Billy Budd and Capital Punishment: A Tale of Three Centuries
Transcription
Billy Budd and Capital Punishment: A Tale of Three Centuries
Billy Budd and Capital Punishment: A Tale of Three Centuries Author(s): H. Bruce Franklin Source: American Literature, Vol. 69, No. 2 (Jun., 1997), pp. 337-359 Published by: Duke University Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2928274 Accessed: 21/10/2010 08:13 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=duke. 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Bruce Franklin ATaleof Punishment: BuddandCapital Billy ThreeCenturies H literature generated as anyworkofAmerican thanHerman hostileinterpretation and mutually moreantithetical Melville'sBillyBudd,Sailor?Andall thebattlesaboutthemoraland politicalvisionat theheartofthetaleswirlaroundonequestion:Are we supposedto admireor condemnCaptainVereforhis decisionto astonish1 Somehow, sentenceBillyBuddtodeathbypublichanging? inglyenough,nobodyseemstohavenoticedthatcentraltothestory anditshistory. is thesubjectofcapitalpunishment thefirstnumber This is trueevenin thetenessays constituting which was devotedtoBilly Law and Cardozo Studies in Literature, of RichardH. Weisberg-it Buddbecause-in thewordsoflawprofessor "2 The closest is "thetextthathas cometo'mean'Law andLiterature. intheseessaysorelsewiththeissueofcapitalpunishment encounter JudgeRichardA. Posner wherecomesfromWeisberg'santagonist, oftheUnitedStatesCourtofAppealsfortheSeventhCircuit(anda Vere's thosewho"condemn "newcritic"),whocondemns self-styled withauthority, conduct"as mere"liberals"whoare "uncomfortable ("mostlitandhatecapitalpunishment" authority, military including the to judge,"we erarycriticsare liberals,"addsPosner).According intoa aboutcapitalpunishment mustnotreadmoderncompunctions a century ago."3 storywritten thestoryYetduringtheveryyearsthatMelvillewas composing attention was focusedonthe 1886to 1891-nationalandinternational in battleovercapitalpunishment unfolding climaxofa century-long theveryplacewhereMelvillewas living-NewYorkState.Whyhave so obvious?Is it because we ignorethe we overlookedsomething C) 1997by Duke Volume69, Number2, June1997.Copyright American Literature, Press. University Literature 338 American including century, in the nineteenth historyof capitalpunishment Or havewe,whohave influence on Americanculture?4 itsprofound WarII cultureof thisstorywithinthepost-World been scrutinizing tothe becomedesensitized century, thesecondhalfofthetwentieth to nineteenth-century oftheissuethatwereso manifest implications BillyBuddwithinthe In anycase, ifwe do contextualize Americans? and its bizarreoutcomein Americanhistoryofcapitalpunishment NewYorkStateduringtheyears1886to 1891,thestorytransforms beforeoureyes. in1891,whenMelvillewrote"End IfBillyBuddhadbeenpublished fewreadersat thetime ofBook"on thelastleafofthemanuscript, thatthe debatethenragingabout couldhave failedto understand andtothesereadersthe was centralto thestory, capitalpunishment and story'spositioninthatdebatewouldhaveappearedunequivocal BillyBuddderivesin partfromtheAmericanmoveunambiguous. It dramatizeseach ofthe crucial mentagainstcapitalpunishment. Andit bringsintovivid and conceptsofthatmovement. arguments debate:Whichoffenses, focusthekeyissuesofthecontemporaneous serve Does capitalpunishment ifany,shouldcarrythedeathpenalty? What to killingor as an exemplary modelforkilling? as a deterrent ofpublicexecutions? Is hanginga methodofexecuare theeffects tionappropriate to a civilizedsociety?Is an impulsiveact ofkilling more-or less-reprehensiblethanthe apparently by an individual essencalmlyreasonedact ofjudicialkilling?Is capitalpunishment A An ofthepowerofthestate? ritualsacrifice? tiallya manifestation A keycomponent ofthe cultureof ofclass oppression? instrument onall sidesofthedebateseemedtoagreeon militarism? Participants inthehistory moment ofcapionlyonething:thatthemostappalling wasthereignofGeorgeIII talpunishment withinmoderncivilization inEngland. forhisdrumwhomCaptainVerehashandpicked Whentheofficers to convictBillyand sentencehimto head courtappearreluctant thattheyowetheir reminds thesesubordinates death,Vereforcefully "'allegiance"'notto "'Nature,"'their"'hearts,"'or their"'private to "'the King"' and his "'imperial[conconscience,"'butentirely in thecode underwhichalonewe officially proscience]formulated ceed."'" The time is 1797, the king is George III, and the code to whichVere referswas knownin the nineteenth centuryas the "BloodyCode." BillyBuddandCapitalPunishment339 crimeshad Duringthe reignsof the Tudorsand Stuarts,fifty and morewere slowlyadded.The most carriedthe deathpenalty, increasecamelater,duringthereignofGeorgeIII, when spectacular statutes.6 By the wereappendedto the death-penalty sixtyoffenses GeorgeIII's BloodyCode had century, last thirdofthe nineteenth bothin Englandand repudiatedand condemned, been universally ragedwhileMelAs thebattleagainstcapitalpunishment America.7 BillyBudd,partisanson bothsides agreedthat villewas composing one ofthe constituted mostofthecode'scapitaloffenses eliminating inhumanprogress.Notsurprisingly, notableachievements century's ofthedeathpenaltycitedtheGeorgiancode as barbaric opponents Forexample,a century. and anachronistic, evenforthe eighteenth justice"as "a scanto"Georgian 1889articlereferred widelyreprinted " andagreedwithMirabeau'sverdaltotherestofthecivilizedworld, dictatthetimethat"'The Englishnationis themostmercilessofany thatI haveheardorreadof. "18Evenadvocatesofcapitalpunishment outthat theBloodyCode,pointing theprogress awayfrom celebrated in Englandhad been reducedto bytheearly1880scapitaloffenses noneofwhichincluded"crimes murder, "threeclasses"ofdeliberate suddenpassion, undercircumstances ofgreatexcitement, committed "9Articlesfavoring publisheddurcapitalpunishment orprovocation. "be ingthelate1880sarguedthatthedeathpenaltyshouldcertainly malice a sane with perto murdercommitted by prepense, restricted 10 ofanotherfelony." son,in resistingarrest,or in the commission is chargednotwithmurder butwithstriking BillyBudd,remember, ingrade'"; "'Apartfrom itseffect theblowitselfis,'" as "'his superior under the crime"' ArticlesofWarof Vere "'a states, capital Captain theGeorgiancode (272).Nobodyontheshipbelievesthesailoracted but ormalicious-muchless murderous-intent, withpremeditation the courtthattheymustdisregardall questionsof Vere instructs intent(274). In themidstoftheAmericanRevolution againstGeorgeIII's imtoabolishcapitalpunishment