- 3 minutes ago
Now married to Ada, Richard is sick with despair but excited by good news. A new found will enables the Chancery to conclude the case. Guppy proposes again, and Woodcourt does so also. Still engaged, Esther is to marry for love.
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00:28Transcribed by ESO, translated by —
02:07I'm much obliged to counsel in the cave.
02:09My lord!
02:12Jandice!
02:14Jandice and Carstow, my lord.
02:23If you please, my lord.
02:49You made your mark today, Mr. Carstow.
02:52Oh, very dear, Mrs. Carstow.
02:55Your first intervention.
02:58I remember the poor pretty, but you have taken Grinley's face.
03:03See, how you amused them all.
03:07Mr. Carstow, I know you are released, but will you spare a moment to hear a request?
03:13I would like you to be my executor.
03:15Yes, Mr. Carstow.
03:16Nominated, constituted, and appointed, my executor, administrator, and assigned.
03:23You are so very regular in your attendance here.
03:28Please oblige me, Mr. Carstow.
03:32If I should wear out, you see, you will be here to watch my case and wait for my judgment.
03:40Mr. Carstow, you are the most regular suitor after myself.
03:48Will you be my executor, Mr. Carstow?
03:54Gladly, Miss Flight.
03:59I should deem it an honor to be considered.
04:03So very much obliged.
04:06I hope you have no objection, but I feel I have to tell you that I have recently added
04:12to my collection of birds, two more.
04:16I call them the wards in John Bice.
04:19There they are, the little dears, caged up with all the rest,
04:24with hope, joy, youth, peace, rest, life,
04:31Waste, ashes, waste, want, ruin, despair, madness, death,
04:38cunning, folly, words, wigs, rags, sheepskin, hunger, prisoner, jargon.
04:54But I want something done!
04:57Nothing's ever done!
05:01Scarcely fair, sir.
05:03Tell me what's been done!
05:06Put the question differently, Mr. Carstow, ask what he's doing.
05:11A great deal he's doing, sir.
05:14We've put our shoulders to the wheel, and the wheel is going round.
05:19The case goes round and round and round and will do forever!
05:24What hope can you give me?
05:25Excuse me, Mr. Carstow, but I never give hopes.
05:28I told you that from the start, as I tell all my clients.
05:31For the sake of my good name in the legal profession, I never give hopes.
05:37Hopes are not the business of the law.
05:38And what is its business?
05:40The one great principle of the English law is to make business for itself.
05:46Even a mere child like me can see that, my dear friend.
05:49That is the symmetry of the law.
05:51Agreed, Vols?
05:54Symmetry not being a legal term, Mr. Skimpole.
05:58Well, I don't feel qualified to answer.
06:07Captivating.
06:10It is the poetry of the law to know nothing but the law.
06:14To mind its own business.
06:19You see?
06:21But what of my business?
06:24Our admirable friend, Vols, is making it more and more his business.
06:35And nothing's done.
06:48But doing, Mr. Carstow, doing.
06:52This desk, sir, is your rock.
06:56That's something.
06:58Since you came to me, you've been separately represented,
07:00not hidden and lost in the interests of others.
07:03That's something.
07:05The suit, sir, does not sleep.
07:08We wake it up, we air it, we walk it about.
07:11That's something.
07:13It's no longer all jarndyce in fact as well as in name.
07:17That's something.
07:20Nobody now is having it all his own way, sir.
07:23And that's something, surely.
07:27John Jarndyce would have strangled the suit if he could.
07:31He might have had good intention.
07:33Not towards me.
07:34What about my interests?
07:41And my wife's.
07:43The suit, it's jarndyce, jarndyce and Carstow.
07:48In fact, as well as in name.
07:51Yes, Mr. Vols.
07:55That is something.
07:56Bringing me together with Mr. Vols in this room, Harold, was the best day's work you ever did.
08:01But I work, my dear friend.
08:05You know I'm incapable of it.
