Hearts grow closer… but society pulls them apart.
The Other Bennet Sister Episode 3 with English Subtitles
In Episode 3, emotions deepen as relationships face new pressures from expectations and hidden desires. As tensions rise within the family, choices must be made between love, duty, and reputation.
With elegant storytelling, romantic tension, and period drama intrigue, this episode continues to build a captivating and emotional narrative.
Watch The Other Bennet Sister Episode 3 in HD with English Subtitles.
#OtherBennetSister #Episode3 #DramaRomance #EnglishSubtitles #FullHD #WatchOnline #Streaming #PeriodDrama #RomanticIntrigue #Entertainment
The Other Bennet Sister Episode 3 with English Subtitles
In Episode 3, emotions deepen as relationships face new pressures from expectations and hidden desires. As tensions rise within the family, choices must be made between love, duty, and reputation.
With elegant storytelling, romantic tension, and period drama intrigue, this episode continues to build a captivating and emotional narrative.
Watch The Other Bennet Sister Episode 3 in HD with English Subtitles.
#OtherBennetSister #Episode3 #DramaRomance #EnglishSubtitles #FullHD #WatchOnline #Streaming #PeriodDrama #RomanticIntrigue #Entertainment
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TVTranscript
00:04The loss of my father was a leap into the unknown. Longbourn was my childhood home,
00:11and although I had my struggles here, it was all I had ever known. From now on,
00:18would I be relying on the hospitality of my sisters, destined to spend my days as my mother's companion?
00:28What other choice did I have?
00:33I do not expect any of you to understand my pain. The bond Mr. Bennet and I shared was a
00:41wry thing.
00:43I do not know that I shall ever eat again.
00:49Who is that?
00:50I do not know, Mama.
00:52What sort of person would impinge upon our hour of mourning so distastefully?
00:59Charlotte!
01:02I am afraid you find us in a state of some disarray.
01:06Let me take...
01:06Understandably.
01:07We have been wanting to see you all since we heard the terrible news,
01:11but knew you would need time as a family to...
01:14To gather your things.
01:15Yourselves.
01:16Together.
01:20I want to make it quite clear...
01:24No.
01:27Quite clear that there's no rush for you to leave Longbourn.
01:32Thank you, Mr. Collins.
01:33You are quite welcome to stay here with us for a full two weeks.
01:37Two weeks?
01:39Mrs. Bennet, there really is no hurry for you and Mary to leave.
01:42But I have arranged you some help with the packing.
01:44So you are not obliged to undertake such a difficult task during your hour of need?
01:50Hmm.
02:02Mama, you must come and stay with Mr. Bingley and Knight Netherfield.
02:06We have a number of cooks and more servants than we know what to do with.
02:11Oh, Jane.
02:13I would be delighted.
02:15It would bring me great comfort to be in a sightable property with a large number of staff at my
02:20disposal.
02:23And Mary, you of course must come too.
02:27But if you're worried about company, Caroline Bingley stays with us often.
02:32Well, yes, but I have not yet thought through my future prospects.
02:39Speaking of your prospects, Mary, I have received a letter from my brother and his wife in London.
02:45Their governess has been called back to Norfolk and they have asked me to send you to stay with them
02:50until a suitable replacement is found.
02:53There is going to be a governess.
02:55Oh, Mary.
02:56I would very much like to help, but you will need me, Mama.
03:01I have already accepted their offer.
03:04They're sending a carriage.
03:06But, Mama, do not worry about me, Mary.
03:09I shall have Jane by my side.
03:26If my options in life really were marriage or misery, it looked very much as though I was destined for
03:32misery.
03:40Mrs. Bennet is indisposed.
03:45Oh, of course.
03:48Thank you, Il.
03:57Um, what if the children don't like me?
04:01Why should they not like you?
04:03You're a perfectly likable soul.
04:07I have nothing ready to teach them.
04:10Mary, nobody knows more facts about anything than you.
04:16It's time for you to get out and see the world.
04:19Meet some other people that live in it.
04:21I think it'll do you good.
04:25Do not be frightened, Miss Mary.
04:27Oh, no, I'm not.
04:28No, I'm just, um...
04:33I'm not.
05:00You're BRAVEED kiss.
06:01Would you like some toasted cheese?
06:02But first, we'll show you your room.
06:04Come in, come in.
06:07It's right at the top of the house, so you won't be disturbed by the children.
06:28How's your mother?
06:31Mother, she's had a most trying time of late.
06:33Well, you all have.
06:36Mother as well.
06:37Thank you for inquiring.
06:40And how are you, Mary?
06:42It must have been a terrible shock.
06:48It was.
