delivered the opinion of the court.
William Spencer, a colored man and a ' convict working with the State road force in Lee county, was. indicted for the murder of a white girl, Maxie Eraser, thirteen years of age, in the county of Lee, on October 31, 1924. He was ably defended by counsel assigned him by the court for this purpose.
The jury found him guilty of the murder and fixed his punishment at death. Upon this verdict judgment was rendered by the court, and from that judgment a writ of error was awarded.
There are three assignments of error.
The first assignment alleges error in giving instruction No. 11 for the Commonwealth. The instruction was as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that murder by poison, lying in wait, imprisonment, starving, or any wilful, *534deliberate and premeditated killing, or in the commission of, or attempt to commit, arson, rape, robbery, or burglary, is murder in the first degree. All other murder is murder in the second degree.”
We understand that this assignment of error was not insisted upon here, but if it had been, the instruction was only given as the statutory definition of murder. It properly defined it in the very language of the statute, it could not have misled the jury, and there was no prejudicial error in giving it.
The second assignment of error is set out in bill of exceptions No. 2, where in effect a mistrial is charged on account of alleged intemperate and inflammatory language used by the assistant prosecuting attorney, as follows:
“ Gentlemen of the jury, that man there (pointing towards defendant), is the low down fiend who committed that awful crime of the killing of that little girl, Maxie Kinser; there is no doubt or question about that. He did not rape her, but no doubt that was his purpose. I believe God sent those two little boys up the hill making a noise rolling their wheel, which he heard and ran away. No doubt God sent these two little boys up there to scare that fiend away, so that the little girl could go on to heaven virtuous. What would he care for a life sentence in the penitentiary of the State! That would just be a home for him, there to be fed and clothed at the expense of the taxpayers of the State. He had already been confined in the penitentiary for a long time, and that has done him no good. You ought to give bim the death sentence. I could gladly see it, -and it would do my soul good to see that fiend — that low down niger — the very scum of the earth, who sits there, placed in the hottest place in hell, where he ought to be, and I would rejoice to hear his flesh broil and his bones crackle.”
*535The bill of exceptions • shows that upon objection being made to the language so used, the court promptly instructed the jury to disregard the statements and that they should be in no way influenced by them. The court was not asked to declare a mistrial, discharge the jury and grant the prisoner a new trial, or after the verdict to set it aside and grant the prisoner a new trial. The objection and exception were to the language used, without further motion of any kind. The proper procedure would have been to move the court to set aside the verdict of the jury and grant the prisoner a new trial, or to discharge the jury and grant the prisoner a new trial.
However, if upon the whole ease it appears to this court that the accused was prejudiced by the language used and did not have a fair trial, it would be the duty of this court to reverse the case and remand it for a new trial.
The decisions in Virginia and elsewhere support these two general propositions:
1. That a new trial may be allowed where the court has failed or refused' to properly check improper remarks or argument of counsel, or to properly instruct the jury thereon, but the statements must be fairly calculated to improperly influence the jury. Mullins Case, 113 Va. 792, 75 S. E. 193; McCoy’s Case, 125 Va. 778, 99 S. E. 644.
2. That there are cases in which the effect of statements of counsel cannot be adequately overcome by direction to the jury to disregard the objeetionablo statements. Washington & O. D. Ry. v. Ward, 119 Va. 339, 89 S. E. 140; Rinehart & Dennis Co. v. Brown, 137 Va. 675, 120 S. E. 269; Harris v. Commonwealth, 133 Va. 700, 112 S. E. 753.
The inquiry upon this assignment of error, therefore, *536is, as stated in 29 Cyc. 774, “whether the statements were fairly calculated to improperly influence the jury,” notwithstanding the instruction of the court to disregard. We cannot determine this question by an examination of the statements alone. The question as to whether language used is prejudicial depends also upon the facts of the particular ease. Thus, if, in the trial of a criminal case, the evidence is such that reasonable men could not disagree as to the guilt of the accused, and further, if the enormity of the crime is such that only the highest penalty prescribed by law will meet the ends of justice, we have a case which, while it would not justify the use of inflammatory language in argument, the use of such language would not prejudice the accused, as it might well do in a case where the guilt of the accused was not so certainly established, and where it may be a debatable question as to the grade of punishment which should be meted out.
