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00:00Well, my dear, here's a splendid surprise.
00:12Ma!
00:13My child is welcome, though unlooked for.
00:16You too, R.W., are welcome, though late.
00:19Does the male domestic and Mr. Boffin hear me?
00:21No one's there, ma'am.
00:22No one's there?
00:24No, no one.
00:25An enigma?
00:25Ah, R.W., unless you've taken the precaution of making some addition to our frugal repast on the way home,
00:32it'll prove distasteful to Bella.
00:34Cold mutton and lettuce can ill compare with the luxuries of Mr. Boffin's board.
00:39Mr. Boffin's board means nothing to me, ma'am.
00:41Why, Bella!
00:43Oh, yes, Lovie, I know what I'm wearing.
00:45I was going to tell you, but...
00:47Well, I've left Mr. Boffin's house for good and I'm home again.
00:51My daughter Bella has left Mr. Boffin's roof.
00:53Yes, ma'am, I had a very serious difference with Mr. Boffin
00:56about his treatment of a member of his household and...
01:00Well, it was a final difference and there's an angry...
01:02George Sampson, speak!
01:04What did I tell you about those boffins?
01:05Oh, yes, yes, indeed.
01:06I told George Sampson, as George Sampson tells you,
01:09that those hateful boffins would take advantage and pick a quarrel with Bella
01:12as soon as her novelty had worn off.
01:14Have they done it or have they not?
01:16Was I right or was I wrong?
01:17No, ma'am.
01:19I say of Mr. and Mrs. Boffin what I've always said of them
01:21and nothing will induce me to quarrel with anyone tonight.
01:25I hope you're not too sorry to see me back again.
01:27And as I heard the word lettuce mentioned, I'll make the dressing.
01:31Oh, George, my dear.
01:33I beg your pardon.
01:35Mutton for your mother.
01:37Thank you, Lassie.
01:38Lassie, I dare say your mother would like a little salad
01:41if you were to put it on her plate.
01:43It's not worth troubling you about Bella,
01:45but George is paying his addresses to me.
01:48Oh, I'm very glad to hear it, Lassie.
01:50I dare say we shall be married one of these days.
01:53We did wonder whether to tell you,
01:55but I said to George that you wouldn't be much interested
01:57in so paltry an affair.
01:59Well, that was a mistake, Lassie.
02:00Oh, it turns out to be.
02:02George is in a new situation
02:03and his prospects are very good indeed.
02:06Ma, pray don't sit staring at me in that aggravating manner.
02:10If you see a black on my nose, say so and be done with it.
02:13Do you presume to address me in those words?
02:15Don't talk about presuming, Ma.
02:17A girl who is old enough to be engaged
02:19is old enough to object to being stared at as if she was a clock.
02:22Your grandmama, so addressed by one of her daughters at any age,
02:25would have insisted on her retiring at once to a dark apartment.
02:29Pretty exhibition she must have made of herself.
02:31Silence, mutinous child.
02:32I don't choose to be silent, Ma.
02:35Nor do I choose to be eyed as if I had just come from the boffins.
02:38Can you imagine if you, in spite of my warnings,
02:41that the face of Mrs. Boffin was teeming with evil,
02:43had gone to Mrs. Boffin's
02:45and had come back rejected by Mrs. Boffin,
02:48trampled underfoot by Mrs. Boffin,
02:50that my feelings could have been expressed in looks?
02:53You'll excuse me, Ma, I think I'll go to bed.
02:55I've had a very tiring day.
02:58Sorry, Father, to have brought all this trouble home with me.
03:01Don't be uneasy, my pet.
03:02It's not really worth worrying about.
03:04If your mother and sister
03:05don't get wary about one thing or another,
03:08they'll find another.
03:10We're never out of wearing subjects, I assure you.
03:13Good night, dear little pa.
03:14Good night, my darling.
03:24Oh.
03:25Hello, Talleris.
03:27Lost him again.
03:27Oh, I've seen him with her.
03:31His boat's been hauled up for three days.
03:35I'll come back for a few hours rest.
03:38Need a bottle of love here.
03:39Hold up, Fatherist.
03:43This would be a bad place for a man
03:46to be flung into with his hands tied.
03:48Those slippery walls would give him no chance.
