- 2 days ago
A young girl, whose head is full of romantic and melodramatic notions, goes to stay with the wealthy Tilney family. Through her adventures, Catherine Morland comes to learn that marriage in the society of her day is determined not by true love but by wealth and social status.
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00:00:00Why do you tremble so?
00:00:11Are we not welcome in this desolate place?
00:00:14Only too welcome, mademoiselle.
00:00:16We must escape this frightful castle and the power of its master.
00:00:21What wild fancy is this?
00:00:23No fancy, dear lady.
00:00:26Ah, mademoiselle, you are so young.
00:00:28Pray God you may escape the horrors of that evil chamber.
00:00:58Ah, mademoiselle, you are so young.
00:01:00Ah, mademoiselle, you are so young.
00:01:03Ah, mademoiselle, you are so young.
00:01:05Where are you?
00:01:06Cathy!
00:01:08Cathy!
00:01:09Mother wants you!
00:01:13Mrs. Allen's here!
00:01:14You do realise, Edward, you've interrupted a vital part of my education.
00:01:26Literature and solitude are as necessary to a young woman's development as sunshine is to ripe fruit.
00:01:33Do I look cloudy?
00:01:34Not very.
00:01:35Can you imagine my joy this morning when Mr. Allen informed me that he is so afflicted with the gout that he's been ordered to bath immediately?
00:02:02I see I am rebuked.
00:02:05But at my age, a little adventure makes such a pleasant change.
00:02:10And at your age, my dear Catherine, I think everyone agrees that if adventure does not find a young lady at home, then she must look for it abroad.
00:02:20I'm invited to bath.
00:02:23Quite so.
00:02:24Emma!
00:02:25Charlotte!
00:02:26Cathy's going to bath!
00:02:28Shall we go to the shops and to the balls?
00:02:30Nothing shall keep us from them.
00:02:32And I shall dance.
00:02:34And shall I have a run of my own?
00:02:36Naturally.
00:02:38But in bath, there is no time for sleep.
00:02:42Nor solitude.
00:02:43You will be weary, but her friend would sing.
00:02:54It's so last but the beginning.
00:02:55You have a heart belief.
00:02:55It's not so that he started to die dell among animals.
00:02:57You have a heart faith.
00:02:59You have a heart right.
00:03:00I have a little money for the contest.
00:03:01It's a lot of money.
00:03:01Becomeapprecious.
00:03:02And I shall stop living.
00:03:02If a guy is holding on my face.
00:03:03You have a hole in theøre 상황.
00:03:04The Cryptographic plays.
00:03:04And I shall get to
00:03:08the CFP of the Houndary.
00:03:08And that is a lot closer than Israel.
00:03:10You have aowed lbs on the hill.
00:03:11Tom! Tom!
00:03:40What's that place over there?
00:03:42Atmos?
00:03:44It's North Anger Abbey.
00:04:10It's North Anger Abbey.
00:04:16It's North Anger Abbey.
00:04:18It's North Anger Abbey.
00:04:22It's North Anger Abbey.
00:04:24It's North Anger Abbey.
00:04:28It's North Anger Abbey.
00:04:30It's North Anger Abbey.
00:04:34It's North Anger Abbey.
00:04:52Oh!
00:04:54Come on, there!
00:04:58Oh, these are lodgings.
00:05:12Oh, Mrs. Allen, are we really here?
00:05:16I hope you'll be comfortable, my dear.
00:05:38Dear Mrs. Allen, can we not go out now?
00:05:40The evening is so beautiful.
00:05:42Out like this, my dear child.
00:05:45Thank God we have arrived under cover of darkness,
00:05:48for we are shockingly ill-closed.
00:05:50And we will go nowhere
00:05:52until we have been provided with the very latest of fashion.
00:05:56Come Friday, Miss Morland will be ready to make her entree into the world.
00:06:04Now, I believe all our exertions are awarded.
00:06:27And dear Catherine looks quite as she should.
00:06:31Mr. Allen.
00:06:32Oh, quite as she should.
00:06:34You too, my dear, most charming.
00:06:36I've never been able to get Mr. Allard to know one of my gowns from another.
00:06:40I should know this one, my dear.
00:06:42This gown, I could not mistake.
00:06:44No, I fear my evening appearance could no way rival your brilliance at the portal.
00:07:02There are no tea things here, are very provoking, and no one to fetch them for us.
00:07:16I think we'd better go upstairs, run and get so tumbled in such a crowd.
00:07:32I wish you could dance, my dear, but I fear I haven't a single acquaintance in the room.
00:07:38The winch is in the room.
00:07:40The winch is in the room.
00:07:42The winch is in the room.
00:07:44The winch is in the room.
00:07:46Roma.
00:07:48The cherry roll.
00:07:50I do declare my muslin is torn.
00:07:56I think not, madam.
00:07:57You have merely lost a ribbon from your sleeve.
00:08:00I should have been so sorry to have torn this gown, for it is a favourite of mine, though it cost only nine shillings a yard.
00:08:20That is exactly what I would have guessed, madam.
00:08:23And do you understand muslins?
00:08:26Particularly well.
00:08:27My sister has often entrusted me in the choice of a gown.
00:08:29I bought one for her just the other day.
00:08:31It was pronounced a prodigious bargain by every lady who saw it.
00:08:34You must be a great comfort to your sister, sir.
00:08:37I hope I am, madam.
00:08:39And pray, what do you think of Miss Morland's gown?
00:08:45It is very pretty, madam.
00:08:47But I do not think it will wash well.
00:08:50Excuse me, Mr. Tilney.
00:08:51Excuse me.
00:08:56It would have been very shocking if I'd torn my muslin, would it not?
00:09:03For my part, I haven't seen anything that I like as well in the whole of the room, I assure you.
00:09:08Oh, I do wish for your sake we had a large acquaintance in Bath.
00:09:15I wish we had any.
00:09:28The government has lost all reason.
00:09:30How is that, my dear?
00:09:32That little shoemaker has been charged with high treason for leading a harmless reform movement.
00:09:37Soon it will be enough merely to call oneself a wig to be charged with plotting to behead the king.
00:09:43Oh, so it will, my dear. The government has lost all reason.
00:09:47Can we still not go out?
00:09:50In this rain?
00:09:53Perhaps it may hold up soon.
00:09:55Perhaps it may, my dear. But then it'll be so dirty.
00:09:58Oh, that won't matter. I never mind dirt.
00:10:01No, I know you never mind dirt.
00:10:14Now there are four umbrellas up.
00:10:17Oh, I hate the sight of an umbrella.
00:10:20They're very disagreeable things to carry.
00:10:26Good heavens!
00:10:28It's James!
00:10:30James is here!
00:10:37It's Catherine's brother, dear, James!
00:10:42James!
00:10:43I know you should still be in Oxford, but oh, how good of you to can't see me!
00:10:47Indeed, Catherine, I love you dearly. And then...
00:10:52Mrs Allen, good day.
00:10:54James!
00:10:55Forgive my intrusion, but what a happy chance brings us together in Bath.
00:10:58Most happy, James!
00:11:01And, Mrs Allen, allow me to introduce my good friend, John Thorpe.
00:11:04How do you do, Mrs Allen?
00:11:06A capital place you have here, if I may say so.
00:11:10Miss Morland.
