Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Modern State Trials, Vol. 1 of 2: Revised and Illustrated With Essays and Notes
The prosecution of the Wakefields for conspiracy, and the abduction of Miss Tamer, forms a singular chapter in legal history; interesting not less to the student of human nature on account of its characters and incidents, than to the lawyer for those elaborate discussions on the Scottish law of marriage, and the right of the wife, even should there have been a legal marriage, to appear as a witness against the offending husband, which were argued with such profuse learning and ability. But for these memorabilia, and the knowledge that all the facts con nected with so remarkable a conviction were to be inserted at length in the next collection of State Trials, the Editor would have preferred omitting this peculiar case, lest it should open wounds long since healed, and lacerate private feelings. His comments are strictly confined to the evidence actually adduced, but he has been informed that a far more favourable interpretation might have been given to the few circumstances which implicated the daughter of the late Dr. Davies, had witnesses been called on her behalf.
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