03:51Those gates would suck him down.
03:54And yet you run about the lock
03:55on a few inches of rotten wood.
03:56I wonder you aren't afraid
03:57of being drowned.
03:59I can't be.
04:00Can't be drowned?
04:01Now, now.
04:02Well, now.
04:03I'll be brought out of drowning.
04:05A man's been brought out of drowning
04:06can't never be drowned it.
04:10Well,
04:11who says you come back
04:12for a few hours rest?
04:13Eh?
04:14Oh, yes.
04:16You'd better come in again.
04:19Yes.
04:26Well, you're fair in the middle of last.
04:37What are you going to do now?
04:39I don't know.
04:41How can I plan anything
04:43when I never get any sleep?
04:44Lord damn, man.
04:46Just let me go now.
04:47Yes.
04:49Give me something to drink.
04:50Get a water.
05:13Oh,
05:15Are you, uh, in your cold, Tellerist?
05:33You'd offer a coat out, were you?
05:45Now, I wonder what you're up to, Tellerist.
06:08Oh, Venus, punctual to the minute, thank you, thank you.
06:12Thank you, Mr. Barfin, I hope you're well.
06:14Well enough, Venus, for one whose nose is about to be laid in a grindstone.
06:18Do you think he'll drop down on me soon?
06:20I think so, sir.
06:21What, this evening?
06:22I shouldn't be surprised.
06:23He's been to see me again, because he wants to have a look at what he calls our stock in trade.
06:27And he mentioned that he was not to be put off beginning on you the very next time as you should go to see him.
06:33Oh, a terrible fellow, Venus.
06:35I don't know how I'd ever go through with you if you weren't standing by me.
06:38You will stand by me, won't you, Venus?
06:40I will, sir.
06:41In that case, let's go and see him.
06:43There's such a noise!
06:46Shuffle, shuffle, shuffle, morning, noon and midnight!
06:52Long, ferret.
06:55A man worth his money can't get a moment's peace.
06:58You fletched that young sloppy old.
07:00Oh, Mr. Barfin, sir, you're quite a stranger.
07:05Come in, aren't you, Mr. Venus?
07:07You know if you hadn't come round this evening, dashed my wig if I wouldn't come round you tomorrow.
07:11Nothing wrong, I hope, Wig.
07:12Oh, no, nothing wrong.
07:14What should there be wrong with Boffin's bower?
07:16Nothing, I hope.
07:17I don't know whether my friend and partner's told you that we have you in our power.
07:22And when you've took your hat off, we'll go into that.
07:25But first of all, I'm going to call you Boffin, for short.
07:28If you don't like it, you can lump it.
07:30I don't mind it.
07:31Oh, well, that's lucky.
07:34What do you want to be read to?
07:36I don't particularly care about it tonight, Wig.
07:39Oh, well, that's lucky too, because if you didn't want it, you wouldn't be.
07:41Now, look, I've been your slave long enough.
07:44I ain't going to be trodden underfoot any more by a dustman.
07:47I'll renounce the situation, with the sole exception of the salary.
07:51Very well, Wig.
07:52Why, for a start, have you set a sneaking, snivelling manual in the yard?
07:55We hadn't a cold when I sent him.
07:57Now, look, Boffin, I'll warn you not to try to joke with me.
08:00Oh, well, Mr. Boffin.
08:01No, I'll call upon you, Boffin, to fetch him in and send him packing.
08:08Sloppy?
08:09Yes, sir?
08:10Come here a minute, will you?
08:11I'll call upon you, Boffin, to inform this menu of our master here.
08:15Come in, Sloppy.
08:17Sloppy, my fine fellow.
08:19Mr. Wig is master here.
08:21He don't want you, so I'm afraid you'll have to go away.
08:24For good.
08:25Yes, Sloppy.
08:26For good.
08:27If you say so, sir.
08:28I say so, sir.
08:30Now, get out!
08:35Well, now, the atmosphere's a little bit more freer for the purposes of respiration.
08:39All right, you sit down now, Boffin.
08:41Mr. Boffin knows all about our little fine, Mr. Wig.
08:44Ah.
08:45I'll be less milk and watery with him than you'd be.
08:48Then you are aware that you are in possession of property to which you've got no right to at all?