00:11:12You'll find him a frightful rattle.
00:11:14But that recommends him to your sex, I believe.
00:11:17However, I am here not only to introduce new friends, Mrs Allen,
00:11:21but to reunite old ones.
00:11:23For I believe that you and John's mother were once dear school friends.
00:11:27Do you not remember Mrs Thorpe?
00:11:29Mrs Thorpe?
00:11:31Yes.
00:11:32Mrs Thorpe.
00:11:34Nay, William!
00:11:36Why, yes!
00:11:37I am her guest in Bath.
00:11:39And to think that only last night I told Catherine we had not a single acquaintance in Bath.
00:11:45With dear old Mater, the case is quite the opposite.
00:11:48And, my dear Catherine, John's sister, Isabella, is just the kind of young woman I could wish to see you attached to.
00:11:55She has so much good sense, is so thoroughly unaffected and amiable.
00:12:01Why, even you, Catherine, could be proud of the friendship of such a girl.
00:12:05What are we waiting for?
00:12:06Make haste.
00:12:07Catherine, put on your hat.
00:12:09Let James take us to this paragon.
00:12:18Why, Miss Morland, I should have known you anywhere for James's sister.
00:12:21If you excessively like him.
00:12:24Oh, excessively like!
00:12:26And I cannot help but consider us friends already, Miss Morland, through the friendship of our dear brothers.
00:12:33And I'd have you notice, Miss Morland, that my sister and I always agree.
00:12:38Good day, Mother!
00:12:42Where did you get that quiz of a hat?
00:12:44Makes you look like an old witch!
00:12:46And how does this morning find you two dear little things?
00:12:51As ugly as ever, it seems.
00:12:54What a pretty coincidence, Mrs Thorpe.
00:12:57It is true I should never have known you after all these years.
00:13:02But how glad I am to see you.
00:13:05We must make sure to attend our next ball together, Miss Morland.
00:13:08And I'm determined at all events we should be dressed exactly alike.
00:13:11Men take notice of that sometimes, you know.
00:13:15My chief pleasure in life is shopping.
00:13:18For I have no children to introduce into the world.
00:13:22Then you have no children to worry about, neither.
00:13:25Dammit, I did not come to Bath to drive my sisters about and look like a fool.
00:13:30I make it a rule never to mind what they think.
00:13:35I have no intention of treating them with such respect.
00:13:38That's the way to spoil them, you know.
00:13:40You're fond of an open carriage, Miss Morland?
00:13:42Yes, very, though I've hardly ever been in one.
00:13:45What say you then to a drive in my new gig?
00:13:47Well, do no such thing.
00:13:49A drive, indeed.
00:13:51Well, come, Miss Morland.
00:13:53It is true Bath is unworthy of you.
00:13:54If there were any natural justice, you should find yourself in Brighton.
00:13:58But scorn pleasure till you have sufficient reason for it, and you may wait a long time.
00:14:04Now that your dear sister and I have met, we would not be separated for all the world.
00:14:10Tomorrow, then, at noon.
00:14:12At noon.
00:14:19What say you to my gig, Miss Morland?
00:14:21Neat, is it not?
00:14:23Curricle hung, you see.
00:14:25Pants, flashboards, swan body, dished wheels, bucket steps, swan neck shaft.
00:14:31I've not had it a month.
00:14:33I chanced on a friend on Magdlin Bridge last turn.
00:14:37Ah, Thorpe, says he.
00:14:38Do you happen to want such a little thing as this?
00:14:41It's a capital one of its kind, but I'm cursed sour of it.
00:14:44Oh, damn it, says I. I'm your man, would you ask?
00:14:47Walk on, Samson.
00:14:50And how much do you think he did, Miss Morland?
00:14:53Oh, I know so little of such things.
00:14:56Only asked 50 guineas, Miss Morland.
00:14:59I closed with him directly.
00:15:01I could have got it for less, I dare say, but I hate haggling.
00:15:03And poor Freeman. Wanted cash.
00:15:05That was very good-natured of you.
00:15:06Oh, damn it.
00:15:08When one has the means of doing a kind thing by a friend, I hate to be pitiful.
00:15:14He's a rich old devil, isn't he?
00:15:17The old man you're with. Rich as a Duke, isn't he?
00:15:20Oh, Mr. Allen, you mean?
00:15:22Why, yes, I believe he is very rich.
00:15:24And no children?
00:15:26No.
00:15:28A famous thing for his next heirs, and you're his godchild, I believe.
00:15:29I? Mr. Allen's godchild?
00:15:31No.
00:15:33And you're very much with them.
00:15:36Yes, I am.
00:15:38I think sometimes I take the place of the child they never had.
00:15:41How prettily you put it, Miss Morland.
00:15:43So, money still comes to Bath.
00:15:48Ah, right then, Miss Thorpe. We'll give them a race.
00:15:51Come on, now.
00:15:56Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:15:58Where are you, John?
00:16:00No, no, never fear me, John. You're in safe hands.
00:16:05Ha!
00:16:06Ha!
00:16:07Ha!
00:16:08Look to your wheels, man!
00:16:10Ha!
00:16:11Ha!
00:16:12Ha!
00:16:13Ha!
00:16:14Ha!
00:16:15Ha!
00:16:16Ha!
00:16:17Ha!
00:16:18Ha!
00:16:19Ha!
00:16:20Ha!
00:16:21Ha!
00:16:23But where is my brother going?
00:16:25Don't fret, Miss Morland. We shall join up later.
00:16:28I'm glad you're fond of an open carriage,
00:16:31for I have determined to drive you out in mine every day.
00:16:37But I've met young Thorpe at Billiards,
00:16:40where I respect his skill with the ball as little as I respect his word.
00:16:44Ah, there you are, my dear.
00:16:46We thought you'd come by an accident.
00:16:48No, not at all.
00:16:50Well, I'm certainly glad to see you safely back.
00:16:52Indeed, I could have wished that this scheme had never been undertaken.
00:16:55Mrs. Allen, are you not of my way of thinking?
00:16:57Do you not think these kind of projects objectionable?
00:17:00Yes, very much so indeed.
00:17:03Open carriages are nasty things.
00:17:06A clean gown has not five minutes' wear in them.
00:17:09I hate an open carriage myself.
00:17:11I know you do, but that's not the question.
00:17:13Do you not think it has a very odd appearance,
00:17:16for young ladies to be driven about in open gigs alone,
00:17:19by young men who are not even their relatives?
00:17:22A very odd appearance indeed.
00:17:25I cannot bear to see it.
00:17:27Dear madam, then why didn't you say so?
00:17:29I'm sure if I'd known it was improper, I wouldn't have gone.
00:17:33One must not be over-particular.
00:17:36Young people don't want to be always thwarted.
00:17:39But, Mrs. Allen, this was something important,
00:17:42and you wouldn't have found me hard to persuade for...
00:17:44I really cannot think Mr. Thorpe is entirely agreeable.
00:17:46But did you have a pleasant walk home, Mrs. Allen?
00:17:52Very pleasant.
00:17:54Did you meet anyone of interest?
00:17:56Why, yes.
00:17:58When you passed us on the Crescent, we met a Mrs. Hughes.
00:18:01Curious woman, all knows, and in a remarkable hurry.
