Lady Windermere's Fan (2014) | Full Movie | Oscar Wilde Adaptation
Step into the dazzling world of Victorian London with Lady Windermere's Fan, a 2014 cinematic adaptation of Oscar Wildeโs timeless play. With sharp wit, scandalous secrets, and unforgettable dialogue, this period drama explores morality, social judgment, and the complexities of love and marriage.
๐ฌ โWe are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.โ โ Oscar Wilde
๐ Plot Summary: When Lady Windermere suspects her husband is having an affair with a mysterious woman, she confronts himโonly to discover deeper truths about love, sacrifice, and society. This faithful adaptation captures Wildeโs satirical brilliance and emotional depth.
๐ญ Genre: Period Drama, Comedy of Manners, Classic Literature
๐๏ธ Based on: The 1892 play by Oscar Wilde
๐ Release: 2014
๐ฐ๏ธ Runtime: Approx. 90 mins
Love Period Dramas? Get 30 Days of Free Audiobooks!
Listen to Oscar Wildeโs full works or other Victorian classics on Audible with your free trial.
๐ Try Audible Free for 30 Days: https://amzn.to/3ES2Ggv
๐ Recommended Audiobooks:
The Picture of Dorian Gray โ Oscar Wilde
Pride and Prejudice โ Jane Austen
Great Expectations โ Charles Dickens
โ Donโt Forget to:
๐ Like
๐ฌ Comment your favorite quote
๐ Subscribe for more classic films
#LadyWindermeresFan #OscarWilde #PeriodDrama #VictorianEra #ClassicMovie #FullMovie #LiteratureAdaptation #HistoricalDrama #BritishFilm #WildeAdaptation #PublicDomainMovie #ClassicCinema #VictorianLondon #TimelessDrama #BritishClassics #CostumeDrama #ClassicAdaptation #LoveAndBetrayal #TheatreToScreen #FeminineStrength #HighSocietyDrama #WittyDialogue #OscarWildeQuotes #OldMovieLovers #DailymotionCinema #FilmBuff #AudibleAffiliate #ClassicLoveStory #19thCenturyDrama #ScandalAndSecrets
Step into the dazzling world of Victorian London with Lady Windermere's Fan, a 2014 cinematic adaptation of Oscar Wildeโs timeless play. With sharp wit, scandalous secrets, and unforgettable dialogue, this period drama explores morality, social judgment, and the complexities of love and marriage.
๐ฌ โWe are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.โ โ Oscar Wilde
๐ Plot Summary: When Lady Windermere suspects her husband is having an affair with a mysterious woman, she confronts himโonly to discover deeper truths about love, sacrifice, and society. This faithful adaptation captures Wildeโs satirical brilliance and emotional depth.
๐ญ Genre: Period Drama, Comedy of Manners, Classic Literature
๐๏ธ Based on: The 1892 play by Oscar Wilde
๐ Release: 2014
๐ฐ๏ธ Runtime: Approx. 90 mins
Love Period Dramas? Get 30 Days of Free Audiobooks!
Listen to Oscar Wildeโs full works or other Victorian classics on Audible with your free trial.
๐ Try Audible Free for 30 Days: https://amzn.to/3ES2Ggv
๐ Recommended Audiobooks:
The Picture of Dorian Gray โ Oscar Wilde
Pride and Prejudice โ Jane Austen
Great Expectations โ Charles Dickens
โ Donโt Forget to:
๐ Like
๐ฌ Comment your favorite quote
๐ Subscribe for more classic films
#LadyWindermeresFan #OscarWilde #PeriodDrama #VictorianEra #ClassicMovie #FullMovie #LiteratureAdaptation #HistoricalDrama #BritishFilm #WildeAdaptation #PublicDomainMovie #ClassicCinema #VictorianLondon #TimelessDrama #BritishClassics #CostumeDrama #ClassicAdaptation #LoveAndBetrayal #TheatreToScreen #FeminineStrength #HighSocietyDrama #WittyDialogue #OscarWildeQuotes #OldMovieLovers #DailymotionCinema #FilmBuff #AudibleAffiliate #ClassicLoveStory #19thCenturyDrama #ScandalAndSecrets
Category
๐ฅ
Short filmTranscript
00:00:00You
00:01:00Is your ladyship at home this afternoon?
00:01:04Oh, yes. Who is called?
00:01:06Lord Darlington, my lady.
00:01:09Show him up.
00:01:11And I'm at home to anyone who calls.
00:01:13Yes, my lady.
00:01:16Lord Darlington.
00:01:20How do you do, Lady Wendell?
00:01:23How do you do, Lord Darlington?
00:01:25No, I can't shake hands with you.
00:01:27My hands are all wet with these roses.
00:01:29Aren't they lovely?
00:01:30They came up from Selby this morning.
00:01:32Oh, they are quite perfect.
00:01:34And what a wonderful fan.
00:01:36May I look at it?
00:01:37Ew, pretty, isn't it?
00:01:39Look, it's got my name on it and everything.
00:01:41I've only just seen it myself.
00:01:43It's my husband's birthday present to me.
00:01:46Oh, you know today's my birthday.
00:01:48No, is it really?
00:01:49Yes, I am of age today.
00:01:52Quite an important day in my life, isn't it?
00:01:54That's why I'm giving this party tonight.
00:01:55Oh, do sit down.
00:01:57I wish you had told me it was your birthday, Lady Windermere.
00:02:00I would have covered the whole street in front of your house
00:02:03with flowers for you to walk on.
00:02:06They are made for you.
00:02:08Lord Darlington.
00:02:09Hmm?
00:02:10You annoyed me last night at the Foreign Office.
00:02:12I'm afraid you are going to annoy me again.
00:02:14Aye, Lady Windermere.
00:02:20Oh, put it there, Parker.
00:02:21That will do.
00:02:28Won't you come over, Lord Darlington?
00:02:30I'm quite miserable, Lady Windermere.
00:02:32You must tell me what I did.
00:02:35Well, you kept on paying me elaborate compliments the whole evening.
00:02:39Ah.
00:02:41Nowadays, we are all of us so hard up
00:02:43that the only pleasant things to pay are compliments.
00:02:47They are the only things we can pay.
00:02:49No, I'm talking very seriously.
00:02:52You must not laugh.
00:02:54I'm quite serious.
00:02:55Now, I don't like compliments.
00:02:57And I don't see why a man should think
00:03:00he's pleasing a woman enormously
00:03:01when he says to her a whole heap of things
00:03:04that he doesn't mean.
00:03:05Ah, but I did mean them.
00:03:06I should hope not.
00:03:10I would be very sorry to quarrel with you, Lord Darlington.
00:03:14I like you very much, you know that.
00:03:15But I shouldn't like you at all
00:03:17if I thought you were what most other men are.
00:03:20Believe me, you're better than most other men.
00:03:22And I sometimes think you pretend to be worse.
00:03:26We all have our little vanities, Lady Windermere.
00:03:30Why do you make that your special one?
00:03:33Nowadays, so many conceited people
00:03:35go about society pretending to be good
00:03:38that I think it shows a rather sweet
00:03:40and modest disposition to pretend to be bad.
00:03:43Besides, there's this to be said.
00:03:45If you pretend to be good,
00:03:47the world takes you very seriously.
00:03:49If you pretend to be bad, it doesn't.
00:03:52Such is the standing stupidity of optimism.
00:03:57Don't you want the world
00:03:58to take you seriously then, Lord Darlington?
00:04:00No, not the world.
00:04:03Who are the people that the world takes seriously?
00:04:05All the dull people one can think of
00:04:07from the bishops down to the boars.
00:04:10I should like you to take me very seriously,
00:04:15Lady Windermere.
00:04:16You more than anyone else in life.
00:04:19Why?
00:04:21Why me?
00:04:22Because I think we might be great friends.
00:04:30Let us be great friends, Lady Windermere.
00:04:33You may want a friend someday.
00:04:36Why do you say that?
00:04:38Oh, we all want friends at times.
00:04:43I think we are very good friends already, Lord Darlington.
00:04:47And we can always remain so, as long as you don't...
00:04:50Don't what?
00:04:50Don't spoil it by saying extravagant silly things to me.
00:04:56The Duchess of Berwick and Lady Agatha Carlyne.
00:05:01Dear Margaret, I am so pleased to see you.
00:05:05You remember Agatha, don't you?
00:05:06How do you do, Lord Darlington?
00:05:09I won't let you know, my daughter, you are far too wicked.
00:05:13Oh, don't say that, Duchess.
00:05:15As a wicked man, I am a complete failure.
00:05:18Why, there are lots of people who say I've never really done anything wrong in the course of my entire life.
00:05:24Of course, they only say it behind my back.
00:05:28Isn't he dreadful?
00:05:31Agatha, this is Lord Darlington, mind you.
00:05:34Don't believe a word he says.
00:05:36Oh, no, no tea, thank you, dear.
00:05:40We've just had tea at Lady Markby's.
00:05:43Such bad tea, too.
00:05:44It was quite undrinkable.
00:05:46I wasn't at all surprised her own son-in-law supplies it.
00:05:50Agatha is looking forward so much to your ball tonight, dear.
00:05:53Oh, you mustn't think it's going to be a ball, Duchess.
00:05:56It is merely a dance-in-on of my birthday, small and early.
00:06:00Very small, very early, and very select, Duchess.
00:06:04Of course it's going to be select.
00:06:07But we know that, my dear, about your house.
00:06:11Just one of the few houses in London I can take, Agatha.
00:06:14And where I feel perfectly secure about, dear Berwick.
00:06:17I don't know what society is coming to.
00:06:19The most dreadful people seem to go everywhere.
00:06:22They certainly come to my parties.
00:06:25The men get quite furious if one doesn't ask them.
00:06:29Really, someone should make a stand against it.
00:06:31I will, Duchess.
00:06:32I shall have no one in my house about whom there is any scandal.
00:06:35Oh, don't say that, Lady Windermere.
00:06:37I should never be admitted.
00:06:39Oh, men don't matter.
00:06:41With women, it is different.
00:06:44We are good.
00:06:46Some of us are, at least.
00:06:48But we are positively getting elbowed into the corner.
00:06:51Our husbands would really forget our existence if we didn't remind them from time to time and nag them just to remind them that we have a perfectly legal right to do so.
00:07:00It's a curious thing, Duchess.
00:07:02The game of marriage, which is a game, by the way, that is going out of fashion.
00:07:08The wives hold all the honors and invariably lose the odd trick.
00:07:13The odd trick?
00:07:14Is that the husband, Lord Darlington?
00:07:17It would rather be a good name for the modern husband.
00:07:20Dear Lord Darlington, how thoroughly depraved you are.
00:07:24Oh, Lord Darlington is trivial.
00:07:26Oh, don't say that, Lady Windermere.
00:07:28Why do you talk so trivially about life, then?
00:07:31Because I think life is far too important a thing to ever talk seriously about it.
00:07:36What does he mean?
00:07:38Do, as a concession to my poor wits, Lord Darlington, just explain to me what you really mean.
00:07:45I think I had better not, Duchess.
00:07:49Nowadays, to be intelligible is to be found out.
00:07:53Goodbye.
00:07:53And now, Lady Windermere, goodbye.
00:07:58I may come tonight, mayn't I?
00:08:00Do let me come.
00:08:01Yes, certainly.
00:08:02But you are not to say insincere foolish things to people.
00:08:06Ah, you are beginning to reform me.
00:08:09It is a dangerous thing to reform anyone, Lady Windermere.
00:08:16What a charming, wicked creature.
00:08:18I like him so much.
00:08:21I'm quite delighted he's gone.
00:08:24How sweet you're looking.
00:08:25Where do you get your gowns?
00:08:28And now, I must tell you how very sorry I am for you, dear Margaret.
00:08:33Agatha!
00:08:34Will you go look over the photograph album I see there?
00:08:37Yes, Mama.
00:08:40Sweet girl.
00:08:41So fond of photographs of Switzerland.
00:08:44Such a pure taste, I think.
00:08:47But I really am so sorry for you, Margaret.
00:08:50Why, Duchess?
00:08:51On account of that horrid woman.
00:08:53Oh, and she dresses so well, too.
00:08:56Which only makes it worse.
00:08:58Set such a dreadful example.
00:09:00Huh, Augustus.
00:09:02You know my disreputable brother.
00:09:04Such a trial to us all.
