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Updated: May 12, 2025


In October, 1746, his wife, by the advice of her friends and in accordance with Scots practice, raised in the Commissary Court at Edinburgh an action of declarator of marriage against her perfidious spouse, and the case was still pending before the Commissaries when Lord Mark Kerr, as we have seen, "gave away" his grand-nephew to the Blandys.

Lord Mark Kerr, a soldier and a gentleman, becoming aware of the footing upon which his graceless grand-nephew was enjoying the Blandys' hospitality, wrote to the attorney the amazing news that his daughter's lover already had a wife and child living in Scotland. The facts, so far as we know them, were these.

The Blandys' door was open to all; their table, "whether filled with company or not, was every day plenteously supplied"; and a profuse if somewhat ostentatious hospitality was the "note" of the house, a comfortable mansion on the London road, close to Henley Bridge.

Fortunately, she had preserved the original draft, together with her faithless husband's letters thereanent. This judgment was, for the gallant defender, now on half-pay, a veritable débâcle, and we may be sure that the confiding Blandys would have heard no word of it from him; but Mrs. Cranstoun, having learned something of the game her spouse was playing at Henley, herself wrote to Mr.

She knew that, but for the £10,000 bait, her crafty lover would surely play her false; her father was sick of the whole affair, and if she went off with the captain, would doubtless disinherit her. As for that "honourable" gentleman himself, the inducement to get possession of her £10,000, the beginning and end of his connection with the Blandys, sufficiently explains his purpose.

On the strength of the old lady's continued illness, Cranstoun contrived to "put in" another six months' free board and lodging under the Blandys' hospitable roof, until his regiment was "broke" at Southampton, when he set out for London. During this visit, says Mary, her father was sometimes "very rude" to his guest, which, in the circumstances, is not surprising.

With the proverbial blindness of those unwilling to see, the old man did nothing further in regard to Lord Mark Kerr's communication; that nobleman, annoyed at the indifference with which his well-meant warning had been received, forbade his kinsman the house, and the Blandys were thus deprived of their only means of knowledge as to the doings of their ambiguous guest.

Cranstoun pays a second six-months' visit to the Blandys. December Cranstoun's regiment "broke" at Southampton. He returns to London. March Mrs. Blandy and Mary visit Mr. Sergeant Stevens in Doctors' Commons. 28 September Mrs. Blandy taken ill after her return home. 30 September Death of Mrs. Blandy. August Cranstoun returns to Henley. Puts powder in Mr. Blandy's tea.

August Cranstoun meets Mary Blandy at Lord Mark Kerr's. October Mrs. Cranstoun takes proceedings in Commissary Court. August Second meeting of Cranstoun and Mary. Cranstoun visits the Blandys and stays six months. January Cranstoun returns to London. 1 March Cranstoun's marriage upheld by the Commissary Court. May Mrs. Blandy's illness at Turville Court.

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