Scene XI

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(Paris at night. MRS. FITZHERBERT and LADY LINDSAY dine with French aristocrats. LADY LINDSAY appears to be enjoying herself while MRS. FITZHERBERT seems a little anxious and sullen.)

LADY LINDSAY

There are several amiable Catholic bachelors dining with us this evening, Maria.

MRS. FITZHERBERT

It appears there are.

LADY LINDSAY

Do any of them pique your interest?

MRS. FITZHERBERT

Not particularly.

(A servant enters and hands MRS. FITZHERBERT a stack of papers, apparently another long letter from the PRINCE OF WALES. LADY LINDSAY sees this and takes the letter from MRS. FITZHERBERT before she can read it.)

MRS. FITZHERBERT (cont.)

Anne!

LADY LINDSAY

(Putting the letter under her chair)

No reading at the table! We must put that gentleman out of your mind for good, but such a thing is impossible if you are constantly reading his letters.

MRS. FITZHERBERT

How can I when he is constantly writing to me?

(LADY LINDSAY ignores her, irritating MRS. FITZHERBERT. She looks pensively at the letter under LADY LINDSAY's chair. Cut to Scene XII.)

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