We enter the theatre. There is no curtain. A raked stage extends well beyond the formal proscenium arch, reaching in almost desperate appeal to the potential responsiveness of the audience. We see what appears to be an enormous, high-beamed gallery, a candle chandelier hanging over a floor of heavy oak boards, supporting only the barest of furnishings, surrounded on three sides by towering, dark, red-brick walls, with a delicately curtained archway breaking the upstage center wall. This is the only suggestion of mobility in the entire set. All else is weighted, durable, lived-in, lending the atmosphere a peculiar, autumnally-colored sense of permanence. This room, we feel, is definitely in a theatre, but just as surely it has known life, an existence away from us, somewhere remote, in a past that we had comfortably connected only with the pleasing unreality of history. Like most English rooms, it seems to be weathered by a stern assumption that winter belongs inside as much as out.