Returning to London after serving in India, Conrad finds himself lonesome and unsure of life's meaning. Nostalgic for the past, he attempts to relive his childhood with his three cousins and then visits a few old flames to revive his youthful sense of passion and purpose. But it's only after he meets a struggling actress named Rosalind that Conrad realizes what he seeks may actually be in reach.
Character actor Charles Ogle is best remembered as the as the first Frankenstein monster of the silver screen in the 1910 version. Eddie Sutherland was a vaudeville actor and a Keystone Kop before beginning his directing career; he's best known for The Flying Deuces (1939), The Invisible Woman (1940) and Abie's Irish Rose (1946). William de Mille, brother of Cecil B. DeMille, was a successful Broadway playwright before becoming a director. Forgotten today, Thomas Meighan was one of Paramount's top leading men of the silent era starring in Cecil B. DeMille classics The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1916), Male and Female (1919), and Manslaughter (1922) as well as the lost Lon Chaney masterpiece the Miracle Man (1919). Actress Mabel Van Buren known for The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1921), The Girl of the Golden West (1915) and Beyond the Rocks (1922).