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.

Colford. [To de Levis] You may think yourself damned lucky if he doesn’t break your neck.

     He goes out.  The three who are left with de Levis avert their eyes
     from him.

De Levis. [Smouldering] I have a memory, and a sting too.  Yes, my lord—­since you are good enough to call me venomous. [To Canynge] I quite understand—­I’m marked for Coventry now, whatever happens.  Well, I’ll take Dancy with me.

St Erth. [To himself] This Club has always had a decent, quiet name.

Winsor.  Are you going to retract, and apologise in front of Dancy and the members who heard you?

De Levis.  No fear!

St Erth.  You must be a very rich man, sir.  A jury is likely to take the view that money can hardly compensate for an accusation of that sort.

     De Levis stands silent.  Canynge.  Courts of law require proof.

St Erth.  He can make it a criminal action.

Winsor.  Unless you stop this at once, you may find yourself in prison. 
If you can stop it, that is.

St Erth.  If I were young Dancy, nothing should induce me.

De Levis.  But you didn’t steal my money, Lord St Erth.

St Erth.  You’re deuced positive, sir.  So far as I could understand it, there were a dozen ways you could have been robbed.  It seems to me you value other men’s reputations very lightly.

De Levis.  Confront me with Dancy and give me fair play.

Winsor. [Aside to Canynge] Is it fair to Dancy not to let him know?

Canynge.  Our duty is to the Club now, Winsor.  We must have this cleared up.

     Colford comes in, followed by Borring and Dancy.

St Erth.  Captain Dancy, a serious accusation has been made against you by this gentleman in the presence of several members of the Club.

Dancy.  What is it?

St Erth.  That you robbed him of that money at WINSOR’s.

Dancy. [Hard and tense] Indeed!  On what grounds is he good enough to say that?

De Levis. [Tense too] You gave me that filly to save yourself her keep, and you’ve been mad about it ever since; you knew from Goole that I had sold her to Kentman and been paid in cash, yet I heard you myself deny that you knew it.  You had the next room to me, and you can jump like a cat, as we saw that evening; I found some creepers crushed by a weight on my balcony on that side.  When I went to the bath your door was open, and when I came back it was shut.

Canynge.  That’s the first we have heard about the door.

De Levis.  I remembered it afterwards.

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