Mr. Fairlie’s prejudices might be reasoned away⁠—that the false testimony of the Count and his wife, and all the rest of the false testimony, might be confuted⁠—that the recognition could not possibly be ascribed to a mistake between Laura and Anne Catherick, or the handwriting be declared by our enemies to be a clever fraud⁠—all these are assumptions which, more or less, set plain probabilities at defiance; but let them pass⁠—and let us ask ourselves what would be the first consequence or the first questions put to Laura herself on the subject of the conspiracy. We know only too well what the consequence would be, for we know that she has never recovered her memory of what happened to her in London. Examine her privately, or examine her publicly, she is utterly incapable of assisting the assertion of her own case. If you don’t see this, Marian, as plainly as I see it, we will go to Limmeridge and try the experiment tomorrow.”

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