00:09:06Well, Augustus is completely infatuated over her.
00:09:10Tis quite scandalous, for she is absolutely inadmissible into society.
00:09:14Many a woman has a past.
00:09:16But I am told she has at least a dozen, and that they all fit.
00:09:20But whom are you talking about, Duchess?
00:09:23About Mrs. Erlin.
00:09:25Mrs. Erlin?
00:09:26I never heard of her, Duchess.
00:09:29What has she to do with me?
00:09:30Oh, poor child.
00:09:33Oh.
00:09:35Agatha, darling?
00:09:36Yes, Mama?
00:09:37Will you go out on the terrace and look at the sunset?
00:09:40Yes, Mama.
00:09:42Such a sweet girl.
00:09:44So devoted to sunsets.
00:09:46She has such refinement of feeling, don't you think?
00:09:48After all, there is nothing like nature, is there?
00:09:51But what is it, Duchess?
00:09:52Why are you talking to me about this person?
00:09:55Don't you really know?
00:09:58I assure you, we are all so distressed about it.
00:10:01Only last night at dear Lady Jansons,
00:10:03everyone was saying how extraordinary it was
00:10:06that of all men in London,
00:10:07Windermere should behave in such a way.
00:10:10My husband?
00:10:12What has he got to do with any woman of that kind?
00:10:15Ah, what indeed, dear.
00:10:17That is the point.
00:10:18He goes to see her continually
00:10:21and stops for hours at a time.
00:10:24And while he is there, she is not at home to anyone.
00:10:27Not that many ladies call on her, dear,
00:10:29but she has a great many disreputable men friends,
00:10:32my own brother particularly, as I told you.
00:10:35And that is what makes it so dreadful about Windermere.
00:10:38How we all looked upon him as being such a model husband.
00:10:42Oh, but I'm afraid there is no doubt about it.
00:10:45And the worst of it all is that I am told
00:10:49that this woman has got a great deal of money out of somebody.
00:10:54For it seems that she came to London six months ago
00:10:57without anything at all to speak of.
00:10:59And now she has this charming house in Mayfair,
00:11:02drives her ponies in the park every afternoon,
00:11:04and all, well, all since she has known poor dear Windermere.
00:11:08I can't believe it.
00:11:10Oh, but it's quite true, my dear.
00:11:14The whole of London knows it.
00:11:16That is why I thought it best to come and talk to you
00:11:20and advise you to take Windermere away at once.
00:11:23To Homburg or to X,
00:11:26where he'll have something to amuse him
00:11:27and where you can watch him all day long.
00:11:29I assure you, my dear,
00:11:31that on several occasions after I was first married,
00:11:34I had to pretend to be very ill
00:11:36and was obliged to drink the most unpleasant mineral waters
00:11:39merely to get Beric out of town.
00:11:41He was so extremely susceptible.
00:11:44Although I am bound to say
00:11:45he never gave away any money to anybody.
00:11:48He was far too high priesthood for that.
00:11:50Duchess, Duchess, it's impossible.
00:11:53We only married two years
00:11:54and our child is about six months old.
00:11:56Ah, the dear pretty baby.
00:11:57How is the little darling?
00:11:59Is it a boy or a girl?
00:12:01Oh, I hope it's a girl.
00:12:03Oh, no, I remember it's a boy.
00:12:06I am so sorry.
00:12:07Boys are so wicked.
00:12:09My boy is excessively immoral.
00:12:11You wouldn't believe at what hours he comes home.
00:12:13And he's only left Oxford a few months.
00:12:16I really don't know what they teach them there.
00:12:18Are all men bad?
00:12:20Oh, all of them, my dear.
00:12:22All of them, without exception.
00:12:24And they never grow any better.
00:12:26Men become old, but they never become good.
00:12:31Windermere and I married for love.
00:12:33Huh, yes.
00:12:34We begin like that.
00:12:35And now I must go as we are dining out.
00:12:39And don't take this aberration of Windermere's too much to heart.
00:12:43Just take him abroad and he'll come back to you all right.
00:12:46Come back to me?
00:12:48Yes, dear.
00:12:48These wicked women get our husbands away from us, but they always come back.
00:12:54Slightly damaged, of course.
00:12:56And don't make scenes.
00:12:57Men hate them.
00:12:59It's very kind of you, Duchess, to come and tell me all this, but I can't believe my husband is untrue to me.
00:13:05Pretty child.
00:13:06I was like that once.
00:13:08Now I know that all men are monsters.
00:13:10The only thing to do is to feed the wretches well.
00:13:14A good cook works wonders, and that I know you have.
00:13:18Margaret, you are not going to cry.
00:13:20Oh, you needn't worry, Duchess.
00:13:22I never cry.
00:13:23That's quite right, dear.
00:13:25Crying is the refuge of plain women, but the ruin of pretty ones.
00:13:29Agatha, darling.
00:13:30Yes, Mama.
00:13:31Come bid goodbye to Lady Wintermere and thank her for your charming visit.
00:13:35Oh.
00:13:36And, by the way, I must thank you for sending a card to Mr. Hopper.
00:13:41He's that rich young Australian people are taking such notice of just at present.
00:13:46His father made a great fortune selling some kind of food in circular tins.
00:13:52Most palatable, I believe.
00:13:55I fancy it is the thing the servants always refuse to eat.
00:13:58But the son is most interesting.
00:14:01I think he's attracted to Agatha's clever talk.
00:14:05Of course, we should be very sorry to lose her,
00:14:07but I think that a mother that doesn't part with a daughter every season has no real affection.
00:14:14And goodbye once more.
00:14:17Come, Agatha.
00:14:19No, I did copy, True.
00:14:25She spoke of enormous sums of money paid this woman.
00:14:31I know why Arthur keeps his bank books.
00:14:33I knew it.
00:14:43There is not a word of truth in that stupid story.
00:14:52The second book.
00:14:54Private.
00:14:55Locked.
00:14:56Mrs. Erland, 600 pounds.
00:15:06Mrs. Erland, 700 pounds.
00:15:08Mrs. Erland, 400 pounds.
00:15:11Oh, it is true.
00:15:12It is true.
00:15:13How horrible.
00:15:14Well, dear, has the fan been sent home yet?
00:15:25Margaret, you have cut open my bank book.
00:15:26You have no right to do such a thing.
00:15:27You think it wrong you are found out, don't you?
00:15:29I think it wrong that a wife should spy on her husband.
00:15:32I did not spy on you.
00:15:33I never even knew of this woman's existence till half an hour ago.
00:15:37Someone who pitied me was kind enough to tell me what everyone in London knows already.
00:15:43Your daily visits to Curzon Street, your mad infatuation, the monstrous sums of money
00:15:48you squander on this infamous woman.
00:15:50Margaret, don't talk like that of Mrs. Erland.
00:15:53You don't know how unjust it is.
00:15:54You are very jealous of Mrs. Erland's honour.
00:15:57I wish you had been as jealous of mine.
00:16:00Your honour is untouched, Margaret.
00:16:02I think you spend your money strangely, that is all.
00:16:05Oh, don't imagine I mind about the money.
00:16:08Oh, as far as I am concerned, you may squander everything we have.
00:16:12But what I do mind is that you, who have loved me,
00:16:17you who have taught me to love you,
00:16:19should pass from the love that is given to the love that is bought.
00:16:23Oh, it's horrible.
00:16:25And it is I who feel degraded.
00:16:26You don't feel anything.
00:16:28I feel stained, utterly stained.
00:16:31But you can't realise how hideous the last six months seem to me now.
00:16:35Every kiss you have given me is tainted in my memory.
00:16:39Don't say that, Margaret.
00:16:41I never loved anyone in the whole world but you.
00:16:44Who is this woman, then?
00:16:46Why do you take a house for her?
00:16:47I did not take a house for her.
00:16:49But you gave her the money to do it, which is the same thing.
00:16:52Margaret, as far as I have known, Mrs. Erland...
00:16:54Is there Mr. Erland, or is he a myth?
00:16:57Her husband died many years ago.
00:16:59She is alone in the world.
00:17:00No relations?
00:17:01None.
00:17:04Rather curious, isn't it?
00:17:06Margaret, I was saying to you, and I beg you to listen to me,
00:17:09that as far as I have known Mrs. Erland, she has conducted herself well.
00:17:13If years ago...
00:17:14Oh, I don't want details about her life.
00:17:16I'm not going to give you any details about her life.
00:17:18I tell you simply this.
00:17:19Mrs. Erland was once honoured, loved, respected.
00:17:22She was well-born.
00:17:24She had position.
00:17:25She lost everything.
00:17:27Threw it away, if you like.
00:17:28That makes it all the more bitter.
00:17:32Misfortunes one can endure.
00:17:33They come from outside.
00:17:34They are accidents.
00:17:36But to suffer for one's own faults, there is the sting of life.
00:17:41It was twenty years ago, too.
00:17:42She was little more than a girl, then.
00:17:44She had been a wife for even less time than you have.
00:17:46I am not interested in her.
00:17:48And you should not mention this woman and me in the same breath.
00:17:51It is an air of taste.
00:17:53Margaret, you could save this woman.
00:17:55She wants to get back into society.
00:17:58And she wants you to help her.
00:18:00Me?
00:18:00Yes, you.
00:18:02How impertinent of her.
00:18:04Margaret, I came to ask you a great favour.
00:18:07And I still ask it of you.
00:18:09Though you have discovered what I intended,
00:18:10you should never have known that I have given Mrs. Erland a large sum of money.
00:18:15I want you to send her an invitation for our party tonight.
00:18:20You're mad.
00:18:21I entreat you.
00:18:23People may chatter about her, do chatter about her, of course.
00:18:26But they don't know anything definite against her.
00:18:29She has been to several houses.
00:18:31Not to houses where you would go, I admit.
00:18:33But still to houses where women who are in what is called society nowadays do go.
00:18:37That does not content her.
00:18:39She wants you to receive her once.
00:18:41Has it dry in for her, I suppose?
00:18:43No.
00:18:44But because she knows that you are a good woman.
00:18:46And that if she comes here once, she will have a chance of a happier, a surer lad than she has had.
00:18:52She will make no further effort to know you.
00:18:54Won't you help a woman who is trying to get back?
00:18:57No.
00:18:58If a woman really repents, she never wishes to return to the society that has made or seen her ruin.
00:19:04I beg of you.
00:19:04I am going to dress for dinner.
00:19:08And don't mention the subject again this evening.
00:19:15Arthur, you fancy because I have no father or mother that I am alone in the world.
00:19:18You are wrong.
00:19:20I have friends, many friends.
00:19:22Margaret, you are talking foolishly.
00:19:24Recklessly.
00:19:25I won't argue with you, but I insist upon you asking Mrs. Erling tonight.
00:19:29I shall do nothing of the kind.
00:19:31You refuse?
00:19:32Absolutely.
00:19:33Margaret, do this for my sake.
00:19:35It is her last chance.
00:19:37What has that to do with me?
00:19:39How hard good women are.
00:19:40How weak bad men are.
00:19:42Margaret, none of us men may be good enough for the women we marry.
00:19:46That is quite true.
00:19:48But you don't imagine I would ever...
00:19:50Oh, the suggestion is monstrous.
00:19:52Why should you be different from other men?
00:19:55I am told that there is hardly a husband in London who does not waste his life over some shameful passion.
00:20:00I am not one of them.
00:20:01I am not sure of that.
00:20:03You are sure in your heart.
00:20:05But don't make chasm after chasm between us.
00:20:08God knows the last few minutes of thrusters widened up apart.
00:20:11Sit down and write the card.
00:20:13Nothing in the whole world would induce me.
00:20:16Then I will.
00:20:17You are going to invite this woman?
00:20:20Yes.
00:20:21Parker?
00:20:24Yes, ma'am.
00:20:25This note sent to Mrs. Erling at number 84A, Curzon Street.
00:20:31There is no answer.
00:20:32Yes, ma'am.
00:20:34Arthur, if that woman comes here, I shall insult her.
00:20:37Barbara, don't say that.
00:20:38I mean it.
00:20:39Child, if you did such a thing, there's not a woman in London who wouldn't pity you.
00:20:43There is not a good woman in London who would not applaud me.
00:20:46We have been too lax.
00:20:48And we must make an example.
00:20:50Yes, I propose we begin tonight.
00:20:53Yes.
