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00:00There was a story of a dream
00:05A dream a dream
00:09A dream of a dream
00:15A dream of a dream
00:20A dream of a dream
00:26Keep her out, Liz.
00:53The tide runs strong here.
00:56Keep her well up all the sweep of it.
01:16Well, I've seen nothing afloat.
01:23I've seen nothing afloat.
01:26I've seen nothing afloat.
01:30I've seen nothing afloat.
01:37I've seen nothing afloat.
01:44I've seen nothing afloat.
01:51I've seen nothing afloat.
01:58I've seen nothing afloat.
02:05I've seen nothing afloat.
02:12I've seen nothing afloat.
02:19I've seen nothing afloat.
02:26I've seen nothing afloat.
02:29I've seen nothing afloat.
02:33I've seen nothing afloat.
02:35I've seen nothing afloat.
02:37I've seen nothing afloat.
02:38I've seen nothing afloat.
02:40I've seen nothing afloat.
02:41I've seen nothing afloat.
02:42I've seen nothing afloat.
02:43I've seen nothing afloat.
02:44I've seen nothing afloat.
02:45I've seen nothing afloat.
03:06Brings us more luck.
03:08Oh, take that thing off your face, for God's sake.
03:14Here, give me a hold of the skull, then.
03:17Oh, no, no, Father, I can't indeed.
03:18Come on.
03:19Father, I cannot sit so near it.
03:21What hurt can it do you?
03:23None.
03:25None.
03:27I just can't bear it.
03:31It's my belief you ate the very sight of this river.
03:34I...
03:34I do not like it, Father.
03:39As if it wasn't your living.
03:41As if it wasn't meat and drink to you.
03:44How can you be so thankless to your best friend, Lizzie?
03:48I had a very fire that warmed you when you was a baby.
03:52Was picked out of this river alongside the coal barges.
03:56The very basket you slept in.
03:58The tide washed ashore.
04:00And the very rockers I put on it.
04:04I'll cut it out of a piece of wood.
04:10They're drifting from some ship, old brother.
04:13And the water.
04:20å¹´
04:20And the water.
04:21I, I, I
04:34I, I,
04:35in luck again gaffer i thought he was in luck again by your weight as you came down
04:57huh so you're out are you yes i said to myself i said myself as soon as you over interviewed
05:04that's gaffer axum i said and he's in that game by george if he ain't
05:10don't worry i didn't touch him he's been touchy enough not to want any more by the look of him
05:18he's been knocking about in too many times by the look of him don't you think partner
05:24such is my out of luck ways hey partner i must have missed him on the tide when he passed down
05:31because i was waiting under the bridge here
05:33i think hey i think you're like one of the vultures partner you can send them out hey
05:41anyway we'll fix it betwixt us shall i uh shall i haul him aboard partner no no
05:51you ain't been eating nothing that's disagreed with you have your partner
05:56why yes i have i've been swallowing too much of that word partner i'm no partner of yours
06:02oh and since when have you not been a partner of mine gaffer axum squire since you was accused of
06:12accused of robbing a live man and suppose i've been accused of robbing a dead man gaffer
06:18well is a dead man any use for money is it possible for a dead man to have money
06:24a dead man belongs to the other world money belongs to this world
06:28don't you start confounding the rights and wrongs of it that way
06:32but it's a sneaking spirit that robs a live man
06:37but tell you what it is tell you what it is oh no you won't i'll tell you what it is
06:43you've got off with a short time for putting your hands in the pocket of a sailor
06:47a live sailor well make the most of it and think yourself lucky
06:52but don't think after that to come over me with your partners
06:56we have worked together in time past but we work together no more not in time present nor yet future
07:02now leave go cast off
07:04hello gaffer you think they're getting rid of me this way
07:07if i don't give a year this way i'll get rid of you another and chop you over there with this boot
07:11cast off
07:12pull you lizzie
07:13pull you into the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back of the back
07:43Look, is your cousin Lord Snigsworth in or out of town?
07:49Oh, out of town.
07:50At Snigsworthy Park?
07:51Yes, it's a place, sir.
07:53Yes, thank you, ma'am.
07:54I assure you, my dear Veneering, that it...
07:58I assure you, my dear Veneering, that it is the oddest affair.
08:04Like the advertising people, I don't ask you to trust me
08:07without offering a respectable reference.
