Mr Tanner wishes to see you, sir.

  RAMSDEN. Mr Tanner!

  OCTAVIUS. Jack!

  RAMSDEN. How dare Mr Tanner call on me! Say I cannot see him.

  OCTAVIUS. [hurt] I am sorry you are turning my friend from your door like that.

  THE MAID. [calmly] He's not at the door, sir. He's upstairs in the drawingroom with Miss Ramsden. He came with Mrs Whitefield and Miss Ann and Miss Robinson, sir.

  Ramsden's feelings are beyond words.

  OCTAVIUS. [grinning] That's very like Jack, Mr Ramsden. You must see him, even if it's only to turn him out.

  RAMSDEN. [hammering out his words with suppressed fury] Go upstairs and ask Mr Tanner to be good enough to step down here. [The parlormaid goes out; and Ramsden returns to the fireplace, as to a fortified position]. I must say that of all the confounded pieces of impertinence - well, if these are Anarchist manners I hope you like them. And Annie with him! Annie! A - [he chokes].

  OCTAVIUS. Yes: that's what surprises me. He's so desperately afraid of Ann. There must be something the matter.

  Mr John Tanner suddenly opens the door and enters. He is too young to be described simply as a big man with a beard. But it is already plain that middle life will find him in that category. He has still some of the slimness of youth; but youthfulness is not the effect he aims at: his frock coat would befit a prime minister; and a certain high chested carriage of the shoulders, a lofty pose of the head, and the Olympian majesty with which a mane, or rather a huge wisp, of hazel colored hair is thrown back from an imposing brow, suggest Jupiter rather than Apollo. He is prodigiously fluent of speech, restless, excitable (mark the snorting nostril and the restless blue eye, just the thirty-secondth of an inch too wide open), possibly a little mad. He is carefully dressed, not from the vanity that cannot resist finery, but from a sense of the importance of everything he does which leads him to make as much of paying a call as other men do of getting married or laying a foundation stone. A sensitive, susceptible, exaggerative, earnest man: a megalomaniac, who would be lost without a sense of humor.

  Just at present the sense of humor is in abeyance. To say that he is excited is nothing: all his moods are phases of excitement. He is now in the panic-stricken phase; and he walks straight up to Ramsden as if with the fixed intention of shooting him on his own hearthrug. But what he pulls from his breast pocket is not a pistol, but a foolscap document which he thrusts under the indignant nose of Ramsden as he exclaims -

  TANNER. Ramsden: do you know what that is?

  RAMSDEN. [loftily] No, Sir.

  TANNER. It's a copy of Whitefield's will. Ann got it this morning.

  RAMSDEN. When you say Ann, you mean, I presume, Miss Whitefield.

  TANNER. I mean our Ann, your Ann, Tavy's Ann, and now, Heaven help me, my Ann!

  OCTAVIUS. [rising, very pale] What do you mean?

  TANNER. Mean! [He holds up the will]. Do you know who is appointed Ann's guardian by this will?

  RAMSDEN.