John Stuart Mill: "Speech In Favor of Capital
Punishment"
From a speech was
given before Parliament on April 21, 1868 in opposition to a bill banning
capital punishment that had been proposed by Mr. Gilpin.
.
. . It would be a great satisfaction to me if I were able to support this
Motion. It is always a matter of regret to me to find myself, on a public
question, opposed to those who are called--sometimes in the way of honour, and
sometimes in what is intended for ridicule--the philanthropists. Of all persons
who take part in public affairs, they are those for whom, on the whole, I feel
the greatest amount of respect; for their characteristic is, that they devote
their time, their labour, and much of their money to objects purely public,
with a less admixture of either personal or class selfishness, than any other
class of politicians whatever. On almost all the great questions, scarcely any
politicians are so steadily and almost uniformly to be found on the side of
right; and they seldom err, but by an exaggerated application of some just and
highly important principle. On the very subject that is now occupying us we all
know what signal service they have rendered. It is through their efforts that
our criminal laws--which within my memory hanged people for stealing in a
dwelling house to the value of 40s.-laws by virtue of which rows of human
beings might be seen suspended in front of Newgate by those who ascended or
descended Ludgate Hill--have so greatly relaxed their most revolting and most
impolitic ferocity, that aggravated murder is now practically the only crime
which is punished with death by any of our lawful tribunals; and we are even
now deliberating whether the extreme penalty should be retained in that
solitary case. This vast gain, not only to humanity, but to the ends of penal
justice, we owe to the philanthropists; and if they are mistaken, as I cannot
but think they are, in the present instance, it is only in not perceiving the
right time and place for stopping in a career hitherto so eminently beneficial.
Sir, there is a point at which, I conceive, that career ought to stop. When
there has been brought home to any one, by conclusive evidence, the greatest
crime known to the law; and when the attendant circumstances suggest no
palliation of the guilt, no hope that the culprit may even yet not be unworthy
to live among mankind, nothing to make it probable that the crime was an
exception to his general character rather than a consequence of it, then I
confess it appears to me that to deprive the criminal of the life of which he
has proved himself to be unworthy--solemnly to blot him out from the fellowship
of mankind and from the catalogue of the living--is the most appropriate as it
is certainly the most impressive, mode in which society can attach to so great
a crime the penal consequences which for the security of life it is
indispensable to annex to it. I defend this penalty, when confined to
atrocious cases, on the very ground on which it is commonly attacked--on that
of humanity to the criminal; as beyond comparison the least cruel mode in
which it is possible adequately to deter from the crime. If, in our horror
of inflicting death, we endeavour to devise some punishment for the living
criminal which shall act on the human mind with a deterrent force at all
comparable to that of death, we are driven to inflictions less severe indeed in
appearance, and therefore less efficacious, but far more cruel in reality. Few,
I think, would venture to propose, as a punishment for aggravated murder, less than
imprisonment with hard labor for life; that is the fate to which a murderer
would be consigned by the mercy which shrinks from putting him to death. But
has it been sufficiently considered what sort of a mercy this is, and what kind
of life it leaves to him? If, indeed, the punishment is not really
inflicted--if it becomes the sham which a few years ago such punishments were
rapidly becoming--then, indeed, its adoption would be almost tantamount to
giving up the attempt to repress murder altogether. But if it really is what it
professes to be, and if it is realized in all its rigour by the popular
imagination, as it very probably would not be, but as it must be if it is to be
efficacious, it will be so shocking that when the memory of the crime is no longer
fresh, there will be almost insuperable difficulty in executing it. What
comparison can there really be, in point of severity, between consigning a man
to the short pang of a rapid death, and immuring him in a living tomb, there to
linger out what may be a long life in the hardest and most monotonous toil,
without any of its alleviations or rewards--debarred from all pleasant sights
and sounds, and cut off from all earthly hope, except a slight mitigation of
bodily restraint, or a small improvement of diet? Yet even such a lot as this,
because there is no one moment at which the suffering is of terrifying
intensity, and, above all, because it does not contain the element, so imposing
to the imagination, of the unknown, is universally reputed a milder punishment
than death--stands in all codes as a mitigation of the capital penalty, and is
thankfully accepted as such. For it is characteristic of all punishments which
depend on duration for their efficacy--all, therefore, which are not corporal
or pecuniary--that they are more rigorous than they seem; while it is, on the
contrary, one of the strongest recommendations a punishment can have, that it
should seem more rigorous than it is; for its practical power depends
far less on what it is than on what it seems. There is not, I should think, any
human infliction which makes an impression on the imagination so entirely out
of proportion to its real severity as the punishment of death. The punishment
must be mild indeed which does not add more to the sum of human misery than is
necessarily or directly added by the execution of a criminal. As my hon. Friend
the Member for Northampton (Mr. Gilpin) has himself remarked, the most that
human laws can do to anyone in the matter of death is to hasten it; the man
would have died at any rate; not so very much later, and on the average, I
fear, with a considerably greater amount of bodily suffering. Society is asked,
then, to denude itself of an instrument of punishment which, in the grave cases
to which alone it is suitable, effects its purposes at a less cost of human
suffering than any other; which, while it inspires more terror, is less cruel
in actual fact than any punishment that we should think of substituting for it.
