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Leaves from the Portfolio of a Practicing Lawyer

The Bracelet

By Henry Legare


‘Save her! for the love of Heaven, sir, save her! she is innocent, I am sure she is innocent!’ passionately exclaimed a young man, the expression of whose features gave additional force to his words.

‘I hope I may be able to do so, Duncan,’ replied his listener, a young lawyer, very little older however, than his client, ‘but I fear I cannot—the evidence is too strong. But I will try. Can you find anyone that will go her bail? You are not a house-keeper, and cannot.’

‘I do not know, sir,’ replied the client; ‘perhaps my employer, Mr. Murphy, may be willing to do so.’

‘You had better see him at once,’ said Mr. Hartley—that was the attorney’s name—‘for Mary, poor girl, ou’t not to suffer the contamination of a prison.’

‘She would die there, indeed she would!’ was the passionate answer, and at the thought the speaker burst into tears. ‘Mr. Hartley,’ he continued, ‘forgive me, my heart is broken!’

‘Do not despond, Duncan,’ said the other, feelingly and kindly; ‘all may yet be well—at least I hope so!’

‘You believe her guilty, sir, I am sure you do,’ exclaimed the one we have called Duncan; ‘but she is not, indeed she is not.’

‘I don’t know what to believe,’ replied the lawyer, ‘I cannot conceive any motive for the offence.’

‘And today we were to have been married,’ thus soliloquized the young man. ‘It is too, too horrible!’

‘Do not despond, Duncan,’ said Hartley; ‘rather meet this untoward event with fortitude. Go, my good fellow, bring Mr. Murphy here. I will endeavor to persuade him to become her security.’

‘I will, sir,’ replied the client. ‘He shall be here in half an hour.’

‘In the meantime Mary will arrive,’ said Hartley. ‘I told the officer who had her in… Read More