V. Retell the story on the part of 1) the boy, 2) one of the passengers,
3) a police-officer.
TEXT 12. THE DINNER PARTY
N. Monsarrat
There are still some rich people in the world.
Many of them lead lives of particular pleasure. But rich
people do have their problems. They are seldom
problems of finance, since most rich people have
enough sense to hire other people to take care of their
worries. But there are other, more genuine problems.
They are the problems of behaviour.
Let me tell you a story which happened to my uncle Octavian a full
thirty years ago. At that time I myself was fifteen. My uncle Octavian was
then a rich man. He was a charming and accomplished host whose villa was
an accepted rendezvous of the great. He was a hospitable and most amiable
man—until January 3, 1925.
There was nothing special about that day in the life of my uncle
Octavian, except that it was his fifty-fifth birthday. As usual on such a day he
was giving a party, a party for twelve people. All of them were old friends.
I, myself, aged fifteen, was deeply privileged. I was staying with my
uncle at his exquisite villa, on holiday from school, and as a special
concession on this happy day, I was allowed to come down to dinner. It was
exciting for me to be admitted to such company, which included a
newspaper proprietor of exceptional intelligence and his fabulous
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American wife, a recent prime-minister of France and a distinguished
German prince and princess.
At that age, you will guess, I was dazzled. Even today, 30 years later,
one may fairly admit that the company was distinguished. But I should also
stress that they were all old and intimate friends of my uncle Octavian.
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Towards the end of a wonderful dinner, when dessert had been
brought in and the servants had left, my uncle leant forward to admire a
magnificent diamond ring on the princess's hand. She was a handsome
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woman. She turned her hand gracefully towards my uncle. Across the
table, the newspaper proprietor leant across and said: "May I also have a
look?" She smiled and nodded. Then she took off the ring and held it out to
him. "It was my grandmother's — the old empress," she said. "I have not
worn it for many years. It is said to have once belonged to Genghis Khan."
There were exclamations of delight and admiration. The ring was
passed from hand to hand. For a moment it rested on my own palm, gleaming
splendidly. Then I passed it on to my neighbour. As I turned away again, I
saw her pass it on.
It was some 20 minutes later when the princess stood up and said:
"Before we leave you, may I have my ring back?" ... There was a pause,
while each of us looked expectantly at his neighbour. Then there was
silence.
The princess was still smiling, though less easily. She was unused to
asking for things twice. The silence continued, I still thought that it could
only be a practical joke, and that one of us—probably the prince himself—
would produce the ring with a laugh. But when nothing happened at all, I
knew that the rest of the night would be dreadful.
I am sure that you can guess the sort of scene that followed. There
was the embarrassment of the guests— all of them old and valued friends.
There was a nervous search of the whole room. But it did not bring the
princess's ring back again. It had vanished—an irreplaceable thing, worth
possibly two hundred thousand pounds—in a roomful of twelve people, all
known to each other.
No servants had entered the room. No one had left it for a moment.
The thief (for now it could only be theft) was one of us, one of my uncle
Octavian's cherished friends.
I remember it was the French cabinet minister who was most
insistent on being searched, indeed, in his excitement he had already
started to turn out his pockets, before my uncle held up his hand and
stopped him. "There will be no search in my house," he commanded.
"You are all my friends. The ring can only be lost. If it is not found"— he
bowed towards the princess— "I will naturally make amends
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myself."
The ring was never found, it never appeared, either then or later.
To our family's surprise, uncle Octavian was a comparatively poor
man, when he died (which happened, in fact, a few weeks ago). And I
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should say that he died with the special sadness of a hospitable host who
never gave a single lunch or dinner party for the last thirty years of his
life.
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