00:18:06She introduced us to Mr. Tilney and his sister.
00:18:09The young lady we saw with Mr. Tilney at the upper rooms.
00:18:13I believe you noticed her?
00:18:15Why, yes.
00:18:17And she is Mr. Tilney's sister.
00:18:19She is.
00:18:31A day this morning, I thought you and I were going for a ride.
00:18:55My only acquaintance has torn my gown.
00:19:01My dearest Catherine, I may call you Catherine, mayn't I?
00:19:11I couldn't wait a moment longer.
00:19:14Only you who saw into my heart the moment we met.
00:19:17Only you could guess my present happiness.
00:19:20But what's the matter?
00:19:23You're not ill, my sweet.
00:19:24You've been losing your sleep over Mrs. Radcliffe?
00:19:34Isn't it amazing, horrid?
00:19:38Have you got to the Black Vale yet?
00:19:39Oh.
00:19:40Oh.
00:19:44Oh, that dreadful dungeon.
00:19:46Can the poor girl ever escape?
00:19:49I wouldn't tell you her fate for all the world.
00:19:51But I can see by your expression you've guessed my secret, you sly creature.
00:19:59Oh, do sit down, Isabella, and catch your breath.
00:20:03Your brother is the most charming of men.
00:20:06Oh, if only I were worthy of him.
00:20:10Good heavens.
00:20:12You mean...
00:20:14I can't believe it!
00:20:15You're in love with James!
00:20:17Yes!
00:20:19In love!
00:20:21And he with me.
00:20:23All that remains is to have your parents' permission to marry.
00:20:25And James has ridden off to Fullerton this morning to ask for it.
00:20:28Oh, Miss Isabella!
00:20:30Oh.
00:20:32But I'm so afraid they'll refuse.
00:20:34How could they refuse James his heart's desire?
00:20:37Why should they refuse a girl like you?
00:20:40Why not?
00:20:42What am I?
00:20:44My fortune will be almost nothing.
00:20:46Whereas James could marry anyone.
00:20:49Indeed, Isabella, you are too humble.
00:20:51A difference in fortune isn't important.
00:20:54What's important is that you love one another.
00:20:55James and I both think to marry for money the wickedest thing in the world.
00:21:00Oh, Isabella!
00:21:02I had no idea!
00:21:04And you, my sweet girl.
00:21:07You'll be dearer to me than my own family.
00:21:10You're so like your darling brother.
00:21:13And from the moment I saw him, my heart was gone.
00:21:18He's banished.
00:21:20Still, mystery is awful becoming a hero.
00:21:23But, Isabella, how shall I find him?
00:21:44Undone, let's see it.
00:21:46Name brand new gardeners.
00:21:50Oh, my God.
00:22:20Isabella is so sensitive to the heat.
00:22:29Is she, my dear?
00:22:31I notice she wears as little as possible.
00:22:50Good day.
00:22:52Hello.
00:22:54Miss Morland.
00:22:55I'm so pleased to meet you, Miss Tilney.
00:22:58Well, have we not met before?
00:22:59Not quite.
00:23:00But I had the pleasure of meeting your brother in the upper rooms last week.
00:23:04Though we never danced.
00:23:06How very amusing Mr Tilney is.
00:23:09Henry.
00:23:10Yes, he is amusing.
00:23:12I find that a very important consideration, don't you?
00:23:15That a person should be amusing.
00:23:17Very important.
00:23:20And what do you make of all this, Miss Morland?
00:23:22I suspect the only argument against fresh air is that it's free.
00:23:26Have you explored the walks in Bath yet?
00:23:28No.
00:23:29Well, perhaps we could do so together.
00:23:32Oh, yes.
00:23:35What's this, pussy?
00:23:37Are we to be supplanted?
00:23:39I am not slighting you, Isabella.
00:24:05I have made the arrangement to walk with Miss Tilney before you told me about the drive.
00:24:11You say I must retract, but I cannot do what I think is wrong.
00:24:15I suspect there is no great struggle.
00:24:19Hey, Dave!
00:24:20Miss Morland!
00:24:23Miss Morland!
00:24:25We may make our outing after all.
00:24:27I have just run after Miss Tilney and told her you cannot go with her.
00:24:30You have not!
00:24:32I have?
00:24:33Upon my soul?
00:24:33She said very well, and tomorrow is just as convenient.
00:24:37So, there's an end to our difficulties.
00:24:39We shall still make Clifton before dark.
00:24:40This will not do.
00:24:43Let me go, Mr Thorpe.
00:24:45I'm glad to see you not entirely agreeable, Miss Morland.
00:24:48For when a person is entirely agreeable, one feels obliged to be the same.
00:24:52Do let her go, John.
00:24:53If go, she must.
00:24:55If I could not be persuaded into doing wrong, I will never be tricked into it.
00:24:59I must go to Miss Tilney directly and set her right.
00:25:01Oh, but Isabella, do please come to me tomorrow to wait for James's letter.
00:25:07I like a girl with spirit and perfect.
00:25:14I will speak to Miss Tilney this moment.
00:25:35I'm so sorry.
00:25:51Forgive me.
00:25:52I am come in a great hurry.
00:25:53It was all a mistake, Miss Tilney.
00:25:55I never promised to go.
00:25:56I told them from the first I could not go.
00:25:58Indeed, I did not want to go.
00:25:59And I never asked Mr Thorpe to bring a message to you.
00:26:02Never.
00:26:02And I've run away in a great hurry to explain.
00:26:05I didn't care what you might think of me.
00:26:06I just ran and I wouldn't say for your servant and...
00:26:10Oh, dear.
00:26:11Miss Morland, allow me to present you to my father, General Tilney.
00:26:19Delighted, Miss Morland.
00:26:20I'm so sorry.
00:26:24I cannot believe that you have anything to be sorry for, Miss Morland.
00:26:31Mr Thorpe did not come to you with a message, Miss Tilney.
00:26:35Yes, he did.
00:26:36And I admit I was much surprised, but now all is well.
00:26:39You were very much surprised, Eleanor.
00:26:42And Henry and I are very much perplexed.
00:26:45It's quite simple.
00:26:47Miss Morland and I were going to go for a walk.
00:26:49Then we were not going to go for a walk.
00:26:51And now we are going to go for a walk.
00:26:54Ah, how foolish of me not to have guessed immediately.
00:26:57The afternoon was made for walking.
00:26:59And I own that, were I invited, I should accept immediately.
00:27:04You are invited.
00:27:06I accept immediately.
00:27:10Do you find Bath agreeable, Miss Morland?
00:27:13Very agreeable.
00:27:16Take care.
00:27:17Or you may forget to be tired of it at the proper time.
00:27:20How can anyone ever get tired of Bath?
00:27:23Not those who bring such freshness to it as you do, Miss Morland.
00:27:26But you ought to be tired of it at the end of six weeks.
00:27:30I'm told so by people who've extended their six weeks to ten or twelve.
00:27:34And then go away because they can afford to stay here no longer.
00:27:39Well, others must judge for themselves.
00:27:42But I live in a very small country village.
00:27:44And there, I can only go and call on Mrs. Allen.
00:27:47Only go and call on Mrs. Allen.
00:27:49What a picture of intellectual riches.
00:27:50Now, Henry, don't go exhausting this young lady walking her uphill in Darndale.
