you.”
“Charge me bed and board while we are with you,” I
rejoined, “but let us have both. You have bread, I suppose?”
“ We have some rice bread.”
“ Perhaps you will toast it.”
“ Will you have it toasted ? ”
“I will. Could you not make coffee?”
“ We have no coffee.”
“ Tea ?”
“We have no tea.”
“ Any water ?”
“ No hot water.”
“Any butter?”
“ Yes, we have salt butter.”
“ Then put some on the rice bread,” I added, for he did not
even propose to do that. I had to dispute every inch of hos­
pitality with him. My “ friend,” Mr. V., was an instance of
that misplacement of which Plato speaks in his “ Republic.”
What a capital Conservative he would have made! No inno­
vation with him—not even into his own loaf 1 I was obliged
to take the initiative into the “ salt ” butter.
After seeing the bread toasted, and buttering it myself, to
make sure that it was buttered, I put on my hat and went into
the streets, in search of material out of which to manufacture

�LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

II

a cordial, for eight hours had then elapsed since Mrs. Holyoake
had had any sustenance, and my good host’s choice reserve of
cold water did not seem quite adequate to revive her.
When I reached the dark streets, to which I was so absolute
a stranger, not knowing where I stood on the slippery ground,
made so by frozen rain on a bedding of snow, I had not gone
(or rather slipped) far before I was fairly lost. Like the sense
in a Rousseauian love-letter, I neither knew whence I came
nor whither I was going, and when I had succeeded in my er­
rand it was at the last place at which I should wish to be found.
During my absence that voluptuous caterer, “ mine host,”
whom I had left behind—whose counterpart Maginn must have
had before him when he drew the portrait of “ Quarantotti,”
—had proceeded so far as to boil some water. The evening
ended without inconsistency, and the bed corresponded with
the supper.
The next day I took lodgings, where, expecting nothing, I
was no longer disappointed. But on this occasion, profiting
by the experience of the preceding night, I went provided with
a small stock of loaves and chocolate. My stay in Cheltenham
was more agreeable than was to be expected after such an in­
troduction ; but I remember that I had to pay my expenses
back again, and though they only amounted to 12s., I felt the
want of them for a long time afterwards. Yet Cheltenham was
not without generous partizans, but, as is common in the incipiency of opinion, they were at that time among that class
who had fewest means. The experience here recounted was
a sample of that frequently recurring, but not exactly of the
kind on which vanity is nurtured, as the reader will think as
he reverts (from a speech to be recited) to these incidents. He
who reads thus far will acquit me of any premeditation of dis­
turbing the peace of the religious inhabitants of Cheltenham,
for it is certainly the last town I should have selected as the
scene of such an occurrence as the one which I have to narrate.
My next location was in a manufacturing town (Sheffield),
where I was treated like its iron-ware—case hardened. My
salary there, of 30s. per week, was a subj‘ect of frequent discus­
sion by the members of the Branch. For this sum I taught a
Day School and lectured on Sunday. And as he who lives
the life of a child all the week (as he must do who teaches
children to any purpose) finds it hard to live that of a man on
Sunday, my duties were wearying and perplexing. Those who
grudged my salary made no sufficient allowance for that ap­

�12

THE HISTORY OF THE

plication necessary for the discharge of my duties—an applica­
tion which often commenced long before they were up in the
morning, and continued long after their mechanical employ­
ment was over at night. Not comprehending myself at the
time, that they who work for the improvement of others must
not calculate on their appreciation as an encouragement, but as
a result, I was thrown into that unpleasant state in which
my pride incited me to stop and my duty to go on. It was not
till subsequent to my return from Glasgow, four years after­
wards, that I mastered the problem thus raised which so many
have been ruined in solving. Most freethinkers absurdly ob­
ject to the pay of the priest, when the true quarrel is with error,
and not with payment: for if a man has the truth, it is well that
it should be his interest to hold it. But Dissent, objecting to
the pay of others, has been left without pay itself—hence its
teachers have been reduced to fight the lowest battles of animal
wants, when they should have been fighting for the truth. Dis­
sent has too often paid its advocates the bad compliment of sup­
posing, that if placed within the reach of competence they would
either fall into indolence or hypocrisy. It has acted practically
upon the hypothesis, that the only possible way of ensuring their
zeal and sincerity was to starve them—a policy which leaves
progress to the mercy of accident. For a long period the
operation of this policy chilled me. My initiation into affairs
of progress was m company with men who estimated, above all
other virtues, the virtue which worked for nothing. They would
denounce the patriotism of that man who accepted a shilling
for making a speech, although it had cost him more to compose
it than those who heard it would probably give to save their
country. Nine-tenths of the best public men and women I have
known, have turned back at this point. Not any new convic­
tion—not any bribe of the enemy, but the natural, though un­
wise revolt. against being considered mendicants, has forced them
back into supineness, indifference, or even into the very ranks
of oppression. True, I felt that he who labours with his brains
is worthy of his hire, as well as he who labours with his hands.
As often as I read a book or heard a lecture, which threw new
light on the paths of life, I found that it not only relieved me
from the dominion of ignorance, but imparted to me the strength
of intelligence.* I felt indebted to the author and speaker, for
I found that knowledge was not only power, but property. I knew
all this, but painful years passed over me before I acquired the
courage to offer any instruction I had to impart, as an article

�LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

13

of commercial value. Those who have encountered this kind
of experience know that the feeling' it engenders is one of in­
difference, and that an unusual speech would arise in a cold
sense of duty, and not in wantonness or wickedness. Thus
much will inform the reader of the circumstances under which
I spoke the alleged blasphemy in Cheltenham.
A fellow-missionary, Mr. Charles Southwell, had in conjunc­
tion with Mr. Chilton and Mr. Field, set up an Atheistical
periodical in Bristol, entitled the Oracle of Reason—which the
authorities attempting forcibly to put down, Mr. Southwell was
sentenced to twelve months’ imprisonment in Bristol gaol. On
a visit to him I walked ninety miles from Birmingham to Bristol,
and as my way lay through Cheltenham, I staid a night in that
town to deliver a lecture on “ Home Colonisation as a Means of
superseding Poor Laws and Emigration.” At the conclusion of
the lecture I instructed the chairman to make the announce­
ment, which I still make after my lectures—viz., that any of the
audience may put relevant questions or offer what objections
they consider useful—whereupon a person stood up of the name
of Maitland, a teetotaller, and sort of local preacher, and com­
plained that “ though I had told them their duty to man, I had
not told them their duty to God,” and inquired “ whether we
should have churches and chapels in community ? ”
I answered thus: “ I do not desire to have religion mixed up
with an economical and secular subject, but as Mr. Maitland
has introduced questions in reference to religion I will answer
him frankly. Our national debt already hangs like a millstone
round the poor man’s neck, and our national church and gene­
ral religious institutions cost us, upon accredited computation,
about twenty millions annually. Worship thus being expensive,
I appeal to your heads and your pockets whether we are not
too poor to have a God ? If poor men cost the state as much,
they would be put like officers on half-pay, and while our dis­
tress lasts I think it would be wise to do the same thing with
deity. Thus far I object, as a matter of political economy, to
build chapels in communities. If others want them, they have
themselves to please, but I cannot propose them. Morality I
regard, but I do not believe there is such a thing as a God.
*
* I do not remember using this phrase, but as the witnesses reported it,
I retain it: but I conclude that it was an expression they fell upon in stating
their impressions of the meeting to their employers, and all working in one
office, they fell into one story, either through inadvertence or from precau­
tion. At that time I defended Mr. Southwell’s right to his opinions—I had
not adopted them. The expression was impossible to me.

�14

THE HISTORY OF THE

The pulpit says ‘Search the Scriptures,’ and they who are
thus trepanned get imprisoned in Bristol gaol, like my friend
Mr. Southwell. For myself, “ I flee the Bible as a viper, and
revolt at the touch of a Christian.” [Their touch at that time
meaning imprisonment.]
Perhaps this reply was indecorous, but it was nothing more,
and as it was delivered in a tone of conversational freedom, it
produced only quiet amusement on the meeting. The next day
I continued my journey to Bristol. A day or two afterwards
I received the Cheltenham Chronicle, commonly called the Rev.
Francis Close’s paper, it being the organ of his party, in which
*
I read the following paragraph—written with that exaggerated
virulence which Archdeacon Hare has subsequently deprecated
as the bane of religious journalism, but which at that time was
considered as a holy ornament:—
“ On Tuesday evening last a person named Holyoake, from Sheffield (?) de­
livered a lecture on Socialism (or, as it has been more appropriately termed
‘ devilism ’), at the Mechanics’ Institution. After attacking the Church of
England and religion generally for a considerable time, he said he was open
to any question that might be put to him. A teetotaller named Maitland
then got up, and said the lecturer had been talking a good deal about our
duty to man, but he omitted to mention our duty towards God, and he would
be glad to know if there were any chapels in the community ? The Social­
ist then replied that he professed no religion at all, and thought they were
too poor to have any. He did not believe there was such a being as a God,+
and impiously remarked that if there wasf. he would have the deity served
the same as government treated the subalterns, by placing him upon half-pay.
* * To their lasting shame, be it spoken, a considerable portion of the
company applauded the miscreant during the time he was giving utterance
to these profane opinions.”
[We have three persons-in our employ who are ready to verify on oath the
correctness of the above statements. We therefore hope those in authority
will not suffer the matter to rest here, but that some steps will immediately
be taken to prevent any further publicity to such diabolical sentiments.—El).
Cheltenham Chroniclei}

Some have censured the openness of my answer to Mr. Mait­
land as being inexpedient. It is not impossible to justify it on
that ground, but I have an aversion to do it. A man may keep
silence if he chooses, but if he does speak he has no alternative
but to speak that which is frank and true. But at that time
there were political reasons why I should not evade the question
put to me. The Odd-Fellow of Mr. Hetherington (under the
editorship of W. J. Linton) had shortly before contained an able
article, beginning thus:—
* The present Dean of Carlisle (1870).
t Alluding to the Orthodox Deity.
J This is an interpolation.

�LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

•5

“ The world need not be much frightened at the present race of Socialists.
However heinous their doctrines may be thought, there need be no fear : they
will not act in too close accordance with them. For ourselves, having been
among them at various times, we have never yet been able to discover any
certain marks, whether of manner, of opinion, or of conduct, whereby to dis­
tinguish them from the mass of professing Christians. However heterodox
their innermost sentiments, they usually maintain as decent an appear­
ance of conformity with custom as the most worldly and orthodox could
desire.”

This was a character which no progressive party could live
with, and as the hypocrisy here charged upon us was generally
believed, and not wholly without reason, it became necessary
either to give up the party or refute the accusation. The attack
on Mr. Owen’s friends, by the Bishop of Exeter in the House of
Lords, had been evaded, not met, and a noble opportunity, such
as bigotry seldom affords to a rising party, had been suffered to
pass away unused. The enemy triumphed. In this very town
of Cheltenham, a young poet named Sperry, who betrayed Freethinking tendencies, had been called upon to recant. He did
so, and then he was treated with contempt by those who intimi­
dated him. They first destroyed his moral influence, and then
despised him. I had therefore sufficient public reasons for not
tempting a similar fate. If I had refused to reply, it would have
been said I held opinions too horrible to avow. Had I evaded
the answer, I should have been considered a time-server, and
if I answered frankly there were the legal consequences in
prospect. I was not very much skilled in policy, but I knew
this much, that when a man cannot take care of consequences,
he ought to take care of the credit of his cause. A little antici­
pating- this history I may say that the expediency of the course
I took, if the expediency must be defended, was shown in the al­
tered tone of the authorities, both in Cheltenham and Glouces­
ter, after my trial. Instead of that contempt With which per­
sons holding Socialist opinions are treated, there was a some­
what respectful recognition of them. However crude might
be considered my defence of my views, nothing escaped me that
-could be distorted into a willingness to avoid any suffering at
the expense of adherence to the principles I had adopted. Many
persons who would not have spoken to me before, came and
expressed regret at what had happened, and I met with many
instances of regard from persons who had formally despised
those with whom I acted.
I was indebted to the Odd-Fellow of July 23, then edited by
Eben. Jones, author of “ Studies of Sensation and Event,” for

�r6

THE HISTORY OF THE

the fairest statement of my conduct and of the point in question
which the press gave. It was thus expressed:—
“We cannot refrain from saying, that under the peculiar circumstances, Mr.
Holyoake (presuming his disbelief in a God to be sincere) could not have said
other than he did say, and at the same time have continued honest. It is true
he was not asked, ‘ Do you believe in a God ? ’ but a question was put to him
which assumed his belief in a God, and had he not testified at once his dis­
belief, he would have sanctioned the false assumption : and if not a liar, would
have been at least the permitter of a lie ; between which is no distinction
recognised by an honourable man. In arguing thus, we would not express
any sympathy whatever with Mr. Holyoake’s atheism, we are merely con­
cerned to show that it was not Mr. Holyoake’s right alone, but absolutely his
DUTY to say, that ‘ he did not believe in a God.’ * It was his duty, if it be
the duty of man to be honest; he could not have spoken otherwise, unless he
had lied against his heart, and lied towards mankind.”

The next number of the aforesaid Cheltenham Chronicle brought
me this further notice:—
“ In reference to a paragraph which appeared in the last Chronicle regarding
the monster [Holyoake,] the magistrates read the article alluded to, and ex­
pressed their opinion that it was a clear case of blasphemy. In order to check
the further progress of his pernicious doctrines, the Superintendent of police
was ordered to use every exeition to bring him to justice ”

On reading this paragraph I lost no time in setting out for
Cheltenham, to hold a public meeting and justify myself to the
town. Foot-sore and weary—for the journey was more than
thirty miles, and the day very hot—I reached Cheltenham on
the ist of June, and proceeded as privately as a ‘ monster ’ could
to my friends the Adamses. The next night I slid like sleep
into the meeting, lest the police should prevent me from ad­
dressing it. Mr. Leech, a leading Chartist, presided, and the
meeting was addressed by Messrs. Parker, Jun., Geo. Adams,
W. Bilson, and J. B. Lear. The Chartists of Cheltenham at
that time held possession of the Mechanics’ Institution, and they
were threatened with the loss of it, if they let it to me to speak
in any more. But as I required it in self-defence they gener­
ously disregarded the menace, and permitted me the use of it.
My friends in the distant town of Newcastle-upon-Tyne after­
wards gracefully acknowledged this fairness by making a col­
lection for Mrs. Holberry, the wife of a Sheffield Chartist, who
had perished in prison. Before I had been long in the meeting
Superintendent Russell came in with about a dozen men, who
were arranged on each side the door, and their glazed hats
formed a shining, but a dubious back ground for a meeting on
* Yet the fact was, I did not then assert disbelief, but justified the right of it.

�LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

17

Free-Discussion. I spoke an hour after they came in. So rare
an audience was not to be neglected, and I thought we might
convert some of them. At the conclusion Superintendent Rus­
sell, who had the politeness to wait until I had done, intimated
that he had instructions to apprehend me. I asked for his war
rant. He said he had none. It was in vain that I protested
against the irregularity of the proceeding. He replied that his
instructions were imperative upon him—and it was thereupon
arranged that I should walk down to the station with Mr. Hollis,
a well-known gun maker of Cheltenham, and there, the meeting
following, we arrived in procession between eleven and twelve
o’clock.
To tell the truth, it is no great proof a posteriori of extreme
views that any one should be involved in legal proceedings
in Cheltenham, on account of freedom of speech. Owing to
priestly and conventional influences, that town will furnish a
j'ury who would, under direction, bring in any man guilty of
blasphemy, who boiled his tea-kettle on a Sunday. Not long
before the time now spoken of, a Mormon preacher, holding
forth there, happened to say that the Elements of Euclid were
as true as the Bible: and for this he was indicted for blasphemy,
and was only saved from imprisonment by the grand jury (who
must have had Infidel tendencies) throwing out the Bill.
On the morning after my apprehension I was taken before
the Rev. Dr. Newell, R. Capper, and J. Overbury, Esquires,
magistrates of Cheltenham. The Rev. Dr. Newell ought to
have had the pride, if not the decency, to have kept away.
The Cheltenham Chronicle reported that “ George Jacob Holy­
oake, who was described as a Socialist Lecturer, and as the
editor of the Oracle of Reason, was charged with delivering athe­
istical and blasphemous sentiments at the Mechanics’ Institution,
on the evening of the 24th of May. The prisoner had been ap­
prehended last night, after delivering another lecture at the
same place. The affair appeared to have caused great sensa­
tion, and several persons attended at the office anxious to hear
the examination. Amongst the number were some individuals
who, without the blush of shame mantling their cheeks, ac­
knowledged themselves friends of the accused.”
Mr. Bubb, a local solicitor, a particularly gross and furious
man, then said—“ I attend to prefer the charge of blasphemy,
and I shall take my stand on the common unwritten law of the
land. There have been a variety of statutes passed for punish­
ing blasphemy, but these statutes in no way interfere with the

�IS

THE HISTORY OF THE

common unwritten law. (Mr. Capper nodded assent.) Any
*
person who denies the existence or providence of God is guilty
of blasphemy, and the law has annexed to that offence imprison­
ment, corporal punishment, and fine. I shall give evidence of
the facts, and I shall ask that he be committed for trial, or re­
quired to find bail for his appearance. The offence is much
aggravated by his having put forth a placard, announcing- a
lecture on a subject completely innocent, and having got to­
gether a number of persons, has given utterance to those senti­
ments which are an insult to God and man.”
The assertion that I had employed duplicity in chosing my
subject was quite gratuitous. Addressing the Bench, I asked
whether it was legal in these cases to apprehend persons with­
out the authority of a warrant ?
Mr. Capper replied, “ Any person in the meeting would be
justified in taking you up without the authority of a warrant,”
which showed that the Bench were better read in Bigotry than
in Blackstone. I said it was customary in other towns, where
bigotry existed to a greater degree even than it did there, for
information to be laid and a regular notice served.
Mr. Capper said, “ We refuse to hold an argument with a man
professing the abominable principle of denying the existence of
a Supreme Being.” This was not a very legal way of getting
rid of my objections, but it answered in Cheltenham.
Two witnesses, James Bartram and William Henry Pearce,
both of the Chronicle office, were produced to swear to the words
that formed the ground of the indictment. Neither of them
could recollect anything else but the objectionable words re­
ported in their own paper, and to these they did not swear posi­
tively, but only to the “ best of their belief.” Mr. Pearce was
not produced at the trial at the Assizes, he having no local repu­
tation but that of a dog-fancier and prize-fighter, which did
not render him a creditable authority on matters pertaining to
religion. Bartram’s sister was a Socialist, and she came to me
some years after, in Manchester, to apologise for the disgrace
brought upon her family by the weakness or the ignorance of
her brother.
* Mr. Bubb took his stand on the common law because his object was to
make it a session’s case, and to take it out of the statutary law, which (9 &amp; 10
Will. 3, c. 32,) would have required that information of the words spoken
should be laid before a justice of the peace, within four days from their utter­
ance, and would likewise have implied a trial at the assizes.

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19

Mr. Overbury said he considered the case satisfactorily prov­
ed, and added, “ Whether you are of no religion is of very little
consequence to us, but your attempt to propagate the infamous sen­
timent that there is no God, is calculated to produce disorder
and confusion, and is a breach of the peace.” This was the
remark of an ill-formed politician rather than of a Christian.
Being required to enter into my own recognizances of £ 100,
and find two sureties of £50 each, Mr. Partridge became one,
and Mr. Henry Fry, editor of the Educational Circular, offered
himself as the other. But the Rev. Dr. Newell objected to Mr.
Fry’s bail, on the ground that he did not swear positively that
he was worth £50 when all his debts were paid. He swore
only that “ to the best of his belief” he was so. I reminded the
Bench that they had accepted the evidence of the witnesses
against me on the same ground—namely, “the best of their
belief.” Hereupon the Rev. Dr. Newell, with an air of outraged
morality, exclaimed “Come, come 1 we’ll have no quibbling.”
I answered that I did not propose to quibble, for if that had
been to my taste I might have avoided standing there at that
moment. Mr. Bubb then interjected that he should demand
twenty-four hours’ notice of bail. Another gentleman then of­
fered himself, whom I desired to sit down and let the Bench
take their own course. This indifference with regard to the
Bench incensed them very much.
Mr. Capper said, “ Even the heathens acknowledged the exis­
tence of a deity. If you entertain the same pernicious opinion
on your death-bed you will be a bold man indeed. But you
are only actuated by a love of notoriety.” I only answered,
“ Why do you address me thus, since you will not allow me to
reply ? ” and I turned away repeating to myself the words of
Sir Thomas Browne—“ There is a rabble amongst the gentry
as well as the commonalty; a sort of plebeian heads, whose
fancy moves with the same wheel as these: men in the same
level with mechanics, though their fortunes do somewhat gild
their infirmities, and their purses compound for their follies.”
But I ought to say that during these proceedings, the people
in the court, of juster feeling than the magistrates, frequently
expressed their disapprobation cf the speeches made to
me.
Mr. Capper’s assertion that I was “ only actuated by a love of
notoriety,” were just the words to do me injury. The respect­
able people near, and the intelligent people at a distance, would
believe the magistrate and disbelieve the sceptic, who had no

�20

THE HISTORY OF THE

friends to rebut the imputation. The vulgar bearing of this
brutal old man lingered long in my memory as the most
distinct thing of these proceedings. I should have thought
less of it had it not come from an old man. The aged
always inspire me with reverence, in their kindly aspects.
They are the links which nature perpetuates between old
time and our time—the human chroniclers of an experience
the young can never know. They have followed the hearse
of the old world, and are the legatees of Time, who has
bequeathed to them his secrets and his conquests, which they
in their turn distribute to us. When living at Islington, in
1848, I frequently passed, but not without sadness, nor some­
times without tears, an old man who stood near the Merlin;s
Cave to beg. He resembled one whom I cannot name. I
could see on his brow the fresh traces of a struggle still going
on between dignity and destitution. And I often gave him the
price of the biscuit intended for my dinner, in the secret hope
we all have in a kind act that some one else may repeat it to
those we love; and I indulged the hope that others might
approach with the same respectful feelings towards him to
whom I have alluded, if ever, with untamed pride and broken
heart, he should stand in his grey hairs on the highway to
beg—which I had dreaded through so many years.
When taken back to the station-house, Captain Lefroy, who
was at the head of the police, introduced me to Mr. Pinching,
surgeon of the same corps. The captain, in a gentlemanly
way, inquired if I would allow Mr. Pinching to reason with
me on my opinions ? I said, “ Certainly.” Mr. Pinching
asked me the irrelevant question, “Did I believe in Jesus
Christ ? ” and began a dry, historical argument to prove that
there was the same evidence for the existence of Jesus Christ
as for that of Henry the Fourth. I said, “ The argument is
unnecessary with me. I do not care to argue whether he
existed or not. My inquiry is not whether he lived, but what
he said.” Mr. Pinching’s next speech was delivered with an
air of sharp authority, and he began to address me rather
rudely.
He asked me was it not Robert Owen who made me an
atheist ? I replied, Mr. Owen himself was not an atheist. In
truth, my position was rather that of a defender of the right
of Mr. Southwell and others to avow atheism, than that of an
expositor of it. There had been too little time for my views
to acquire definiteness.

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21

Mr. Pinching- now became impatient and abusing, allowing
me no opportunity of replying, and I said, “ Stop ! stop I sir,
you must not treat me as a prisoner if you intend me to hear
you. Unless you converse with me upon equal terms I shall
not answer you.” Lefroy laughed, and said, “ Come ! come!
Pinching, I think you are not quite fair.” After this Mr.
Pinching became more abusive, and I turned away, when he
ended the conversation by saying, “ I am only sorry the day
has gone by when we could send you and Owen of Lanark to
the stake instead of to Gloucester gaol.”
Not allowed to wait twenty-four hours to see if I could
obtain bail, I was soon after sent off to Gloucester, nine miles
away, the same afternoon, where the difficulty of negotiating
my release was so much increased, that it took me a fortnight
to do it.
After my conversation with Mr. Pinching I was shut up in
a very filthy place with a lousy man. I was handcuffed with
small old irons that pinched my wrists, and I begged to have
another pair of handcuffs put on, which was done; then I was
made to walk through Cheltenham town and suburbs, and
afterwards through Gloucester city, with the hand irons on.
As I had walked thirty miles to be apprehended, they had no
reason to suspect me of making my escape ; nor was it cus­
tomary to handcuff prisoners conveyed to Gloucester on foot.
In my case it was done to pain and degrade me.
A memorial of a public meeting, sent from the town of
Cheltenham to the House of Commons, on this subject, stated
“ That notwithstanding Mr. Holyoake offered no resistance to
any officer or procedure, and was at the same time in very
indifferent health and much exhausted, yet it was deemed ne­
cessary to lock both his hands in irons and make him walk to
Gloucester—a distance of near nine miles—on a most sultry
day, but on the way thither his friends interfered, and obtained
leave for him to ride, on condition only that they should pay
his expenses as well as the expenses of two policemen to
accompany him.” And it may be added, that though I sat an
hour at the station waiting for the train, my hands were not
unlocked.
The same memorial also alleged “ That the conduct of the
magistrates during the proceedings indicated a predisposition
to punish Mr. Holyoake, independently of any evidence which
he might have offered in defence of his own conduct.”
The Member for Bath, to whom this memorial was

�22

THE HISTORY OF THE

entrusted, paid to it the most generous attention, and imme­
diately returned the following reply:—
“London, June 23rd, 1842.
“ Sir,—The petition you sent me is of a nature that demands serious
inquiry, and I thought I should best discharge my duty towards the peti­
tioners and Mr. Holyoake by at once addressing myself to Sir James
Graham. He has very promptly taken up the inquiry, and I have no
doubt but that substantial justice will be done. If, however, the petitioners
should hereafter deem that justice has not been done, I can present their
petition after the inquiry which has been undertaken by the Home Secretary
has been closed. I have taken this liberty with the petition on my own
responsibility, hoping that the petitioners will here trust to my discretion,
and they for the moment will put confidence in my judgment. I will write
you word so soon as I bear from the Home Secretary, who has now the
petition in his hands for the purpose of immediately instituting a searching
inquiry.
“ I am, Sir, your obedient Servant,
“Mr. H. Fry.”
“J. A. Roebuck.

The committal the police bore with them was to the fol­
lowing effect:—
“ [Gloucestershire to wit.]-—To all and every of the constables and
other officers of the peace for the said county, and to the keeper of the
gaol at Gloucester in the said county-—
“Whereas, George Jacob Holyoake is now brought before us, three of
Her Majesty’s Justices of the Peace in and for the said county, and
charged, on the oaths of James Bartram and William Henry Pearce, with
having, on the twenty-fourth day of May last, at the parish of Chelten­
ham in the said county, "wickedly and profanely uttered, made use of, and
proclaimed, in the presence of a public assembly of men, women, and
children, then and there assembled, certain impious and blasphemous
words against God, and of and concerning the Christian religion, to wit,
‘ That he was of no religion at all,’ and ‘ that he did not believe there
was such a thing as a God,’ and ‘ that if he could have his way he would
place the Deity on half-pay, as the government of this country did the
subaltern officers,’ against the peace of our Lady the Queen, her crown and
dignity. And whereas we, the said justices, have required the said
George Jacob Holyoake to become bound in the sum of one hundred
pounds, and to find two sufficient sureties in the sum of fifty pounds each,
conditioned for the appearance of the said George Jacob Holyoake at the
next Quarter Sessions of the Peace, to be holden at Gloucester, in and for
the said county, and then and there to answer to any bill of indictment
that may be preferred against him for his said offence, which he hath
neglected to do.
* These are therefore in Her Majesty’s name to command you, and every of
you the said constables, forthwith safely to convey and deliver into the
custody of the keeper of the said gaol the body of the said George Jacob
Holyoake.
* And you, the said keeper, are hereby required to receive the said George
Jacob Holyoake into your said custody, and him safely keep until the said

�LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

23

next general Quarter Sessions of the Peace, to be holden at Gloucester
in and for the said county, or until he become bound and finds such
sureties as aforesaid, or until he shall be thence delivered by due course
of law. And for your so doing this shall be to you and every of you a
sufficient warrant.
* Given under our hands and seals the third day of June, in the year of our
Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Forty-two.
“ Robt. Capper,
“J. B. Newell,
“Joseph Overbury.
“ Twenty-four hours’ notice of bail to be given.”
“ I hereby certify that the above is a true copy of a warrant, by virtue of
which the within-named George Jacob Holyoake was brought into custody
the 3rd day of June, 1842.
“ Witness my hand,
“Thomas Moore,
“ Clerk to the County Gaol of Gloucester.”

Some of the magistrates characterised the speech for which
I was committed as “ Felony,” “ a breach of the peace,” etc.,
and I was told that my committal was made out for “ felony.”
Serious comments were made thereupon by the public. Able
strictures on the subj’ect were made by “ Philo Publicola,” in
the Weekly Dispatch. But the magistrates grew wiser as they
grew cooler, and on the copy of the committal subsequently
furnished to me, the charge of felony did not appear.
A very curious circumstance deserves mentioning here.
The magistrates being censured in the House of Commons for
their “ irregularities ” in my case (as will be explained in my
defence further on), an attempt was made to fix the blame on
Mr. Russell, superintendent of the police. This induced me to
address the following letter to the editor of the Cheltenham
Free Press:—
“ Sir,—Observing an attempt has been made in Parliament by the Hon.
Craven Berkeley to fix the blame of my ‘ harsh treatment ’ on the constables
of your town, and to implicate Superintendent Russell, I beg to say that
after my committal I never saw Mr. Russell, and never once said, or sus­
pected, that the harshness exercised towards me, while ostensibly in his
custody, originated with him. His courtesy to me on the night of my
apprehension, of which I retain a lively sense, forbids such a conclusion.
“ I shall be glad if you will insert this in your next number. I can never
consent to purchase public sympathy by a silence which may unjustly
sacrifice any person’s interest. I was justified in making the complaints I
have, but would rather they were for ever unredressed than that an innocent
man should suffer.
“Birmingham, July 30,1842 ”...
“G. Jacob Holyoake.