perialregimethereweresomeattempts ThomasJefferandtreason.Forexample, forallcrimesexceptmurder son and fourotherVirginialegislatorsdraftedsuch a law in early until1785,whenitwas defeatedbya 1777,butitwas notconsidered one-vote marginintheHouseofDelegates.1" The mostinfluential legalactcamein 1794,threeyearsbeforethe becamethefirst actionofBillyBudd,whenthestateofPennsylvania Literature 340 American Capiintolawtheinnovative tocodify conceptof"degrees"ofmurder. defined the "first degree," tomurder in was restricted talpunishment "12 Two yearslater, deliberateand premeditated killing. as "wilful, thirteen to ofcapitalcrimesfrom NewYorkStatereducedthenumber as a punwhipping two-murderandtreason-whilealso abolishing In theensuingdecades,stateafterstatein ishmentforanycrime.13 andNewYorkin theleadofPennsylvania theNorthandWestfollowed of forcompleteabolition andthemovement capitaloffenses, reducing intothe1850s.Mainein gainedmomentum thedeathpenaltysteadily onall executions; in 1849passedmoratoria 1837andNewHampshire Massachusettslimitedthe deathpenaltyto firstdegreemurderin votedtoabolishthedeath 1852;andonehouseofthestatelegislature (1853).Capipenaltyin Ohio (1850),Iowa (1851),and Connecticut in Michigan(1846),Rhode was abolishedaltogether talpunishment Island(1852),andWisconsin(1853).14 were ofthesurgingcampaignforabolition Amongthechampions manyofthe republic'sculturalleaders,such as HenryWadsworth JohnQuincyAdams,Lydia JohnGreenleafWhittier, Longfellow, Maria Child,TheodoreParker,MargaretFuller,and HenryWard Beecher.The twogreatnewspapersofNewYorkCitywerefordeWilliam ofcapitalpunishment, opponents cades editedbyprominent Post(1829-1878)andHorace CullenBryantoftheNewYorkEvening (1841-1872).15 GreeleyoftheNewYorkTribune GeorgeIII's BloodyCode had itsdisIn theslaveSouth,however, inthemyriadofoffenses definedas Americancounterpart tinctively as an instrument byslaves.Capitalpunishment capitalifcommitted moreblatantly, an has neverbeen demonstrated ofclass oppression intheanti-death-penalty literature. Forexmadefrequently argument minister CharlesSpearofMassachusetts ample,in 1844Universalist ofcapital citedthelawsoftheSouthas examplesoftheclasscontent andreasonsforitstotalabolition. Georgiahad a mandapunishment crimes:"Rapeon a freewhite torydeathsentenceforthefollowing to murder, freewhitefemalewithintent female,ifa slave.Assaulting containedin penal ifa slave. Burglaryor arsonof anydescription code ofstate,ifa slave.Murderofa slaveor freepersonofcolor,if a slave."916 On theotherhand,a whitemanin Georgiaconvictedof rapinga slavewomanorfreewomanofcolorfaceda fineand/orimInAlabama,Spearnoted, at thediscretion ofthecourt.17 prisonment, BillyBuddandCapitalPunishment341 it was nota capitalcrimeto killa black,buttherewas a mandatory orattempt tokillanywhite "Murder, fortheseoffenses: deathpenalty ifa slave,freenegroormulatto. to commit, person.Rape,orattempt ArBurglary. againstthewhiteinhabitants. or rebellion Insurrection son.Accessary[sic] to anyoftheabovecrimes."Missouriprovided rape or freecoloredperson"committing thatany"negro,mulatto, Virginiahad seventy-one wouldbe executedbymeansofcastration. forslavesbutnotforwhites.These crimesthatwerecapitaloffenses a horsethief, stealinga horseorharboring forgery, includedburglary, ofmoneyor firetoanystackorcockofwheat," theft "wilfully setting " andofcourserapingorattempting goods"ofthevalueoffourdollars, In 1848,Virginia passeda newstatuterequirtorapea whitewoman.18 thatwas punishable ingthedeathpenaltyforblacksforanyoffense if committed bywhites.19 three or more imprisonment years by inthe ofcapitalpunishment was alsomanifest The politicalcontent ofslavery.Pre-CivilWar the institution legal codes thatsupported sentenceof deathforanyperson NorthCarolinahad a mandatory orfor"circulatguiltyofconcealinga slavewithintentto freehim20 Georgia amongslaves,secondoffence."21 ingseditiouspublications insurrectionary deathpenaltyfor"Circulating imposeda mandatory Misorfreeperson."22 papers,eitherbya white,a negro,mustizzo, executionfor"Excitinginsurrection sourilaw requiredmandatory Louisianahad a mandatory amongslaves,freeblacks,ormulattoes." foranyoneguiltyof"writings ofa seditiousnature."23 deathpenalty to abolthrough theCivilWar,themovement Fromthemid-1850s against by the movement ish the deathpenaltywas overwhelmed Whenrevivedinthelate1860s,theanti-capital-punishment slavery.24 movement oftenseemedto its adherentsto be partof inexorable globalprogress.By 1889theycouldcite the abolitionofthe death by law or in practice,in Holland,Finland,Belgium,Pruspenalty, To maximizeshockvalue,they andRumania.25 Tuscany, sia,Portugal, oftenfocusedonwhatmanyregardedas themostbarbaricaspectsof andhanging. as practiced: publicexecution capitalpunishment to CaptainVere's whichareintegral Publicexecutionandhanging, for the of necessity killingBillyBudd,playeda complex arguments As abocentury. roleinthedebatesofthelastthirdofthenineteenth emphasizedthegrotesqueand sordidspectaclesofpublic litionists whosaw theyoftenplayedintothehandsofretentionists, hangings, 342 American Literature forpreserving thedeathpenalty layincleansthattheirbeststrategy ing it of the featuresalmostuniversally condemnedas loathsome remnants ofa savagepast.26 Between1833and1849,fifteen statesabolishedpublicexecutions,27 was unstoppable andthemovement tobanishthepracticealtogether theend ofthe in thepostwardecades.Fromthelate 1860sthrough andreformist century, hangingbecamethefocalpointofabolitionist and New YorkStatebecame the pivotalbattleground. arguments, In his 1869Putnam'sarticle"The Gallowsin America,"Edmund ClarenceStedman(whowas to becomeMelville'smostenthusiastic dwellson the patronduringtheperiodofBillyBudd'scomposition) horrorsofhangingto convincereaders,especiallyin New York,to "LettheEmpireState"joinMichiabolishthedeathpenaltyentirely. in ten Stedmandeclares,"andwithin gan endingcapitalpunishment, the gallowswillbe banishedfromeveryStatein yearsthereafter thatthrough"newscienthe Union."28 Althoughhe acknowledges some"painlessmodeofkilling maybe discovered, tificknowledge" as by an electricshock,"the movement againstthe deathpenalty is growing"so rapidlythatthereis smalllikelihoodofits modificationbynewforms."29 Stedmandidnotforeseehowone ofthemost Americantechnological and bizarrechaptersin nineteenth-century culturalhistory-the"BattleoftheCurrents"-would helppreserve inNewYorkandmuchofthenationdeepintothe capitalpunishment twentieth century. In