00:27:59Though I can see by the charming elasticity of your walk.
00:28:04But there's no great danger of that, Miss Morland.
00:28:07How this makes me think of Italy or the south of France.
00:28:30You've been abroad, then?
00:28:31Oh, no, I only mean what I've read about.
00:28:34And this puts me in mind of the country Emily travelled through, in The Mistress of Udolpho.
00:28:39But you never read novels, I dare say.
00:28:43Gentlemen read better books.
00:28:44Do they?
00:28:45In my opinion, anyone, lady or gentleman, who has no pleasure in a good novel, must be intolerably stupid.
00:28:52I've read all Mrs. Radcliffe's works and The Mysteries of Udolpho.
00:28:56Once begun, I couldn't put it down.
00:28:57I remember completing it in two days with my hair standing on end from start to finish.
00:29:01Yes, in fact, you ran off with my copy when I'd left the room for five minutes.
00:29:05And I had to wait until you'd finished it.
00:29:07What else do you read, Miss Morland?
00:29:10To tell the truth, nothing very much.
00:29:12Really?
00:29:12Well, I read poetry and plays and that sort of thing.
00:29:17But history, for instance, real solemn history, I just can't be interested in.
00:29:22Can you?
00:29:23Yes, I'm fond of history.
00:29:25Oh, dear.
00:29:27I wish I were, too.
00:29:34It's not so much a question of what we read, Miss Morland, but of how we read.
00:29:39We must exercise our own judgment, after all, and not mistake fantasy for reality.
00:29:45But...
00:29:45You may argue that the art of art lies in its power to deceive, but that is a dangerous course.
00:29:50Look there.
00:29:56The work of man and nature brought together to make a perfect picture.
00:30:00The elements of air and water moving harmoniously.
00:30:04But art is as different from reality as water is from air.
00:30:09And if you mistake water for air, you drown.
00:30:13Of course, if you are a fish, then the danger lies in the air.
00:30:19Oh, how I should like to return one day to draw this scene.
00:30:37Would you take in the temple and the sweep of the lawn, Eleanor?
00:30:40No.
00:30:41Just the lake.
00:30:43There.
00:30:44Where it curves away between the trees and the rushes.
00:30:47Nature, not artifice.
00:30:48How very modern of you.
00:30:51But will it not lack perspective?
00:30:53What do you say, Miss Morland?
00:30:55Oh, I know nothing of drawing, Mr. Tilney.
00:30:58My only talent lies in writing, and...
00:31:01Even there.
00:31:03No, I'm heartily ashamed of my ignorance.
00:31:06Ashamed?
00:31:08The advantages of natural folly in a pretty girl are well known, are they not?
00:31:13And you, Miss Morland, strike me as nothing if not natural.
00:31:18Henry, do you want Miss Morland to think you a brute in your opinion of women?
00:31:22A brute?
00:31:22My dear sister.
00:31:24To the larger part of my sex, imbecility in females is a great enhancement of their charms.
00:31:29Come now, own it.
00:31:30You know it's true.
00:31:32Whereas I am far too reasonable to demand anything more than ignorance.
00:31:37And now, Henry, I think you should add a little something, in case Miss Morland misunderstands you.
00:31:42She's not used to your odd ways.
00:31:45I shall be most happy to make her better acquainted with them.
00:31:49I meant only to say that Miss Morland is not one of those romantic heroines she so enjoys reading about.
00:31:55She tells us frankly she is not accomplished in music, nor in drawing.
00:31:58She does not go in for exaggerated displays of feeling.
00:32:02And worst of all, I do believe she says what she means.
00:32:06I'm afraid she really will not do.
00:32:08Henry, you're very impertinent.
00:32:11Miss Morland, he treats you exactly like his sister.
00:32:14To conclude, Miss Morland is so natural as to be a disgrace to her sex.
00:32:20But it's a quality I shall be sad to see her lose.
00:32:24As lose it she must.
00:32:25Miss Morland, he treats you exactly like her.
00:32:41To see her, miss Morland is so natural.
00:32:44And shall you be going to the cotillion ball tomorrow, Miss Tilney?
00:33:04I don't think so.
00:33:14Good day, sir.
00:33:20Miss Morland, we are too late to join you, it seems.
00:33:23Magnificent spot.
00:33:25Miss Morland, allow me to present you to my brother, Captain Tilney, Miss Morland.
00:33:29Delighted, Miss Morland.
00:33:31My daughter is mistaken, Miss Morland.
00:33:33We are, of course, going to the cotillion ball.
00:33:35Why otherwise would a young lady come to bar?
00:33:38And may I say we look forward to seeing you dance, Miss Morland.
00:33:44The previous evening, Emily had entered the forbidden chamber.
00:34:03Looking round, she perceived a black veil, which descending from ceiling to floor, was drawn along the whole side of the chamber.
00:34:12Isabella, suddenly conjecturing.
00:34:18Isabella?
00:34:19What is it?
00:34:20It's four o'clock.
00:34:22I know it's four o'clock.
00:34:23The last post comes by four o'clock.
00:34:25Suddenly conjecturing that it concealed the body of her murdered aunt, she seized the curtain and drew it aside.
00:34:37Oh, I can't bear it.
00:34:40Beyond appeared a corpse, stretched on a kind of low couch, which was crimsoned with human blood, as was the floor beneath it.
00:34:50But the features, deformed by death, were ghastly and horrible.
00:34:56Emily bent over the body.
00:34:58Here it is.
00:35:00Here it is, my darling.
00:35:03James's letter.
00:35:09Success!
00:35:10We have a concern.
00:35:11What did I say?
00:35:13I cannot pretend that I am surprised.
00:35:16What does surprise me is that James should have gone to Fullerton without letting me know.
00:35:21For I would certainly have troubled him with my best regards and my compliments to the Skinners.
00:35:27And Isabella, and?
00:35:28He says we must wait two years.
00:35:33In two years' time, a living of about 400 a year will be mine.
00:35:38No small sum for one of ten children.
00:35:40And in due course, an estate of at least the same value.
00:35:46400 pounds?
00:35:53I'm sure if he finds he can do more by and by, he will.
00:35:57Well, 400 pounds is a low income to begin on.
00:36:03But you, my dearest girl, are so very moderate in your wishes.
00:36:09For myself, it's nothing.
00:36:11I never think of myself.
00:36:12I know you never do, my dear.
00:36:14Of course, Mr. Morland has every right to do as he chooses with his own money.
00:36:19I'm sure my father has promised as much as he can afford.
00:36:22Oh, Catherine.
00:36:23It's not the want of money, but the weight that it entails.
00:36:31Come now!
00:36:33Put on a happy face!
00:36:36Tonight is the cotillion ball.
00:36:38And do we not all have new gulls?
00:36:41I couldn't possibly go without James.
00:36:43Not go?
00:36:44How can I enjoy myself without you, Isabella?
00:36:47And this time you would meet Mr. Tilney.
00:36:51Nade, didn't you make such a point of it?
00:36:55Until tonight, then.
00:36:56Oh, my God.
00:37:31Hey, Miss Morland. What's the meaning of this? I thought you and I were going to dance together.
00:37:53No wonder you should think so, for you never ask me.
00:37:55It's a cursed, shabby trick. What chap have you there?
