- 1 day ago
First broadcast 6th December 1970.
Mr Hedges is growing increasingly worried about Dennis' lack of a job when he leaves school.
John Alderton - Bernard Hedges
Deryck Guyler - Norman Potter
Noel Howlett - Mr. Cromwell
Joan Sanderson - Doris Ewell
Richard Davies - Mr. Price
Erik Chitty - Mr. Smith
Liz Gebhardt - Maureen Bullock
Penny Spencer - Sharon Eversleigh
Peter Cleall - Eric Duffy
Malcolm McFee - Peter Craven
Peter Denyer - Dennis Dunstable
David Barry - Frankie Abbott
Peter Bayliss - Mr. Dunstable
Joe Ritchie - Mr. Stone
George Georghiou - Pupil wearing jacket
Kristin Hatfield - Pupil in plaid skirt
Aziz Resham - Pupil in round-neck jumper
Gregory Scott - Mr. Wyatt
Suzanne Togni - Pupil in checked blouse
Mr Hedges is growing increasingly worried about Dennis' lack of a job when he leaves school.
John Alderton - Bernard Hedges
Deryck Guyler - Norman Potter
Noel Howlett - Mr. Cromwell
Joan Sanderson - Doris Ewell
Richard Davies - Mr. Price
Erik Chitty - Mr. Smith
Liz Gebhardt - Maureen Bullock
Penny Spencer - Sharon Eversleigh
Peter Cleall - Eric Duffy
Malcolm McFee - Peter Craven
Peter Denyer - Dennis Dunstable
David Barry - Frankie Abbott
Peter Bayliss - Mr. Dunstable
Joe Ritchie - Mr. Stone
George Georghiou - Pupil wearing jacket
Kristin Hatfield - Pupil in plaid skirt
Aziz Resham - Pupil in round-neck jumper
Gregory Scott - Mr. Wyatt
Suzanne Togni - Pupil in checked blouse
Category
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TVTranscript
00:28Good night, John.
00:28Good night, John.
00:30How come you stayed behind for a drink tonight, boy?
00:32Penny gave you a late pass, did she?
00:34Now, listen to me, Price.
00:35Just because Penny and I are engaged
00:36doesn't mean to say I have to ask permission for a drink.
00:39If I want a drink, I just tell her.
00:41Oh, good for you.
00:42Start as you mean to carry on, eh?
00:44Yes.
00:44Good for you, Bernard.
00:45You just told her, eh?
00:47Well, I didn't have to because she's on duty tonight.
00:50Oh, why am I always your number two girl, Bernard?
00:52Because you've got hairy legs and you drink shorts, that's why.
00:55Sleep out!
00:56Get no more sweat in here!
00:57Good evening, Mr. Dunstable.
00:59Oh, get stuffed.
01:02No credit, oh, no credit to your drunken dick.
01:07I always enjoy meeting the parents.
01:09Yes.
01:11Get out and stay out and don't come back!
01:15Oh, you've done yourself now, George Landlord Gittings.
01:19That's the last time I drink in your house, but you'll take my credit elsewhere.
01:24Now, come on, Mr. Dunstable.
01:26You don't want George to get his pickaxe handle out.
01:28Don't you punch me in the back, you four-eyed schooly.
01:32Oh, I'll take care of you any day of the...
01:39Leave him there.
01:40Perhaps he'll get run over.
01:41Yes, I wouldn't mind, but he'll get pneumonia as well.
01:44Come on, let's get him on.
01:45Off you get up, will you?
01:46Off you get up!
01:48You understand, don't you, mate?
01:51You're my old mate, you are.
01:52Oh, Price, it's got me around the next place.
01:55I'll give you a hand, Florence Nightingale.
01:58Come here.
01:59Trick me into having a kiss, you didn't.
02:01Yes.
02:01And turn him against me.
02:03All right, there we are.
02:04There we are.
02:04Oh, take your hands off me.
02:07Mind your own bloody business, you bookworming squirt.
02:10Yeah, I don't have to take that from you, a merving brute.