theearly1880sThomasAlvaEdisonandhisEdisonCorporation theemerging electrification ofurbanAmerica,especially dominated in the New YorkCityarea. Edison,however, was obsessivelycomtodirectcurrent transmitted (DC), whichcouldnotbe economically mitted morethana mileortwo.In 1886GeorgeWestinghouse's newly Electricaland Manufacturing Company incorporated Westinghouse current(AC) generating placedintooperationthe firstalternating thatAC couldbe transmitted overgreat stationand demonstrated CivilWarheroGeneralNewtonCurtis,elected distances.Meanwhile, to theNewYorkAssemblyin 1884,had launcheda majorcampaign In 1885Governor to abolishthe deathpenaltyin NewYorkState.30 DavidHill,anxioustopreservecapitalpunishment whilerecognizing the prevalent revulsionagainsthangingas a "remnant ofthe dark to createa commission to exploreways ages," askedthelegislature ofcarrying manner. '31 outthedeathpenalty"ina less barbarous BillyBuddandCapitalPunishment343 with movedintodirectcompetition In early1887Westinghouse Edisonin New YorkCity,touchingoffthe Battleofthe Currents.32 Edison'sstrategy was to convincethepublicthatAC was toodangercamous fordomesticuse. So in 1887he begana gruesomepublicity from theNewYorknewspapers, particularly paign,inviting reporters, ofcats,dogs,calves,and towitnesstheatrically stagedelectrocutions horses.Edisonevenmanagedto get themembersoftheNewYork and Reportthe MostHumaneand StateCommission to Investigate intoEffectthe SentenceofDeath to PracticalMethodofCarrying Edison'smain ofneighborhood dogs.33 attendhis AC electrocution whopretended tobe actingindewas oneHaroldP. Brown, operative evenaftertheNewYorkSun printeda seriesofforty-five pendently lettersbetweenBrownand Edison,as well as betweenBrownand In 1888Brownstagedat thecompaniescovertly actingforEdison.34 ColumbiaCollege'sSchoolofMinesan especiallycruelexecutionof whattheNew YorkHeraldcalled"a largemongrelNewfoundland"; theshowproducedsensational accountsintheNewYorkdailiesand withNew conspiring Brownwas secretly evena ballad.35 Meanwhile, AC to purchasethreeWestinghouse YorkStateprisonauthorities and set themup in prisonsto be wiredto a proposed generators "electricchair."36 The objectwas to arrangeforhumanexecutions thepoputobe conducted withAC,thusterrorizing byelectrocution technology. lationaboutthelethalmenaceposedbyWestinghouse's felons to Edisonandhiscohort,condemned Fromnowon,according Brownconcludeda selfwouldnotbe hangedbut"Westinghoused."37 American Reviewwiththesewords: serving1889articleintheNorth "strenuous efforts havebeenmadeto befogthepublicmindin order forthedeath-penalty, lest theuse ofthealternating current toprevent thepublicshouldlearnitsdeadlynatureanddemandthattheLegisthusendingtheterrible, laturebanishitfromstreetsandbuildings, ofunoffending men. "^38 needlessslaughter New YorkCity'snewspaperschargedintothe Battleofthe Currents.The New YorkEveningPost,no longereditedby ardentfoe ofcapitalpunishment WilliamCullenBryant, favoredelectrocution. andNewYorkTimeswerebothzealousallies The NewYorkTribune The Timesin 1887 ofcapitalpunishment.39 ofEdisonand defenders in favorof replacinghanging-whichit characterized editorialized whichit envisioned as so as sheer"barbarity"-with electrocution, iturged"theState quickanddeadlyas to be a formof"euthanasia"; 344 American Literature to substitute a civilizedfora ofNewYorkto be thefirstcommunity barbarousmethodofinflicting andto set an excapitalpunishment, "40 When theworld. amplewhichis sureofbeingfollowed throughout inJanuary theNewYorkStateCommission 1888reported, tonoone's in favorofelectrocution, the Tribune and Timespresented surprise, therecommendation as majorandwelcomenews.Besidestheirnews editorialsextolling eleccoverage,bothpapershad daysoflengthy The Tribune trocution. declaredthatelectrocution wouldbe "a step In anothereditorialthesame day, towardhumanity and decency."'41 the Tribuneevokedthe almostuniversalrepugnance againsthangindesiring ing:"TheAmerican peoplearepractically unanimous that thepresentcruelandclumsymethodofexecutionshallbe relegated "42 Bothnewspapers ofpunishment. amongtheotherbarbarisms also thatall executionsbe heldwithin approvedoftherecommendation withthenumber thewallsofa prison, ofwitnesses-alltobe selected totwelve.The onlycaveats,expressed byprisonauthorities-limited recommendations bybothpapers,had to do withtheCommission's thattheexecutedperson'sbodyshould"in no case be deliveredto and thatanynewspaper anyrelativeor otherpersonwhatsoever" an accountofan executionotherthan"thestatement publishing of thefactthatsuchconvictwas on thedayin questiondulyexecuted tolawat theprison"wouldbe "guilty ofa misdemeanor. "43 according The Timescommended theintentoftheseprohibitions, whichwas tokeeptheexecutedcriminal frombecoming"a hero"ofthemasses withcrimeas wasfurnished andprevent "sucha displayofsympathy inChicago." The editorialist oftheAnarchists bythefuneral argued, thatto "makea mystery" ofan executionsuchas thatof however, wouldbe "proceeding "theChicagoAnarchists" toomuchintheline ofa despoticGovernment tobe acceptablehere."44 Duringthe nexttwoand a halfyearsNew Yorkwas embroiled in legal suitsand politicalmaneuvering thatbroughtnationaland worldwide to itsstruggles withtheissue ofcapitalpunishattention ment.LawyersforWilliamKemmler, theintended victimofthefirst went to court this and unusualpunto "cruel electrocution, prevent ishment."Edisonmergedhis companyintoGeneralElectric,partly to fightthelegal suitsfiledbyWestinghouse to keep its equipment frombeingused to electrocute Kemmler. GeneralCurtissubmitted his secondAssemblybillto outlawcapitalpunishment. The Tribune and the Timesnowbeganto impugnGeneralCurtis'smotives,im- BillyBuddandCapitalPunishment345 plyingthathe was actingmerelyas a bribedagentofWestinghouse yearslateras a memberofCongressto byhisefforts (chargesrefuted abolishthedeathpenaltyforthewholenation).The personalattacks was whenhisbillto abolishcapitalpunishment on Curtisgotfiercer 1 a vote of 74 1890 by passed by the New YorkAssemblyon May to29.45 bytheStateSenate.Alltherecapproved The billwasnot,however, criminal penalties oftheStateCommission-including ommendations unchalbecame the of executions-now forpublishing descriptions lengedlawofNewYorkState.So on6 August1890,WilliamKemmler civilizedformofexecution by victimofthemodern, becamethefirst electricity. earlierpromised bythe The spectaclewas hardlythe"euthanasia" dayviolated page oftheTimesthefollowing Times.Indeed,thefront bypublishKemmler'selectrocution