08:53Sure, Mr. Venus tells me.
08:54You will need to talk terms, Boffin.
08:56Because if you ain't, I'll take my stick and go straight round to the rightful owners.
08:59I'll come to terms, Wig.
09:01Be so good as to name them.
09:02Mark them well, Boffin.
09:03You will throw that there amount of yours into the general estate and divide the whole property into three parts.
09:08You keep one and hand over the others, you hear me?
09:10Oh, yes.
09:11Yeah, wait, though.
09:12You've squandered some of the property and bought a house.
09:15You'll be charged for that.
09:16I'll be ruined, Wig.
09:17And you're going to leave me in sole custody of that there amount until they're all cleared away
09:21and anything as valuable found in them I'll take care of.
09:23Oh, doy in the workhouse.
09:25And there's one other thing.
09:27You've been ferreting about in that there yard.
09:30And two pairs of eyes have seen you dig up a bottle.
09:33A Dutch bottle.
09:34Ain't that so, Mr. Venus?
09:35Yes, true enough, Mr. Wig.
09:36It was mine.
09:37I put it there.
09:38What was then it?
09:39Nothing you could turn into money.
09:41An evasive answer.
09:43Mr. Venus, are you willing to prepare to charge our dusty friend here a thousand pounds against that bottle?
09:48It seems a high price, Mr. Wig.
09:50Oh, you're too milk and watery.
09:52Look, as well as that thousand pounds, you've got to get rid of that there.
09:56Sneaking roguesmith.
09:58Roguesmith's already been discharged.
10:00Oh, well then, there's no one to be said, is there?
10:02I'd like to see this document, Wig.
10:05Mr. Venus?
10:06Yes, I've got it here.
10:07Yeah, don't you so insist that I've got a firm hold on him.
10:09Yeah, yeah, yeah.
10:11Huh?
10:12Now then, answer Nicodemus, Boffin.
10:15I'll leave the smallest mound and the residue of the property goes to the crown.
10:19Yeah, when you want it safely tucked away, let me know the strain of holding him is Terry Menges.
10:23All right.
10:24Well, Boffin, now you know.
10:27Yeah.
10:28Now I know.
10:29You take care to stick to our conditions?
10:31I must keep this from my old lady.
10:33She's kind of got used to the property.
10:35Beated to a hard surprise.
10:37Who's your old lady to set herself up?
10:39I think this must be kept from her wig.
10:41All right, I ain't going to tell her.
10:42But I'll keep you under close inspection.
10:44In fact, I'm going to see you home.
10:46Oh, I'll see Mr. Boffin home.
10:47No, you're too milk and watery.
10:49I'll see him home.
10:50I'll stick to him like a brother.
10:52You're going to ask me to your house, Boffin, and invite me to dinner whenever I say.
10:57I'm as good as men as you are, and better.
11:00You ready?
11:01Quite ready.
11:02Well, come along there, Mr. Venus, and accompany me and this dustman to the house which he has bought with money, which by rights belongs to you and me.
11:10Eh?
11:11Go out.
11:15You wicked old boy.
11:17You forced me to leave you, and then you'll shake to bits, and there'll be nobody to pick up the pieces.
11:23Misfortune dogs make no fault of me.
11:26Nobody cares.
11:27I care very much, and well you know it, you disgusting bad boy.
11:31Who's that?
11:32Oh, I thought it was you.
11:33Did you?
11:34And I thought it was you.
11:35Quite a coincidence.
11:36You're not mistaken, and I'm not mistaken.
11:39How clever we are.
11:40Well, and how are you?
11:41Oh, I'm pretty much as usual, sir.
11:43Worryed out of my life by a very bad child.
11:46Him?
11:47Yes, but you're not a parent, and consequently it's no use talking to you upon a family subject.
11:52To what am I to attribute the honour and favour?
11:55To the wish to improve our acquaintance.
11:57We never meet now, do we?
11:58Nope.
11:59So I had a mind to come round and talk to you about our dodging old friend, the child of Israel.
12:04So he gave you my address, did he?
12:06I got it out of him.
12:08What's he up to with your friend the handsome gal?
12:11He must have some object.
12:13What is it?
12:14Can't undertake to say.
12:16Miss Jenny?
