Marie Cappelle, Madame LAFARGE (1816-1852) accusée d'avoir empoisonné son mari; son procès eut un grand retentissement

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Marie Cappelle, Madame LAFARGE (1816-1852) accusée d'avoir empoisonné son mari; son procès eut un grand retentissement
L.A.S. "Marie Cappelle", "In prison!" [Montpellier 1843]; 8 pages in-8. Long letter commenting on the circumstances of his own conviction. Mrs. Lafarge is outraged by Josephine Mallet's book Les Femmes en prison (1843); she returns to the additional analyses requested from Dr. Orfila, and to the indictment that emphasized the principle of equality before the law. His admiration for the author's style and compassion did not prevent him from raising with fury "a cruel page on the favours obtained by the great poisonous ladies and on equality before the law! - Equality before the law!...... ...] to the poor woman of the people brought before the court, we ask for an account of her actions, that is, facts within the reach of the men who will judge her! - to the great lady we ask for her thoughts, the beats of her heart, the impulses of her soul and this intimate life which only belongs to God, this life we make her judge by merchants, by industrialists who reduce everything to figures, who see mysteries of infamy in everything they do not understand and who, rather than the fear of being duped, prefer the remorse of being executioners !"... She continues her diatribe: "There is no arsenic, there are no lesions, so doctors conclude for the poor woman that there is no poisoning - for the great lady, that the symptoms are natural, that death is not. We turn to chemistry - the first time the experiment misses the tube breaks - the result is nil but doctors who want to have conscience and not let themselves be influenced by the position of the accused, unanimously declare that from a nil result it results the evidence of poisoning. Other chemists[...] can't find any poison!..... But a famous trial cannot stop... The exhumation takes place: the absence of arsenic restores a poor woman to her family, honour and life, but "for a great lady it is not enough that two negative experiences is not enough for 11 chemists who have only one merit of province and hon
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