KELLY'S LAST STATEMENT.
Nelson, Oct. 5, 4.30 p.m.
Kelly's stateinnnt to-day was a string of adjectives in rtfany places, it began thus : — " Good morning ! But an unpleasant morning to you all, gentlemen, countrymen, brothers, and spectators of one of the most awful, terrible, dreadful, fearful, shameful, painful, mournful, reverential, hateful, wrongful, unjustifiable, ignominious, inglorious deaths and rauf-
ders that ever took place in the -wide world, since the creation of Adam ; and a sad morning' to my poor self. And may G"od be merciful to me, a sinner, not a murderer, since I have been born." After referring to the atonement of Christ, he went on — " Besides, I trust Almighty God has .searched me and tried me to see if there has been any such Avickedness in me as' ever to 'know for a certainty of the Maungatapu murders, until Sullivan made a confession. May I never be forgiven my sins upon earth", nor after I shuffle off this mortal coil,,, and appear before my Almighty God, if I am not. innocent of killing, or of being with "any person that did > kill them when they were killed on the Maungatapu, or any other murdered men in the w.orld. If my assertions, declarations, and dying ' wbrds be not the truth about these men, and nothing but the. truth, I hope that after I ascend the fatal and welcome -scaffold, and the bolt is drawn* that .will launch me out of this world, and that whilst my frail and worthless body of 1 clay is dangling in the 'air, the Devil •will be waiting for the 1 moment my soul departs from this body to be bo^ne upon his wings to the bottomless" pit of Hell, at a speed more rapid- than lightning, or than the light of the sun in reaching the earth, — yes at a speed as quick as thought, which I believe to be the fastest thing that travels, for I can think to Heaven in an instant." lie next termed Sullivan the demon of the West Coast, and Maungatapu mountain 'assassin. He prayed for a blessing on the heads of the people., of Nelson for their efforts to discover the bodies of the murdered men, and praised all that the people had done " in Hhe town named after the gallant hero of the sea and ocean, and conqueror of the enemies of Old England, my country ; Nelson, the inimitable wonder of the sea, fighting, and war : and I hope he is happy. God bless him, for I like a patriot." He then repeated the hymn referring to the hour of parting with all earthly things, and concluded his dying speech thus : — - " And this hour has been fully before me the great part of my life, never as it should have been, until after my arrest : but may I find life aud heaven with God. ' i ,So, fare we'll to everybodyFrom Tommy Noon, called Kelly."
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Bibliographic details
West Coast Times, Issue 331, 15 October 1866, Page 3
Word Count
487KELLY'S LAST STATEMENT. West Coast Times, Issue 331, 15 October 1866, Page 3
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