SENT FROM THE DEAD.
STRANGE MASONIC “SIGNS.” STORY OF A SUICIDE. Remarkable evidence was given by a medical man concerning a patient who, in his opinion, was wrongly certified as a lunatic, at an inquest at Hampstead recently on Gilbert Soutlnvood Meiklejohn, aged forty-five, of Westminster, who was found shot near the Viaduct Pond on Hampstead Heath. Dr. Oscar Parkes, said he had . known Meiklejohn for about four years, first as an aquaintance and then as a patient. “The man was not certifiable, in my opinion,” said Dr. Parkes. “I saw him at the asylum, and I also saw the lunacy commissioners. I was prepared t p help to get him out when he escaped. From that time his nerves went steadily downhill, and in June of this year I received a letter from him telling me that he was in a bad way.” Mr.. Danford-Thomas: Do you know the circumstances under which he was certified? Dr. Parkes: Well, he was a temperamental man, and he had just decided completely to alter his ways in many respects. He was going “on the water wagon/’ and he had taken a step which I hope all bachelors take at some time in their life, and resolved to turn over a new leaf. In order toi make some sort of definite binding contract with himself he bad taken a knife and cut a small cross on his chest.
“He said to me, ‘lt’s just like the Crusaders, Parkes. I made a cross on my own body to register this vow.’ It was partly on the strength of that that he certified for self-mutilation.”
Dr. Parkes said that Meiklejohn had an extensive knowledge of masonic matters and signs, although lie was not a mason. “He told me,” added the doctor, “that this knowledge came to him from people on the “other side.” He gave me a number of signs, and a friend of mine who is a mason assured me that they have a direct bearing on masonry.” Mr. Danford-Thomas: You say that this man was certified without your knowledge? —Yes. Did he not ask for you? —He was not given an opportunity. He was taken away from his diggings in Hamjjstcad in his/nightdress—a most extraordinary state of things. Dr. Parkes, asked if Meiklejohn was quite normal before the certification, said he was undoubtedly temperamental. He was strongly built, and rather than argue with a man he would always knock him down. After Meiklejohn escaped no effort was made to get him back to the asylum. Mr. Danford-Thomas said he would like to hear from the police some details of the circumstances in which Meiklejohn was Certified. A police constable produced a copy of the official record, which stated that on June 24, 1924, the police were called to a house at Hampstead. They there saw Meiklejohn, who was in an excited condition and suffering from fiesh wounds in his chest.
Police Constable Sergeant, who found Meiklejohn’s body in a plot of firs, with a billlet wound in the temple, said that in the man’s pockets were twelve pamphlets on .lunacy reform, three £5 notes, thir-ty-seven £1 Treasury notes, thirtyeight shillings in silver, and a number of bottles of medicine.
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XLVIII, Issue 3698, 1 October 1927, Page 1
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536SENT FROM THE DEAD. Manawatu Herald, Volume XLVIII, Issue 3698, 1 October 1927, Page 1
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