id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt miun.aan6316.0001.001 Collins Wilkie The law and the lady. A novel. By Wilkie Collins 1875 .txt text/plain 117294 9616 86 declared that he had traveled to London for the express purpose of speaking to me personally on this serious subject.'I know your weakness,' he said,'where women are eoncerned. He looked at Benjamin, and said," Will you speak to Mrs. Woodville?" the Verdict, he, the said Eustace Macallan,"ought to be punished with the pains of the law, to deter others friom committing like crimes in all time coming." Mrs. Macallan had said to her on the day when that lady Both the ladies were asked, in turn, if Mrs. Eustace Macallan had expressed to them, directly or indirectly, any intention of obtaining arsenic, with a view to the improvement the house at the time had poisoned Mrs. Eustace Macallan? "Wait a little," said Mrs. Macallan, "and "Thus far, you know little or nothing about me, Mr. Dexter," I said. ./cache/miun.aan6316.0001.001.pdf ./txt/miun.aan6316.0001.001.txt