theverylawthathad mandated that"placed circumstances" of"themostrevolting inga description thatwas a disoftheStateofNewYorkan execution tothediscredit in The witnesses,"meneminent scienceand graceto civilization." "nauseated"bythegoryspectacle in medicine," wereso physically warsay thatthissingleexperiment that"theyalmostunanimously repealofthelaw."The articleendedbynotingthat rantstheprompt thewitnessesall acted"as thoughtheyfeltthattheyhad takenpart in a scene thatwouldbe toldto the worldas a publicshame,as a "46 legalcrime. selectedto conducttheautopsyon Oneoftheattending physicians appealto abolKemmlerpublishedin October1890an impassioned openingwithan evocationofthe"world-wide ish thedeathpenalty, detailsofthedeath intheexecution: "Whentheharrowing interest" and wiresofthecountry, chamberweretingledalongthetelegraph thecable,theentirecivilized through theirimpulseswerethrobbed In an influential worldviewedthe scene withastonishedhorror."47 1891, to warpublishedinJanuary capitalpunishment volumelinking as AndrewPalmnotedthattheKemmlerexecutionwas "denounced etc. Englishedia disgraceto humanity, brutal,atrocious, horrible, on thisside ofthe torswerejustas muchshockedas theirbrethren senta execution thatKemmler's oneLondondailydeclaring Atlantic, "148 aroundtheglobe. thrillofhorror Itwas inthiscontextthatMelvillecomposedBillyBudd,whichhe afterKemmbeganin1886andconcludedinApril1891,eightmonths Literature 346 American whoalmostuniMelville'scontemporaries, Although ler'sexecution. mighthave shudderedat CaptainVere's hanging, versallyabhorred decisionthatBilly"'musthang"' (232),the storyis instantaneous frombeinga signifitokeepthemeansofexecution crafted carefully cantissue. Whenhe is hanged,Billyevincesnoneofthehideousagoniesfamiliar to the crowdsat publichangingsand describedwithsickening detailincountlessnineteenth-century essaysandbooks.Thereis not muscular ejaculation. spasmorinvoluntary eventhealmostinvariable death insertedbetweenBilly'stranscendent Chapter26,obtrusively and the sailors'reaction,is devotedto a discussionofthisperfect must lack of motion.The pursersuggeststhatthis"'singularity"' In "'will be attributed to Billy's power."' thesurgeon'sresponsewe in Melville'sNewYork can heara parodyofthedebatetranspiring wayto killa person:"'In a aboutthe mosthumaneand scientific conducted-andunderspecialordersI myself hangingscientifically following directedhow Budd'swas to be effected-anymovement inthebodysuspended, such andoriginating thecomplete suspension Then system. movement indicatesmechanical spasminthemuscular to willpower,as youcall theabsenceofthatis no moreattributable to thepurserthatthis Admitting to (321-22). horsepower"' it,than "'muscularspasm"' is almost"'invariable,"'the surgeonacknowlpretendto account"' edges,"'I do not,withmypresentknowledge, thatat the foritsabsence:"'Even shouldwe assumethehypothesis by firsttouchofthehalyardstheactionofBudd'sheart,intensified stopped-muchlikea emotionat its climax,abruptly extraordinary thus itup youstrainat thefinish, watchwhenin carelesslywinding howaccountforthe thechain-evenunderthathypothesis snapping (323). thatfollowed?"' phenomenon " bythehalter, The purserthenasks, 'wastheman'sdeatheffected or was it a speciesofeuthanasia?"'"'Euthanasia,"'repliesthesuras a scientific term"'(324).Though geon,has dubious" 'authenticity it may outwardly resemblethe "euthanasia"the New YorkTimes forelectrocution, Billy'sdeathbyhanging haderroneously predicted but understanding notonlythesurgeon'sscientific clearlytranscends swirling also thedebateaboutthemodalitiesofcapitalpunishment ofthestory. aroundthecomposition relevant toBillyBuddarethetermsofthedebate Moreprofoundly issueofcapitalpunishment itself.Indeed,the aboutthefundamental thestory. essenceoftheissuestructures 347 Punishment BillyBuddandCapital Onecomesfrom aboardH.M.S.Bellipotent. Wewitnesstwokillings theimpulsive, involuntary fatalblowBillyBuddstrikesto theforehead ofClaggart.The blowis partlyin responseto CaptainVere's VererecBilly,"'Defendyourself!"' exhortation to thestammering ognizesthatClaggarthas been "'Struckdead byan angelofGod!"' thatBillyactedwithandhe andhisdrumhead courtall acknowledge oranymurderous intent. The otherkillingis outmalice,forethought, andby carriedoutundercoveroflaw,afterreasonedargumentation, theagencyofCaptainVereandhisofficers. thestateactingthrough murder? Buddis notevenacWhichofthesetwoactsconstitutes the cused ofmurder. One questionthatunderlies twentieth-century to thisway:Does itconform discussionofVere's actmightbe framed inthe"first definition ofmurder degree,"that the1794Pennsylvania killing"? andpremeditated deliberate is,"wilful, Thisis precisely thewaytheargument againstcapitalpunishment The factthathangwasframed duringtheyearsMelvillewaswriting. ings were conductedby the stateundercoverof law did not,to Inofthedeathpenalty, absolvethemfrom beingmurders. opponents deed,thetermswidelyusedforthesekillingswere"legalmurders," The following commentaries, and"murder bylaw."49 "legalkilling," publishedin 1890,could applydirectlyto the twokillingson the Bellipotent: circumstances [W]hena criminalis judged,all the extenuating Werethisruleobserved, thevicshallbe takenintoconsideration. timofthelaw wouldseldomappearin so bad a lightas thegovthethought: a thatpassedthesentence.Let me illustrate ernment inturnsentencestheman thegovernment mancommits a murder: to death.Herewe havetwopartieswhohavepresumedto takea human life.... [T]he question now arises, upon the shouldersof There guilt?A mostsolemnthought. whichpartyreststhegreatest inthefirst butwhat circumstances aremanyextenuating instance, 50 ofthegovernment? canbe saidinjustification inanyform a relic administered is essentially [C]apitalpunishment ofa barbarousage.... [T]he Statealwaysactswithcoolnessand whileninety slaytheirfellowdeliberation, percent.ofherchildren ofpassion.51 meninthefrenzy CaptainVerehasalreadydecidedthatBilly"'musthang"' Although he handbeforehe conveneshis drumheadcourt,thethreeofficers Literature 348 American toconvictandsentencetheHandsomeSailor. picksarequitereluctant and, In thetrial,duringwhichVereactsas sole witness,prosecutor, ofthejury,he findsitnecessarytooverwhelm ultimately, commander One is precisely witha delugeofarguments. his threesubordinates thattheymust"'let notwarmheartsbetrayheads thatshouldbe cool"' (270).52 whilestillin his role of witness Vere makeshis firstargument "'HithertoI havebeenbutthewit(thoughlaterhe tellstheofficers, motive