I accordingly served out my four years at Wetumpka, Ala., and all to avoid going to Mississippi to be tried for the murder of Harvey.
However, I did not evade the rigor of the laws of Mississippi. The vigilance of the Sheriff of Perry county threw a guard around me, that secured to him the possession of my person at the expiration of my time in the penitentiary of Alabama, and he immediately transferred me to the county jail of Perry county, Mississippi.
I remained in the jail of Perry and Covington counties upward of two years before I had a trial. I was found guilty of murder; and the sentence of death was passed upon me, and the day appointed for my execution. Within eight days of the time the Sheriff informed me that my time was only eight days, and that my rope, shroud and burial clothes were all ready. He then read to me the death warrant! My tongue nor pen cannot express my feelings on that occasion during that day and night. However, to my great joy, the next morning he brought me the glorious news that the clerk of the court had received a supersedeas and order to respite my execution, and carry my case to the High Court of Errors and Appeals.
I cannot express my joyful feelings on receiving this intelligence. It removed that cloud of horror and despair, which was lowering upon and around me, and renovated anew my whole soul. It was to me as a refulgent light from the sun of heaven cast upon the dark and gloomy vale; but, alas, how ephemeral that sunshine of joy and bliss! That fickle dame, Fortune, upon whose wheel I had so successfully floated in former days, finally brought me to the same point where I started.
I was, therefore, conveyed from the Perry county jail to the State penitentiary at Jackson, to await there a hearing of my case in the High Court of Errors and Appeals, and remained there about two years. In the meanwhile my case was argued before this Court, and the judgment reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in the Circuit Court of Perry county.
TRIAL OF JAMES COPELAND.
TRANSCRIPT OF THE JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS.
At the September term of said Court, in the year A. D. 1857, on Wednesday of the term, it being the 16th day of the month, James Copeland was taken to the Bar of the Court and arraigned upon an indictment, found by the following Grand Jury at the March term, 1857, to-wit: John McCallum, Lemuel Strahan, John W. Carter, Allen Travis, Lewis H. Watts, James Chappell, G. W. Rawls, Wm. Jenkins, Peter McDonald, Malachi Odom, Joseph G. Young, James M. Bradler, Sr., Stephen Smith, Wm. Hinton, Edmund Merritt, Sidney Hinton, Joseph T. Breeland, Henry Dearman, Lorenzo Batson and John Fairley, Foreman—which indictment was as follows: