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