00:20:55You gave me this fan.
00:20:56It was your birthday present.
00:20:58If that woman crosses my threshold, I shall strike her across the face with it.
00:21:03Why but you couldn't do such a thing?
00:21:04You don't know me.
00:21:06Parker?
00:21:07Yes, ma'am.
00:21:09I shall dine in my own room tonight.
00:21:12Actually, I don't want dinner, in fact.
00:21:14See that everything is ready by half past ten.
00:21:17Oh, and Parker, be sure you pronounce the names of the guests very distinctly tonight.
00:21:22Sometimes you speak so fast that I miss them.
00:21:24I am particularly anxious to hear the names of the guests very clearly so as to make no mistake.
00:21:31You understand, Parker?
00:21:33Yes, ma'am.
00:21:34That will do.
00:21:39Arthur, if that woman comes here, I warn you.
00:21:43Margaret, you'll ruin us.
00:21:44Oh, awesome.
00:21:45Oh, from this moment, my life shall be separate from yours.
00:21:48But if you wish to avoid a public scandal, write at once to this woman and tell her I forbid her to come here.
00:21:54I will not.
00:21:55I cannot.
00:21:55She must come.
00:21:56Then I shall do exactly as I have said.
00:21:59You leave me no choice.
00:22:00Margaret.
00:22:02Margaret.
00:22:15Margaret, I want to speak to you.
00:22:18Lord Darlington.
00:22:19In a moment.
00:22:20Lord Augustus Lawton.
00:22:28Good evening, Lady Windermere.
00:22:29Good evening.
00:22:30I want to speak to you particularly, dear boy.
00:22:35I'm worn to a shadow.
00:22:37No, I don't look it.
00:22:38None of us men do look what we really are.
00:22:40Damn good thing, too.
00:22:42What I want to know is this.
00:22:44Who is she?
00:22:45Where does she come from?
00:22:47Why hasn't she got any damn relations?
00:22:49Damn nuisance relations, but they make one so damn respectable.
00:22:52You are talking of Mrs. Erling, I suppose?
00:22:54I only met her six months ago.
00:22:56Till then, I never knew of her existence.
00:22:58Oh, you have seen a good deal of her since then.
00:23:01Yes, I have seen a good deal of her since then.
00:23:04I have just seen her.
00:23:06Egan.
00:23:06Well, the women are very down on her.
00:23:10I've been dining with Arabella this evening.
00:23:12Boy, Jobe, you should have heard what she said about Mrs. Erling.
00:23:14Didn't leave a rag on her.
00:23:17Barak and I told her that didn't matter much,
00:23:18as the lady in question must have an extremely fine figure.
00:23:22You should have seen Arabella's expression.
00:23:24But look here, dear boy.
00:23:25I don't know what to do about Mrs. Erling.
00:23:28Egan.
00:23:28I might be married to her.
00:23:29She treats me with such damned indifference.
00:23:32She's juicet clever, too.
00:23:33She explains everything.
00:23:36Egad, she explains you.
00:23:38She's got any amount of explanations for you,
00:23:39all of them different.
00:23:40No explanations are necessary about my friendship with Mrs. Erling.
00:23:43Yes, well...
00:23:45Look here, dear old fellow.
00:23:46Do you think she will ever get into this damn thing called society?
00:23:50Would you introduce her to your wife?
00:23:51No use beating about the confounded bush.
00:23:53Would you do that?
00:23:54Mrs. Erling is coming here tonight.
00:23:56Your wife has sent her a card?
00:23:58Mrs. Erling has received a card.
00:24:00Well, she's all right, then.
00:24:01But why didn't you tell me this before?
00:24:03It would have saved me a heap of worry and damned misunderstandings.
00:24:07Mr. Cecil Graham.
00:24:14Good evening, Arthur.
00:24:16Why don't you ask me how I am?
00:24:17I like it when people ask me how I am.
00:24:19Now, tonight, I'm not at all well.
00:24:22Been dining with my people.
00:24:23Wonder why it is one's people are always so tedious?
00:24:26My father would talk morality after dinner.
00:24:29I told him he was old enough to know better.
00:24:31But from my experience, as soon as people are old enough to know better,
00:24:34they don't know anything at all.
00:24:37Oh, hello, Tuppy.
00:24:39Heard you're going to be married again.
00:24:41Thought you were tired of that game.
00:24:42You're excessively trivial, dear boy.
00:24:44Excessively trivial.
00:24:45By the way, Tuppy, which is it?
00:24:47Have you been twice married and once divorced?
00:24:50Or twice divorced and once married?
00:24:52I say you've been twice divorced and once married.
00:24:55It seems so much more probable.
00:24:56I have a very bad memory.
00:24:58I really don't remember which.
00:24:59Mr. Hopper.
00:25:06How do you do, Lady Windermere?
00:25:08How do you do?
00:25:10Please.
00:25:11How do you do, Duchess?
00:25:13Dear Mr. Hopper, how nice of you to come so early.
00:25:17We all know how you are run after in London.
00:25:19Capital Place London, but not nearly so exclusive in London as they are in Sydney.
00:25:23Ah, we know your value, Mr. Hopper.
00:25:26We wish they were more like you.
00:25:27It would make life so much easier.
00:25:30Do you know, Mr. Hopper, Agatha and I are so much interested in Australia.
00:25:34It must be so pretty with all the dear little kangaroos flying about.
00:25:39Agatha has found it on the map.
00:25:42Such a curious shape it is.
00:25:43Just like a large packing case.
00:25:46However, it is a very young country, isn't it?
00:25:48Wasn't it made at the same time as the others, Duchess?
00:25:54How clever you are, Mr. Hopper.
00:25:56Oh, you have a cleverness all of your own.
00:26:00Now, I mustn't keep you.
00:26:02But I should like to dance with Lady Agatha, Duchess.
00:26:04Oh, well, I hope she has a dance left.
00:26:07Have you a dance left, Agatha?
00:26:10Yes, Mama.
00:26:11The next one.
00:26:14Yes, Mama.
00:26:15May I have the pleasure?
00:26:16Mind you, take great care of my little chatterbox.
00:26:24Mrs. Erling.
00:26:34Lady Winery.
00:26:36Do you have dropped your fan?
00:26:37How charming your sweet wife looks.
00:26:42Quite a picture.
00:26:43It was terribly rash of you to come.
00:26:45The wisest thing I ever did in my life.
00:26:48And by the way, you must pay me a good deal of attention this evening.
00:26:51I'm afraid of the women.
00:26:53You must introduce me to some of them.
00:26:56The men I can always manage.
00:26:58How do you do, Lord Augustus?
00:27:00You have quite neglected me lately.
00:27:02I haven't seen you since yesterday.
00:27:04I'm afraid you're faithless.
00:27:06Everyone told me so.
00:27:07Now, really, Mrs. Erling.
00:27:09Allow me to explain.
00:27:10No, dear Lord Augustus.
00:27:12You can't explain anything.
00:27:14It's your chief charm.
00:27:16If you find charms in me, Mrs. Erling.
00:27:18I do indeed.
00:27:20Come.
00:27:21You look faint.
00:27:21Come out from the hall.
00:27:23How do you do, Mr. Graham?
00:27:26Isn't that your Aunt Lady Jedbra?
00:27:28I should so much like to know her.
00:27:30Oh, certainly, if you like.
00:27:32Aunt Caroline, may I introduce to you Mrs. Erling?
00:27:36So pleased to meet you, Lady Jedbra.
00:27:39Your nephew and I are great friends.
00:27:42I'm so much interested in his political career.
00:27:44I think he's sure to be a wonderful success.
00:27:47He thinks like a Tory and talks like a radical,
00:27:49and that's so important nowadays.
00:27:52He's such a brilliant talker, too.
00:27:54But we all know from whom he inherits that.
00:27:57Lord Allendale was saying to me only yesterday in the park
00:28:00that Mr. Graham talks almost as well as his aunt.
00:28:05Most kind of you to say these charming things to me.
00:28:09Did you introduce Mrs. Erling to Lady Jedbra?
00:28:13Couldn't help it.
00:28:15That woman can make one do anything she wants.
00:28:18How, I don't know.
00:28:21Hope to goodness she won't speak to me.
00:28:22Yes, yes, her coming here is monstrous, unbearable.
00:28:30He insisted on her coming, against my entreaties,
00:28:32against my commands.
00:28:34The house is tainted for me now.
00:28:36But I feel that every woman here sneers at me
00:28:38as she dances by with my husband.
00:28:41What have I done to deserve this?
00:28:43I gave him my life.
00:28:45He took it, used it, spoiled it.
00:28:47I am degraded in my own eyes, and I have no courage.
00:28:52I'm a coward.
00:28:53If I know you at all,
00:28:55I know you can't stand to live with a man
00:28:58who treats you like this.
00:29:00What sort of life would you have with him?
00:29:03You would feel that he was lying to you
00:29:04every moment of the day.
00:29:06You would feel that the look in his eyes was false.
00:29:09His voice, false.
00:29:10His touch, false.
00:29:12His passion, false.
00:29:17He would come to you
00:29:17when he was weary of others.
00:29:20You would have to comfort him.
00:29:22He would come to you
00:29:23when he was devoted to others.
00:29:24You would have to charm him.
00:29:26You would have to be to him
00:29:28the mask of his real life,
00:29:30the cloak, to hide his secret.
00:29:33But you are right.
00:29:34But you are entirely right.
00:29:37Oh, but where am I to turn to, Lord Darlington?
00:29:39You said you would be my friend.
00:29:41Tell me, what am I to do?
00:29:42Be my friend now.
00:29:44Between men and women,
00:29:45there is no friendship possible.
00:29:48There is passion,
00:29:51enmity, worship, love.
00:29:53But no friendship.
00:29:56I love you.
00:29:58No.
00:29:59Yes.
00:29:59No.
00:30:00Yes, I love you.
00:30:02More than anything in the whole world.
00:30:04What does your husband give you?
00:30:06Nothing.
00:30:07I offer you my life.
00:30:11Your darling dinner.
00:30:12Yes, my life.
00:30:14My whole life.
00:30:15Take it and do with it what you will.
00:30:18On Thursday, with great pleasure.
00:30:26What a bore it is to have to be civil to these old dowagers,
00:30:29but they always insist on it.
00:30:32Who is that well-dressed woman talking to Windermere?
00:30:36I haven't the slightest idea.
00:30:38Looks to be an addition de luxe of a wicked French novel.
00:30:42Meant specially for the English market.
00:30:45So that is poor Dumbie with Lady Plymdale.
00:30:47I hear she's frightfully jealous of him.
00:30:51He doesn't seem anxious to speak to me tonight.
00:30:54I suppose he's afraid of her.
00:30:55Those straw-coloured women have dreadful tempers.
00:31:00Do you know,
00:31:01I think I'll dance with you first, Windermere.
00:31:03It'll make Lord Augustus so jealous.
00:31:06Lord Augustus,
00:31:07Lord Windermere insists on my dancing with him first,
00:31:10and as it's his own house,
00:31:12I can't well refuse.
00:31:13You know I would much sooner dance with you.
00:31:16I wish I could believe so, Mrs. Earline.
00:31:18You know it far too well.
00:31:21I can fancy a person dancing through life with you
00:31:24and finding it charming.
00:31:25Oh, thank you.
00:31:27You are the most adorable of all ladies.
00:31:30Oh, what a nice speech.
00:31:32So simple and so sincere.
00:31:34Well,
00:31:36you shall hold my bouquet.
00:31:40I love you.
00:31:46Oh, I love you like I have never loved any living thing.
00:31:50From the moment I met you,
00:31:51I loved you.
00:31:53Blindly,
00:31:54adoringly,
00:31:55madly.
00:31:56You did not know it then,
00:31:58you know it now.
00:32:00Leave this house tonight.
00:32:02Now, I won't tell you that the world matters nothing,
00:32:04or the world's voice,
00:32:05or the voice of society.
00:32:06They matter a great deal.
00:32:08They matter far too much.
00:32:09But there comes a time
00:32:11in one's life
00:32:12when one has to choose
00:32:13between living one's own life
00:32:15fully,
00:32:15completely,
00:32:16entirely,
00:32:17or dragging out some false,
00:32:19shallow,
00:32:19degrading existence
00:32:21that the world
00:32:21and its hypocrisy
00:32:22demands.