08:10Mortimer there is my reference, and he knows all about it.
08:12He is the solicitor, and he knows everything.
08:16I insist that you tell us all there is to be told about the man from Jamaica.
08:21Not Jamaica.
08:22Well, the man from somewhere.
08:25We're all very much interested in the man from somewhere.
08:29Deeply interested.
08:30Quite excited.
08:31The man from nowhere, perhaps.
08:32Yes.
08:34I find it immensely embarrassing to have the eyes of Europe upon me to this extent,
08:39especially as I find the man from somewhere a bore.
08:42Oh, sure.
08:42Where he comes from escapes me, but it's where they make the wine.
08:46Dea Martin.
08:47No, that's where they make the port.
08:49Now, come along.
08:50Come along.
08:52A man called John Harmon was the only son of a tremendous old rascal
08:58who made his money as a dust contractor.
09:00Coal dust, vegetable dust, bone dust.
09:03This old vagabond lived among great mountain ranges of it.
09:05His highest gratification in life came from turning his relatives out.
09:10He began, as was natural, with his wife, then his daughter.
09:15He found a husband for her, entirely to his own satisfaction, not in the least to hers,
09:20and proceeded to settle upon her a considerable amount of dust as a marriage portion.
09:25But the girl said she was engaged to what the novelists call another,
09:30and that such a marriage would make dust of her heart.
09:33So he turned her out.
09:35A little claret, sir.
09:36Hmm?
09:37Ah.
09:38Dust, dust.
09:39Oh, yes.
09:40Yes.
09:42Where go on?
09:44Well, despite the fact that another was hard up,
09:48she married him and lived in some humble dwelling until she died.
09:52We now return to the man from somewhere.
09:54Ah.
09:55At the time of his sister's expulsion,
09:57he was a boy of 14 being cheaply educated in Brussels.
10:01He absconded, burst in upon his father to plead his sister's cause.
10:05Venerable parent promptly turns him out.
10:06The boy takes flight and seeks his fortune abroad.
10:10So he was only discovered the other day after having been expatriated about 14 years.
10:15How discovered and why?
10:17Ah.
10:18Venerable parent dies.
10:20Ah.
10:20His will is found.
10:22It's dated very soon after the son's flight.
10:24It leaves the lowest of the range of dust mountains
10:27with some humble dwelling house at its foot to an old servant who is sole executor.
10:32The rest of the very considerable property he leaves to the son.
10:35He directs himself to be buried with certain eccentric ceremonies
10:40and precautions against his coming to life with which I needn't bore you.
10:45And, ah, that's the end of the story.
10:48Hmm.
10:49Except that the son's inheritance is made conditional upon his marrying a girl
10:55who at the date of the will was a child of four or five years of age
10:58but is now a marriageable young woman.
11:01Advertisement and inquiry discovered the son and he a man from somewhere
11:05and at the present moment he's on his way home from there.
11:09No doubt in a state of great astonishment
11:11to succeed to a very considerable fortune and to take a wife.
11:14Is she a young person of personal charge?
11:17Oh, I'm unable to report.
11:18What becomes of the fortune if he does not marry her?
11:22Ah, it then goes to the old servant
11:24who has already been left a small legacy.
11:26Also, if the son is dead, the same servant inherits everything.
11:30Everything.
11:32What's this?
11:33A boy to see, sir.
11:35Who?
11:36A boy.
11:37This, this, this...
11:42This arrives in an extraordinarily opportune manner.
11:46This note is the conclusion of the story of the same man.
11:50Already married?
11:51Declines to marry?
11:52Codicil among the dust.
11:53Why, no remarkable thing is you're all wrong.
11:55The story's rather more exciting than I supposed.
11:58Man's drowned.
12:00Are you the boy who bought this paper?
12:23Yes, sir.
12:25Whose writing is this?
12:27Mine, sir.
12:28Who told you to write it?
12:29My father, Jesse Hexham.
12:32What is your father?
12:34He gets a living along shore.
12:36Is it far?
12:37Is which far?
12:38To your father's.
12:40It's a goodish stretch, sir.
12:42They come up in a cab.
12:44And the cab's waiting to be paid.
12:48Were any means taken, do you know, boy, to ascertain if it was possible to restore life?
