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Dialogue Following No. 11
- Lord C.:
- Ahem! (Sir C. and Lady Maud start and look round.) Ahem!
- Lady M.:
- (looking into Sir Cecil's face). Eh?
- Sir C.:
- I didn't speak.
- Lady M.
- You said "Ahem!"
- Lord C.:
- (from picture). I said "Ahem!"
- Lady M.
- Gracious, who are you?
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- Lord C.
- Because I was painted at the age of sixty-five; Lady Maud was painted at the age of twenty-two. I was not born until a hundred and seventy years after Lady Maud's death. And talking of liberties, may I ask by what right my Michael Angelo puts his arm round the waist of my Leonardo da Vinci?
- Sir C.
- We are companion portraits, Sir. Besides, don't it strike you that it is hardly dutiful on your part to interfere with the proceedings of your great, great, great, great great-grandmother?
- Lord C.
- She's my picture, Sir, and I may do what I like with her.
- Sir C.
- She's your great-grandmother, Sir, and she claims the respect due to her extraordinary old age. Besides, who are you? I don't know you.
- Lord C.
- I'm Lord Carnaby Poppytop, painted by Sir Godfrey Kneller, in 1713, at the age of sixty-five, and forty-four years after coming into possession of this castle.
- Sir C.
- Sir Godfrey Kneller! Nobody ever heard of the man!
- Lord C.
- No one would have heard of you if you hadn't been painted by an old master.
- Lady M.
- Gentlemen, pray don't quarrel on my account. (To Lord Carnaby, with authority.) My dear, your grandmama is quite old enough to take care of herself.
Page Modified August 23, 2011