00:32:24You have that moment now.
00:32:25Choose.
00:32:26Oh, my love,
00:32:27choose.
00:32:29Why?
00:32:29I have not the courage.
00:32:31Yes.
00:32:32Yes,
00:32:32you have the courage.
00:32:34There may be
00:32:34six months of pain,
00:32:36of disgrace even.
00:32:37But when you
00:32:39no longer
00:32:40bear his name,
00:32:41when you bear mine,
00:32:42all will be well.
00:32:45Oh, Margaret,
00:32:46my love,
00:32:48my wife,
00:32:49that shall be someday.
00:32:50Yes,
00:32:51my wife,
00:32:52you know it.
00:32:54What are you now?
00:32:56This woman
00:32:56has the place
00:32:57that by right
00:32:58belongs to you.
00:33:00Oh, go,
00:33:01go out of this house
00:33:02with head erect,
00:33:04with courage in your eyes,
00:33:06with a smile
00:33:07upon your lips.
00:33:09All London
00:33:10will know why you did it
00:33:11and who will blame you.
00:33:12No one.
00:33:16Oh, Mr. Dunby,
00:33:17how are you?
00:33:18I'm so sorry
00:33:19I have been out
00:33:20the last three times
00:33:21you have called.
00:33:22Come and lunch on Friday.
00:33:24Delighted.
00:33:25What an absolute brute
00:33:29you are.
00:33:30I really never can
00:33:31believe a word you say.
00:33:32Why did you tell me
00:33:33you didn't know her?
00:33:34And what do you mean
00:33:35by calling on her
00:33:36three times running?
00:33:37You are not to go
00:33:38to lunch there.
00:33:39Of course you understand that.
00:33:41My dear Laura,
00:33:42I wouldn't dream
00:33:43of going.
00:33:44You haven't told me
00:33:45her name yet.
00:33:46Who is she?
00:33:47Mrs. Erlin.
00:33:49That woman?
00:33:50Yes.
00:33:50That is what
00:33:51everyone calls her.
00:33:52How very interesting.
00:33:54How intensely interesting.
00:33:56I really must have
00:33:56a good stare at her.
00:33:58I have heard
00:33:58the most shocking
00:33:59things about her.
00:34:00They say she's
00:34:01ruining poor Windermere.
00:34:03And Lady Windermere,
00:34:04who goes in
00:34:04for being so proper,
00:34:06invites her.
00:34:07How extremely amusing.
00:34:09It takes a thoroughly
00:34:10good woman
00:34:10to do a thoroughly
00:34:11stupid thing.
00:34:13You are to lunch
00:34:14there on Friday.
00:34:15Why?
00:34:17Because I want you
00:34:17to take my husband
00:34:18with you.
00:34:20He's been so attentive
00:34:21lately that he's
00:34:22become a perfect nuisance.
00:34:24Now, this woman
00:34:24is just the thing
00:34:25for him.
00:34:26He'll dance attendance
00:34:27upon her as long
00:34:28as she lets him
00:34:29and won't bother me.
00:34:31I assure you,
00:34:32women of that kind
00:34:32are most useful.
00:34:34They form the basis
00:34:35of other people's
00:34:36marriages.
00:34:37What a mystery
00:34:38you are.
00:34:39I wish you were.
00:34:41Oh, I am.
00:34:42To myself.
00:34:43I'm the only person
00:34:44in the world
00:34:44I should like to know
00:34:45thoroughly.
00:34:46I just don't see
00:34:47a chance of it
00:34:48just at present.
00:34:48Just give me time
00:34:59to think.
00:35:01Look, I cannot
00:35:01answer you now.
00:35:02It must be now
00:35:03or not at all.
00:35:06Then not at all.
00:35:07You break my heart.
00:35:16Mine is already broken.
00:35:19Tomorrow,
00:35:20I leave England.
00:35:22This is the last time
00:35:24I shall ever look on you.
00:35:26We shall never see
00:35:27each other again.
00:35:30For one moment,
00:35:31our lives met,
00:35:32our souls touched.
00:35:34They shall never meet
00:35:36or touch again.
00:35:41Goodbye, Margaret.
00:35:43God, how alone
00:35:54I am in life.
00:35:57Oh, terribly alone.
00:36:04Oh, dear Margaret,
00:36:06I have just been having
00:36:08the most delightful chat
00:36:09with Mrs. Erlin.
00:36:11I am so sorry
00:36:13for what I said
00:36:13this afternoon about her.
00:36:15Of course,
00:36:16she must be all right
00:36:17if you invite her.
00:36:18Such an attractive woman
00:36:20and has such sensible
00:36:21views on life.
00:36:23Told me she entirely
00:36:24disapproved of people
00:36:25marrying more than once.
00:36:26So, of course,
00:36:27I feel quite safe
00:36:28about poor Augustus.
00:36:30Oh, I can't imagine
00:36:32why people speak
00:36:33against her.
00:36:35Oh, it's those
00:36:36horrid nieces of mine,
00:36:38the Saville girls.
00:36:39They're always
00:36:40talking scandal.
00:36:41Still, I should go
00:36:43to Hamburg.
00:36:44I really should.
00:36:45But where is Agatha?
00:36:46Ah, there she is.
00:36:48Agatha, darling.
00:36:49Yes, ma'am.
00:36:49Mr. Hopper,
00:36:51I am very, very
00:36:52angry with you.
00:36:53You have taken Agatha
00:36:54out on the terrace
00:36:55and she is most delicate.
00:36:56Awfully sorry, Duchess.
00:36:58You stepped out
00:36:59for a moment
00:36:59and got chatting together.
00:37:01Ah, about Australia.
00:37:03Yes.
00:37:04Hmm.
00:37:05Agatha, darling.
00:37:06Yes, ma'am.
00:37:07Did Mr. Hopper
00:37:08most definitely?
00:37:09Yes, ma'am.
00:37:10And what answer
00:37:11did you give him,
00:37:12dear child?
00:37:13Yes, ma'am.
00:37:14Oh, my dear one.
00:37:16You always say
00:37:17the right thing.
00:37:19Mr. Hopper.
00:37:21James,
00:37:22Agatha has told me
00:37:23everything.
00:37:24How cleverly you both
00:37:25have kept your secret.
00:37:26Then you don't mind
00:37:27my taking Agatha
00:37:28off to Australia,
00:37:29then, Duchess.
00:37:30To Australia?
00:37:31Yes.
00:37:31Oh, don't mention
00:37:33that dreadful vulgar place.
00:37:35But she said
00:37:36she'd like to come
00:37:36with me, Duchess.
00:37:38Agatha, did you say that?
00:37:40Yes, ma'am.
00:37:42My dear Agatha,
00:37:43you say the silliest
00:37:44things possible.
00:37:45I think on the whole
00:37:48I think on the whole
00:37:48that Grosvenor Square
00:37:50is a much healthier place
00:37:51to reside in.
00:37:52There are lots of vulgar people
00:37:54living in Grosvenor Square,
00:37:55but at any rate,
00:37:56there are no horrid kangaroos
00:37:58crawling about.
00:37:59But we'll talk about that tomorrow.
00:38:02You may take Agatha down, James.
00:38:05You'll come to lunch tomorrow,
00:38:07of course,
00:38:08at half past one
00:38:09instead of two.
00:38:11The Duke will have a few words
00:38:12to you to say, I'm sure.
00:38:13I should like to speak
00:38:15with the Duke, Duchess.
00:38:16He hasn't said
00:38:16a single word to me yet.
00:38:18Oh, I'm sure you'll find
00:38:20he has quite a few words
00:38:21to say to you tomorrow.
00:38:26And now, good night, Margaret.
00:38:29I'm afraid it's the old, old story.
00:38:32Love.
00:38:34Well, not love at first sight,
00:38:36but love at the end of the season,
00:38:38which I think is so much
00:38:40more satisfactory.
00:38:43My dear Margaret,
00:38:50what a handsome woman
00:38:51your husband has been dancing with.
00:38:53Is she a great friend of yours?
00:38:55No.
00:38:57Really?
00:38:59Good night, dear.
00:39:06Awful manners, young Harper has.
00:39:08Ah, Harper is one of nature's gentlemen.
00:39:11The worst kind of gentleman I know.
00:39:13A sensible woman, Lady Windermere?
00:39:16Most wives would have objected
00:39:17to Mrs. Erling coming.
00:39:20Lady Windermere has that uncommon thing,
00:39:23common sense.
00:39:24And Windermere knows
00:39:24nothing looks so like innocence
00:39:26as an indiscretion.
00:39:28Yes.
00:39:29Dear Windermere,
00:39:30he's becoming almost modern.
00:39:32Didn't think he would,
00:39:34nice time ago.
00:39:34Good night.
00:39:40Good night.
00:39:41Good night.
00:39:45Oh, good night, Lady Windermere.
00:39:48Oh, what a fascinating woman
00:39:50Mrs. Erling is.
00:39:51She's coming to lunch on Thursday.
00:39:53Won't you come too?
00:39:55I expect the bishop
00:39:56and dear Lady Merton.
00:39:58I am afraid
00:40:00I am otherwise engaged,
00:40:02Lady Chedbra.
00:40:02Oh, so sorry.
00:40:04Good night, dear.
00:40:07Charming ball it has been.
00:40:09Quite reminds me of old days.
00:40:11And I see that there are
00:40:12just as many fools in society
00:40:13as there used to be.
00:40:15So pleased to find
00:40:16that nothing has altered.
00:40:19Except Margaret.
00:40:20She's grown quite pretty.
00:40:23The last time I saw her,
00:40:2320 years ago,
00:40:24she was a frightened flannel.
00:40:26Positive fright, I assure you.
00:40:27Oh, the dear Duchess.
00:40:30And that sweet Lady Agatha,
00:40:32just the type of girl I like.
00:40:34Well,
00:40:35if I am to be
00:40:37the Duchess's sister-in-law...
00:40:39But are you?
00:40:40Oh, yes.
00:40:41He's to call tomorrow
00:40:42at 12 o'clock.
00:40:44He wanted to propose tonight.
00:40:46In fact, he did.
00:40:47He kept on proposing.
00:40:48Poor Augustus.
00:40:49You know how he repeats himself.
00:40:50Such a bad habit.
00:40:51But I told him
00:40:52I wouldn't give him
00:40:53an answer till tomorrow.
00:40:55Of course,
00:40:56I'm going to take him
00:40:57and I dare say
00:40:58I'll make him
00:40:59an admirable wife
00:41:00as wives go.
00:41:01And there's a great deal
00:41:02of good in Lord Augustus.
00:41:04Fortunately,
00:41:05it is all on the surface.
00:41:06Just where good qualities
00:41:07should be.
00:41:09Of course,
00:41:09you must help me
00:41:10in this matter.
00:41:12I'm not called on
00:41:13to encourage Lord Augustus,
00:41:14I suppose.
00:41:14Oh, no.
00:41:15I do the encouraging.
00:41:17But you will make me
00:41:19a handsome settlement,
00:41:20Windermere,
00:41:20won't you?
00:41:21Is that what you want
00:41:22to talk to me about tonight?
00:41:24Yes.
00:41:25I will not talk of that here.
00:41:27Then we shall talk of it
00:41:29in private.
00:41:42Won't tomorrow do as well?
00:41:44No.
00:41:45You see,
00:41:45tomorrow I'm going to accept him.
00:41:47And I think it would be
00:41:48a good idea
00:41:48if I was able to tell him
00:41:50that,
00:41:50well,
00:41:51what shall I say?
00:41:53Two thousand pounds
00:41:53a year left to me
00:41:54by a third cousin
00:41:55or a second husband
00:41:57or some distant relative
00:41:58of that kind?
00:41:59It would be
00:42:00an additional attraction,
00:42:01wouldn't it?
00:42:03You have a delightful
00:42:04opportunity now
00:42:05of paying me
00:42:06a compliment,
00:42:06Windermere.
00:42:08Oh, but you're not
00:42:08very clever
00:42:09at paying compliments.
00:42:10I'm afraid Margaret
00:42:11doesn't encourage you
00:42:12in that excellent habit.
00:42:14It's a great mistake
00:42:15on her part.
00:42:16When men give up
00:42:16saying what is charming,
00:42:17they give up thinking
00:42:18what is charming.
00:42:21But seriously,
00:42:22what do you say
00:42:23to two thousand pounds?