ness,littlemore"'[265]):"'Quiteasidefromanyconceivable oftheprovocation to and irrespective actuating themaster-at-arms, theblow,a martialcourtmustneedsin thepresentcase confineits to theblow'sconsequence,whichconsequencejustlyis to attention deed"' (256).Byarguthanas thestriker's be deemednototherwise his courtis notto that in legalistic phraseology, such ing,especially or motive,Vereis underlining circumstances considerextenuating The injusticeoftheproceedings. forreadersin 1891thefundamental of"a prein fact,are disturbed bythismanifestation threeofficers, " 'Budd's onthespeaker'spart"(258).LaterVerereiterates, judgment tothepurpose"'(274). is nothing ornon-intent intent thatthe officers As discussedearlier,Vere'sextendedargument owe theirallegiancenot to "'Nature,"' their"'hearts,"' or their "'privateconscience,"'but entirelyto King George III and his proceed"'wouldto anylate"'code underwhichalonewe officially reminder ofthebarbaric audiencebe an emphatic nineteenth-century BloodyCode forwhichVereis actingas agent.Vereinsists,in fact, of as agentsandinstruments mustactmerely thathe andhisofficers " not Our the of we are responsible. thatlaw: 'Forthelawand rigor it, thatlawmay is in this:Thathoweverpitilessly vowedresponsibility we nevertheless adheretoitandadminister operateinanyinstances, readers,thiswouldserveas a it"' (270).To latenineteenth-century ofGeorgianjusticefromwhich reminder ofthehorrors conspicuous had liberatedboththe UnitedStatesand nine decades of reform infact,defendsoneormoreofthe Each ofVere'sarguments, Britain. thathadbeen oftheGeorgiancode,features mostegregiousfeatures bylawinthosenineensuingdecades. repudiated may not consider afterinsistingthathis officers Immediately Vere claimsthattheyare taking "'Budd's intentor non-intent,"' especiallyin lightof too muchtime(a blatantly speciousargument, thetimelaterspentin theexecutionandburialrituals):"'strangely 349 Punishment BuddandCapital Billy thatshouldbe summary-theenemymay we prolongproceedings result.We mustdo; and one oftwo be sightedand an engagement thingsmustwe do-condemnor let go"' (275). In response,the who has not previouslysposailingmaster,the one trialofficer "'Can we notconvictand yetmitigatethe ken,asks "falteringly," penalty?"'(275). for Insistingthatthiswouldnot be "'lawful,"'Vere highlights aspectsofthecode condemned readersone ofthemostuniversally deathpenalties.Opponentsof underwhichhe operates:mandatory and brutality ofcoursefocusedon theinflexible capitalpunishment them, crueltythuscodifiedintolaw and passingforjustice.Joining however,were some of the mostardentdefendersof capitalpunwho were ishment,includingmanyjudges and districtattorneys, juriesthat-likethesailingmaster-would encountering continually ratheracquitthanconsigna criminalto death.In the periodfrom todiscretionary frommandatory 1860to 1895,eighteenstatesshifted the usuallyciting reluctanceof withlegislators capitalpunishment, incapitalpunishment.53 juriestoparticipate shiftsfromall hisprevious Atthispointin thetrial,Vereabruptly werebasedonthepremisethathe andhisdrumarguments-which underlaw,sentenceBillytodeath-totheargument headcourtmust, theyshouldhangBillyin a public convinceshis officers: thatfinally us,is nottotheir informs "Hisclosingappeal," thenarrator execution. (280,italicsmine),and as sea officers" reasonbut"to theirinstinct leasttothem. thisis whatmakesitso convincing-at themain ofdeterrence, Thisappealis basedsolelyonthedoctrine thenineteenth throughout capitalpunishment preserving argument vast By thelate 1880s,however, century. (as wellas thetwentieth) there that had demonstrated evidence and other statistical of amounts is littleifanyreasonablebasisforthebeliefthatcapitalpunishment the detersanyofthe crimesforwhichit is imposed.Nevertheless, likeVere,tendedmoreandmoreto defenders ofcapitalpunishment, ordainedby thatitwasjust,fair,appropriate, abandontheargument in its valueas a belief God,et cetera,andmoreandmoreto relyon to crime.Theyappealednotso muchto evidenceas to the deterrent and affluent fearofviolentcrimewidespreadamongtheprivileged classes,a fearwhichtheyofcourseencouraged.54 ofcapitalpunishment, defender nineteenth-century Likethetypical class Vereappealstothefearofthefellowmembersofhisprivileged Literature 350 American as sea officers." in otherwords,to "theirinstinct on theBellipotent, betweenthe deterdifference There is, however,one fundamental readersand Vere's familiarto nineteenth-century renceargument was (andis) thatcapiargument The customary decisiveargument. crimeby makingan example detersthe particular tal punishment morecynical-isthathanging Vere'sargument-far ofthecriminal. the themand reinforce BillyBudd beforethe crewwillintimidate not while discipline"'exertedoverthembytheofficers, "'arbitrary Mutinyis thecrimeofwhich hanginghimwouldencouragemutiny. ClaggarthadfalselyaccusedBillyandofwhichVereandhisofficers But,arguesVere," 'thepeople,"' becausethey knowBillyis innocent. thatmightqualify responsiveness "'have notthatkindofintelligent willbelievethatBillyhas and discriminate,"' themto comprehend " 'a flagrant emulatehim andwilltherefore actofmutiny"' committed ifhe is notappropriately punishedforit.Forreadersin 1891,Vere's wouldseem so officers, so persuasiveto his subordinate argument, a parodyofthe speciousandillogicalas to appearvirtually obviously forthesakeofdeterrence: usualdefenseofcapitalpunishment were thatclearlylawfulforus underthe circum"Gentlemen, The people" stances,considertheconsequencesofsuchclemency. (meaningthe ship'scompany)"havenativesense; mostofthem andhowwouldthey withournavalusageandtradition; arefamiliar position takeit?Evencouldyouexplaintothem-whichourofficial not that have molded discipline, arbitrary by long forbids-they, thatmightqualifythemto comresponsiveness kindofintelligent deed, No,tothepeopletheforetopman's prehendanddiscriminate. willbe plainhomicide howeveritbe wordedintheannouncement, Whatpenaltyforthatshould ina flagrant actofmutiny. committed theywillruminate. theyknow.Butit does notfollow.Why? follow, Youknowwhatsailorsare.Willtheyrevertto therecentoutbreak alarm-thepanicit at theNore?Ay.Theyknowthewell-founded struckthroughout England.Yourclementsentencetheywouldacthatwe are countpusillanimous. Theywouldthinkthatwe flinch, dea lawfulrigorsingularly afraidofthem-afraidofpracticing What lestitshouldprovokenewtroubles. mandedat thisjuncture, shameto us such a conjectureon theirpart,and how deadlyto (276-78) discipline. BillyBuddandCapitalPunishment351 