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    Chapter 15 - Page 2

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    until the police borrowed a blanket to
    put upon him.

    That the constables had been guilty of gross exaggeration was shown
    by their evidence as to the desperate injuries the combatants had
    inflicted upon one another. Of Paradise in particular it had been
    alleged that his features were obliterated. The jury had before them
    in the dock the man whose features had been obliterated only a few
    weeks previously. If that were true, where had the prisoner obtained
    the unblemished lineaments which he was now, full of health and
    good-humor, presenting to them? (Renewed laughter. Paradise grinning
    in confusion.) It was said that these terrible injuries, the traces
    of which had disappeared so miraculously, were inflicted by the
    prisoner Byron, a young gentleman tenderly nurtured, and visibly
    inferior in strength and hardihood to his herculean opponent.
    Doubtless Byron had been emboldened by his skill in mimic combat to
    try conclusions, under the very different conditions of real
    fighting, with a man whose massive shoulders and determined cast of
    features ought to have convinced him that such an enterprise was
    nothing short of desperate. Fortunately the police had interfered
    before he had suffered severely for his rashness. Yet it had been
    alleged that he had actually worsted Paradise in the
    encounter--obliterated his features. That was a fair sample of the
    police evidence, which was throughout consistently incredible and at
    variance with the dictates of common-sense.

    Attention was then drawn to the honorable manner in which Byron had
    come forward and given himself up to the police the moment he became
    aware that they were in search of him. Paradise would, beyond a
    doubt, have adopted the same course had he not been arrested at
    once, and that, too, without the least effort at resistance on his
    part. That was hardly the line of conduct that would have suggested
    itself to two lawless prize-fighters.

    An attempt had been made to prejudice the prisoner Byron by the
    statement that he was a notorious professional bruiser. But no proof
    of that was forthcoming; and if the fact were really notorious there
    could be no difficulty in proving it. Such notoriety as Mr. Byron
    enjoyed was due, as appeared from the evidence of Lord Worthington

    and others, to his approaching marriage to a lady of distinction.
    Was it credible that a highly connected gentleman in this enviable
    position would engage in a prize-fight, risking disgrace and
    personal disfigurement, for a sum of money that could be no object
    to him, or for a glory that would appear to all his friends as
    little better than infamy?

    The whole of the evidence as to the character of the prisoners went
    to show that they were men of unimpeachable
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