02:13Price, Price, remember who we are.
02:15Oh, remember who we are.
02:18What are we, a couple of queers?
02:20Get them out of the mocking, right?
02:21Yeah, it is.
02:22Price is very drunk, boy, is he?
02:25And keep your nose out of it, and keep away from Dennis.
02:29Well, it's a bit difficult, Mr Dunstable, because he's in my class five days a week.
02:33Now, don't be clever with me.
02:34That's your trouble, putting cocky ideas in the kid's head behind his daddy's back.
02:40I resent that remark very much indeed, Mr Dunstable.
02:44Cobblers.
02:45You've made him more stupid than what he is.
02:48All right, Mr Dunstable, I think I'd better tell you, I'm going to take my glasses off, can't I?
02:51Don't know if I do it now, boy.
02:52Yeah, grab it, will you?
02:54Get out of my way.
02:56You're wasting time talking to you two.
02:59Schooling.
03:02What's he ever done for me?
03:04One and one, me two.
03:06Do anything, me?
03:11Did you hear anything, then?
03:13No, I think it was somebody just putting the dustbins out, didn't it?
03:16Yeah.
03:17Shall we go, then?
03:18Right.
03:19This is your best suit, Eric.
03:21What if I get it dirty?
03:22You just get the job, then.
03:24Fulton's for the schmatter.
03:25There you are.
03:26D for Dennis.
03:27Only don't throw your nose on it, because it's two parts cardboard.
03:30Right, go on, neat, innit?
03:31Oh, Sharon, me hair!
03:33Well, I'm just trying to do something with it, Dennis.
03:36I had nits once, you know.
03:38Really?
03:39Hmm.
03:39Oh, there you go.
03:41There's bronzing.
03:42Great.
03:44Here, then, and a packet of king-sized, case you want to flash the ash.
03:48Here, then, lend me like that.
03:50It's topped up new fling.
03:51Oh, thank you very much.
03:52Now, remember, Dick, don't get blustered.
03:54Speak up for yourself, and you'll walk away with a job.
03:56Oh, I don't know.
03:57I didn't walk away with the other four, did I?
03:59But he's in a pet shop, then, working with animals.
04:03You're utterly good with animals.
04:04You know you are.
04:05And the others are working with animals, too.
04:07But animal jobs all seem to have invoices and tools in them.
04:12All set, Dennis?
04:13I suppose so.
04:14So, look.
04:17Well done, 5C.
04:19Now, Dennis, you'll probably need a bit of lunch after the interview, won't you?
04:23Got any money?
04:23Er, no.
04:24There we are, then.
04:25That man can do no wrong, as far as I'm concerned, Sharon.
04:29Right.
04:29Chin up, Dennis.
04:31And don't forget to go to the toilet before you work out.
04:33Oh, all right.
04:34Cut out, then.
04:35All the best, Dennis.
04:36Good luck.
04:40Maureen, is that for Dennis?
04:41Yes, sir.
04:42I'm asking God to pull the contents of his only chalice onto Dennis' head.
04:46Well, that's very nice, indeed, Maureen.
04:48Very nice.
04:49But I'm concerned about all your career.
04:52For instance, Craven, what's the latest on the careers officer?
04:54Johnny Sibley.
04:55Oh, he took Miss York's stock car racing Saturday.
04:58No, no, no.
04:59I mean your career.
05:00My job at the GPO.
05:01That's all fixed, innit?
05:02Oh, fine.
05:02Well, don't put the charges up too much when you're Postmaster General.
05:06Ah, don't piss you.
05:07Here, here, Chief.
05:08You'd have laughed the other night.
05:10Oh, yeah.
05:11I'm coming, and there's me old man sitting at the table, you see, with his box of policies
05:16in front of him, and Monty stays on the other side.
05:20And me mum says, come in and sit down, Eric, see.
05:24My word, that really is.
05:27Why is that particularly funny?
05:29Well, she called me Eric, you see, all formal.
05:32Oh, I...