08:08Providence guided me.
08:11You have looked to Vols.
08:13If we're to talk about work.
08:18As you know, Mr. Carstown, I don't profess to be a man of capital.
08:23Well, I admit it frankly, because it is a principle of mine that there can never be too much openness
08:28between solicitor and client.
08:30Now, there have been many little consultations and attendances of late, as you'll agree, and these things mount up.
08:43I can, of course, show you dates and times if you wish.
08:46There must ever be openness between us.
08:49But if you are satisfied to trust my word, I would be obliged for your signature on this draught I've
08:57prepared.
08:58It's all in twenty pounds.
09:01Of course, Mr. Vols.
09:06When I ultimately congratulate you, sir, on your accession to fortune,
09:11although, as you know, I never give hopes,
09:14you will owe me nothing.
09:19Beyond whatever little balance may be the outstanding of the costs between solicitor and client.
09:28Except, of course, for the taxed costs allowed out of the estate you are heir to.
09:38Two sets of costs.
09:42There have been several of these draughts.
09:45I pretend no claim upon you, Mr. Carston,
09:49but for the zealous and active discharge of my professional duty.
09:54Not the languid and routine discharge of your experience elsewhere.
10:00Not, of course, that I ever disparage, as you know.
10:05My desk, sir, is your rock.
10:08I am always here, shoulder to the wheel.
10:12And my duty prosperously ended.
10:15All between us is ended.
10:21I know you'll pull me through it, Mr. Vols.
10:32He is the most reliable fellow in the world, isn't he, Harold?
10:36If a young man of the world like you says so,
10:39I accept your judgment undeservedly.
10:42He seems a capital fellow to me
10:44because he looks like a lawyer
10:46and talks like a lawyer
10:48and is the very embodiment of the law
10:50and nothing but law.
10:53Now, I know nothing whatever of the law
10:55and don't give a hoot for it.
10:58But I know a picture of the law when I see one.
11:01And those is that portrait.
11:05I'd have them hung in the Great Hall of Westminster.
11:09Richard!
11:10Richard!
11:14Mr. Woodcourt called on us, Richard.
11:16Did you forget?
11:18Was it to be today?
11:20I'm so sorry.
11:24Well, yes, I suppose I did forget.
11:30I'm so sorry, Richard.
11:32You're stupid of me.
11:36Ill-mannered.
11:38So stupid.
11:41Woodcourt, please forgive me.
11:43Well, we found you now.
11:44It would only be this place or the other.
11:48How are you, Richard?
11:50I'm well enough.
11:53Of course I am.
12:04You haven't yet said good day to Mr. Skimple.
12:07Ah.
12:09My dear Mrs. Karstow.
12:13You arrive in this dreary street
12:15like the first day of summer.
12:18How fitting that a physician should bring you.
12:21The company of youth is a fine medicine.
12:23I prescribe it for myself.
12:26I practice in the profession once, you know.
12:29For the brief time it took for the detail of sickness to disgust me.
12:34The physician's life is not poetic.
12:37A very realistic view, Mr. Skimpole.
12:39A child's view.
12:41What other reality does Harold Skimpole know
12:43for a child's gaiety.
12:45A child's impulsiveness.
12:46A child's negligence.
12:48A child's trust.
12:51Where were you going, Richard?
12:54We were going to find a cab to take Harold home.
12:58Is Mrs. Skimpole so much of a child
13:00that he cannot find a cab by himself?
13:02Ada, please!
13:05Enough of a child
13:06to know when to scamper away, Mrs. Karstowne.
13:09Umar used to be allowed to call Ada.
13:12And she was also a child.
13:16Such a long time ago.
13:19Goodbye.
13:20Goodbye.
13:21Goodbye, Harold.
13:23We'll meet shortly.
13:25We'll go home now, Richard.
13:27Alan came to see you as a doctor.
13:30As well as a friend.
