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00:00You
00:30Miss Mayley, I beg of you not to distress yourself so.
00:36This is a dreadful and brutal case, I know,
00:38but we must not blame ourselves that it's happened.
00:41How can you say that?
00:42But for us, she would be living now.
00:45Then we must see she is avenged, Miss Rose,
00:47of this diabolical man brought to justice.
00:49It's time for action, Mr Brownrow.
00:51The promise you made to the girl is wiped out.
00:53I agree with you, Dr Losman.
00:56Mrs Mayley, persuade Miss Rose to go and lie down.
01:00You'll feel better in a little while, my dear,
01:01and there are matters to be discussed in which you have no part.
01:04Come with me, Rose, my dear.
01:06And remember, too, the girl came to you of her own free will.
01:09You did not seek her confidence in the first place.
01:15Mrs Mayley, would you send Oliver here?
01:18Oliver?
01:18Oh, have no fear.
01:20We shall not place him in any danger,
01:22but he can be a very great help to us.
01:25Now, Dr Losman, this is what I suggest,
01:27that you and I and two other men go to the Three Cripples.
01:32This, Man Monks, is your first objective?
01:34Yes.
01:34But Fagin.
01:36Ah, Harry.
01:37Now, this is where you can be of help to us and the law at the same time.
01:41This murder's out.
01:43Fagin's not going to be taken at the Three Cripples,
01:45nor may his hiding place be known to the police.
01:48But there's one person who knows where it is
01:50and can lead you to it, and that's Oliver.
01:51What?
01:53It's to take such a risk with him.
01:55Well, you must keep him with you in the coach.
01:58He has but to point out the place to you
01:59and then you can go straight to the police.
02:02Ah, no.
02:04Ah, Oliver.
02:05Mrs Mayley said you wanted to see me, sir.
02:07Yes, my wife.
02:10Now, Oliver.
02:12Are you brave enough to hear bad news with fortitude?
02:15I think so, sir.
02:18Yes, yes, yes.
02:19Of course you are.
02:20Of course you are.
02:21I must remember all the unhappiness you've borne in this short life of yours.
02:26Very well, then.
02:28Someone who once befriended you is dead.
02:31Foully and most brutally murdered Nancy.
02:35Nancy?
02:37She was killed trying to help you,
02:40enabling Miss Mayley and myself to discover something of your history.
02:44Her meeting with us was discovered,
02:46and this, alas, is the result.
02:49I'm very, very sorry, sir.
02:52Nancy tried to be good to me.
02:53Yes.
02:54Oliver, the man who did it,
02:56and all those who were indirectly responsible for it,
02:58must be taken.
03:00Now, if you were to go with me,
03:01could you show me where Fagin lives?
03:03Fagin?
03:04There's no danger, Oliver.
03:05He can't take you again.
03:07I'll do it anyway, sir.
03:09For Nancy's sake.
03:10I don't know the name of the street, Mr Harry,
03:12but I think I can guide you to it.
03:14Good boy.
03:16Where do we meet again, Mr Brando?
03:17Well, if I'm fortunate in my quest this evening at my house,
03:20then I'll be off with you, Mr Mayley.
03:21Every moment's precious.
03:24Dr Losman, I don't think I've spoken to you as yet
03:27as what I believe I know about this man Monks.
03:29But if we should meet with him,
03:31I must warn you to prepare yourself for a very considerable surprise.
03:39Ah, please.
03:42Yeah!
03:43I'll do seven.
03:43Come on, Bob.
03:44Give us some money.
03:44Oh, shoo!
03:45Did I tell you to be silent?
03:48I'm sorry, Fagin, I forgot.
03:50Duh.
03:51Well, what's all the fuss about anyway?
03:52No one knows about this place.
03:54But Barney won't, Peach, even if they twisted his tongue off.
03:56Ah, what a pill, Sikes.
03:58Do you suppose he won't try to come here?
04:02Mother, he should bring the traps here.
04:04You know, I didn't come into this gang to be led into danger.
04:07I made that clear at the store.
04:08You let me get out.
04:09Fix time with us.
04:10You ain't cuttin' away when everything's wrong
04:12and eatin' all the vittles when everything's right.
04:15If we're nabbed, you're nabbed.
04:17Understand?