05:33No, I'm still not clear.
05:35Well, what you find is, Eric and his brother Monty are setting up their own decorating business.
05:40Who's telling this story?
05:41Well, that's marvellous.
05:41What about capital, don't you?
05:42Well, it's a box of policies.
05:43What do you want to tell him?
05:45No.
05:45Anyway, me old man's taken one out for me since I was one, you see.
05:48And now it's matured.
05:49A thousand pounds.
05:50Who's telling the story?
05:50Me.
05:51Anyway, Monty's going to run with his grand, and we're going to give it a whirl.
05:54Oh, what do you reckon, Edgy?
06:00Well, I think if you work hard, Duffy, your sort of chaper will succeed.
06:07Right.
06:07Good.
06:08Well, now, that's almost everybody fixed up, isn't it?
06:11All right, Maureen, yes.
06:12Mr Sidley will let us know about the nursing.
06:14I find he hadn't been so silly and so young.
06:16All right.
06:17Now, Sharon, you're fixed up, aren't you?
06:19Yeah.
06:19Eva, you're going into plastic bags.
06:22Now then, who else is it?
06:24The gold bag is here.
06:30All right, all right, all right, all right.
06:33Yes, there's always Abbott in there.
06:35Relax, teach.
06:36F.A.'s just hit the big time.
06:38Oh, me eye.
06:40Take that ridiculous hat.
06:41Where have you been, anyway?
06:42Johnny Sidley sent me down his detective agency, didn't he?
06:45Yes, maybe.
06:47You didn't get a job, did you?
06:49Yep.
06:51Nah, rubbish.
06:52Feast your eyes on that, then.
06:55If this is forged, Abbott, I shall be able to know by the spelling, you know.
07:02Hey, Isaiah.
07:03Really?
07:06Well, congratulations, Frankie.
07:09Thanks, Bernie.
07:17Oh, thanks very much for lending me some boys to give a hand with us, Mr. Smith.
07:26I do appreciate it.
07:27I'm sorry, Potter, but they're all at interviews.
07:30Is that all it is?
07:31Well, the way you described it, I was about to send for a block and tackle.
07:34A couple of hefty girls would do.
07:36No, they're at interviews, too.
07:38Well, that's the trouble of this school, isn't it?
07:39Everybody's obsessed with the kids.
07:40Nobody gives a top-dead about me getting an assistant.
07:43Bore the headmaster with that old chest-up, Potter.
07:45I'm too busy.
07:46Oh.
07:47Lucky I wasn't too busy in 1939, isn't I?
07:50Eh?
07:50Oh, no.
07:51Oh.
07:53Norman, Norman, what is it?
07:55Oh, sir, you would have to come along at this moment, sir.
07:57You're the last person that I'd want to worry, sir, with one of my terms.
08:00Terms?
08:01It's all right, sir.
08:02I'm not going to say another word about it, sir.
08:04Brave, self-effacing Norman.
08:07All right, sir, you've dragged it out of me, sir.
08:09Look, sir, I...
08:11I have been secretly visiting this specialist who deals in cases of exhaustion.
08:16But why?
08:17Well, because I'm exhausted.
08:19It's overworked, you see, sir, sir, but I didn't want to worry you, sir.
08:22I didn't...
08:23I tried to hide, you see, sir, these dizzy spells and these blackouts, you see.
08:26I didn't want you to go to all the trouble of getting me an assistant, you see, sir.
08:31Oh, there I go again.
08:33Now, Norman, I'm not going to allow you to be brave and silly any longer.
08:37I'll get you an assistant.
08:38Yeah, well, don't look at me just for a moment, sir.
08:40I...
08:41I've gone all missed, sir.
08:43There.
08:44You see, Doris, your Mr Sidley's not the only person who can deal with careers.
08:48My Mr Sidley wouldn't make such a silly claim in the first place.
08:51Which child are you helping?
08:53Norman, I'm giving him an assistant.
08:55I think an Oscar might be more apt.