�24

THE HISTORY OF THE

Soon after Mr. Russell left the corps, and appears to have
been offered up by the magistrates as a sacrifice for the irre­
gularities they had committed.
At the County Gaol my pockets were searched, and my
pocket-book and letters taken from me.- This I felt not only
as an indignity, but also as a breach of faith. Before leaving
Cheltenham, and when in communication with my friends,
I inquired if my papers would be taken from me at Glou­
cester, and the officers answered “ No ” (but they must have
known differently). Trusting their answer, however, I
brought with me papers I should not otherwise have brought.
Perhaps I was fevered after my walk, but the cell I was put
into gave me a new sense. There had been times when I had
wished for a sixth sense, but this was not the sense I coveted,
for it was a sense of suffocation. The bed was so filthy that I
could not lie down, and sat on the side all night. When
taken into the general room next morning the prisoners
surrounded me, exclaiming, “ What are ye come for ? ” As
I made no reply, another observed, “We always tells one
another.” “ Oh 1 blasphemy,” I replied. “ What’s that ? ”
said one. “ Aren’t you ’ligious ? ” said another.
But as these rustics were happily unacquainted with doc­
trinal piety, they said nothing rude; and seeing my loaf
unbroken, and that I could not eat, “ Here,” said four or five
at once, “ will you have some of this tea, zir ? ”—which was
mint-tea, the reward of some extra work, and the nicest thing
they had to offer.
When the chaplain of the gaol, the Rev. Robert Cooper,
came to see me, I told him that before I took anything from him
for my soul I wanted something from him for my defence; and I
demanded my note-book and papers. Mr. Samuel Jones, a
visiting magistrate, brought me a few pencil notes which I
had made during my examination in Cheltenham and some
private papers, but he withheld many others relating to
matters of opinion, saying that he “ did not think them neces­
sary to my defence.” The clergyman has a veto on all books
admitted, and of a list which I gave him, which I wanted to
read for my trial, he only allowed me thirteen. He said the
others “ were of an unchristian character,” and he could not
let me have them. I told him I was not going to make an
*
* See Report of Gloucester Trinity Sessions in the county papers of that
period.

�mm

LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

2$

orthodox defence. He would not relax, so I would not have
any spiritual consolation, and we lived on very indifferent terms.
One day Mr. Bransby Cooper and Mr. Samuel Jones (just
mentioned), both old magistrates, came to visit me. Mr.
Jones, I was told, had at one time been a preacher among the
Methodists. He told me he would be kind to me, but all his
kindness was religious kindness—the worst kindness I have
ever experienced. I was then the sole occupant of the Queen’s
evidence side of the prison, a place I had chosen, as I pre­
ferred to be alone. I had a large yard and all the cells to
myself. In this solitary place these magistrates visited me.
After teazing me with Leslie for a long time, Mr. Bransby.
Cooper concluded thus—“ Now! Holyoake, you are a Deist,
are you not?” I shook my head. “You cannot be an
atheist,” he continued, “you don’t look like one.” He said
this, I suppose, seeing no horns on my head, and no eyes on
my elbows, as he expected. I answered that I felt very
unpleasantly how much I was in their power, and had there­
fore some reason to desire to oblige them. Though sorry to
say what might outrage them or look like obstinacy, yet out
of respect to my own conscience I must say that I was an
*
atheist.
Upon this they both flew into indignant revulsions,
and shouted “ A fool! a fool! ” till the roof rang. Captain
Mason (the governor), who accompanied them, turned away
a few paces, with the air of one not caring to be witness of so
much rudeness.
Before leaving they said of course I should employ counsel
to defend me. I answered, “ No, I should defend myself as
well as I was able. Barristers were not good at stating a
case of conscience.” They urged, they even coaxed me to
abandon the idea of defending myself; but finding me not to
be deterred, they threatened me that it would aggravate my
case—reminded me of Hone and others, and said that the
judge would put me down and not hear me. This menace,
as will be seen hereafter, did me great harm. They reported
my determination at the Trinity Sessions as though it was a
matter desirable to be averted.
Mr. Bransby Cooper was a brother of Sir Astley Cooper.
He was formerly member for Gloucester; and when he sus­
pected that I did not regard his dignity sufficiently, he would
slide in some remark about “ his friend ” Sir James Graham,
* I had begun to think I must be an Atheist.
C

�26

THE HISTORY OF THE

who was then Secretary of State for the Home Department.
Bransby Cooper was the senior magistrate at this time—a man
of venerable and commanding aspect, generous to a fault in
matters of humanity, harsh to a fault in matters of religion.
On his way through the city old women would waylay him to
beg. First raising his stick against them—then threatening
to commit them as vagrants—they fled from him in mock
terror; but knowing the generous feelings of the man, they
returned again, and before he reached home he would empty
his pockets among them. One minute he would growl at me
like an unchained tiger—the next he would utter some word
of real sympathy, such as came from no one else, and at the
end of my imprisonment I parted from him with something of
regret. He had the voice of Stentor, and though at first his
savage roar shook me, at last I acquired an artistic liking for
it, and his voice was so grand that I came to the conclusion
that he had a natural right to be a brute. The old gentleman,
after his fashion, laboured very hard for my conversion. His
son Robert was chaplain of the gaol, and had I happily been
brought over, the old man would have given the credit to his
boy. My conversion was thus a sort of family speculation.
Those who sent me to prison in default of bail took care to
make bail impossible to me, by intimidating those who would
have become my sureties, and after two weeks’ anxiety I was
obliged to accept the generous offer of two friends in Worcester
—James Barnes and John Dymond Stevenson—to come from
that city and enter into recognizances for me, and I was indebted
to them for my liberation, after sixteen days’ imprisonment.
So near was my trial upon my release that I had to return
to Gloucester within a fortnight. A great desire of my youth
had been to see London. When I found myself suddenly shut
up in gaol, in prospect of an indefinite term of imprisonment,
which in my then state of health might prove fatal, my sole
remorse was that I had never seen that city of my dreams.
Once again at liberty I made a short visit to my family in
Birmingham, and the next week found me in London.
Chafed and sad, with tremulous heart and irresolute step, it
seems but yesterday that I walked through Woburn Place
into the city in which I now write. Its streets, its pride, its
magnificence enthralled me, and its very poverty fascinated
me because nearer to my destiny. Savage and Johnson had
walked those squares houseless, and why not I ? Chatterton
had perished in a garret, and garrets had something sacred

�LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

27

in them. Solitary in that two million multitude, I was hardly
known to any one in it; yet when I remembered that I was in
London I felt an enchanted gladness, and in all my vicissitudes
of fortune and chequered struggles there, I have walked
its magical streets with undimmed joy, and it is to me still a
fairy land, whose atmosphere of enchantment feels as if it
would never leave me.
How sweetly, how gratefully to me (as words never read
before) came the notice the Weekly Dispatch gave of my first
lecture in London. All the night before I had sat up with
Ryall, answering correspondence and concerting my defence.
When I reached the Rotunda it was more fitting that I should
have found a bed there than a rostrum, for when I rose to
speak I was weak as well as timid. To succeed in any way
in London was more than I ventured to expect, and the nature
of the report in the Weekly Dispatch inspired me With the hope
of at least being tolerated.
I hastened back to Gloucester. Either a Secretary of
State’s order, or a Bill had come into operation, I was never
correctly informed which, removing my trial from the Sessions
to the Assizes, which gave me an impartial judge to determine
my case. At a Sessions’ trial the parties who had caused my
imprisonment, and the magistrates who had shown themselves
my personal opponents, would have sat on the Bench to try
me. Though unable to proceed with my trial after having
committed me, they put me to the expense of bringing my
bail from Worcester, and charged me £1 9s. for renewing my
sureties.
My arrest caused a demand for atheistical publications in
Cheltenham, which Mr. George Adams, partly as a friend to
the free publication of opinion and partly from personal
friendship to me, undertook to supply. In this he was joined
by his wife, Harriet Adams, a very interesting and courageous
wornanM
On Monday evening, June 13th, at a public meeting called
to consider the grounds of my own apprehension, Mr. George
Adams was arrested for selling No. 25 of the Oracle, and
forthwith conveyed to the station-house. As soon as a know­
ledge of the arrest came to the ears of Mrs. Adams, she went
to the station-house to see her husband, when she, likewise,
was served with a warrant for selling No. 4. Mrs. Adams
says (the account cannot be better rendered than in her own
words), “ I went to see my husband at the station-house, when
c 2

�28

THE HISTORY OF THE

I was detained; a policeman was sent home with me to fetch
my infant, and I had to leave four at home in bed. The man
that went with me to the station was a rude fellow; he was
quite abusive to me, telling- me I should be locked up from
my husband, saying it was quite time such thing’s were put a
stop to. When we arrived at the station-house he would
have locked me in a cell with a drunken woman had I not
sat down in the yard and insisted on seeing the superintendent,
who then allowed me to sit up in a kitchen, where policemen
were coming in and out all night. My husband was much
troubled on my account.” The four children were left locked
up in the house alone.
Mr. Bubb’s speech, when Adams was brought up, is so
curious a relic of provincial barbarism that I preserve it, or
those who are told of it in time to come will regard the story
as some malicious fiction. Mr. Bubb opened the charge by
justifying himself and clients—“ It has been said that we are
prosecuting here for the entertaining of opinions merely.
That proposition I deny. The entertaining of opinions is not
opposed to law if people keep them to themselves. If they
step out of the way, and seek to propagate them by under­
mining the institutions of the country, by denying the existence
of a God, by robbing others of H the hopes set before them,’
without offering the flimsiest pretext, it is the duty of all to
prevent this. Such is the opinion of those gentlemen who set
on foot these proceedings, and no clamour of persecution will
prevent them from doing what they believe to be their duty.
And if there are any here present disposed to take up this
unfortunate trade, I would assure them that as long as the law
punishes, and the magistrates uphold the law, so long will
they bring offenders to justice. So long as men say there is
no God, or that the religion of the State is a farce and a
fallacy, these gentlemen will not be deterred by any clamour.”
If this threat were carried out the magistrates on every Bench
would have constant employment—especially if they would
undertake, as Mr. Bubb appeared to promise, to ascertain
whether or not we had the “ flimsiest pretext ” to offer in
defence of the course we took.
Adams and his wife were committed to take their trials at
the Sessions—in the wife’s case it was purely vexatious, as
there was no one bound over to prosecute her. Yet Adams,
nearly blind from an inflammation of the eyes, and his wife
with her child in her arms, were kept several days in attend-

�»’Z»t

LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

29

ance at Gloucester—though the same law which prevented the
court proceeding in my case, prevented the court from trying
the Adamses. In further aggravation of loss, £i 17s. 6d.
were demanded for discharge of their bail and entering new
sureties—nor was time allowed to fetch the bail (after they
were demanded) from Cheltenham, the clerk announcing that
they would be estreated at once. Upon this I directed Mr.
and Mrs. Adams to go into court and say they were prepared
to take their trial then, and there was no occasion to estreat
the property of their friends. Time was then allowed.
Mrs. Adams was never tried. Mr. Adams’s trial took
place at Gloucester Assizes, immediately before my own.
The passage from No. 25 of the Oracle, for which Adams
was indicted, was written by my friend Mr. Chilton, who was
outraged at my imprisonment, and ran as follows:—
“ What else could be expected of men who deify a real or imaginary indi­
vidual, a compound of ambition and folly, of mock humility and rampant
tyranny; who, though called the ‘ Prince of Peace,’ declared he came to
bring a sword in the world ? This hellish mission he performed to per­
fection, for never since his time has blood and misery ceased to flow from
his dogmas and mysteries.”

As I was very anxious to save Adams from consequences
which he incurred through friendship to me, I advised him to
let Mr. Thompson defend him. Ihis gentleman began by
sympathising with all the disgust invented by the counsel who
opened the prosecution, and he ended by expressing Adams’s
sorrow and contrition for what he had done—a contrition
which he did not feel, and would rather have undergone much
imprisonment than have had it said that he did. During the
whole of the trials arising out of the Oracle, Mr. Ralph
Thomas, barrister, was the only counsel who defended us
in court without sacrificing us. Taking warning by Mr.
Thompson’s example, I made it a rule to advise all our
friends to defend themselves, and where unaccustomed to
public speaking to write a brief defence in their own language,
and after some legal friend had revised it, to read it to the
court. We do not want lawyers to defend our opinions,
those opinions not being their own, but we want them simply
to maintain our right to publish what are to us important
convictions. Instead of this they commonly agree with the
crown that we are criminal for having a conscience, and then,
in our name, recant with “ contrition ” the opinions which we
go into court to maintain.

�30

THE HISTORY OE THE

Adams’s sentence was delivered in the following- words by
Mr. Justice Erskine:—“ George Adams, you have been con­
victed of the offence of publishing a blasphemous libel, and
the libel which was proved to have been published by you
was one of a most horrid and shocking character. Whatever
a man’s opinions may be, he can have no right to give vent to
them in that language. If there was evidence to prove that
you were the author, or that you were engaged as an active
disseminator, I should have thought it my duty to have
inflicted on you a very serious imprisonment. Although by
the law of this country every man has a right to express his
sentiments in decent language, he has no business to make
use of such shocking language as this. But you have
expressed, through your counsel, contrition; and trusting that
this is the general feeling of your mind, I shall not think it
necessary to pass on you a severe sentence this time. But if
you ever offend again, it will then be known that you are
determined to persevere, and it will be seen whether the law
is not strong enough to prevent it. The sentence of the court
is, that you be imprisoned in the Common Gaol of this county for
one calendar months
I was with Adams during the term of his imprisonment, and
although his losses and the privations of his family were
great, he never uttered a murmuring word. From first to
last he behaved well, and Mrs. Adams, as women usually do,
behaved better.
It is worthy of remark that when a gentleman deposed
that the character of Mr. Adams “ was a pattern of morality,”
Mr. Justice Erskine told the jury that “had Adams committed
a robbery, such a character might have weight, but in extenu­
ation of religious offence it was of no service.”

CHAPTER n.-----THE TRIAL.

The Assizes opened on the 6th of August, 1842, but my
case did not come on till the 15th. Mr. Knight Hunt (the
author of the “ Fourth Estate ”) was the gentleman engaged
*
to report my trial. As the judge was informed that I intended
to defend myself he resolved to take my case last. This
* Subsequently Editor of the Daily News.

�LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

31

caused the Assizes to extend into a second week. Saturday
came before the calendar was exhausted, and as there was
no knowing- whether my trial could be gone through in a day,
the fear of trespassing on Sunday led to the court’s being
ordered to open on Monday, to the annoyance of javelin men
kept there unexpectedly, to jurymen who had left tills,
ploughs, and orange-baskets unprotected, and not least to my
prosecutors, who saw with some consternation some £200
added to the county expenses, for in Cheltenham bigotry is
greatly preferred when it is cheap.
If ignorance would look upon its own degradation, let it
spend a few hours in an assize court. One trial I witnessed
was of two men for an offence which indeed arose out of
depravity, but the depravity arose out of bad training and
vicious circumstances. The oldest man, between forty and
fifty, was sentenced to transportation for life to Norfolk
Island, the most ferocious sentence an English judge can
pronounce. When the man heard it he bowed in genuine
and awkward humbleness, and said, as he made a rustic
bow to the bench, “ Thank'ee, my Lord!” Such abject humi­
liation of spirit I had never conceived before. Ignorance
never appeared to me so frightful, so slavish, so blind, as
on this occasion. Unable to distinguish a sentence passed
upon him from a service done him, he had been taught
to bow to his pastors and masters, and he bowed alike when
cursed as when blessed. The measured contempt with which
the words were spoken by the judge which blasted the man’s
character for ever—the scorn with which he was thrust out of
the pale of society, never again to know freedom or reputa­
tion, made no impression on his dark and servile soul. That
appalling weight of infamy falling on his head and on the
heads of his children—for which he might justly have cursed
society—only elicited from him a “ Thank’ee, my Lord ! ”
If ignorance would see its own degradation, would feel the
incalculable depth of its abjectness, let it sometimes sit for
instruction in an assize court.
The preliminary proceedings at« the trial I shall render as
Mr. Hunt gave them, in the third person—adding what, from
various causes, was omitted at the time.
On the morning of the trial the Court-house at Gloucester
was very crowded. Many ladies were present from all parts
of the county; the wives of clergymen, and some of the
nobility, were among them, attracted by curiosity, and by the

�32

THE HISTORY OE THE

opportunity which might never occur to them again of hearing,
without loss of caste, a little heresy defended in person. The
audience continued undiminished till ten o’clock at night.
As the name of George Jacob Holyoake was called he
advanced and entered the dock. Mr. Ogden, the turnkey in
charge of prisoners, directed him, with the usual air of official
impatience, to take his place at the bar.
Mr. Holyoake.—Do not be in a hurry. First hand me my
books.
Mr. Ogden (looking indignantly at a large corded box
lying outside the dock).—You can’t have that box here. You
must go to the bar and plead.
Mr. Holyoake.—Nonsense. Hand me the box.
It being reluctantly handed up, Mr. Holyoake applied to
the judge, Mr. Justice Erskine, for the use of a table.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—There is one. He referred to some
boarding behind the bar, and there Mr. Holyoake proceeded
to arrange his books and papers, although the situation was
not advantageous, it being lower than the bar where the
prisoners usually stand. Mr. Holyoake employed twenty
minutes in this operation, and when he had done the dock
resembled a young bookseller’s stall. Mr. Holyoake then
advanced to the bar and bowed to the court.
Mr. Justice Erskine (who had waited with-great patience).—
Are you ready ?
Mr. Holyoake replied affirmatively, and the clerk pro­
ceeded to read the indictment as follows:—
*• [Gloucester to wit.—The jurors for our lady the Queen, upon their
oath, present that George Jacob Holyoake, late of the parish of Chelten­
ham, in the county of Gloucester, labourer, being a wicked, malicious,
*
and evil-disposed person, and disregarding the laws and religion of the
realm, and wickedly and profanely devising and intending to bring
Almighty God, the Holy Scriptures, and the Christian religion, into dis­
belief and contempt among the people of this kingdom, on the twenty­
fourth day of May, in the fifth year of the reign of our lady the Queen,
with force and arms, at the parish aforesaid, in the county aforesaid, in
the presence and hearing of divers liege subjects of our said lady the
Queen, maliciously, unlawfully, and wickedly did compose, speak, utter,
pronounce, and publish with h loud voice, of and concerning Almighty
, God, the Holy Scriptures, and the Christian religion, these words fol­
lowing, that is to say, ‘I (meaning the said George Jacob Holyoake) do

* It was pure invention that described me as a “labourer.” It was a
term of degradation in the county, and therefore employed. My profession
was that of a Mathematical Teacher.

�*&lt;¥&amp;$¥«

•’Al &gt;'•'

LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

33

not believe there is such a thing as a God; I (meaning the said George
Jacob Holyoake) would have the Deity served as they (meaning the
government of this kingdom) serve the subaltern, place him (meaning
Almighty God) on half-pay ’—to the high displeasure of Almighty God,
to the great scandal and reproach of the Christian religion, in open viola­
tion of the laws of this kingdom, to the evil example of all others in the
like case offending, and against the peace of our lady the Queen, her
crown and dignity.”

Mr. Holyoake pleaded Not Guilty, and applied to have the
names of the jury called over singly and distinctly.
Mr. Alexander, counsel for the prosecution, said the offence
being only a misdemeanour, the defendant had no right to
challenge.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—Of course not, unless reasons are
given in each case.
Clerk.—The name of John Lovesey is first.
Mr. Holyoake.—I object to Lovesey. He sat on the bench
when I was before the magistrates at Cheltenham, and
approved the proceedings against me. He is not disinterested
in this matter.
Mr. Justice Erskine said that was not sufficient reason for
challenging.
Lovesey declared he “ shuddered at the crime of the
prisoner,” and after some further conversation, the judge
having observed it was “ as well to go,” Lovesey left the box.
Mr. Holyoake.—In the case of Mr. Southwell he was
allowed to challenge.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—I am not bound by the Recorder of
Bristol.
The names of the other jurors having been called over,
Mr. Holyoake objected to one on the ground of his being a
farmer, and from his profession not likely to be acquainted
with the nature of the question at issue.
*
Mr. Justice Erskine said he could not sit there to listen to
such objections. Mr. Holyoake saying he had no objection to
urge which his lordship would allow, “ seven farmers, one
grocer, one poulterer, one miller, one nondescript shopkeeper,
* A poulterer is called upon, under oath, to decide this great theological
and philosophical question that has agitated the world for so many hundred
centuries. . . . To make a poulterer a sovereign judge of theology is
on a par with making the Archbishop of Canterbury a judge of poultry.—
Weekly Dispatch, August 18, 1842. [It has been objected to this that very
likely his Grace of Canterbury is a very good judge of poultry.

�34

THE HISTORY OF THE

and one maltster, were then impannelled to ascertain whether
one George Jacob Holyoake had had a fight with Omni­
potence, whether he had done his utmost to bring the Deity
into contempt, whether he had fought Omnipotence with force
of arms, and had spoken against it or him with a loud
*
voice.
The following is a list of the jury:—
Thomas Gardiner, grocer, Chelten­
ham, Foreman.
James Reeve, farmer, Chedworth.
William Ellis, farmer, Chedworth.
Avery Trotman. farmer, Chedworth.
William Mathews, poulterer, Chel­
tenham.
Simon Vizard, shopkeeper, Oldland.

Isaac Tombs, farmer, Whitcomb.
William Wilson, maltster, Brimpsfield.
Edwin Brown, farmer, Withington.
Bevan Smith, farmer, Harescomb.
William Smith, miller, Barnwood.
Joseph Shipp, farmer, Yate.

Mr. Holyoake.—Can I have a copy of the indictment?
Mr. Justice Erskine.—I had one made for you in conse­
quence of your application to the court last week.
Mr. Holyoake.—Yes, my lord, but after I had thanked you
for your courtesy in so doing, I was asked 8s. 6d. for it by
(not being able to call him by his name, Mr. Holyoake said)
that sour-looking gentleman there (pointing to the clerk of
the court, an individual as dusty and as forbidding as an old
penal statute, and who always spoke to Mr. Holyoake like
one. The court laughed, the judge frowned, the clerk looked
indignant, but before censure could fall, Mr. Holyoake
escaped into the next sentence, adding), after the numerous
exactions I was subjected to at the sessions, after being
brought here by the magistrates and then not tried, I did not
think myself justified in paying any more, and the clerk
refused it me.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—I ordered a copy to be made for you,
but did not think it necessary that you should have it on any
other than the usual conditions, t
Mr. Holyoake.—Can I be allowed to read the indictment
against me ?
Mr. Justice Erskine.—Certainly.
The clerk then handed a copy to Mr. Holyoake, who on
* “ Publicola’s ” second letter to Judge Erskine.—Weekly Dispatch, Sept.
18, 1842.
t This copy of Indictment occupied not quite one sheet ofpaper, for which
eight shillings and sixpence were asked !

�LAST TRIAL BY JURY EOR ATHEISM.

35

observing the counsel for the prosecution rise, left the bar,
and placed himself where he could face Mr. Alexander, with
a view to take notes. The judge very courteously asked if
Mr. Holyoake desired note-paper and pens, which he
accepted, and
Mr. Alexander said—Gentlemen of the jury: The defendant
at the bar is indicted, not for writing, but for speaking and
uttering certain wicked and blasphemous words. This person
is not, as in the case previously brought before your atten­
*
tion, the vendor, but he is the author of the blasphemy. From
the coincidence of words, he is the Editor—
Mr. Justice Erskine.—You must not proceed in that way.
You must not assume—
Mr. Alexander.—I am aware, my lord, that I may not
assert the identity of the defendant with the work alluded to—
I was only going to draw the attention of the gentlemen of
the jury to the coincidence of the word. But I will proceed
with my case. The defendant, on the 24th of May last,
issued placards for a lecture to be delivered in Cheltenham.
In these placards he announced, not the diabolical, the
dreadful topics which he descanted upon, not anything which
would lead the reader to imagine or expect what really took
place, but he gave out his subject as a lecture upon Home
Colonisation, Emigration, and the Poor Laws. Mark this,
gentlemen of the jury. Had he given in his announcements
any hint of what was to take place, his end might have been
defeated, and no audience attracted to listen to the blas­
phemous expressions you have heard set out in the indictment.
But he did obtain an audience, a numerous audience, and then
declared that the people were too poor to have a religion—
that he himself had no religion—that he did not believe in
such a thing as a God, and—though it pains me to repeat the
horrible blasphemy—that he would place the Deity upon
half-pay. I shall call witnesses to prove all this, and then it
will be for you to say if he is guilty. It may be urged to you
that these things were said in answer to a question, that the
inuendoes must be made out. Inuendoes ! I should think it an
insult to the understandings of twelve jurymen—of twelve
intelligent men—to call witnesses to prove inuendoes; but I
shall place the case before you, and leave it in your hands.
* That of George Adams.