04:18Ah!
04:22Now be silent!
04:25Every one of you!
04:26Every one of you!
04:56Ah, never tell me that. This stuff's nothing but trumpery. Why, the razor strop it I bought
05:05at you last winter. Dang me if the razor didn't cut right through it. Ah, you're too strong
05:10in the arm by far. He hit you there, man. So you be and all. Now, I've another one here
05:16said, guaranteed as strong as iron and will sharpen steel to a needle's point. And if
05:19that steel doesn't shave you closer than you've ever been shaved in your life before, why,
05:23dash me, you may cut my own throat with it. I can't say fairer than that now, can I?
05:28Here, what be this stuff, peddler? Good to eat. Dog soap, my late, made it up a good.
05:35This stuff, this stuff, gentlemen, is the most infallible and invaluable composition for
05:40removing all sorts of stains, rust, dirt, mildew, spick, speck, spot or spatter, from silk, satin,
05:46linen, cambric, cloth, crepe, stuck, carpet, merino, muslin, bombazine, all wool and stuff.
05:51Stain stains, fruit stains, beer stains, water stains, paint stains, pitch stains, all sorts
05:56of stains come out at one rub of this infallible and invaluable composition. If a lady stains
06:04her honour, she has only to swallow one cake and she's cured at once, ah, for it's poison.
06:11And if a gentleman wishes to prove this, she has only to bolt one little square and he's
06:16put the matter beyond question, for it's quite as satisfactory as a pistol bullet and a great
06:20deal nastier in the flavour. Consequently, the more credit for taking it. One penny a square,
06:26with all these virtues, only one penny a square.
06:29I wish I'd have one from your men. You want it for your wife, ain't I?
06:33It's all bought up as fast as it can be made. There are 14 water mills, 16 engines and a
06:38galvanic battery. All are working on it and they can't make it fast enough. So the men work
06:42so hard they dies off and the widows is pinching directly with £20 a year for each of the children
06:47and a premium of £50 for twins. One penny a square, two eight inches all the same, four
06:53five inches received with joy, wine stains, fruit stains, beer stains, water stains, paint
06:58stains, pitch stains, mud stains, blood stains. Now, here's a stain upon the hat of a gentleman's
07:04company, which I shall take out before he can order me a pint of ale.
07:08Ah, give me that back. I shall take it clean out itself, or you can come across the room to
07:12get it now, gentlemen all. Observe this dark stain upon the hat of this gentleman. No wider
07:19than a shilling, but thick and a half a crown now, whether it be wine stain, fruit stain,
07:23beer stain, or blood stain.
07:27Beer wood.
07:34Quick as you can, ladies and gents. We've only got two minutes.
07:40And look sharp within the waters, hurry up with the drinks now. Look alive with the mailbags,
07:44will you? We'll be ironed time now.
07:46Ah, this is for your people, sir. Oh, you'll find it in prime condition. I had it with me under the
07:51booty all the time. Spent, rather than you up in town. Oh, not that I know, sir.
07:56Corns up a little. As always. I did hear talk of a murder down Splitterfield's
08:01way, but I don't reckon much on it. Oh, that's quite true, Gar, and the dreadful murder it was.
08:06Oh, was it, sir? A man or woman, sir? A woman. But it's believed that the man who did it won't
08:10be at large very long. A description of him is out already, and what's more, he has a dog with it.
08:15A dog, eh? Well, that ain't very sensible, sir. Give him away at once, a dog, eh?
08:19Where she then, sir? Dammit, where's that mailbag? You got no sleep in there?
08:23Come in. Come in. Yes. And says a young woman of property what's gonna take a fancy to me, Bart? I don't know
08:29well. Come on, give us a hold of it. Right, take her away.
08:45I don't know where it is after all, sir. I thought I could recognise the street, but I can't. Unless it's around that corner.
09:05You've been around so many corners already. I know, sir. I'm very sorry.
09:09Never mind, Oliver. You've done your best. Let's hope that Sir Brownlow is more fortunate in tracing monks,
09:14and we can force it out of him.
09:20It's one of them. Pagans, boys. Come on.
09:37That's it. That's the place, sir. You're quite sure? Yes, sir. Good.
09:42I'm back to the coach now, Oliver. I must go back to Mr. Brownlow.