00:42:25Two thousand five hundred pounds,
00:42:26I think.
00:42:27In modern life,
00:42:28margin is everything.
00:42:29Oh, Windermere,
00:42:33don't you find the world
00:42:34an intensely amusing place?
00:42:37I do.
00:42:41To stay in this house
00:42:42any longer
00:42:43is impossible.
00:42:44So, tonight,
00:42:45a man who loves me
00:42:46offered me his whole life.
00:42:48I refused it.
00:42:49It was foolish of me.
00:42:51I will offer him mine now.
00:42:52I will give him mine.
00:42:54No,
00:42:56Arthur never understood me.
00:42:59Though when he reads
00:42:59this letter,
00:43:00he will.
00:43:01He may do
00:43:01as he chooses
00:43:02now with his life.
00:43:04I have done with mine
00:43:05as I think right,
00:43:05as I think best.
00:43:08It is he who has broken
00:43:09the bond of marriage,
00:43:10not I.
00:43:12Oh, I only break
00:43:13its bondage.
00:43:21Is Lady Windermere
00:43:22in the ballroom?
00:43:23No, madam.
00:43:23Her ladyship
00:43:24has just gone out.
00:43:25Gone out?
00:43:26She's not on the terrace.
00:43:28No, madam.
00:43:28Her ladyship
00:43:29has just gone out
00:43:29of the house.
00:43:30Out of the house?
00:43:31Yes, madam.
00:43:32Her ladyship
00:43:33has told me
00:43:33that she had left
00:43:34a letter for his lordship
00:43:35on the table.
00:43:36A letter for Lord Windermere?
00:43:38Yes, madam.
00:43:42Gone out of her house?
00:43:45A letter addressed
00:43:46to her husband?
00:43:48No, no.
00:43:49It would be impossible.
00:43:51Life doesn't repeat
00:43:52its tragedies like that.
00:43:54Oh, why does this horrible
00:43:55fancy come across me?
00:43:57Why do I remember
00:43:58the one moment
00:43:59in my life
00:43:59I most wish to forget?
00:44:02Does life repeat
00:44:03its tragedies?
00:44:04Oh, how terrible
00:44:13the same words
00:44:15that 20 years ago
00:44:16I wrote to her father.
00:44:18Oh, now, bitterly,
00:44:19I have been punished for it.
00:44:22No.
00:44:24My punishment,
00:44:25my real punishment
00:44:27is tonight,
00:44:28is now.
00:44:29You have to say
00:44:35goodnight to my wife?
00:44:36Um, yes.
00:44:38She is very tired.
00:44:39She has gone to bed.
00:44:40She said she had a headache.
00:44:42I must go to her.
00:44:42You'll excuse me.
00:44:43Oh, no.
00:44:43She doesn't wish
00:44:45to be disturbed.
00:44:46She's just very tired,
00:44:47that is all.
00:44:48Besides,
00:44:49there are people
00:44:49still in the supper room.
00:44:51She wants you
00:44:52to make her apologies
00:44:53to them.
00:44:54She asked me to tell you.
00:44:55You have dropped something?
00:44:58Oh, yes.
00:44:59That is mine.
00:45:00But it is
00:45:01my wife's handwriting.
00:45:02Um, yes,
00:45:03it's an address.
00:45:04Will you ask them
00:45:05to call my carriage, please?
00:45:07Certainly.
00:45:10What can I do?
00:45:11What can I do?
00:45:14I feel a passionate
00:45:15awakening within me
00:45:16I never felt before.
00:45:18What can it mean?
00:45:20The daughter must not
00:45:21be like the mother.
00:45:22That would be terrible.
00:45:23Oh, how can I save her?
00:45:26How can I save my child?
00:45:28A moment may ruin a life.
00:45:29Who knows that
00:45:29better than I?
00:45:33Windermere must be
00:45:33got out of the house.
00:45:35That is absolutely necessary.
00:45:37But how shall I do it?
00:45:38Oh, I must be done somehow.
00:45:41Dear lady,
00:45:42I am in such suspense.
00:45:44May I not have
00:45:45an answer to my request?
00:45:46Lord Augustus,
00:45:47listen to me.
00:45:48You are to take
00:45:48Lord Windermere
00:45:49down to your club
00:45:50and keep him there
00:45:50as long as possible.
00:45:52You understand?
00:45:53But you said
00:45:54you wish me
00:45:54to keep early hours.
00:45:55Do what I tell you.
00:45:56Do what I tell you.
00:45:56And my reward.
00:45:58No reward?
00:45:59No reward?
00:46:00Oh, ask me that tomorrow.
00:46:02But don't let Windermere
00:46:02out of your sight tonight.
00:46:04If you do,
00:46:05I will never forgive you.
00:46:06I will never speak to you again.
00:46:07I'll have nothing to do with you.
00:46:09Remember,
00:46:09you are to keep Windermere
00:46:10at your club
00:46:11and don't let him
00:46:11come back tonight.
00:46:12Well, really,
00:46:17I might be married
00:46:19to her already.
00:46:20Positively, I might.
00:46:28He was mad of me
00:46:29to come here.
00:46:31Horribly mad.
00:46:32Yet, which is the worst,
00:46:38I wonder.
00:46:40To be at the mercy
00:46:41of a man who loves one
00:46:42or the wife of a man
00:46:44who in one's own house
00:46:45dishonors one.
00:46:48What woman knows?
00:46:49What woman in the whole world?
00:46:50Will he love me always?
00:46:55This man to whom
00:46:56I am giving my life,
00:46:57for what do I bring him?
00:47:00Lips that have lost
00:47:01the note of joy,
00:47:02eyes that are blighted
00:47:03by tears,
00:47:04chill hands,
00:47:05an icy heart.
00:47:06I bring him nothing.
00:47:10I must go back.
00:47:14No.
00:47:16No, I can't go back.
00:47:17My letter has put me
00:47:18in their power.
00:47:20Oh, Arthur would never
00:47:20take me back.
00:47:22Oh, that fatal letter.
00:47:25No.
00:47:27No.
00:47:30Lord Darlington
00:47:31leaves England tomorrow.
00:47:33I will go with him.
00:47:35I have no choice.
00:47:40No.
00:47:42No, I must go back.
00:47:45Oh, let Arthur do with me
00:47:46what she pleases.
00:47:48I can't wait here.
00:47:49It has been madness
00:47:50my coming.
00:47:51As for Lord Darlington.
00:47:54Oh, here he is.
00:47:57Oh, what shall I do?
00:47:57What can I say to him?
00:47:59Oh, will he let me go away at all?
00:48:02I have heard that men
00:48:03are brutal, horrible.
00:48:06Oh.
00:48:06Lady Windermere.
00:48:07Look, heaven,
00:48:07I am in time.
00:48:08You must go back
00:48:09to your husband's house
00:48:10immediately.
00:48:10Must?
00:48:11Yes, you must.
00:48:12There's not a second to be lost.
00:48:14Lord Darlington may return
00:48:15at any time.
00:48:16Don't come near me.
00:48:18Oh, you are on the brink of ruin.
00:48:20You are on the brink
00:48:21of a hideous precipice.
00:48:22You must leave this place
00:48:23at once.
00:48:25What are you doing?
00:48:26Oh, Mrs. Erlin.
00:48:29If you had not come,
00:48:30I would have gone back.
00:48:32But now that I see you,
00:48:33I feel there is nothing
00:48:34in the whole world
00:48:35would induce me
00:48:36to live under the same roof
00:48:37as Lord Windermere.
00:48:39You fill me with horror.
00:48:41Oh, there is something about you
00:48:42that stirs the wildest rage
00:48:44within me.
00:48:45And I know why you were here.
00:48:46Oh, my husband sent you
00:48:48to lure me back
00:48:48that I might serve as a blind
00:48:50to whatever relations exist
00:48:51between you and him.
00:48:52Oh, you don't think that.
00:48:55You can't.
00:48:56Go back to my husband,
00:48:57Mrs. Erlin.
00:48:59He belongs to you,
00:49:00not to me.
00:49:02I suppose he's afraid
00:49:03of some scandal.
00:49:06Men are such cowards.
00:49:08They outrage every law
00:49:10of the world
00:49:10and are afraid
00:49:11of the world's tongue.
00:49:13Oh, but he had better
00:49:14prepare himself.
00:49:15He shall have a scandal.
00:49:17Oh, he shall have
00:49:18the worst scandal
00:49:18there has been in London
00:49:19for years.
00:49:20He shall see his name
00:49:21in every vile paper,
00:49:23mine on every hideous
00:49:24placard.
00:49:25No, no.
00:49:25Yes, he shall.
00:49:28Oh, had he come himself,
00:49:29I admit,
00:49:30I would have gone back
00:49:31to the life of degradation
00:49:32you and he had prepared
00:49:33for me.
00:49:35He was going back
00:49:36to stay himself at home
00:49:38and to send you
00:49:39as his messenger.
00:49:40Oh, that is infamous.
00:49:43Infamous?
00:49:43Lady Windermere,
00:49:45you wrong me horribly.
00:49:47You wrong your husband horribly.
00:49:49He does not know
00:49:49that you are here.
00:49:50He thinks you are safe
00:49:51in your own house.
00:49:52He thinks you are asleep
00:49:53in your own room.
00:49:56He never read the mad letter
00:49:57you wrote him.
00:49:59Never read it?
00:50:00No, he knows nothing about it.
00:50:02Oh, how simple you think me.
00:50:04You are lying to me.
00:50:06I'm not.
00:50:06I'm telling you the truth.
00:50:08If my husband didn't read
00:50:09my letter,
00:50:09how is it that you were here?
00:50:11Who told you
00:50:12I had left the house,
00:50:13you were shameless enough
00:50:14to enter?
00:50:15Who told you
00:50:15where I had gone to?
00:50:17My husband told you
00:50:18and sent you
00:50:19to decoy me back.
00:50:22Your husband
00:50:22has never seen the letter.
00:50:24I saw it.
00:50:26I opened it.
00:50:27I read it.
00:50:30You opened
00:50:31a letter of mine
00:50:32to my husband?
00:50:34You wouldn't dare.
00:50:36Dare?
00:50:38Oh, to save you
00:50:38from the abyss
00:50:39into which you are falling,
00:50:40there is nothing in the world
00:50:41I would not dare.
00:50:42Nothing in the whole world.
00:50:43Here is the letter.
00:50:46Your husband
00:50:47has never read it.
00:50:48He never shall read it.
00:50:52How do I know
00:50:53that that was my letter
00:50:53after all?
00:50:55Oh, you seem to think
00:50:56the communist device
00:50:57can take me in.
00:50:58Oh, I do disbelieve
00:50:59everything I tell you.
00:51:00What object do you think
00:51:02I have in coming here
00:51:03except to save you
00:51:04from utter ruin,
00:51:05to save you from
00:51:05the consequence
00:51:06of a hideous mistake?
00:51:08That letter
00:51:09that is burning now
00:51:09was your letter.
00:51:10I swear it to you.
00:51:12You took good care
00:51:13to burn it
00:51:13before I had examined it.
00:51:17Why can't I trust you?
00:51:20You, whose whole life
00:51:22is a lie,
00:51:23could you speak
00:51:24the truth
00:51:25about anything?
00:51:27Think as you like
00:51:28about me.
00:51:29Say what you choose
00:51:30against me.
00:51:31But go back.
00:51:32Go back to the husband
00:51:33you love.
00:51:34I do not love him.
00:51:35You do.
00:51:36And you know
00:51:37that he loves you.
00:51:37He does not understand
00:51:39what love is.
00:51:40God, he understands it
00:51:41as little as you do.
00:51:44But I see what you want.
00:51:46Oh, it would be
00:51:46a great advantage
00:51:47for you to get me back.
00:51:49Oh, dear heaven.
00:51:51The life I would have then.
00:51:53Living at the mercy
00:51:54of a woman
00:51:55who has neither mercy
00:51:57nor pity in her.
00:51:58Oh, a woman
00:51:59whom it is an infamy
00:52:01to meet.
00:52:02A degradation to know.
00:52:04A vile woman.
00:52:05A woman who comes
00:52:05between husband
00:52:06and wife.
00:52:07Oh, Lady Windermere.
00:52:08Lady Windermere
00:52:09don't say such
00:52:09terrible things.
00:52:10You don't know
00:52:11how terrible they are.