13:50I don't have a medical term
13:52in the strict sense
13:53for what is wrong with him.
13:54He is sick.
13:56Not physically,
13:57at least
13:59no physical ailment
14:00is the cause of his sickness,
14:01but he is sick.
14:04He is sick with anger,
14:06with worry,
14:07with bitterness,
14:09sick with despair
14:10and with trying to pretend he isn't.
14:14I'm sorry,
14:15these are not a doctor's terms,
14:16but they add up to one fact.
14:18He is ill.
14:23I can tell you the name of the illness.
14:25It's called Chancery.
14:28Get him to turn his back on Chancery
14:31and we can make him well again.
14:32I'm afraid he's in no condition
14:34to see the logic of that.
14:35He's possessed.
14:38Rick!
14:43forgive me.
14:44I have to be practical.
14:46What can we do?
14:49Richard's lawyer,
14:50Mr. Voles.
14:50Might we appeal to him?
14:52Do you know what kind of man he is?
14:56I've not met Mr. Voles.
15:00I can tell you exactly what he is.
15:03He's a very respectable man.
15:06All the greater attorneys
15:08who have made fortunes
15:09or who are making them
15:10would assure you
15:11that Mr. Voles
15:13is a respectable man.
15:16Never misses a chance
15:18in his practice,
15:19which is a mark of respectability.
15:23Never takes any pleasure
15:26not a mark of respectability.
15:29He's reserved and serious,
15:31which is most respectable.
15:34And I'm sure his digestion
15:35is impaired,
15:36which is highly respectable.
15:38And he's making hay
15:40of the grass,
15:41which is his client's flesh.
15:43Who could be more respectable
15:44than Mr. Voles?
15:47No, Esther.
15:49I don't think we can help Richard
15:50by supplicating
15:52in that quarter.
15:54Does one ask a vampire
15:55not to suck blood?
16:00I wish Rick
16:01would let me see him again.
16:07Mr. Jarndyce,
16:08I took the liberty
16:11of suggesting to Richard
16:12that your advice
16:14and your regard
16:16for it.
16:17Considering his needs,
16:19I hoped you wouldn't mind
16:20my...
16:20Pleading with him
16:23to allow me
16:24to visit him.
16:30No, I don't mind that.
16:32What did he say?
16:36He prefers not to see you.
16:39Well, how did he put it?
16:40What did he say?
16:41How much he blames me
16:42for what is happening to him.
16:43He is ill.
16:45Mr. Jarndyce,
16:46whatever Richard is thinking
16:47about you now
16:48can not be of any consequence.
16:50Tell me what he said,
16:51Alan.
16:54He said he regards
16:55every new delay
16:55and every new disappointment
16:57as a new injury
16:58from John Jarndyce's hand.
17:07But there is someone
17:10I will see.
17:15If someone asks me
17:16how I defend
17:17the legal abuses
17:18of that place,
17:19I say I don't defend them.
17:21But there is a shepherd youth,
17:24a friend of mine,
17:25who transmutes them
17:27into something
17:27highly fascinating.
17:30to a man
17:31of my simplicity.
17:38Have I encouraged him,
17:40as you put it?
17:44What a question.
17:46Am I to discourage
17:47a young friend
17:48from trying to lighten
17:50the dark corners
17:51of this world?
17:54Do you receive money
17:55from this man,
17:56Voles,
17:57because of Richard?
18:00John Jarndyce,
18:02you of all people
18:03know what I think
18:05of money.
18:06How I would live without it
18:07if the world would let me,
18:08but it won't.
18:10So the world must provide me
18:12with what it insists
18:13I must have.
18:16I suppose there have been
18:17some trifling sums
18:19from Voles,
18:20your share of Richard.
18:24Would Voles give me
18:25Richard's money?
18:27If you say he does,
18:28he must have a reason for it,
18:29but as you know,
18:30I've never understood
18:32matters of business.