09:44Charlie, what do you say? His sight's away. Answer me, will you, is he?
09:54Here, give him a fart, someone to get his breath back, Fagin. He's gone to Birmingham, they say. I listened to a crowd of people that was talking about it. But the traps are out, and they said there's a cry for him all over the country.
10:03Oh, fool the madman. I told him not to be too violent. He could have quieted the girl without one of the three cripples.
10:12Barney got away, and it's all closed up. But they say he's alive with traps inside.
10:16Oh, monks should go there. I can read, can't he?
10:19I can read, can't he? Well, he's been out of town. He expects me there tonight.
10:25Oh.
10:26Hey, why don't we make a run for it, Fagin? We could go to the island, Kent, to Toby's.
10:30No. No. We're safer here. For the time. For the time Sykes' way, Barney's gone. And unless someone peaches.
10:40A whole peach here, anyway.
10:42Oh, no, no. If they take us, they'll fang out about the money we stole from Mr. Salbury.
10:49You took it, not me. You know you did.
10:53Walter, my dear. You know my boys. And you know me. We don't care to be unpleasant.
11:03But we should discover one of our number is disloyal. You understand me?
11:14Very sensible, my dear. Very sensible. Now stay here quietly. All of you!
11:22Till I decide what's to be done.
11:33Hey. Who's on? Come here. Come here, you devil.
12:04Hey, come back, Jimmy. Come back, you devil, you!
12:08Stay by the door. As he tries to escape, call the police at once and charge him as of Helen in my name.
12:37By what right do you kidnap me in the street and have me brought here by force?
12:40By my own? Are you mad enough to wish to leave this place? Very well, then stand aside.
12:47Ah, you're free to go. But I warn you, Mr. Edward Leifert, that the moment you set foot outside this house,
12:53I shall have you apprehended for fraud and robbery. Otherwise, you can appeal to my own forbearance and the mercy of those you've injured.
13:02Give him to the law, Mr. Brownlow, and have done with it.
13:05Well?
13:06How much do you know?
13:07Everything.
13:08That's easily said. What if I commit myself for nothing?
13:11Ah. Wait outside.
13:13Very good, sir.
13:19Ah. You recognise me in the street tonight as being your father's oldest friend.
13:24Some fine treatment my father's oldest friend has given me.
13:26It's because you bear his name that even now I'm disposed to treat you gently.
13:30What does a name to do with it? What does a name to mean?
13:32Nothing to you, I know. You and your mother despoiled it.
13:35But it was your father's name and your sister, who was to have been my wife.
13:40Say why you've brought me here.
13:42You have a brother, Edward Leifert, whom you hounded almost to his death.
13:45It's a lie, a lie. I have no brother.
13:47If you know so much, you must know that I was an only child.
13:50I know of your father's marriage, which he was forced into by family pride and sordid ambition.
13:55But when your parents parted, what then?
13:57No.
13:59While your mother, whose nature like your own was shallow and heartless, disported herself in Paris,
14:05your father remained here in England.
14:07He met a family, a naval officer and his two daughters.
14:10One a beautiful girl of 19, the other a mere child of two or three.
14:15Your father and the elder daughter fell in love, and by the end of the year he was solemnly contracted to her.
14:22But the previous marriage, Mr Brownlow, he made no mention of it, hoping in desperation that some way or another
14:28he could obtain his freedom.
14:30And then, quite suddenly, he was informed that he'd been left a large sum of money.
14:34It was necessary for him to go to Rome for certain formalities, but before he went abroad, he came to see me.
14:40To see you?
14:42He left with me, amongst other things, a likeness of the girl he loved, that portrait, painted by himself.
14:49He spoke in a wild, distracted way of the ruin and dishonour he'd worked on someone he loved.
14:55And of his intention of bestowing half his property to you and your mother, and with the rest to fly the country in the company of this girl.
15:05In Rome, he was taken suddenly ill. Your mother followed as soon as the news reached her.
15:10But he died the next day, and as no will could be found, the whole of his property passed to you and her.
15:16What becomes of your charges? Fraud and robbery are high-sounding words.
15:21Justified, I suppose you think, by some fancied resemblance to this idle daub.
15:26You don't even know there was a child born to this maudlin pair! You don't even know that!