06:50Well, thank you for stepping in at such short notice.
06:53We don't stand on ceremony here, especially with the children, so if you don't mind that, you'll do well with
06:59us.
07:00And the rest of your belongings will be brought up any moment.
07:02Do you have all you need?
07:04I do.
07:18Which mountain range is found in the end of your armies?
07:37Oh, that's good.
07:40Not so good.
07:41Mary, won't you join us for breakfast?
07:44Oh, no, no, no, sir, thank you, sir.
07:45I'm not at all hungry this morning.
07:47I shall see the children upstairs.
08:01Marianne, would you like to start?
08:04Miss Bennett, it's a pleasure to meet you.
08:07I am Marianne Gardner, and I'm 11 years old.
08:09Yes, it's my pleasure to meet you too, Miss Marianne.
08:15George!
08:18Yes, thank you, George.
08:20And this is...
08:25This is Rebecca.
08:27Thank you, Miss Rebecca.
08:31And if an organised body is not in the situation and circumstances
08:37best adapted to its sustenance and propagation
08:41then, in conceiving an indefinite variety
08:45among the individuals of that species
08:47we must be assured that, on the one hand,
08:52those which depart most from the best adapted constitution
08:55will be the most liable to perish.
09:01You've made him go to sleep.
09:08Let us move on to history, shall we?
09:11Now, in 1492,
09:14Christopher Columbus discovered America.
09:17Now, where is America?
09:17America.
09:18Ah, yes, America.
09:21Uh...
09:25Where has Rebecca gone?
09:27There were very clearly three of you in this room
09:29when I began looking at the globe,
09:31and now there are two of you.
09:33She vanished.
09:34She's a magician.
09:36Oh, magic is nothing but illusion and trickery.
09:38Oh.
09:39Now, where could she be?
09:42Tom, you're here!
09:43Tom, can we finish lessons now?
09:44Tom?
09:45Yes.
09:46Oh, forgive the intrusion.
09:47I came to tell you that dinner is served.
09:50You must be Miss Bennett.
09:52I... I must be.
09:55Oh, yes, I am.
09:57Tom Hayward.
09:58Oh.
09:59Friend of the family.
10:05Aren't there normally three of you?
10:07There were three, certainly,
10:09but I was looking at America,
10:13and when I looked back, it was...
10:20Do you have mice, Miss Bennett?
10:23For if you do,
10:24might I suggest you do not keep them in the toy trunk?
10:29Well, I...
10:30I wasn't sure.
10:31I thought perhaps mice like toy trunks.
10:34Oh, you see, in there,
10:35they cannot get to their cheese.
10:37Actually, it's a fallacy that mice like cheese.
10:41Of course.
10:43They're much more partial to root vegetables and grains.
10:46Yes, indeed.
10:48I'm a rabbit.
10:52Mr. Hayward?
10:54Mr. Hayward,
10:56I am keeping a rabbit in the toy trunk
11:00because...
11:02I...
11:02Because rabbits are not at all social creatures.
11:07Exactly.
11:07Yes, they are.
11:12Now, why exactly do you have a new governess?
11:16Is it that you keep eating them?
11:23Tom helped Edward with the legal matter some years ago,
11:26and we've been friends ever since.
11:28You're not a revist for my lodgers.
11:30Oh.
11:31Yes.
11:32Oh.
11:33What is a revolutionary Republican?
11:39Well, as discussed during the lesson,
11:43they're often associated with Jacobinism.
11:45But my point really was...
11:47Sounds like you had a very interesting first day, Miss Bennet.
11:49Well, uh...
11:51Have you read Catherine Cawley, Miss Bennet?
11:54Yes, I have.
11:55Yes.
11:57Mary told us about smallpox.
11:59I shall never sleep again.
12:01Well, you asked me to be truthful.
12:03Was there deadly rash?
12:05She said it can leave one blind or dead.
12:08That is not quite how I put it.
12:10Blind or dead, she said.
12:11Well, that is true.
12:12There's a mortality rate of about...
12:1430%.
12:17Exactly.
12:19George cried three times.
12:22There was something in my eye.
12:24We held hands until Mary had finished talking.
12:27Well, you're never too young to learn about life.
12:31I think our game is in order, aren't you?
12:33I think that's a very good idea.
12:35Yes.
12:35Yes.
12:36I'm first.
12:37But what should we play?
12:39Graces.
12:39Graces.
12:40Ah.
12:40Let's show Mary how to play Graces.
12:43Yes.
12:43Yay.
12:44Yes.
12:44Mary-Anne.
12:45Well called.
12:46Bravo.
12:47Bravo.
12:49Yours are better.
12:50Woo.