08:59Norman, I don't know who this Oscar is, but I believe that Miss Ewell was being vituperative.
09:05As will all women vituper, sir.
09:07Oh, yes, yes.
09:08She's just jealous, you see, sir.
09:10Allow me.
09:10She's just jealous, sir, of your dynamoism, sir.
09:14You know, Norman, I do love your plays on words.
09:17I look upon you as the little pack of the lower corridors.
09:22Clearly, sir, how very kind.
09:27Now, say what you like, Doris.
09:29I still say that your Johnny Sibley is a genius.
09:32Oh, come.
09:33Very intelligent, efficient, considerate.
09:36Sexy.
09:37Sexy.
09:38Mr Price.
09:39Okay.
09:39But why a genius?
09:40Well, I would say that actually getting Abba to job in a detective agency is the equivalent
09:44of writing Beethoven's Fifth.
09:46I agree.
09:47If Abba can be a private detective, why the Welsh may yet rally to the banner of Orn up price
09:50and help me to sweep the English into the sea.
09:52Before you leap into the saddle, I should point out that he's only been taken on as office boy.
09:57Oh.
09:58No, well, that's not really what he expected, is it?
10:00Well, a boy like Abba's lucky to find employment of any kind.
10:03That's true.
10:03I wouldn't wish him on my worst enemy.
10:05Not that you would have him, Doris.
10:09Well, I suppose it can still be Tony Rome in his own weird little mind.
10:14One go.
10:17Hello, Dennis.
10:19How'd it go?
10:20I knew I'd had it as soon as she started talking about invoices.
10:24Oh, 19 and five pence change.
10:27I had chips and a penny chew for me dinner.
10:29All right, Dennis.
10:30See you later on.
10:35Damn and blast.
10:37That's the boy that really worries me.
10:39He's got loser written right across his forehead.
10:42Aye, and I know who wrote it.
10:43His bloody father.
10:45Have some crump, it was the price.
10:46Mixed company, monsieur.
10:49I'm not saying that Mr. Sibley doesn't know his job.
10:52I'm simply saying he doesn't know what he's talking about, that's all.
10:56Everybody knows she can't be a nurse without O-levels.
10:59She knows.
11:00Mr. Sibley's got me into this hospital nursing cadet scheme where I can learn the job and
11:05study for my O-levels at the same time, so...
11:09Now, listen, Chicky.
11:10Everyone knows that the nursing cadets were disbanded at the same time as the land army.
11:14That's peculiar.
11:15Them forms had dated yesterday.
11:16Allow me to finish.
11:18With the proviso that they'd be reformed in 1970.
11:21That's what I was going to say.
11:21You ought to be in politics, mate.
11:23Liam Moore, if you're working up the Royal General Anatomy, it wouldn't not be handy.
11:28You ought to see what you mean.
11:29Having a tart water nurse will come in handy when they're digging bullocks out my shoulder.
11:33I meant meeting for lunch.
11:35The boutique I'm working in is just round the corner.
11:37The boutique?
11:38Oh, what do you know about flowers?
11:41Oh, leave it, Ronnie.
11:42Let's go, sir.
11:43Yeah, well, come to think of it, what do you know about anything, eh?
11:45If you lads had any sense, you'd be aiming at something worthwhile.
11:49Like this.
11:50Oh, and he's never too late.
11:51What?
11:51Yeah!
11:57End of term pranks, Norman.
11:59They never fail to amuse.
12:00No, they don't, sir.
12:01No.
12:02Yes, and if it wasn't for these terrible shooting planes in my chest, sir, I'd be even more
12:06prankish, you know, sir.
12:07Tell me, sir, any news about my assistant, sir?
12:10Oh, yes, yes, sir.
12:10I got on a county hall this morning.
12:12My word.
12:12When you strike, sir, you're like a black man by yours.
12:15I don't want any shilly-shallying with an underling.
12:17I said, I want your top man, and I want him now.
12:20I'm frightened just listening to him.
12:21I explained the fact of the case and demanded an answer.
12:25On the spot.
