#video #The Other Bennet Sister - Season 1 - Episode 09: Chapter 9
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00:21I woke early that morning, a great thought pressing upon me.
00:35I had made my decision.
00:41I knew what I wanted, and today I would seize it.
00:52Fortune favored the brave, didn't it?
01:09Mr Ryder, I want to hear your thoughts on the book I lent you.
01:14I've made little progress.
01:15Or is it that you're reading?
01:17You won't know it.
01:19It is far too trivial for her tastes.
01:25Would you like the preserves, Miss Bennet?
01:28I recommend the strawberry.
01:30Oh, thank you.
01:31The marmalade is most excellent.
01:36Mr Hayward, I am heartened to see you out in public so soon after your disappointment with Miss Baxter.
01:45The whole situation was so publicly played out, I would have hidden myself away for a year at least with
01:52the humiliation of it all.
01:54You are brave.
01:56On the contrary, things can happen to any of us, can't they?
02:00Tip us, Miss Bingley.
02:06Pass the coffee pot.
02:08It's empty.
02:14It's quite hard to imagine that later today we will see the sea.
02:17I think I might be the first in my family to climb a mountain.
02:21I think you're right.
02:21It will not disappoint, Miss Bennet.
02:24I can assure you that.
02:26It's extraordinary to think that we'll be following in Mr Wordsworth's steps.
02:31That we'll stand where he stood.
02:34She stood, actually.
02:35It was his sister that climbed Scarfell.
02:49Oh!
02:52Oh!
03:02And so our little party has expanded.
03:06Yes.
03:11I know it is not polite of me to say, but I do not care much for Miss Bingley.
03:19Nor I.
03:22I get the feeling that at any moment she might ask me to fetch a coat or polish her shoes.
03:27Well, you'd have to be in possession of 10,000 a year to win the good opinion of Caroline Bingley.
03:33Do you think money is important, Miss Bennet?
03:36You know, Lizzie used to say that it was only when she caught sight of Pemberley
03:41that she realised how much she loved Mr Darcy.
03:47Um...
03:48Six to one odds on Slim and Spritely at the 420 in York next Tuesday.
03:52On the flat?
03:53Yes.
03:55Well, it's a shame it isn't Newmarket, but you must surely take the odds.
03:58That I will, Miss Bennet, and so must you!
04:01Yes!
04:01Mr Hurst?
04:06Oh!
04:09What a good idea!
04:12Okay, pass me.
04:14Yeah!
04:25Oh!
04:27Put some effort into it, Hayward.
04:29You could do with loosening up.
04:42Tom, I wondered whether you and I might find some time to discuss this legal matter today.
04:53Of course!
04:57I've been delighted!
04:59Come along!
04:59The mountain will not wait!
05:02Let's go!
05:15This is rather marvelous, Bingley.
05:17Steady on!
05:19Steady on!
05:30Have you spent it?
05:33Here.
05:34Honeysuckle.
05:35Yes.
05:36Very poisonous to dogs.
05:38But not bears.
05:39Not bears.
05:40Dogs and shoemans.
05:41Hmm.
05:42It's funny, although it's called Honeysuckle.
05:44If you were to suckle on the berries, it would leave you quite sick.
05:48Fascinating.
05:49Well, I mean, you know.
05:50What am I saying?
05:53My pleasure.
05:59Miss Bennet.
06:01Oh!
06:02I picked this for you.
06:03The last two primroses of the season.
06:08One for you and one for Miss Bingley.
06:10Oh!
06:11Very thoughtful.
06:13You must have a fact about primroses, Miss Bennet.
06:15Oh!
06:16Ah!
06:17Ah!
06:17I shall have to think.
06:18Um...
06:18Uh...
06:19The first to eat a primrose, they say, will be the first to marry.
06:25Ha!
06:26Ha!
06:27Ha!
06:28Ha!
06:29Ha!
06:30Ha!
06:31Ha!
06:33Ha!
06:33Ha!
06:34Ha!
06:35Ha!
06:37Ha!
06:48Miss Bennet, you always make me see the world in a new light.
06:58Shall we?
07:14Cheap pieces!
07:16Glorious!
07:28More. More. More.
07:37I do hope the Hursts are not finding it too taxing.
07:40Mm, yes.
07:42I offered Mrs Hurst my arm when we forwarded this string, but she brushed me off quite brusquely.