12:51Oh.
12:52Oh.
12:53That counts.
12:54It does indeed.
12:55It does indeed.
12:56It does indeed.
12:57Oh.
12:57Oh, Tom.
12:58You'll need to get someone to look at that.
13:01Send it to Blythe.
13:02She'll fix it for you.
13:04Ready?
13:05Hey.
13:05Mary-Anne.
13:06Yes.
13:07Oh.
13:07Well done.
13:08Flare play.
13:09You look like a wizard.
13:11Yes.
13:17Are you sure you won't join in, Mary?
13:20Oh, uh, no.
13:21I'm not good at games.
13:22Oh, that doesn't matter at all.
13:25Yes.
13:27Well, you couldn't possibly be as ungainly as I am.
13:30Really, I'd only spoil it.
13:38George.
13:39Ready?
13:48Yes, Tom.
13:49It's Mr. Gardner.
13:51Oh.
13:52Stop it.
14:09Yes?
14:11Mary?
14:14Oh, do not look so grave, my dear.
14:16You're not in trouble.
14:18With the weather getting warmer, we're about to become more sociable.
14:21Oh, please, do not feel any obligation to involve me.
14:24I shall be quite content to stay upstairs with the children.
14:26Mary, we want you to join us.
14:30But I do not sparkle at dinners.
14:34In our house, no one is obliged to sparkle.
14:39Then, of course.
14:41But we need to get you properly dressed.
14:44Oh.
14:44I thought perhaps tomorrow we could go to the haberdashers and you could pick out some fabrics.
14:48I do not really care for dresses.
14:50Well, that's a shame.
14:51But very well.
14:55Perhaps think about it, Mary.
14:57There is a dress allowance as part of your governor's wages.
15:01I have thought about it.
15:03And I would very much like to accept your kind offer.
15:06That's excellent news.
15:09Well, good night, Mary.
15:11And thank you for today.
15:20This must be such a change for Meriton.
15:23It most certainly is.
15:35What do you think of the deep greens?
15:38We have a soiree coming up.
15:39Now, I think deep green would be perfect.
15:43Mother has always said it's terribly difficult to get any color to work with my complexion.
15:47Really?
15:48Well, perhaps your complexion's changed because I can see many colors here which would work well on you.
15:53But the most important thing being is that you choose fabrics that you truly like.
15:59But Mother says that Mother isn't here.
16:05Mr. Gardner.
16:06Oh.
16:07Miss Bennet.
16:08Tom!
16:10Mr. Hayward, have you brought your jacket to be mounted?
16:12I have just this minute dropped it off.
16:14Well, now that you're here, you can make yourself useful.
16:17Miss Bennet needs to choose some dress fabric.
16:20I find myself quite overwhelmed by the choice.
16:23Well, I shall be honest and say that my experience of picking dress fabric is limited, to say the least.
16:29But I shall try.
16:32Have you seen the names of these colors?
16:35We've got Dust of Ruins, Corbeau, or Flamme de Bonche, anyone?
16:42I think I shall take the Drake's neck with a splash of Nunkey.
16:47Anyone for Gabbo's?
16:49Well, I mean, that's just yellow, that one.
16:51Yes.
16:52Yes.
16:54I think my advice would be to choose the colors that make one feel more like oneself.
16:59And I am sorry not to be of more use.
17:02I should return to my desk, and a particularly unexciting land negotiation.
17:08Good day.
17:10Good day.
17:15Oh, poor Tom.
17:17You work so hard.
17:18Really?
17:18Underneath that light-hearted manor, carries the weight of the world on his shoulders.
17:26Now, have you decided?
17:29I have chosen.
17:31Very well, Mary.
17:34The first is this crimson, and then I thought perhaps a spring green trim.
17:42Lovely.
17:43Yes.
17:43But you will need two dresses.
17:45So perhaps...
17:47China blue?
17:49Hmm.
17:53Do you think a dress in the spring green alone would be garish?
17:57What do you think, Mary?
18:00Some people may think it is wild, but I like it.
18:06Then I think you should please yourself and not worry what others may think.
18:11You've done a very good job.
18:13Now.
18:16Now.
18:39Oh.
18:40Oh.
18:41Oh.
18:45The gardeners are out. They're buying shoes for the children.
18:50Would you like to play graces?
18:55Well, yes. Thank you.
19:03Ready?
19:04Yes.
19:12I did it.
19:13You did? Natural.
19:15Beginner's luck.
19:17Right. Ready?
19:20Oh.
19:22Oh.
20:01Ready?
20:02Yes.
20:04Yes.
20:06Oh.
20:07Oh.
20:08Oh.
20:09Oh.