12:55Wouldn't ask, sir, if you knew his state.
12:58Pharaoh's multitude that were drowned in the Red Sea ain't more beyond restoring to life.
13:03Hello.
13:04You seem to be at home in the Red Sea, my young friend.
13:07Read of it with teacher at school.
13:09But don't tell my father.
13:10We'd have no peace in our place if that got touched upon.
13:13It's my sister's contriving.
13:15You seem to have a good sister.
13:17Oh, she ain't half bad, my sister.
13:19She ain't half bad.
13:20And if she knows her letters, then that's the most she does.
13:23And then I learned her.
13:27I hope you'll know me again.
13:29I'll go with you, if you like.
13:42I have been, Eugène, upon the honourable roll of solicitors of the High Court of Chancery and attorneys of common law five years.
13:50And except for gratuitously taking instructions on the will of Lady Tippins, who has nothing to leave, I've had no business at all but this romantic business of harmony.
14:00I've been called to the past seven years and I've never had any business at all.
14:03Never shall have any.
14:04If I had, I shouldn't know how to do it.
14:06I hate my profession.
14:08Shall I incommode you if I put mine up too?
14:13I hate mine.
14:14It was forced upon me because it was understood we wanted barrister in the family.
14:17Well, it was forced upon me because it was understood we wanted a solicitor in the family.
14:20I mean, how am I to rush out into the street, call her the first man of worth the appearance, shake him and say,
14:24Go to law upon the spot, you dog, and retain me or I'll be the deputy.
14:28Precisely.
14:29I mean, what can one be energetic about?
14:32You show me something worth being energetic about.
14:34I'll show you energy.
14:35And so will I.
14:36This is a confoundedly out of the way place.
14:48You have to walk the rest, sir.
14:50Get out of the way.
14:51Not many yards.
14:52My father's house is by the light.
15:02You're Mortimer Lightwood, Esquire.
15:16Are you sir?
15:17Mortimer Lightwood is my name.
15:18What you found.
15:19Is it here?
15:20Ain't nothing to say here, but it's close by.
15:21I do everything regular.
15:22I give notice of the circumstance to the police.
15:23And the police have took possession of it.
15:24There ain't been no time to say here.
15:25I do everything regular.
15:26I give notice of the circumstance to the police, and the police have took possession of it.
15:27There ain't been no time lost on any hand.
15:28The police have put it into print already.
15:29There ain't been no time lost on any hand.
15:30The police have put it into print already.
15:31And here's what the prince says on it.
15:32Only papers on the unfortunate man, I see.
15:33Not many.
15:34The police have put it in.
15:35And I crackled it in paper, and the old old old old old, and this must have sold them
15:36there.
15:37To get it.
15:38I do nothing to say here.
15:39I do nothing to say here.
15:40But I do everything regular.
15:44I give notice of the circumstance to the police, and the police have taken possession of
15:50it.
15:51There ain't been no time lost on any hand.
15:53The police have put it into print already.
15:56And here's what the print says on it.
15:59Only papers on the unfortunate man, I see.
16:02Only papers?
16:03No money but three pence in one of the skirt pockets.
16:05Three penny pieces?
16:07Trouser pockets empty and turned inside out.
16:09Oh, well, that's common.
16:11That could be the wash of the tide.
16:14You can't tell.
16:15Now here.
16:17His pockets was found empty and turned inside out.
16:20So was this one's.
16:21So was that one's.
16:23I can't read.
16:26Nor do I have any need to.
16:28For I know them by their places on the wall.
16:31This was a sailor with two anchors and a flag and GFT on his arm.
16:36Look and see if he went.
16:36Quite right.
16:38And this was a young woman with grey boots and a linen mark with a cross.
16:42Look and see if she went.
16:43Quite right.
16:45And this was him that had a nasty cut over the eye.
16:49And this was them two young sisters
16:51that tied themselves together with the anchor tree.
16:55And this was a drunken old chap.
16:57With a pair of slippers and a nightcap.
17:00Who'd offered to eat afterwards come out
17:03to make a hole in the water for a quarter of rum.
17:06Stood a forehand.
17:08And he kept his word to it
17:10for the first and last time in his life.
17:13They practically papers of war, you see.
17:17But I know them all.
17:19I'm scholar enough.
17:21You didn't find all these yourself, did you?