07:47She obviously possesses the same gentle charm as her sister.
07:53Look at this!
07:56Isn't it marvellous?
07:58Really, really is.
08:00I think we'll have to accompany the Hursts back down.
08:04Really?
08:05Oh, they have no wish to continue, but unfortunately no recollection of the path we walked to get here.
08:11Can't they just head downwards?
08:13Well, the inn will be peaceful this afternoon.
08:18Everyone will be out.
08:20Very good.
08:23We shouldn't risk the Hursts getting lost.
08:26No.
08:27Are you happy to continue without us, Mary?
08:29Of course.
08:30I want to hear all about the view when you return, and take good care of her, won't you?
08:36I will.
08:38I'll race you down!
08:40You're on!
08:41Well, there we are.
08:42It's been revealed.
08:43I'm not pissed.
08:44Onwards we go!
08:56Mr Ryder?
08:57Perhaps it's big bleak.
08:59Wait for me!
09:00Is it?
09:01No.
09:03No.
09:04No.
09:05No.
09:06No.
09:28That way lies the Solway Firth.
09:32And then...
09:34Scotland.
09:36And then beyond that...
09:38Beyond that...
09:40is the sea.
09:58What would your mother say?
10:01If she could see you now.
10:06She would likely tell me that the winds have ruined my hair.
10:14The vastness of the landscape...
10:18almost overwhelming.
10:21It is.
10:24It reminds me how small and insignificant we are.
10:29How, in the blink of an eye,
10:30we, everything that we have created will be gone.
10:38Do you think there's a lesson here, Miss Bennet?
10:42That during our short time on this earth,
10:44we should be brave.
10:47Follow our hearts.
10:52Perhaps there is.
10:56Perhaps now would be a good time to continue
10:58our conversation from the boat yesterday.
11:00Er, well, I, er...
11:03Yes.
11:04Yes.
11:07Well...
11:07Though I...
11:10Hmm.
11:19Though I spend so much of my time absorbed in poetry
11:21when it comes to my own emotions, I...
11:26I...
11:26Well...
11:28I do not always find it easy,
11:29knowing where to begin.
11:32The same.
11:33The same.
11:34Yes.
11:37Miss Bennet.
11:43Mary.
11:49I am most glad that we are able to see this.
11:53To be here together.
11:54To be here together.
11:57As am I.
12:00You know that I've grown so fond of you.
12:03So fond of you during our time together.
12:08And are you?
12:09Yes.
12:12There is no one I long to talk to like I do you.
12:16No one.
12:19No one who makes me feel more like me.
12:23If...
12:24If that makes any sense at all.
12:26Yes, it does.
12:27Yes, it does.
12:27No, it...
12:29Absolutely does.
12:30Yes.
12:32Yes.
12:35I wondered if you might...
12:36Tom!
12:38If...
12:38If I might.
12:40Tom, I beg a word with you.
12:42William, please give us a moment.
12:43We're...
12:44Just in the middle of a conversation.
12:45Yes.
12:45I'm afraid I really must insist.
12:48I'll be brief.
12:50It is very important.
12:51We...
12:52We will continue.
12:57Yes.
13:00Now, Tom, we must discuss my financial affairs.
13:05You see...
13:23Do you know what legal matter Mr Ryder wished to speak to Mr Hayward about so urgently?
13:28Something to do with his aunt, Lady Catherine de Burr.
13:31I...
13:32I...
13:33I could not wait.
13:35Evidently not.
13:45Excuse us.
13:47Business talk, I'm afraid.
13:49And is the matter resolved?
13:52Yes.
13:53Yes.
13:54Yes, I'd say it is.
14:01Sit.
14:04Would you like an egg?
14:05Yes.
14:05No, sir.
14:09No, sir.
14:14No, sir.
14:14I'm so sorry.
14:15No, sir.
14:15No, sir.
14:18Now...
14:19Where were we?
14:20Ah!
14:23What were you saying, Mr Hayward, when um...
14:26Mr Ryder came over?
14:27I'm sorry. I cannot do this anymore. My circumstances have changed.
14:34What has happened?
14:36Please forgive me. Miss Bennet.
14:45Mr. Hayward?
14:54Miss Bennet. Shall we take in the views and see what inspiration Wordsworth can give us?
