In the Fog by Richard Harding Davis (novels in english txt) π
Read free book Β«In the Fog by Richard Harding Davis (novels in english txt) πΒ» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Richard Harding Davis
Read book online Β«In the Fog by Richard Harding Davis (novels in english txt) πΒ». Author - Richard Harding Davis
IN THE FOG
CONTENTS
IN THE FOG
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
Illustrations
01 I Cannot Tell You How Much I Have to Thank You For
02 the Four Strangers at Supper Were Seated Together
03 the Men Around The Table Turned
04 I Would Tumble his Unconscious Form Into a Hansom Cab
05 βmy Name,β he Said, βis Sears.β
06 a Square of Light Suddenly Opened in the Night
07 at My Feet Was the Body of a Beautiful Woman
08 the Princess Zichy
09 This Gave the Princess Zichy The Chance
10 She Knew She Would Be Twenty Thousand Pounds Richer
11 I Threw out Everything on the Bed
12 Threw Everything in the Dressing-case out on The Floor
13 We Found Him Propped up in Bed
14 We Found the Body of The Princess Zichy
15 Entreating Chetney Not to Leave Her
16 What Was the Object of Your Plot?
CHAPTER I
The Grill is the club most difficult of access in the world. To be placed on its rolls distinguishes the new member as greatly as though he had received a vacant Garter or had been caricatured in βVanity Fair.β
Men who belong to the Grill Club never mention that fact. If you were to ask one of them which clubs he frequents, he will name all save that particular one. He is afraid if he told you he belonged to the Grill, that it would sound like boasting.
The Grill Club dates back to the days when Shakespeareβs Theatre stood on the present site of the βTimesβ office. It has a golden Grill which Charles the Second presented to the Club, and the original manuscript of βTom and Jerry in London,β which was bequeathed to it by Pierce Egan himself. The members, when they write letters at the Club, still use sand to blot the ink.
The Grill enjoys the distinction of having blackballed, without political prejudice, a Prime Minister of each party. At the same sitting at which one of these fell, it elected, on account of his brogue and his bulls, Quiller, Q. C., who was then a penniless barrister.
When Paul Preval, the French artist who came to London by royal command to paint a portrait of the Prince of Wales, was made an honorary memberβonly foreigners may be honorary membersβhe said, as he signed his first wine card, βI would rather see my name on that, than on a picture in the Louvre.β
At which Quiller remarked, βThat is a devil of a compliment, because the only men who can read their names in the Louvre to-day have been dead fifty years.β
On the night after the great fog of 1897 there were five members in the Club, four of them busy with supper and one reading in front of the fireplace. There is only one room to the Club, and one long table. At the far end of the room the fire of the grill glows red, and, when the fat falls, blazes into flame, and at the other there is a broad bow window of diamond panes, which looks down upon the street. The four men at the table were strangers to each other, but as they picked at the grilled bones, and sipped their Scotch and soda, they conversed with such charming animation that a visitor to the Club, which does not tolerate visitors, would have counted them as friends of long acquaintance, certainly not as Englishmen who had met for the first time, and without the form of an introduction. But it is the etiquette and tradition of the Grill, that whoever enters it must speak with whomever he finds there. It is to enforce this rule that there is but one long table, and whether there are twenty men at it or two, the waiters, supporting the rule, will place them side by side.
For this reason the four strangers at supper were seated together, with the candles grouped about them, and the long length of the table cutting a
Comments (0)