It is here we start on our journey proper.
The journey of Mrs Leidners life.
First of all we must realize that the Louise Leidner of all those years ago is essentially the same Louise Leidner of the present time.
She was young then, of remarkable beauty that same haunting beauty that affects a mans spirit and senses as no mere material beauty can and she was already essentially an egoist.
Such women naturally revolt from the idea of marriage.
They may be attracted by men, but they prefer to belong to themselves.
They are truly La Belle Dame sans Merci of the legend.
Nevertheless Mrs Leidnerdid marry and we can assume, I think, that her husband must have been a man of a certain force of character.
Then the revelation of his traitorous activities occurs and Mrs Leidner acts in the way she told Nurse Leidner.
She gave information to the Government.
Now I submit that there was a psychological significance in her action. She told Nurse Leatheran that she was a very patriotic idealistic girl and that that feeling was the cause of her action.
But it is a well-known fact that we all tend to deceive ourselves as to the motives for our own actions.
Instinctively we select the best-sounding motive!
Mrs Leidner may have believed herself that it was patriotism that inspired her action, but I believe myself that it was really the outcome of an unacknowledged desire to get rid of her husband!
She disliked domination she disliked the feeling of belonging to someone else in fact she disliked playing second fiddle.
She took a patriotic way of regaining her freedom.
But underneath her consciousness was a gnawing sense of guilt which was to play its part in her future destiny.
We now come directly to the question of the letters.
Mrs Leidner was highly attractive to the male sex.
On several occasions she was attracted by them but in each case a threatening letter played its part and the affair came to nothing.
Who wrote those letters?
Frederick Bosner or his brother William or Mrs Leidner herself?
There is a perfectly good case for either theory.
It seems clear to me that Mrs Leidner was one of those women who do inspire devouring devotions in men, the type of devotion which can become an obsession.
I find it quite possible to believe in a Frederick Bosner to whom Louise, his wife, mattered more than anything in the world!
She had betrayed him once and he dared not approach her openly, but he was determined at least that she should be his or no ones.
He preferred her death to her belonging to another man.
On the other hand, if Mrs Leidner had, deep down, a dislike of entering into the marriage bond, it is possible that she took this way of extricating herself from difficult positions.
She was a huntress who, the prey once attained, had no further use for it!
Craving drama in her life, she invented a highly satisfactory drama a resurrected husband forbidding the banns!
It satisfied her deepest instincts.
It made her a romantic figure, a tragic heroine, and it enabled her not to marry again.
This state of affairs continued over a number of years.
Every time there was any likelihood of marriage a threatening letter arrived.
But now we come to a really interesting point.
Dr Leidner came upon the scene and no forbidding letter arrived!
Nothing stood in the way of her becoming Mrs Leidner.
Not until after her marriage did a letter arrive.
At once we ask ourselves why?
Let us take each theory in turn.
If Mrs Leidner wrote the letters herself the problem is easily explained.
Mrs Leidner really wanted to marry Dr Leidner.
And so she did marry him.
But in that case, why did she write herself a letter afterwards?
Was her craving for drama too strong to be suppressed?
And why only those two letters?
After that no other letter was received until a year and a half later.
Now take the other theory, that the letters were written by her first husband, Frederick Bosner (or his brother).
Why did the threatening letter arrive after the marriage?
Presumably Frederick could not have wanted her to marry Leidner.