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impassive; WINSOR'S angry and defiant; DE LEVIS's mocking, a little triumphant, malicious. Then CANYNGE and WINSOR go to the door, and pass out. DE LEVIS. [To himself] Rats! CURTAIN ACT II SCENE I Afternoon, three weeks later, in the card room of a London Club. A fire is burning, Left. A door, Right, leads to the billiard-room. Rather Left of Centre, at a card table, LORD ST ERTH, an old John Bull, sits facing the audience; to his right is GENERAL CANYNGE, to his left AUGUSTUS BORRING, an essential Clubman, about thirty-five years old, with a very slight and rather becoming stammer or click in his speech. The fourth Bridge player, CHARLES WINSOR, stands with his back to the fire. BORRING. And the r-rub. WINSOR. By George! You do hold cards, Borring. ST ERTH. [Who has lost] Not a patch on the old whist--this game. Don't know why I play it--never did. CANYNGE. St Erth, shall we raise the flag for whist again? WINSOR. No go, General. You can't go back on pace. No getting a man to walk when he knows he can fly. The young men won't look at it. BORRING. Better develop it so that t-two can sit out, General. ST ERTH. We ought to have stuck to the old game. Wish I'd gone to Newmarket, Canynge, in spite of the weather. CANYNGE. [Looking at his watch] Let's hear what's won the Cambridgeshire. Ring, won't you, WINSOR? [WINSOR rings.] ST ERTH. By the way, Canynge, young De Levis was blackballed. CANYNGE. What! ST ERTH. I looked in on my way down. CANYNGE sits very still, and WINSOR utters a disturbed sound. BORRING. But of c-course he was, General. What did you expect? A FOOTMAN enters. FOOTMAN. Yes, my lord? ST ERTH. What won the Cambridgeshire? FOOTMAN. Rosemary, my lord. Sherbet second; Barbizon third. Nine to one the winner. WINSOR. Thank you. That's all. FOOTMAN goes. BORRING. Rosemary! And De Levis sold her! But he got a good p-price, I suppose. The other three look at him. ST ERTH. Many a slip between price and pocket, young man. CANYNGE. Cut! [They cut]. BORRING. I say, is that the yarn that's going round about his having had a lot of m-money stolen in a country house? By Jove! He'll be pretty s-sick. WINSOR. You and I, Borring. He sits down in CANYNGE'S chair, and the GENERAL takes his place by
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