Amos Kilbright; His Adscititious Experiences by Frank Richard Stockton
page 36 of 103 (34%)
page 36 of 103 (34%)
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proposed marriage. We want to do what is right and fair, and we have no
desire that any act of ours shall create a widow." "Then," I exclaimed, "you relinquish your design against Mr. Kilbright?" "Not at all," said he. "We shall carry out our plan before our subject marries. If you choose to hurry up matters and have the wedding take place before we are ready to proceed with our dematerializing process, we shall be very sorry, but the blame must rest on you. You should have had consideration enough for all parties to prevent any such complication as an engagement to marry. As to what you said in your letter in regard to invoking the law against us, I attach no weight whatever to that threat." "You will find you have made a great mistake," said I, angrily, "when I have brought the law to bear upon you, which now I shall not delay to do." "You will merely bring ridicule upon yourself," he said, "if you assert that the man you wish to protect is Amos Kilbright. We can prove by records, still to be seen in Bixbury, that said person died in seventeen eighty-five. On the other hand, if you choose to assert that he is, or was, anybody else, how are you going to prove it? All that you can say is that the person you refer to came from, you knew not where, and has gone, you know not where. If you declare that at one time he was a materialized spirit, you know very well how such a statement as that would be received in a court of law. It will be much wiser to let it be supposed that the person who has lately been seen about this town has run off to Canada, than to make any sort of legal inquiry into the |
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