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FREE ESSAY ON LIZZIE BORDEN

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The Case of Lizzie Borden
This paper analyzes the murder case of Lizzie Borden and her eventual acquittal. -- 1,350 words;

Lizzie Borden’s Motives
A comprehensive examination of what might have compelled Lizzie Borden to murder her parents. -- 1,467 words; MLA

Lizzy Borden
Examines her life and her trial for murdering her parents, at which she was aquitted. -- 1,350 words;

Hellenism and Hebraism in Victorian Literature
This paper examines Matthew Arnold's Hellenism and Hebraism as personified by Christina Rosetti's Laura and Lizzie in "Goblin Market". -- 1,240 words; MLA

Gender, Desire, and Repression in “Goblin Market”
An analysis of the poem by Christina Rossetti called “Goblin Market”. -- 2,357 words;

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LIZZIE BORDEN

L I z z I e B o r d e n
A little over a century ago a gruesome double murder was committed, in the 2-? story
house at 92 Second Street, in Fall River, Massachusetts. This crime shocked the nation as
Lizzie Borden, a 32-year-old Sunday school teacher, went on trial for the murder of her
father and her stepmother. An all male jury eventually acquitted her on the accusations.
To this day, the murderer of Andrew J. Borden and Abby Gray Borden is still unknown, but
in the public mind everyone believes it was Lizzie Borden.
Lizzie was born and grew up in Fall River, Mass. She was the youngest daughter of Andrew
Jackson Borden, who was a very successful Banker and Sarah Morse Borden. Sarah died when
Lizzie was very young and Andrew then married Abby Durfee Gray. Lizzie grew up with an
elder sister, Emma. Neither of them has ever married. The sisters hated their stepmother,
mainly because of the family's inferior social position.
On the day of August 4, 1892, the bodies of Andrew Borden and his wife were found
mutilated. As opposed to 40 whacks, in the popular rhyme, 19 blows struck Abby Borden by
a hatchet or axe to the back of her head and neck. At the time she was cleaning the
guestroom of the family home, at 9:30 am. Andrew Borden, who had returned home around
10:30 am, after his daily business had been attended to, was either napping or reading
the newspaper on a couch in the parlor, when he was attacked. 11 blows were rained upon
Mr. Borden's head and face, to the point that one eye hung from its socket upon his
cheek, and his close friend and physician, Dr. Bowen, couldn't recognize him.
There were only two people in or about the house at the time of the killings, Lizzie
Andrew Borden and Bridget Sullivan, the Borden's maid. There is some speculation as to
others that may have been responsible for these heinous acts. Among the other alleged
killers are John Morse, the brother of Andrew's first wife, a secret lover Lizzie was
said to have, though never named, Emma Borden, Lizzie's elder sister, and William Borden,
who, while legally Andrew's second cousin, was rumored to really be his illegitimate son.

Soon after the murders, Lizzie emerged as the prime suspect after John Morse's alibi
checked out. She then was arrested and tried on three counts, the murder of Abbey, of
Andrew, and of them both and, if found guilty, faced death by hanging. Six days after the
murders occurred, she went to court. The all-male jury was put into a difficult position.
It was the Victorian Era where women were considered delicate flowers and not capable of
killing someone and it was not a common or working class woman they were to judge guilty
or innocent, it was a wealthy society lady. After only an hour of deliberating, the jury
declared Lizzie to be not guilty. It is said it only took them 15 minutes to decide, but
out of respect for the prosecution, they waited another 45 minutes before they informed
the court of their decision. 
What makes the Fall River murders so perplexing is that the motive, the weapon and the
opportunity for such a crime are all seemingly absent. When the Fall River constabulary
investigated the murders, they found no money or jewelry missing, not even small amounts
of change or the packet of bus tickets as were taken in the daytime break-in at the
Borden home twelve months earlier. Later, Prosecuting Attorney Knowlton hired a machinist
who spent two days cracking open Andrew Borden's safe in hopes of finding a missing will
disinheriting both daughters. But Borden died intestate, leaving Lizzie and Emma to
inherit his entire fortune.
Besides the lack of a clear motive for the murders, there was also the disconcerting lack
of opportunity. Fall River found the entire Borden house locked up as usual, and during
the two-and-a-half-hour period in which both murders were completed, the maid Bridget was
outside the house washing windows and daughter Lizzie was inside the house reading a
magazine. Even if one of the two committed the crime, the violent and bloody act should
have been noisy enough to attract the attention of the other. 
Shortly after the trial, Emma and Lizzie each inherited half of their father's estate,
about $200,000.00 each, a large sum in those days. Their first purchase was a home on The
Hill, at 7 French Street, which Lizzie named Maplecroft. While at the time, Lizzie was
said to have never had a thought of moving away from Fall River, in her later years,
friends said she had questioned her decision to stay. Lizzie became a social outcast
after the trial, with few friends remaining loyal. Her every move was scrutinized: if she
appeared solemn in public, it was because she was guilt-ridden because of her crime; if
she was happy, it proved she was a heartless monster. Soon, the only shopping trips she
made were to the larger cities, such as Boston, Providence and New York.
Lizzie refused to give newspaper interviews, in the hope that perhaps the attention that
was constantly focused upon her would go away. But people were always hungry for gossip
about Lizzie, and the papers were all too happy to print any and all rumors that were
circulating about her, and if there weren't one, the paper would create a new piece of
gossip. Among these rumors were tales of supposed engagements and accusations of
shoplifting. These papers never seemed willing to print tales of her good deeds, such as
her many charitable donations, her aide to deserving young people who could not afford a
college education. Nor did they print stories of her love of animals, or of the arts.
Lizzie enjoyed going to the theatre, and was an avid fan of Nance O'Neil, a stage and
silent film actress of the day. It was a party thrown for Nance and the members of her
acting troupe that caused Emma to move from Maplecroft in 1905. Emma, being a quiet and
timid woman, simply could not abide by the rowdiness of Lizzie's newfound friends.
Little has been written about the friendship between Lizzie and Nance, though rumors
abound that they were in fact lovers for a brief time. It is nearly impossible to say
whether or not this is true. At the same time, however, Lizzie may have become very
lonely. How many men were likely to call on a woman that may have killed her father and
stepmother? Perhaps out of desperation, Lizzie sought comfort and love in the arms of
another woman. 
By many reports, Lizzie and Emma had little or no communication after Emma left
Maplecroft. Emma moved to Newmarket, New Hampshire, and the two sisters never saw each
other again. Lizzie died on June 1, 1927, at the age of 67. Emma did not attend the
funeral, because on the day of Lizzie's death, she had fallen and suffered a broken hip.
Emma died on June 21, 1927 at the age of 76, just ten days after Lizzie. Both were buried
in the Borden family plot, in Fall River's Oak Grove Cemetery. Andrew Borden lies between
Sarah and Abbey, his wives, while Lizzie and Emma are at his feet. A grant made to the
city of Fall River in Lizzie's will pays for the perpetual upkeep of the plot.


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