12:17That is your name, if I don't mistake.
12:19You need a touch of blue in your trimming, my dear.
12:21Miss Jenny, are you attending?
12:23Quite blue, I think.
12:24Because if you are, it'll lead to you buying damage and waste from Pubsy and Co at a nominal price.
12:29Ah.
12:30Or even, perhaps, getting it for nothing.
12:32Hark it little eyes answering for Pubsy and Co, my dear.
12:35I take it for granted, Miss Jenny, that to get most of your materials for nothing would be well worth your while.
12:40You may take it for granted it's always worth my while making money.
12:43Ah, now you're answering sensibly.
12:45So I make so free, Miss Jenny, as to remark that you and old Judah were too stick together to last.
12:50You can't come to be intimate with a deep old file like him without beginning to see a little way into him, can you?
12:56I must own with that we're not very good friends at present.
12:58I know that.
12:59And I should like to pay him out.
13:01Not let him have his own deep way in everything.
13:03How can I stop him having his own way?
13:05His own deep way, I said.
13:07His own deep way, then?
13:09Ah, now you're looking alive.
13:10That's what I like to hear.
13:12Just what I would expect of one of your sagacious understanding.
13:15Now candidly.
13:16Eh?
13:17I said, now candidly.
13:19Oh.
13:20I should be glad to counter-mine him respecting your friend, the handsome gal.
13:24He means something there, you may depend upon it, and whatever his motive, he means to keep it from me.
13:29So I put it to you, what's he done with her?
13:32I ask no more.
13:33And is that asking much when you understand that it'll pay?
13:38Where do you live?
13:39Albany, Piccadilly.
13:40What time are you at home?
13:42Any time you like.
13:43Breakfast time?
13:44No better time of day.
13:45I'll call in on you tomorrow morning, young man.
13:47These two ladies have an appointment at Bond Street at ten precisely.
13:51So when I've dropped them there, I'll come straight to you.
13:53Oh, this is looking alive indeed.
13:55Mind you, I don't promise anything.
13:57Oh, no, no, I quite understand.
14:00The damage and waste question should be settled first.
14:03It'll pay you all right, Miss Jenny.
14:05Good day, young man.
14:07Good day, Miss Jenny.
14:13What do you make of that, my dear?
14:15Can't make it out.
14:17What has little eyes got to do with Pubsy and Co?
14:20And is Co the wolf?
14:22And are they both after my poor Lizzie?
14:25Can't make it out.
14:28Now, candidly.
14:31Whichever way the cat jumps, little eyes is a liar.
14:37As for you, you old creature.
14:38How'd you come to get the trembles twice in a week?
14:42Sixty-three pennies of rum.
14:45What?
14:46Where'd you get the money?
14:47Tell me or I'll shake you worse than you're shaking already.
14:50Sixty-three pennies of rum and all for a bit of paper.
14:55What paper?
14:56Only in a dress, my dear.
14:58Only in a dress.
14:59Tell me so much noise, Pa.
15:00Your mother never even stirred.
15:01Here's your coffee.
15:02All you have to do is drink it.
15:03How do you feel?
15:04I'd rather like a housebreaker new to the business.
15:05Whoosh!
15:06Can I help you?
15:07Now, Liz Pa, I want you to stay after me.
15:11Here's your coffee. All you have to do is drink it.
15:16How do you feel?
15:17I'd rather like a house-breaker new to the business.
15:23Can I help you?
15:25Now then, Carl, I want you to say after me.
15:28My dear little Bella.
15:30My dear little Bella.
15:31I am very fond of you.
15:32I'm very fond of you, my darling.
15:34When you're making responses, you say only what is dictated.
15:38You were always...
15:39You were always.
15:40Eh, vexatious?
15:41No, you weren't.
15:43Vexatious, do you hear me?
15:45Thankless, capricious young animal.
15:48And I hope you will do better in time to come.
15:51And I forgive you and bless you.
15:53Bless you, my darling.
15:54Oh, Pa, I feel as if I've stamped and screamed
15:58as I did before old John Harmon,
16:00and beaten you with my detectable little bonnet
16:03ever since I was born.
16:04Nonsense, my dear.
16:06Did I ever hurt you, Pa?
16:07You couldn't hurt a fly.