12:26Superhumans are...
12:27What did they say?
12:28We're up to establishment, and you can't have anyone.
12:32It's not quite hated.
12:33It's not just any job, but that's the police.
12:36You see, the trouble is, he's set his heart at working with animals, and, well, we're running
12:39short of animal jobs.
12:40Madge doesn't really need any help with the aquarium, I'm afraid.
12:44We only have three black mollies.
12:46Yes.
12:47There must be something.
12:49We used to have a few chickens, but they would peck at my bulbs, and so we...
13:19of course, Mrs. Stone.
13:20Dennis isn't familiar with the technical terms of your business.
13:23I mean, saddles and painters, things like that.
13:27Halters.
13:27Halters, yes.
13:28But he does love horses.
13:30Well, don't we all?
13:32You've done a bit of riding, have you?
13:33Oh, yes, yes, yes.
13:34Well, a bit.
13:34Yes.
13:35Yes, what I like about these big chaps is their strength coupled with their true gentleness.
13:42Right.
13:43All right.
13:44Whoa there, boy.
13:46Whoa.
13:47Big strong chap, isn't he?
13:49It's a mare.
13:50Mare.
13:51Big, big strong, yes.
13:53Well, is there anything else I can tell you about Dennis?
13:55No, I don't think so.
13:56I think the board ought to tell me himself.
13:58Right.
13:59Here.
13:59Over here, son.
14:04Yes, sir?
14:05Charlie.
14:06Everybody calls me Charlie, even the horses.
14:08Even the horses, yes.
14:10Tell me, why do you reckon you're so fond of horses?
14:12Because they smell nice, and they go, winny, winny.
14:17Could do for a start.
14:18Here, Charlie.
14:20Charlie, Charlie, yes, yes.
14:21Do you give them lumps of sugar for behaving themselves?
14:23No, bad for the teeth.
14:25Oh, every now and then.
14:26Every now and then, yes.
14:26Probably very good for them.
14:28Here, I think you ought to do a little test.
14:29Ah, not invoicing, anything like that, is it?
14:32No, no.
14:32Invoicing's upstairs.
14:34Down here, it's mucking out, pushing out, and grooming.
14:36Grooming out, yes, good.
14:37Yeah, tell you what, son, you go and give them a carrot.
14:39Oh, OK.
14:41Hello, horse.
14:42You're a nice horse, aren't you?
14:45Ah, is that wise?
14:47Would you like a carrot?
14:49I bet you would.
14:50Yeah.
14:51Aren't you a good boy, then?
14:53Oh, you're smashing.
14:56Neat.
14:57That's what I wanted to see.
14:58That boy's a natural.
15:00If he's such a natural, you'll give him a chance, will you?
15:04Yeah.
15:05Three months to try for a start.
15:07Right.
15:09Alice, at least you're in.
15:10You've got the job.
15:11Oh, neat.
15:13Wonderful, son.
15:14Really great to see a boy keen on the job.
15:16Oh, neat, neat.
15:17Oh, Charlie.
15:19Yeah?
15:20Could I go somewhere, please?
15:22Yes, round the corner.
15:23Oh.
15:27The point is that while Mr. Potter is not entitled to an assistant as such,
15:31I, as the captain of the ship, can create such a position for a junior school-leaving applicant.
15:36Now, isn't that an exciting prospect?
15:40This, uh, this is, of course, a plum job, you know.
15:43So, Monsieur, if you'd collect up the applications and put them in my end tray in my office under the
15:47stage,
15:47I will consider them at my leisure, you see.
15:50Firstly, Mr. Potter, I'm not some office girl.
15:52And secondly, why should any child want to rush into a life of bureaucracy under you?
15:57Because he'd be working with me.
15:59But that's what she means.
16:01Well, that seems to be the end of that discussion.
16:04Don't be upset, Norman.
16:05There's bound to be a flood of applicants.
16:07Well, if there are, perhaps Mr. Potter can sort the chaff from the wheat via a practical squeegee example.