17:23And what might your name be now?
17:28This is my friend, Mr. Eugene Rayburn.
17:30Ah, Mr. Eugene Rayburn, is it?
17:32And what might Mr. Eugene Rayburn have asked of me?
17:37I asked you simply if you found all these yourself.
17:40Well, I answer simply.
17:42Most of them.
17:43Do you suppose there's been much violence
17:45and robbery beforehand amongst these cases?
17:47I don't suppose at all about it.
17:49But I'm not one of the supposed insult.
17:54There.
17:58Body missing, body found, which?
18:01I'm lost.
18:04Lost?
18:06I'm a stranger and I don't know the way.
18:10I want to find the place
18:11where I can see what is described here.
18:14This gentleman, Mr. Lightwood, is on that business.
18:17Mr. Lightwood?
18:18I think so.
18:19You did me the honour to mention my name?
18:21I repeated it after this man.
18:22You said you were a stranger in London.
18:24Another stranger.
18:25Will you come with us?
18:26I'll have a liver.
18:44I want a liver.
18:51Let me out there!
18:52I want a liver.
18:57Almost high.
19:03Sir, beautiful.
19:07No clue to how the body came into the river.
19:10Very often.
19:11No clue.
19:13He'll have a certain difference
19:15received before or after death.
19:18One excellent surgical opinion says before,
19:20another excellent surgical opinion says after. Steward ship which gentleman came
19:27back passenger, been around to view, swear to identity, likewise will swear to
19:34clothes.
19:36and then you see you had the papers too.
19:53how was it he totally disappeared on leaving ship to a founding river?
20:01probably upon some little game. probably thought it a harmless game wasn't up to things
20:07turned out a fatal game. inquest tomorrow no doubt open verdict.
20:14got your friend completely over. got him completely off his feet.
20:18that's given him a bad turn to be sure. he's not a friend.
20:21indeed where'd you pick him up? nearby. he wanted to identify I think.
20:28don't you faint sir?
20:36seems you're not accustomed to this kind of work.
20:38no. it's a horrible sight.
20:42you expected to identify I'm told sir? yes. have you identified? no.
20:48it's a horrible sight. oh horrible horrible sight.
20:52oh did you think it might have been? well give us a description sir perhaps you can help.
20:57no. no it would be useless. good night.
21:04you missed a friend you know.
21:06or you missed a foe you know.
21:08or you wouldn't have come here you know.
21:10well then ain't it reasonable to ask who was it?
21:16you must excuse my telling you
21:18that families may not choose to publish their disagreements and
21:22misfortunes except on the last to necessity.
21:25I do not dispute that you discharge your duty in asking me the question.
21:29you will not dispute my right to withhold the answer.
21:33good night.
21:35at least you will not object to leave me your card sir.
21:37I should not object if I had one but I have not.
21:40well at least you will not object to write down your name and address.
21:43not at all.
21:47my name is
21:49Julius
21:51Hanford
21:53you can find me at the
21:55exchequer coffee house palace yard.
21:57staying there I presume sir.
21:59Westminster. staying there yes.
22:01consequently from the country.
22:03from the country yes.
22:05good night sir.
22:07good night.
22:13reserve.
22:15take care of this piece of paper.
22:17keep him in view.
22:19without giving offence.
22:21as a pain he is stay in there and find out everything you can about him.
22:31do you believe there is something that really looks bad here?
22:37couldn't say.
22:39if a murder
22:41anybody could have done it.
22:43it's your burglary pocket picking want apprenticeship.
22:45not so murder.
22:47we're all of us up to that.
22:51I've seen scores of people come to identify.
22:53never seen any person struck in that particular way.
22:57it might have ever been stomach not mind.
23:01if so rum stomach.
23:03for there to be sure there's
23:07rum everythings.
23:09Peter there's not a word of truth in that
23:11superstition about bodies bleeding
23:13when touched by the hand of the right person.
23:17you never get a sign out of bodies.
23:19or you get wry enough out of such as her.
23:21she's good for all night now.
23:29but you get nothing out of bodies.
23:31where's father?
23:33he's gone for half a point.
23:49where did you go Liz?
23:59i went out in the dark.
24:01and the gentleman looked hard at me.
24:03i was afraid he might know what my face meant.
