profoundly analytical. “That’s Fanny Price, the great beauty.” “That’s Miss Waldron, who is engaged to Arthur Annandale.” “That is Annandale there”—the usual subtleties of the small people of a big city. Now, at the entrance, Orr and Loftus appeared.
“Shall I ask them to join us?” Annandale asked.
“Yes, do,” said Fanny. “I like Mr. Orr so much.”
But Loftus, who, with his hands in his pockets, a monocle in his eye, had been looking about with an air of great contempt for everybody, already with Orr was approaching. On reaching the table very little urging was required to induce them to sit, and, when seated they were, Loftus was next to Fanny.
“What are you doing uptown at this hour?” Annandale asked Orr, who had got between Loftus and Sylvia. “I thought you lawyers were all so infernally busy.”
“Everybody ought to be,” Orr replied. “Although an anarchist who had managed to get himself locked up, and whom I succeeded in getting out, confided to me that only imbeciles work. By way of exchange I had to confide to him that it is only imbeciles that do not.”
“Now that,” said Annandale, who had never done a stroke of work in his life, “is what I call a very dangerous theory.”
“A theory that is not dangerous,” Orr retorted, “can hardly be called a theory at all.”
With superior tact Sylvia intervened. “But what is anarchy, Melanchthon? Socialism I know about, but anarchy—?”
“To put it vulgarly, I drink and you pay.”
“But suppose I am an anarchist?”