00:37:59Why, it's Mr. Tilney.
00:38:00Yeah, so it is. Good figure of a man. Does he want a horse, you know?
00:38:06Your servant, sir. I have some interesting information concerning Miss Morland.
00:38:33Did you know that I consider a dance to be like a marriage?
00:38:35Fidelity and politeness are the principal duties in both.
00:38:38And those men who do not marry or dance have no business with their neighbor's wives.
00:38:42But they're such very different things.
00:38:45But you must allow that in both matrimony and dancing, man has the advantage of choice, woman only the power of refusal.
00:38:51Mr. Tilney, I think you should not underestimate the power of refusal.
00:38:55Forgive me, Miss Thorpe, if I disturb you, please.
00:39:10We've not been formally introduced, yet there exists a strong connection between us which emboldens me to ask you to dance.
00:39:18I suppose your brother saw Isabella sitting down and fancied she must wish for you.
00:39:48For a partner.
00:39:49How little trouble it costs you to understand other people's motives.
00:39:53What do you mean?
00:39:55Well, with you, it isn't what would make so-and-so behave in such a way.
00:39:59It's what would make me behave in such a way.
00:40:02I don't understand you.
00:40:04Then we are on very unequal terms.
00:40:07For I understand you perfectly.
00:40:09Me?
00:40:10Yes, I can't speak well enough to be unintelligible.
00:40:13Bravo.
00:40:14An excellent satire on modern language.
00:40:16I certainly did not look for attention, Captain Tilney.
00:40:34My spirit, you know, is pretty independent.
00:40:36I wish your heart were independent.
00:40:38That would be enough for me.
00:40:39My heart, indeed.
00:40:41What can you have to do with hearts?
00:40:44None of you men have any hearts.
00:40:46If we have not hearts, we have eyes.
00:40:49And they give us torment enough.
00:40:53I hope this may please you, then.
00:40:55I hope your eyes are not tormented now.
00:40:57Never more so, for the edge of a blooming cheek is still in view at once too much and too little.
00:41:08I can't think how this could happen.
00:41:11And Isabella was so determined not to dance.
00:41:14And did Isabella never change her mind before?
00:41:18I assure you she is very firm in general.
00:41:20Miss Tilney does not care to dance.
00:41:31No.
00:41:33That is, I believe there's no one here she chooses to dance with.
00:41:39It vexes our father.
00:41:42Who is that lady?
00:41:45The Marchioness de Thierry.
00:41:47She is a friend of my father's, his confidant.
00:41:51She keeps him in touch with all the latest gossip and such.
00:41:56When she was 16, she ran off with a French nobleman.
00:42:02Twenty years later, with the revolution, he was kind enough to marry her.
00:42:06Last year, he was guillotined.
00:42:08How terrible.
00:42:09Terrible, yes, it is terrible.
00:42:12But at least it clears her from any suspicion of Jacobin sympathies.
00:42:17We live in curious times, Miss Morland.
00:42:20On the one hand, barbarity.
00:42:23And on the other, greater civilisation.
00:42:27I see you look doubtful.
00:42:32But in my father's youth, every man in the room would be drunk by now,
00:42:35and half the women would be losing fortunes at the gambling tables.
00:42:39But I forget, you are not fond of history.
00:42:42I do entreat you, Mr Tilney, to make Isabella's engagement known to your brother.
00:42:48Frederick does know of it.
00:42:50Well, then why does he persist in pursuing her?
00:42:52Why do you not stop him?
00:42:55I repeat, Frederick knows what he's about.
00:42:58He must be his own master.
00:42:59No, he does not know what he's about.
00:43:06Is it my brother's attentions to Miss Thorpe,
00:43:08or Miss Thorpe's admission of them, that gives the pain?
00:43:11Isn't it the same thing?
00:43:12I think your brother would acknowledge a difference.
00:43:16And what of the woman's power of refusal?
00:43:19I could have predicted your every move this evening, Frederick.
00:43:46I should hope so, little brother, since I have misspent
00:43:50so much of my youth in teaching you the same tricks.
00:43:57I don't wonder at your surprise, my dear.
00:43:59And really, I'm tied to death.
00:44:01He's such a rattle.
00:44:03Amusing enough, but I would have given the world to sit down.
00:44:06Then why ever didn't you?
00:44:08Because it would have looked so awful, particular.
00:44:10And besides, you know how it is with men.
00:44:13It'd take no denial.
00:44:14Amazingly conceited, I'm sure.
00:44:17I took him down several times, you know, in my own way.
00:44:21Goodness, is that his father?
00:44:24How like his son he is.
00:44:27Now he stares at you, my sweet.
00:44:29Father?
00:44:41Yes?
00:44:43Since we shall be leaving Bath so soon,
00:44:46and since I shall find myself so often alone at home,
00:44:50I wondered if I might ask Miss Morland to be my guest.
00:44:55You may.
00:44:56As a matter of fact, I was going to suggest it myself.
00:45:01This evening, all my hopes concerning Miss Morland
00:45:04have been confirmed.
00:45:08I shall call on Mrs. Allen
00:45:11in the morning.
00:45:13Poor gentleman, I do hope he does not regret it.
00:45:20You must try to be tidy, Catherine,
00:45:23and at all times decent.
00:45:25But you're not listening to me.
00:45:28Yes, I am.
00:45:29Truly, Mrs. Allen.
00:45:31General Tilney has just called,
00:45:33and he has most kindly, most gratifyingly,
00:45:37asked you to be his daughter's guest at Northanger Abbey.
00:45:40Northanger Abbey.
00:45:44Have I mistook the place?
00:45:47Northanger Abbey!
00:45:49Oh!
00:45:50Oh!
00:45:53Father's temper's beyond all reason.
00:45:54He knows I'd join the regiment in a few days.
00:45:57The mess room will drink Isabella Thorpe for a fortnight,
00:45:59and there's an end to it.
00:46:00Come, stupid boy, sir!
00:46:04Come, late start!
00:46:09Frederick chasing after every damn...
00:46:11Father?
00:46:15And good riddance to bath, Miss Morland, what do you say?
00:46:18Oh, yes.
00:46:19Good riddance to bath.
00:46:23Good luck, little brother.
00:46:25When did I ever need luck, Frederick?
00:46:27The devil take you, then!
00:46:29How right my father was, Miss Morland,
00:46:45to insist on your riding the rest of the way with me.
00:46:47Your first view of Northanger will be so much the better.
00:46:52And I must thank you for your kindness
00:46:53in becoming my sister's visitor.
00:46:55It is an act of real friendship,
00:46:57for Eleanor has no female companion,
00:46:59and with father and I often away,
00:47:01she is sometimes without any companion at all.
00:47:04How sorry you must be for that.
00:47:06Yes, I am always sorry to leave Eleanor.
00:47:08And then you must be sad to leave the Abbey, too.
00:47:11Not so very much.
00:47:13I have my own estate just a few miles away,
00:47:15where my present passion is a pinery.
00:47:17But I see you've formed a very favourable idea of the Abbey.
00:47:21Oh, to be sure I have.
00:47:22You can't imagine, Mr. Tilney,
00:47:24what a passion I have for ancient buildings.
00:47:27Then I hope you're not disappointed.
00:47:29Of course, one cannot be surprised
00:47:31that anyone's taking a fancy to Catherine.
