MRS. MUNNING. I think that's our business and nobody else's.
WRIGLEY (pushing back chair and rising). Come on, let's be getting over to Wilson's and making our arrangements with him.
THOMAS (rising). Yes, that's the only thing if they're going to talk that road.
PAUL. But I do wish you'd explain. What has Zack's going to Canada to do with it?
HARRY. You want a lot of telling. You have two sorts of jollifications here. Jollifications with Zack Munning and jollifications without. We want them with.
MRS. MUNNING. With Zack?
HARRY. He's the difference I've been telling you about.
MRS. MUNNING. Zack is! He never does anything.
HARRY. He does enough. I know what you mean. He's a bit of a fool at doing most things is Zack, but he's got a gift for jollifications. I couldn't point to where it is myself. Zack's just to come and moon about and drop a word into an ear there and take a woman's arm here and the thing's done. You might call it a knack he has.
THOMAS. He mellers things. That's where it is. It's like this, Mrs. Munning. You can eat cheese without supping ale to it, but you don't get satisfaction. And Paul can run a wedding without Zack being there, but it's not hearty—not what I'd call a jollification. It's stiff and hard. No feeling in it. No mellerness.