Man and Wife eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 882 pages of information about Man and Wife.

Man and Wife eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 882 pages of information about Man and Wife.
a Non-conformist minister to celebrate a marriage which may be lawfully celebrated by a clergyman of the Established Church.  An odd state of things.  Foreigners might possibly think it a scandalous state of things.  In this country we don’t appear to mind it.  Returning to the present case, the results stand thus:  Mr. Vanborough is a single man; Mrs. Vanborough is a single woman; their child is illegitimate, and the priest, Ambrose Redman, is liable to be tried, and punished, as a felon, for marrying them.”

“An infamous law!” said Mr. Kendrew.

“It is the law,” returned Mr. Delamayn, as a sufficient answer to him.

Thus far not a word had escaped the master of the house.  He sat with his lips fast closed and his eyes riveted on the table, thinking.

Mr. Kendrew turned to him, and broke the silence.

“Am I to understand,” he asked, “that the advice you wanted from me related to this?

“Yes.”

“You mean to tell me that, foreseeing the present interview and the result to which it might lead, you felt any doubt as to the course you were bound to take?  Am I really to understand that you hesitate to set this dreadful mistake right, and to make the woman who is your wife in the sight of Heaven your wife in the sight of the law?”

“If you choose to put it in that light,” said Mr. Vanborough; “if you won’t consider—­”

“I want a plain answer to my question—­’yes, or no.’”

“Let me speak, will you!  A man has a right to explain himself, I suppose?”

Mr. Kendrew stopped him by a gesture of disgust.

“I won’t trouble you to explain yourself,” he said.  “I prefer to leave the house.  You have given me a lesson, Sir, which I shall not forget.  I find that one man may have known another from the days when they were both boys, and may have seen nothing but the false surface of him in all that time.  I am ashamed of having ever been your friend.  You are a stranger to me from this moment.”

With those words he left the room.

“That is a curiously hot-headed man,” remarked Mr. Delamayn.  “If you will allow me, I think I’ll change my mind.  I’ll have a glass of wine.”

Mr. Vanborough rose to his feet without replying, and took a turn in the room impatiently.  Scoundrel as he was—­in intention, if not yet in act—­the loss of the oldest friend he had in the world staggered him for the moment.

“This is an awkward business, Delamayn,” he said.  “What would you advise me to do?”

Mr. Delamayn shook his head, and sipped his claret.

“I decline to advise you,” he answered.  “I take no responsibility, beyond the responsibility of stating the law as it stands, in your case.”

Mr. Vanborough sat down again at the table, to consider the alternative of asserting or not asserting his freedom from the marriage tie.  He had not had much time thus far for turning the matter over in his mind.  But for his residence on the Continent the question of the flaw in his marriage might no doubt have been raised long since.  As things were, the question had only taken its rise in a chance conversation with Mr. Delamayn in the summer of that year.

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Man and Wife from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.