[The Country House by John Galsworthy]@TWC D-Link book
The Country House

CHAPTER X
2/10

1 of the members' rules: "No member of this club shall have any occupation whatsoever." Hence the name of a club renowned throughout London for the excellence of its wines and cuisine.
Its situation was in Piccadilly, fronting the Green Park, and through the many windows of its ground-floor smoking-room the public were privileged to see at all hours of the day numbers of Stoics in various attitudes reading the daily papers or gazing out of the window.
Some of them who did not direct companies, grow fruit, or own yachts, wrote a book, or took an interest in a theatre.

The greater part eked out existence by racing horses, hunting foxes, and shooting birds.
Individuals among them, however, had been known to play the piano, and take up the Roman Catholic religion.

Many explored the same spots of the Continent year after year at stated seasons.

Some belonged to the Yeomanry; others called themselves barristers; once in a way one painted a picture or devoted himself to good works.

They were, in fact, of all sorts and temperaments, but their common characteristic was an independent income, often so settled by Providence that they could not in any way get rid of it.
But though the principle of no occupation overruled all class distinctions, the Stoics were mainly derived from the landed gentry.
An instinct that the spirit of the club was safest with persons of this class guided them in their elections, and eldest sons, who became members almost as a matter of course, lost no time in putting up their younger brothers, thereby keeping the wine as pure as might be, and preserving that fine old country-house flavour which is nowhere so appreciated as in London.
After seeing Gregory pass on the top of a bus, George Pendyce went into the card-room, and as it was still empty, set to contemplation of the pictures on the walls.


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