18:34Is that what Richard is to you,
18:35Mr Skimpole,
18:36a matter of business?
18:39He is my dearest friend.
18:42I love Richard.
18:45Perhaps I ought not
18:46to say that in your presence,
18:48John,
18:48since I believe
18:49he is not on
18:50good terms with you,
18:52but I can't help it.
18:54It's true.
18:56I love him.
18:58Mr Skimpole,
19:00Richard has very little money.
19:03I thought he was
19:04immensely rich.
19:06He is in very
19:07embarrassed circumstances.
19:11He can still
19:13sign a bond
19:15or a cheque
19:16or a bill
19:16or put something
19:18on a file somewhere.
19:20Can't he?
19:23Since he will take
19:24nothing from Mr Jandice,
19:26he and Ada,
19:27Mrs Carstone,
19:28have very small resources.
19:30Indeed,
19:31if you truly
19:32love Richard,
19:33Mr Skimpole,
19:34I will stay away from him.
19:36Yes,
19:36Miss Somerset?
19:39Richard and Ada
19:40are very troubled
19:41at present.
19:48In fact,
19:50I've had very little
19:51enjoyment at dear Richard's
19:53lately.
19:58Our young friends
19:59are losing
20:00the youthful poetry
20:01which was
20:03once so
20:04captivating
20:05in them.
20:08Why should I go there?
20:10When I go anywhere,
20:12I go for pleasure,
20:13because I was made
20:14for pleasure.
20:16I don't go anywhere
20:17for pain.
20:19It will be a perversion
20:20of the intention
20:21of my being.
20:23A monstrous thing
20:24to do.
20:26so you will leave
20:27Richard alone.
20:29You give me your word.
20:34Jandice.
20:36In common
20:37with most other men
20:38I have known,
20:40you are the incarnation
20:41of selfishness.
20:47I knew the danger
20:48which it was in
20:49when I married him.
20:53I knew he was already
20:54losing himself.
21:02He was being swallowed up
21:04by Chancery.
21:07and the lawyers
21:09the people pretending
21:11they cared.
21:15But I never imagined
21:16what it would come to.
21:21How much he would be hurt
21:22in every way.
21:27When we married
21:30I hoped
21:30because I was his wife
21:31I could help him
21:32forget the case.
21:35Put it aside.
21:38See it for what it is.
21:41A wicked thing
21:42that could do
21:43us nothing but harm.
21:48But even if I hadn't
21:49hoped like that, Esther,
21:52I would still
21:53have married him.
21:55Just the same.
21:57Just the same.
22:05I see him
22:06at his worst
22:07every day.
22:10I watch him
22:11in his sleep.
22:14I know every change
22:16in his face.
22:19When I married
22:22I swore never to show him
22:24how much I grieve
22:25for what he did.
22:27which could only
22:28make him more unhappy.
22:32I want him
22:33when he comes home
22:36to find no trouble
22:37in my face.
22:40I want him
22:41when he looks at me
22:45to see what it was
22:46he loved.
23:02but I have a new hope now.
23:08In a little while
23:11there will be someone
23:12else to help me
23:12win Richard back.
23:17Aidan.
23:28He would never fail
23:29his child.
23:32when he sees the baby
23:33he'll be restored.
23:35Do you think that too, Esther?
23:38I'm sure of it.
23:42But supposing
23:45he doesn't live
23:47to see the child?
23:49I don't.
23:51I don't.
23:59Ada!
24:00Ada!
24:03Ada!
24:04Ada, my love!
24:06What news I've got!
24:08Richard.
24:12Well, there's no reason
24:13why Esther and Alan
24:14shouldn't be here as well.
24:18We've won.
24:23We've won!
24:36Can't you hear me, Ada?
24:41We've won!
24:44Richard.
24:45Richard.
24:46You're feverish.
24:48You're burning.
24:49Everything's going to be
24:50all right.
24:54We have won!
25:02They've found a new will.
25:05A true document.