24:07you will make the most of your time won't you Charlie?
24:11won't i?
24:13i like that don't i?
24:15yes you work hard at your learning i know.
24:17and i work a little.
24:19and plan and contrive a little.
24:21i wake out of my sleep contriving sometimes.
24:23i had to get together a shilling now and a shilling then.
24:25that will make father believe that you're beginning to earn a stray living along shore.
24:29you're father's favourite. you can make him believe anything.
24:32i wish i could Charlie.
24:34for if i could make him believe that learning was a good thing.
24:37and that we should all lead better lives.
24:40i should be almost content to die.
24:43don't talk stuff about dying Liz.
24:50well have an evening Charlie.
24:52when you're at the school and father's at the...
24:54at the six jolly fellowship portis.
24:56as i sit and look at the fire
24:58i seem to see in the burning coal.
25:00look where that glow is now.
25:01now that's gas that is.
25:03coming from a bit of forest
25:04that was under the mud
25:05that was under the water in the days of noah's ark.
25:07now look here.
25:08when i take the poker and give it a dig.
25:10don't disturb it Charlie.
25:11or it'll all be in a blaze.
25:13no it's that dull glow near it coming and going that i mean.
25:17when i look at that of an evening
25:19it comes like pictures to me Charlie.
25:23well show us a picture.
25:25tell us where to look.
25:26oh it wants my eyes.
25:27well then tell us what your eyes make of it.
25:32well there are you and me Charlie.
25:34when you were quite a baby that never knew a mother.
25:37now don't go saying i never knew a mother.
25:40for i knew a sister who was a sister and mother both.
25:43well there are you and me.
25:46when father was away at work and had locked us out for fear that we should set ourselves afire or fall out of a window.
25:53sitting on the doorstep or wandering the streets to get through time.
25:58you're rather heavy to carry and often have to rest.
26:04sometimes we're sleepy.
26:07sometimes we're very hungry.
26:09sometimes we're a little frightened.
26:12but what is oftenest hard upon us is the cold.
26:17do you remember Charlie?
26:19do you remember Charlie?
26:22yeah i remember.
26:24i snuggled under a little shawl and it was warm then.
26:27sometimes it rains and we get under a boat or the likes of that.
26:34sometimes it's dark and we get among the gas lights sitting watching the people as they go along the streets.
26:40then at last up comes father and takes us home.
26:47old home seems such a shelter after out of doors.
26:50and he pulls off my shoes and dries my feet at the fire and has me sit by him while he smokes his pipe.
26:56as long after you're abed.
27:00i notice that father's is a large hand.
27:04but it's never a heavy one when it touches me.
27:07it just strikes me then.
27:11are those some of the pictures you see in there?
27:15of what is past, yes Charlie.
27:18well give us a fortune telling one. a future one.
27:25well
27:27there am i.
27:28continuing with father and holding to father.
27:31because father loves me and i love father.
27:33i can't so much as read a book because if i'd learned father would have thought i was deserting him.
27:37i should have lost my influence.
27:41oh i have not the influence i want to have.
27:46i can't stop some of the dreadful things i try to stop.
27:50but i go on in the hope and trust that time will come.
27:57because if i was not faithful.
28:04well there you are.
28:08where am i liz?
28:09still in the hollow down by the flare.
28:12there you are Charlie.
28:13working your way in secret from father at the school.
28:16and you get prizes.
28:17and you go on better and better.
28:19and you rise to be...
28:21what was it you called it when you told me that?
28:23fortune teller not know the name.
28:25pupil teacher.
28:26you come to be a pupil teacher.
28:27and still you go on better and better.
28:29and you rise to be a master full of learning and respect.
28:32the secret has come to father's knowledge long before.
28:48and it's divided you from father and from me.
28:51no it hasn't.
28:52yes it has Charlie.
28:54i see as plain as plain can be that your way is not ours.
29:03still.
29:05it's a great thing to have cut your way from father's life.
29:08and to have made a new and good beginning.
29:16so there am i.
29:19left alone with father.
29:20keeping him as straight as i can.
29:22and looking for more influence than i have.
29:26hoping i may wish to turn him to do better things.
29:31you said you couldn't read books Liz.
29:35your library of books is the hollow down by the flare i think.
29:40i should be very glad to read real books Charlie.
29:43i feel my want for learning very much.