16:13Now, Monsieur, if I may, that is constructive thinking.
16:16Well, in that case, why not set a paper on coke maintenance?
16:21Followed by a thesis on the relative ease of the cleaning of stand-ups as opposed to sit down.
16:25Oh, stop, stop, stop, stop.
16:26I will not have, Mr. Potter, ragged like this.
16:29God bless and keep you, sir.
16:31Well, let's face it, most of the kids have got jobs anyway.
16:34Except Barnstable, of course.
16:36Dunstable.
16:37Oh.
16:38Dunstable.
16:38Ah, now, sir, I was rather thinking along the lines of Wagner in 5A, you know, sir.
16:43If he didn't have a German name.
16:45He's going to university, Potter.
16:48In any case, Dunstable has an interview at the brewery today.
16:51Well, we know that, but he's failed five interviews already.
16:54Well, I suppose assistant to Potter would at least be a job.
16:57We'll pencil in Dunstable for you, then.
17:00Oh, yes.
17:00Well, now, sir, these giddy spells, you know, sir, they could clear up, sir.
17:03Oh, they could, you know.
17:04Yes, they could.
17:07Oh, right.
17:12You might have been a brutal sadist to the rest of us, but you're certainly damn damn proud.
17:16Yeah, and if that hasn't opened the gates of heaven to you, sir, I shall want to know why when
17:19I get up there.
17:20Well, quite honestly, Maureen, I'm satisfied with the earthly rewards.
17:23You should have seen his face when I sent him home to tell his father the news.
17:27Oh, I shall owl when he comes in.
17:29I'm so utterly pleased for him.
17:31Oh, I shall owl and all.
17:32Well, I might not owl, but I am buying down the feathers tonight.
17:34Oh, no, no, it's my shout.
17:36Oh, great!
17:37Well, I think you can go into the garden and I'll bring a tray of Sandy out to you.
17:40Oh, goody, goody.
17:41We can have a go on the swings and all.
17:44Oh, I don't see what all the fuss is about.
17:47Albert, I thought Dennis was your friend.
17:48Exactly.
17:49So the kid should have come to my detective agency.
17:52I'd have banged him the job as office boy.
17:54Albert, you are the office boy.
17:56Oh, now, listen, Bernie, baby.
17:58Pardon?
17:59Sir, you never fell for that one, did you?
18:01Yeah, they obviously give him the office boy as a cover.
18:04Golly.
18:04Please, sir, may we lynch Abbott?
18:06Well, we do have a couple of minutes, yeah.
18:07Right.
18:08Now, please, sir.
18:09Give us a chance.
18:10Good evening.
18:10Well done, man.
18:12Dennis.
18:15What's the trouble?
18:16What's wrong?
18:17Me dad won't let me work at the brewery.
18:22That man is a right bastard.
18:24Mr. Price.
18:25Hey.
18:26You're quite right.
18:27He is a bastard.
18:28Don't it, don't it.
18:29Well.
18:31Life has taught me that there is some good in all people.
18:34And Mr. Dunstable is the exception.
18:36For no exception that proves the rule.
18:44Hedges, Hedges, I told you to walk in the playground to cool down, not to heat up.
18:47I'm quite calm, sir, but I'm going to have this out with Mr. Dunstable, and that's final.
18:51Ah, do you?
18:51You should have let me thump him outside the fair as well.
18:53Well, but I do beg of you not to act too hastily.
18:55I'm not going to fight him, Mishul.
18:57I'm just going to try and persuade him that it would be more pleasant for Dennis to work
19:01with animals than to live with one.
19:02Yeah, well, if you don't, you know, I could always, with a little training, you know, I
19:06mean, well, I could.
19:09You could what?
19:10Well, I could have him as my assistant.
19:12You know, sort of, well, just look after the land, you know.
19:16Potter, why are you embarrassed when you actually do something pleasant?
19:20Well, I'm not.
19:21I'm pleasant all the time, aren't I?
19:23Thanks anyway, Nolan.
19:25No.