16:09Hadn't we better be going, my love?
16:11Shhh, are you ready?
16:12Yes, Pa, I'm ready.
16:13Shhh.
16:14Come on, can I?
16:16Roses, lovely roses.
16:20Here you are, sir.
16:22Is a lovely bunch of roses.
16:24Oh, thank you, sir.
16:26God bless you, sir.
16:28I keep expecting to see your mother.
16:30You're not regretting anything, are you, Pa?
16:31No, no, of course not.
16:32Still, I shouldn't like to be found out.
16:33Oh, you won't be.
16:34I've written a letter and I shall post it as soon as we come on.
16:36Oh, what did you say, my love?
16:37I said I hoped she wouldn't be angry,
16:39and I asked her to tell you when you got home.
16:41It seems a little deceitful, my dear.
16:42Duggy, Pa.
16:43Oh, John.
16:44There you are, Pa.
16:45There you are, John.
16:46There you are, Pa.
16:47Here you are, John.
16:48and I asked her to tell you when you got home.
16:51It seems a little deceitful by the...
16:52Duggy pa!
16:54Oh, John!
17:00There you are, sir.
17:04There you are, John.
17:18You're late.
17:19I know.
17:20I had a stop in the way and speak to some people I met.
17:22I didn't want them to think that I was hurrying to...
17:23Keep an appointment with me?
17:25Are the lads of the village such scandal-mongers?
17:28Mr Rabin, I must speak to you very seriously.
17:33Please don't touch me.
17:35Anything within the limits of possibility.
17:37There, look. Napoleon at St Helena.
17:40When you met me outside the mill the night before last, you appeared to be surprised.
17:43You said you were on a fishing expedition, was that true?
17:46No, Lizzie, it's not in the least bit true.
17:48I came here because I knew I should find you.
17:51Do you know why I left London, Mr Rabin?
17:53I've heard you left London, Lizzie, to get rid of me.
17:56I did.
17:57How could you be so cruel?
17:59Oh, Mr Rabin, is there no cruelty in your being here tonight?
18:03And you'll know as well as I do the difference and the distance between us.
18:08Lizzie,
18:10I never thought before there was a woman in the world that could affect me so much by saying so little.
18:14Mr Rabin, I beseech you.
18:16I beg and I pray you leave this neighbourhood.
18:18No, Lizzie.
18:19Then I must go.
18:21I live here peacefully.
18:22I'm well respected and well employed.
18:25Then you will drive me away and then seek me, seek me out and I'll have to leave the next place and the next place.
18:29There'll be no refuge for me anywhere.
18:31Are you so determined to fly from your lover?
18:32I'm determined to fly from such a lover.
18:34Listen to me.
18:35If I had not been what you call removed from you, would you still have asked me to go?
18:39I don't know.
18:40I don't know.
18:41Don't ask me.
18:42Let me go.
18:43You must answer me.
18:44How can I say what I would have done if you had not been what you are?
18:47Would you still have hated me?
18:49I don't hate you.
18:51You know me better than now.
18:54Don't you think for me at all?
18:57I never supposed until tonight that you needed to be thought for.
19:01But if it's true what you say, that you do really feel for me.
19:05Then there's nothing for us in this life but separation.
19:11Heaven bless you.
19:13Heaven protect you, Mr Rabin.
19:21There you go.
19:22Will he be all right?
19:23He used to being out alone.
19:28Is there...
19:30nothing I can do?
19:32You can leave this neighbourhood tomorrow.
19:34I will.
19:37Goodbye, Mr Rabin.
19:44Goodbye, Mr Rabin.
19:45Goodbye, Mr Rabin.
19:51Goodbye, Mr Rabin.
20:21Eugene.
20:22Eugene!
20:23Eugene!
20:52You do not, I notice, R. W. inquire after your daughter Bella.
20:56Oh, no, I didn't, did I?
20:58Where is she?
20:59Not here.
21:00Indeed, my dear.
21:01In a word, R. W., you have no daughter Bella.
21:04No daughter Bella?
21:05No, R. W.
21:06Your daughter Bella has bestowed herself upon a mendicant.
21:09Good gracious me.
21:10Show your father his daughter's letter, Lavinia.
21:12I think he will agree it is documentary proof that what I tell him is true.