My hon. Friend says that it does not inspire terror, and that experience proves
it to be a failure. But the influence of a punishment is not to be estimated by
its effect on hardened criminals. Those whose habitual way of life keeps them,
so to speak, at all times within sight of the gallows, do grow to care less
about it; as, to compare good things with bad, an old soldier is not much
affected by the chance of dying in battle. I can afford to admit all that is
often said about the indifference of professional criminals to the gallows.
Though of that indifference one-third is probably bravado and another third
confidence that they shall have the luck to escape, it is quite probable that
the remaining third is real. But the efficacy of a punishment which acts
principally through the imagination, is chiefly to be measured by the
impression it makes on those who are still innocent; by the horror with which
it surrounds the first promptings of guilt; the restraining influence it
exercises over the beginning of the thought which, if indulged, would become a
temptation; the check which it exerts over the graded declension towards the
state--never suddenly attained--in which crime no longer revolts, and
punishment no longer terrifies. As for what is called the failure of death
punishment, who is able to judge of that? We partly know who those are whom it
has not deterred; but who is there who knows whom it has deterred, or how many
human beings it has saved who would have lived to be murderers if that awful
association had not been thrown round the idea of murder from their earliest
infancy? Let us not forget that the most imposing fact loses its power over the
imagination if it is made too cheap. When a punishment fit only for the most
atrocious crimes is lavished on small offences until human feeling recoils from
it, then, indeed, it ceases to intimidate, because it ceases to be believed in.
The failure of capital punishment in cases of theft is easily accounted for;
the thief did not believe that it would be inflicted. He had learnt by
experience that jurors would perjure themselves rather than find him guilty;
that Judges would seize any excuse for not sentencing him to death, or for
recommending him to mercy; and that if neither jurors nor Judges were merciful,
there were still hopes from an authority above both. When things had come to
this pass it was high time to give up the vain attempt. When it is impossible
to inflict a punishment, or when its infliction becomes a public scandal, the
idle threat cannot too soon disappear from the statute book. And in the case of
the host of offences which were formerly capital, I heartily rejoice that it
did become impracticable to execute the law. If the same state of public
feeling comes to exist in the case of murder; if the time comes when jurors
refuse to find a murderer guilty; when Judges will not sentence him to death,
or will recommend him to mercy; or when, if juries and Judges do not flinch
from their duty, Home Secretaries, under pressure of deputations and memorials,
shrink from theirs, and the threat becomes, as it became in the other cases, a
mere brutum fulmen; then, indeed, it may become necessary to do in this
case what has been done in those--to abrogate the penalty. That time may
come--my hon. Friend thinks that it has nearly come. I hardly know whether he
lamented it or boasted of it; but he and his Friends are entitled to the boast;
for if it comes it will be their doing, and they will have gained what I cannot
but call a fatal victory, for they will have achieved it by bringing about, if
they will forgive me for saying so, an enervation, an effeminacy, in the
general mind of the country. For what else than effeminacy is it to be so much
more shocked by taking a man's life than by depriving him of all that makes
life desirable or valuable? Is death, then, the greatest of all earthly ills? Usque
adeone mori miserum est? Is it, indeed, so dreadful a thing to die? Has it
not been from of old one chief part of a manly education to make us despise
death--teaching us to account it, if an evil at all, by no means high in the
list of evils; at all events, as an inevitable one, and to hold, as it were,
our lives in our hands, ready to be given or risked at any moment, for a
sufficiently worthy object? I am sure that my hon. Friends know all this as
well, and have as much of all these feelings as any of the rest of us; possibly
more. But I cannot think that this is likely to be the effect of their teaching
on the general mind. I cannot think that the cultivating of a peculiar
sensitiveness of conscience on this one point, over and above what results from
the general cultivation of the moral sentiments, is permanently consistent with
assigning in our own minds to the fact of death no more than the degree of
relative importance which belongs to it among the other incidents of our
humanity. The men of old cared too little about death, and gave their own lives
or took those of others with equal recklessness. Our danger is of the opposite
kind, lest we should be so much shocked by death, in general and in the
abstract, as to care too much about it in individual cases, both those of other
people and our own, which call for its being risked. And I am not putting
things at the worst, for it is proved by the experience of other countries that
horror of the executioner by no means necessarily implies horror of the
assassin. The stronghold, as we all know, of hired assassination in the 18th
century was Italy; yet it is said that in some of the Italian populations the
infliction of death by sentence of law was in the highest degree offensive and
revolting to popular feeling. Much has been said of the sanctity of human life,
and the absurdity of supposing that we can teach respect for life by ourselves
destroying it. But I am surprised at the employment of this argument, for it is
one which might be brought against any punishment whatever. It is not human
life only, not human life as such, that ought to be sacred to us, but human
feelings. The human capacity of suffering is what we should cause to be
respected, not the mere capacity of existing. And we may imagine somebody
asking how we can teach people not to inflict suffering by ourselves inflicting
