SCENE
and on the large table near the centre of the room there is a litter of
which he is now engaged. On the walls of the room are a number of
omb on a stand underneath one of these diagrams. There are sectional
iagrams of aeroplanes and airships to be seen, also fairly large models of
eroplanes and airships. -
ofessor Henry Corrie, aged between fifty and sixty, is sitting at the centre
ble watching a chemical process in a large retort. He has cold,
mourless eyes, and his mouth, if it were not concealed by a thickish
ard, would be seen to have truel lines about it. He does not, however,
press the casual visitor as a cruel man-indeed, he seems to be a
npletely absorbed, of course, in
The scene of the play is laid in the study room of Professor Henry Corrie in
a remote village in the North of England on a spring day in the year 1919.
The room is tidy enough, with the tidiness of a house dominated by a
Sachelor who is dominated by his work rather than by domestic comfort,
cientific apparatus employed by Professor Corrie in the experiment in
iagrams, showing sections of very large bombs. There is a model of a big
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the degree or intensity of heat present in a substance or object, especially as expressed according to a comparative scale and shown by a thermometer or perceived by touch.
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