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Doctor. SMITH. Is the Duke ill? HASTINGS. [_Laughing._] Oh, no; the Doctor has come to ask him to help some cause or other. The Duke is never ill. SMITH. Is the Doctor with him now? HASTINGS. Why, strictly speaking, he is not. The Doctor has gone over the road to fetch a paper connected with his proposal. But he hasn't far to go, as you can see. That's his red lamp at the end of his grounds. SMITH. Yes, I know. I am much obliged to you. I will wait as long as is necessary. HASTINGS. [_Cheerfully._] Oh, it won't be very long. [_Exit._ [_Enter by the garden doors_ DR. GRIMTHORPE _reading an open paper. He is an old-fashioned practitioner, very much of a gentleman and very carefully dressed in a slightly antiquated style. He is about sixty years old and might have been a friend of Huxley's._ DOCTOR. [_Folding up the paper._] I beg your pardon, sir, I did not notice there was anyone here. SMITH. [_Amicably._] I beg yours. A new clergyman cannot expect to be expected. I only came to see the Duke about some local affairs. DOCTOR. [_Smiling._] And so, oddly enough, did I. But I suppose we should both like to get hold of him by a separate ear. SMITH. Oh, there's no disguise as far as I'm concerned. I've joined this league for starting a model public-house in the parish; and in plain words, I've come to ask his Grace for a subscription to it. DOCTOR. [_Grimly._] And, as it happens, I have joined in the petition against the erection of a model public-house in this parish. The similarity of our position grows with every instant. SMITH. Yes, I think we must have been twins. DOCTOR. [_More good-humouredly._] Well, what is a model public-house? Do you mean a toy? SMITH. I mean a place where Englishmen can get decent drink and drink it decently. Do you call that a toy? DOCTOR. No; I should call that a conjuring trick. Or, in apology to your cloth, I will say a miracle. SMITH. I accept the apology to my cloth. I am doing my duty as a priest. How can the Church have a right to make men fast if she does not allow them to feast? DOCTOR. [_Bitterly._] And when you have done feasting them, you will send them to me to be cured. SMITH. Yes; and when you've done curing them you'll send them to me to be buried. DOCTOR. [_After a pause, laughing._] Well, you have all the old doctrines. It is only fair you should have all the old jokes too. SMITH. [_Laughing also._] By t
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