Complete Plays of John Galsworthy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,284 pages of information about Complete Plays of John Galsworthy.

Complete Plays of John Galsworthy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,284 pages of information about Complete Plays of John Galsworthy.

Twisden.  There’s no end to human nature, General.

Graviter.  You can see queerer things in the papers, any day.

Canynge.  That poor young wife of his!  Winsor gave me a message for you,
Twisden.  If money’s wanted quickly to save proceedings, draw on him. 
Is there anything I can do?

Twisden.  I’ve advised him to go straight off to Morocco.

Canynge.  I don’t know that an asylum isn’t the place for him.  He must be off his head at moments.  That jump-crazy!  He’d have got a verdict on that alone—­if they’d seen those balconies.  I was looking at them when I was down there last Sunday.  Daring thing, Twisden.  Very few men, on a dark night—­He risked his life twice.  That’s a shrewd fellow—­young De Levis.  He spotted Dancy’s nature.

     The young clerk enters.

Clerk.  The taxi’s here, sir.  Will you see Major Colford and Miss Orme?

Twisden.  Graviter—­No; show them in.

     The young clerk goes.

Canynge.  Colford’s badly cut up.

     Margaret Orme and Colford enter.

Colford. [Striding forward] There must be some mistake about this, Mr
Twisden.

Twisden.  Hssh!  Dancy’s in there.  He’s admitted it.

     Voices are subdued at once.

Colford.  What? [With emotion] If it were my own brother, I couldn’t feel it more.  But—­damn it!  What right had that fellow to chuck up the case—­without letting him know, too.  I came down with Dancy this morning, and he knew nothing about it.

Twisden. [Coldly] That was unfortunately unavoidable.

Colford.  Guilty or not, you ought to have stuck to him—­it’s not playing the game, Mr Twisden.

Twisden.  You must allow me to judge where my duty lay, in a very hard case.

Colford.  I thought a man was safe with his solicitor.

Canynge.  Colford, you don’t understand professional etiquette.

Colford.  No, thank God!

Twisden.  When you have been as long in your profession as I have been in mine, Major Colford, you will know that duty to your calling outweighs duty to friend or client.

Colford.  But I serve the Country.

Twisden.  And I serve the Law, sir.

Canynge.  Graviter, give me a sheet of paper.  I’ll write a letter for him.

Margaret. [Going up to Twisden] Dear Mr Jacob—­pay De Levis.  You know my pearls—­put them up the spout again.  Don’t let Ronny be—­

Twisden.  Money isn’t the point, Margaret.

Margaret.  It’s ghastly!  It really is.

Colford.  I’m going in to shake hands with him. [He starts to cross the room].

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Project Gutenberg
Complete Plays of John Galsworthy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.