We cannot, in any aspect of the case, justify the remarks of the assistant attorney for the Commonwealth. We do not consider that they amounted to the indulgence in inferences not supported by the evidence, but they were of an inflammatory nature, calculated to arouse prejudice and passion, which, in a case less certainly made out than the one here presented, would have raised a serious question as to the propriety of declaring a mistrial by the court. A very just and proper rebuke was administered by the presiding judge, and but for the fact that the result, as we view the evidence, would inevitably have been the same, if the assistant prosecuting attorney had not addressed the jury at all, we should feel constrained to reverse the ease.
The frequency with which complaints of the use of inflammatory, abusive, and extravagant and intern*537perate language are reaching this court leads us to suggest that trial courts are fully competent to protect themselves against these assaults upon orderly procedure, by fining or, in aggravated eases and when the-offense is persisted in, even by imprisoning offenders. It is fair to say, however, that so far as we are advised, no complaint has reached us as to misconduct of this character on the part of the regular attorneys for the Commonwealth.
But the evidence in this case, although circumstantial, leaves not a shadow of doubt of the guilt of the accused. Reasonable men could not differ upon this issue. Nor would any penalty but the extreme penalty of death begin to answer for the enormity of the crime, as evidenced by the manner in which it was perpetrated.
It is not necessary to go at length into the details-of the case to demonstrate the truth of these two assertions. The sufficiency of the proof was admitted by counsel in the argument. The prisoner’s connection with the crime and the enormity of it are sufficiently indicated by the following brief statement:
On the day before the murder the prisoner had been: to the home of the parents of Maxie Kinser, a thirteen, year old girl, and had carried away an opossum, which some members of the family had baked for him, in a pan loaned him for the purpose. He suggested to a companion that there were two pretty girls at the Kinserhome, and if he would carry the pan back he might get in with one of them. On the day of the murder, he started to the Kinser home to carry the pan back. Maxie Kinser was alone in the house at the time, her father having gone to work, her mother and two sisters having gone to the home of a married daughter, her small brother having gone to drive the cows to pasture. The prisoner was seen going in the direction of the house-*538with the pan, he was seen handing it in the window to some one inside. It was found in the Kinser home afterwards. The prisoner with a stick in his hand was seen by several witnesses running from the direction of the Kinser house, and a few minutes after he was seen, the little brother, returning home with a companion, found Maxie Kinser in a semiconscious condition, lying on the ground at the back door of the house, with her skull crushed, bleeding at the mouth and ears, and denuded of all her clothing. There were bruises, described as finger marks, on her throat, and her body was scratched and bruised. She died without regaining oonseiousness.
The little girl was left alone only a few minutes by her brother, and during that time she was killed. The time of the appearance of the prisoner in the vicinity of the house, at the house, and of his running away from it, fit in exactly with this short space of time when ¡she was alone, and there was a general alarm, resulting in Spencer’s arrest almost before he had gotten out of the shadow of the house. There were blood spots on his overalls, and analysis showed them to be human blood. There was other incriminating evidence, but this is sufficient to show not only the certainty of guilt, .but the enormity of the crime.
In such a ease, we cannot conceive that the remarks ■of the attorney assisting in the prosecution could have improperly influenced the jury, either in arriving at a verdict of guilt, or in fixing the punishment.
The third and last assignment of error is based upon demonstrations of bystanders in the presence of the jury. The demonstration consisted of applause of the remarks of the attorney above referred to, which was promptly cheeked by the court, and all persons engaged in it were severely reprimanded, and *539the jury were very fully and very earnestly instructed to disregard it.
It is needless to go into a discussion of this assignment. Much of what has been said in the discussion of the second assignment is applicable here. In addition, the subject of this assignment has been thoroughly considered by this court in a number of recent cases. Without quoting from any of them, reference is made to the cases of Doyle v. Commonwealth, 100 Va. 808, 40 S. E. 925, and Bowles v. Commonwealth, 103 Va. 816, 48 S. E. 527. In both of these eases, where the circumstances were identical with the circumstances here,, this court, speaking in the first case through Judge Keith and in the second through Judge Cardwell, while such conduct was deplored and condemned, it was held that as the misconduct of the spectators received at the hands of the presiding judge a prompt and vigorous rebuke, sufficient to prevent its recurrence, the assignment of error was without merit. And so we hold here, especially as in addition to rebuking the spectators, the presiding judge, in this ease, instructed the jury to-disregard the demonstration.
For the foregoing reasons, we are of opinion to affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Affirmed.