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قراءة كتاب The Land of Promise A Comedy in Four Acts
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THE LAND OF
PROMISE
A COMEDY IN FOUR ACTS
BY
W. S. MAUGHAM
LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN. 1922
TO
IRENE VANBRUGH
All applications regarding the Performance Rights of this play should be addressed to Mr. R. Golding Bright, 20, Green Street, Leicester Square, London, W.C. 2.
This play was produced on February 26, 1914, at the Duke of York’s Theatre, with the following cast:
Norah Marsh | Irene Vanbrugh. |
Edward Marsh | C. V. France. |
Gertrude Marsh | Marion Ashworth. |
Frank Taylor | Godfrey Tearle. |
Reginald Hornby | Basil Foster. |
Benjamin Trotter | George Tully. |
Sidney Sharp | J. Woodall-Birde. |
Emma Sharp | Mary Rorke. |
James Wickham | Athol Stewart. |
Dorothy Wickham | Netta Westcott. |
Agnes Pringle | Lena Halliday. |
Clement Wynne | Charles Goodwin. |
Kate | Marion Christie Murray. |
CHARACTERS
Norah Marsh. Edward Marsh. Gertrude Marsh. Frank Taylor. Reginald Hornby. Benjamin Trotter. Sidney Sharp. Emma Sharp. James Wickham. Dorothy Wickham. Agnes Pringle. Clement Wynne. Kate. |
The action of the play takes place at Tunbridge Wells, and later in Canada.
THE LAND OF PROMISE
ACT I
Scene: The drawing-room at Miss Wickham’s house in Tunbridge Wells. It is a room in which there is too much furniture. There are armchairs covered with faded chintz, little tables here and there, cabinets containing china, a great many photographs in silver frames, porcelain ornaments wherever there is a vacant space, Chippendale chairs and chairs from the Tottenham Court Road. There are flowers in vases and growing plants. The wall-paper has a pattern of enormous chrysanthemums, and on the walls are a large number of old-fashioned watercolours in gilt frames. There is one door, which leads into the hall; and a French window opens on to the garden. The window is decorated with white lace curtains. It is four o’clock in the afternoon. The sun is streaming through the drawn blinds. There is a wreath of white flowers in a cardboard box on one of the chairs. The door is opened by Kate, the parlour-maid. She is of respectable appearance and of a