[untitled]
THE man who killed President McKinley has had a fair
and decent trial, and we are likely to hear very little more about
him, except that in about three weeks the announcement will be made
that he is dead. The most interesting thing that has been made public
about him was that on his way to Auburn he said he was sorry for
what he had done, and when he got to the prison gate he collapsed
entirely, and had to be dragged in. Poor wretch! Why did such a
creature commit a crime so unutterably disproportionate to his capacity?
If we had the lively sense of the existence of a personal devil
that some of our forebears had, we would say that Satan, finding
his mind undefended, had entered into it and directed and controlled
the creature’s action. That would account for everything. But we
don’t take the Devil seriously any more, and being prone to regard
him as hardly more than a figure of speech, we can’t make any serious
use of him in our reasoning. It is a pity on many accounts that
we have so impoverished our mental resources. Recounting the inception
of a momentous crime, a writer still familiar to the readers of
Christendom begins: “Then entered Satan into Judas, surnamed Iscariot.”
With all the enlightenment that we think we possess, we have not
got much ahead of that method of statement. Since the murder was
done on September sixth there has been a strong and reasonable desire
to bring responsibility for it home to some one adequately amenable
to correction. That desire has led to activity on the part of the
police, to a good deal of miscellaneous recrimination not clearly
warranted by facts, and to some sharp pursuit of evil-doers that
will do no harm whether it has special justification or not. But,
so far, as a whole the desire has been baffled; search for special
motive and direct instigation has failed, and the Bible words describe
as well as any words of ours the mental process that led up to assassination.
|