00:47:34Still, to be blunt,
00:47:36we are surprised.
00:47:38Oh, dear Mrs. Allen.
00:47:40Such a fine family,
00:47:43and the general known to be most particular for his children.
00:47:47Oh, here it is.
00:47:48This is what I wanted to read you, Richard.
00:47:50I believe Mrs. Tilney is dead.
00:47:53Indeed, I am certain.
00:47:55For I remember now that Miss Tilney
00:47:57has got a beautiful set of pearls
00:47:59that were put by her when her mother died.
00:48:03Richard.
00:48:04I know Mrs. Allen rattles on like this
00:48:06partly to impress us, but...
00:48:07Mrs. Allen rattles
00:48:09because she can't help it.
00:48:10If there is no Mrs. Tilney,
00:48:13was it wise I wanted to give our permission so readily?
00:48:19Come on, go on, now.
00:48:21Come on.
00:48:22I'm on pass, Mr. Allen.
00:48:25Come on, come on, come on.
00:48:29Father always likes to arrive first.
00:48:39Come on, please.
00:49:01Come on.
00:49:01Come on.
00:49:01Come on, come on.
00:49:03Come on.
00:49:03Oh, my God.
00:49:33Do you see how simply we live, Miss Moreland?
00:49:46Nothing in this room pertains to more than comfort and convenience.
00:49:56But it is within twenty minutes of six.
00:50:03Remind me to show you two other rooms.
00:50:08Oh, how pretty!
00:50:36Well, we eat at six, Miss Moreland.
00:50:38Do please make as little alteration to your dress as possible.
00:50:40I don't know.
00:50:42I don't know.
00:50:44I don't know.
00:50:46I don't know.
00:50:48I don't know.
00:50:50I don't know.
00:50:54I don't know.
00:50:54I don't know.
00:51:24I don't know.
00:51:54I don't know.
00:52:24I don't know.
00:52:54I don't know.
00:53:24I don't know.
00:53:26I don't know.
00:53:28I don't know.
00:53:30Do you think you have a heart stout enough to bear the horrors of this place, Miss Morland?
00:53:38Horrors?
00:53:38How does your novel put it?
00:53:40A young girl, alone in a strange dwelling, full of gloomy passages, mysterious stairways.
00:53:50Go on.
00:53:52Are you not afraid?
00:53:54Why should I be?
00:53:56But come, Miss Morland, I am here to rescue you and bring you to dinner.
00:54:06Miss Morland was lost.
00:54:08Miss Morland was lost.
00:54:14Miss Morland was lost.
00:54:16Miss Morland was lost.
00:54:18Miss Morland was lost.
00:54:19Miss Morland was lost.
00:54:20Miss Morland was lost.
00:54:24Miss Morland was lost.
00:54:25Miss Morland was lost.
00:54:26Miss Morland was lost.
00:54:30Miss Morland was lost.
00:54:32Miss Morland was lost.
00:54:36She turned into the shadow.
00:54:37Miss Morland was lost.
00:54:38is quite out of breath.
00:54:40You should not plague your guests
00:54:41with such an excess of punctuality.
00:54:44There was not the least occasion for hurry, after all.
00:54:50I suppose, Miss Morland,
00:54:52you are used to much better-sized apartments
00:54:56than, uh, Mr. Allen's?
00:54:59No, indeed.
00:55:00Mr. Allen's dining parlour isn't half this size.
00:55:03I never saw such a large room in my life.
00:55:06Well, as you see, our way of life is unassuming.
00:55:19But we shall spare no pains
00:55:21to make Northanger Abbey agreeable to you.
00:55:25You're fortunate to have Henry here with us.
00:55:29His commitments so often take him away from us.
00:55:33Well, then all young men should be
00:55:35employed.
00:55:38Even Frederick, my eldest son,
00:55:41will perhaps inherit as considerable a landed property
00:55:44as any private man in the kingdom.
00:55:45Even he has his profession.
00:55:48How very elegant your dinner service is, General Tilney.
00:56:03You flatter me, Miss Morland.
00:56:09For it was my choice, but I confess.
00:56:12For my part, soup, or even tea,
00:56:16tastes as well from Staffordshire clay as from Dresden.
00:56:22Well, I think it only right to encourage the manufacture of my own country.
00:56:26And I trust the opportunity may soon arise for me to choose another size.
00:56:37No, not for myself.
00:56:41Some more soup for my father.
00:56:42I don't want any more soup.
00:56:53Take it away.
00:56:53Take it away.
00:57:07Like...
00:57:08Like...
00:57:09Elinor, Elinor.
00:57:36Elinor, Elinor.
00:57:43I can't bear it any longer.
00:57:57How long must I go on living in this house?
00:58:01It won't last forever.
00:58:03You'll see.
00:58:31I can't bear it any longer.
00:58:38I can't bear it any longer.
00:58:43I can't bear it any longer.
00:58:47I can't bear it any longer.
00:58:55I can't bear it any longer.
00:58:59I can't bear it any longer.
00:59:03I can't bear it any longer.
00:59:13I can't bear it any longer.
00:59:15I can't bear it any longer.
00:59:19I can't bear it any longer.
00:59:27I can't bear it any longer.
01:00:02Do please come inside, mademoiselle.
01:00:17The bandita are closing in on us.
01:00:19You are not safe out here.
01:00:21And if you come with me now, I will show you the picture.
01:00:24The picture?
01:00:26Yes, ma'am.
01:00:27The picture of the late lady of this place.
01:00:32The picture is a good place.
01:00:41The picture is a good place.
01:00:44The picture is a good place.
01:00:50Well, here's a right old mess.
01:01:06What have you been up to, miss?
01:01:09What are you doing?
01:01:10No, no, don't take those, Alice.
01:01:12Only a lot of old laundry bills, miss.
01:01:20The same day at three, you and I beside the unknown woman.
01:01:50Good morning, Miss Morland.
01:02:03Must you really be gone all day, Mr. Tilney?
01:02:06I'm afraid so.
01:02:08After four weeks' neglect, my estate claims some attention.
01:02:15But Eleanor will keep you happily occupied.
01:02:20Oh, Eleanor.
01:02:31Henry's duties must lie heavy on him this morning, Miss Morland.
01:02:35Depriving him, as they do, of your company.
01:02:41I hope the storm last night did not disturb you.
01:02:43Only a very little, thank you.
01:02:46Father, I thought to show Miss Morland over the house this morning.
01:02:49She's very keen to see it.
01:02:50Most gratifying, but I insist that you delay that pleasure
01:02:53until I am free to accompany you.
01:02:56Besides, I believe I see in Miss Morland's eye
01:03:00an altogether judicious desire to make use of the present fine weather.
01:03:05You see, I'm right.
01:03:07What say you, Miss Morland,
01:03:09to allowing my daughter to show you the gardens?
01:03:12Oh, what a deliciously secret spot this is.
01:03:34Yes, yes, it is.
01:03:37Part of my fondness for it is that it was my mother's favourite walk.
01:03:40You were with her, I suppose, to the last?
01:03:49No.
01:03:51I was, unfortunately, away from home.
01:03:55Away from home?
01:03:57Her illness was sudden and short,
01:03:59and before I arrived, it was all over.