�36

THE HISTORY OF THE

I am sure I need not speak, I need not dilate upon the conse­
quence of insulting- that Deity we are as much bound as
inclined to reverence. He then called
James Bartram—who said: I am a printer, at Cheltenham,
employed upon the Cheltenham, Chronicle; attended the lecture
of defendant, just after nine o’clock; there were about one
hundred persons present of both sexes; the placard announced
“ Home Colonisation, Emigration, Poor Laws Superseded
heard a man put a question to Mr. Holyoake; he said, “ The
lecturer has been speaking of our duty to man, but he has
said nothing as regards our duty towards God.” Prisoner
replied, “ I am of no religion at all—I do not believe in such
a thing as a God. The people of this country are too poor to
have any religion. I would serve the Deity as the govern­
ment does the subaltern—place him on half-pay.” He was
the length of the room off; I heard him distinctly; he spoke
in a distinct voice.
Cross-examined by Mr. Holyoake.—You say I said the
people were too poor to have any religion; will you state
the reasons I gave ?
Witness.—I can give the substance, if not the words; you
said, “ The great expense of religion to the country.”
Mr. Holyoake.—I will thank you to state the other reasons.
Witness.—I don’t recollect any other reason.
Mr Holyoake.—Now, you have sworn the words are blas­
phemous—
Mr. Justice Erskine.—No, he has not.
Mr. Holyoake.—Will you state if the words are blas­
phemous |
Mr. Justice Erskine said such a question could only be put
through him. He then put the question—Do you consider the
words blasphemous ?
Witness.—I do.
Mr. Holyoake.—Why do you think them blasphemous ?
Witness.—Because they revile the majesty of heaven, and
are calculated to subvert peace, law, and order; and are
punishable by human law, because they attack human autho­
rity.
Mr. Holyoake.—Who has instructed you to define blas­
phemy thus ?
Witness.—I have not been instructed; it is my own opinion.
Mr. Holyoake.—At Cheltenham, during my examination
before the magistrates, you did not appear to have these

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37

notions. Will you swear you have not concocted that answer
for this occasion ?
Witness.—I did not expect such a question would be put;
I did not expect to be catechised.
Mr. Holyoake.—Who advised you to attend as a witness ?
Witness.—The magistrates sent for me.
Mr. Holyoake.—Did you not know before the day of my
commitment something of this matter ?
Witness.—There was some “ chaff” in the office about it;
that’s all I heard of it; a policeman was sent from the magis­
trates for me to give the names of witnesses who were to
appear. Don’t know why the policeman came to me; don’t
know his name; no clergyman has spoken to me, that I
recollect, upon the subj’ect of this prosecution; not sure of it;
several persons have spoken to me, cannot say they were
clergymen; I do not know the parties who got up the prose­
cution or sent the policeman to me; the report was furnished
to the paper I work on by another person; I saw the
reporter’s notes, but not the Editor’s observations till the
galleys were pulled.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—What do you mean by galleys
pulled ?
Witness.—Brass slides, my lord.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—You mean, I suppose, till all the types
were up ?
Witness.—Yes, my lord.
Cross-examination resumed.—Do not know of my own
knowledge who made the report; have been ten years in
employment at Chronicle office; know it was said in that
paper that three witnesses from that office could prove what
had occurred at the lecture; the name of reporter of our
paper is Edward Wills; I heard your lecture, you said
nothing against morality ?
Mr. Holyoake.—Will you state your opinion of morality ?
Mr. Justice Erskine.—The question is irrelevant.
Mr. Holyoake.—Did you think I spoke my honest con­
victions ?
3
Witness —I thought you spoke what you meant; you spoke
straightforwardly.
The j'udge here interposed to stop Mr. Holyoake from
asking as to witness’s opinions.
Cross-examination resumed. Witness.—I should not have
lost my situation if I had not come forward in this case; in

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THE HISTORY OE THE

my opinion you spoke wickedly, as stated in indictment; I did
not notice that you spoke contemptuously when using- the
word thing, but you used the word; there were other words
between ■ those used in indictment; they did not, as in that
document, follow one another; I do not remember the words;
you spoke of the enormous sums of money spent upon religion,
and the poverty of the people, and afterwards, and in con­
nection with that, said you would place Deity as government
did the subalterns—on half-pay; I have been a preacher.
Re-examined by Mr. Alexander.—-I have been uninter­
ruptedly ten years in the same employment; do not give
evidence from fear or reward, but from a sense of duty.
Mr. Alexander.—That is the case for the prosecution, my
lord.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—Now is the time for your defence.
Mr. Holyoake.—I am not a little surprised to hear that the
case for the prosecution is closed. I have heard nothing, not
one word, to prove the charge in the indictment. There has
been adduced no evidence to show that I have uttered words
maliciously and wickedly blasphemous. I submit to your lordship
that there is not sufficient evidence before the Court.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—That is for the jury to decide.
Mr Holyoake.—I thought, my lord, as the evidence is so
manifestly insufficient to prove malice, you would have felt
bound to direct my acquittal.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—It is for the jury to say whether they
are satisfied.
Mr. Holyoake.—Then, Gentlemen of the Jury, it now
becomes my duty to address you on the nature of the charge
preferred against me, and of the evidence, by which it is
attempted to be supported. When I stood in this court a
week ago, and saw the grand jury, with Mr. Grantley
Berkeley at their head as foreman—when I heard his lordship,
surrounded by learned counsel, deliver his charge in the
midst of persons distinguished for learning, for eloquence, for
experience, and for literary attainments—I then thought, as I
now do, that this court could find nobler means than the
employment of brute force to counteract anything I could
attempt—which I never have done—to bring the truly sacred
into contempt. I thought I never should be called upon to
stand in this dock, with all its polluting and disgusting asso­
ciations, to answer for mere matters of speculative opinion. I
did think that such persons possessed a sense of the powers of

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39

the human mind that would have prevented the interposition
of penal judges upon such subjects.
But to Mr. Grantley Berkeley, as foreman of the grand
jury who found a true bill against me, I beg to draw your
attention. Mr. Grantley Berkeley, as you are aware, is
brother to the member, Mr. C. Berkeley, who attempted to
vindicate the conduct of the Cheltenham magistrates from the
allegations against them by Sir James Graham in the House
of Commons. In the recent case of Mr. Mason, who was
takfen from a meeting, as I was at Cheltenham, by a police­
man, illegally, without a warrant, the doctrine was laid down
by a cabinet minister, in the House of Commons, that if the
person so arrested was subsequently found guilty by a jury,
the illegal apprehension was justified. See how this applies
to my case. I was taken from a public meeting a week after
the objectionable words were spoken; was taken by a police­
man at near midnight, without a warrant. This was justly
deemed illegal. I sat in the gallery of the House of Commons
when the Hon. Member for Bath brought forward my case,
and when Sir James Graham, in reference to the correspond­
ence which had taken place with the magistrates, had the
frankness to say “ there had been serious irregularities and
unnecessary harshness used in the case of Holyoake.” In
this country four thousand applications are annually made
to the Secretary of State for the Home Department, and out
of that four thousand my case is spoken of as one in which
serious irregularities had occurred, and unnecessary harshness
been employed. And that amid the numerous affairs of this
great empire it should have received this distinct notice is
presumptive evidence that it contained much that should be
corrected. On Thursday, July 2i, the Hon. Mr. C. Berkeley,
addressing the Speaker of the House of Commons, said, “ I
wish to ask the Right Hon. Baronet the Secretary for the
Home Department a question, but in order to make it intelli­
gible to the House, it will be necessary for me to refer to
what took place on Tuesday last. It appears that upon that
day the Hon. Member for Bath stated, ‘ that as a person
named Holyoake had been committed to prison, at Chelten­
ham, in an improper manner, he wished to know whether the
Right Hon. Secretary for the Home Department had any
objection to produce the correspondence which had taken
place upon that subject ’—to which the Right Hon. Baronet
replied that ‘ he felt called on in the discharge of his duty to

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THE HISTORY OF THE

inquire into the circumstances of the commitment in question
—he found that serious irregularities had been committed,
and he expressed his opinion to that effect—but as legal pro­
ceedings were likely to result out of what had occurred, he
did not think it would be judicious in the Hon. and learned
Gentleman to press for the production of the correspondence.’
. . . . The Right Hon. Baronet knows, or at least ought
to know, that no such imputation could with propriety be cast
upon the magistrates, for by the 3rd section of the 2nd and
3rd of Victoria, commonly called the County Constabulary
Act, no magistrate or magistrates, in petty sessions assem­
bled, can interfere with or control the chief constable, or any
sub-constable, in the discharge of their duties, as the rules
and regulations for these all emanate from the office of the
Right. Hon. Baronet. It therefore was exceedingly unfair that
these imputations should go forth, and I have therefore now
to ask, on behalf of the magistrates, whether the Right Hon.
Baronet objects to the correspondence being printed and circu­
lated with the votes of the house, and in case he should object
I shall offer it for the perusal of the Hon. Member for Bath.”
Sir James Graham, in reply, said, “ I had no intention what­
ever to cast any imputation on the gentlemen who that day
formed the Petty Sessions. My observations more properly
applied to the capture of Holyoake, and the unnecessary
harshness used in his conveyance from the magistrates’ office.
At the same time I shall object to the printing of the corres­
pondence with the votes, as no good result would come from
it. Of course the Hon. Member is at liberty to offer it to the
Hon. Member for Bath if he chooses | but I repeat, that as
legal proceedings were pending, I think such course not
advisable.”
This is a most flagrant attempt at justification. The Act
the Hon. Member quoted related to Petty Session magistrates,
before whom he knew my case had never come, and of whom,
therefore, no complaint could have been made. But Mr.
Berkeley had a friendly purpose to serve. The magistrates
and their friends have the strongest motives for finding a true
bill against me—and they have motives equally powerful for
desiring that your verdict should be “guilty,” inasmuch as
that verdict will justify all these ‘ irregularities ’—all the
‘ unnecessary harshness ’—will remove from their shoulders
all the responsibility which they incurred by the course they
have pursued towards me. Bear in mind, gentlemen of the

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41

jury, if the rights are to be enjoyed about which we so much
glorify ourselves, cases of this kind must not be allowed to
pass unnoticed. “ Serious irregularities ” demand serious
notice. Arbitrary infraction of the liberty of the subject must
not receive the sanctfon of a jury. Recollect that the same
course may be pursued towards any one of you, and that if it
receives your sanction it will be made a precedent of law—
and pernicious may be its influence.
But I would draw your attention to a printed report of
remarks, made by his lordship, in his charge to the grand
jury upon my case. I do not for a moment believe that his
lordship had other than fair intentions, but, unfortunately, his
remarks will have a contrary effect on those who have to
judge my case. I have in my hand the Cheltenham Chronicle,
of Wednesday last, August 10th, from which I will read.
“These offences,” he said, referring to the cases of blas­
phemy, “ lay at the root of all the crime which prevailed, and
a consideration of the causes out of which they sprung pointed
to the only efficient remedy for their removal. In the case of
Holyoake, his lordship observed that a work called the Oracle
of Reason had been printed and circulated containing language
which he did not think it right to repeat; language in which
the writer traced all the evil which existed in the world, not
to the real cause—the evil passions of the human heart—but
to the existence of Christianity itself. This was followed by
the most opprobrious language ”—
Mr. Justice Erskine (interrupting).—I never said anything
of the kind; that printed report is entirely incorrect.
Mr. Holyoake.—I will read some notes of your lordship’s
charge, taken at the time of its delivery by a Reporter; but
whether the report in the Chronicle is correct or incorrect, it
has had its influence in leading the public, and probably this
jury, to a prejudgment of my case.
“ There are other charges which seem at once to lead the
mind to the consideration of the root of all the evil which forms
the subject of our present consideration. I allude to two
charges of blasphemy. In one the accused is said to have
sold and published a paper called the Oracle of Reason, con­
taining language which I shall not think it right to read, in
which the writer traces the evils at present existing, not to the
evil passions of man, but to the existence of Christianity, and
follows it up with the most opprobrious language to the
Saviour and his system, charging him with being the occasion

�42

THE HISTORY OE THE

of all the crime and misery which prevail. The second charge
is against a man who gave a lecture, in the course of which
he discussed the proper way of teaching man his duty to his
neighbour. A person suggested that he had said nothing about
teaching man his duty to his God. That led to a statement
which shows the folly of the person ; and he followed it up by
making use of such language that, if you believe it was
intended to have destroyed the reverence for God, he has
subjected himself to punishment. There is another thing—he
does not appear to have intended to discuss this; but if you
are convinced that, by what he has said, he intended to bring
religion into contempt, he is guilty of blasphemy. If such
addresses had been directed to the educated classes, it might
have been thought they would remedy themselves; but when
they are delivered among persons not educated, the greatest
danger might be expected. It is not by the punishment of
those who attempt to mislead the ignorant that we can hope
to cure the evil. If we feel that it is from the ignorance of
those persons to whom the addresses are delivered that the
danger is to be apprehended, it becomes our imperative duty
to teach those persons. Some persons have said, ‘Instruct
the poor in reading and writing, but leave them to learn
religion at home.’ But what would you say to a man who
would manure his land, and leave it to find seed for itself?
It would produce nothing but weeds. I know there is great
difficulty in arranging any national schools; but, as we are
all individually sufferers, I hope we shall join in extending a
national religious education, so that all may learn to do right,
not from a fear of punishment, but from a far nobler motive—
the knowledge that offences against the laws are contrary to
the precepts of the word of God, and hostile to the best
interests of society.”
I fear his lordship may not give me credit for sincerity; but
I do assure you, gentlemen of the jury, no one heard some of.
those sentiments with more pleasure than I did. I did not
expect so much liberality. If such advice had been followed,
I should not now be standing here to defend points of a
speculative nature. Such errors should be corrected by argu­
ment, in the arena of public opinion. Where I uttered these
words they should have been refuted. The witness against
me says he is a preacher; had he no word in answer ? could
he say no word for his God ? No; he, and those who employ
and abet him, shrink from the attempt, and seek to punish in

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43

this dock opinions they cannot refute. Is this a course
becoming1 those who say that they have truth on their
side ?
His lordship said “ emissaries are going about.” I am no
emissary, and the term as applied to me is unjust. I might,
even by the admission of Mr. Bubb, “ undermine ” men’s reli­
gion, go about secretly disseminating my opinions, without
danger of standing here. But I spoke openly; and you who
usually have to punish dishonesty are now called upon to punish
its non-committal, for a little lying would have saved me from
this charge. I have infringed no law, injured no man’s repu­
tation, taken no man’s property, attacked no man’s person,
broken no promise, violated no oath, encouraged no evil,
taught no immorality—set only an example of free speaking.
I was asked a question, and answered it openly. I am not
even charged with declaring dogmatically, “There is no
God.” I only expressed an opinion. I should hold myself
degraded could I descend to inquire, before uttering my con­
victions, if they met the approval of every anonymous man in
the audience. I never forget that other men’s opinions may
be correct—that others may be right as well as myself. I
have put forth my own opinions openly, from a conviction of
their truth; and the sentiments I cannot defend I should scorn
like my prosecutors to invoke an attorney-general to protect.
I seek a public place, where any man may refute me if he
can, and convict me as wilful or ignorant. I should think
myself degraded if I published secretly. What can we think
of the morality of a law which requires secret inquiry, which
prohibits the free publication of opinion ?
Mr. Justice Erskine.—You must have heard me state the law,
that if it be done seriously and decently all men are at liberty
to state opinions.
Mr. Holyoake.—Whatever the law says, if an informer can
carry the words to persons interested in their suppression—if
policemen can be sent to apprehend, without warrants, the
man who publicly expresses his opinions—if he can be hand­
cuffed like a felon, and thrust into a gaol—if indictments can
be brought against him, and he be put to ruinous expenses
and harassing anxieties, however honest the expression of
opinion may be—then, I say, this “ liberty law ” is a mockery.
But by the word “ decent ” is meant “ what those in authority
think proper.” There should be no censorship of opinions;
but I am told that, because I spoke to ignorant people, I am

�44

THE HISTORY OF THE

criminal. To educated persons, then, I might have said what
I did with impunity—
Mr. Justice Erskine.—I only, after speaking of education,
said that an honest man, speaking his opinions decently, was
entitled to do so.
Mr. Holyoake.—There is no evidence to show that my
audience were unable to distinguish decency and propriety.
But it must be already clear enough to you, gentlemen of the
jury, who have been employed during the past week deter­
mining violations of the law, that I am placed here for having
been more honest than the law happens to allow. I am
unaccustomed to address a jury, and I hope to avoid the
charge of presumption or dogmatism. I have no wish to
offend the prejudices of any man in this court, and have no
interest in so doing, when his lordship is armed with the power
of the law to punish it. But, while I profess respect for your
opinions, I must entertain some for my own. There are those
here who think religion proper, and that it alone can lead to
general happiness: I do not, and I have had the same means
of judging. You say your feelings are insulted—your opinions
outraged; but what of mine ? Mine, however honest, are
rendered liable to punishment. I ask not equality of privi­
leges in this respect; I seek not the power of punishing those
who differ from me—nay, I should disdain its use. Christianity
claims what she does not allow, although she says, “ All men
are brothers.”
It is from no disrespect to the bar that I did not give my
case into the hands of counsel, but because they are unable to
enter into my motives. There is a magic circle out of which
they will not step; they will argue only what is orthodox;
and you would have had no opportunity from them of learning
my true motives, or seeing the real bearings of this case.
*
The author of the paragraph which led to this day’s pro­
ceedings applied to me the epithets of “ wretch,’’ “ mis­
creant,” “ monster ”—represented me as one who discoursed
* From what subsequently appeared in the Cheltenham Free Press, I
learned that some of the bar took offence at these remarks; and one
revenged himself by describing me, in the Morning Chronicle, as “a
wretched-looking creature, scarcely emerging from boyhood, whose wiry
and dishevelled hair, ‘ lip unconscious of the razor’s edge,’ and dingy looks,
gave him the appearance of a low German student,” and concluded by
pronouncing his unsolicited opinion that “ I no doubt courted the present
prosecution for the sake of notoriety.”

�* 'iw***/

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45

“ devilism.” The Gloucester Chronicle laboured to prove that
I was a malicious blasphemer. The Cheltenham Examiner—the
Editor of which, I understand, is Mr. Jelinger Symons—draws
a parallel between me and the reputed regicide who has
recently shot at the Queen. These are the words:—“ Akin
to the offence for which Holyoake has been committed is the
crime for which Francis, also a mere stripling, is likely to
forfeit his personal liberty, if not his life. The crimes of blas­
phemy and treason have many points of great similarity, and
frequently result from the same causes; and it would not be
an uninstructive task to trace out the progress of those causes
which lead the minds of the unguarded to the extreme points
when they become dangerous to society. Holyoake, the bold
assertor of the non-existence of a God, did not become an
infidel at once; and Francis, the would-be regicide, did not
level his pistol at our beloved Sovereign without his mind
having been acted and prepared by previous circumstances.
. . . . In both cases a morbid imagination, an affectation
of superiority, a contempt for and a disaffection with existing
institutions, and a craving after notoriety, are the primary
incentives to action.” This ungenerous and offensive parallel
was drawn out through a long leading article. The effect, if
not the object, of all this is to prejudge my case, to awaken
all the bitter prejudices which lurk around religion, and to
secure my condemnation before my trial.
Another paper, in which justice was done me in some
*
respects, called me a “ bigot.” I am not a bigot. I do not
assume that I alone am right; nor did I speak of Deity,
declaring dogmatically his non-existence. I spoke only of my
own disbelief in such an existence. Of all isms I think dog­
matism the worst. I do not judge other men by the agree­
ment of their opinions with my own. I believe you consider
Christianity a benefit. I regret that I feel it is not so, and I
claim the privilege of saying what is true to me. I have eve
**
been ready to acquire correct notions. I have publicly called
upon parties whose duty it was to teach me—and who were
well paid for teaching—to assist me in sifting out the truth.
But they have chosen the strong arm of the law rather than
strong argument. Jean Jacques Rosseau says in his “ Con­
fessions,” | Enthusiasm for sublime virtue is of little use in
* The National Association Gazette.

�46

THE HISTORY OE THE

society. In aiming’ too high we are subject to fall; the con­
tinuity of little duties, well fulfilled, demands no less strength
than heroic actions, and we find our account in it much better,
both in respect to reputation and happiness. The constant
esteem of mankind is infinitely better than sometimes their
admiration.” As the world goes there is much good sense in
this, and I have read it to show how fully I accord with these
sentiments. I am not aiming at sublime virtue, but rather at
the continuity of little duties well fulfilled. It is enough for
me if I can be true and useful.
I was greatly surprised to find the learned gentleman
engaged as prosecuting counsel had so little to say in reference
to the case entrusted to his charge, but I presume it must be
attributed to the fact that little could be said upon the subject.
All his ingenuity, all his legal skill, could not discover an
argument at all tenable against me. I certainly expected to
hear him attempt to prove to you that these prosecutions
were either useful or necessary, but he could only tell you that
my sentiments were very horrible, without adducing proof
that his assertions were true. He dealt liberally in inuendoes,
particularly in reference to the placards exhibited previous to
the lecture, and the motive for issuing them. But you have
been able to glean from his own witness the truth of the
matter. I had completed my discourse, which was of a
secular character, and was preparing to return home, when
one Maitland questioned me on the subject of my opinions. I
did not get up a meeting under one pretence to use it
for another. I employed no scheme to allure an audience
to listen to what I did not openly avow, although it has been
unfairly insinuated that I did so.
When I was first apprehended my papers were taken from
me. They would not even leave me the papers necessary for
my defence, and I do not know what use was made of them,
or that this day the information thus unfairly obtained may
not be employed against me. I will read the memorial on
this subject, which I forwarded to the Secretary of State.
“ Memorial of the undersigned George Jacob Holyoake, prisoner in Glou
*
cester County Gaol, on the charge of Blasphemy, to Sir James Graham,
Her Majesty's Secretary of State,
“ Sheweth,—That your memorialist was committed to this gaol from
Cheltenham, on the vague charge of blasphemy, on June 3rd.
“That in consequence of representations made to him by the police
authorities in Cheltenham, your memorialist brought with him to the gaol

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47

some private papers, hastily selected, for his defence, and that, on arriving
here, the said papers were seized, and the visiting magistrate refused to
allow your memorialist the use of them, or to give them up to his friends to
be used for his advantage.
“ That, as these papers were brought in confidence that your memorialist
would have been allowed to consult his own thoughts in his own defence—•
and as they are no man’s property but his own—and, also, as without them
your memorialist will not have a fair chance of defence—he trusts you will
order them to be restored to him without delay.
" The offence with which your memorialist stands charged occurred as he
was journeying homeward, in a town where he was a comparative stranger.
Consequently, and owing to great bigotry on religious subjects, your memo­
rialist has been unable to obtain bail, and has suffered fourteen days’
imprisonment, which time he has spent in fruitless applications to the
authorities here for proper books and papers to prepare his defence. Out
of a list of thirty-one books submitted for that purpose only thirteen are
allowed.
“ That, as the trial of your memorialist is to take place at the next
sessions of this county, to be holden on the 28th instant, and he is without
the means of defence or the hope of justice, and otherwise he is placed in
circumstances of peculiar anxiety.
“ Hence your memorialist earnestly hopes that you will direct that his
papers, seized as before mentioned, be immediately restored to him, and also
that he be allowed free access to such works and papers as he may deem
necessary for his defence, and that without further delay.
“[Signed)
George Jacob Holyoake.
“County Gaol, Gloucester, June 14, 1842.”

The papers were afterwards returned; but, had it not been
for friends in the House of Commons and in various parts of
the country, I should have been deprived of the materials for
my defence. Public opinion did for me that which Christian
charity refused.
*
Strong prejudices exist against me as being a Socialist.
Your local newspapers have denounced me on this ground.
To show that I deserve no condemnation on this account, I
shall draw your attention to the nature of Socialism. I have
here a little book, stated to be published by the “ Society for
Promoting Christian Knowledge.” If it had been stated to be
a “ society ” for disseminating “ malicious knowledge ” the
title-page would have been correct—for a more gross series
'* At the Gloucester Trinity Sessions, Mr. R. B. Cooper stated, in contra­
diction of the prayer of this memorial, that “ as soon as I mentioned that
my papers were necessary for my defence they were returned to me.” Mr.
S. Jones said he “ took my papers home, and every one I wanted for my
trial on the morrow I had given to me.” Both these statements were
untrue, and I stated so at the time in the Cheltenham Free Press, and my
assertion was never impugned.

�48

THE HISTORY OF THE

of misrepresentations were never strung- together. If what it
says of Socialism were true, then I might be abused; but
Socialism, as I have learned or explained it, would never lead
to the injury of peace or the disturbance of public order. The
first paragraph of Godwin’s “ Political Justice ” is an epitome
of Socialism as developed in this country hitherto; it is “ an
investigation concerning that form of political society, that
system of intercourse and reciprocal action extending beyond
the bounds of a single family, which shall be found most con­
ducive to the general benefit—how may the peculiar and inde­
pendent operation of each individual in the social state most
effectually be preserved—how may the security each man
ought to possess as to his life, and the employments of his
faculties according to the dictates of his own understanding,
be most certainly defended from invasion—how may the indi­
viduals of the human species be made to contribute most sub­
stantially to general improvement and happiness.” But I
shall not content myself with one authority; and to avoid the
charge of presumption, I have gathered much of my defence
from other men’s writings, and shall make them speak for
me.
Socialists have been declared to have dangerous meta­
physical notions. The whole question has been expressed by
the poet-philosopher Goethe in four lines, translated by
Ebenezer Elliott, thus:—
“ How like a stithy is this land I
And we lie on it, like good metal
Long hammer’d by a senseless hand ;
But will such thumping make a kettle ? ”

Meaning that senseless hammering and senseless legislation
could neither make the dull iron into a kettle nor a vicious
people into an enlightened nation. Socialism says all men
have in them the true metal—the elements of goodness, which
all governments are responsible for moulding. Socialism
proposes to substitute other means than punishments for the
prevention of crime; and that you may not think these
chimeras of my own, I will read you the opinion of a Lord
Cardinal to a certain High Chancellor of England, Sir Thomas
More, who, in his “ Utopia,” says, “ When I was in England
the king depended much on his councils. . . . One day
when I was dining with him there happened to be at table one
of the English lawyers, who took occasion to run out in high

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49

commendation of the severe execution of justice upon thieves,
‘ who,’ as he said, ‘ were then hanged so fast that there were
sometimes twenty on one gibbet! ’ and upon that he said ‘ he
could not wonder enough how it came to pass that, since so
few escaped, there were so many thieves left, who were still
robbing in all places.’ Upon this, I (who took the boldness to
speak freely before the cardinal) said, ‘ there was no reason
to wonder at the matter, since this way of punishing thieves
was neither just in itselfnor good for the public ; for as the severity
was too great, so the remedy was not effectual; simple theft
not being so great a crime that it ought to cost a man his life;
no punishment, how severe soever, being able to restrain
those from robbing who can find no other way of livelihood.
In this (said I) not only you in England but a great part of
the world, imitate some ill masters, that are readier to chas­
tise their scholars than teach them. There are dreadful
punishments enacted against thieves, but it were much better to
make such good provisions by which every man might be put in a
method how to live, and so be preserved from the fatal necessity of
stealing, and of dying for it? ” Socialism would try to obtain a
remedy for the evils which judges go round year by year
lamenting; Socialism would suggest a means of affording
employment, and thus mitigate the crime which judges and
juries are called to punish.
Such objects may be declared chimerical, but surely it is
not criminal to hope that they can be carried out, and to feel
that they ought. I could read many other passages to show
that under no circumstances Socialism merits that character
which has been ascribed to it. But I do not deem it necessary,
as I think I have said enough to prove that. Nor do I want
to instil my sentiments, but merely to disabuse your minds of
a prejudice which has been disseminated to my disadvantage.
My assuming the right of free expression inculcated by Mr.
Owen, and when asked a question, refusing to equivocate, are
opposed, it would appear, to the laws of this country. But this
I have learned from Socialism, that there can be no public
or private virtue unless the foundation of action is the practice
of truth. Passing through Cheltenham to visit a friend in
prison, I delivered a lecture. After which the words were
uttered which are here indicted. When I had read the Chel­
tenham Chronicle, in the city of Bristol, I returned to Cheltenham.
If I had been conscious of guilt, should I have returned ? On
the night of my apprehension marks of kindness were shown

�50

THE HISTORY OF THE

me by the people. If I had acted disgracefully, would the
people of Cheltenham have met a stranger, and showed him
marks of esteem and friendship ? I went to the station-house
and remained there all night. When taken before the magis­
trates, Mr. Capper told me I was not fit to be reasoned with,
because I did not believe in a God, and that it was from a love
of notoriety that I acted ; but from the love of mere notoriety
I have never uttered any sentiments, for I hold such conduct
in contempt. After I was taken from the magistrates’ office,
I was treated with contumely at the police-station. Surgeon
Pinching, finding me completely in his power, said he was
sorry the days were gone by when I could hold up my head,
and wished the Inquisition could be put in force against such
persons as myself. I was thrust into a filthy cell, and my
hands were bolted together and the skin pinched off. I was
brought to Gloucester on a sultry day, and should have been
made to walk had not some friends interfered and obtained
permission for me to ride, on paying my own fare and that of
two policemen. There was no indication from my manner
that I wished to make my escape, and the company of two
policemen was sufficient to prevent it. It was thought if I was
chained like a felon, and dragged through two towns, it
would wound my feelings. If these are the ways in which
the truths of Christianity are to be taught, I leave you to
judge of them. Two of your magistrates conversed with me,
and shouted with much rudeness that I was a fool for holding
my opinions. I never could have, said this to any man, and
yet such treatment I received from magistrates old enough to
be my grandfathers.
Here Mr. Bransby Cooper, who sat upon the left of the
j-udge, was so moved by this remark, that he rose and ejacu­
lated something in court, but the judge peremptorily com­
manded him to sit down.
Mr. Holyoake then read the memorial of the public meeting
of the inhabitants of Cheltenham, before quoted, referring to
the conduct, at the examination, of Joseph Overbury, Robert
Capper, and the Rev. T. B. Newell, D.D., magistrates.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—You ought not to read any statement
not authenticated by evidence, which reflects on any person.
Defendant.—This is a petition of a public meeting.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—It is not evidence.
Defendant continued.—I have never been- anxious, under
any circumstances, to obtrude my opinions on the public. I

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confined myself strictly to the subj’ect on which I lectured, and
should not have introduced my sentiments on religion, should
not have spoken another word after my lecture, if I had not
been publicly questioned. I have held various situations, and
in all secular ones, I have strictly kept religious opinions out of
view. It is known that I have taught that and that only which
I have been employed to teach. In proof of this I may cite
testimonials given me upon the occasion of my applying for
the situation of collector at the Birmingham Botanic Gardens.
They are from magistrates and gentlemen of Birmingham,
and the post was one requiring a person of trust, as consider­
able funds would have to pass through his hands in a year.
Mr. Holyoake here quoted from numerous testimonials.
One of them, from a magistrate, F. Lloyd, Esq., stated that
“Mr. Holyoake obtained the first prize at the Mechanics’
Institute, some years ago, for proficiency in mathematics, a
proficiency attained, too, under most discouraging circum­
stances.” Another of the testimonials was from the Rev. S.
Bache, one of the ministers of the New Meeting House congre­
gation.
Having read these documents, Mr. Holyoake
resumed.
During one of those commercial panics which a few years
ago passed over this country like a pestilence, my parents
were suddenly reduced from a state of comparative affluence
to one of privation. At one of these seasons my little sister
became ill. While she was so the Rev. Mr. Moseley, M.A.,
Rector of St. Martin’s, Birmingham, sent an order to us for his
Easter due of fourpence. On previous occasions this demand
had been cheerfully and promptly paid; but now, small as the
sum was, it was sufficient materially to diminish the few com­
forts our house of illness unfortunately afforded; and it was
therefore discussed whether the demand of the clergyman
should be paid, or whether it should be expended in the pur­
chase of some little comforts for my sick sister. Humanity
decided; and we all agreed that it should be devoted to this
latter purpose. It was; but, I think, the very next week, a
summons came for the Easter due, and two shillings and six­
pence were added, because of the non-payment of the fourpence. The payment of this could now no longer be evaded,
for in a few days a warrant of distraint would have rudely
torn the bed from under her, as had been the case with a near
neighbour. Dreading this, and trembling at the apprehension,
we gathered together all the money we had, and which was

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THE HISTORY OF THE

being saved to purchase a little wine to moisten the parched
lips of my dying sister, for at this time her end seemed
approaching. My mother, with a heavy heart, left home to go
to the Public Office. The aisles there were cold and cheerless
like the outside this court, and there, all broken in health and
spirit, worn out with watching, and distracted by that anxiety
for her child a parent, under such circumstances, only could
feel, she was kept from five to six hours waiting to pay the
two shillings and tenpence. It was about this time that my
sister died. Gentlemen, will you wonder if, after this, I
doubted a little the utility of church establishments ? * and if,
after the circumstances I have related, I did not think so
highly of church “ as by law established ” as before, can you
be surprised? Can you punish me for it? [At this point
many ladies wept, and the Court manifested considerable
attention.] I have been told to look around the world for
evidences of the truth of the Christian religion; to look upon
the world and draw different conclusions. It is well for those
who enjoy the smiles of fortune to say so. Bor them all shines
brightly—for them all is fair. But I can see cause of com­
plaint, and I am not alone in the feeling. Mr. Capel Lofft
had said, “the sours of life less offend my taste than its
sweets delight it.” On this Kirke White wrote:—
“ Go to the raging sea, and say ‘ Be still! *
Bid the wild lawless winds obey thy will;
Preach to the storm, and reason with despair—
But tell not misery’s son that life is fair.

