The Deceased Wife's Sister Act may seem no more than a legislative curiosity today. Yet while it remained on the statute books it was the focus of intense, even obsessive, interest as Parliament continually renewed the well-rehearsed arguments for and against its repeal. By the end of the nineteenth century its notoriety made it an easy butt for satire: “And he shall prick that annual blister,/ Marriage with deceased wife's sister”, promises the Queen of the Fairies in Gilbert and Sullivan's
Iolanthe. Like Monty Python's dead parrot, the Deceased Wife's Sister Act had become humorous through incessant repetition. Yet although it was increasingly ridiculed the Act's strange hold over the Victorian imagination cannot be denied.
The Deceased Wife's Sister Act was introduced in 1835 to
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Citation: Brown, Sarah. "Deceased Wife's Sister Act". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 21 June 2004 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/stopics.php?rec=true&UID=1430, accessed 22 November 2024.]