FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3717   3718   3719   3720   3721   3722   3723   3724   3725   3726   3727   3728   3729   3730   3731   3732   3733   3734   3735   3736   3737   3738   3739   3740   3741  
3742   3743   3744   3745   3746   3747   3748   3749   3750   3751   3752   3753   3754   3755   3756   3757   3758   3759   3760   3761   3762   3763   3764   3765   3766   >>   >|  
ER. We considered it. Sir Frederic decided that he could use him better in cross-examination. WINSOR. Well! I don't know that. Can I go and see him before he gives evidence to-morrow? GRAVITER. I should like to hear Mr Jacob on that, WINSOR. He'll be in directly. WINSOR. They had Kentman, and Goole, the Inspector, the other bobby, my footman, Dancy's banker, and his tailor. GRAVITER. Did we shake Kentman or Goole? WINSOR. Very little. Oh! by the way, the numbers of those two notes were given, and I see they're published in the evening papers. I suppose the police wanted that. I tell you what I find, Graviter--a general feeling that there's something behind it all that doesn't come out. GRAVITER. The public wants it's money's worth--always does in these Society cases; they brew so long beforehand, you see. WINSOR. They're looking for something lurid. MARGARET. When I was in the bog, I thought they were looking for me. [Taking out her cigarette case] I suppose I mustn't smoke, Mr Graviter? GRAVITER. Do! MARGARET. Won't Mr Jacob have a fit? GRAVITER. Yes, but not till you've gone. MARGARET. Just a whiff. [She lights a cigarette]. WINSOR. [Suddenly] It's becoming a sort of Dreyfus case--people taking sides quite outside the evidence. MARGARET. There are more of the chosen in Court every day. Mr Graviter, have you noticed the two on the jury? GRAVITER. [With a smile] No; I can't say-- MARGARET. Oh! but quite distinctly. Don't you think they ought to have been challenged? GRAVITER. De Levis might have challenged the other ten, Miss Orme. MARGARET. Dear me, now! I never thought of that. As she speaks, the door Left Forward is opened and old MR JACOB TWISDEN comes in. He is tallish and narrow, sixty-eight years old, grey, with narrow little whiskers curling round his narrow ears, and a narrow bow-ribbon curling round his collar. He wears a long, narrow-tailed coat, and strapped trousers on his narrow legs. His nose and face are narrow, shrewd, and kindly. He has a way of narrowing his shrewd and kindly eyes. His nose is seen to twitch and snig. TWISDEN. Ah! How are you, Charles? How do you do, my dear? MARGARET. Dear Mr Jacob, I'm smoking. Isn't it disgusting? But they don't allow it in Court, you know. Such a pity! The Judge might have a hookah. Oh! wouldn't he look sweet--the darling! TWISDEN.
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3717   3718   3719   3720   3721   3722   3723   3724   3725   3726   3727   3728   3729   3730   3731   3732   3733   3734   3735   3736   3737   3738   3739   3740   3741  
3742   3743   3744   3745   3746   3747   3748   3749   3750   3751   3752   3753   3754   3755   3756   3757   3758   3759   3760   3761   3762   3763   3764   3765   3766   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

MARGARET

 

GRAVITER

 

narrow

 

WINSOR

 

TWISDEN

 

Graviter

 
curling
 
suppose
 
cigarette
 

challenged


thought
 

evidence

 

kindly

 

shrewd

 
Kentman
 
smoking
 

disgusting

 

distinctly

 

chosen

 

darling


noticed

 

hookah

 

wouldn

 

narrowing

 

whiskers

 

ribbon

 

trousers

 

strapped

 

collar

 
tailed

opened

 

Forward

 
speaks
 
twitch
 

Charles

 

tallish

 

Taking

 
tailor
 

banker

 

Inspector


footman
 

papers

 
police
 
wanted
 

evening

 

published

 
numbers
 

directly

 

decided

 

Frederic