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The human v. animal sport examined during the trial is cock throwing. Cock Throwing [The Prosecution calls noted German intellectual Mark Schairbaum.] Prosecution: Describe the game of cock-throwing? Schairbaum: Normally, someone ties a cock to a stake. Standing around twenty yards from the cock, men compete by attempting to hit it with the chosen projectile.1 Prosecution: Could you please describe the "projectile." Schairbaum: The weapons usually thrown are either cudgels or broomsticks.2 Prosecution: Are there are other throwing games that do not harm animals? Schairbaum: Yes. Prosecution: Then why do people play ones that torment animals? Schairbaum: They enjoy the supremacy in their ability to over-power other species. These people take out their aggressions on the ones that can not speak.
[Defense Cross-examines Schairbaum.] Defense: Could this game be fun? Schairbaum: For some, yes. Defense: Why deprive the people of their entertainment? Schairbaum: Because they are harming others.
[The prosecution calls former cock-thrower T.M. Leigh.] Prosecution: From your personal experiences, what happens to the cock as a result of the throwing? Leigh: It dies. Prosecution: Does the cock die instantaneously? Leigh: No, the competitor at times has to keep on throwing at the animal for it to die.3 Prosecution: Does the cock suffer? Leigh: Yes, its body is quite marked up with wounds. Its legs are often broken.4 Prosecution: Does cock-throwing pose any other dangers? Leigh: Sometimes the sticks go off course and hit people.
[The Defense Cross-examines Leigh.] Defense: Are these animals that are being killed regularly killed anyway? Leigh: Yes. Defense: Do people have the right to kill the food of their choice as they see fit? Leigh: Yes. Defense: So, could it be possible that these cocks will be eaten afterwards? Leigh: Yes.
[The Prosecution calls Henry Brand to the stand.] Prosecution: Is cock-throwing good for society? Brand: It is an amusement fit only for the bloodiest savages, and not for humanized men, much less for Christians. A barbarous custom.5 [Mr. Brand is removed from the courtroom by guards and asked not to return.]
COMMENTARY: Both the defense and prosecutions' arguments are hurt by the scarcity of evidence still available at the end of the 20th century. The lack of living cock-throwing spectators and throwers still around today also takes away chances for oral histories. |
Copyright © 1999 Lara Zador and Jason Winokur. All rights reserved. Email zadorl@umich.edu or jwin@umich.edu with comments or suggestions. |