In otherwords,because"we" are afraidof"thepeople,""we" have "they"wouldthink"we" are afraid to hangBuddbecauseotherwise of"them"! articlepublishedin January1890,entitled"The One influential attacksVere'sfinalandmost directly CrimeofCapitalPunishment," to killing... is donemerelyas a warning argument-"legal effective exan "an afterthought, andforthesafetyofsociety"-as evil-doers ofthepeopleis forcing humanesentiment whichthegrowing planation bylaw."55 whodefendandpractisemurder fromthebarbarians The same articlegoes on to focuson theroleoftheclergyin the there "Ateveryscaffold ofcapitalpunishment: actualadministration unionofChurchand State.The Stateis is a strangeand significant The Churchis thereintheperthereinthepersonofthehangman. sceneoftheState It is theoldfamiliar son ofthepriestor minister. andorder,and law in name of and blood the deeds of violence doing seemstobe "56 Melville ofreligion. andconcurrence withthesanction from thispassage,ormanysimilaronesoftheperiod,in extrapolating toavertthe tolift"a finger inability onthechaplain's hiscommentary and on his overallrole, to martialdiscipline" doomofsucha martyr totheessentialpurposeoftheBellipotent: whichlinkstheexecution ofthePrinceofPeace serving put,a chaplainis theminister Bluntly in thehostofthe God ofWar- Mars.As such,he is as incongruWhy,then,is ous as a musketwouldbe on thealtarat Christmas. subservesthepurposeattestedby he there?Becausehe indirectly ofthe thecannon;becausetoohe lendsthesanctionofthereligion but of is theabrogation everything meekto thatwhichpractically bruteForce.(312) The responseofthecrewto Billy'sexecutionis a directrefutation in whichhe suggestedto his offiofVere'sdeterrenceargument, on theship. was smoldering mutiny cersthatthethreatofimminent itrevealsnotthe thestoryis labeledan "InsideNarrative," Although priorto Billy'sdeath.Discipline hintofanysuchpossibility faintest is breachedonlyafterBilly'shangingand in responseto it,in the midstofthe ritualsofthe publicexecutionand subsequentburial (326,330,331). ofBillyBuddcomesoutinthese ofthekilling The truesignificance raisedagainstthedeathpenalty scenes.Likemanyofthearguments Literature 352 American betweenthe1790sandthe1890s,BillyBuddstripsawaytheillusions torevealtheessenceofcapitalpunishment: ofjusticeanddeterrence a ritualofpowerin whichthestateand theruling humansacrifice, and celebratetheirultimate power-the sanctify, class demonstrate, poweroflifeanddeath-overtheclassestheyrule. publicexecutionhad century, By thelastthirdofthenineteenth and legallyabandoned,in Englandas discredited been thoroughly crowdscontinued wellas inmostoftheUnitedStates.Nevertheless, thatwereofficially closedtothepublic. tofindwaystoviewhangings tookplaceat theTombsin execution When,forexample,a "private" buildings[were]blackwithpeople, NewYorkCity,"theneighboring seekingto look downoverthe prisonwallsand witnessthe death "57Suchsceneswerea maintargetofthe agoniesofthepoorwretch. in the NewYorkStateelectrocution law thatexecutions stipulation musttakeplace insidethe walls of a prison.A principalargument on the"mobs"that againstpublicexecutionshad been theireffects echoedin the strange came to watch.This reasoningis ironically thatrunsthrough thesailorsforcedto witnesstheirship"murmur" revulsion of "itseemedtoindicatesomecapricious mate'sexecution: or feelingsuchas mobsashoreare liableto,in thepresent thought on themen'spartof a sullenrevocation instancepossiblyimplying (326). theirinvoluntary echoingofBilly'sbenediction" to againstpublicexecutionwas that,contrary Anotherargument thecriminal into it tendedto transform effect, its allegeddeterrent Vere's The sailors,pointedly botha victimand a "hero."58 refuting feltthatBillywas a sortofman aboutthem,"instinctively prediction as ofwilfulmurder."To themhe becomes as incapableofmutiny morethana hero.The verysparfromwhichhe was hangedis meta"To thema chipofit intotheobjectoftheirveneration: morphosed was as a pieceoftheCross"(345-46).59 a meretreatiseagainstcapitalpunishBillyBuddis not,however, awarenessabouttheissue ment.Melvilleis usingcontemporaneous and politicalquestionsit to explorethe largerethical,philosophic, Hitt focuses.Undoubtedly New YorkAssemblyman so dramatically thecase whenhe claimedin early1890,"atpresent was overstating whoyetfavorcapital thereare onlytwoclasses ofthe community and theseare clergymen and prosecuting attorneys."60 punishment Melvillecouldsafelyassumethatalmostall potential Nevertheless, readersin 1891wouldregardpublicexecutionandhangingas relics 353 Punishment BillyBuddandCapital tothelargerissuessurroundpast,wouldbe sensitized ofa barbarous and wouldalreadyeitheropposethe death ingcapitalpunishment, murder onlyforfirst-degree orconsideritwarranted outright penalty penalty death the of proponents ardent most the Even and treason. by posiAmericawouldbe embarrassed in late-nineteenth-century Billyto death"(Peter condemns tionssuchas these:"Verejustifiably anda cause ofhis owndeath"and Shaw);BillyBuddis a "murderer withCaptainVere(MiltonStern);"the Melville"is to be identified" virtuousman,CaptainVere,"must"punishtheviolenceofabsolute innocence"-thatis, mustkillBillyBudd-since "absolute,natural is "atwarwiththepeace oftheworldandthetruewelfare innocence" Readersin 1891wouldbe farmore ofmankind"(HannahArendt).61 (236-237), likelyto wonder,likethesurgeon(235) andthenarrator Vereis insane. whether Thereremainsa questionthatbynowmusthaveoccurredtomost especiallydurcircumstances, readersofthisessay:Do notmilitary ingwar,demandthekindofmartiallaw underwhichVereproceeds inchapter in1850presents (orclaimstoproceed)?62 A bookpublished British ofthisposition.Ascribing afterchaptera detailedrefutation thathadrefeudalaristocracy" navallawofthisperiodtoa "barbarous anditssequel,theauthorarguesthat gainedpowerintheRestoration "a perioddeemedso glorioustotheBritishNavy, intheInterregnum, he reasons,"such Therefore, theseArticlesofWarwereunknown." war-to the during arenotindispensable-even ordinances tyrannical marine."He pointsoutthat ofa military highestpossibleefficiency androupunishment Nelson(lionizedinBillyBudd) opposedcorporal seamento an admiralwho tinelyreassigned"whollyungovernable" the winning thereby all corporalpunishment," "heldin abhorrence abuses ofgovernment loyaltyofthesemen."The mutinouseffects at the "developedthemselves to thiswriter, in theNavy,"according greatmutinyofthe Nore."The authorsumsup his viewin these a codeforitsgovthenecessitiesofnavieswarrant