15:29I didn't at the time. But during the last fortnight, I've learned all.
15:35You have a brother, and you know it.
15:39Moreover, there was a will which you and your mother destroyed.
15:42In it was a reference to a child likely to be born of this sad union.
15:46And years later, when you saw him, your suspicions were aroused by his resemblance to his father.
15:52All lies! All lies!
15:53You went to the place of his birth, and there long suppressed were proofs of his birth and his parentage.
15:59You destroyed these proofs, and now in your own words to your accomplice, Fagin.
16:06All proofs of his identity lie at the bottom of the river.
16:13And the old hag who stole them from her lies rotting in her coffin!
16:17Mr. Brownlow!
16:23Well?
16:24The man will be taken, tonight.
16:25What, the murderer?
16:26Yes. His dog has been seen lurking about some old haunt.
16:28And they believe his master is there, or will be soon.
16:30Intriguing, Harry! What of him?
16:32Oliver found the place, and the police have been informed.
16:34And he's taken?
16:35Not when I last heard, but he will be by this time. They're sure of him.
16:38Well, sir, you hear this gentleman?
16:41Anything you may choose to withhold, we can easily learn from your associates.
16:45Well, the choice is yours.
16:50Give me your word to be secret with me.
16:52Yes. Remain here till I return. It's your only hope of safety.
17:15It says it'ssex, Sir.
17:16For the king, say it!
17:17Feagin, it's the Trax!
17:35Come on, Charlie, we're in the king!
17:39Here, take it!
17:56Here, take it!
18:26Take it, take it, take it!
18:32Well, think that up.
18:35And make yourself scarce when you've done it.
18:37You might have been a bit more glad to see us, Toby.
18:39Well, I'm not.
18:40A man who's got a snug can in the backwater
18:42don't particularly want a visit from two young gentlemen situated as you are.
18:46We had to come here, Toby.
18:47We had nowhere else to go with the three cripples alive with traps.
18:50We ain't doing no more than we're entitled to.
18:52So Fagin's took, is he?
18:54Yeah.
18:55Thought he was following us.
18:56But he stopped to try and take more money.
18:58Fool.
18:59Charlie and me made our lucky up to watch his chimney.
19:01Walter got into a water butt head downwards.
19:03His legs were so precious long they took him too.
19:05And the girl with him.
19:06This is a smash, this is.
19:08If Walter turns King's evidence, as of course he will,
19:11there's more than one, I'll go with it.
19:14What about Sykes?
19:16He's gone out country, Birmingham way.
19:18Thank all for that.
19:20At least he won't be able to lead him to us.
19:25The court.
19:26What's that?
19:31What's the meaning of this?
19:33He can't be coming here.
19:34He was here to come with the dog.
19:36Give us some water.
19:37He's nearly ran himself back.
19:38Yes, come away, mate.
19:39He must have come a long way.
19:40He must have been to all the other kens and find him full of strangers.
19:42Come on here.
19:43But why ain't he with Sykes?
19:45Here, can Sykes have made away with himself, do you think?
19:48No.
19:49Now if he had, that dog would have took us to where he'd done it.
19:52Now I think he must have got out the country and left the dog behind.
19:56Can we help us?
19:58Is it him?
20:02Yeah.
20:03That's him.
20:04Yeah.
20:05That's him.
20:06Let him in, Charlie.
20:07We're not going to let him in.
20:08I've got to let him in.
20:09There's no help for it.
20:11Come on, Charlie.
20:12We're not going to let him in.
20:13I've got to let him in.
20:14There's no help for it.
20:41There's no help for it.
20:42There's no help for it.
20:43There's no help for it.
20:44There's no help for it.
20:45There's no help for it.
20:46There's no help for it.
20:47There's no help for it.
20:48There's no help for it.
20:49There's no help for it.
20:50There's no help for it.
20:51There's no help for it.
20:52There's no help for it.
20:53There's no help for it.
20:54There's no help for it.
20:55There's no help for it.
20:56There's no help for it.
20:57There's no help for it.
20:58There's no help for it.
20:59There's no help for it.
21:00There's no help for it.
21:01There's no help for it.
21:02There's no help for it.
21:03There's no help for it.
21:04There's no help for it.
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