29:45i should feel it even more if i didn't know it to be a tie between father and me.
29:50even more if i didn't know it to be a tie between father and me.
29:52even more if i didn't know it to be a tie between father and me.
29:53i've used to be an masterpiece.
29:55that's a good one.
29:56you should feel it even more if you have to.
30:01oh my God.
30:03you should be able to be a tie with a tie.
30:04you should be a tie with a tie.
30:05And upon the evidence placed before us,
30:26we find that the body of Mr. John Harmon
30:29was discovered in the Thames in an advanced state of decay
30:34and much injured,
30:37and that the said Mr. John Harmon
30:39has come by his death under highly suspicious circumstances,
30:44though by whose act or in what precise manner
30:47there is no evidence before this jury to shut.
31:04My respected father has found down in the parental neighbourhood
31:17a wife for his not generally respected son.
31:19With some money, of course.
31:20With some money, of course, if not have found her.
31:22My respected father's always in the clearest manner provided for his children
31:26by pre-arranging from the hour of birth of each
31:28what his or her course in life would be.
31:30Do you know the lady?
31:32Not in the least.
31:33Hadn't you better see her?
31:34Oh my dear Mortimer, you've studied my character.
31:36Could I possibly go down there labelled eligible on view,
31:39meet the lady similarly labelled?
31:41I'm ready to carry out all my father's arrangements except matrimony.
31:45Could I possibly support it?
31:47I so soon bored.
31:48So constantly.
31:50So fatally.
31:51But you're not a consistent fellow, Eugé.
31:53In susceptibility to boredom, I assure you I'm the most consistent of mankind.
31:56It was but now that you were dwelling on the advantages of a monotony of two.
32:00In a lighthouse.
32:01Do me the justice to remember the condition.
32:02In a lighthouse?
32:03No, no, no, no, no.
32:04There's no help for it.
32:05One of the prophecies of my father must forever remain unfulfilled.
32:08As far as my marrying is concerned, my father must submit to failure.
32:13It's a strange night.
32:18As if the ghosts were rising.
32:28Apparently one of them's lost his way.
32:31Dropped in to be directed.
32:32Look at this fat.
32:33Who the devil are you?
32:35Oh, I ask your pardon, but might one of you governors be loyal I would?
32:41What do you mean by not knocking at the door?
32:42I do ask your pardon, but perhaps you didn't know that your door was already open.
32:46What do you want?
32:47I ask your pardon, Governor, but might one of you governors be loyal I would?
32:52Yes, one of us is.
32:54Yes, well, governors both.
32:55It's particular business.
32:57What is it?
33:00Governors both.
33:01Which one of you might be loyal I would?
33:03I am.
33:06Governor, I'm a man who earns my living and seeks to earn my living by the sweat in my brow.
33:12Before I say anything else, I'd like to be sworn in.
33:16You're not a swearer in a people man.
33:18Alfred David.
33:19Is that your name?
33:20No, I want to take an Alfred David.
33:22Alfred David.
33:23Well first let us know what your business is about.
33:26It's about ten thousand pounds reward.
33:28That's what it's about.
33:30It's about murder.
33:31That's what it's about.
33:32Come near at the table.
33:34Sit down.
33:35Can I have a glass of wine?
33:38Yes, I will.
33:39And I won't receive you, Governor.
33:40I won't receive you.
33:47Can I have another?
33:48Yes, I will.
33:49And I won't receive you, Governor.
33:50And what's your name?
33:51Well before I say that, I'd like the other Governor, the other Governor, to witness what I said I said.
33:58So if the other Governor would be so good as to chuck me his card, his name and address.
34:03Yes.
34:21Now, you have quite completed your various preparations, my friend.
34:25And have fully ascertained that your spirits are cool.
34:28Not in any way hurried.
34:29What's your name?
34:30Rogue graduate.
34:32Dwelling place?
34:34Lymus Hall.
34:35Calling or occupation?
34:37Riverside character.
34:38Anything against you?
34:39I will leave the other Governor's just after, sir.
34:41Ever in trouble?
34:42Once.
34:43On suspicion of a seaman's pocket.
34:45Whereas, in reality, I was the man's best friend and tried to take care of him.
34:48With the sweat of your brow?
34:49Oh, till it poured down like rain.