words:"Certainly thanthelawthatgovernstheland;butthat morestringent ernment ofthe to the spiritofthepoliticalinstitutions code shouldconform ofthe some thatordainsit.It shouldnotconvertintoslaves country He thendenouncestheAmerican citizensofa nationoffreemen." fromabroad,evenfromBritain, ArticlesofWaras "an importation and yetretained whoselawswe Americanshurledoffas tyrannical, ofall." That author,ofcourse,is HermanMelthemosttyrannical 354 American Literature ville.The book is White-Jacket,63 a volumehe consultedfrequently whilecomposing BillyBuddon a writing box to whichhe had glued thismotto:"Keeptruetothedreamsofthyyouth."64 Onanother level,therelations betweenmartial lawandcivilsociety had moredisturbing implications forMelvillein 1891thanin 1850. As he was writing BillyBudd,the risingtide of imperialism, with itscorollary ofmilitarism, was threatening thebasic republican and democratic valuesexpressedso passionately in White-Jacket. In 1850 he couldplead forextensionofthe highestlaws ofthe land to its shipsat sea. But by 1891,as the nationwas aboutto buildits first large-scale standing navytoprepareforitsimperial manifest destiny, Melvilleenvisioned thegovernanceofthewarshipbecomingdominantoverthelawsoftheland.65 Likemanyofhiscontemporaries, he saw thattheessenceofcapitalpunishment is thestate'spowerover lifeanddeath,a powerboundlessly expandedinwar.He dramatized thedeadlymeaningofcapitalpunishment forthe eighteenth, nineandtwentieth teenth, inthekidnapping centuries ofBillyBuddfrom theRights ofMan andhisexecution ontheaptlynamedBellipotent. Rutgers Newark University, Notes 1 2 3 Myownviewofthegreatdebatecan be foundin "FromEmpireto Empire:BillyBudd,Sailor," inHermanMelville: Reassessments, ed.A. Robert Lee (NewYork:BarnesandNoble,1984):199-216.Foran astuteanalysis ofthecontesting interpretations as expressions ofpoliticalchangesduringseveraldecadesofrecentU.S. history, see Geraldin2 Murphy, "The PoliticsofReadingBillyBudd,"American Literary 1 (summer History 1989):361-82. RichardH. Weisberg, "Editor'sPreface,"CardozoStudiesin Law and Literature 1 (spring1989).Weisberg himself has donethemostthorough analysisofthespecificlegalissuesin thestoryin "HowJudgesSpeak: SomeLessonsonAdjudication inBillyBudd,Sailorwithan Application toJusticeRehnquist," NewYorkUniversity Law Review57 (April1982): 1-69,andinTheFailureoftheWord: TheProtagonist as LawyerinModern Fiction(NewHaven:Yale Univ.Press,1984),131-59.See also theperinSusanWeiner, ceptiveexploration Law inArt:Melville's MajorFiction and Nineteenth-Century American Law (New York:PeterLang,1992), 139-66. RichardA. Posner,"Comment on RichardWeisberg'sInterpretation of BillyBudd," Cardozo StudiesinLawandLiterature 1 (spring 1989):73-74. BillyBuddandCapitalPunishment355 to AbolishCapitalPunarticle"The Movement In his groundbreaking Review63 [OctoHistorical (American inAmerica,1787-1861," ishment ber1957],23-46),DavidBrionDaviswas shockedto discoverthatthis in thestandardsocialand is "seldommentioned movement prominent historiesofthe period"(23). This articledid mostof the intellectual spadeworkformorerecentstudiesand stilloffersthe mostcompreforthenineteenthbackground ofthephilosophic hensiveexploration capitalpunishopposingand defending Americanarguments century ment. ed. Harrison BillyBudd,Sailor(AnInsideNarrative), 5 HermanMelville, andMertonSealtsJr.(Chicago:Univ.ofChicagoPress,1962), Hayford tothistextwillbe byparenthetical references leaves267-72.Subsequent leafnumber. ControThePublicExecution 6 DavidD. Cooper,TheLessonoftheScaffold: England(Athens:OhioUniv.Press,1974),27.Cooper in Victorian versy devotesa chapterto "The BloodyCode" ofGeorgeIII. See also Hugo 3rded. (NewYork:Oxford inAmerica, AdamBedau,TheDeathPenalty Univ.Press,1982),6. inEnglandagainst ofthemovement 7 See Cooper'svolumeforthehistory andhanging. publicexecution, capitalpunishment, Maga" Eclectic "TheCaseAgainstCapitalPunishment, 8 B. PaulNeuman, British from the American reprint this is an 518; 1889, October zine, 1889,322-33. September Review, Fortnightly on CapitalPunArticles in Selected 9 SamuelHand,"The DeathPenalty," comp.LamarT. Beman(New York:H. W. WilsonCompany, ishment, December1881,541Review, American North from 1925),178;reprinted from theprogress Handcelebrates ofcapitalpunishment, 50.A defender ofthecentury. thebeginning onCapi" inBeman,Selected Articles "CapitalPunishment, 10 J.M. Buckley, fromForum,June1887,381-91.See also 94; reprinted tal Punishment, Month, W.C. Maude,"ShallWeAbolishtheDeathPenaltyforMurder?" February 1889,168-79. 1787toCapitalPunishment, Opposition Death:American Against 11 Voices & Co.,1976), 1975,ed. PhilipEnglishMackey(NewYork:BurtFranklin 4 xiv. States(Hackin theUnited 12 Bedau,4; SarahT Dike,CapitalPunishment 1982),7-8; ensack,NJ.:NationalCouncilon Crimeand Delinquency, xvi. Mackey,Voices, Pun13 PhilipEnglishMackey,Hangingin theBalance:TheAnti-Capital in NewYorkState,1776-1861(NewYork:Garland, Movement ishment xvi-xvii. 1982),69;Mackey,Voices, xxvi-xxvii. 14 Mackey,Voices, in Lec15 In 1850 MelvillepurchasedGreeley'sHintstowardReforms, which included 1850), York, and Other Writings (New Addresses, tures, Literature 356 American 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 "DeathbyHumanLaw" attackonthedeathpenalty, Greeley'sinfluential of Reading:A Check-List (301-10);see MertonM. SealtsJr.,Melville's fromHarvardLibraryBulletin offprinted BooksOwnedand Borrowed, HarvardUniv.Press,1950),130. (Cambridge: ofDeath,10thed. (London, CharlesSpear,Essayson thePunishment in 1844,thisvolumeexerteda majorinpublished 1845),224.Originally inEnglandas well againstcapitalpunishment fluenceonthemovement as America. WilliamJ.Bowers,withGlennL. PierceandJohnF. McDevitt,Legal inAmerica,1864-1982(Boston:NorthDeathas Punishment Homicide: easternUniv.Press,1984),140. Spear,224-31. Bowers,140. Bedau,8. Spear,223. Spear,224. Spear,225-26. andtheTransforCapitalPunishment LouisP. Masur,RitesofExecution: Univ.Press, 1776-1865(NewYork:Oxford Culture, mationofAmerican xxvii;Davis,45-46. 1989),160;Mackey,Voices, 524. Neuman, England,eventhosewhowereinfavorofpublicexecutions In pre-1850 "evil,"and "ugly,""disgusting," thattheywere"depraving," admitted (Cooper,50). "brutalizing" xx. Mackey,Voices, MagaPutnam's "The GallowsinAmerica," EdmundClarenceStedman, 1889,234.StedmanmetMelvillein 1888.On 20 October zine,February bookslentto himby Stedmanwitha letterin 1888Melvillereturned whichhe wrote,"Andyourownbookin manyofitsviewshas proved a to me." In 1890Stedmanarranged or suggestive eithercorroborative of dinnerforMelvilleat theAuthor'sClub,one ofthefewrecognitions becamea goodfriend sonArthur theauthorinhislateryears.Stedman's ofMelvillein thelasttwoyearsofthewriter'slifeandafterMelville's fourofhisbooks;see deathworkedwithElizabethMelvilleinreissuing 1951),1:xxxiii; Brace, Harcourt, York: Melville (New Log The Leyda, Jay 2:804-06. 