The Experiences of a Barrister, and Confessions of an Attorney eBook

Samuel Warren (English lawyer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 399 pages of information about The Experiences of a Barrister, and Confessions of an Attorney.

The Experiences of a Barrister, and Confessions of an Attorney eBook

Samuel Warren (English lawyer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 399 pages of information about The Experiences of a Barrister, and Confessions of an Attorney.
of cerebral infirmity, would not be permitted towards the meanest human being, much less a tenderly-nurtured, delicate female.  At length, under the influence of a composing draught, she sank gradually to sleep; and Lady Compton having determined to rescue her, if possible, from the suspicious custody of her relatives, and naturally apprehensive of the legal difficulties which she could not doubt would impede the execution of her generous, if somewhat Quixotic project, resolved on at once sending off an express for Mr. Ferret, on whose acumen and zeal she knew she could place the fullest reliance.

Clara Brandon’s simple history may be briefly summed up.  She was the only child of a Mr. Frederick Brandon, who, a widower in the second year of his marriage, had since principally resided at the “Elms,” a handsome mansion and grounds which he had leased of the uncle of the late Sir Harry Compton.  At his decease, which occurred about two years previous to poor Clara’s escape from confinement, as just narrated, he bequeathed his entire fortune, between two and three thousand pounds per annum, chiefly secured on land, to his daughter; appointed his elder brother, Major Brandon, sole executor of his will, and guardian of his child; and in the event of her dying before she had attained her majority—­of which she wanted, at her father’s death, upwards of three years—­or without lawful issue, the property was to go to the major, to be by him willed at his pleasure.  Major Brandon, whose physical and mental energies had been prematurely broken down—­he was only in his fifty-second year—­either by excess or hard service in the East, perhaps both, had married late in life the widow of a brother officer, and the mother of a grown-up son.  The lady, a woman of inflexible will, considerable remains of a somewhat masculine beauty, and about ten years her husband’s junior, held him in a state of thorough pupilage; and, unchecked by him, devoted all her energies to bring about, by fair or foul means, a union between Clara and her own son, a cub of some two or three-and-twenty years of age, whose sole object in seconding his mother’s views upon Clara was the acquisition of her wealth.  According to popular surmise and report, the young lady’s mental infirmity had been brought about by the persecutions she had endured at the hands of Mrs. Brandon, with a view to force her into a marriage she detested.  The most reliable authority for the truth of these rumors was Susan Hopley, now in the service of Lady Compton, but who had lived for many years with Mr. Frederick Brandon and his daughter.  She had been discharged about six months after her master’s decease by Mrs. Major Brandon for alleged impertinence; and so thoroughly convinced was Susan that the soon-afterwards alleged lunacy of Clara was but a juggling pretence to excuse the restraint under which her aunt-in-law, for the furtherance of her own vile purposes, had determined to keep her, that although out of place at the time, she devoted all

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The Experiences of a Barrister, and Confessions of an Attorney from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.