“ Thou who in plenty’s lavish lap hast roll’d,
And every year with new delight hast told—
Thou who, recumbent on the lacquer’d barge,
Hast dropt down joy’s gay stream of pleasant marge,
Thou may’st extol life’s calm, untroubled sea—
The storms of misery ne’er burst on thee.
Go to the mat where squalid want reclines ;
Go to the shade obscure where merit pines;
Abide with him whom Penury’s charms control,
And bind the rising yearnings of his soul—
Survey his sleepless couch, and, standing there,
Tell the pooj pallid wretch that life is fair!
* I have since learned that Mr. W. J. Fox read this passage in a Sunday
morning lecture on the events of the month, delivered at South Place in the
September following my trial; and I take this opportunity of acknowledg­
ing that Mr. Fox was the only occupant of a pulpit from whom I received a
friendly line during my entire imprisonment.

�'fisi &gt; ■

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53

“ Lo ! o’er her youthful form, decayed and wan,
The shades of death with gradual steps steal on;;
And the pale mother, pining to decay,
Weeps, for her child, her wretched life away.

“ Go, child of fortune! to his early grave,
Where o’er his head obscure the rank weeds wave ;
Behold the heart-wrung parent lay her head
On the cold turf, and ask to share his bed.
Go, child of fortune, take thy lesson there,
And tell us then that life is wondrous fair.

As I grew up I attended missionary meetings, and my few
pence were given to that cause. When told of heathen kings
who knew not God, and caged their miserable victims, I
shuddered at their barbarity and prayed for their conversion.
O waste of money and prayers that should have been
employed on Christian men ! O infantile fatuity! Do I not
reap the whirlwind for my pains ? I learned the accents of
piety from my mother’s lips. She was and still is a religious
woman. Whatever may be the dissent I entertain, I have
never spoken of her opinions in the language of contempt. I
have always left her (as she, to her honour, has left me mine),
to enjoy her own opinions. In early youth I was religious. I
question whether there is any here who have spent more time
than I did as a Sunday-school teacher. I have given hours,
which I ought to have employed in improving myself, in
improving others. It is not without giving to Christianity
time and attention—without knowing what it was—that I
have given it up. Some lines I contributed to a religious
publication at that time will show the tone of thought which
inquiry has subsequently changed:—
“THE REIGN OF TIME.

“ The proudest earthly buildings show
Time can all things devour;
E’en youth and beauty’s ardent glow,
And manhood’s intellectual brow,
Betray the spoiler’s power :
How soon we sink beneath his sway—
He glances, and our heads turn grey.

“ Though, over all this earthly ball,
Time’s standard is unfurled,
And ruin’s loud to ruins call
Throughout this time-worn world—
Yet from this wreck of earthly things,
See how the soul exulting springs.

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THE HISTORY OF THE

“ And after the archangel’s wand
Has wav’d o’er earth and sea,
And Time has stopped at his command,
The soul will flourish and expand
Through all eternity.
Religion—lovely, fair, and free—
Holds forth this immortality.

“By all the glories of the sky,
To mortals yet unknown—
And by the worm that ne’er shall die,
The fires that always bum—
By all that’s awful or sublime,
Ye sons of men, improve your time.”*

It was stated by one of the magistrates that my being of no
religion was no crime.
I may conclude from what I heard
this morning that I am not to be punished for not being reli­
gious. It was argued in the Cheltenham. Chronicle that my
expressing my opinions was no crime, and I was at some loss
to know what my crime was. The charge stated I was
guilty of blasphemy. ' In the depositions made against me, it is
stated that I was brought before the Cheltenham magistrates
on a charge of felony. I believe now what I have to answer
is the accusation of uttering certain words offensive to the
Cheltenham Chronicle.
This paper stated that “ three persons were ready to give
evidence on the matter.” And yet the witness says he knew
nothing of it till the policeman came for him. He says they
were “chaffing” about my remarks in the office—that is,
joking upon them. It does not say much for his seriousness—
reporting these “horrid sentiments” at night, and the next
morning “ chaffing” about them. If it was an aggravation of
my crime to have chosen an innocent subject, what would the
learned counsel have said if I had chosen a guilty one? It
has been sworn by the witnesses that I said I did not believe
there was such a thing as a God, and an attempt has been
made to make you believe that I used the term “ thing ” con­
temptuously, but the witness admits that I did not use it in a
contemptuous sense. The same word occurs in some lines by
Thomas Moore:—
“ Man, in the sunshine of the world’s new spring,
Shall walk transparent like some holy thing.”
* “ Baptist Tract Magazine,” Vol. ii., p. 341.

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55

I must have used the word “ thing- ” in some such sense as is
used in these lines.
It is laid down by the Common Law that a person denying
the existence of a God is a blasphemer. It has not been
shown that I did this. I merely stated my disbelief—and
disbelief is not included by the law. There is a great differ­
ence between denial and disbelief If I had said distinctly
“ there is no God,” it would have been stating that I was quite
sure of it. I could not have said that, because I am not sure
of it. I saw reasons for disbelief, but did not assert denial.
Disbelief is all I profess. Those dogmatise who affirm, rather
than those who deny a proposition. Mr. Southwell put this
point in its proper light:—
“ If God had never been affirmed, he could not have been denied. It is a
rule of logic, and a very sensible rule, that the onus frobandi, that is, the
burthen or weight of proving, rests on those who affirm a proposition.
Priests have affirmed the existence of a God, but who will maintain that
they have complied with the rule of logic ? ” *

We can only, I think, arrive at a conviction of the existence
of a God by the following modes:
1. By the medium of innate ideas, which we are said by some
divines to possess, and which intuitively lead us to entertain
the idea of a God.
2. By the senses, the sole media by which all knowledge is
acquired.
3. By conjecture.—This is employed by those who suppose
there must be a God, from their inability otherwise to account
for the existence of the universe, and are not willing to allow
it to be inexplicable.
4. By analogy.—Comparison is the basis of this argument.
Analogy is the foundation of natural theology.
5. By revelation.—In this country the Bible is said to contain
the revelation of a God.
Of these it may be remarked:—
1. Innate ideas.—With regard to these, very conclusive
reasons have been advanced by eminent philosophers for dis­
believing that we have any. And human experience confirms
this conclusion. Some nations, as the people of the Arru
Islands, have no idea of a God. So this source of knowledge
concerning one is, to say the least, dubious.
* Oracle af Reason, No. 31, p. 251.

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THE HISTORY OF THE

2. The Senses.—“ No man hath seen God at any time ” is a
sufficient reply to this; for the same may be affirmed of every
other sense, which is here affirmed of sight.
3. Conjecture.-—This defies us. We only prove our own
inability and multiply difficulties. For when we suppose a
God, we cannot suppose how he came, nor how he created
something out of nothing, which is held by the learned to be
plainly impossible.
*
4. Analogy will not inform us. A small pivot or wheel
cannot infallibly indicate to us the mechanism to which it
belongs, nor anything conclusive as to whether the whole had
only one or more makers. So of the universe, no part can
shadow forth the whole of that, nor inform us conclusively
whether it had a creator or creators. And here it is to be
observed the difficulty is greater than with machines—for a
pivot or wheel is a finite part of a finite whole, and both com­
prehensible : but with the universe, all we can take cognizance
of is but a very finite part of an infinite whole, and that whole
to all men acknowledgedly incomprehensible. Moreover, creation
can have no analogy; no one ever saw or can conceive of
anything being created. So that this mode of learning the
existence of a God fails. The Rev. Hugh M‘Neile, M.A.,
minister of St. Jude’s Church, Liverpool, in a lecture delivered
to above four hundred of the Irish clergy, at the Rotunda in
Dublin, said in reference to this part of the question, “ I am
convinced, I say, that, from external creation, no right con­
clusion can be drawn concerning the moral character of God.
Creation is too deeply and disastrously blotted in consequence
of man’s sin, to admit of any satisfactory result from an
adequate contemplation of nature. The authors of a multitude
of books on this subject have given an inadequate and partial
induction of particulars. Already aware (though perhaps
scarcely recognising how or whence) that ‘ God is love,’ they
have looked on nature for proofs of this conclusion, and taken
what suited their purpose. But they have not taken nature
as a whole, and collected a conclusion fairly from impartial
premises. They expatiate on the blessings and enjoyments
of life, in the countless tribes of earth, air, and sea. But if
* Since this time Mr. Francis William Newman has put this argument
unanswerably in these words : “ A God uncaused and existing from eternity
is to the full as incomprehensible as a world uncaused and existing from
eternity.”—“ The Soul,” p. 36. Second edition.

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57

life be a blessing, death is a curse. Nature presents the
universal triumph of death. Is this the doing of a God of
love ? or are there two Gods—a kind one, giving life; and an
unkind one, taking it away; and the wicked one invariably
the victor ? In external creation, exclusively and adequately
contemplated, there is no escape from Manichseism. It is vain
to say that the death of the inferior creatures is a blessing to
man; for why, in the creation of a God of love, should any
such necessity exist ? And how would this account for the
death of man himself? ” So far the argument of analogy.
5. Revelation.—We have none. If others ever had, we can
only determine it by human reason, and for this purpose
Leslie has furnished his well-known rules. Therefore, as
revelation means something superadded to reason, we cannot
be said to possess it; for reason has to determine what is, and
what is not, revelation, and therefore is superior to it. Also,
it is contended by divines that, but for the Bible, we should
know nothing of a God, which shows the unsatisfactory nature
of the four methods of learning his existence we have gone
through. And Lord Brougham contends that but for natural
theology, or the analogy argument, which has been shown to
be no argument at all, the Bible would have no other basis
than mere tradition.So you see, gentlemen, the philosophical difficulties besetting
the path of a young inquirer into sacred things. These diffi­
culties are to me insuperable, and hence I find myself inca­
pable of employing language you are more fortunate in being
able to adapt to your conscience.
*
But it has been stated I said I would put the Deity on half­
pay. After first stating that I did not believe there was a
Deity, is it likely I should say I would put him on half-pay ?
Would you put a servant on half-pay whom you never hired
or had ? All my expressions went to prove that I referred to
the expenses of religion. I could not suppose that there is a
being capable of governing the world, and consider him good

* The object of this passage was to show the jury the intellectual difficul­
ties belonging to this subject, and the passage was an episode among other
issues I raised. A friend of mine asking the late W. J. Fox, at one of
Dr. Elliotson’s seances (who had read the report of the trial), what he
thought of the defence. “ Oh, it turned upon that eternal conundrum, the
existence of God,” was the answer. But I had something more serious in
my defence than the frivolity that employs itself on riddles.

�58

THE HISTORY OF THE

and kind, and yet have any intention of bringing him into con­
tempt. I had no personal reference to the Deity. If I made
use of that figure of speech it was because I thought they
would understand it better, and it seems they did understand it.
I said we had many heavy burdens to pay to capitalists and
others, and that I thought they hung like a millstone round us.
Sir R. Peel said, when he introduced the income-tax, that the
poor man could bear no more. I said there were twenty-four
millions taken from us for the support of religion, and that
they would do well to reduce that one-half. Suppose, gen­
tlemen, that I did refer to the Deity, was my notion a dis­
honourable one ? What man of you who had enough and to
spare, and seeing the people around him in poverty, would
not willingly relinquish part of his income to give them a bare
subsistence ? Who will deny that in England there are
honest, industrious, hard-working men, honourable women,
and beautiful children, who have not the means of obtaining
food ? Did I do him a disgrace if I thought he, who is called
our Father, the Most High, would have dispensed with onehalf of the lip-service he receives in order to give his creatures
necessaries ?
[It being nearly four o’clock, the jury asked leave to retire,
to which Mr. Holyoake consenting, they left the Court for a
short time. Some ladies who represented themselves as wives
of clergymen, came round the dock offering Mr. Holyoake
confections and refreshment, and expressing their regret at
the treatment he had received and the position in which he
was placed.]
Mr. Holyoake, on resuming, said—According to a calcula­
tion that has never been disputed, the
“ Catholics, numbering ..
Protestants
„
..
Greek Church „
&gt;■
Total of Christians

..

Pay to their Clergy.
124,672,000 .. £6,106,000
54,046,000 .. 11,906,000
41,000,000 ..
,£760,000

219,718,000

^18,762,000

“ Of which England, for twenty-one millions of people, pays
more than one-half.”* Thus the English pay five times more
according to their numbers. I proposed a reduction of only
one-half.
* “ Cheap Salvation,” By Henry Hetherington.

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59

Mr. W, J. Fox has told us—“ If the government of the
country disposed of the mismanaged funds of the clergy, they
would have sufficient for their annual needful expenditure.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—If you can convince the jury that
your only meaning was that the incomes of the clergy ought
to be reduced, and that you did not intend to insult God, I
should tell the jury you ought not to be convicted. You need
not go into a laboured defence of that.
Mr. Holyoake.—It was stated by one of the witnesses at
Cheltenham that I said Christians are worshippers of Mam­
mon. I thought it necessary for me to refer to it.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—There is no evidence of that.
Mr. Holyoake.—Then turn to the question, What is blasphemy ?
In the case of Mr. Southwell, one of the witnesses for the
prosecution stated his opinion that the crime was “ bringing a
scandal on the religion of the magistrates” Perhaps this is as
correct a definition as can be given. It has been said to be
“an injury to God.” Men who could not string six sentences
together grammatically have told me they would defend
God—men whom I should be ashamed to have defending me.
But blasphemy is impossible in the sense of annoyance to
God. Jonathan Edwards says, “The following things may
be laid down as maxims of plain truth and indisputable
evidence:—
“ i. That God is a perfectly happy being, in the most abso­
lute and highest sense possible.
“ 2. It will follow from hence that God is free from every­
thing that is contrary to happiness: and so that in strict pro­
priety of speech there is no such thing as any pain, grief, or
trouble in God.
“ 3. Where any intelligent being is really crossed and dis­
appointed, and things are contrary to what he truly desires,
he is less pleased, or has the less pleasure, his pleasure and
happiness are diminished, and he suffers what is disagreeable
to him, or is the subject of something that is of a nature con­
trary to joy and happiness, even pain and grief.
“ From this last maxim it follows, that if no distinction is to
be admitted between God’s hatred of sin and his will with
respect to the event and existence of sin, as the all-wise deter­
miner of all events, under the view of all consequences through
the whole compass and series of things; I say, then, it cer­
tainly follows, that the coming to pass of every individual act
of sin is truly, all things considered, contrary to his will, and

�6o

THE HISTORY OF THE

that his will is really crossed in it, and that in proportion as
he hates it. And as God’s hatred of sin is infinite, by reason
of the infinite contrariety of his holy nature to sin, so his will
is infinitely crossed in every act of sin that happens; which is
as much as to say, he endures that which is infinitely dis­
agreeable to him, by means of every act of sin he sees com­
mitted—and so he must be infinitely crossed and suffer infinite
pain every day, in millions of millions of instances, which
would be to make him infinitely the most miserable of all
beings.” *
But blasphemy is an antiquated accusation. In a work f by
Col. Peyronnet Thompson, it is remarked—“ what a turmoil,
what a splutter, was in this land, when men first announced
that they would not eat fish, they would not bow down, they
would not confess but when they liked, and this because the
secret had got wind that these things were either not in the
priests’ own rule, or were against it! What threats of hell
flames, what splashing about of fire and brimstone, what
registration of judgments on men choked with a beef-steak
on Friday! Look at one of those simple men in the present
day, who shock themselves with the barouches, the cigars, the
newspapers, and the elephants of a London Sunday, and
occasionally digress to Paris, for the keener excitation of
seeing Punch upon the Boulevards, and wondering where
heaven reserves its thunder. And put the parallel case, that
a good Austrian or Navarrese Catholic came here, and
grieved his heart with our weekly doings on a Friday, to say
nothing of our more wholesale offences for forty days together
in Lent, ‘ Such frying; such barbecuing; in no place did I
see anybody having the smallest notion of a red herring 1 All
are involved in one flood of sin and gravy I How fathomless
the patience of heaven, that such an island is not swallowed
up of the deep ! ’ We have looked into the rule he professes
to go by, and we declare it is not there, but the contrary.
We know we must appear in the next world with all our
mutton on our heads. But we have done our best to look at
the rule with the light that God has given us; and in spite of
* Quoted from “ A Commentary on the Public Discussion on the subjects
of Necessity and Responsibility,” &amp;c. By Jonathan Jonathan, late of the
United States.
t “ The Question of Sabbath Observance, tried by the Church’s own rule,”
&amp;c. By Col. Peyronnet Thompson, F.R.S., of Queen’s College, Cambridge.

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61

Austria or Navarre, we will take the risk of His not beingangry with us, for seeing no prohibition of mutton there.”
Thus we see that mutton-eating was at one period blas­
phemous.
Mr. Sergeant Talfourd told the jury, in the case of Hethering­
ton v. Moxon, that if the government were consistent in carry­
ing out prosecutions for blasphemy, Shakspere, Milton, Byron,
Shelley, Southey, might be prohibited. This, perhaps, would
be an agreeable result to a reverend gentleman well known
in this court and county, who says all science should be
destroyed; but I trust you entertain no such feelings, and
that if I can show that my sentiments cannot be productive of
harm, you will feel called upon to acquit me. I claim no
inherent right of expressing my opinions; I only contend for
liberty of expression because required for the public good.
A doctrine was laid down by Lord John Russell upon the
occasion of the presentation of the Natfoual Petition, which I
will quote as a view of the subject of human rights well
expressed.
“I am aware,” he said, “that it is a doctrine frequently
urged, and I perceive dwelt upon in this petition, that every
male of a certain age has a right, absolute and inalienable, to
elect a representative to take his place among the members
in the Commons’ House of Parliament. Now, sir, I never
could understand that indefeasible right. It appears to me
that that question, like every other in the practical application
of politics, is to be settled by the institutions and the laws of
the country of which the person is a native. I see no more
right that a person twenty-one years of age has to elect a
member of Parliament than he has to be a juryman. I con­
ceive that you may just as well say that every adult male has
a right to sit upon a jury to decide the most complicated and
difficult questions of property, or that every man has a right
to exercise the judicial functions, as the people did in some of
the republics of antiquity. These things, as it appears to me,
are not matters of right; but if it be for the good of the people
at large, if it be conducive to the right government of the
state, if it tend to the maintenance of the freedom and welfare
of the people, that a certain number, defined and limited by a
reference to a fixed standard of property, should have the
right of electing members of Parliament, and if it be disad­
vantageous to the community at large that the right of suffrage
should be universal, then I say that on such a subject the con­

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sideration of the public good should prevail, that legislation
must act upon it as on every other, and that no inalienable
right can be quoted against that which the good of the whole
demands.”
If Lord Russell did not, I do see a difference between the
claim of an elector and the right of a juryman. The elector
is chiefly concerned with his own interests, the juryman with
other people’s—one is simple, the other complex. But with
the measure of right laid down by his lordship in the senti­
ments I have quoted, I perfectly accord, and if it could be
shown that freedom of expression produced public harm, then
I would give it up. But I believe such a right would produce
good, and therefore I claim it at your hands upon the ground
of public good.
In what I urge, it is not faith but reason, as far as I under­
stand it, that I take for my guide—a rule of argument I trust
you will accept. “Reason contents me” was inscribed as
the motto on the seal of the letter from Sir James Graham,
acknowledging the receipt of the Cheltenham memorial. If
reason “ contents ” the Secretary of State and “ fountain of
justice,” surely it ought to “ content ” the channels through
which such justice is diffused over society. Reason would
always be preferred by us were we not differently instructed.
“Bewildered,” says Diderot, “in an immense forest during
the night, and having only one small torch for my guide, a
stranger approaches, and thus addresses me: 1 Friend, blow
out thy light if thou wouldst make sure of the right path? The
‘forest’ was the world—the ‘light’ was my reason—the
‘ stranger ’ was a priest.”
After several quotations showing the dubious and often per­
nicious influences of sacred authority, Mr. Holyoake observed:
Religious sanctions are regarded only by the ignorant, whom
they confirm in folly. The good find their sanction in the
satisfaction of a virtuous act performed. In an address of the
Rev. F. Close, delivered a short time since at the Church of
England Tradesmen and Working Men’s Association of
Cheltenham, he said “ that the more a man is advanced in
human knowledge the more is he opposed to religion, and the
more deadly enemy he is to the truth of God.” If this
Christian minister is to be believed, then may you burn your
books, forsake all mental refinement, and be equal in piety
and ignorance. If Christianity is opposed to human improve­
ment, then should all systems of ignorance be patronized by

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Christians. Sentiments like these would lead us to give up
Boyle, Locke, and Newton, and regard them, with the Rev.
Mr. Close, with detestation.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—Let me see the discourse of Mr.
Close from which you are quoting.
The book was handed to his lordship.
Mr. Holyoake.—If the correctness of that report be doubted,
I may state that the sentiments of Mr. Close were replied to
by Mr. Grantley Berkeley.
Permit me now to draw your attention strongly to what
has been said by men in authority of the impolicy of these
prosecutions—that even if you were justified in inflicting
punishment on me, it would not be wise to do so. Lord
Brougham, three or four years ago, said, “I may underrate
the power of truth opposed to error, and I may overrate the
good sense of my fellow-countrymen in rejecting it, but one
thing I do not overrate—the power of persecution to spread
that which persecution only can spread.” When I walk
through any of those ancient places, as I did yesterday
through your beautiful cathedral, I feel the majesty they ever
present, and think of the manner in which our Catholic
ancestors acted on the minds of men. There were sublimity,
and pageantry, and pomp to create awe. We have none now
of that beauty of architecture in our meagre churches and
more meagre chapels. They had a service more imposing
than we ever had. Recollecting all these things, I have won­
dered how anything could be found sufficiently powerful to
shake them off. I have wondered how Luther, with his rude
vulgarity, could have effected so much. I can only account
for it in this way—that when the Catholics dragged his fol­
lowers to gaol, it was found that human feelings were stronger
than human creeds.
These prosecutions are entirely in opposition to the senti­
ments promulgated by yourselves, as appears from a book
given me in gaol called the “ Manual of Devotion.” I
amused myself by contrasting the profession contained in it
with the practice of my opponents. It is published by the
“ Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.” In the “ Dis­
course concerning Prayer ” it is laid down that the “ second
qualification for prayer is charity or love. There is nothing
so contrary to the nature of God, nothing so wide of the true
spirit of a Christian, as bitterness and wrath, malice and
envy; and therefore it is vain to think that even our prayers

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can be acceptable to God, till we have put on, as the elect of
God, bowels of mercy, kindness, humbleness of mind, meek­
ness, long-suffering-, forbearing one another, and forgiving
one another, as St. Paul commands.” Gentlemen, where are
these sentiments evinced in this prosecution ?
The “ third qualification is faith. If any of you lack wis­
dom, says St. James, let him ask of God, but let him ask in
faith.” My prosecutors have asked, and Mr. Bubb have had,
faith in policemen, and confidence only in the “ common law.”
The “ fourth qualification is—That in all things of a tem­
poral concern, we must exercise an entire submission to the
will of God. A good Christian will be sure to leave the issue
in God’s hands.” In my case not the will of God, but the
will of bigots was done, and the “ issue ” left in the turnkey’s
hands.
The “ fifth qualification is—That the person praying hath
a good intention; that he asks for a good end. We must
not pray as the revengeful man when he prays for authority,
that he may have the more power to effect his evil designs.”
What can be more wholly condemnatory of these proceedings
than these instructions of the “ Manual of Devotion ? ”
When the “ Life of Christ,” by Dr. Strauss, appeared in
Berlin, contrary to usages in such matters, the Prussian go­
vernment consulted the clergy to ascertain from them whether
it would not be prudent to prohibit this extraordinary pro­
duction. The celebrated Bishop Neander was commissioned
by the ecclesiastical body of Berlin to peruse the book and
return an answer. Neander did so, and declared, in reply,
that the work submitted to his examination threatened, it was
true, the demolition of all creeds; nevertheless, he requested
that full liberty should notjae denied to his adversary, in order
that full and free discussion might be the only judges between
truth and error. And when asked whether it should be pro­
secuted, said, “ No, I will answer it.”
Mr. Justice Erskine.—That work was temperately written.
Mr. Holyoake.—Neander did reply to it, and Strauss had
the manliness to acknowledge that it had corrected many of
his errors. Would that have been done had he been prose­
cuted ? Dr. Strauss’s work on the Scriptures got him a pro­
fessor’s chair in Germany. In this country it would have
made him amenable to the common law, and to one, two, or
three years’ imprisonment.
Gentlemen, in the pertinacity of my open reply to Maitland,

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you may find something- objectionable, but I happen to be an
admirer of that sentiment expressed by the honest “ Vicar of
Wakefield”—“In all human institutions a smaller evil is
allowed to procure a greater good; as in politics, a province
may be given away, to secure a kingdom; in medicine, a limb
may be lopt off, to preserve the body; but in religion, the law
is written and inflexible, never to do evil.” Then, gentlemen,
I ought to be tolerated in the truthfulness of my answer.
Milton, in his Prose Works, in reference to an incident in his
*
travels, says:— “ While I was on my way back to Rome, some merchants
informed me that the English Jesuits had formed a plot
against me, if I returned to Rome, because I had spoken too
freely of religion; for it was a rule which I had laid down to
myself in those places, never to be the first to begin any con­
versation on religion—but if any questions were put to me
concerning my faith, to declare it without any reserve or fear.”
This is the rule which I myself have followed in this case.
Since his lordship—with more liberality than is customary,
and with more philosophy than I expected on matters of reli­
gion (on which I hear his lordship thinks very devoutly)—has
said that any religion may be discussed in temperate lan­
guage, it is not necessary for me to prove, as I should have
done, that it would be useless liberty for me to entertain
opinions without permission to publish them. The only ques­
tion is whether, in the expression of these opinions, I used a
proper kind of language. I think I have proved that I was
far from having any of those “ malicious ” feelings the indict­
ment presupposes. Many figures of speech have been used
in this court from which my feelings revolted as much as those
of any person could from what I said. No allowance is made
for this, and too much importance is attached to what is
assumed to be ridicule. A short time ago it was argued, that
if the political squibs which are seen in shop-windows were
permitted to be published, they would bring government into
contempt, and you would soon have no government. Their
publication has been permitted. Have we no government
now ? I feel the utility of a government, and no force of
ridicule could shake my belief in the importance of good
government. So it is with religion. Nothing that is uttered,
* Milton’s Prose Works, pp. 933-4, 8vo edition.

Edited by Fletcher.

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however contemptuous, can bring it into contempt, if it really
is useful and beneficial. We might defy all the wits and
caricaturists in the world to bring the problems of Euclid into
contempt. No man can bring into contempt that which is
essential and true.
The counsel who opened the case did not state whether the
indictment was at statute or common law.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—Common law.
Mr. Holyoake.—Then, gentlemen of the jury, I shall draw
your attention to that, and I hope I shall be able to explain
the law bearing on my case.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—The jury must take the law from me.
I am responsible for that.
Mr. Holyoake.—I know, my lord; but still I may refer to
it. 'A friend of mine consulted the works bearing upon the
law of this case.
*
I have here the results of his labours, and,
if I am wrong, your lordship will, in summing up, correct
me.
Gentlemen of the jury, the common law is a judge-made
law. A judge laid down, some years ago, that to say any­
thing against the Christian religion was an indictable offence.
Another judge followed him and said the sameI and at last it
came not to be doubted. If I show there is no law properly
made in Parliament assembled, you ought to acquit me.
The offence with which I am charged is an offence at
common law. There is no statute which punishes a man
simply for denying the existence of God. There is a statute
(9 and 10 Wm. III., c. 32) directed against those who denied
the Trinity and who renounced Christianity. But the former
part has been repealed, in favour of Unitarians, by the 5 3rd
Geo. III., c. 160; and the words I am charged with having
spoken cannot be brought within the latter. There is a
statute against profane cursing and swearing (19 Geo. II. c.
21), but it takes no cognisance of this offence. Human beings
have also been put to death for witchcraft (33 Hen. VIII.,
c. 8 ; and 1 James I., c. 12), under the merciless statutes
which were enacted in times of the grossest ignorance and
superstition; but those statutes have been repealed (9 Geo. II.,
c. 5). This offence, therefore, is an offence against the com­
mon law, if it is an offence at all. It is to be found in the
* I was indebted to Mr. J. Humffreys Parry, barrister, now Mr. Serjeant
Parry, for the revision of the argument I employed.

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recorded decisions of the judges, if it is to be found anywhere,
and the punishment for it is in their discretion. Had it been
an offence under a statute, it would have been impossible for
me to have denied the authority of the statute; but, as it is an
offence at common law, it is quite competent for me to show
that the authorities which have been supposed to constitute
•the offence do not warrant such a construction. Should your
lordship even declare that you had no doubt upon the subj'ect,
it would still be competent for me to bring before you the
decisions of former judges, to argue upon those decisions, and
to show, if I could, that there was some mistake or error
running throughout the whole of them. Your lordship, I am
sure, will admit that judges are fallible, and that a blind,
unreasoning submission to them no man should give. As
some excuse for presuming to doubt the decision of some of
your lordship’s predecessors, I shall quote the following
passage from the preface to Mr. Watkin’s treatise on Con­
veyancing, allowed to be a master-piece of legal sagacity and
method. “ I believe,” writes that gentleman, “ it will be
found, on examination, that an implicit submission to the
assertions of our predecessors, whatever station those prede­
cessors may have held, has been one of the most certain
sources of error. Perhaps there is nothing which has so much
shackled the human intellect, nothing which has so greatly
promoted whatever is tyrannic, preposterous, and absurd,
nothing perhaps which has so much degraded the species in
the scale of being as the implicit submission to individual
dicta.” And he then goes on in vigorous terms to reprobate
the practice of allowing “ authority to shoulder out common
sense, or adhering to precedent in defiance of principle.”
Upon the principle contained in this passage I shall act, in
claiming the attention of your lordship, and you, gentlemen of
the jury, whilst I examine the authorities for the doctrine
which brings the offence with which I am charged within the
jurisdiction of the temporal courts. Your lordship will,
perhaps, refer to those books.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—No need of that. If it is not an
offence at common law, this indictment is worth nothing.
You can take it before the fifteen judges on a writ of error.
I sit here, not to correct the law, but merely to administer it.
*
* I have been told by a legal friend of great experience, that at this point
I might have taken the judge at his word, and have carried the case before
the judges for decision; but I was unacquainted with the forms of law in
such cases, and I moreover distrusted the judge.