25:09It changes everything.
25:14I can confirm all that.
25:16Mr. Kenj, my solicitor,
25:17called to see me earlier today.
25:19The document was found
25:21at Crook's old warehouse.
25:23among that sorrowful debris.
25:26Found by the same people
25:27who discovered
25:28my mother's letters
25:29to my father.
25:32They have been rewarded
25:33for their persistence.
25:35We can surely hope now
25:36that those sad premises
25:39will have no further
25:39influence on our lives.
25:41My father died there.
25:43And my mother was
25:44as good as killed there.
25:47I can't help but be afraid
25:48that only evil
25:49comes from that place.
25:51I fear for Richard.
25:53And Ada.
25:59The will is genuine.
26:02Kenj believes it.
26:04Voles believes it.
26:06I wish to believe it.
26:07It's dated later
26:08than any other.
26:10And it makes
26:11Richard and Ada
26:12the principal beneficiaries.
26:17Maybe the happy end
26:18of John Lice
26:19and John Lice.
26:20I never thought
26:21there could be one.
26:24Being proved wrong
26:26might put Rick
26:27and me right again.
26:40Good night, Esther.
26:47Good night, Mr. John Lice.
26:52Alan, you must make
26:53allowances for my age
26:55this evening.
26:56Good night.
26:56Good night, sir.
27:06I think
27:07until this moment
27:09I had not
27:09fully appreciated
27:10the depth of
27:12love that lies
27:13between you
27:14and your guardian.
27:18From my childhood
27:19I have been the object
27:20of his untiring goodness.
27:23Whatever I can do
27:25in the rest of my life
27:26cannot be enough
27:27to express my
27:28gratitude.
27:30Gratitude.
27:55get off the door
27:56and shoot!
28:15Mr. Gutby.
28:17I've Kenge and Carboy.
28:19Confidential message
28:20from Mr. Kenge
28:20to Mr. John John Lice.
28:32Mr. Guffey.
28:34Forgive me for receiving
28:35a visitor like this.
28:39You are perfectly at liberty
28:40to wait for Mr. John Lice's
28:41return if you wish
28:42but I'm sorry
28:42I've no idea
28:43how late in the day
28:43that might be.
28:44Oh Miss Somersen
28:45I willingly wait a day
28:46a week
28:48a month
28:50provided it was
28:51always in your presence
28:52as you are
28:53at this moment
28:54so
28:55naturally gracious
28:56in spite of interruption
28:58and so caring
28:59of another's good opinion
29:00when that opinion
29:01can claim no right
29:02of consideration
29:03whatsoever.
29:04It's a matter of an hour
29:05or two only
29:06Mr. John Lice
29:06is here in London.
29:08Please
29:08sit down.
29:11Would you like
29:11a glass of wine
29:12or tea
29:13or anything else?
29:15To be in your company
29:16in this room
29:17is refreshment enough
29:19Mrs. Lice.
29:20Please Mr. Guffey.
29:30You wish to leave
29:31a message
29:31for Mr. John Lice?
29:32Ah
29:32with reference
29:33to the suit
29:34in Chancery
29:35and the recent
29:36development
29:37Mr. Kenge
29:38wishes to advise
29:39Mr. Jarndyce
29:40that there is
29:40further activity
29:41of what Mr. Kenge
29:43is pleased to call
29:43a hastening nature.
29:46It obliges Mr. Kenge
29:48to place himself
29:48very close
29:49to the suit indeed
29:50on account of a settlement
29:52appearing imminent.
29:57Mr. Kenge's reputation
29:58in the profession
30:00is for cautiousness
30:02but he feels
30:03sufficient confidence
30:04of his ground
30:04to recommend
30:06to Mr. Jarndyce
30:07that he
30:07hold himself
30:08in readiness
30:09for
30:10in Mr. Kenge's
30:11word.
30:12A resolving
30:14of Jarndyce
30:15and Jarndyce.