00:52:12How terrible
00:52:13and how unjust.
00:52:15Oh, listen.
00:52:16You must listen.
00:52:17Only go back
00:52:18to your husband
00:52:18and I promise you
00:52:20never to communicate
00:52:21with him again
00:52:21on any pretext.
00:52:23Never to see him.
00:52:24Never to have anything
00:52:25to do with his life
00:52:26or yours.
00:52:28Oh, the money
00:52:29he gave me
00:52:30he gave me
00:52:30not through love
00:52:31but through hatred.
00:52:33Not in worship
00:52:34but in contempt.
00:52:35The hold I have
00:52:36over him.
00:52:37Oh, you admit
00:52:38you have a hold?
00:52:40Yes.
00:52:41And I'll tell you
00:52:42what it is.
00:52:43It is his love
00:52:44for you,
00:52:44Lady Windermere.
00:52:45You expect me
00:52:46to believe that?
00:52:47Oh, you must believe it.
00:52:48It is true.
00:52:50It is his love
00:52:51that has made him
00:52:52submit to
00:52:53call it what you like.
00:52:56Tyranny,
00:52:56threats,
00:52:57anything you choose.
00:52:59But it is his love
00:53:00for you.
00:53:01His desire
00:53:02to spare you shame.
00:53:03His shame
00:53:04and disgrace.
00:53:06What do you mean?
00:53:08God, you're more insolent.
00:53:09What have I to do
00:53:10with you?
00:53:12Nothing.
00:53:13I know it.
00:53:16But I tell you
00:53:16that your husband
00:53:17loves you.
00:53:18That you may never
00:53:19meet with such love
00:53:20again in your whole life.
00:53:22That such love
00:53:23you will never meet.
00:53:24And that if you
00:53:25throw it away
00:53:25the day may come
00:53:26when you will starve
00:53:27for love
00:53:27and it will not
00:53:28be given to you.
00:53:29Beg for love
00:53:30and it will be
00:53:30denied you.
00:53:32Oh, Arthur
00:53:33loves you.
00:53:35And you say
00:53:35there is nothing
00:53:36between you.
00:53:37Oh, plenty
00:53:38you wouldn't admit.
00:53:40Before heaven
00:53:41your husband
00:53:42is guiltless
00:53:43of all events
00:53:44towards you.
00:53:46And I tell you
00:53:46that had it ever
00:53:48occurred to me
00:53:48that such a monstrous
00:53:49suspicion would have
00:53:50entered your mind
00:53:51I would have died
00:53:52rather than
00:53:53have crossed your life
00:53:54or his.
00:53:54Oh, died,
00:53:55gladly died.
00:53:56You talk
00:53:57as if you had
00:53:57a heart.
00:53:59Women like you
00:54:00have no hearts.
00:54:01Heart is not in you.
00:54:03But your bottom
00:54:04soul...
00:54:04Believe what you
00:54:09choose about me.
00:54:10I am not worth
00:54:11a moment's sorrow.
00:54:13But don't spoil
00:54:14your beautiful young
00:54:15life on my account.
00:54:17You don't know
00:54:18what may be in store
00:54:19for you unless
00:54:19you leave this house
00:54:20at once.
00:54:21You don't know
00:54:22what it is to fall
00:54:23into the pit,
00:54:24to be abandoned,
00:54:26sneered at,
00:54:26mocked,
00:54:28to be an outcast,
00:54:29to have the doors
00:54:30shut against one,
00:54:32to have to creep in
00:54:33by hideous byways,
00:54:35afraid every moment
00:54:36lest the mask
00:54:37should be stripped
00:54:37from one space.
00:54:39And all the while
00:54:40to hear the laughter,
00:54:42the horrible laughter
00:54:43of the world,
00:54:44nothing more tragic
00:54:45than all the tears
00:54:46the world has ever shed.
00:54:48You don't know
00:54:48what it is.
00:54:50One pays for one's sin
00:54:51and then one pays again
00:54:52and all one's life
00:54:53one pays.
00:54:54You must never know that.
00:54:56As for me,
00:55:01if suffering
00:55:02be an expiation,
00:55:03then at this moment
00:55:04I've expiated
00:55:04all my faults.
00:55:06For tonight,
00:55:07you have made a heart
00:55:08in one who had it not.
00:55:12Made it
00:55:12and broke it.
00:55:18But let that pass.
00:55:20I may have wrecked
00:55:22my own life,
00:55:22but I will not let
00:55:23you wreck yours.
00:55:26For you are a mere girl.
00:55:29You would be lost.
00:55:31You haven't got
00:55:31the kind of brains
00:55:32that enables a woman
00:55:33to get back.
00:55:34You have neither the wit
00:55:35nor the courage.
00:55:36You couldn't stand dishonor.
00:55:37Go back to your husband,
00:55:42Lady Windermere.
00:55:44Your husband loves you.
00:55:52You have a child,
00:55:54Lady Windermere.
00:55:56Go back to that child
00:55:57who even now,
00:55:58in pain or in joy,
00:55:59may be calling to you.
00:56:01God gave you that child.
00:56:03He will require from you
00:56:04that you make his life fine,
00:56:05that you watch over him.
00:56:07What answer will you make
00:56:08to God if his life
00:56:09is ruined through you?
00:56:11Go back to your husband,
00:56:13Lady Windermere.
00:56:14He has never swerved
00:56:15for a moment
00:56:16from the love he bears you.
00:56:18But even if he had
00:56:19a thousand loves,
00:56:20you must stay
00:56:20with your child.
00:56:22If he was harsh to you,
00:56:23you must stay
00:56:23with your child.
00:56:25If he ill-treated you,
00:56:26you must stay
00:56:27with your child.
00:56:29If he abandoned you,
00:56:30your place is
00:56:31with your child.
00:56:32Lady Windermere.
00:56:33Take me home.
00:56:34Take me home.
00:56:36Come.
00:56:36Come on.
00:56:38Stop.
00:56:40Don't you hear voices?
00:56:42No, no, there's no one.
00:56:43Yes, there is.
00:56:44Listen.
00:56:44What's he doing, Cecil?
00:56:46Oh, God, it's my husband.
00:56:47He's coming in.
00:56:49Oh, save me.
00:56:51There.
00:56:52The first chance
00:56:53you have slip out.
00:56:54If you ever get a chance,
00:56:55but you don't mind me.
00:56:57I'll face them.
00:57:01My dear boy,
00:57:02Lord Augustus,
00:57:04then it is I
00:57:07who am lost.
00:57:10Nonsense, dear Windermere.
00:57:12Does not leave me.
00:57:14What a nuisance
00:57:14they're turning us out
00:57:15of the club at this hour.
00:57:17It's only two o'clock.
00:57:19Live before the evening
00:57:20is only just beginning.
00:57:22It's very good of you,
00:57:23Lord Darlington,
00:57:24allowing Augustus
00:57:25to force our company on you.
00:57:26I'm afraid I can't stay long.
00:57:28Oh, really?
00:57:29I'm so sorry.
00:57:30You'll take a cigar,
00:57:31won't you?
00:57:32Thanks.
00:57:33Dear boy,
00:57:34I think I was not
00:57:34a dream of going.
00:57:35I have a lot to talk to you about.
00:57:37Damned importance, too.
00:57:38Oh,
00:57:39we all know what that is.
00:57:41Topic,
00:57:41I can't talk about anything
00:57:42but Mrs. Ireland.
00:57:44That's no business of yours,
00:57:45is it, Cecil?
00:57:46None.
00:57:47That's why it interests me.
00:57:49None business always bores me to death.
00:57:51I prefer other people's.
00:57:52Have something to drink,
00:57:54you fellows.
00:57:55Cecil,
00:57:56you'll have a whiskey and soda.
00:57:57Thanks.
00:57:58Mrs. Ireland looked
00:57:59very handsome tonight,
00:58:01didn't she?
00:58:01I am not
00:58:02one of her admirers.
00:58:04I wasn't,
00:58:05as I am now.
00:58:06Why,
00:58:06she actually made me
00:58:08introduce her
00:58:08to my dear Aunt Caroline.
00:58:11I believe she's going
00:58:11to lunch there.
00:58:13No.
00:58:15She is,
00:58:16really.
00:58:17Clever woman,
00:58:18Mrs. Ireland.
00:58:20Hello,
00:58:20Dumbie.
00:58:21Thought you were asleep.
00:58:22I am.
00:58:24I usually am.
00:58:25Very clever woman.
00:58:27Knows perfectly well
00:58:28what a damn fool I am.
00:58:29Knows it as well
00:58:30as I do myself.
00:58:32You may laugh,
00:58:33dear boy,
00:58:33but it is a great thing
00:58:34to come upon a woman
00:58:35who thoroughly understands it.
00:58:38It is an awfully
00:58:39dangerous thing.
00:58:41They always end up
00:58:41marrying one.
00:58:43But I thought,
00:58:44Tubby,
00:58:45that you were never
00:58:45going to see her again.
00:58:47Yes,
00:58:48you told me so
00:58:49yesterday evening
00:58:50at the club.
00:58:51You told me
00:58:52that you and her...
00:58:53Oh,
00:58:53she's explained that.
00:58:55And the Wiesbaden affair?
00:58:57She's explained that too.
00:58:59And her income,
00:59:00Tubby.
00:59:00Has she explained that?
00:59:02She's going to explain
00:59:03that tomorrow.
00:59:04Awfully commercial
00:59:07women nowadays.
00:59:09Our grandmothers
00:59:09threw their caps
00:59:10over the mills,
00:59:11of course.
00:59:12But by Jove,
00:59:13their grandaughters
00:59:14only threw their caps
00:59:15over the mills
00:59:16that bring the wind
00:59:17for them.
00:59:18You want to make her
00:59:19out a wicked woman?
00:59:20She is not.
00:59:23Wicked women
00:59:23bother one,
00:59:25good women
00:59:25bore one.
00:59:26That is the only
00:59:27difference between them.
00:59:28Mrs. Earline
00:59:29has a future
00:59:30before her.
00:59:31Mrs. Earline
00:59:32has a past
00:59:33before her.
00:59:34I prefer women
00:59:35with a past.
00:59:36They're always
00:59:36so damned amusing
00:59:37to talk to.
00:59:38There are lots
00:59:39of topics of
00:59:40conversation
00:59:41with her,
00:59:41Tubby.
00:59:42You're getting
00:59:42annoying,
00:59:43dear boy.
00:59:44You're getting
00:59:44damned annoying.
00:59:46My dear Tubby,
00:59:48you've lost your figure
00:59:49and you've lost
00:59:49your character.
00:59:51Don't lose your temper.
00:59:52You've only got one.
00:59:53My dear boy,
00:59:54if I wasn't the most
00:59:55good-natured man
00:59:56in London,
00:59:56I've...
00:59:57We'd treat you
00:59:57with more respect,
00:59:58now wouldn't we,
00:59:59Tubby?
00:59:59The youth of today
01:00:00are quite monstrous.
01:00:02They have absolutely
01:00:03no respect
01:00:04for dyed hair.
01:00:06Mrs. Earline
01:00:06has a very great
01:00:07respect for our
01:00:08dear Tubby.
01:00:08Then Mrs. Earline
01:00:09has set an admirable
01:00:10example for the rest
01:00:11of her sex.
01:00:13It is perfectly
01:00:14brutal the way
01:00:15most women nowadays
01:00:17behave to men
01:00:18who are not
01:00:18their husbands.
01:00:20Dumbi,
01:00:21you are ridiculous.
01:00:22And Cecil,
01:00:23you let your tongue
01:00:23run away with you.
01:00:24You must leave
01:00:25Mrs. Earline alone.
01:00:26You don't really
01:00:26know anything about her
01:00:27and you're always
01:00:28talking scandal
01:00:29against her.
01:00:29My dear Arthur,
01:00:30I never talk scandal.
01:00:32I only talk gossip.
01:00:34What is the difference
01:00:34between scandal
01:00:35and gossip?
01:00:36Oh.
01:00:38Gossip is charming.
01:00:41History is merely gossip.
01:00:43But scandal
01:00:43is gossip
01:00:45made tedious
01:00:45by morality.
01:00:46Now I never
01:00:47moralise.
01:00:48A man who moralises
01:00:50is usually a hypocrite
01:00:51and a woman who
01:00:52moralises
01:00:52is invariably plain.