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Mr. Holyoake resumed.—In the fourth volume of “ Black­
stone’s Commentaries,” p. 59, in speaking- of offences against
God and religion, that writer says, “The fourth species of
offences, therefore, more immediately against God and reli­
gion, is that of blasphemy against the Almighty, by denying
his being or providence, or by contumelious reproaches of our
Saviour, Christ. Whither also may be preferred all profane
scoffing at the Holy Scripture, or exposing it to contempt and
ridicule. These are offences punishable at common law by
fine and imprisonment, or other infamous corporal punish­
ment ; for Christianity is part of the laws of England.” Black­
stone quotes, in support of the first species, a volume of
“Ventris’ Reports,” p. 298, and the second from the second
volume of “Strange’s Reports,” p. 834. Mr. Christian, the
commentator upon Blackstone, adds, in a note, a passage
from the “Year Book” (34 Henry VI.), folio 43.
The earliest case is that from the “ Year Book,” in the
34th year of Henry VI. (1458). Mr. Christian quotes from
it this passage—“ Scripture est common ley, sur quel toutes
manieres de leis sont fondes ” (i.e., Scripture is common law,
upon which all descriptions of laws are founded). Were this
quotation correct, and did the word Scripture here mean
“ Holy Scripture,” or what is generally understood by the
Bible, then I admit this passage would be a good foundation
to build up Mr. Judge Blackstone’s law. But then it is no
such thing. The case in the “ Year Book ” is a case of quare
impedit, and, in the course of the argument, the question arose
whether, in a matter of induction to a benefice by the ordinary
(i.e., the bishop), the common law would take notice of, or be
bound by, the law or practices of the church. Whereupon,
Chief Justice Prisot says—“ To such laws, which they of the
holy church have in ‘ ancient writing,’ it becomes us to give
credence, for such is common law, upon which all descriptions
of laws are founded. And therefore, sir, we are obliged to
recognise their law of the holy church—likewise they are
obliged to recognise our law. And, sir, if it appears to us
now that the bishop has done as an ordinary should do in
such a case, then we ought to judge it good—if otherwise,
bad.”
In this passage, then, there is not one word about Scripture
in the sense of “ Holy Scripture.’’ Judge Prisot says, “ To
such laws as the church has in ancient scripture {i.e., ancient
writing) we ought to give credence.” And what does he

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mean by “laws which the church has in ancient writing?”
not any laws that are to be found in the Bible, but the canon
or ecclesiastical laws by which the temporal concerns of the
church are guided. And the reason he uses the phrase
“ ancien scripture,” or ancient writing, is that the laws were
not then printed; the only record of them was in writing.
Printing had not been introduced into England, and was only
just discovered on the continent; the laws, therefore, of the
spiritual and temporal courts were only to be seen in writing.
And as though there should be no doubt as to his meaning,
he goes on to say, “ And as we are obliged to recognise their
laws (that is, the ecclesiastical laws, or laws of the spiritual
courts), so they are obliged to recognise our laws (that is, the
laws of the temporal courts).” It must, therefore, be evident
that this quotation of Mr. Christian is a perversion or mistake,
a judicial forgery or a judicial blunder, and in either case its
authority is of no value. It must be dismissed altogether from
our minds in considering what the law is upon this point—
that is, whether Christianity is or is not a part and parcel of
the law of England. Unfortunately, however, we shall find
that this case is actually made the substratum of the law. In
proving, therefore, that it cannot warrant such a law, surely I
prove that at common law, at least to speak against Christ­
ianity, is not an offence.
The next case is that in Ventris’ Report, vol. I, p. 293. It
is called Taylor’s case, and Chief Justice Hale certainly
declares explicitly in this case, “ that Christianity is parcel of
the laws of England.’’ But he cites no authority whatever.
In the case analysed from the Year Book, it is expressly
said that the common law is to be found in “ ancient writings,”
and the unsupported dictum of a judge in the middle of the
seventeenth century cannot be.construed as a part of the
ancient writings of the common law. Either the law already
existed or it did not. If it did, the question is—where is it ?
If it did not, Chief Justice Hale could not then make it for the
first time; and this case in Ventris’ cannot be said to lay down
the law. The case in the second volume of Strange is The
King v. Woolston. The defendant had been convicted of
writing four blasphemous discourses against the divinity and
character of Christ; and upon attempting to move in arrest of
judgment, the court declared they would not suffer it to be
debated whether to write against Christianity in general was
an offence punishable in the temporal courts of common law.

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And they cited Taylor’s case, which has been shown to be an
insufficient authority, or rather no authority at all, and The
King v. Hale, in the same volume of Strange, p. 416, but
which was an indictment under the statute (9 &amp; 10 Wm. III.)
for speaking against the Trinity, and therefore cannot in any
way support the common law doctrine.
The first person who called attention to the utter want of
authority in the common law for the dictum “ that Christianity
was part of the common law,” was Jefferson, the second pre­
sident of America—himself a profound lawyer, and to his
references I am indebted for the foregoing authorities, which,
however, have been carefully verified. Mr. Jefferson, in a
letter to Major Cartwright, to be found in vol. ii., p. 272, of
his “Memoirs,” exposes the mode in which this law was
created. Alluding to the case of Prisot, he says, “ Finch, in
his first book, c. 3, is the first who afterwards quotes this
case. He misstates it thus; ‘ To such laws of the church as
have warrant in Holy Scripture, our law giveth credence/
and cites Prisot, mistranslating ‘ Ancien Scripture ’ into Holy
Scripture. This was in 1613, a century and a half after the
dictum of Prisot. Wingate, in 1658, erects this false transla­
tion into a maxim of the common law, copying the words of
Finch, but citing Prisot. Shephard, title ‘ Religion,’ in 1675,
copies the same mistranslation, quoting the Year Book, Finch,
and Wingate. Hale expresses it in these words: ‘Christ­
ianity is parcel of the laws of England,’ but quotes no autho­
rity. Wood, 409, ventures still to vary the phrase, and says,
‘that all blasphemy and profaneness are offences by the
common lawand Blackstone repeats the words of Hale.”
In the case of The King v. Carlile, decided since Mr. Jefferson
wrote this letter, there was no argument as to the commonlaw. The question was as to whether the statute (9 &amp; 10
Wm. III.) had superseded the common law. But the common
law itself was not called in question, which I submit it should
be, and by a wise example superseded.
But let us see what Christianity is according to common
law. We may remark—
1. Its inconsistency.—It calls blasphemy the greatest crime
man can commit. Yet in the case of Hetherington v Moxon,
it permits the respectable blasphemer to go free. Blasphemy in
guinea volumes it allows, but exhibits the holiest horror at it
when in penny pamphlets.
2. Its barbarity, as in Peter Annet’s case.—In Michaelmas

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term, M. 3 G. 3, Peter Annet was convicted on an information
for writing- “ a most blasphemous libel,” in weekly papers
called the Free Inquirer, to which he pleaded guilty; in con­
sideration of which, and of his poverty, of his having confessed
his errors in an affidavit, and of his being 74 years old, and
some symptoms of wildness that appeared on his inspection in
court, the court declared they had mitigated his punishment
to the following: To be imprisoned in Newgate for one
month; to stand twice in the pillory with a paper on his
forehead, inscribed Blasphemy; to be sent to the House of
Correction to hard labour for a year; to pay a fine of 6s. 8d.,
and to find security himself in £100, and two sureties in £50
each for his good behaviour during life.
*
3. Its capriciousness.—The common law before the time of
Henry VIII. was one thing, but afterwards it was another.
The language which was blasphemy at the first period was
not so in the other. Those expressions which insulted God
before Henry the Eighth was born did not insult him after­
wards. Henry the Eighth’s opinion made the difference.
Lord Commissioner Whitelocke (5 Howell’s State Trials,
p. 826), in Debate whether James Nayler, the Quaker, should
suffer death, remarked, “ I remember a case in our Book H. 7,
where the bishop committed one to prison for a heretic, and
the heresy was denying * that tythes were due to the parson.’
This at that time was a very great heresy.”
4. Its disregard of equal justice.—A British subject would
be punished for firing into a Turkish vessel, but he is not
punishable for attacking- the captain and sailors with Bibles
and tracts, which, if they read and believe, will make them
apostates from the faith of Mahomet, and blasphemers of the
Koran. While on terms of amity with the Sublime Porte,
the laws of England restrain us from despoiling them of their
property, but not from despoiling them of their religion.-^
5. It debases religion as best set forth.—“Religion (says
Miss Martineau) is, in its widest sense, ‘the tendency of
human nature to the infinite;’ and its principle is manifested
in the pursuit of perfection in any direction whatever. It is in
this widest sense that some speculative atheists have been
religious men—religious in their efforts after self-perfection,
* Blackstone’s Reports, p. 395.
t Vide Freethinker's Information for the People.

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though unable to personify their conception of the infinite. In
a somewhat narrower sense, religion is the relation which the
highest human sentiments bear towards an infinitely perfect
being. There can be no further narrowing than this. Any
account of religion which restricts it within the boundaries of
any system, which connects it with any mode of belief, which
implicates it with hope of reward or fear of punishment, is low
and injurious, and debases religion into superstition.” How
much more is religion degraded that is made the subject of
reward and punishment here ?
Thus speaks the common law upon these points; and thus,
as part of the common law, speaks Christianity. Will you,
by a verdict of guilty this day, send forth to the world this
card of credentials of the religion of Jesus ?
The intention of a libel constitutes its criminality. It is for
you, gentlemen, to say whether I knowingly, wickedly, and
maliciously offended the law ? Malice is necessary to a libel
—conscientious words are allowable.
“Contumely and contempt are what no establishment can
tolerate; but, on the other hand, it would not be proper to
lay any restraint upon rational and dispassionate discussions
of the rectitude and propriety of the established mode of wor­
ship.” 4 Bia. Com. 51; I Pmp. 219. And Mr. Starkie, on the
subject, says “ that it may not be going too far from the prin­
ciples and decisions, that no author or preacher who fairly and
conscientiously promulgates the opinions with whose truth he
is impressed for the benefit of others, is for so doing amenable
as a criminal, that a malicious and mischievous intention is in
such case the broad boundary between right and wrong; and
that if it can be collected from the offensive levity with which
so serious a subject is treated, or from other circumstances,
that the act of the party was malicious, then, since the law
has no means of distinguishing between different degrees of
evil tendency, if the matter published contain any such ten­
dency, the publisher becomes amenable to justice.” *
As to the duty of the jury, I have Lord Chief Justice
Abbott’s opinion, in his charge to the jury in summing up the
evidence against Mr. Joseph Russell, at the Warwick Summer
Assizes, on Friday, August 13,1819, for a political libel, being
Mr. Hone’s “ Parody on the Litany.”« Mr. Russell argued
that as Hone had been acquitted for publishing, it, he also
* Starkie on Libel, pp. 496-7.

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.ought to be. “ No one,” says his lordship, “ is more inclined
than myself to speak reverently of the decision of j'uries. But,
gentlemen, you cannot, under the sanction of an oath, take the
verdict of those j’ uries either directly or indirectly as your guide
in the verdict you are called upon to give in this case. Those
juries, no doubt, returned their verdicts honestly and con­
scientiously according to the evidence that was laid before
them. What that evidence was you can know nothing of.
You are to try the question by your own consciences and by
your own reason. They might have been right in their deci­
sion, and you should be careful that you are right in yours.”
After this, you will see it is clear that though a jury had
before found a person guilty of the offence I am charged with,
it will be no justification of your doing so too. [Here Mr.
Holyoake, perceiving that he would be heard fairly, and that
no attempts to put him down were practised, laid aside a
handful of notes, and said]—I have to thank your lordship,
and you, gentlemen of the jury, for the courtesy and attention
with which I have been heard. Gentlemen, if I have occupied
you long you will find my apology in the circumstance that
your verdict against me will occupy me longer. I could wish
that justice to me and your convenience had permitted brevity.
The length of my defence has originated with the charge
against me, and not with myself.
It is said that when Southey was asked if he were not
ashamed of having written Wat Tyler, he answered, “ No more
ashamed than I am of having been young.” Meaning, any
man may err in youth. So I erred in being religious in my
early days. If I am not religious now, deem me not criminal.
Religion never did me a service, how then should I love it ?
But it assailed my youth with gloomy dogmas, now it assails
my liberty.
Gentlemen, if during my address to you I have offended by
the frankness of my avowals, it has not proceeded from a dis­
regard of your feelings, but from the belief that, as men, you
would prefer independence to servility of speech.
Of the nature of the charge against me I add no further
word. My only crime has been the discharge of what I con­
sidered a duty. For my difference in opinion with you upon
the question of Deity, I offer no apology. * I have made no
contract to think as you do, and I owe you no obligation to do
it. If I commanded you to abjure your belief, you would dis­
regard it as impertinence, and if you punish me for not

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abjuring- mine, how will you reconcile it with “doing as you
would wish to be done unto ? ”
Had I said that there is no God, still I should not deserve
the penalties of the law. If I point to the wrong I see in
this Christian country, and ask “ Is this Christianity ? ” you
would reply “ No ; what you refer to results from men who
live without God in the world.” Then, gentlemen, would you
punish me for simply saying that which other men, unpunished,,
are every day doing ?
If I have said that religious revenues should be reduced
one-half, I spoke only the dictates of humanity at this season
of national suffering. Surely it is not blasphemous to argue
that human misery should be alleviated at the expense of
spiritual pride.
I ask not equal rights with yourselves. You, as Christians,
can imprison those who differ from you. I do not offend
your pride by asking to be admitted your equals here. I
desire not such privileges. I claim merely the right to speak
my convictions—to show a man, if I can, the right path when
I think he takes the wrong one.
It is a melancholy maxim in these courts of law, that the
greater the truth the greater the libel; and so it would be
with me this day could I demonstrate to you that there is no
Deity. The more correct I am the severer would be my
punishment, because the law regards the belief in a God to
be the foundation of obedience among men. But I trust I
have convinced you that my views of this question are com­
patible with the practice of all our duties to our fellow-men,
borne out by eminent authority and long experience.
Setting aside the reprobation of persecution by Middleton,
by Clarke, by Latimer, and other divines I have quoted;
Leslie, Reid, and Bulwer have contended that the objections
of the sceptic merely strengthen the fabric of piety he
pretends to assail. Gentlemen, which is to be believed,
divines and philosophers, or the common law ? These persons
speak as though they believed Christianity to be true; the
common law punishes as though it knew it to be false.
If the State religion be true, my opinion can never overcome
it; and by convicting me you publish your consciousness of
error in the cause you are placed there to defend as truth.
If God be truth, you libel him and his power, and publish the
omnipotence of error.
When in gaol I one day opened the rules drawn up by the

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judges. The 167th opens thus: “No prisoner shall lie.”
Now, gentlemen, how is a man to act under these circum­
stances in which I am placed ? If you find me guilty upon
the indictment before you, my case stands in this manner—
if I do not lie you imprison me, and if I do you punish me.
Turning back to the morality of ancient days, and meditating
with delight on their noble sincerity and love of truth, am I to
count it a misfortune to live in modern times and among a
Christian people ?
In your churches, as I have read to you, you implore that
truth and justice may descend among men, and the supplica­
tion is a noble one. Gentlemen, will you pray for truth in
your churches and brand it in your courts ?
The atmosphere of your gaols as little assimilates with my
taste as their punishments will accord with my constitution.
I seek not these things, I assure you, but when they lie in the
path of duty, I trust I shall ever prefer them to a dereliction
from it.
But, gentlemen, supposing that they are my sentiments that
you are requested to punish; you should first do yourselves
justice to reflect what has been said about them and insinu­
ated in this court. Learned divines, and sage writers on
Atheism, agree that it is too absurd to need refutation—too
barren to satisfy, too monstrous to attract, too fearful to
allure, too feeble to speak, and too deathly not to appal its
own votaries. It is styled too grave to entertain youth, and
too devoid of consolation for the trembling wants of age—too
abstract for the comprehension of the ignorant, and too
unreasonable to gain the admiration of the intelligent. That
it is alarming to the timid and disquieting to the brave—that
it negatives everything, and sets up nothing, and is so purely
speculative, that it can never have a practical bearing on the
business of life. Gentlemen, will you disturb the harmony of
these conclusions by a verdict against me, and attack that
which never existed, and place upon the grave records of this
court a slaying of the self-slain ? Will you thus draw atten­
tion to a subject you perhaps think had better be forgotten,
and create a conviction that it must be a greatly important
one, since you erect it into public notice by directing the
thunders of the law at a young and comparatively inexpe­
rienced believer in its principles ?
Would you test my opinions by my emotions on the bed of
death ? Let me assure you, that if men can expect to die in

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peace who can send their fellow-men to a gaol because of
honest differences of opinion, I have nothing to fear.
I am told I may hold opinions, but must keep them to
myself—which means, I may know and feel what is right, but
must never do it. I must see my fellow-men in error, but
never put them right. Must live every day below the standard
of right my sense of duty and conscience sets up, and all my
life long “prove all things,” and never “hold fast to the
good.”
The indictment charges me with having “wickedly, mali­
ciously, and with evil design,” against the peace of the Queen,
uttered certain words. What shadow of evidence has been
adduced to substantiate this extravagant charge ?
Will you suffer this court to proclaim the sacred nature of
an oath, and openly violate it in the same hour and under the
same roof ? I might ask in the spirit of that Christianity you
sit there to administer, how do you propose to answer to your
God in that day when the secrets of all hearts are to be
opened, when all dissembling is to be exposed, and all perjury
punished—how do you propose to answer for having invoked
the name of God in this assembly only to disregard it, on the
poor plea of precedent, that others have done so before?
For, gentlemen, there is nothing else that even the subtlest
sophistry can conjure up to justify you. But I best prefer
appealing to you, as honest men, in the spirit of my own
reasoning and thinking—as men with an eye to the improve­
ment of mankind, who would break the unjust shackles that
bind them, who would discard prejudice in order to be just,
who will not condemn me because I am not rich, and who will
listen to humanity rather than to bigotry, and respect truth­
fulness wherever you may find it. I believe that in every
honest heart there is a sense of rectitude that rises superior to
creeds, that respects all virtue and protects all truth, that asks
for no names and seeks no precedents before resolving- to do
rightly, that fears no man’s frowns, and dares to be just
without custom’s permit. To this feeling, gentlemen, only do
I appeal, and by its verdict I am willing to abide.
Mr. Justice Erskine.—Gentlemen of the jury, although the
lengthened address of the defendant has demanded from you
so long endurance, in this vitiated atmosphere, I still trust we
shall have enough of power left to direct our minds to the
parts of this case which are important. The greater part of
the time has been wasted on subjects with which you have

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nothing1 to do. We are not sitting here as a deliberate
assembly to consider whether in respect of such cases as this
it is politic or wise to imprison for opinions—whether men
ought to be punished for uttering such sentiments—and I shall
have nothing to say to you on that point. We have to decide
on the law as we find it. I shall make no law—the judges
made no law, but have handed it down from the earliest ages.
I should have no more power to alter this than to say the
eldest son is not the heir of his father. Allusion has been
made to some expressions of mine, when in the course of my
duty I directed the attention of the grand jury to these cases.
Certainly the printed report was highly incorrect. I said
nothing to prejudice them. Inasmuch as this offence directly
tended to take away that foundation on which real morality
can alone be safely based, I told them what I feel, that with­
out religion there is no morality. I recommended that that
foundation may be made by early education and habits of
thought, but in so doing I did not mean to prejudge, nor do I
seem to have been considered as doing so. I am not going
to lay down as law that no man has a right to entertain
opinions opposed to the religion of the State, nor to express
them. Man is only responsible for his opinions to God, because
God only can judge of his motives, and we arrogate his duties
if we judge of men’s sentiments. If men will entertain senti­
ments opposed to the religion of the State, we require that
they shall express them reverently, and philosophers who
have discussed this subject all agree that this is right. Mr.
Archdeacon Paley has stated this in language so plain, far
better than any words I could supply myself. “ Serious
arguments are fair on all sides. Christianity is but illdefended by refusing audience or toleration to the objections
of unbelievers. But whilst we would have freedom of inquiry
restrained by no laws but those of decency, we are entitled to
demand, on behalf of a religion which holds forth to mankind
assurances of immortality, that its credit be assailed by no
other weapons than those of sober discussion and legitimate
reasoning.” Our law has adopted that as its rule, and men
are not permitted to make use of indecent language in refer­
ence to God and the Christian religion, without rendering
themselves liable to punishment. You have had a great
number of books read to you, arguing whether it was politic
to prosecute in such cases. One of the sentiments was a dig­
nitary’s reply, “I will answer it.” That points out the

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difference in these cases. Sober argument you may answer,
but indecent reviling you cannot, and therefore the law steps
in and punishes it. You have been told you have to consider
what is blasphemy. Defendant asked the witness what he con­
sidered blasphemy, and he gave him a very sensible answer.
What you have to try is, whether the defendant wickedly and
devisedly did intend to bring the Christian religion into con­
tempt amongst the people, by uttering words of and con­
cerning Almighty God, the Holy Scriptures, and the Christian
religion. The charge is, that he uttered these words with the
intention of bringing Almighty God, the Christian religion,
and the Holy Scriptures into contempt. You are not called
upon to say whether, in your judgment, the opinions of the
defendant are right or wrong—whether it is right or wrong
that words like these should be punished, but whether he
uttered these words with the intent charged in the indictment.
These words were proved by a witness who admits that others
were used, that they did not follow consecutively, and that
other words were interspersed. It is right that you should
have the whole set before you, for a man is not to be judged
for what is partly set before you, and therefore it was neces­
sary you should have the whole of what was said. The way
in which the witness related the statements made by defendant
was this: He said he had been lecturing on “ Home Colonisa­
tion, Emigration, and Poor Laws Superseded.” After the
lecture had been closed, some man whose name he did not
then know, said the lecturer had been speaking of our duty to
our fellow-men, but he had not spoken of our duty to our
God, and it is important that you should notice that the words
were not the subject of the lecture, but uttered in answer to a
question put to him. There is no evidence that he intended
to have said anything—there is no evidence that this person is
a friend of the other person, or that this question was asked
so as to give him an opportunity of uttering these sentiments.
*
If that had been the case it would have made it worse than if
he had introduced it. This challenge having been made by
this person, whoever it was, the defendant said, “ I am of no
religion at all I I do not believe in such a thing as a God.”
There is nothing in the introduction of the word “ thing ” to
* The artifice which Mr. Justice Erskine here suggested to the jury never
entered into my imagination. The evidence could not have given the jury
any such idea, and I was pained and astonished to hear the judge employ it.

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show that he intended to treat the subj’ect with levity and
contempt. You might take it that he said he did not believe
there is such a being as a God. The witness went on: “ He
said the people of this country are too poor to have any reli­
gion, he would serve the Deity as the government did the
subaltern officers—place him on half-pay; I was near the
door; you said the reason was the expense of religion. And
then he was asked as to his opinion of blasphemy. He is then
cross-examined as to his knowledge of some report made by
another person. “ You did not lay any emphasis on the word
thing; you said the word in the ordinary tone of voice.”
There is something which defendant has alleged himself to
have stated * which gives a stronger sting than that which was
given by the witness—“ I flee the Bible as a viper.” The
question is whether these words were uttered with the inten­
tion of bringing God and the Christian religion into contempt.
Then the charge is made out, for I tell you that it is an
offence at common law. If it is not an offence, the indictment
is not worth the parchment it is written upon—if there is no
such authority as that which I have laid down. Any man
who treats with contempt the Christian religion is guilty of an
indictable misdemeanour. You have to consider the language
and a passage read to you from a charge of a learned j’udge.
“It may not be going too far to state, that no author or
preacher is forbidden stating his opinions sincerely. By
maliciously is not meant malice against any particular indi­
vidual, but a mischievous intent. This is the criterion, and it
is a fair criterion, if it can be collected from the offensive
levity in which the subj’ect is treated, if the matter in the
indictment contains any such tendency.” If the words had
appeared in the course of a written paper, you would have
entertained no doubt that the person who had uttered these
words had uttered them with levity. The only thing in his
favour is, that it was not a written answer. The solution
given by the defendant is, that although his opinions are,
unhappily, such that he has no belief in a God, he had no
intention of bringing religion into contempt. He went on to
state that he considered it the duty of the clergymen of the
establishment to have reduced their incomes one-half. If he
had meant this, he ought to have made use of other language.
* In the report of my original speech to Maitland, which I read to the
court from the Oracle.

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You will dismiss from your minds all statements in newspapers,
or other statements made out of court, and consider it in
reference to the evidence. If you are convinced that he
uttered it with levity, for the purpose of treating with con­
tempt the majesty of Almighty God, he is guilty of the offence.
If you think he made use of these words in the heat of argu­
ment without any such intent, you will give him the benefit of
the doubt. If you are convinced that he did it with that
object, you must find him guilty, despite of all that has been
addressed to you. If you entertain a reasonable doubt of his
intention, you will give him the benefit of it.
The jury, after a very brief deliberation, returned a verdict
of Guilty.
[One of the jury was a Deist, a professed friend of free
speech, and who had said that he never could convict me, but
he wanted courage when the hour of the verdict came, and
gave in against me. For myself, I never for a moment
expected an acquittal. During the few moments of the jury’s
consultation, I took my watch from my neck, and gave it, with
my keys, to my friend, Mr. Knight Hunt. My papers I con­
signed to my friend, Mr. W. B. Smith, as, for all I knew, they
might the next moment become the property of the court by
virtue of the sentence.]
Mr. Justice Erskine.—George Jacob Holyoake, if you had
been convicted as the author of that paper which Adams has
been convicted of publishing, my sentence must have been
very severe. But, although the name is the same, there is no
evidence of it. You have been convicted of uttering language,
*
and although you have been adducing long arguments to
show the impolicy of these prosecutions, you are convicted of
having uttered these words with improper levity. The arm
of the law is not stretched out to protect the character of the
Almighty; we do not assume to be the protectors of our God,
but to protect the people from such indecent language. And
if these words had been written for deliberate circulation, I
should have passed on you a severer sentence. You uttered
* This is another of those unwarranted suppositions in which the judge
ought not to have indulged. “ That paper ” was written by my friend Mr.
Chilton, Editor of the Oracle in my absence, and signed with his initials.
The judge might have known that I was in Gloucester Gaol when it was
written and published. I should have stopped the judge and corrected him,
but I feared by seeming to separate myself from Adams, to be thought
capable of saving myself at his expense, or exposing him to new rigour.

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them in consequence of a question—I have no evidence that
this question was put to draw out these words. Proceeding1
on the evidence that has been given, trusting that these words
have been uttered in the heat of the moment, I shall think it
sufficient to sentence you to be imprisoned in the Common Gaol
for six calendar months.
Mr. Holyoake.—My lord, am I to be classed with thieves and
felons ?
Mr. Justice Erskine.—No; thieves and felons are sentenced
to the Penitentiary, you to the Common Gaol.
The Court adjourned at ten o’clock.

What was advanced by the counsel and the judge has been
rendered in full in the foregoing report, but I have contented
myself with an abstract of what I urged myself. The Times
said I quoted from more than thirty authors, which is very
likely; but it was not because I was not sensible of the good
taste of brevity that I occupied the bench so long. I was
standing that day in court fourteen hours, and, including the
cross-examinations, I was speaking more than eleven hours.
I prepared notes to last me two days; and after the first six
hours, my voice, usually shrill and weak, became full and
somewhat sonorous. I could have spoken all night, and I
should have done it had the judge attempted to put me down.
But I willingly acknowledge that, on the whole, the conduct
of the judge was fair to me, and patient to a degree that
inspired me with great respect for the dignity of the bench, and
I dedicated my “ Short and Easy Method with the Saints ” to
Mr. Justice Erskine, as an actual expression of my respect.
The governor of the gaol one day said to me that I ought not
to regret six months’ imprisonment after occupying the court
and public for so many hours. I did not regret it. Indeed, I
more deserved the sentence for the length of my defence than
for the words for which I was indicted. But it was the menace
of the magistrates (before recounted) that I should not be
heard, that did me the harm, and exposed me to the imputa­
tion of wanting good sense, which is a worse imputation than
that of wanting orthodoxy. This came of inexperience in
imprisonment. The menaces of magistrates will not so mis­
lead me another time.
When I now read the notices of these proceedings which I

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furnished to the Oracle at the time, I smile at the juvenility of
comment in which I indulged. When similarly worded
reports reach me for the Reasoner, my practice is to extract the
simple facts—and, of course, the writers remonstrate with me;
but how grateful should I be now if some one had done the
same by me then. The principle on which we proceeded
with our Oracle was that every man should express himself in
his own words and in his own way, and we thought it a crime
against freedom to distinguish between weak comment and
the report of essential facts, or the expression of vital principle.
The report of the proceedings rendered in these pages is
given, in some measure, upon the rule of discrimination which
I have described. But, in this, I have been impartial to others,
and have omitted many things on the part of my opponents
which I believe they would not repeat, and which I, therefore,
have no wish to perpetuate. The remaining variations
between this report and that which formerly appeared will be
found to be partly on the side of greater accuracy in some
respects, and more fulness in others. The original report
presented most of the quotations, calling them a string of
pearls, but left in a very unravelled state the string which tied
them—and hence they read like abrupt interpolations. I
have now given the connecting observations, the spirit of the
extracts, and, in cases where the extracts have not, since that
time, grown familiar to the public ear, I have given them
also.
The influence of my defence upon the public at Gloucester
and Cheltenham, notwithstanding the difficulties under which
I laboured, was in my favour beyond my expectation. The
newspapers stated that “ the court and jury were attentive
throughout, and the numbers who thronged the court behaved
in the most decorous manner, testifying their interest in the
proceedings by a uniform silence, manifesting neither appro­
bation nor disapprobation.” Several newspapers gave nine
or ten columns of the proceedings, which was valuable propagandism. And it is due to the Cheltenham Examiner (whose
parallel between me and Francis, the regicide, the reader
will not have forgotten,) to state that it gave an effective
rendering of my defence, and added these compensatory
words to its report: tl The defendant spoke throughout in a
temperate manner, and his defence appeared to tell in his
favour, so far as regarded the honesty of his motives.”
Let me say here that my grateful acknowledgments are

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due to the Editor of the Cheltenham Free Press. That paper
reported whatever concerned my liberty, my conscience, or my
character. It risked much in defending-, alone among its local
contemporaries, the freedom of speech violated in my perSon.
It opened its columns to Mr. Goodwyn Barmby’s proclamations,
to Mrs. Catherine Barmby’s letters, to Richard Carlile’s
defences, and to the numerous communications of my friends
on my behalf.
My acknowledgments are also due to the Weekly Dispatch.
On my visiting London, “ Publicola,” then Captain Williams,
invited me to call upon him, and inform him of my position with
respect to the pending trial; and his able Letters to Justice
Erskine, after my conviction, produced great uneasiness at the
gaol, and each number of the Dispatch was awaited for some
weeks by the authorities around me, as I learned from the
gaolers, with anxiety.
My defence, considered as a defence of the wide and
momentous question of Atheism, was crude enough. No one
can be more sensible of that than I am. On the moral
aspects of Atheism and its relation to public policy I feared to
enter, lest in my own newness to the study of so large a sub­
ject I should compromise it by unskilfulness of statement; I
therefore confined myself to pleading that the right of public
expression was the sequence of the right of private judgment
—that the right of expression was consonant to the common
law as well as to reason, and that the right of expression
being necessary to private morality, it could not be incom­
patible with the public peace.