01:04:01Her death was so sudden.
01:04:02But I suppose you saw the corpse.
01:04:06How did it appear?
01:04:10Looked as if my mother had fallen asleep.
01:04:15Forgotten us in a fit of absent-mindedness.
01:04:18That's all.
01:04:20Would you like to see her chamber?
01:04:21Oh, very much.
01:04:33Eleanor, where are you going?
01:04:37There's nothing worthy of Miss Morland's attention there.
01:04:41Come, I need your help, Eleanor.
01:04:43Miss Morland.
01:04:53We are expecting guests at four,
01:04:56and may I hope you will join us?
01:05:01My dearest Isabella,
01:05:04you cannot imagine how I longed to talk to you.
01:05:08Northanger Abbey is everything and more than I had imagined,
01:05:11and Mr. Tilney.
01:05:15Mr. Tilney must be the most agreeable man alive,
01:05:20but he is much preoccupied with concerns of his own.
01:05:23Yet something is happening at Northanger to make the blood run cold.
01:05:45The general has done everything possible to prevent me from looking over the abbey,
01:05:49and one room in particular is forbidden me.
01:05:54I am convinced that Eleanor is very much afraid of her father,
01:05:58possibly with good reason,
01:05:59for he shows every symptom of an uneasy conscience.
01:06:03I must wait for an opportunity to unravel this mystery alone.
01:06:08Very amusing, sir.
01:06:22But your sister's fair guest may not have the taste for such satirical entertainment,
01:06:28and her pleasure is our responsibility.
01:06:31You know we stole Miss Morland away from Bath,
01:06:33the place of her public triumph.
01:06:36And I greatly fear that the monotony of our days here may disgust her.
01:06:42Oh, but there is nowhere in the world I would rather be.
01:06:47Miss Morland's youth allows her to be transparent.
01:06:50A pretty license my dogs also indulge in.
01:06:53Perhaps we might go riding tomorrow to keep Miss Morland from boredom.
01:06:56But I have no habit.
01:06:57That is no obstacle. We will find you a habit, Miss Morland.
01:07:01Then it is settled.
01:07:02Have you no duets there, Henry?
01:07:05I'm sure we do.
01:07:07And now, my dear Amélie, you must give me all the gossip from Bath.
01:07:12Tell me, how did you find it?
01:07:14Oh, tease, Danielle.
01:07:14Lord Sumter's new mistress.
01:07:19Just as silly, just as cross and just as extravagant
01:07:23as any of us could have hoped.
01:07:27Nontis, Señor.
01:07:30Nontis, Señor.
01:07:32Esosa Pastorella.
01:07:37Si il tuo bel Creniorato,
01:07:40Lant mi distrange.
01:07:43Il coro.
01:07:46Glorii.
01:07:48Fa tante prove
01:07:50Per cui fa tante prove
01:07:54Amore
01:08:06Amore
01:08:08Non è di te men bella
01:08:12Per cui fa tante prove
01:08:16Non è di te men bella
01:08:24Non è di te men bella
01:08:26Per cui fa tante prove
01:08:30Per cui fa tante prove
01:08:36Per cui fa tante prove
01:08:46Per cui fa tante prove
01:08:52Per cui fa tante prove
01:08:54Per cui fa tante prove
01:08:58Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:00Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:04Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:10Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:12Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:14Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:16Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:20Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:22Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:24Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:26Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:32Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:34Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:38Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:40Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:44Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:46Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:50Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:52Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:56Per cui fa tante prove
01:09:57Per cui fa tante prove
01:10:10Per cui ha mai
01:10:10Per cui, buona
01:10:12Why do you say poor, Mrs Tilney?
01:10:18Oh, well, I was only in the kitchens then.
01:10:21But my mother, she was the mistress's favourite.
01:10:24And she used to say that the general made his wife's life a perfect misery.
01:10:29She never would say why.
01:10:30Not exactly.
01:10:32Then her dying so sudden like she did.
01:10:36Why, whatever is it, miss?
01:10:39Are you ill?
01:10:39Well, I feel a little sick.
01:10:43Alice, be kind enough to tell the general I will not go riding today.
01:10:47Oh, dear. Not go riding?
01:10:51I was talking a long ago, miss, and Amanda's quaint down with the years.
01:10:54Worse luck? I ought to know.
01:10:56I married an old one, didn't I?
01:10:58Alice, please go and tell the general I'm not well. I cannot go riding today.
01:11:09I look at her in the night.
01:11:21This is very rare.
01:11:23It might stop being aowaway.
01:11:25Yeah?
01:11:27Yes, sure.
01:12:29Mr. Tilney, how came you up that staircase?
01:12:36How?
01:12:37Because it's the quickest way from the stable yard.
01:12:41I decided not to go with the others after all.
01:12:43I was concerned about you, and may I not ask how you come to be here?
01:12:47I came to see your mother's room.
01:12:51So it seems.
01:12:53And is there anything extraordinary to be seen here?
01:12:57No, nothing at all.
01:12:58You know my father does not like this room to be entered.
01:13:00No, that is I...
01:13:02sent you to log.
01:13:06No.
01:13:10It has been your own doing entirely.
01:13:15But then, Eleanor has spoken a great deal about her mother, I suppose.
01:13:20Yes, a very great deal.
01:13:22Well, that is not so very much.
01:13:23But what she did say was interesting.
01:13:25Her dying so suddenly, and none of you being at home, and your father...
01:13:29I thought perhaps he had not been so very fond of her.
01:13:32And from these circumstances, you infer perhaps some negligence?
01:13:40Or could it be something still less pardonable?
01:13:44The seizure that killed my mother was sudden, it is true.
01:13:47But her illness was constitutional, and she often suffered from it.
01:13:52Besides, during her last illness, both Frederick and I were here, as was my father.
01:13:58Poor Eleanor, it is true, was far away, but we were both here.
01:14:01And your father?
01:14:03Did he suffer?
01:14:04For a while, very much so.
01:14:06He loved her, I'm sure, insofar as he was able.
01:14:10We are not all equally tender, you know.
01:14:13And I cannot pretend that while she lived, she did not have much to put up with from him,
01:14:19but he was greatly distressed by her death.
01:14:22Why did he never marry again?
01:14:24Why?
01:14:26A widower is not obliged to marry again, you know.
01:14:29Besides, I'm quite sure there was no one my father wished to marry.
01:14:33I'm so glad.
01:14:34But it would have been very shocking otherwise.
01:14:37Shocking?
01:14:37If I am to understand you, you've been imagining things of such horror, I've hearted the words to...
01:14:45My dear Miss Morland, what have you been judging from?
01:14:49Remember the age and the country in which we live.
01:14:54Consult your own sense of the probable, your own understanding.
01:14:58Could such atrocities be perpetrated in a land such as this, where roads and newspapers lay everything open?
01:15:08My father has his faults, God only knows.
01:15:11And mother used to joke that he only married her for her money, but murder?
01:15:17My dear Miss Morland, has reading one silly novel unbalanced your judgment so completely?
01:15:21My dear Miss Morland, has reading one silly novel unbalanced your judgment so perfectly.
01:15:51My dear Miss Morland, we are telling you about your...
01:15:58She's not m 바뀌 exist but...
01:16:06Unbalanced your resposta will succeed in a moment...
01:16:08Me?
01:16:10All my dear Miss Morland...