01:00:54There's nothing
01:00:55in the world
01:00:55so unbecoming
01:00:56as a nonconformist
01:00:58conscience.
01:00:59Most women know
01:01:00this, I'm happy to say.
01:01:01Just my sentiments,
01:01:02dear boy.
01:01:03Just my sentiments.
01:01:05I'm sorry to hear that,
01:01:06Tuppy.
01:01:07Whenever someone agrees
01:01:08with me,
01:01:08I feel I always
01:01:09must be wrong.
01:01:10My dear boy,
01:01:11when I was your age...
01:01:12But you never were,
01:01:13Tuppy.
01:01:14And you never will be.
01:01:16I say, Darlington,
01:01:17let us have some cods.
01:01:18You'll play Arthur,
01:01:19won't you?
01:01:19No thanks, Cecil.
01:01:21Good heavens,
01:01:22how marriage ruins a man.
01:01:24It's as demoralising
01:01:25as cigarettes
01:01:26and far more expensive.
01:01:28You'll play,
01:01:28of course, Tuppy.
01:01:29Can't, dear boy.
01:01:31Promise Mrs. Early
01:01:32never to play
01:01:32or drink again.
01:01:34Now, my dear Tuppy,
01:01:36don't be let
01:01:37a stranger
01:01:37to the paths
01:01:38of virtue.
01:01:39Reformed,
01:01:39you'd be
01:01:40perfectly tedious.
01:01:41That is the worst
01:01:43of women.
01:01:44They always want
01:01:44one to be good.
01:01:46And if we are good
01:01:47when they meet us,
01:01:47they don't love us at all.
01:01:49They like to find us
01:01:50quite irretrievably bad
01:01:52and then to leave us
01:01:53quite unattractively good.
01:01:55They always do
01:01:56find us bad.
01:01:59I don't think
01:02:00we are bad.
01:02:01I think we're all good.
01:02:03Except for Tuppy.
01:02:05No.
01:02:07We are all
01:02:07in the gutter.
01:02:09But some of us
01:02:10are looking at the stars.
01:02:11upon my word,
01:02:13you are romantic
01:02:14tonight, Darlington.
01:02:15Too romantic.
01:02:16You must be in love.
01:02:18Who is the woman?
01:02:20The woman I love
01:02:22is not free
01:02:24or thinks she isn't.
01:02:26A married woman, then?
01:02:28Well, there's nothing
01:02:29in the world
01:02:30like the devotion
01:02:31of a married woman.
01:02:33It's not free
01:02:34or thinks she isn't.
01:02:36A married woman, then?
01:02:38Well, there's nothing
01:02:39in the world like
01:02:40the devotion of a married woman.
01:02:41It's a thing
01:02:42no married man
01:02:43ever knows anything about.
01:02:44Oh, she doesn't love me.
01:02:46She's a good woman.
01:02:48She's the only good woman
01:02:49I have ever met
01:02:50in my entire life.
01:02:51The only good woman
01:02:52you've ever met
01:02:53in your entire life?
01:02:54she's the only good woman.
01:02:57Why then, you are a lucky fellow.
01:03:00I've met hundreds of good women.
01:03:03I never seem to meet
01:03:04any but good women.
01:03:05The world is perfectly
01:03:06packed with good women.
01:03:08To know good women
01:03:09is a middle-class education.
01:03:10This woman has innocence and purity.
01:03:17She has everything we men have lost.
01:03:21What good should we men do
01:03:23going about the world
01:03:24with purity and innocence?
01:03:27A well-thought-out buttonhole
01:03:28is a much more effective approach.
01:03:30So, she does not love you then?
01:03:33No.
01:03:34She doesn't.
01:03:36I congratulate you,
01:03:37my dear fellow.
01:03:38In this world,
01:03:39there are only two real tragedies.
01:03:41One is not getting what one wants
01:03:44and the other is getting it.
01:03:46To last is much the worst.
01:03:49To last is the real tragedy.
01:03:51But I'm interested to hear
01:03:53that she does not love you.
01:03:54How long could you love a woman
01:03:56who didn't love you, Cecil?
01:03:57A woman who didn't love me?
01:03:59Huh.
01:04:00All my life.
01:04:01So could I.
01:04:02But it's so difficult to meet one.
01:04:04How can you be so conceited, Dumbie?
01:04:07I didn't say it as a matter of conceit.
01:04:10I said it as a matter of regret.
01:04:13I have been wildly, madly adored.
01:04:17I'm sorry, I have.
01:04:19It has been in an immense nuisance.
01:04:22I should like to be allowed
01:04:24a little time to myself now and then.
01:04:26A little time to educate yourself, I suppose.
01:04:29No, to forget all I've learned.
01:04:31That's much more important.
01:04:33What cynics you fellows are.
01:04:35What is a cynic?
01:04:37A man who knows the price of everything
01:04:40and the value of nothing.
01:04:43And a sentimentalist, my dear Darlington,
01:04:45is a man who sees an absurd value in everything
01:04:48and doesn't know the market price of a single thing.
01:04:51You always amuse me, Cecil.
01:04:54You speak as if you're a man of experience.
01:04:56I am.
01:04:57You are far too young.
01:04:59That is a great error.
01:05:00Experience is a question of instinct on life.
01:05:03I have got it.
01:05:05Tuppy hasn't.
01:05:07Experience is the name that Tuppy gives to his mistakes.
01:05:10Experience is the name everyone gives to their mistakes.
01:05:14One shouldn't commit anything.
01:05:15Life would be very dull without them.
01:05:17Darlington, you are quite faithful to this woman you love.
01:05:23This good woman?
01:05:25Cecil, if one really loves a woman,
01:05:30all other women become absolutely meaningless.
01:05:34Love changes one.
01:05:36I am changed.
01:05:38How very interesting.
01:05:41Tuppy, I would like to speak with you.
01:05:45Oh, it's no use talking to Tuppy.
01:05:47You might as well talk to a brick wall.
01:05:49Because I like talking to a brick wall.
01:05:51It's the only thing that doesn't contradict me.
01:05:53Tuppy?
01:05:54What is it?
01:05:56What is it?
01:05:57Come here.
01:06:04Darlington has been moralising and talking about the purity of love and that sort of thing.
01:06:08And this whole time, he's had a woman here in his rooms.
01:06:12No.
01:06:13Really?
01:06:14Really?
01:06:15Yes.
01:06:16Here is her fan.
01:06:17Butch.
01:06:18Butch.
01:06:19Right.
01:06:20I'm really off now, Lord Darlington.
01:06:22I'm sorry you are leaving England so soon.
01:06:24Very cold on us when you get back.
01:06:26My wife and I will be charmed to see you.
01:06:27I'm afraid I shall be gone for many years.
01:06:30Good night.
01:06:32Arthur.
01:06:33What?
01:06:34I would like to talk to you.
01:06:36No, do come.
01:06:38I can't.
01:06:39I'm off.
01:06:40It is very interesting.
01:06:41You'll find it very amusing.
01:06:43It is some of your nonsense, Cecil.
01:06:45It isn't.
01:06:46It isn't, really.
01:06:47My dear boy, you must not go yet.
01:06:49I have a lot to talk to you about and Cecil has something to show you.
01:06:52No.
01:06:53What is it?
01:06:54Darlington has had a woman here in his rooms.
01:06:58Here is her fan.
01:06:59Amusing, isn't it?
01:07:01Good God.
01:07:02What is it?
01:07:03Lord Darlington?
01:07:04Yes?
01:07:05What is my wife's fan doing here in your rooms?
01:07:08Hands off, Cecil.
01:07:09Don't touch me.
01:07:10Your wife's fan?
01:07:11Yes.
01:07:12Here it is.
01:07:13I don't know.
01:07:14You must know.
01:07:15I demand an explanation.
01:07:16Don't hold me, you fool.
01:07:17Speak, sir.
01:07:18Why is my wife's fan here?
01:07:19Answer me, by God.
01:07:20I'll search your rooms and if my room...
01:07:21You will not search my rooms.
01:07:22You have no right to do so.
01:07:23I forbid it.
01:07:24You scoundrel.
01:07:25I'll not leave your room till I have searched every corner of it.
01:07:26Lord Windermere.
01:07:27Mrs. Erling.
01:07:28I'm afraid I took your wife's fan in mistake for my own when I was leaving your house tonight.
01:07:31I'm so sorry.
01:07:32I'm so sorry.
01:07:33I'm so sorry.
01:08:01I'm so sorry.
01:08:02I came in dreadfully late and would like to wake you.
01:08:06You are crying, dear.
01:08:09Yes, I am crying for...
01:08:11I have something to tell you, Arthur.
01:08:14My dear child, you are not well.
01:08:17You've been doing too much.
01:08:20Let us go away to the country.
01:08:22You'll be all right at Selby.
01:08:24The season is almost over.
01:08:25There is no use staying on.
01:08:27Poor darling.
01:08:29We can go away today if you like.
01:08:31We can easily catch the 340.
01:08:33I'll send a wire to Fanon.
01:08:34Yes.
01:08:35Let us go away today.
01:08:36No.
01:08:37No, I can't go today, Arthur.
01:08:40There is someone I must see before I leave town.
01:08:42Someone who has been kind to me.
01:08:44Kind to you?
01:08:45Far more than that.
01:08:46I will tell you, Arthur, but only love me.
01:08:50Love me as you used to love me.
01:08:52Used to?
01:08:53But you are not thinking of that wretched woman who came here last night.
01:08:58But you don't still am...
01:08:59No, you couldn't.
01:09:00I don't.
01:09:01I know now I was wrong and foolish.
01:09:03Look, I don't think now that people can be divided into the good and the bad as though they were two separate races or creations.
01:09:11What are called good women may have terrible things in them.
01:09:15Mad moods of recklessness, assertion, jealousy, sin.
01:09:20Bad women, as they are termed, may have in them sorrow, repentance, pity, sacrifice.
01:09:26And I don't think Mrs. Earlin a bad woman.
01:09:28I know she's not.
01:09:29My dear child, the woman's impossible.
01:09:31No matter what harm she tries to do her, you must never see her again.
01:09:34But I want to see her. I want her to come here.
01:09:37Never.
01:09:38She came here once as your guest. She must come now as mine. That is but fair.
01:09:43She should never have come.
01:09:44It is too late, Arthur, to say that now.
01:09:47Margaret, if you knew where Mrs. Earlin went last night after she left this house, you would not sit in the same room with her.
01:09:53It was absolutely shameless, the whole thing.
01:09:55Arthur, I... I can't bear it any longer. I must tell you. Last night...
01:10:01Mrs. Earlin has called to return your ladyship's fan which she took away by a mistake last night.
01:10:05She has left a message on the card.
01:10:12Ask Mrs. Earlin to be kind enough to come up. Say, I shall be very glad to see her.
01:10:18If she wants to see me, Arthur.
01:10:20Margaret, I beg you not to.
01:10:23How do you do, Lady Windermere? How do you do?
01:10:27Do you know, Lady Windermere, I am so sorry about your fan.
01:10:30I can't imagine how I made such a silly mistake. Most stupid of me.
01:10:34And as I was driving in your direction, I decided to return your property in person.
01:10:39With many apologies for my carelessness.
01:10:42And of bidding you goodbye.
01:10:45Goodbye? Oh, are you going away then, Mrs. Earlin?
01:10:49Yes, I am going to live abroad again.
01:10:52The English climate doesn't suit me.
01:10:55My heart is affected here and that I don't like. I prefer living down south.
01:11:00London is too full of fogs and serious people, Lord Windermere.
01:11:05Whether the fogs produce the serious people or whether the serious people produce the fogs, I don't know.
01:11:10But the whole thing rather gets on my nerves.
01:11:12So I'm leaving this afternoon by the club train.
01:11:15This afternoon? But I wanted so much to come and see you.
01:11:19How kind of you. But I'm afraid I have to go.
01:11:23Shall I never see you again then, Mrs. Earlin?
01:11:26I'm afraid not. Our lives lie too far apart.
01:11:30But there is a little thing I would like you to do for me.
01:11:34I want a photograph of you, Lady Windermere. Would you give me one?
01:11:38You don't know how gratified I should be.
01:11:40Oh, with pleasure. I'll show it to you.
01:11:47It is monstrous you're intruding yourself here after your contact last night.