CHAPTER III.—AFTER THE SENTENCE.

As soon as the sentence was pronounced I was taken to the
cells under the court. Captain Mason, the governor, said
there was another prisoner to go down besides me and
Adams. It was a case of felony. He said, “ Would I go with
him?” I replied, “I would not.” He then asked if I
“ objected to go with Adams.” That I cheerfully agreed to,
and, handcuffed with Adams, I walked down to the gaol.
Having taken nothing since morning but a little raspberry

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vinegar, with which Mr. Carlile supplied me, I began to feel
weak, but nothing was offered me except a little warm water,
for which I asked, and this, with a very hard and bitter apple,
constituted my supper. The transition from the excitement of
the court to the darkness and coolness of the night-cell, made
me feel as if going into a well, and my supper not serving to
compose me, I continued restless till the morning.
Next day I felt so weak that I could scarcely stand upright.
About twelve o’clock Mr. Bransby Cooper and the Rev.
Samuel Jones came round. When Mr. Cooper saw me, he
said, “ Why, Holyoake, I did not know you yesterday.”
“ Why, sir ? ”
“You did not seem to be the same person you were
before.”
“In what respect was I different? ”
“ Before you were so gentle and submissive, but yesterday
there was so much hauteur about you.”
I answered, “ Here I had to endure your authority; in
court I had to defend my character and liberty. It was my
turn yesterday, it is yours again to-day.”
About the middle of the first day’s imprisonment I was
startled by the sonorous voice of a street-crier, passing near
the walls of the gaol, crying with a loud voice, “ Howitt’s
correct list of all the cast, quit, and condemned and speci­
fying, with marked emphasis, far above that bestowed on
two cases of wilful murder, the case of ‘ George Jacob Holy­
oake, for uttering certain blasphemous words against God,
and of and concerning the Christian Religion.” The above
words and specifications are to be found in the said “ Correct
List,” which a turnkey bought for me at my request, and
which I still have. On the second morning after my sentence,
I was sitting by the (very little) fire in the common room,
contemplating, with very critical air, a can of somewhat
indifferent gruel, which I had not the slightest disposition to
eat, when the prayer bell rang, which did not all improve my
temper. Where the gaol was situated, I enjoyed such a pro­
pinquity to dock bells, basin bells, cathedral bells, and gaol
bells, that had I been inclined to rebel, it would have chimed
in with the others. Upon the aforesaid prayer bell ringing,
all my fellow-prisoners made a rapid escape. I could not tell
what had become of them. Over my head was a large
grating, for the convenience of gaolers overlooking the room.
Down this grating there came a tremendous voice, shouting,

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“ Holyoake! Holyoake ! Holyoake! ” The voice belonged to
Ogden, a man whom Carlyle would have delighted to honour.
Nature made him for a gaoler. Looking up, I said, “ What
do you want ? ”
“ Did you not hear that bell ? ”
“ Yes,” I said; “ what of that ? ”
“ All the other prisoners are gone to prayers.”
“Well, let the poor devils go, if they like it.”
“ I can’t be talked to in this way,” he roared out, in his sur­
liest tones; “ you must go.”
“ I am afraid that is a mistake of yours.”
“ Don’t you know where you are ? ”
“ Yes; I’m in Gloucester Gaol, sitting over a can of very
bad gruel.”
“ Don’t you know you are a prisoner ? ”
“Oh, yes ! I am quite sensible of it.”
“ Well, you must do as the others do, and you must go to
prayers.”
“ Then you must carry me.”
“I’ll report you to the clergyman.”
“Give the clergyman my compliments, and say I’m not
coming to prayers.”
He stalked away with the air of one whose dignity was
greatly outraged. During the time of this colloquy prayers
were suspended, and the clergyman was waiting my arrival
in order to begin. As soon as prayers were well over, an
. order came for me—“ The clergyman wanted me”
“Well, Mr. Holyoake,” he said, when I met him, “how is
it you did not come to prayers? ”
I answered. “ You cannot expect me to come to prayers;
you imprison me here on the ground that I do not believe in a
God, and then you would take me to chapel to pray to one.
I cannot prevent your imprisoning me, but I can prevent your
making me a hypocrite, and must.”
“ But if you attended the ordinances of grace, it might lead
you to believe in the Christian religion.”
“ I should be very sorry for that.”
“ Really me—how can you say so, sir ? ”
“ Because I should be very sorry to treat those who differ
from me as you treat me.”
“ You do not understand us. It is not you we persecute—
it is your opinions.”
“ Then I wish you would imprison my opinions, and not me.”

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Here he turned to refresh himself by looking at the rules
for the regulation of prisoners in Gloucester Gaol. He
resumed—
“ But you must attend prayers—it’s the rule of the gaol.”
° I must do what I must do, I know; but, if I do that, I
must be carried into chapel every morning, and that will not
edify the remainder of your congregation. What can I do if
I go ? I could not say, ‘ O Lord, I have erred and strayed
like a lost sheep.’ You see yonder gratings ? I’m not likely
to err and stray, for the next six months, beyond those bars.”
“ Ah ! that is not what we mean.”
“ Then what do you mean ? Can I join with those men in
saying, ‘ O Lord, who hath given us grace with one accord
to make our common supplications unto thee,’ when I shall
make no supplications, unless I am forced to it ? You know
the prisoners mostly go because the turnkey is behind them ?’’
Then I showed him the passage, ‘ We have done those things
which we ought not to have done,” etc., and asked him what
I had done, or had the chance of doing, wrong, since I came
there? At this he was puzzled a little, and he at last
answered—
“ Ah I but we think there is a divine influence in prayer,
which might operate upon you.”
“ Not in this place,” I answered, “ where it is so much con­
tradicted by your practice. I will agree to this, that when
on Sundays you preach, and I may hear something new, I
will come.”
He ended the colloquy after a very Christian manner, by
saying, “ Well, if you don’t come to prayers, you shall be
locked up.”
I answered, “ Well, sir, give your orders.” I need scarcely
say this was done, in one form or other, to the end of my
imprisonment. Sometimes I was locked in my sleeping cell,
but generally in the day room; but I found it more agreeable
than the litany, and I never asked for any alteration. I went
to chapel only on Sunday (the preaching day), but never to
the week-day prayers.
Offensive regulations were often sought to be applied to
me. One was an attempt to make me wear the prison dress.
I said I preferred my own clothes. The answer was, the
rules were imperative, and they must enforce them. I inquired
whether they had any spare time on their hands, for it would
be necessary to dress me every morning. My answer was

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reported to the magistrates, and I heard no more of the
project.
Out of doors much is said against passive resistance, but in
prison it is the only resistance possible, and is often very
effective. If you speak or act, you are at the mercy of those
in whose power you are. Take any aggressive step, and
your gaoler knocks you down, or locks you up in a moment.
But if you simply will not do a thing, if without bluster or
bravado you leave it to them to make you do it, or to do it
themselv.es, they often find it of rather awkward accom­
plishment. To carry me to prayers or to dress me every
morning was far more offensive and troublesome to them than
breaking my head, so they left me alone.
Old Mr. Jones, the magistrate, paid me frequent visits. One
day he took me to the door, and pointing upwards, asked,
“ did I not see there proofs sufficient of the existence of a
God ? ” I answered, that “ when the boundless expanse of
the skies had been before me I had been unable to think so,
and now the few square feet, which the high walls of the gaol
permitted me to see, were still less likely to inspire me with
that conviction.”
A little reflection ought to have shown these gentlemen,
who made these appeals to me, that the time and place were
both inauspicious in which to address to me such interroga­
tories. Indeed it was offensive, and on more than one occa­
sion I told them, that having undertaken to compel my
acquiescence with them by imprisonment, I could never divest
myself of the conviction that it was superfluous to pretend to
win me by argument.
The last visit Mr. Jones paid was to read me a psalm. As
on my trial I had complained of the discourtesy of their calling
me a fool, the old man was particularly anxious to justify
himself. He found what seemed to him a favourable oppor­
tunity in the circumstance that a German scholar had at this
time published a new translation of the Psalms of David. As
I had spoken favourably of German theologians, he concluded
that this one would have weight with me. He brought down
the book, summoned the whole class of prisoners, and we
stood twelve or eighteen in a row. Proclaiming attention, he
said he wished to read to us, and particularly to me, the 14th
Psalm. Reading aloud the first verse, where David observes,
“ the fool hath said in his heart there is no God,” Mr. Jones
said, “ Now, Holyoake, you complained that we called you a

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fool; you see David says you are a fool.” The old man
looked round with an air of triumph, which was considerably
moderated when I gently but distinctly observed that “ I no
more liked rudeness in the mouth of David than in the mouth
of a magistrate.” My fellow-prisoners glanced around in
consternation at my audacity, and expected to hear me
ordered into the dark cell, but old Mr. Jones turned round,
shut up his book, and walked away without saying a word,
and I never saw him afterwards.
The next day I wrote to the Board of Magistrates to say
that “ if visiting magistrates continued to question me before
other prisoners, where the discipline of the gaol forbade
adequate reply, I should refuse to answer.” In future I was
always called out by myself and spoken with alone.
Before my trial the same Mr. Jones told me that my friend,
Mr. Richard Carlile, had died in London a very horrible
death, recanting all his principles before he expired, and urged
me to take warning by his example and do the same. Shortly
after Mr. Jones was surprised to meet Mr. Carlile in the cor­
ridor of the gaol bringing me refreshments, which his expe­
rience assured him I needed. And it was not the least part
of my pride on the day of my trial that he sat near me from
morning till night, encouraging me by his presence and
assisting me by his wisdom. After my conviction he vindi­
cated me assiduously through the press, addressed to me
public letters, and wrote to Justice Erskine and Sir Robert
Peel, threatening to renew his former war against the Church
if my situation was not ameliorated—a very curious species of
recantation, it must be confessed, but a fair sample of the
usual death-bed “ scenes ” which the pulpits relate.
My company as a prisoner was not of a very agreeable
kind. I had to listen to recitals of depravity such as I never
heard before, and do not wish to hear again. But this was
not all. Sometimes a companion was filthy as well as
wicked. One man sent in among us had the itch, and before
I found it out he had held me by the wrists in some accidental
wrestle, which misfortune might have subjected me to a taste
of prison discipline which few will be able to imagine •
When the surgeon finds that a prisoner has this disease he
makes no remark, but shortly after the man is called out by
the turnkey, whom he has to follow through various corridors
to remote cells at the top of the gaol, near the gallows.
Upon entering one, he is told to take off his clothes. As soon

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as he is in a state of nudity his clothes are taken away, and
locked up. He is then shown a cask filled with brimstone,
grease, and other mixture, of the consistence of pitch, and
quite as offensive to the sight. With this he is made to smear
his entire person over ; when this is done he is left locked up
in the place. All he finds about him is a bed, on which are
two blankets, in which hundreds, smeared as he is, have lain
before. When no longer able to endure the cold, he may
lie in this place. Thick and chilly, these disgusting coverings
adjust themselves to the body when softened by the warmth,
where, without caution, the liquid will run into the eyes and
mouth. Here he remains some days, and eats the uncut food
which is brought to him as well as he can with his filthy
fingers.
Such is the description of a process of cure (as I gathered
from several whose experience I heard narrated), to which I
might have been subjected, if, when I discovered indications on
my wrists similar to those on the infected man, I had not kept
them from the observation of the surgeon while they remained.
My habit of daily ablution, and some medicine I procured,
saved me from more than temporary discomfort. I need
scarcely add, that had such a cure been attempted on me, I
should have had to be carried to the place, and the applica­
tion must have been effected by force.
After some weeks’ imprisonment, and when I had had
sufficient opportunity of noticing the disposition of the autho­
rities, and estimating the treatment to which I was to be
subjected, I addressed the following, slightly abridged:—
“ Memorial of George Jacob Holyoake, prisonerfor Blasphemy * in Gloucester
County Gaol, to Sir fames Graham, Her Majesty's Secretary of State.
“ Sir, — At the recent Gloucester Assizes your memorialist was sentenced
by Mr. Justice Erskine to six months’ imprisonment for the alleged offence
of blasphemy.
“ Since that period he has been confiued in the common gaol and fed on
convict gruel, bread, rice, and potatoes. It is true your memorialist is
allowed the privilege of purchasing, to some extent, better food, but his
imprisonment renders this privilege valueless, without the assistance of
friends, upon whom are the claims of his family left dependent by his
incarceration.

* I always said “ Prisoner for Blasphemy ” in all my communications,
and directed my friends so to address me, to which the magistrates objected.
But' if I was to be written to at a gaol, I preferred to be known as a pri­
soner for opinion rather than as a prisoner for crime.

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“ Under these circumstances your memorialist applied to the surgeon of
the gaol for other diet; by the surgeon he was referred to the governor ;
by the governor to the visiting magistrates, and by the visiting magistrates
back to the surgeon, who subsequently has recommended, though not pre­
scribed, better diet; but from the recommendation of it, your memorialist
concludes that in that gentleman’s opinion it is necessary. Two other
surgeons whom your memorialist consulted on entering his prison warned
him that a generous diet was absolutely requisite, and the decay of your
memorialist’s health is a testimony of its truth.
“ He prays for other regulations than those under which he sees VISITORS.
They have always to stand, sometimes to talk through the bars of a gate,
and are permitted to stay but a few minutes. As your memorialist is far
from his friends, these rules continually prevent him seeing them, and
receiving those attentions to his wants he otherwise would.
“ He wishes permission to remain up in an evening until the hour of the
debtors’ retiring (9 o’clock), or at least to be allowed the use of a light in
his cell, in which he is confined from twelve to fourteen hours, and during
the winter he will be so shut up sixteen hours and a half. Thus much time
will be lost, your memorialist could employ upon a little mathematical
*
speculation, which would afford him the gratification of contributing him­
self to the support of his family.
“ As every newspaper sent your memorialist is retained by the governor,
your memorialist prays the liberty of reading them.
“ The visiting magistrates have said they should have no objection to
grant what your memorialist asks, had they the power; and hence he prays
the exercise of your authority on his behalf.
“ As custom attaches little weight to the opinion of a prisoner, it becomes
not your memorialist to speak of his own case, but trusts he may with pro­
priety refer to it as one in which he believes will be found little that is
aggravated. Seduced in the warmth of debate to express his honest
opinion on a religious question, young and inexperienced, he took not
the hypocrite’s crooked path nor the dissembler’s hidden way, but unwarily
uttered language disingenuousness would have concealed or art have
polished, and became in consequence the ready victim of Christianity.
Criminal without intention, punishment brings with it no consciousness of
guilt, and hence that which in other circumstances, would be light, is, in
his, a bitter infliction.
“George Jacob Holyoake.”

Sir James gave me permission to remain up till nine o’clock
after I had been three months in prison. But for the con­
cession it required an effort to be grateful, for it was a per­
mission to remain up without fire and without light. For
unless I could pay for fire and light, I had to go without.
Whether Sir James Graham intended this I have no means of
knowing; he probably expected that the magistrates would
* Mentioned to prevent the supposition on the part of Sir James that
the time would be employed in writing blasphemy, which would be fatal to
the application.

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not interpret his order as a privilege to sit up in the cold and
in the dark, which would be a greater punishment than going
to bed. But they did put this construction upon it. As Sir
James did not mention fire and light they refused to supply them.
Mathematical studies were impossible, for the authorities
also refused to allow me my instruments, lest I should commit
suicide with them; but I had provided for that, as every man
should who goes to gaol. There was j'ust width enough in
my cell to admit of the heavy iron bed-frame being raised on
one end. By marking a circle round one of the legs, which
I did with a fragment of stone, I determined the place on
which the leg would fall when the frame was pulled down.
My head once placed on that spot, the great weight of the
frame would have sent the narrow leg through the brain, and
death must have been instantaneous. I am no friend of
suicide, and had a thousand reasons for living; but I had not
been long in gaol before I saw many things to which none
but the degraded or the weak would submit—and lest they
should come to my turn, I provided against them.
A bout this time an event occurred in my family which con­
verted my imprisonment into an unexpected bitterness.
Against that “ love abroad which means spite (or indifference)
at home,” I early set my face. At home, as a matter of
j’ustice, there always existed an understanding as to the risks
I ran in my free speaking. Whatever consequences fell upon
my own head alone, I had myself only to please in incurring;
but those which affected others I had no right to invoke,
without their consent—and this consent I always sought from
my wife, in any special case which arose. At our marriage,
therefore, it was understood that my life somewhat resembled
a soldier’s, and that it would often include duties and dangers
not compatible with perennial fireside comfort. Nor did she
obj’ect to this, and I have had the sweet fortune always to be
left to do whatever I should have done had I been single and
childless. On my saying, on the imprisonment of Mr.
Southwell, first Editor of the Oracle, that it was my duty to
take his place, my wife replied—“ Do what it seems your
duty to do, and I and the children will take care of ourselves
as well as we can. When they grow up, I trust they will
contemplate with little satisfaction any advantage they might
have enj’oyed at the expense of their father’s duty. We can
leave them no riches, but we may at least leave them a good
example and an unsoiled name.”

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It was therefore that when I came to leave home, to go to
my trial, all was calm and cheerful as usual, though there was
much around to cause uneven thoughts. On that day no
one came to accompany me or to spend an hour of solace
with those from whom I parted. Had there been a single
friend present to have made up the appearance of society
after I was gone, the loneliness would have been less bitter.
As I left the house I heard that cry break forth which had
been suppressed that it might not sadden my departure.
Before I had proceeded far up Windsor Street, Ashted, I was
arrested by Madeline’s silvery voice calling “ Good bye,
dada,” and turning round I saw her large, bright, black
eyes (which everybody praised,) peering like two stars round
the lintel of the door. I am glad I did not then know that I
should never hear that voice again nor see those bright eyes
any more.
To turn the attention of mankind in an atheistical direction
may do harm to some. The propagation of all new views
does harm, more or less. As in commercial speculations
much capital is sunk before any returns come in, so in the
improvement of the people, you sacrifice some old feeling
which is good, before the new opinion, which is better, can
be created. But all the new opinions I have at any time
imbibed never produced so much harm in me as the prudential
doctrines of Political Economy. The doctrine that it is dis­
reputable in the poor to have children is salutary, no doubt,
but it requires to be enforced under limitation. To regard
the existence of little ones as an expense, and the gentle
love of children as a luxury in which you cannot indulge
without reproach, is, beyond all doubt, bad for those whose
tender years should be passed in a perpetual smile of joy.
To look into the face of your child and feel that the hand
of death, which shall hush that gentle voice, pale those rosy
cheeks, and quench those animated eyes, is a political
blessing, is calamitous. I look back with mute terror
on the days when I was under the influence of those
feelings. I would burn all the books of Political Economy
I ever read (and I think it the science of many blessings)
if I could feel once more on my knee the gentle hand of
my child from whom I parted that day, too stoical to shed
a tear.
After a few weeks of my imprisonment had passed away,
hint words came of Madeline’s failing health. Out of some

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money sent by my private friends, John Fowler and Paul
Rodgers, of Sheffield, to buy better food than the gaol
afforded, I saved a guinea, and sent it to Birmingham, to
purchase Madeline a winter cloak—it was spent in buying her
a coffin. Though of perfect health and agility, she was one
of those children who require entire preservation from expo­
sure, want, or fatigue. On ten shillings per week, which was
all that the Anti-Persecution Union could provide, obviously
this could not be done, and all those descending and inevitable
vicissitudes succeeded, producing a state of ill health, which,
alas! had a fatal issue.
Mr. Chilton sent me several intimations to prepare for the
worst, should it happen. But I could not believe in the
worst happening, and indeed I had yet to realise what the
worst implied. At length, one morning, the heavy corridor
door grated on its hinges, and the morose turnkey — fit
messenger of misery—put a letter into my hand. As it had
been, as usual, broken open—for there is no feeling, not even
that of affection and death, respected in a gaol—Ogden knew
its contents, and in justice to him I must say he endeavoured,
as well as one whose ability lay in his moroseness could, to
speak a word of apology and sympathy. The strangeness
and awkwardness of the attempt drew my attention to the
fatal black border, which gave me sensations such as I never
received before and never shall again, for the first death of
one dear to you, like that of the first love, brings with it
a feeling which is never repeated. I remember that some
prisoner came and covered me with a coat, for I had walked
into the yard without one. Captain Mason and two friends
came round, but I could not speak to them. He addressed a
few words to me, but I turned away.
Then Madeline had perished among the people whose tra­
ditions include so many despairs, so many sorrows—a pledge
that I shall never forsake those with whose sad destiny one so
dear to me is linked. Though in the death of poverty there is
nothing remarkable, though hundreds of children are daily
killed off in the same way, yet parents unused to this form of
calamity find in it, the first time, a bitterness which can never
be told. The limited income of the family in my absence was
made up by small subscriptions by some who knew me, and
by a few outside who happened to think useful the course I had
taken. One or two friends whose professions had beforetime
been profuse, the mother met. They were cold, or to her they

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seemed so. She thought they feared a continued acquaintance
might lay them under some tax to contribute to her support.
An instinctive apprehension. Offering her hand to one who
did not take it, she went home, and nothing induced her to
subject herself to such suspicion any more. A quick and
enduring sense of independence, which no privation could
disturb, was an attribute in her character I had always
admired, and this dreadful form of its operation I have never
been able to censure. The Roman mother put the armour of
her son on him as he went out, and saw him brought home
dead from the fight without weakness; but in that case, the
strife of arms, the glory of victory, the sublimity of duty, and
the applause of the senate, were so many supports to the
mother’s heroism; but harder far is it for a mother to bend
over her child day by day and night after night, and see
relentless death eat like a canker in the damask cheek of
beauty, and be too poor to snatch it from the tomb—and this
with no trumpet note, no clang of arms to drown the dying
scream, no incense of glory to raise the sinking heart, no
applause to reward the sacrifice—without even those near
who could penetrate to the depth of that desolation, and utter
those words of sympathy which is all which humanity can
do to soothe in the face of death.
“ There are homesteads that have witnessed deeds
That battle-fields, with all their bannered pomp,
Have little to compare with. Life’s great play
May, so it have an actor great enough,
Be well performed upon a humble stage.”

** My dada’s coming to see me,” Madeline exclaimed on the
night of her death, with that full, pure, and thrilling tone
which marked her when in health. “ I am sure he is coming
to-night, mammaand then remembering that that could not
be, she said, “ Write to him, mamma, he will come to see me
and these words were the last words she uttered—and all that
remains now is the desolate memory of the midnight rever­
beration of that plaintive voice which I would give a new
world to hear again.
For her father, he was debating in incoherence the vain
proposition as to whether he could prevail on the Governor
to let him go home for one night to soothe and watch over the
dying pillow, and he would cheerfully and gratefully have
expiated the privilege by six or twelve months’ additional

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imprisonment. Of course this was impossible. Everything
was relentless there. Had there been the consciousness of
crime to be expiated, the sense of detention would have been
mitigated. But this was the penalty of the just pride of dis­
charging the common duty of frank speech.
O liberty! whom the nations welcome with triumphant
shouts, whom all to whom the world owes its progress have
worshipped — over how many graves hast thou walked!
Rising like the morning dawn, making all people radiant
with thy presence, the poet thrills as he sees thy chariot borne
on the sun’s golden beams, he hails thee as a goddess, he
blesses thee as a bride, and sings of thy triumphs and bene­
factions ! But those who serve thee—who make their lives a
sad and desert waste that thy pathway through the world
may be unobstructed—who kneel to thee in their dungeon­
churches and pour out the incense of their young life at
gibbet-altars: they know thee by thy gory garments dripping
with the blood of the father, the tears of the orphan, and
the desolation which precedes thy progress. The anthems of
thy march are hollow voices from Siberia’s mines, and Vin­
cennes’ cells—the wail of women under the Russian knout,
the groans of Konarski and the whistle of bullets which slay
the Bandiera and Blum—thy trophies are the fresh graves of
Hungary and Rome, thy throne is on a hecatomb of earth’s
noblest and bravest sons. Yet art thou still sacred in the
eyes of man. Queen of Genius and Progress! emblem of that
suffering through which Humanity is purified and developed !
Thou hast trodden on the grave of my child, and I worship
thee still, although thou mayst yet tread on my own.
Yes, though I neither hope—for that would be presumptuous
—nor expect it, seeing no foundation, I shall be pleased to
find a life after this. Not a life where those are punished
who were unable to believe without evidence, and unwilling to
act in spite of reason—for the prospect of annihilation is
pleasanter and more profitable to contemplate: not a life
where an easy faith is regarded as “ easy virtue ” is regarded
among some men—but a life where those we have loved and
lost here are restored to us again—for there, in that Hall
where those may meet who have been sacrificed in the cause
of duty—where no gross, or blind, or selfish, or cruel nature
mingles, where none sit but those whom human service and
endurance have purified and entitled to that high company,
Madeline will be a Hebe. Yes, a future life bringing with it

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the admission to such companionship, would be a noble joy to
contemplate. But Christianity has no such dream as this.
On making- arrangements for the burial, at the Birmingham
Cemetery, the clerk asked whether they should provide a
Minister, or whether the friends of the deceased would do so ?
The answer was—“ A minister was not desired.” “ Then I
presume,” the clerk observed, “ you mean that you will pro­
vide one yourselves?” The answer again was—“We do not
require one at all. Please send the beadle merely.”
On the day of the interment the beadle attended as re­
quested. He was instructed to conduct the burial party direct
to the grave, and not into the chapel, which he did without
remark: and when the coffin, plain but pretty, without tinsel
or angels, was lowered, each threw a bouquet of flowers in,
and when the grave was made up they returned home. Thus
Madeline was buried, as became her innocence and her fate,
without parade, without priest, or priestly ceremony. Had
hesitation been displayed, or previous inquiries been made as
to whether what was done could have heen permitted, no
question but that a priest would have been inflicted, as at the
grave of Carlile and others—for Christianity, always officious
and rude to the dissentient, is never more so than when oppo­
sition is paralysed by agony on the bed of death, or hushed in
speechless sadness by the side of the grave.
As it would only be painful to my wife, I never wished
her to visit me; but after what had occurred she desired
it; and arrangements made to that effect of course became
known, all letters passing through the Governor’s hands.
On this occasion Mr. Bransby Cooper sent to say that
the Magistrates’ Committee-room, a furnished and cheerful
apartment, should be at my service at Mrs. Holyoake’s visit.
Mr. Cooper was the first of the magistrates to send a message
of condolence on the death of Madeline, and in this instance
his kindness was delicate and generous. As on the day Mrs.
Holyoake came the magistrates happened to hold a meeting
in it, an apology was sent me, and the Lodge placed at my
service. No turnkey was sent in, and I was permitted to see
my friends with an air of perfect freedom. A near relative
who was one of the party, brought me a present of wine and
cigars. As both were forbidden by the rules of the gaol, I
declined to touch them. As I was trusted without restraint,
I was doubly anxious to respect a liberty generously con­
ceded. Had they set a watch over me, I should have had less