30:17Oh.
30:20Thank you
30:21Mr. Guffey.
30:23Your employer
30:24entrusts you
30:25with important news
30:26and you in turn
30:27entrust me.
30:28Miss Somersen
30:29what is a mere
30:30confidentiality
30:31is a measure
30:32of my respect
30:32for you.
30:35I have more
30:36than that
30:36to say to you.
30:41There has been
30:41a change
30:43in my circumstances
30:45which I believe
30:46may be of
30:47direct significance
30:48to yourself
30:50in view
30:51of what has
30:51passed between us
30:52on former occasions.
31:03I'm out of my
31:03articles Miss Somersen.
31:06I am admitted
31:07on the role
31:08of attorneys
31:08in my own right.
31:10I've taken a house
31:12in Walcott Square
31:12Lambeth
31:13which has six rooms
31:15exclusive of kitchens
31:16and I intend
31:17setting up
31:17professionally there
31:18forthwith.
31:20In the opinion
31:21of my friends
31:21it's our most
31:22commodious tenement
31:23Miss Somersen.
31:29you once
31:31rejected my
31:32proposal of marriage
31:35subsequent to that
31:36due to matters
31:37over which I had
31:38no control
31:41I believed my heart
31:43had relinquished
31:43the image of your beauty
31:44formally imprinted
31:45upon it
31:46and I gave you
31:47so to understand
31:49and at that time
31:51your conduct
31:51towards me
31:52was highly genteel
31:53I might even say
31:54magnanimous
31:56Miss Somersen
31:57I was wrong.
32:03Your image
32:04stays in my heart
32:05its influence
32:06upon me
32:07is still
32:08tremendous
32:10and yielding to it
32:12I am willing
32:13to overlook
32:13completely
32:14the matters
32:14over which
32:15neither of us
32:15had any control
32:19and renew
32:20my proposal.
32:23let me prove
32:24that I can rise
32:24to a height
32:25of generosity
32:25to match your own
32:27I beg to lay
32:28before you
32:29the house
32:29in Walcott Square
32:30and the business
32:31and myself
32:33for your acceptance
32:37I beg you
32:38Miss Somersen
32:48you are very magnanimous
32:50indeed Mr. Guppy
32:52you could hardly
32:53have offered me more
32:54or presented it
32:55more straightforwardly
32:57I believe you will
32:59prosper
32:59and gain much respect
33:01in your profession
33:03you reject me again
33:07please say why
33:09I'm sorry
33:13I can say nothing
33:14more to you
33:14than that
33:15I'm content
33:15with my life
33:16as it is
33:21I wish you well
33:22Mr. Guppy
33:50I wish you well
34:08the estate has dried up is that it mr. Kenj? we believe so sir. every penny has
34:20gone in costs. yes mr. Kenj. so we understand. and the case is now dead old
34:31wills and new wills equally of no account because there is no money. none mr. Kenj. the
34:44court has found it thus, sir.
34:53Richard!
35:06my lord!
35:16Richard! Richard! my friend come away! if it please your lordship!
35:24Mr. Carstone, you no longer have any business to concern you here. I earnestly advise you to leave and give
35:33yourself and this court no further injury.
35:53my friend come away!
36:09I have to begin the world.
36:18good morning sir.
36:24Richard! Richard! Richard! Richard! Richard! Richard! no!
36:58Hope, joy, youth, peace,
37:10rest, life, dust, ashes, waste, wonder, ruin, despair, madness, death, coming.
37:36Follin, worms, wings, rats, sheepskin, plant,
37:48pressfoot, jargon, gammon, and spinach.
38:05And the worms in John Dice and John Dice.
38:18Goodbye.
38:24Such an honor.
38:26Goodbye.
38:27Goodbye.
38:32Goodbye.
38:40Goodbye.
38:42Goodbye.
38:43Goodbye.
38:56Goodbye.
38:56Goodbye.
