Publication information |
Source: Nation Source type: magazine Document type: book review Document title: none Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: 26 December 1901 Volume number: 73 Issue number: 1904 Pagination: 500 |
Citation |
Rev. of The Science of Penology, by Henry M. Boies. Nation 26 Dec. 1901 v73n1904: p. 500. |
Transcription |
excerpt |
Keywords |
book reviews (The Science of Penology); McKinley assassination (public response: criticism); crime (dealing with). |
Named persons |
Henry M. Boies; William McKinley; Eugene Smith. |
Document |
[untitled] [excerpt]
The Science of Penology. By Henry M. Boies. G. P. Putnam’s Sons. 1901.
The murder of President McKinley
has aroused passions and called forth opinions which indicate the importance
of the subject here treated. The episode has indeed been a lesson in penology,
not only because it has directed attention to the causes of crime, but also
because it has revealed the criminal impulse in hosts of people who thought
it a meritorious act to declare that the assassin should be put to death by
the mob. It would be unfortunate were no improvement in the administration of
justice to result from this conspicuous crime; and when the foolish outcry over
“stamping out anarchy” has subsided, the timeliness of Mr. Boies’s book should
be recognized. The anarchist murderer having been disposed of, the causes of
crime, the laws defining it, and its prevention by the intelligent treatment
of criminals and those who are likely to be criminals, are subjects demanding
immediate consideration.
Without going so far as to agree with Mr. Boies
that there is a complete science of penology, we can at least maintain that
knowledge is far in advance of practice. For years the county jail has been
a shame and reproach, undefended and indefensible, but it is everywhere maintained.
Here criminals, tramps, paupers, imbeciles, persons charged with crime, but
who may be innocent, and witnesses charged with no crime, of all ages, are poured
in and stirred together; a seething vat of moral and physical filth. As Mr.
Eugene Smith has said, the prison turns out more direct results in the shape
of confirmed criminals than any other agency “within the range of experience
or devised by the folly of man.” Let those who are so hot to stamp out anarchy
consider the responsibility of Government in this matter.