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scruple, and perhaps have thought it a merit to defeat their
suspicions.
Captain Mason, the governor, was a study—a type of the
gentleman, official and conventional, whose qualities were
instructive. Bland, imperturbable, civil, and firm, he was
never weak and never rude. Among the uneducated, all
decisive action is announced in commotion or bluster. The
gentleman is never in a hurry, never in a contention. If you
annoy him, are rude to him, impose upon him, or menace him,
perhaps he quietly indicates his opinion of the impropriety,
perhaps his resolution is taken without. He avoids you. His
defence is prevention. Renewal of offence, renewal of inter­
course, chance of altercation or repetition, is simply impossible.
Such was Captain Mason. I watched his manners with plea­
sure—he governed the gaol like a drawing-room, excepting
that the desserts were not quite the same. I saw rude men
baffled, they could not make out how. Possibly he had nerves
and sensibility, but these articles were not in common use.
They were kept under lock and key, and never brought out
in the routine of official duties. As blandly and courteously
as he wished me good morning, he would have conducted me
to the gallows, had instruction to that effect reached him.
He would have apologised for the inconvenience, but he would
have hung me while I was saying “ pray don’t mention it.”
Excepting in one transaction our intercourse was unruffled.
When I left the gaol, a prisoner (the Master of a Post Office)
the only gentleman on my side of the prison, addressed to me
a letter of accusation against the governor—an act which
made me a participator in his sentiments. As it passed through
the governor’s hands, he wrote under the name the crime and
sentence of the writer—a brief and bitter retort. I re-enclosed
the letter to the writer with a note to Captain Mason, ob­
serving that on leaving the gaol I had expressed to him the
only opinion I entertained of him, and I should regard it as
unmanly to be a party to reproaches which I did not see rea­
son to address to him in person. He wrote me back, with a
soldier’s pleasant frankness, that “I had always behaved
honourably in my intercourse with him, and he did not believe
I would do an unmanly thing.”
The exceptional transaction with the Captain referred to
was this. One of my fellow-prisoners was an epileptic man,
whose ignorance and irritability, more than any crime, had
led to his imprisonment. As I kept a sort of school in our

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common room, and taught a few things to those about me
who were disposed to learn, I had become interested in Upton,
a humble and unhappy man, who learned at grammar
anxiously. Some nights he would fall out of bed in an epi­
leptic fit, and lie groaning on the stone floor for an hour or
more together. It was in vain that we shouted to the turn­
keys. They who can hear a man think of escaping, cannot
hear when he breaks his neck. Upton representing that a
little tobacco, to which he had been accustomed, would save
him from the frequency of these fits, I procured him some.
Smoking it one day in a corner, in a paper pipe made for the
purpose out of one of my letters, the governor came upon
him through a side door. Upon being asked how he pro­
cured it, he answered, “ From a man who had just come in
from the Sessions.” This the governor did not believe. At
night Ogden made an immense speech at me, in which that
luminous functionary inserted several elephantine hints, to the
effect that he knew the source whence the aforesaid tobacco
came. It was a treat to hear Ogden hint; it was like a hip­
popotamus putting his paw out, or kicking a man down stairs.
As soon as I could get to speak to Upton, I prevailed upon
him to allow me to write to the governor, tell him the truth,
and take the blame upon myself, reminding Upton that a good
man might be surprised into a lie, but only a bad man would
persist in one. The retaliation of the governor was refined
and vindictive. Instead of ordering me into a dark cell on
bread and water for two or three days, which was the
authorised punishment, he ordered two gates to be locked
between me and my visitors, so that those who spoke were
obliged to shout to me. This he continued, with slight varia­
tion, to the end of my imprisonment. This deprived me of
the pleasure of seeing ladies who called, as I would never
consent to see them under circumstances of so much humilia­
tion.
Captain Mason had had previous proof that my professions
might be trusted. When first imprisoned, the reader
perhaps remembers I was kept a fortnight while the magis­
trates played at bail. When at length they signified their
intention of accepting it, Captain Mason took me, through
the city, to Bransby Cooper’s house, where the bail-deed
was to be completed.
On our way I asked him if it
would be necessary for me to take an oath, before my own
bond could be accepted, as I should object to take an

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oath ? He turned round and replied — “ Why, Holyoake,
as you- don’t believe in any of the Gods, you could have
no objection to swear by them all.” I explained to him that
if the Magistrate would regard my oath as a mere cere­
mony, by which I rendered myself liable to penalties in case
of violated truth, or failure in my bond, I would take the oath
readily, if all the Gods of the Pantheon were in it: but if it
were regarded as a profession of my religious faith, I would
not take it. It was better that I should go back to gaol, than
to make a profession of belief which would mislead others.
I told Mr. Cooper the same when we reached his house. He,
however, said my signature would do,
One day I concluded a dialogue with my chaplain upon the
principle of reciprocation, i. e., of retorting his language upon
himself, and, I think, not without utility, for he never after-wards fell into that insensible arrogance of speech so common
among pastors. On the occasion referred to, he began—“Are you really an atheist, Mr. Holyoake?’’
“Have not you assumed that in placing me here?”
“You deny that there is a God?”
“ No; I deny that there is sufficient reason to believe that
there is one.”
“ I am very glad to find that you have not the temerity to
say that there is no God.”
“ And I am very sorry to find that you have the temerity to
say there is one. If it be absurd in me to deny what I can­
not demonstrate, is it not improper for you to assert so dog­
matically what you cannot prove ? ”
“Then where would you leave the question of atheism?”
“ Just where it leaves us both. It is a question of pro­
bability.”
“ Ah I the probabilities in favour of atheism are very few.”
“ How know you that ? Did you ever examine the question
without prejudice, or read that written in its favour without
fear? Those who dare not look at all never see far.”
“ But if the atheist has so much on his side, why does he
not make it known ? We do not keep back our evidences.”
“Has the atheist an equal opportunity with you? Is it
generous in you to taunt him with lack of evidence, when you
are prepared to punish its production ? ”
“ The reason is that your principles are so horrible; as
Robert Hall has said, ‘Atheism is a bloody and ferocious
system.’ ”

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“Permit me, sir, to return that gentle speech—to tell you
that your principles are horrible, and that Christianity is a
bloody and ferocious system.”
“ Really I am shocked to hear you speak so dreadfully of
Christianity.”
“ Why should you be shocked to hear what you are not
shocked to say ? ”
“But atheism is so revolting.”
“ But Christianity is so revolting.”
“ How dangerous is it for atheism to corrupt the minds of
children.”
“ How pernicious it is for Christian doctrines to corrupt the
thoughts of infancy.”
“ But you are only asserting.”
“ Are you doing otherwise ? I sometimes think that Chris­
tians would be more respectful in their speech if the same
language could be applied to them with impunity which they
apply to others.”
“ But, my dear sir, the language of the atheist is so shock­
ing to Christian feeling.”
“ And, my dear sir, has it never occurred to you that the
language of the Christian is shocking to atheistical feeling ? ”
“ Atheists have a right to their opinions, I allow, but not to
publish them.”
“ I shall think you speak reasonably when you permit the
same rule to be applied to the Christian.”
“But you really cannot be an atheist?”
“ And you say this who have been a party to imprisoning
me here for being one I If you believe yourself, go and de­
mand my liberation.”
“ Ah! when you come to die you will wish that you were
a Christian.”
“ Can it be that I shall wish to hold a creed that I distrust—
one that leads me to deny another the liberty I claim for
myself ? If to be capable of looking back with satisfaction on
conduct like this is to be a Christian, may I never die the
death of the righteous, and may my last end never be like
his.”
As the general treatment pursued towards me did not work
any satisfactory conversion, some attempts were made by
gentler means. Taken one day into a sleeping cell for pri­
vacy, one who had the power to fulfil his promises passed in
review the casualties of a life like mine, and asked whether I

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had not better change it. Thinking I was seduced by some
attraction which belonged to my position, he suggested how
fickle a thing was popularity, and how soon the applause of
friends might die away, or change with the growth or refine­
ment of my conviction, into suspicion or even hate. Had I
not better accept the editorship of a paper, where I should
not be required to contradict, but merely to avoid advocating
my views ? Had I not better accept a school in a retired part
of the country—a girls’ school also might be given to Mrs.
Holyoake, and our joint incomes would insure competence,
respectability, and usefulness ? I answered, “ I think you have
mistaken me. The opinions I defended are also my con­
victions ; and thinking them useful, it seems my duty to propa­
gate them, and the discharge of this duty is more serious in
my eyes than you suppose; nor do the inducements you pic­
ture exist. Do you not see that I am nearly friendless ? I am
without even the attentions of those from whom I have some
right to expect it. Except Mr. Farn, Mr. Watts, and Mr.
Campbell, none of my colleagues among the Social Mis­
sionaries have written me a friendly word. The editor of the
New Moral World, upon whose protection I have some claim,
has written no word in my favour. The only public defence
for which I am indebted has come from strange papers, and
unknown men.
Even Mr. Owen, the advocacy of whose
opinions involved me in this prosecution, he who occupied the
largest share of my veneration, has not even recognised my
existence by a single line. This affair may have made some
noise, but I am not so young as to mistake noise for popu­
larity, nor so weak as to think popularity the one thing need­
ful. Popularity is to be won by those who can flatter the
public, but that estimation which is alone worth having is only
to be won by the service of the people, and that is not the
work of youth but of life. That which you call my cause is
yet in an infantine state. It has no attractions but the rude
ones of daring and truth. It requires to be divested of an­
tagonism, and developed in its relations to political and social
interests and personal character. This must be the work of
time, and judging from the present, it will be a work of dif­
ficult and precarious effort. At present we number no public
friends of wealth or influence. We have every thing to gain
—yet the. comparative affluence you offer would be a canker
to my peace, while it was the price of duty evaded. My self­
chosen path, presumptuous and thorny, will be sweeter to

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walk. It is enough that you see I am not misled by its
attractions. Now 1 tread these floors with a proud step, and
meet your eye with unblenched brow, because it is necessary
to show you that in defence of my opinions I feel neither fear
nor guilt—but when I walk from this place into the wilder­
ness of the world, my steps will falter and my face will pale,
because my path will lie over the grave of my child.”
All I remember farther is that my tempter made a few not
unfeeling remarks, and led me back in silence to my usual
cell.
The final efforts for my conversion were on this wise. The
Rev. Mr. Cooper sent for me, a few days before my liberation,
and asked me to follow him to the chapel. Arrived there, he
ascended the pulpit, motioning me to a prisoner’s pew without
even asking me to be seated. My neck was stiff with a
severe cold, and I was as ill able as ill disposed to be cate­
chised. I stood leaning on the spikes—not inapt emblems of
such Christian love as I had there been made acquainted with.
The good Chaplain prayed—I did not move. He looked at
me to catch my eye—I kept mine fixed on the spikes. He
addressed me—I made no sign. He spoke some minutes—
still I remained motionless. He paused and asked what I
thought of his representations—I answered no word. He
seemed to think he was making a favourable impression. He
resumed, and came to another peroration, and again besought
me to answer—still no motion, no word from me. He began
a third time, and touched all serious topics which he could
command, and came again to an elaborate peroration on
death-beds; and as I remained still silent and immovable, he
said, somewhat perplexed this time, “Holyoake, won’t you
speak?” I then answered “Not while we occupy these
places. Do you not preach to me and place me here where
prisoners stand? I take this to be a ceremony, and not a
conversation.” He walked down from his pulpit and asked
me to accompany him, when he took me into several cells till
he found one warmed with hot air, and asked would I speak
with him there on friendly terms ? I answered, “ with plea­
sure;” and there we conversed for the last time. I troubled
him to repeat his arguments, as I would not admit that I had
attended to a word. When he had done, I briefly assured
him that my experience there had not created in me any de­
sire to be a Christian: he had brought before me no new
evidences, and as it had been found necessary to enforce those

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I knew before by penal reasons, the operation had rather
diminished their weight in my estimation.
He professed himself anxious to “ present me with a Bible ”
•—a fact which I knew was destined to make a figure in the
next Gaol Report to the County Magistrates; I therefore re­
solved to have one worth acceptance, or not one at all. When
he brought to me the usual prison copy, I respectfully declined
it. I said, a thin copy bound in calf, in pearl type, with mar­
ginal references, would be interesting to me, but the dumpling­
shaped book he offered, I could never endure in my library.
He deliberated—the trade price of the Bible he offered me
was about tenpence, that I desiderated would cost him half a
guinea. The reflection was fatal. The Bible never came,
and the evangelical fact that “The prisoner, George Jacob
Holyoake, was presented with a copy of the Holy Scriptures
before leaving the gaol, which it is hoped, under the Divine
blessing, will be the means of bringing him to the knowledge
of the truth ”—was never recorded.
About this period I saw the magistrates for the last time.
There seemed to be a full Board of them, and Mr. Bransby
Cooper wras in the chair. Before withdrawing I addressed
Mr. Cooper, and said—“ As in a short time I shall leave this
place, I wish, before doing so, to express to you my sense of
the kindness and consideration shown me by you when Mrs.
Holyoake visited me here. It is one of the few things I shall
remember with pleasure when again at liberty. You will
not, I fear, believe in the possibility of one of my opinions
feeling gratitude, but I will at least assure you of it.” The
answer he made was a compensation for much that I had
experienced. In that loud voice in which he usually spoke, he
exclaimed—“Yes, I will say this, that I believe you, Holyoake,
I don’t believe that you could be a hypocrite.”
One day a magistrate, described to me as the Hon. and
Rev. Andrew Sayer, sent me a copy of Paley’s works, re­
questing my particular attention to his Natural Theology.
“ Did I put into your hands,” I said, addressing that gentle­
man, “ an atheistic work, you would tell me of the contamina­
tion you dread; and may I not plead the same risk in perusing
your theistical book ? But, as all in the search after truth must
venture through phases of error, I shall not hesitate to comply
with your request; and that you may' be certain that I do
so, you may, when I have ended, put to me any question upon
the contents you please.” It happened that my examination

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resulted in my writing “ Paley Refuted in his Own Words.’*
When Mr. Sayer came to ask me what conclusions I had
come to on the books he had lent me, I made this answer to
him—“Sir, I am surprised at your asking me this question.
Does it become you, a clergyman and a magistrate, to ask
me to commit crime ? ”
“ What do you mean ? ” he inquired.
“ I mean this,” I replied, “ that in having punished my last
expression of opinion as a crime, by bringing me here, it
does not become you to put religious inquiries to me again.”
He seemed confounded; and on this occasion I showed him,
that while Christianity punished as crime the expression of
dissentient opinions, Christians were disqualified from seeking
the state of any man’s thoughts with respect to religion.
Unless one volunteers explanations, Christians have plainly no
right to demand them. They put themselves out of the pale
of ordinary privilege.
Writing “ Paley Refuted ” and the “ Short and Easy
Method with the Saints ”—a title suggested by “ Leslie’s
Short and Easy Method with the Deists,” another book put
into my hands by the authorities—occupied me till the end of
my imprisonment. On the 6th of February, 1843, I was.
liberated; and three days after (having paid visits of acknow­
ledgment to my friends in Gloucester, Cheltenham, and Wor­
cester,) I rejoined (what I might then term the remains of)■
my family in Birmingham.

CHAPTER IV.---- AFTER THE LIBERATION.

On rejoining my colleagues of the Oracle of Reason, I pro­
ceeded to issue an address to our readers. The substance of
it, which was as follows, comprises some additional facts of my
prison experience:—
“ My Friends,—It is now six months since cut and hacked,
* I fell,’ not merely in the language of the parable, but lite­
rally, ‘ among thieves.’ Of those who caused that contact, I
am afraid I must say, as William Hutton said of an untoward
sweetheart—‘ There was little love between us at first, and
heaven has been pleased to decrease it on a further acquaint­

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ance.’ Christians profess to draw men to Jesus with ‘ cords
of love,’ but were it not for their judicious foresight in telling
us that they are ‘ cords of love,’ few would find it out.
“To friends in Gloucester, Cheltenham, Birmingham,
*
London,f and other places, I owe many thanks for what has
been contributed for my support, and for that of my family,
during my imprisonment. For their attentions I believe no
thanks were asked and none are wished. Yet I am concerned
to make acknowledgments, because a man always values
highly the kindness he does not expect. When the words
were spoken which led to my prosecution, I expected that the
cautious would think that I had gone ‘ too far ’—that the
prudent would think that I had been too rash—that my friends
would be afraid for me, and that the timid would be afraid
for themselves. But I held, with Polydamus, that
‘To speak his thoughts is every freeman’s right­
in peace and war, in council and in fight.’

“ And, what I regarded as greater than my right, I felt it
to be my duty. Besides, my honour was concerned. I could
not descend to that disingenuousness I had often counselled
others against. Hence, in the course I took, I did not think
it necessary to calculate consequences; a man’s true concern
is with his principles, and not with his fate. I pretended to
no public virtue, and I laid claim to no praise—I did no more
than every man ought to do. That doing so little has been
so rewarded by the exertions of many friends for my pro­
tection, I must be pleased; but had nothing been done, I
trust I should have found pride in penury and satisfaction
* To Gloucester two special acknowledgments are due. First to a young
lady, the niece of the innkeeper in whose house I resided when awaiting
trial, both at the sessions and assizes. With no other knowledge of me than
these occasions afforded, and with no prepossession in favour of my opinions,
but simply from that generous sympathy women often display, she fre­
quently brought me refreshments to the gaol, and was a medium of com­
munication with my friends, and often answered inquiries of my family
which the restrictions of the gaol sometimes rendered it impossible for me
even to know. In the romance of incident, she afterwards became the wife
of my friend Mr. Chilton. The other instance was that of Mrs. Price, a
woman in humble circumstances, who, during the latter part of my impri­
sonment, brought me dinner every Sunday. Both Mrs. Price and her
husband were utterly unknown to me.
+ At the time of the death of Madeline, Mrs. Ralph Thomas, of Lon­
don, sent to Mrs. Holvoake ^3, subscribed by herself and personal friends.

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under neglect, in the reflection that I had respected duty
and consistency.
“ When my memorial to Sir James Graham was returned
to the magistrates for their opinion, they came to me, and
Mr. Bransby Cooper stormed out with great violence, ‘ You
were sent here, sir, for punishment, and you have nothing else
to expect. I consider you worse than the greatest felon in
the gaol; you have been guilty of the most atrocious crime
a man can possibly commit. I have told Sir James Graham
what you deserve.’ I knew that these magistrates were
Christians. I was told they were gentlemen, but I thought
them furies.
*
“ The prison diet was bread, gruel, and potatoes. On two
days in each week boiled rice was substituted for potatoes;
and after I had been in prison nine weeks I was, by the rules,
allowed a small portion of salt beef on Thursdays and
Sundays. As this fare is deemed in Gloucestershire a famous
specific for the cure of Atheism, it may not be out of place to
explain its virtues. The gruel was little remarkable for its
delicate flavour and little celebrated for its nutritious qualities,
and known by the luxurious cognomen of ‘ skilly.’ The rice
had a blue cast, a saline taste, and a slimy look. The beef I
could not often taste, seldom chew, and never digest; I should
say it was rather leather mode than a la mode. The whole of
the food could only be taken by a ploughman’s appetite, and
only be digested by a navigator’s stomach.
“ The indirect occasion of my prosecution was the editor­
ship of the Oracle. When Mr. Southwell was apprehended
no Social Missionary came forward to continue his paper,
although many of them were better qualified to do so than
myself. Socialism had always attached great importance to
freedom of expression, and Socialism’s advocates had been
styled ‘ apostles of freethought.’ Knowing this, I felt that it
would be a dishonourable reflection should any one refuse
personally to support what he was known publicly to approve.
Had Mr. Fleming been placed in Mr. Southwell’s situation,
* Yet such is the inconsistency of the Christian character when allied to
a generous nature, that Mr. Bransby Cooper, who, as a Christian, behaved
with so much rudeness, had just before given instruction to the turnkeys to
treat me with respect, with a view to save me from less harshness from other
officials than that which, in other moods he so plentifully inflicted on me
himself.

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and had he been of opinion that I could have defended his
violated liberty by taking- his place, I should have edited
the New Moral World as cheerfully as I did the Oracle of
Reason. When I speak of ‘ freedom of speech ’ and ‘ liberty
for all,’ I know of no distinction between myself and those
who differ from me; I see with an equal eye the Atheist and
the Christian, the violent and the gentle, the dogmatic and
the modest.
“That is true of Christianity which has been said of
Catholicism—1 Humane individuals may express their abhor­
rence of the sentiments of persecution—bodies of men, sections
of the church itself, nay, many of the dignitaries may abjure
them, and protest that they have never acted upon them, nor
ever will enforce them—yet all this will not avail to give a
discerning- man the smallest security for his liberty, his pro­
perty, or his life; for as long as those intolerant decrees
remain upon the statute-book, they can at any time be revived.’
It therefore behoves every one to set a guard over that
liberty, for the loss of which no religion will ever compensate.
The conviction should be permanent that Christianity is a
fearful thing. But bad men may laud it—mistaken men may
contend that there is some good in it—unthinking men may
give currency to its terms—and weak men may connive at its
delusions, but we ought to regard with different sentiments a
system which tramples upon the feelings of humanity and the
principles of liberty. Let us, then, secure the antidote—free
expression of opposite opinion. Shall it be said that we are
content to wear mental fetters ? When Protestants, who
dare never think without the Bible and Prayer Book, have
shaken off the iron despotism of Catholicism—when Methodists
and even Ranters have refused to submit their thoughts to be
cut down to the Procrustean bed of conventional opinion—let
not Christians mock at Freethinking pusillanimity, and deride
us as holders of craven principles. Not only for ourselves but
for others are our exertions demanded. What patrimony has
the poor man but his free thoughts ? Industry will not save
him from chill penury’s grip, nor virtue from the poor-house
grave. Let us,, then, preserve and perfect the humble inhe­
ritance of those who have no other.” *
In prison it is not safe to make complaints. You are too
* Abridged from the Oracle oj Reason.

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much in the power of those around you to escape reprisals of
a serious kind, but this did not deter me from attempting
what I conceived might make the future easier for others who
might follow me in the same way. Besides the endeavours
I had made within the prison, with a view to tolerable treat­
ment, I addressed, on my release, the following letter to the.
Editor of the Cheltenham Free Press: —
“ Mr. Editor,—As prisons and prison discipline have lately
occupied much public attention, I am induced to offer to your
notice a little recent experience in such matters. What I
have written I intended to have stated to a public meeting,
but suffering from debility, which makes me glad to avoid
excitement, I seek the calmer medium of your paper.
“ I speak of Gloucester County Gaol. I believe the prison
inspector is of opinion that the rules of that place are ‘ harsh
and cruel? Now, should a prisoner seek a partial exemption
from their operation, the process he goes through is very
curious. He applies to a turnkey: the turnkey answers, ‘ My
duty is determinate and my province clear; I cannot do it.’
Probably he refers the prisoner to the surgeon. The surgeon
is seen j he refers him to the governor, the governor refers
him to the visiting magistrates; they reply, ‘ We have no
power to grant the request, Sir James Graham only can do
that.’ Sir James Graham is memorialised, who, as is usual,
answers, ‘ The visiting magistrates best know what is proper;
I only grant what they recommend.’ Any further application
to them would be construed into a wilful annoyance, and the
prisoner is fortunate who can sit down like Sterne’s happy
man, pleased he knows not why, and contented he knows not
wherefore. Of course I blame no one, for there is no one to
blame, and this constitutes the beauty of the system. Should
*
* It seemed to me useful to make applications for what I wanted in
writing. It prevented mistakes, and afterwards admitted of proof. The
governor used to come to me and say, “ Now, Holyoake, it is of no use
sending this memorial; it is sure not to be attended to,” and he would so
obligingly bestow upon me the treasures of his experience on the futility of
the course I was pursuing, that at times it really did seem not only useless
but uncivil to persist. But I used to say, “ Captain Mason, I suppose you
are right as to the result. - That makes no difference, however, as to my
duty. You may put my memorials in the fire, if you like, as soon as I have
written them ; still I will make the proper application to every officer and
every authority, and deliver them to your care, as in duty bound.” I knew
the Captain would not burn them—I knew more, I knew he dare not burn

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I individualise, it would only be to say that the governor is a
gentleman of some excellent qualities and some unintelligible
conduct; that the surgeon possesses the suaviter in modo with­
out the fortiter in re ; and that the magistrates are little gods,
who, like Jupiter, thunder oftener than they smile.
“ What of health I have I owe to my friends, who supplied
me with such food as my constitution required, for had I been
compelled to subsist on the diet of the prison, my health, by
this time, would have been quite broken. With the direction
of my own medical adviser, I made this representation to the
proper authorities at the gaol; I made them to the commis­
sioners who were lately there, and I made them to Sir James
*
Graham. I therefore conceive that I am j'ustified in repeating
them here. The surgeon admitted the necessity of better diet,
but referred me to the governor, and he sent me the fruitless
round I have described. Now the province of the governor
was the care of my person, and the province of the surgeon
the care of my health. The governor ought not to have
permitted the reference to him, and the surgeon ought not to
have made it. Either the surgeon should have refused my
application with decision, or have allowed it with inde­
pendence. Upon this subj’ect the commissioners reminded
me ‘ that if the surgeon did not order what was necessary for
my health, he was responsible for it.’ I replied ‘ that I knew
this, and that they also knew, that a prisoner, like Beale of
Northleach, must die before he could avail himself of such
them. I knew, also, that each would be duly delivered to the proper party.
Further, I knew this, that if his dissuasions had deterred me from sending
in my complaints, that when I left the prison the authorities would destroy
every representation I might make, by saying, “ If there had been anything
wrong Holyoake would have complained, but as he has not done so, the
aggravation he points out could not have existed, or could not have been
grievous.” Foreseeing this, I provided against it, and, disregarding the
refusal of my applications, I addressed them all round with scrupulous
formality. The result was, that on my liberation I found myself in a
position to defy contradiction in any allegations I had to advance; and
though I published this letter immediately under the eyes of the magistrates,
it was never contradicted.
* In consequence of these representations some medical gentlemen of the
city were brought in to examine me, who pronounced my life to be in no
danger, and therefore (so it seemed) my health was not regarded as worth
improving by better food. Provided I did not make a case for the Coroner
or House of Commons, that was enough. They appeared to consider
themselves as bound to keep me alive and no more.

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responsibility, and that this was but grave consolation. But of
the surgeon I wish to speak impartially, and I gladly admit
that his manner was always very kind, but I complain that his
answers were always very indecisive. What he recommended
he seldom prescribed, and professed that he must consult the
governor, when he should have consulted only himself. This
fault may seem little, but its effects are great. In a gaol, the
surgeon is the only person who stands between a prisoner
and the grave, and it is indispensable that to the quality of
humanity those of independence and decision should be joined.
The kind of answers to which I have alluded were given to
me more than once, and given to others as well as to me.
And I again repeat, that had I been without friends, I should
have left my prison without health.
“ Akin to the want of better food was the want of exercise,
and no want of damp. The yard in which I walked was so
small that I always became giddy, through the frequent
turnings, before I became refreshed. The governor some­
times permitted the ‘ Fines-Class,’ in which I was, to walk in
his garden; but the occasions came seldom, and lasted not
long; and I was previously so enervated by confinement, that
the unusual exercise thus taken threw me into a slight fever.
Generally speaking, the place in which I was confined was
miserably humid, and, although I took perpetual care, I had
almost a perpetual cold.
“An application for a trivial favour often brought down
upon me ruthless treatment. The visiting magistrates would
come, and before the other prisoners denounce me as the
‘ worst felon in the gaol, and the most atrocious of criminals.’
I was directed to ascribe this to the petulance of age and the
rancour of orthodoxy; but I thought it proceeded from bad
taste and worse feeling.
“ From first to last every newspaper sent me was detained;
every letter from me was perused, and every one io me was
broken open and read—and the very seals, if they happened
to be heterodox, were interdicted. Thus the privacy of
affection and friendship were violated, and mind as well as
body laid under one restraint.
“ When I saw friends it was but for a few minutes, and then
through the bars of a gate; to shake hands was a privilege,
and to converse unheard impossible. To me it was a
momentary satisfaction made an enduring mortification. To
the public it may seem a light matter that nothing can be

�LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

I 11

spoken to a visitor unheard by officers, but it is no light
matter to a prisoner. The commissioners inquired, ‘ Can you
make no communication to your friends without its passing
under the eyes of the governor or through the ears of the
turnkey ? ’ I answered, ‘ None ; and that it was not prudent
for a prisoner to mention openly what affected persons in
whose power he was put—that no prisoner must calculate on
gaolers being generous, for they owned few virtues not written
in their rules.’ I spoke from experience, and gave them cases
in point.
*
“ During the latter portion of my time all my friends were
denied access to me,f which, though it interfered with the
supply of my wants, I did not, for the reasons stated, much
regret. But this I did regret—all my letters were detained,
*
and I was refused the privilege of writing a single letter to
my family. The reason assigned by the governor for this
was the enforcement of new rules, but I know that they were
enforced without proper authority, and I believe applied only
to me.J
“Those are happy who are for ever preserved from the
reception-cells of Gloucester Gaol. Of the one in which I was
put the floor was filthy, the bed was filthier, and the window
was filthier still, for in the window was—what I sicken at
while I write—a rag full of human excrement. And of the
bed, a prisoner assured me that when he lay in it the lice
crept up his throat off the corners of the blanket which

* One case I allude to was this. Mr. Bransby Cooper and Mr. Jones had
called me out to state that an application I had made for better dietary
would not be acceded to- Mr. Cooper said the surgeon did not prescribe
any other diet. I said, “It appears to me, sir, that the surgeon dare not
prescribe any other diet, unless he was first assured you would approve of
it.” The answer of Mr. Cooper was loud, harsh, brief, and decisive. “Of
course, sir, he dare not.” Thus the fierce candour of this man broke through
the web-work of cautiousness which surrounded prisoners there, and spoke
the truth for once.
11 have since been told that Mr. Alcott, of America, was among the
number, who, being a visitor in England, had but one opportunity of calling
upon me.
+ On one occasion Richard Carlile brought me a present of a handsome
pair of large razors, which were sent back, lest I should cut my throat with
them. The rules of the gaol forbid the entrance of such articles, but this
reason for their rejection was not in the rules, but added as suitable to mv
case.

