Skepsey’s case appeared in the evening papers. He confessed, ‘frankly,’ he said, to the magistrate, that, ’acting under temporary exasperation, he had lost for a moment a man’s proper self-command.’ He was as frank in stating, that he ’occupied the prisoner’s place before his Worship a second time, and was a second time indebted to the gentleman, Mr. Colney Durance, who so kindly stood by him.’ There was hilarity in the Court at his quaint sententious envelopment of the idiom of the streets, which he delivered with solemnity: ’He could only plead, not in absolute justification—an appeal to human sentiments—the feelings of a man of the humbler orders, returning home in the evening, and his thoughts upon things not without their importance, to find repeatedly the guardian of his household beastly drunk, and destructive.’ Colney made the case quite intelligible to the magistrate; who gravely robed a strain of the idiomatic in the officially awful, to keep in tune with his delinquent. No serious harm had been done to the woman. Skepsey was admonished and released. His wife expressed her willingness to forgive him, now he had got his lesson; and she hoped he would understand, that there was no need for a woman to learn pugilism. Skepsey would have explained; but the case was over, he was hustled out.