20:10Yeah.
20:10So, um, that's probably enough places for today.
20:17Oh, yes, I brought a book for Mrs. Tyler.
20:21Oh, of course, yes.
20:22Ah, poetry.
20:24Do you like poetry, Miss Bennett?
20:26I prefer facts to whimsy.
20:31Whimsy?
20:32I've tried, uh, well, Cowper, uh, Byron, even some Dryden.
20:37But, um, well, it seems to me that it's all just words.
20:44What were you expecting?
20:46Are you a scholar, sir?
20:49No.
20:50I'm a barrister, junior.
20:52And though the law is my business, poetry is my passion.
20:56What do you like to read?
20:59Uh, works of non-fiction.
21:01Um, histories and, uh, and geology.
21:04And what do you like to read for pleasure?
21:08That is reading for pleasure.
21:11There is nothing you like about poetry.
21:18Some poems are mercifully short.
21:22Well, now that you have thrown down the gauntlet,
21:26I will not rest until you have appreciated the merits of poetry.
21:32I believe that this is the book that will open the heart of Miss Mary Bennett.
21:41Oh?
21:44The garden is at home.
21:45Oh, is it?
21:46Ah, yes.
21:47Yes.
21:48Uh, well, yes.
21:49Uh, I don't know.
21:52Oh, Tom!
22:16And we'll need more scallops.
22:18Mrs. Stromling will claim she could possibly before helping herself to seven.
22:23It must be very strange without your family here.
22:27There was always at least one argument about stolen perfume.
22:35Mary, you look lovely.
22:38I'm not sure.
22:43I think we should let your hair fall naturally.
22:45No point trying to force it into curls if it doesn't want to go.
22:51Mm-hmm.
22:53Yeah.
23:08Yes.
23:10Oh, my god.
23:11Yes, yes.
23:13No point trying to be.
23:16A dropped and a half of this.
23:17No, this is a lot.
23:20Yeah, I'm sorry.
23:31Um, I mean, that's basically it, but they're awfully fun to... fun it.
23:40Good evening. I do not believe we have met. I'm Miss Baxter. Delighted to meet you, Miss Baxter.
23:47Um, I am Miss Bennet. I have not long moved to London from Hertfordshire.
23:53Fanshawe, Mr Fanshawe.
23:58A friend of my mother's died eating those nuts. One got stuck in his throat and that was it. He
24:05was quite dead in minutes.
24:12Oh, I hope I didn't cause any offence.
24:14That was marvellous. Oh, I shall keep that story in mind for when I want to be rid of someone.
24:18Forgive me, it wasn't deliberate.
24:22I hate the first 20 minutes of these evenings.
24:25How do I?
24:26I never know who to talk to and I often find myself saying the wrong things.
24:34Your dress is striking. It looks very well on you.
24:37You really think so? I feel a little bold in it.
24:39Well, you're in London, Miss Bennet. If you're going to be bold, here is the place to do it.
24:46Perhaps London will be the start of something new for you.
24:49Perhaps it will.
24:51And if you want to be shown around town, I could call on you.
25:03London, it turned out, was a place of learning as much as teaching.
25:08A place of trying new things.
25:12And though I had never liked to change, I seemed to be enjoying myself.
25:19Much about me felt different after just one week.
25:24Being here had lifted my spirits.
25:27I felt something long forgotten.
25:30Hope.
25:32Are you looking for someone?
25:36You must tell me all about it in a moment.
25:40Mary, there's a gentleman I'd like you to meet.
25:43We have something of an understanding.
25:45Please may I introduce Mr. Tom Hayward.
25:52Uh, we've already met.
25:55What's that?
25:55Oh, of course, you must have.
25:58Oh, I see you went for the Pomona trim.
26:00Uh, it's, um, spring green. It's quite different to Pomona.
26:05Well, it suits you very well.
26:08Tom!
26:09Excuse us ladies.
26:10You must come and meet my colleague, Mr. May.
26:14Mr. May.
26:15Mr. May.
26:16Mr. Hayward and I met three years ago this spring.
26:20We are hoping to be married next year.
26:23Not everything went exactly as I would have liked.
26:26Come on.
26:27Oh, please excuse us.
26:29Come on, Mary. It will be fun.
26:31Of course a man such as Mr. Hayward would have secured a match.
26:36But I had made friends.
26:37And that was enough.
26:45I did not know what tomorrow would bring.
26:49But for now, at least I had someone to dance with.
26:53We're in the first half of college, the college.
26:53And that's what we did.
26:54And as we went...
26:54We were on the front of the library.
26:54What we did was to do after the library.
26:55We made the story.
26:55We made our time the year ago.
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