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Updated: June 4, 2025


Is that enough?" "And you love him?" "No." "It must be like having your head in chancery. Can't you get it out?" "No." "Why?" "Divorce-court! Ugh! I couldn't!" "Yes, I know it's hellish!" Was he, who gripped her hand so hard and said that, really the same nonchalant young man who had leaned out of the carriage window, gurgling with laughter? And what had made the difference?

You of all people, and him of all people! Agh! If you got him, what would you have? And how long would you keep him? You can't make a household pet out of a laughing hyena. Chuck him, I say." "But that means the divorce-court, Jim." "What of it? It's cleaner and sweeter than this arrangement." "But the newspapers?" "Ah, what do you care about them?

Neither of them seemed destined to go into the English divorce-court, and such a circumstance on the part of one's near relations struck Laura as in itself almost sufficient to constitute happiness. Miss Steet never lived in a state of nervous anxiety everything about her was respectable.

She had written him about Jasmine, again and again, of what she did and what the world said and his replies had been as casual and as careless as the most jealous woman could desire; though she was not consciously jealous, and, of course, had no right to be. She saw no harm in having a man as a friend on a basis of intimacy which drew the line at any possibility of divorce-court proceedings.

Such things were not to be endured: I was loth to bring her into the divorce-court, and accordingly sought the hospitality of Dialogue, who was my near neighbour. Such, gentlemen, are the grievous wrongs that plaintiff has suffered at my hands.

Patricia was unutterably happy now, because she, and not John Charteris, had been in the wrong. "Poor Rudolph! he has such a smug horror of the divorce-court that he would even go so far as to pretend to be in love with his own wife in order to keep out of it. Really, Jack, both our better-halves are horribly commonplace and they will be much better off without us."

You go to a so-called "divorce-court," which is dominated by this Christian taboo, and exists for the purpose of barring you from a second chance at the gratification of your unclean animal desire.

Think what you're doing! Have you ever seen a divorce-court here, in New York? Do you know what it's like? What it can be like?" "Yes," Roger panted. He did know, and the picture came vividly into his mind a mass of eager devouring eyes fixed on a girl in a witness chair. "To-morrow I see a lawyer!" he said. "No you won't do that, my dear," Deborah told him sadly. "Laura's husband has got proofs."

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