21:16Posted at Greenwich this morning.
21:18Hope's Ma won't be angry but is happily married to John Rokesmith.
21:22Didn't mention it beforehand to avoid words and please tell darling you and love to Ma.
21:27And I'd like to know what you'd have said if any other member of the family had done it.
21:31Dear me.
21:32You may well say, dear me.
21:33It's very surprising, of course, but I suppose we must make the best of it.
21:37After all, Mr Rokesmith is not a mendicant.
21:39Indeed.
21:40I was not aware that Mr Rokesmith was a gentleman of landed property.
21:43I didn't say he was, my dear.
21:45I make false statements, it appears.
21:47So be it.
21:48If my daughter flies in my face, surely my husband may.
21:51Don't talk nonsense, Ma.
21:53The main thing is that Bella has behaved in a most unsisterly way to me.
21:57She might have severely compromised me with George and George's family.
22:00Running off and getting married in that low, disreptable manner.
22:03With some pew open or other for a witness, I suppose.
22:06She ought to ask me to go, keeping it a secret from you and Pa.
22:10As of course I would have done.
22:12As of course you would have done.
22:13In great.
22:14Viper.
22:15Oh, I say, ma'am.
22:16Viper, you know.
22:17Well, upon my honour, you mustn't.
22:19With the highest respect, of course.
22:21When a man is engaged to a young lady and it comes to viper as well, you know.
22:24George Samson.
22:25My own unnatural mother wants to annihilate George.
22:29You shan't be annihilated, George.
22:31I'll die first.
22:32Oh, viper, as you know.
22:33Have I lured George from his happy home to expose him to this?
22:37George, dear, be free.
22:40Leave me forever to Ma and my fate.
22:43Give my love to your aunt, George, dear.
22:46And implore her not to curse the viper who has crossed your path and blighted your existence.
22:52Oh.
22:55Demon!
22:56With the highest respect, of course.
22:58Behold your work.
22:59Is this my child?
23:01George, George, dear.
23:03Are you safe?
23:04What has happened?
23:05Where's Ma?
23:06I suppress my feelings and say nothing of them.
23:09After what has passed, George, dear.
23:11I am sure Ma can tell Pa that he may tell Bella we shall be glad to see her and her husband.
23:17Far be it from me to run contrary to the feelings of a child of mine and the youth who is the object of her maiden preference.
23:24Therefore, R. W., you may tell your daughter Bella that she may come when she will and she will be received.
23:33So will her husband.
23:34And I beg, dear Pa, that you will not tell Bella of my engagement to George.
23:38It might seem like reminding her that she has thrown herself away upon a...
23:42Upon a mendicant.
23:44Let me ever remember that I am her younger sister and spare her the painful contrast of George with his rising prospects and those of...
23:53And those of a mendicant.
23:55My dearest Lavinia, you are more than an angel.
23:58No, George. I am but too well aware that I am merely human.
24:03Oh, darling.
24:05Yes, my dear.
24:06Can you think of your daughter Bella in sleep?
24:08Yes, my dear. I think I can.
24:10I would recommend you, if you have any human feeling, to retire at once to bed.
24:14Thank you, my dear. I think that is the best place for me.
24:17How long it be, I wonder, before his daughter's rash act brings home to her the misery and discomfort of living in a hosel.
24:26Happy, my darling?
24:30Unbelievably happy, John.
24:33You don't ask what we are going to live on.
24:35Oh, it doesn't matter.
24:36We can live on nothing in this dearest of all doll's houses.
24:39Oh, yes, it does matter.
24:41We must be business-like, so listen.
24:43I have got a better job than I had with Mr. Boffin.
24:46And I shall have 250 pounds a year.
24:49What do you think of that?
24:50John, that's wonderful.
24:52Oh, but I have everything I want and more.
24:54Oh, dear.
24:55You do love me, don't you, John?
24:58Love you with all my heart and soul.
25:01Now, what are you so serious about?
25:03What are you thinking of?
25:05I was just wondering if you'd like me to be rich.
25:09I mean, really rich like Mr. Boffin.
25:11Oh, no, I should be afraid, John.
25:13Was he any better for his wealth?
25:15Was I any better for my share in it?
