Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 156, June 25, 1919 by Various
page 47 of 75 (62%)
page 47 of 75 (62%)
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Even "KATHARINE TYNAN" must sometimes fall below her own standard, and _The Man from Australia_ (COLLINS), though written with considerable grace and charm, is too thin in plot to be altogether satisfactory. _John Darling_, a youngish man of wealth and an extremely liberal disposition, came from Australia to visit his connexions in the West of Ireland and--if opportunities occurred--to help them. Opportunities did offer themselves in abundance. The _Adairs_ in their various ways were ripe for a benefactor of the _Darling_ type to appear, and _John_ soon got busy. In the course of his activities--for it would have been unkind (and very dull) to bring him all the way from Australia to Ireland just to serve as a travelling relief-fund--he is made to fall in love with one of the _Adair_ girls. And that's almost the whole story. One may always trust Mrs. HINKSON to get her atmosphere right; but she is not so happy in her attempt to contrast the preternaturally unselfish _Darling_ who, like an earlier _Mr. Darling_, would have been content to live in a kennel) with the inordinately self-indulgent father of the _Adairs_. * * * * * [Illustration: EPILOGUE] THE NEW ORDER OF THINGS. "I assume," said the Cynic, "that you are sufficiently sanguine to rejoice in the prospects of Peace." "I derive a certain satisfaction from those prospects," replied Mr. Punch on a note of reserve. |
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