[Birds of Prey by M. E. Braddon]@TWC D-Link bookBirds of Prey CHAPTER I 13/39
How did you discover the marriage-lines ?" "Not without hard labour, I can tell you.
Of course my idea of a secret marriage was at the best only a plausible hypothesis; and I hardly dared to hug myself with the hope that it might turn up trumps.
My idea was based upon two or three facts, namely, the character of the young man, his long residence in London away from the ken of respectable relatives and friends, and the extraordinary state of the marriage laws at the period in which our man lived." "Ah, to be sure! That was a strong point." "I should rather think it was.
I took the trouble to look up the history of Mayfair marriages and Fleet marriages before you started for Ullerton, and I examined all the evidence I could get on that subject. I made myself familiar with the Rev.Alexander Keith of Mayfair, who helped to bring clandestine marriages into vogue amongst the swells, and with Dr.Gaynham--agreeably nicknamed Bishop of Hell--and more of the same calibre; and the result of my investigations convinced me that in those days a hare-brained young reprobate must have found it rather more difficult to avoid matrimony than to achieve it.
He might be married when he was tipsy; he might be married when he was comatose from the effects of a stand-up fight with Mohawks; his name might be assumed by some sportive Benedick of his acquaintance given to practical joking, and he might find himself saddled with a wife he never saw; or if, on the other hand, of an artful and deceptive turn, he might procure a certificate of a marriage that had never taken place,--for there were very few friendly offices which the Fleet parsons refused to perform for their clients--for a consideration." "But how about the legality of the Fleet marriage ?" "There's the rub.
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