it? But to this I should answer--all of us would answer--that to deter by
suffering from inflicting suffering is not only possible, but the very purpose
of penal justice. Does fining a criminal show want of respect for property, or
imprisoning him, for personal freedom? Just as unreasonable is it to think that
to take the life of a man who has taken that of another is to show want of
regard for human life. We show, on the contrary, most emphatically our regard
for it, by the adoption of a rule that he who violates that right in another
forfeits it for himself, and that while no other crime that he can commit
deprives him of his right to live, this shall. There is one argument against
capital punishment, even in extreme cases, which I cannot deny to have
weight--on which my hon. Friend justly laid great stress, and which never can
be entirely got rid of. It is this--that if by an error of justice an innocent
person is put to death, the mistake can never be corrected; all compensation,
all reparation for the wrong is impossible. This would be indeed a serious
objection if these miserable mistakes--among the most tragical occurrences in
the whole round of human affairs--could not be made extremely rare. The
argument is invincible where the mode of criminal procedure is dangerous to the
innocent, or where the Courts of Justice are not trusted. And this probably is
the reason why the objection to an irreparable punishment began (as I believe
it did) earlier, and is more intense and more widely diffused, in some parts of
the Continent of Europe than it is here. There are on the Continent great and
enlightened countries, in which the criminal procedure is not so favorable to
innocence, does not afford the same security against erroneous conviction, as
it does among us; countries where the Courts of Justice seem to think they fail
in their duty unless they find somebody guilty; and in their really laudable desire
to hunt guilt from its hiding places, expose themselves to a serious danger of
condemning the innocent. If our own procedure and Courts of Justice afforded
ground for similar apprehension, I should be the first to join in withdrawing
the power of inflicting irreparable punishment from such tribunals. But we all
know that the defects of our procedure are the very opposite. Our rules of
evidence are even too favorable to the prisoner; and juries and Judges carry
out the maxim, "It is better that ten guilty should escape than that one
innocent person should suffer," not only to the letter, but beyond the
letter. Judges are most anxious to point out, and juries to allow for, the
barest possibility of the prisoner's innocence. No human judgment is infallible;
such sad cases as my hon. Friend cited will sometimes occur; but in so grave a
case as that of murder, the accused, in our system, has always the benefit of
the merest shadow of a doubt. And this suggests another consideration very
germane to the question. The very fact that death punishment is more shocking
than any other to the imagination, necessarily renders the Courts of Justice
more scrupulous in requiring the fullest evidence of guilt. Even that which is
the greatest objection to capital punishment, the impossibility of correcting
an error once committed, must make, and does make, juries and Judges more
careful in forming their opinion, and more jealous in their scrutiny of the
evidence. If the substitution of penal servitude for death in cases of murder
should cause any declaration in this conscientious scrupulosity, there would be
a great evil to set against the real, but I hope rare, advantage of being able
to make reparation to a condemned person who was afterwards discovered to be
innocent. In order that the possibility of correction may be kept open wherever
the chance of this sad contingency is more than infinitesimal, it is quite
right that the Judge should recommend to the Crown a commutation of the
sentence, not solely when the proof of guilt is open to the smallest suspicion,
but whenever there remains anything unexplained and mysterious in the case,
raising a desire for more light, or making it likely that further information
may at some future time be obtained. I would also suggest that whenever the
sentence is commuted the grounds of the commutation should, in some authentic
form, be made known to the public. Thus much I willingly concede to my hon.
Friend; but on the question of total abolition I am inclined to hope that the
feeling of the country is not with him, and that the limitation of death
punishment to the cases referred to in the Bill of last year will be generally
considered sufficient. The mania which existed a short time ago for paring down
all our punishments seems to have reached its limits, and not before it was
time. We were in danger of being left without any effectual punishment, except
for small of offences. What was formerly our chief secondary
punishment--transportation--before it was abolished, had become almost a reward.
Penal servitude, the substitute for it, was becoming, to the classes who were
principally subject to it, almost nominal, so comfortable did we make our
prisons, and so easy had it become to get quickly out of them. Flogging--a most
objectionable punishment in ordinary cases, but a particularly appropriate one
for crimes of brutality, especially crimes against women--we would not hear of,
except, to be sure, in the case of garrotters, for whose peculiar benefit we
reestablished it in a hurry, immediately after a Member of Parliament had been garroted.
With this exception, offences, even of an atrocious kind, against the person,
as my hon. and learned Friend the Member for Oxford (Mr.Neate) well remarked,
not only were, but still are, visited with penalties so ludicrously inadequate,
as to be almost an encouragement to the crime. I think, Sir, that in the case
of most offences, except those against property, there is more need of
strengthening our punishments than of weakening them; and that severer sentences,
with an apportionment of them to the different kinds of offences which shall
approve itself better than at present to the moral sentiments of the community,
are the kind of reform of which our penal system now stands in need. I shall
therefore vote against the Amendment.