25:17Yes, but not all people are the worst for their riches, my darling.
25:19Oh, most people are.
25:21If you were rich, for example, you'd have the power of doing good for others.
25:24Yes, but should I use that power?
25:27I'd be more likely to do harm to myself.
25:30And you don't mind being poor?
25:32I am not poor, John.
25:34Yes, you are.
25:35I'm not, because I have you.
25:37But I think of you and for you.
25:39Well, this dress in which you look charming.
25:43Dear John.
25:44I mean, no other could you ever look more beautiful.
25:45But I've seen you admire so many finer ones,
25:48and it's only natural I should want to give them to you.
25:50Well, it's dear of you, John, but I don't want them.
25:53And those pretty little feet?
25:55Orden they to go in a carriage?
25:56The very fact that you want these things for me is as good as having them.
26:00I'm only afraid that I'm not good enough for you and this dear little house.
26:04You're like a bright light in it, my dearest.
26:06Am I truly, John?
26:08No.
26:09And you don't mind being alone all day?
26:11Oh, the day is not long enough for all I want to do.
26:14And you don't regret anything?
26:17Why must you ask these goosey questions?
26:21Oh, yes, I do, though.
26:24I regret Mrs. Boffin.
26:26So do I, Bella.
26:28But perhaps things may change and you will see her again.
26:32I hope so.
26:33I do hope so.
26:35But apart from that, I want nothing else on earth.
26:38Only don't keep asking me if I wouldn't rather be rich.
26:43Promise me, John.
26:45I promise, my darling.
26:53Well, Daggerist, haven't you been gone lost?
26:55Where you been these last two nights?
26:57Sleep.
26:58I should like something to drink.
27:02What time does your relief man take over?
27:05Any time now.
27:08You, uh...
27:09You hope being in a fight, I suppose.
27:11My drunk business.
27:12Ain't it my business to marry sleeping?
27:14I said I was thirsty.
27:15You better eat, too.
27:24Look how tellerous you'll cut to yourself.
27:27Oh!
27:28Ah, look at you.
27:29You've never had a knife before.
27:31Give me something a bit of time.
27:32Here.
27:33Yeah, careful.
27:38I don't want my coat marked like you on.
27:42What do you mean?
27:44The news has come down the river up for you.
27:46What news?
27:47Guess who's picked up the body.
27:49I'm not very good at guessing.
27:50She did.
27:51Au revoir, Daggerist.
27:52You had him again there.
27:53She did.
27:57What time is it?
27:59Nine on four.
28:00I must go.
28:01Eighteen.
28:03Ain't you good to have your forty winks?
28:05Save as usual.
28:07Whenever it should be necessary for you and me to have any further communication, I shall come back.
28:12Good day.
28:14Well.
28:16That's the way you want it.
28:18Good day.
28:23Hello, Ralph.
28:24Oh, I thought you was never coming.
28:25Well, I want time, aren't I?
28:26Here's the key. He's taken.
28:27Devil of an hurry, anything?
28:28Friend of mine just passed.
28:29Want to pick him up?
28:32Very particular friend, I should reckon.
28:43I'm not only.
28:44No, I need aкого.
28:45I'm not only having an acute surgery, I'm not gonna try for a ihn.
28:46I've had no idea how to try, but it's all course it's surely.
28:47To be the most in the next day, I'm not worried about his wife.
28:48I feel the most in the next day, darling.
28:50The next day, morning.
28:51How are you guys out of the morning?
28:52All night?
28:53How are we?
28:54How are you?
28:55How are you?
28:56How are you?
28:57How are you on the morning?
28:59How are you guys in the morning?
29:00How are you...
29:01The morning is nascent.
29:03All night before you...
29:04How are you on?
29:05Now?
29:06How are you guys in my chin right now?
29:08How are you guys in the morning?
29:09so that's your game
29:17come with me clothes
29:19even to me red spotted neck at you
29:21that floor full of you
29:22shall I go fishing
29:25fishing I think
29:28yes fishing
29:39fishing
29:41fishing
29:43fishing
29:45fishing
29:47fishing
29:49fishing
29:51fishing
29:53fishing
29:55fishing
29:57fishing
29:59fishing
30:01fishing
30:03fishing
30:05fishing
30:07fishing
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