230. Stedman, 1943),s.v.Curtis, (NewYork:Scribner, Biography ofAmerican Dictionary NewtonMartin. History in American Crimeand Punishment LawrenceMeirFriedman, (NewYork:BasicBooks,1993),171. see Matthew Fora goodoverallaccountoftheBattleoftheCurrents, (NewYork:McGrawHill,1959),344Edison:A Biography Josephson, in RobertSilverberg, are offered perspectives 50; somewhatdifferent BillyBuddandCapitalPunishment357 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 D. Van N.J.: (Princeton, theWorld: EdisonandthePowerIndustry Lightfor 1967),238-43;RonaldW.Clark,Edison:TheMan WhoMade Nostrand, Sons,1977),157-60;andMargaret theFuture(NewYork:G. P. Putnam's N.J.:Prentice-Hall, Cheney,Tesla:Man OutofTime(EnglewoodCliffs, accountis ThomasP. 1981),41-49.A moredetailedandwell-documented An Incident Current: Hughes,"HaroldP. Brownand theExecutioner's Review32 (spring1958): BusinessHistory in theAC-DCControversy," itsrole ramifications, including 143-65.ForsomeoftheBattle'scultural Court,see H. Bruce Yankeein KingArthur's in Twain'sA Connecticut and theAmericanImagination WarStars:The Superweapon Franklin, Univ.Press,1989):54-77. (NewYork:Oxford 17January 1888.The dogs NewYorkTribune, forMurder," "Lightning neighandcatswerepetsgatheredfromtheWestOrange,NewJersey, whowerepaidtwenty-five byschoolboys borhoodofEdison'slaboratory was decicentsforeach animal;as a result,thelocalanimalpopulation 347). mated(Josephson, NewYorkSun,25August1889. Hughes,148-49. andthecovertoperations machinations Fora detailedaccountofBrown's ofEdison'sfront see Hughes,156-58. organizations, 45. 348;Cheney, Josephson, American ofExecution," North HaroldP. Brown,"The NewInstrument November 1889,586-93.Inthesameissue,theeditorsran"DanReview, in Sepan anti-AC articlebyEdisonhimself; gersofElectricLighting," ReviewhadpublishedanotherarticlefavortembertheNorth American by ElbridgeT. by Electricity," "CapitalPunishment ingelectrocution, whowas secretly the chairmanof the New YorkCommission, Gerry, withBrown. working soon Afterthe deathofeditorHoraceGreeley,theNew YorkTribune voicesin favorofabolishing ceased to be one oftheforemost capital punishment. NewYorkTimes,17December1887. "CapitalPunishment," 22January 1888. ortheRope,"NewYorkTribune, "Electricity 22January 1888. "ANewAgentofDeath,"NewYorkTribune, NewYorkTimes, ofHanging," and"TheAbolition "DeathbyElectricity" 17 JanuforMurder,"New YorkTribune, 17 January 1888;"Lightning ary1888. is to the workers'leaders of Hanging";the reference "The Abolition ofreFora discussion bombing. hangedin 1887forthe1886Haymarket andBillyBudd,see RobertK. hangings lationsbetweentheHaymarket Literature American Hangings," Wallace,BillyBuddandtheHaymarket 47 (March1975):108-13. "Gen.Curtisof St. Lawrence.. . ," New YorkTimes,29 March1890; hoursafterthenews. . .," New YorkTimes,2 May 1890; "Forty-eight Literature 358 American 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 "Is It the DynamoAgain?Rushingthroughthe Bill to AbolishCapi2 May 1890;"The DeathPenalty," NewYorkTribune, talPunishment," NewYorkTribune, 3 May1890;"CapitalPunishment," NewYorkTribune, 6 May1890. "Far WorseThan Hanging;Kemmler'sDeath Provesan AwfulSpectacle,"NewYorkTimes,7 August1890. TheArena,October1890, "The DeathPenalty," Dr. GeorgeF. Shrady, 513. to A Consideration oftheObjections AndrewJ.Palm,TheDeathPenalty: on War(NewYork:G. P. Putnam's witha Chapter CapitalPunishment, Sons,1891),100. Billy Davis,33. For an examplepublishedwhileMelvillewas writing The "The CrimeofCapitalPunishment," Budd,see Hugh0. Pentecost, 1890,175-83. Arena,January The to KillOurFellowmen?" 0. Flower],"ShallWe Continue [Benjamin 1890,243-44. Arena,January [Benjamin0. Flower],"Thoughtson the Death Penalty,"TheArena, October1890,636. comment aboutthosepossessedby"deNotetheechoofthenarrator's ofan aim accordingto nature":"Towardthe accomplishment pravity ofatrocity wouldseemtopartakeoftheinsane,he whichinwantonness sagaciousandsound"(133-34). willdirecta cooljudgment xxx. Mackey,Voices, An 1889articlepublishedin bothEnglandand theUnitedStatesgave statistics showingthatthehomicideratehad droppedin each stateas thathad abolishedcapitalpunishment; wellas each Europeancountry see Neuman, 524. 175-76,italicsmine. Pentecost, 178. Pentecost, JamesD. McCabeJr.,Lightsand ShadowsofNew YorkLife(1872),as 170. quotedinFriedman, 1888. "TheAbolition ofHanging," NewYorkTimes,17January 227:"Greatandgoodmenhavebeenhanged,andit CompareStedman, liketheCross"' (the was saidofone,thathe 'madethegallowsglorious, is fromEmerson'seulogyofJohnBrown). internal quotation theBill to AbolishCapital "Is It the DynamoAgain?Rushingthrough 2 May1890. NewYorkTribune, Punishment," Literature PeterShaw,RecoveringAmerican (Chicago:IvanR. Dee, 1994), SteelofHermanMelville(Urbana: 76;MiltonStern,TheFineHammered OnRevolution (New Univ.ofIllinoisPress,1957),26-27;HannahArendt, York:Viking, 1965),79. Vereis actuallynotfollowing butviolating the code underwhichhe pointedoutbyC. B. Ives, Thisviolation was first claimstobe operating. 34 (March Literature "BillyBuddand theArticlesofWar,"American BillyBuddandCapitalPunishment359 Stanincluding byothercritics, further 1962):31-39;ithasbeenexplored "Fraudas FactinHermanMelville'sBillyBudd," SanJoseRetonGarner, TheFailure Weisberg, view4 (May1978):82-105,and,mostthoroughly, thatMeltaketheposition 144-59.Vere'smoderndefenders oftheWord, rendered navallaw,an argument withBritish unfamiliar villewas simply reofthislaw,based on thorough dubiousbythedetailedexploration TheTailoring ofMelville's see HowardP.Vincent, search,in White-Jacket; Univ.Press,1970),103-06. Ill.:Northwestern (Evanston, White-Jacket ed. in a Man-of-War, orTheWorld arefromWhite-Jacket 63 The quotations HershelParker,and G. ThomasTanselle(Evanston HarrisonHayford, Library, 1970), Univ.PressandtheNewberry andChicago:Northwestern 35,36,71. chapters (Chicago:Univ.of ChicagoPress, 64 MerlinBowen,TheLongEncounter 217. 1960), 65 For an analysisofBillyBuddin the contextofthe end-of-the-century see my"FromEmpireto Empire:Billy movement towardimperialism, Budd,Sailor."