01:16:14Everything is probably worth it.
01:16:15I've got two answers to doors.
01:16:17I've got one chance of blessing.
01:16:18I've got two answers to the الم없이.
01:16:20Catherine?
01:16:26Catherine?
01:16:31Forgive me for waking you, but you've been asleep for hours.
01:16:34And there's a letter for you.
01:16:36Perhaps it's from Isabella at last.
01:16:38Thank you. Where is everyone?
01:16:40Our guests have all left for London.
01:16:42And Henry?
01:16:43Henry's been called away on business and must stay overnight.
01:16:46So you see how glad I am of your company, Catherine?
01:16:50No, this isn't Isabella's hand.
01:16:56This is from James.
01:17:14Dear Catherine,
01:17:16I think it is my duty to tell you that everything is at an end between Isabella and me.
01:17:22I suffered her flirtation because she swore her heart was mine, but all the while she deceived me.
01:17:28And I'm ashamed to think how long I bore with it.
01:17:30I can only hope that before...
01:17:32Captain Frederick Tilney makes their engagement known, you may be removed from Northanger.
01:17:38Her cruelty has all but killed me.
01:17:41Dearest Catherine, beware how you give your heart.
01:17:46Your loving brother, James.
01:17:48How can this be?
01:17:50James writes to tell me that Isabella has deserted him.
01:17:56And that he expects her engagement to Captain Tilney to be made known at any hour.
01:18:02Can any heart be so fickle?
01:18:05Not everyone is ruled by their heart, Catherine.
01:18:09And as for Frederick marrying Isabella, no, that's impossible.
01:18:13My brother would never think of such a thing.
01:18:15Why do you say that?
01:18:17Why?
01:18:18Because Isabella is as poor as a church mouse.
01:18:21But that will not signify with your family.
01:18:24Only the other day, the general was saying.
01:18:26You were there, Eleanor.
01:18:28He said he values money only as it allows him to promote the happiness of his children.
01:18:34Oh, have I misunderstood the general in so many ways.
01:18:38I know that we appear to be rich and fortunate, but things are not as they seem.
01:18:48Father is an inveterate gambler and loses vastly.
01:18:52In all of which, the marchioness only encourages him with schemes of setting everything to rights
01:18:57by making dazzling matches for us children.
01:19:00But if the general is so very concerned with money, what does he want with me?
01:19:04Oh, Catherine, don't let him ruin your happiness.
01:19:10And your happiness?
01:19:15On my 14th birthday, at my first ball, I fell in love with Thomas, a young officer in Frederick's regiment.
01:19:25Until three years ago, our happiness was perfect.
01:19:28Then Thomas's family was ruined, and my father forbade me ever to see or communicate with him again.
01:19:36Although we do, of course, still meet in secret.
01:19:40And do you meet here, beside the statue of the Unknown Woman?
01:19:45Yes, we do.
01:19:47Alice told me that you'd found some of our old notes.
01:19:51Now you must both keep my secret.
01:19:54And you know that I shall do nothing foolish, for I value good sense above all things.
01:20:00Even in love?
01:20:05Most of all in love.
01:20:08The general has to see you miss in the library.
01:20:11I've never seen him have so mad.
01:20:12I've never seen him have so much.
01:20:13Please.
01:21:17Cathy's here.
01:21:49Thank you, sir.
01:21:50My behaviour, damn you.
01:21:53It's Miss Morland's behaviour surprises me.
01:21:57The Marchioness arrived from Bath with rumours that persuaded me to make more careful inquiries.
01:22:03I discovered Miss Morland to be what you probably have always known her.
01:22:08A common little fortune seeker.
01:22:12As you may well imagine, Thorpe's deceit has given Bath some pretty amusement at my expense.
01:22:20Thorpe?
01:22:20John Thorpe misled you.
01:22:22Yes, Thorpe.
01:22:23Damn it.
01:22:31Thorpe, his vulgar sister, and Miss Morland colluded to ruin the Tilney family, and they attempted it at our weakest point, Frederick and yourself.
01:22:41On Miss Morland's part, there was none of that.
01:22:43Oh.
01:22:44Did she not pretend herself an heiress from the start?
01:22:47No, indeed she did not, Father.
01:22:48You all too readily believed her to be one.
01:22:51The truth is, Miss Morland is not an heiress, nor is she by any means a pauper.
01:22:55So, you've been making inquiries on your own, have you? You amaze me.
01:23:10Pray be good enough to tell me how much the young lady may expect.
01:23:15Four hundred a year.
01:23:19Four hundred.
01:23:20Have you any notion how much it costs to keep this place?
01:23:30This morning I have formed a notion, yes, and I believe it costs too dear.
01:23:37Perhaps you should look to your own weakness, Father.
01:23:42Oh, you forgot yourself, sir.
01:23:44On the contrary.
01:23:46Good God, and I believed Catherine's picture of you to be too black.
01:23:50Too black, you say?
01:24:00Dumb nonsense.
01:24:02I always had a bark that was worse than my bite.
01:24:08Perhaps the young lady should occupy her imagination writing novels.
01:24:20One cannot imagine a better-bred man than General Tewall, and very particular for his children, of course.
01:24:29But then, dear Catherine, is agreeable in both dress and manners?
01:24:34My dear, whatever the general's reasons may be, he certainly not acted honourably.
01:24:40Neither as a gentleman nor as a parent.
01:24:43It's a strange business.
01:24:45Indeed it is.
01:24:47And I cannot think that the general has acted honourably.
01:24:50You may depend upon it, Mrs. Allen.
01:24:52The general's behaviour is something not worth understanding.
01:24:56We are only happy to have Catherine safely back with us again.
01:24:59I'm sure you are.
01:25:01Besides, it is a great comfort to know she's not the sad little shatterbrain creature we all thought her, but can shift very well for herself.
01:25:09It is the Tilney's loss.
01:25:11Catherine!
01:25:12Catherine!
01:25:13Bath was a nice place, was it not?
01:25:26My dear, do you not think these gloves wear well?
01:25:29I put them on you the first time we visited the upper rooms.
01:25:33Do you remember that night?
01:25:34Do I?
01:25:35Oh, perfectly.
01:25:37We met Mr. Tilney there.
01:25:39I always thought him a great addition.
01:25:41I have a notion you danced with him, Catherine, but I'm not quite sure.
01:25:47No, really, I have no patience with him.
01:25:50Though I shall never forget his last words to me.
01:25:54Mrs. Allen.
01:25:56Such a commanding voice he had.
01:25:58Mrs. Allen.
01:26:00It has been a pleasure to meet you.
01:26:03Well, one lives and learns.
01:26:11Mrs. Allen.
01:26:31Mrs. Allen.
01:26:33Love.
01:26:33Miss Morland, don't be afraid.
01:26:54I promise not to oppress you with too much remorse or too much passion.
01:26:59Though since you left us, the white rosebush has died of grief.
01:27:08Catherine, are you still a disgrace to your sex?
01:27:14Does your face express all that your heart feels, or may I hope that it holds a secret?
01:27:23You know that I do not need my father's permission to marry.
01:27:26But he knows you are here.
01:27:29Yes.
01:27:50Happy!
01:27:53Happy!
01:27:56Happy!
01:27:57Happy!
01:27:57Happy!
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