�IT2

THE HISTORY OF THE

covered him. This statement, on my direction, he made to
the commissioners.
*•' The gaol chapel is a cold place. Often, on entering it,
I have exclaimed, with Jugurtha, on entering his Roman
dungeon, ‘ Heavens ! how cold is this bath of yours! ’ Yet
in this place, during this inclement season, the prisoners are
assembled every morning to hear prayers, on empty stomachs,
after sixteen hours’ confinement in their night cells. On the
‘ long prayer ’ mornings they are detained in chapel threequarters of an hour, and the penitentiary men, on their return
to their cells, find their gruel on the stone floor, gone cold in
their absence. I mention this matter with reluctance, as some
may suppose that I notice it only from want of religion ; but
perhaps a little reflection will convince them that believers, as
well as unbelievers, can appreciate a warm breakfast on a
cold morning!—and that an asthmatical man, however sound
his faith, will have his affection painfully increased by enerva­
tion, inanition, and sudden cold. This practice I do not say
is contrary to the rules, for it would be difficult to say what
is, or what is not, contrary to them—and I never met with any
one at the gaol who could tell. But the practice is contrary
to the act of the 4th of Geo. IV., chap. 64, sec. 30, which is
professed to regulate it.
“ A circumstance of a different nature from any of the fore­
going I think it my duty to notice. After a considerable
portion of my term of imprisonment had elapsed, and after I
had memorialised Sir James Graham, I was permitted to
remain up in an evening with my books. To this I owe what
of pleasure I can be said to have experienced in gaol, and
with pleasure I acknowledge it.
*
“ I prefer leaving these statements without comment, and
* Before this privilege was conceded I whiled away the long nights by
writing on the cover of a book, on which I had adjusted threads at equal
intervals ; under these threads I slipped paper, and thus wrote on the lines
made by the threads, which kept, in the dark, the words from running into
each other. When a boy I learned to write with my eyes shut, and my
playful acquirement now became of service to me. In this way I wrote
some letters for the Oracle, and much of my correspondence. Scattered by
force, our little party at that time, and for some years after, had to be kept
together by letters, and, incredible as it will sound, I wrote during my
imprisonment from first to last nearly 2000 letters. The governor did not
see them all, but he saw so many that one day he said I sent out more
letters than usually went through a local post office.

�LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

iB

content myself with saying that I can abundantly substantiate
every one of them. On Saturday last they were partly
examined at the gaol by the magistrates, but I heard nothing
that impugned their correctness or affected the propriety of
their appearing before the public. If I have made any mis­
representations I shall be sorry; and what is -proved to be
wrong I will cheerfully retract. I have written from no
malevolence, for I feel none; and as what I have related
affects me no longer, my only motive is the hope of benefitting
the unfortunate beings whom I have left behind me. My
object is not, as some may suspect, to excite commiseration on
my part; to do this have no wish, and no expectation, for
I
*
in Cheltenham it seems to be a received maxim, that they
who have little faith have no feelings—certainly none are
respected.
“ How my imprisonment is supposed to affect me toward
religion I cannot tell; I only know that I have no change of
sentiment to own. During six months I have been ‘shut
out from the common light and common air’—from those
whom the bonds of friendship connected, and the ties of
affection endeared; and some of these ties are broken for ever.
After this, I can only say that I have greater difficulty than
ever in believing that humanity is the associate of piety; and
if Christianity has no expounders more attractive than those I
have fallen in with, the day of my conversion is still distant.
“ It was taught to me that the religion of Jesus cherished
kindness, that it promoted our best affections, and reclaimed
the erring in love. But how is this accomplished in gaol ?
The man who goes there must leave his affections, his
feelings, and his sensibilities behind him—for in gaol all are
blighted, deadened, and destroyed. There no appeals are
made but to coward fears, and no antidote applied to error
but misery. Indeed, I cannot dwell upon Christianity’s treat­
ment of what she considers my errors, without wishing, with
Themistocles, that I could learn the art of forgetting. With
regard to the cause of my prosecution, I admit that I might be
wrong in the sentiments which I held, but I could not be
wrong in frankly avowing them. And I may answer to
Christians, as did Aristides to the tyrant Dionysius—‘I am
sorry for what you have done, but I am not sorry for what I
have said.’ Despite all that has succeeded, I still prefer
integrity to liberty. My resolution has long been taken, to
speak nothing or to speak what I think; for

�I I4

THE HISTORY OF THE

* Who dares think one thing and another tell,
My heart detests him as the gates of helL’

“Christians speak what they think useful, and the same
privilege ought to be conceded to me. A difference in faith
ought not to make a difference in right. But while it does so,
those who cannot pronounce the required Shibboleth must
arm themselves to bear. Those are poor principles for which
a man is unwilling to suffer when they are in danger. It is
an encouraging reflection, that though a man’s fate may be at
others’ disposal, his character is ever at his own—and that
no enemy can dishonour him who will not dishonour himself.
“ Yours respectfully,
“ G. J. Holyoake.
“Gloucester, Feb. 7, 1843.”
The commissioners referred to in this letter asked me, when
I was first taken before them, whether I had any complaint
to make?
I said I had.
Did I wish to give it as evidence ?
I said I did.
In the evening of the next day, between nine and ten
o’clock, I was called up and taken into their presence again.
The governor of the gaol, Captain Mason, and the surgeon,
Mr. Hicks, were present.
“Take a seat, Mr. Holyoake,” said the speaker of the
Board—Dr. Blisset Hawkins, I believe.
I did so.
“ Now, Mr. Holyoake, what have you to complain of ? ”
said the speaking Commissioner.
“ Nothing, sir.”
“ Nothing ! Why, what do you mean ? ”
“ What I say, sir.”
“ But did you not say that you had evidence that you
wished to give ? ”
“ I did.”
“ Has it not been at your request that you have been
brought before us for that purpose ? ”
“ It has.”
“ Then what are we to understand by your present state­
ment ? ”
•
“ Why, sir, what you hardly need me to explain. I cannot

�LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

IT5

give evidence before these gentlemen,” looking towards the
governor and the surgeon.
“ True,” said the questioner. “ Captain Mason, Mr. Hicks,
you will please to withdraw.”
When they were gone, “ Now, Mr. Holyoake, you can
speak freely,” said the chairman.
“ But first I must have your guarantee that I shall suffer no
inconvenience in consequence.”
“ Why, what danger do you run ? ” was asked me.
“ This. Am I not in the power of governor and surgeon ?
Can they not retaliate in your absence ? No prisoner is safe
in any gaol, as you ought to know, if the authorities come to
regard him as reporting them. If you decline to give me this
guarantee I shall not make any communication to you, and
when I am at liberty again I shall have a right to publish
that your commission did not learn the whole truth at this
gaol—that it did not even put itself in a condition to learn
it.”
“ Well,” the chairman said, “ we guarantee that you shall
suffer no inconvenience in consequence of any evidence you
may give to us.”
Then, and not till then, did I proceed to explain what in the
last letter and notes is recounted. The commissioners kept
their word. The severity of the discipline, instituted by the
governor when a visitor came, was somewhat relaxed; and
once or twice, when I was suffering from cold (before
unnoticed) a can of mutton broth was ordered me by the
surgeon, in which I found a very sensible looking piece of
mutton.
Nothing more of importance remains to be narrated. Con­
cluding, let me solicit consideration to the moral aspects of
Christianity, as set forth in this narrative, and to what I con­
sider the political moral of these pages. Many persons whose
candour and general intelligence I do not distrust, tell me that
the persecution here recounted is not to be ascribed to
Christianity. To this I make the answer made on this subj'ect
(the imprisonment of myself, Adams, and others) by my late
friend Maltus Questell Ryall. “ Christians set a watch upon
them—Christians informed against them—Christians pre­
judiced the public against them : by Christian pay were hire
,
*
ling lawyers retained—by Christian witnesses confronted—by
the Christian Press misrepresented—by Christian juries found
guilty, by Christian judges condemned.” It is necessary to

�11(5

THE HISTORY OF THE

put the argument in this cumulative form to satisfy some
understandings; but a well-informed and candid Christian
can hardly be supposed.to need formal proof on this head.
A careful study of the Evangelists some time after this
imprisonment, satisfied me that the religion of Jesus involves
persecution. A man who believes that men need saving, that
there is only one way whereby they can be saved, that his
way is that way, and that it is better for a man to lose the
whole world than to lose his own soul by missing that way,
such a believer will inevitably coerce all he can into it. If he
is not a persecutor he ought, in moral consistency, to be one.
Having the fear of the philanthropists and of the humanitarians
before his eyes, he may modify his practice, but it will be at
the expense of his penetration or of his religious duty. I have
no difficulty whatever in understanding that the conscientious
among the old inquisitors might be men of benevolence—•
spiritual physicians, who amputated existence with a view to
save the eternal life of the patient. It is now many years
since I wrote or spoke against them on religious grounds, and
for a long period I have ceased to speak of persecution
as being either unscriptural or unchristian.
It will not do to say that what we have seen of persecution
has been but the abuse of Christianity. It is in itself a con­
demnation of Christianity to be obliged to repudiate the
conduct of all Christian churches. It will not do to say that
Christians have not been wise enough to see, nor good enough
to image, the divine gentleness of Christ. The Christian
churches have been presided over by pastors who have pos­
sessed both penetration and purity in the highest degree—
who were able to see what there was to be seen, and devout
enough to render it in their lives. Try the question even in
our day. If Christ be the symbol of love and gentleness to all
who believe in his name, how is it that in every part of the
world the Freethinker should fear to fall into the hands of the
Christian? How is it that he must set a watch upon his
words in every town and hamlet in our own land, lest the free
expression of his deepest convictions should cost him his posi­
tion, his employment, and his character ? Branded, outcast,
and friendless, the Christian’s door is the last at which he
would knock—the Christian’s fireside is the last at which he
would find a welcome—and the average Christian pastor,
who in knowledge, duty, and example, most nearly resembles
the Christ whom he preaches, is the last man whose path the

�LAST TRIAL BY JURY FOR ATHEISM.

II7

Freethinker would wish to cross, or into whose ear he would
venture to pour the tale of his expatriations.
In one passage of my defence I represent persecution, as
Lord Brougham and others have done, as a power which
spreads opinion. I believed so then, but believe it no longer.
I have lived to watch the effects of persecution, and have seen
it put down the truth so often, as no longer to doubt its bad
efficacy. The ignorant, the timid, the opulent, and the con­
ventional (and these make up the mass of mankind), are all
deterred by danger or opprobrium. The resolute and the
reckless, the only parties who persist, labour under accumu­
lated disadvantages. Condemned to spend their time in selfdefence, development of doctrine—the legitimate and only
source of permanent influence—is nearly impossible to them ;
and it is well for them if they escape acquiring an antagonistic
spirit, which disfigures their advocacy and misrepresents their
character. Their only proselytes are those who come to
them out of spite or out of sympathy, and who, of course,
miss the intellectual ground of conviction, and can be of little
real service until they have been re-educated.
If, as I admit, persecution will put down opinion, what
objection is there to its employment when it puts down error?
I answer, “ Beware of its use, because it may put down the
truth also.” Persecution is not an ordeal. Free discussion is
the only test capable of distinguishing and establishing the
truth. The proper condemnation of persecution is, that it is
an illegitimate opposition which is sure to be discountenanced
as men become manly and refined. The armies of a civilised
people observe, even in the deadly strife of battle, some rules
of honourable warfare, and do not descend to the arts of
treachery or tactics of savages. We may surely hope that
in the battle for religious truth a sense of honour will prevent
the dominant party from taking against its opponents the
undue advantage of persecution. Montaigne relates that when
Polyperchon advised Alexander to take advantage of the
night for attacking Darius, “ By no means,” answered the
noble general; “ it is not for such a man as I am to steal such
an advantage; I had rather repent me of my fortune than be
ashamed of my victory?’ It is not too much to expect that
Christianity will always be less refined than War.
Persecution, always a disaster, was not, however, with us a
defeat. We were not put down by persecution; we continued
the Oracle a hundred and four weeks, then the Movement,

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THE HISTORY OF THE

sixty-eight weeks, and the Reasoner has since completed thirty
volumes. Besides having written in these publications, I
have, in almost all the principal cities and towns in the
kingdom, spoken, since the trial at Gloucester, with the
utmost explicitness. The imprisonment has at least been of
this service—and this is all—it has enabled me to speak
accredited by the sincerity which otherwise could not have
been so satisfactorily manifest to the multitude. To have
spent, without shrinking, some portion of life in prison in
defence of public liberty, gives the same authority among the
people as having graduated at a university does among
*
scholars,
The fact is a sad illustration of the brutal manner
in which the people are condemned to win the enlargement of
their liberties. In cases where clergymen have menaced me
with renewed imprisonment, I have always answered—“I
consider myself as having taken out a license to speak freely.
The Government made a charge to me of six months’ impri­
sonment for that privilege, and I paid the price. If you have
renewed demands upon me, let me know them, and I will
endeavour to meet them ; but do not interrupt me.”
In the present structure of English political society, to pre­
serve the ability to be imprisoned is necessary to usefulness.
When the associations of home have twined themselves
around the feelings—after long industry and patient frugality
have surrounded a man with some comforts unknown to his
youth—few have the temper which will part from them and
walk into a gaol at the call of duty. I should think this
state the death of progress. When, in 1847, insuring my
life in the Equity Law Insurance Office, I asked, before I
took out my policy, whether it would be forfeited if my death
was occasioned by imprisonment or transportation. The
Directors naturally asked whether I was liable to those
casualties. I said, “ Not particularly liable, I hoped; but to
* When the Prizes were awarded me for writing the Literary Lectures of
the Manchester Unity, an attempt was made to cancel the award on the
ground of my having been imprisoned, but it was immediately quashed.
When the legislation of the Order was before the House of Lords, the then
Bishop of Oxford (in Committee) made an objection to the Lectures on
account of the Authorship, but the Unity refused to withdraw them, and
they were continued in use. The objections of this nature made in some
instances by the Press have been inoperative where the people have been
concerned.

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119

be able to be imprisoned, if it seemed a duty, I valued as a
great privilege, and I would not barter my right to be
imprisoned.” I am afraid they smiled at my eccentricity, but
they assured me that that accident would not involve the
forfeiture of my policy, which I then took out.
No one who reads thus far will, I hope, consider me as a
candidate for either imprisonment or transportation. I have
too keen an insight into their misery for that. But he who
pretends to take the side of the people ought to see his way
all through, and not incur a danger he has not weighed, and
not suffer any to ascribe to him a virtue he does not mean to
maintain.
If any, from what I have just expressed, or from the trans­
actions of this narrative, shall conclude that I am disposed to
regard law-breaking lightly, they will mistake me. Respect
for the law is an intelligent virtue—a sign of fitness for
freedom so important, that none but an enemy would obscure
the duty or weaken the sentiment. If accused, in the matter
which led to my trial, of breaking the law, I might plead that
there was no law to break, and therefore I could not break
one. What is called the common law relating to blasphemy
is a mere caprice, an opinion interpreted by ignorance or
sectarian prejudice, and enforced at the call of bigotry—male­
volent to the humble while neutral towards the rich. Against
this tyranny one is obliged to rebel. It is disastrous that
we should have to set up the standard of resistance even in a
case of this kind, and the chiefjustification was that a democratic
government was denied us. When the people have a voice in
making the laws, the breaking of any law requires grave justi­
fication. Men have two lives—a private and a public one.
Conscience is the guide of all that relates to private duty, but
law is the conscience of society, and it is best when private
conscience can be subordinate to the public conscience. Pri­
vate conscience may be the child of selfishness, fanaticism, or
vanity, as well as of the greatest purity and intelligence. A
man, therefore, should be careful how he places so uncertain
a thing above the law. If private conscience be more just
and intelligent than the public conscience, a democratic form
of government affords peaceful facilities whereby it can come
into the ascendant. But where these modes are denied, no
alternative remains but that of rebellion or unconditional and
indefinite submission. Resistance to the law, however, or to
what is tacitly accepted by the majority as law, is, under any

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THE HISTORY OF THE

form of government, so pernicious an example, is so liable to
be abused, so liable to unfit the people who learn the lesson
for submission to legitimate authority, that these cases demand
the strictest surveillance before they receive the sanction of a
friend of the people. In all instances in which conscience is
the ground of resistance, the wrong done to conscience ought
to be clear, deep, and momentous, and the necessity which
obliges the claims of private conscience to be put above the
laws ought to be made so evident that the sentiment of free­
dom shall not deteriorate that of legitimate and honourable
allegiance.
If the political moral of this narrative be therefore drawn
with discrimination, we may do little harm even if mistaken
in the belief that the prevalence of our views of life may
be a public good; and if this belief prove to be right in
the main, we do what reformers are said often to forget—we
make a past to which the future may refer for authority and
instruction.
“ Then not ‘ in vain ! ’ Even obscurest weedsNourish the roots of fruitfulest fair trees.
So from our Fortune-loathed Hope proceeds
The experience that may base high victories.” *

What “our views” are this is not the place to state; as to
some it would seem that under the pretext of a plea for Free
Utterance, sentiments were obtruded upon the reader he was
not forewarned to expect. I therefore limit myself to saying
(and that only for the sake of others who will decline to
concede free utterance until they know what has to be
uttered) that whoever sees in Atheism simply the development
of a negation, sees but half the truth. Even in this respect
(supposing existing theological systems to be erroneous)
Atheism has the merit of clearing the way for pure Moral ism,
which is the other half or positive ground of Atheism. The
latest writers on the Philosophy of Religion resolve religion
into Dependence; by which its modern theory at length coin­
cides with its ancient practice. We venture to think that this
is not salutary teaching. Life should be self-reliant. It seems
to me that the light of Nature and the experience of man are
anterior to the dogmas of priests, and are the sources whence
* W. J. Linton.

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121

guidance and duty independently spring. The priest breaks
in upon the integrity of life, and diverts its course. He says
he makes an addition to our knowledge—we do not find it so.
He professes to show us the hidden mysteries of the future—
. we fail to see them. He simply encumbers us, and we pray
him to stand aside. The responsibility of our course is our
own and not his, and we have a right to be left free.
Rejecting his advices, he proclaims that we reject truth,
honour, justice, love. This is his error, or the retaliation of
his disappointment. We appeal to the candid and the
impartial to judge between us. We respect Theology as the
science of man’s destiny, and regret that it bears no fruits for
us; but this is not our fault, and we therefore attempt to
solve the problem of life for ourselves. Our progress already
counts some distinct steps. We have recast the practice of
controversy; we forbid to ourselves to suspect evil motives,
or to impute insincerity to others; the doubtful act we propose
to judge by evidence alone, and to put the best construction
on the dubious word. Thus we annihilate Antagonism, the
eldest foe of Progress, by imposing laws on impulse. Our
search in every system is directed after moral truth ; and, less
exacting than the Christian, we accept it, whether given by
Inspiration, confirmed by Miracle, attested by Prophecy or
not. Probity of word and act may be securely based on the
intelligence and refinement of mankind—and this we labour
to enforce. To restrict human expectation to that which is
ascertainable by reason must have the effect of concentrating
attention on humanity, and intensifying interest in human
exertions. In Solidarity we find the encouragement to public
endeavour, and we sum up private duty in Honour, which is
respecting the Truth; in Morality, which is acting the Truth ;
and in Love, which is serving the Truth.

THE END.

�INDEX.
PAGE

Abjectness of Ignorance, The .. 31
*
Acquittal, its Chances Estimated x.
Adams, George, his Arrest ... 27
--------------- , Sentence upon him 30
----------- -—, his Conduct and
Character ...
...
... 30
Adams, Mrs. Harriet, her Ap­
prehension and Courage ... 27
Address on Liberation
... 104
Alcott, Mr.
............................ in
Alexander, Mr., his Speech for
the Crown.............................. 35
----------------- , his Offensive Inuendoes
.............................. 35
Among the “Cast, Quit, and
Condemned”
...
... 84
Answer Indicted, The...
... 13
Anti-Persecution Union, its
Slender Provision ...
... 93
Apprehension, The
...
... 17
Arms of the Free-thought Party 120
Artifice invented by the Judge 78
Assumption by the Judge
... 80
Atheism, the Controversial
Species
.............................. ix.
--------, its Limit of Proof ... ix.
-------- , its Conditions
... ix.
-------- not a mere Negative... 120
Attorney-General, the Proposed
Prosecutor.............................. iv.
Barclay, the Hon. Mr. C., his
Defence of the Magistrates... 39
Barnes, James, one of the Bail 26
Barristers, Reason for Distrust­
ing them in 1841 ...
... 25
Bartram, James, his Evidence . 36
Betrayal by Barristers
29, 44
Bigotry, its Fifteen Years’ Sleep viii.
Birch, W. J., Dedication to him ii.
Blasphemy, Definition of by the
Judge
.......................... 42
-------------- , Definition of by a
Witness
...
...
... 59
Bubb, Mr., on the Rampage
again...
...
...
... 28
Bubbism
...
...
17, 19
Buckle, H. Thomas, his Famous
Protest against Mr. Justice
Coleridge ...
...
... vi.
Burial of Madeline ...
... 96
Bush, Rev. Paul, the Prosecutor
of Pooley ..............
vi.

PAGE

Capper,
Mr.,
Magisterial
Speeches of ...
•••
••• 5°
------------------- , his Doctrine
of “ Notoriety ” ...
22,23
Carlile, Richard, his Estimate
of the Trial.......................... i.
-------------------- , his Friendship
and Attention
...
88,111
Charge to the Jury ...
...76
Chartists of Cheltenham, The . 16
Cheltenham Defined ...
... 9
Cheltenham Free Press, its Cou­
rageous Services
... 83
Chilton, William, his Writing
imputed to Adams ...
... 29
-------- , Mrs., Incidents of Im­
prisonment ....................... ;. 105
Christians, their Resistance • to
Established Opinion •
... 107
Circumlocution in Prison
... 108
Clergymen’s, The, Final Dia­
logue in Chapel and Cell 102,103
-------------- Offer of a Fat Bible 103
Close, the Rev. Francis
... 14
---------------------------- on the
Deadliness of Science
... 62
Coleridge, Justice, his Savage
Sentence of Pooley ...
... vi.
Commission, Special Evidence
before it
...
...
... 114
Committal, Copy of ...
22, 23
Common Law, History of its
Relation to Blasphemy
70, 71
------------- , its Five Defects 76, 119
Conversion, Dialogue with the
Chaplain
...
...
... iol
Cooper, Bransby, his First Con­
versation
...
...
... 25
------------------- , his Ferocity
and Tenderness
... 26,106, ill
------------------- , Ejaculates in
Court......................................... 59
------------------- , his Surprise
after the Trial
...
... 84
-------------------- ■, his Generous
Thoughtfulness
...
... 96
Correspondence of Six Months Il2

Defence, Commencement of ... 38
----------- Conclusion of
... 76
Desertion by Colleagues
... iol
Dialogue with a Cheltenham
Host..................................... 10

�123

INDEX.

PAGE

Diderot, his famous Fable

...

62

Easter Dues, a Story of ... 51, 52
Edwards, Jonathan, on the Im­
possibility of Paining God. 59,60
Equity Law Life Insurance and
Imprisonment
...
... 118
Erskine, Mr. Justice, his Cour­
tesy ..........................
... 35
------------------- - , his Opinion
—
of Strauss’s Life of Jesus ... 67
----- ----------------- , Tribute to
his Fairness and Patience ... 81
Explicitness in Advocacy, its
Justification in 1841
... 15
First Experience of Gloucester
Gaol..............
24
First Visit to London.............. 26
Fox, W. J. (afterwards M.P. for
Oldham), Letter from
... 52
----------- , his Curious Opinion
of Theism ...
...
... 57
Future Life
.............
... 95
Gaol Reading, the “ Manual of
Devotion”..............
63, 64
Gloucester Gaol, the Journey
there.........................
20, 21
Government Price of Freedom. 118
Graham, Sir James, his Frank­
ness and Fairness ...
39, 40
---------------- ------ , his Motto . 62
----------------- —-—, his Conces­
sions ------------------90, 112

PAGE

Itch Room, The

..............

89

Jones, Charles Lorando, his
Trial in Australia..............
x.
----- ■, Eben., on the Duty of
Atheists
...
...
... 16
----- , Samuel, Visiting Magis­
trate
...
...
24, hi
----------------- ■, Reads a Psalm
in the Common Room
... 88
----------------- , Relies on the
Rudeness of David
... 88
----------------- } his Fabrication
concerning Richard Carlisle. 88
Jury, their Verdict
...
... 80
Jurisdiction of Justice Act of
1842......................................... vi.

Hall, Rev. Robert, his Coarse
and Brutal Phrases.............. iv.
Hawkins, Dr. Blissett...
... 114
Hetherington, Henry, his Trial
in 1840
.......................... vii.
—- -------------------- , his OddFellow
...
...
... 14
Hicks, Mr.
............................ 115
Holberry, Mrs., Subscription
for her
...
...
... 16
House of Commons, Discussion
in
..........................
39,4°
Hunt’s (Knight) Report of the
Trial......................................... 30

Last Days in Birmingham ... 92
Last Interview with the Board
of Magistrates
...
... 103
Law-breaking, Gravity and
Danger of it.......................... 119
Law of Speech and Silence ... 14
Liberty of Statement Defined... 43
Limitation of Families
... 92
Linton, W. J..................
15, 120
Lovesey “ Shudders ”............... 33
Mathematical Blasphemy
... 17
Memorial to Sir James Graham 46,
Midnight Excursion, A
... 11
Moxon, Mr., Indicted by Mr.
Hetherington
................. vii.
47
McNeile, Rev. Hugh.............. 56
Madeline, News of her Death . 93
Mason, Captain, his Character
and Courtesy ...
97, 109, 115
----------------- ', his Doctrine
—
of Oaths
.......................... 99
Milton, his Rule of Controversy 65
Narrowness of Old Free-think­
ing Policy.......................... 12
Newell, Rev. Dr., much Out­
raged...
...
...
... 19
Newman, Francis William, on
an Uncaused Deity ...
... 56
Night Writing..............
... 112

Imprisonment, Personal Theory
of it
...”
.............. v.
Inaccurate Magisterial State­
ments......................................... 47

Odd Fellows’ Prize Lectures ... 118
Ogden on the Prayer Bell ... 85
-------- on the Introduction of
Tobacco
.............................. 98

�INDEX.

PAGE

Oracle of Reason, Indiscrimi­
nating Editorship............... 82
.......
..............-, Quoted by
the Judge .......................... x.
Overbury, Mr., Delivers his
Opinion
..............
... 19

Passive Resistance in Gaol ... 87
Persecution a Sequence of
Christianity ...
...
... 116
----- , its Power to Put
Down Truth...
...
... 117
Pinching, Mr., the Theological
Police Surgeon
...
20, 21
Place, Francis, his Advice ... vii.
Plutarch on Suicide ...
... x.
Policy of Prison Complaints ... 108,
109
Pooley, Thomas, his Trial in
1857
.......................... vi.
Price, Mrs., of Gloucester
... 105
Price of Liberty
...
... 95
Priest, The, Interrupting and
Irrelevant ...
...
. 121
Prison Books: “Paley Refuted ”
and “ Short and EasygMethod
with the Saints” ...
... 104
-------- Christianity
101,2,3,113
-------- Companions ...
... 88
Proposal by the Chaplain ... 101

124
PAGE

Schoolmastership in Sheffield . 11
Search for God, The.............. ix.
Sentence, the .v
...
... 80
Socialists, Estimates of them
in 1841
.......................... 15
Southwell, Charles, his Impri­
sonment
.......................... 13
Sperry, Treatment of the Young
Poet..................................... 15
Spitefulness to Mrs. Adams . 28, 29
Stevenson, John Diamond, the
other Bail ...
...
... 26
Suicide, its General Want of
Decency or Necessity
... x.
-------- , Possibilities of it in
Prison
..............................91
Surgeon of the Prison, a Terri­
fied Instrument
... 110,111
Symons, Mr. Jellinger, his Re­
gicide Parallel
...
... 45
-------------------------- , his Com­
pensatory Report .............. 82

Talfourd, Mr. Serjeant, on Re­
stricting the Right of Indict­
ment ........................................ vii.
Theism, its Pretension to Lo­
gical Omniscience ...
... ix.
-------- , Sources of its Proofs... 55,
56,57
Question of Maitland, The ... 13 Thomas, Mr. Serjeant, Obliga­
tion to him.............................. 29
-------- , Mrs................................. 105
Reciprocal Arguments with the
Chaplain ..................
99,100 Treatment in Gaol, 89,90,109 —113
Trial, The, its Commencement. 32
Refusal to Wear the Prison
Dress...
...
...
... 86
Results of the Imprisonment... 113 Upton, the Epileptic Prisoner... 97
Reverence
...
...
... ix.
Visit to Cheltenham, First ... 9
Robert Owen, his Silence during
the Imprisonment ...
IOI
Walk with Adams after the
Roebuck, J. A., M.P., Letter
Trial......................................... 83
from ...
...
...
... 22
Wanted by the Clergyman ... 85
Russell, Joseph, his Indictment
at Warwick ...
...
... 72 Weekly Dispatch, Notice of
First Lecture
...
xii., 27
-------- •, Lord John, on the
Measure of Rights ...
61,62 -----------------------•, on Qualifi­
cations of the Jury ...
... 33
-------- , Superintendant, De­
fence of
...
...
... 23 I ---------------------- , its Influ­
ences at the Gaol ...
... 83
Ryall, Maltus Questell, Facts
of Christian Persecution ... 115 : Williams, Captain, his Defence
of Free Speech
...
... 83
Sayer, the Hon. and Rev.
Witnesses against Mr. Lorando
Andrew
............................ 103 I
Jones
............. ,
... xi.

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