34:54I give information that the man that did the Armand murder was Jesse Hexham, the man that found a body.
35:01It was the hand of Jesse Hexham, commonly called Guffer, on the River and Longshore, that did the murder.
35:08His hand and no other.
35:11Tell us on what grounds you make this accusation.
35:13On the grounds that I was his partner.
35:15On the grounds that I knew his ways.
35:18On the grounds that I broke the partnership.
35:21Because I knew the danger.
35:23Mind you, his daughter will tell you a different story.
35:26And on the grounds it's common knowledge on the causeways and stairs that he did the murder.
35:31And on the grounds that I will swear he did it.
35:34All this is nothing?
35:35Nothing.
35:36Merely nothing.
35:37It only goes to prove that you suspect this man of the crime.
35:42You may do so with some reason.
35:44You may do so with no reason.
35:46But he cannot be convicted on your suspicion.
35:48Then I will be took down then.
35:50Because by George and the Dragon I'm coming to it now.
35:52He told me that he did it. Isn't that enough?
35:54Take care of what you say my friend.
35:57No.
35:58You take care.
35:59And listen to me.
36:01Because I judge you're gonna be answerable for it.
36:09I...
36:11Roger Ryderud.
36:14Lymus Hull.
36:17Riverside character.
36:19Tell you.
36:21That the man Jesse Exon.
36:23Commonly called Gaffer.
36:24On the river and long shore.
36:26Exon.
36:30Did the deed.
36:32And what's more.
36:34He told me he did the deed.
36:36And what's more.
36:38He told me with his own lips he did the deed.
36:42And then he...
36:44He falls down all the staking.
36:46There's been foul play old friend he says.
36:50And I done it.
36:52I done it for his money.
36:54Don't betray me old friend.
36:55Don't split on me he says.
36:58Those were the very words he used.
37:01What more?
37:03Does there have to be any more?
37:05Did you ask him how he did it?
37:06When he did it?
37:07Where he did it?
37:08Oh no.
37:09No.
37:10I was so troubled on my mind then.
37:13You've been troubled on your mind a long time now.
37:15Ages.
37:16Ages.
37:17When all that stir was made.
37:18When the government reward was offered.
37:19When the police were on the alert.
37:21When the whole country rang with the crime.
37:23Oh.
37:24Weren't I troubled on my mind.
37:25But he had not then the opportunity of earning so much money you see.
37:28Is it a sin to earn it?
37:30Hmm?
37:31I've turned that over in my mind.
37:32Strong.
37:33And the answer's no.
37:35No.
37:36Certainly not governor.
37:37Certainly not.
37:38I was determined in my mind to take the troubles off my mind.
37:41And earn by the sweat of my brow.
37:43What was held out to me.
37:45And I mean to have it.
37:46I mean to have it.
37:47I give you Gaffarexen.
37:49And I want him took tonight.
37:50I suppose I must go with this fellow to our imperturbable friend at the police station.
37:55I suppose there's no help for it.
37:56Do you believe him?
37:57I believe him to be a thorough rascal.
37:58He may tell the truth on this occasion for his own purpose only.
38:02You mentioned, I think, a daughter of this Hexens.
38:09You don't mean to imply she had any guilty knowledge of the crime?
38:12No, I don't.
38:13You implicate no other person.
38:14It's not what I implicate.
38:15It's not Gaffare implicated.
38:17I can't tell you any more than you tell me.
38:20I've done it, he says.
38:22Tells me his very words.
38:29I must see this out, Mortimer.
38:31How shall we go?
38:35Let's walk.
38:36Give this fellow time to think on it.
38:44Wait downstairs for us.
38:57He has a hangdog, eh?
38:58Strikes me as a hangman, eh?
39:01I want to sit back and bring them together.
39:02I want to see him.
39:03I'm going to have a hangnyt, no.
39:04What am I sleeping together here?
39:06I put him.
39:07I do.
39:08I do not.
39:10I will not walk away.
39:11Oh, boy.
39:15That's what I have to do.
39:18I got to bring him,行ok guy.
39:20Allow me, musicians.
39:21All yes, I'm con TikTok and fri-ko-ko-la,
39:23Oh, my God.
39:53What do you put in that little pile of money by itself for?
40:11For you, Charlie.
40:12What do you mean?
