London at the End of the Century:A Book of Gossip
a Beckett, Arthur William
1900
THE EXCHANGE OF CLUB COURTESIES.
The exchange of courtesies is the natural outcome of kindred tastes and political opinions. The Carlton absorbs its junior, and the Guards accepts hospitality from and gives it to its the Marlborough. The Oxford and Cambridge is on visiting terms with the Old University, and the Union and the Travellers are frequently friendly. Of late years the Service clubs have been slightly at loggerheads. The Rag, once great with the Junior, has arranged with the Naval and Military, a that for about a couple of years had a habitation without a name within the hospitable walls of the J.U.S.C. Nowadays | |
92 | those who live in Cambridge House have no room for their hosts, and act accordingly. For all that the Junior is happy in joining hands with the East India, the spot sacred to the most excellent of curries. Brooks's, White's, Boodle's, Arthur's, and the other clubs select partners without difficulty. After all, the closure only lasts a month or six weeks, when every member, according to the strict rule of the game, should be out of town. |
And when the period is over the return to the renovated club-houses is pleasant indeed; for that return means familiar haunts to , and to all the rest the meeting of old friends and the absence of strangers. | |