01:11:50My dear Windermere, manners before morals.
01:11:55I'm afraid it is very flattering. I'm not so pretty as that.
01:11:59You are much prettier. But don't you have one of yourself and your little boy?
01:12:04I have. Would you prefer one of those?
01:12:07Yes.
01:12:08I'll get it for you. If you'll excuse me for a moment, I have one upstairs.
01:12:12I'm so sorry, Lady Windermere, to give you so much trouble.
01:12:15No trouble at all, Mrs. Earlin.
01:12:17Thanks so much.
01:12:21You seem rather out of temper this morning, Windermere.
01:12:24Why should you be? Margaret and I get on charmingly together.
01:12:27I can't bear to see you with her.
01:12:29Besides, you have not told me the truth, Mrs. Earlin.
01:12:33Mrs. Earlin.
01:12:34I have not told her the truth, you mean.
01:12:36I sometimes wish you heard.
01:12:38I should have been spared then the misery, the anxiety, the annoyance of the last six months.
01:12:44But rather than my wife should know, that the mother whom she has been taught to consider as dead,
01:12:49the mother whom she has mourned as dead, is living.
01:12:53A divorced woman, going about under an assumed name.
01:12:58A bad woman, preying upon life as I know you now to be.
01:13:03Rather than that, I was ready to supply you with money to pay bill after bill, extravagance after extravagance,
01:13:09to risk what occurred yesterday, the first quarrel I have ever had with my wife.
01:13:12You don't understand what that means to me. How could you?
01:13:16But I tell you that the only bitter words that ever came from those sweet lips of hers were on your account.
01:13:22And I hate to see you next to her.
01:13:25You sully the innocence that is in her.
01:13:29And there I used to think that with all your faults you are frank and honest.
01:13:34You are not.
01:13:36Why do you say that?
01:13:38You made me get you an invitation to my wife's ball.
01:13:41For my daughter's ball, yes.
01:13:42You came.
01:13:43And within an hour of your leaving the house, you are found in a man's rooms.
01:13:47You are disgraced before everyone.
01:13:49Yes.
01:13:50Therefore, I have the right to look upon you as what you are.
01:13:54A worthless, vicious woman.
01:13:57I have the right to tell you never to enter this house.
01:13:59Never to attempt to come near my wife.
01:14:02My daughter, you mean?
01:14:03You have no right to claim her as your daughter.
01:14:05You left her.
01:14:07Abandoned her when she was but a child in the cradle.
01:14:11Abandoned her for your lover, who abandoned you in turn.
01:14:16Do you count that to his credit, Lord Windermere, or to mine?
01:14:19To his, now that I know you.
01:14:22Take care.
01:14:23You had better be careful.
01:14:25I am not going to mince words for you.
01:14:26I know you thoroughly.
01:14:28I question that.
01:14:29I do know you.
01:14:30For 20 years of your life you lived without your child.
01:14:34Without a thought of your child.
01:14:36One day, you read in the papers that she had married a rich man.
01:14:39You saw your hideous chance.
01:14:41You knew that to spare her the ignominy of learning that a woman like you was her mother, I would endure anything.
01:14:47You began your blackmailing.
01:14:49Don't use ugly words, Windermere. They are vulgar.
01:14:53I saw my chance. It is true and took it.
01:14:56Yes, you took it.
01:14:57And spoiled it all last night by being found out.
01:15:01You were quite right.
01:15:03I spoiled it all last night.
01:15:05And as for your blunder in taking my wife's fan from here and then leaving it about in Darlington's rooms, it is unpardonable.
01:15:11I can't bear the sight of it now.
01:15:13I shall never let my wife use it again. The thing is soiled for me.
01:15:16You should have kept it and not brought it back.
01:15:18I think I shall keep it.
01:15:20It's extremely pretty.
01:15:22I shall ask Margaret to give it to me.
01:15:25I hope my wife will give it to you.
01:15:27Oh, I'm sure she'll have no objections.
01:15:29Oh, don't imagine I'm going to have a pathetic scene with her.
01:15:32Weep on her neck and tell her who I am and all that kind of thing.
01:15:36I have no ambition to play the part of a mother.
01:15:41Only once in my life have I known a mother's feelings.
01:15:44That was last night.
01:15:46They were terrible. They made me suffer.
01:15:49They made me suffer too much.
01:15:52For 20 years, as you say, I have lived childless.
01:15:57I want to live childless still.
01:16:00Besides, my dear Windermere,
01:16:04how on earth could I pose as a mother with a grown-up daughter?
01:16:08Margaret is 21,
01:16:10and I have never admitted that I am more than 29 or 30 at the most.
01:16:1429 when there are pink shades, 30 when there are not.
01:16:18So you see what difficulties it would involve.
01:16:21No, as far as I am concerned,
01:16:24let your wife cherish the memory of this dead, stainless mother.
01:16:28Why should I interfere with her illusions?
01:16:30I find it hard enough to keep my own.
01:16:33I lost one illusion last night.
01:16:36I thought I had no heart.
01:16:39I find I have.
01:16:41I am so sorry, Mrs. Erland, to have kept you waiting.
01:16:45I couldn't find the photograph anywhere.
01:16:47At last I discovered it in my husband's dressing room.
01:16:50He had stolen it.
01:16:51I am not surprised.
01:16:53It is charming.
01:16:55So that is your little boy.
01:16:57What is he called?
01:16:59Gerald.
01:17:00After my dear father.
01:17:01Really?
01:17:02Yes.
01:17:03If it had been a girl, I would have called it after my mother.
01:17:06My mother had the same name as myself.
01:17:08Margaret.
01:17:09My name is Margaret too?
01:17:11Indeed.
01:17:12Indeed.
01:17:13Yes.
01:17:18You are devoted to your mother's memory, Lady Windermere, your husband tells me.
01:17:22We all have ideals in life.
01:17:24At least we all should have.
01:17:25Mine is my mother.
01:17:27Ideals are dangerous things.
01:17:29Realities are better.
01:17:31They wound, but they are better.
01:17:33If I lost my ideals, I should lose everything.
01:17:36Everything?
01:17:37Yes.
01:17:38Did your father often speak to you of your mother?
01:17:43No.
01:17:44No.
01:17:45It gave him too much pain.
01:17:46He told me how my mother had died a few months after I was born.
01:17:50His eyes filled with tears as he spoke.
01:17:53He then begged me never to mention her name to him again.
01:17:56It made him suffer even to hear it.
01:17:59My father...
01:18:01My father really died of a broken heart.
01:18:04His was the most ruined life I know.
01:18:07I'm afraid I must go now, Lady Windermere.
01:18:11Oh, no, don't.
01:18:12I think I had better.
01:18:14My carriage must have come back by now.
01:18:16I sent her to Lady Jedburgh's with a note.
01:18:18Arthur, would you mind seeing if Mrs. Erlen's carriage has come back?
01:18:22No, pray don't trouble Lord Windermere, Lady Windermere.
01:18:24Yes.
01:18:25Arthur, do go, please.
01:18:29What am I to say to you? You saved me last night.
01:18:32Hush, don't speak of it.
01:18:33I must speak of it.
01:18:34I can't let you think I'm going to allow this sacrifice.
01:18:37I'm not.
01:18:38It is too great.
01:18:40I'm going to tell my husband everything.
01:18:42It is my duty.
01:18:43It is not your duty.
01:18:45At least you have duties to others besides him.
01:18:50You say you owe me something.
01:18:52I owe you everything.
01:18:53Then pay your debt by silence.
01:18:55That is the only way in which it can be paid.
01:18:57Don't spoil the one good thing I have done in my life by telling it to anyone.
01:19:02Promise me that what happened last night will remain a secret between us.
01:19:06You must not bring misery into your husband's life.
01:19:10Why spoil his love?
01:19:12You must not spoil it.
01:19:14Love is easily killed.
01:19:16How easily love is killed.
01:19:18Pledge me your word, Lady Windermere, that you will never tell him.
01:19:23I insist upon it.
01:19:24It is your will, not mine.
01:19:29Your carriage has not come back yet, Mrs. Erling.
01:19:35Makes no matter.
01:19:36I'll take a handsome.
01:19:37There's nothing in the world more respectable than a good Shrewsbury and Talbot.
01:19:44And now, my dear Lady Windermere, I'm afraid it is really goodbye.
01:19:50Oh, I remember.
01:19:51You'll think me absurd.
01:19:53But you know I've taken a great fancy to this fan that I was silly enough to run away with last night.
01:19:59Now I wonder, would you give it to me?
01:20:02Lord Windermere says you may. I know it is his present.
01:20:06Oh, certainly, if it will give you any pleasure.
01:20:10Oh, but it has my name on it. It has Margaret on it.
01:20:13But we have the same Christian name.
01:20:16I forgot, of course.
01:20:18Oh, do have it.
01:20:20What a wonderful chance our names being the same.
01:20:23Quite wonderful.
01:20:25Thanks.
01:20:27It will always remind me of you.
01:20:31Lord Augustus Lawton and Mrs. Erling's carriage has arrived.
01:20:34Good morning, dear boy.
01:20:36Good morning, Lady Windermere.
01:20:39Mrs. Erling.
01:20:41How do you do, Lord Augustus?
01:20:43Are you quite well this morning?
01:20:45Quite well, thank you, Mrs. Erling.
01:20:48You don't look at all well.
01:20:49You stop up too late.
01:20:50It is so bad for you.
01:20:52You really should take more care of yourself.
01:20:55Goodbye, Lord Windermere.
01:20:58Lord Augustus, won't you see me to my carriage?
01:21:02You might carry the fan.
01:21:04Allow me.
01:21:06Oh, no, I want Lord Augustus.
01:21:07I have a special message for the dear Duchess.
01:21:10Won't you carry the fan, Lord Augustus?
01:21:13If you really desire it, Mrs. Erling.
01:21:16Of course I do.
01:21:18You'll carry it so gracefully.
01:21:19You would carry off anything gracefully, dear Lord Augustus.
01:21:25You will never speak against Mrs. Erling again, Arthur, will you?
01:21:29She is better than one thought her.
01:21:31She's better than I am.
01:21:34Child, you and she belong to different worlds.
01:21:38Into your world, evil has never entered.
01:21:39Don't say that, Arthur.
01:21:41You know, there's the same world for all of us.
01:21:44And good and evil, sin and innocence go through it hand in hand.
01:21:48You know, to shut one's eyes to half of life that one may live securely
01:21:52as though one blinded oneself.
01:21:54That one might walk with more safety in a land of pit and precipice.
01:21:58Child, why do you say that?
01:22:00Because I, who had shut my eyes to life, came to the brink.
01:22:04And the one who separated us...
01:22:06We were never separated.
01:22:07We never must be again.
01:22:10Oh, Arthur, don't love me less.
01:22:12And I will trust you more.
01:22:14I will trust you absolutely.
01:22:16Let us go to Selby, hm?
01:22:19In the Rose Gardens at Selby, the roses are white and red.
01:22:22Arthur, she has explained everything.
01:22:25My dear fellow, she has explained every damn thing.
01:22:28We all wronged her immensely.
01:22:30It was entirely for my sake she went to Darlington's rooms.
01:22:33Called first at the club.
01:22:35Fact is, wanted to put me out of suspense.
01:22:37Being told that I had gone on.
01:22:38Followed.
01:22:40Naturally frightened when she heard a lot of us coming in.
01:22:43Retired to another room.
01:22:45Oh, I assure you, most gratifying to me the whole thing.
01:22:48We all behaved brutally to her.
01:22:51She is just the woman for me.
01:22:53Suits me down to the ground.
01:22:55The only condition she makes is that we live entirely out of England.
01:22:58Very good thing, too.
01:23:00Damn clubs.
01:23:01Damn climate.
01:23:02Damn cooks.
01:23:03Damn everything.
01:23:04Sick of it all.
01:23:05Has Mrs. Earline...
01:23:06Yes, Lady Windermere.
01:23:07Mrs. Earline has done me the honor of accepting my hand.
01:23:14Well, he is certainly marrying a very clever woman.
01:23:16He is marrying a very good woman.
01:23:18He is marrying a very good woman.
01:23:19He is marrying a very good woman.
01:23:23Giantolithic discriminant to him in certain humans.
01:23:26Mm-hmm .
01:23:29vings
01:23:40He is marrying her...
01:23:42I don't mind, isn't it?
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