40:13Well, get washed and dressed and I'll tell you.
40:23Would you be so good as to look at these papers?
40:27Would either of you gentlemen happen to have a pinch of snuff?
40:51Have you heard these read?
40:58No.
41:00Then you'd better hear them.
41:02I shall read them to you and then I shall ask if this is the evidence you mean to give.
41:05I solemnly swear.
41:08Charlie, dear, I've made up my mind that this is the right time for your going away.
41:14You'll be much happier and you'll do much better.
41:17Even so soon as next month.
41:20Even so soon as next week.
41:22How do you know I shall?
41:24I don't quite know how, Charlie.
41:26But I do.
41:28You must leave Father to me.
41:30I'll do what I can with him, but you must go.
41:33You don't stand upon ceremony.
41:35I tell you what, you're a selfish jade and you think there's not enough for three of us
41:39and you want to get rid of me.
41:40Well, if you believe that, then yes, I believe too.
41:43I'm a selfish jade and I think there's not enough for three of us
41:45and I want to get rid of you.
41:46Don't cry.
41:55Don't cry.
41:57I am satisfied to go, Liz.
41:59I am satisfied.
42:02I know you're sending me away for my own good.
42:07Charlie Heaven above us knows I am.
42:14Don't mind what I said.
42:16Don't think about it.
42:19It's me.
42:23Now listen, Charlie.
42:25You both know it must be done.
42:27You must go straight to the school and say that you and I agreed on it.
42:31That we cannot overcome Father's opposition.
42:34And that he'll never trouble them, but he'll never take you back.
42:39And be sure you always speak well of Father.
42:42Because he's got no learning in himself and is set against it in you.
42:45But say nothing else against him.
42:48And if you should hear anything you said against him, it will not be true.
42:54Remember, Charlie, it will not be true.
42:56I've got nothing more to say except be good and get learning.
43:05And only think of the old life here as if you dreamed it.
43:10Goodbye, my darling.
43:11I'm sorry.
43:17You're right.
43:23I'm going to be78.
43:27You're enough.
43:28We're a Savior.
43:34You're right.
43:34You're meeting the well.
43:36well Caffer Hexham's out and his boat's out but his daughter's at home getting
43:53some supper ready. so Hexham's expected. we mustn't look business.
44:02Ryderhood you watch Fexham's return. now when you've found out come round to the
44:09window up cosy. tap twice at it and wait for me.
44:18now come on be off with you. now would you two gentlemen have any objection to making a
44:24pretense of taking a glass of something in my company at the fellowships? oh it's a
44:29well-conducted house. very highly respectable landlady. I should be happy to
44:32substitute the reality for the pretense. that was my meaning too sir.
44:37I reserve you know where to find me. they burn sherry very well at the six jolly
44:42fellowship quarters.
44:59hey governor's I've just had a thought. he's missed the last I time so we can't
45:13expect Gaffer Hexham to arrive before the next I time yet his daughter still
45:20awaits his return.
45:23I'll wait.
45:50Why are you happy.
45:52why are you serious?
45:57nice.
46:02suya
46:04.
46:07present.
46:12me
46:19Father?
46:25Was that you calling me?
46:29Father?
46:49Father?
46:59I am a chef.
47:07One minute.
47:13I love you.
47:19look governor no one can pass in or out of the house without being seen but it'll be light at
47:25five and then we will be seen oh well look governor what do you say to this he may be
47:31skulking up and down you know holding his own betwixt two or three bridges now i've got my
47:37boat here what do you say if i cast off you know have a look around we'll come with you
47:49so
48:02this is Gaffer's boat empty adrift one skull broken
48:31I don't miss him what's become a pexum I don't know what he dived overboard
48:38all in easy to say that governor but ain't so easy to do his lines got caught under the
48:46keel of the barges I'm gonna take this boat ashore that he should have laughed
48:51right he's a trifle far right give me that spare set of scouts
49:01come out
49:08I'm
49:10right
49:11the
49:14the
49:21Hey, hey, what's this thing?
49:51By the Lord, he's done me.
50:12Gaffer's done me.
50:15Drowned himself on his own towboat.
50:21.
50:26.
50:34.
50:35.
50:36.
50:38.
50:40.
50:43.
50:47ORGAN PLAYS
51:17ORGAN PLAYS
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