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Various

"Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 159, July 21, 1920"

Eille Norwood)
would do well to watch the serious passages--always the danger-points in
farce. As nobody on our side of the footlights takes these seriously the
folk on the other side must substantially dilute the seriousness. The
tragically uttered, "O God!" at the end of the Second Act ruined an
otherwise excellent curtain. But I must not end on a note of censure. I
was much too thoroughly entertained for that. Here's a quite first-rate
piece of fooling, with dialogue of humorous rather than smart sayings.
And humour's a much rarer and less cheap a gift than smartness.
T.
* * * * *
[Illustration: _First Newly-Rich._ "It's a great secret, but I must
tell you. My husband has been offered a peerage."
_Second ditto._ "Really! That's rather interesting. We thought of
having one, but they're so expensive and we are economising just now."]
* * * * *
Our Considerate Scribes.
"Presumptious is a hard word that I would not readily apply to
any man."--_Daily Paper._
* * * * *
"PASSIVE PESSIMISM.


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