Bristol Mercury - 21 March 1888
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TEMPLE CLOUD POLICE COURT
ALLEGED ATTEMPTED SUICIDE John James, of Hallatrow, an old man, was brought up in custody charged with attempting to commit suicide on March 17th. Mary Chappell, of Old Mills, said her husband kept a beerhouse, at Paulton, and on Saturday morning the prisoner had two pints of beer at the house at half-past-six in the morning. After some conversation the prisoner said he had his grave marked out, in a field where there was a well. He repeated this, and she spoke to him about it, telling him to go to his work. She left the room, and whilst away the prisoner left the house and walked fast up the lane towards Paulton. She had never noticed anything strange in his manner and did not think he was drunk when he said what he did. In answer to the prisoner witness said that he was at her house on Thursday and Friday, the 15th and 16th inst. but she could not say whether he drank heavily on those days. He was in the house for nine or ten hours on each of those days. William Carter, living next door to the last witness, said that Mrs Chappell told him of the prisoner's threat, and he followed him into a field where there was a well, and his hands were resting on the opposite side of the well. He was shouting out and seemed as if he was out of his mind. Witness ran up to him and pulled him away, but prisoner struggled and said "That's my home down there; I'm going before the day is out." James got back to the well and remained by the side of it for an hour and witness stayed with him. Further evidence having been taken, the prisoner was committed for trial at the quarter session.