19:28My career is almost at an end, and Hedges is still before him.
19:32I should be the one to settle with the swine.
19:34Grab him, Royce.
19:34He's going to be, sir.
19:35He's going to be, sir.
19:37Come hand me, madam.
19:50Dennis, come on.
19:56Just a minute, just a minute.
19:57Where do you think you're going?
19:58We're going to kick you in a pieces, haven't we?
20:00Don't be silly.
20:01You know Dennis's father will only take it out on him later on.
20:04I don't, Eric.
20:04I know it's mates and that, but this time he's got to see off me.
20:08He's got to.
20:09Good boy, Dennis.
20:11Come on.
20:14Oh, blimey, there's nothing worse than not being able to thump a bloke who really needs it.
20:20Right in the lawn, on the crest of the wave, and the sun is in the sky, yeah.
20:28Oh, no, no, no.
20:39Oh, rotten cow.
20:42Where she eat it.
20:48Oh, thank you.
20:58Shut up!
20:59I'm eating.
21:01It's me teacher, Dad.
21:03Oh, come in, sir.
21:04It's a bit of a mess.
21:05Thank you, Dennis.
21:08Good evening, Mr Dunstable.
21:10Come to apologise, have we?
21:12No, I haven't.
21:12I've come to a reason with you.
21:15Do you mind if I sit down?
21:16You can do what you're bleeding like.
21:20Thank you, Dennis.
21:24Now, Mr Dunstable.
21:28What's the matter?
21:29I've never seen a man washing his feet before.
21:32Not when he's eating his dinner, well, that's all corollary, isn't it?
21:36Now, why won't you let Dennis take this job that he wants so much?
21:39Why?
21:40Because of my principles.
21:42I don't think you've got a leg to stand upon.
21:44We're talking about Dennis's future.
21:46Oh, I'll see you later, back, carrying tails.
21:49I never.
21:49What do you say?
21:50All right, all right.
21:51What principles exactly are these?
21:53The principle of my getting tucked out of the feathers the other night.
21:58Oh, yeah.
21:59That brewery where you want him to arse around with horses.
22:01I mean, that's my principle.
22:04That's the house where I used to drink.
22:07They own the brewery.
22:08And that is my principle.
22:11Oh, bloody fish.
22:13I see, sir, because you can't get credit at a pub, Dennis doesn't get a job, is that it?
22:18Well, you was there.
22:19You saw them throw me out.
22:21Yes, and they were quite right to you.
22:22You were completely non-compass-mentous.
22:23Here.
22:24Now, please, don't come that in this house.
22:27What's that mean?
22:28Smashed out of your skull.
22:29So why don't you admit it and just let Dennis take that job?
22:34It's your fault, you creepy little swine.
22:36It was not.
22:37Did you hear that?
22:39Cheeky and his own father.
22:41That's your...
22:42What did you teach him at school?
22:44We're talking about Dennis at work, not school.
22:47Can't you see how important this job is to him?
22:49It's not more important than my principles.
22:51Oh, stop your principles.
22:53Oh, I see.
22:54I see.
22:55Well, I'm not about throwing you out of this house.
22:58Well, I'm not about stopping you.
22:59Now, we're going to settle this Dennis business once and for all.
23:03He ain't worth the trouble.
23:05Why don't you never listen to no one?
23:07What did he say to me?
23:08You heard, you old bloody...
23:10Here, come here.
23:11Come here, Dennis.
23:13Dennis.
23:14Dennis.
23:18I've done it.
23:19I've finally done it.
23:23Well, Mr Dunstable?
23:27You can't listen to reason, can you?
23:30None of you.
23:32If he wanted that job so much, why couldn't he just say?
23:35Because he's only just learned your language.
23:38Come on, Dennis.
23:39Go and see a man about a horse.
23:42Get out of here.
23:44Oh, rotten fish.
23:48Come on, Dennis.
23:52Be not says a man about a horse.
23:55Quack...
23:57Come on.
24:06Yes, sir.
24:09You sit down.
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