39:03Goodbye.
39:04Goodbye.
39:05Goodbye.
39:06Goodbye.
39:07Goodbye.
39:08Goodbye.
39:09Goodbye.
39:09Goodbye.
39:10Goodbye.
39:10Goodbye.
39:10Goodbye.
39:11Goodbye.
39:11Goodbye.
39:12Goodbye.
39:12Goodbye.
39:17is this all right miss
39:24miss esther
39:26could you look please miss
39:43I'm
39:44I'm
39:57I'm
39:59I'm
39:59I'm
40:00I'm
40:02I'm
40:06I'm
40:19I'm
40:20I'm
40:22I'm
40:23I'm
40:23I'm
40:38The End
41:00Rick, you are at home. Bleak House is your home.
41:18The End
42:08Rick, you are at home.
42:10engagement secret. wasn't it something to celebrate? something for family and
42:19friends to be glad about? we didn't deliberately conceal it.
42:30we were glad. so please don't make it sound otherwise.
42:38it was an honest proposal made in mr. jarndyce's own modest way and accepted
42:44without any display which might embarrass him or myself. and since that time we have
42:52respected each other's reticence. I will not call it secretive. the word isn't just.
43:02if it is offensive to you then of course I withdraw it with my fullest apology but
43:08you must understand my disappointment. oh that's a poor word for what I feel. I must
43:16ask you to say nothing more. I know I should not but I cannot keep silent. I don't
43:23believe that any good will be so but letting more time go by and the truth left unsaid.
43:31I love you and I wish to marry you. I love you and I wish to marry you. I'm not
43:39free to hear you talk of love.
43:40if I thought my feelings for you threatened any injury to mr. jarndyce then I believe
43:45I should stay silent. I believe it though I can't be sure of it. my my concern is with you.
43:52with your love which I want above everything else.
43:58you must know esther that I wrote to mr. jarndyce telling him of my feelings for you.
44:04knowing his love for you as your guardian. his reply did not tell me as you have done that you
44:09when he agreed to marry.
44:21what was his answer to you?
44:26that his dearest wish was for you to live in happiness with the husband you are.
44:46are you asking me to choose between you?
44:51the question is do you love Alan Woodcorn?
45:02how can I answer that?
45:05I'm not free.
45:09what if I made you free?
45:23is that what you want?
45:26for your sake?
45:30it isn't enough to say that.
45:36I am not prepared to take another
45:40kindness another gift as if this one meant no more than all the others.
45:49we promised each other our lives.
45:56mr. jarndyce you must tell me plainly do you no longer wish to be my husband?
46:04I've been selfish I'm sorry I was afraid of being alone again.
46:14when woodcourt went away for years or even forever we both thought at the time I suppose I seized the
46:19the opportunity her own sense of desertion and gave me.
46:24I always wanted to have someone to provide for to protect to cherish to make me feel needed.
46:31is that wrong?
46:34I love you esther as if you were my own child as I loved ada and and and it was
46:41wrong to ask you to marry me.
46:48Mr. jarndyce you will always be loved.
46:51when woodcourt came back I soon saw his wishes towards you and I hold him in high regard.
46:56he's shared so much lately that has come near to crushing us.
47:02the question remains
47:05do you love him?
47:14yes.
47:18you must forgive me my mistake.
47:23this is a moment of joy it starts your new life.
47:28you've been hiding from the world since richard's death.
47:31i thought i might never be able to leave this room again for the rest of my days.
47:37but that must not be.
47:41richard wanted to begin the world.
47:44richard wanted to begin the world and so must we in his memory.
47:48begin the world.
48:12earth.
48:38a boy mr. jarndyce.
48:47this is your grandfather
48:53would you like to hold your grandson
48:57I've never held a baby
49:20begin the world Mr John Dice
50:10I've never held a baby
50:39I've never held a baby
51:09I've never held a baby
51:40I've never held a baby
51:48I've never held a baby
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