15:04I wandered lonely as a cloud that floats on high, oh, vales and hills, when all at once I saw
15:13a crowd, a host of golden daffodils, beside the lake, beneath the trees, fluttering and dancing in the breeze, continuous
15:25as the stars that shine and twinkle on the Milky Way.
15:31They stretched a never-ending line along the margin of a bay.
15:43I think that might be the inn.
15:47It's moving.
15:50Or a sheep.
15:53How does Mr. Hayward seem to you? Is he quite all right?
15:57Mr. Hayward, I think so.
16:00Mr. Ryder, Mr. Hayward, a word.
16:03One moment.
16:04Now.
16:10Mr. Hayward!
16:12Mr. Hayward!
16:12Mr. Hayward, a word, up all the terrain or this.
16:15I understood.
16:16Mr. Hayward, we need to make our way down the mountain.
16:18Mr. Hayward, what?
16:19Mr. Hayward, why?
16:21Mr. Hayward, what has happened?
16:22Mr. Hayward, there's a storm coming in.
16:24Mr. Hayward, but we've only just arrived, and we need to rest before heading back down.
16:29Mr. Hayward, nevertheless, the storm is brewing.
16:31Mr. Hayward, we need to start our descend immediately.
16:34Mr. Hayward, how does he know?
16:35Mr. Hayward, there's been a change in the air.
16:38I mean, I can't feel it.
16:40Well, he can, and he is a guide.
16:43So we should leave.
16:45I was only saying that I could not feel...
16:47Please, let us gather our things up.
16:48Hayward, I don't think we need to leave immediately.
16:51Earlier, it seemed as though a storm was brewing and nothing happened.
16:55Yes, and this guide is not the sharpest fellow I've ever met,
16:57so I say we stay here a little longer.
17:00He knows the skies and he knows the area.
17:03Miss Bingley.
17:06What do you think, Miss Bennet?
17:09Can you imagine what it would be like to experience a storm from up here?
17:15To watch it come in?
17:16Yes, that would be quite unforgettable.
17:19And did Wordsworth himself not tell us
17:21that no traveller should grudge a little inconvenience
17:24to witness such a sight as a storm?
17:27It is a privilege to witness such a demonstration of nature's power.
17:31I am not sure what privilege there is in being soaked to the skin.
17:34A little rain is of no concern to me.
17:36Well, you are not the only person here.
17:38I think we should stay a while longer,
17:39and I think we should experience a storm just as Wordsworth did.
17:43That is the spirit, Miss Bennet.
17:44But our guide has told us that we should leave.
17:47Miss Bennet, I appeal to your rational mind.
17:50Right, I am leaving this minute, and I suggest you follow.
17:53Or else I will inform the others they have a rather long wait for you.
17:57Has he just left us?
17:58I believe he has.
18:01This is not like you at all.
18:03Oh!
18:04Oh, it is I who has changed, is it?
18:06Yes.
18:08Well, perhaps I'm tired of my old character.
18:11I wish to try a new one.
18:12Well, I'm sorry to hear that.
18:14I was fond of the old Mary.
18:19I shall be sure to tell her that.
18:21For she has wondered many times today
18:23what your true feelings were.
18:27Sometimes in life we must seize the moment,
18:29and we must finish what we set out to do
18:32without letting anything get in our way.
18:36I am sorry to have disappointed him.
18:45I am sorry to have disappointed him.
19:02There was a roaring in the wind all night.
19:06The rain came heavy and fell in floods.
19:09Quite extraordinary.
19:31I think perhaps now we should go.
19:33Magnificent!
19:34Nevertheless, I think we should head back.
19:36Ha ha!
19:37Is this not the most extraordinary sight
19:39you've ever laid eyes upon?
19:41We need to move, quickly!
19:45Come on!
19:46We can head down now!
19:55All it is to be alive, eh?
19:57Yes!
19:59Come on!
20:10I'm sorry!
20:10I... I'm sorry!
20:14Police say close.
20:16I told Mrs. Gardiner I want to go after you.
20:18I intend to keep my word.
20:19I'm sorry for him.
20:35I'll call the head.
20:36I'll call the head.
20:36I'll call the head.
20:38I'll call the head.
20:44Ah!
20:53Ah!
20:54Ah!
20:55Ah!
20:55Ah!
20:56Mr. Ryder!
20:57Ah!
20:59Mr. Ryder!
21:01Ah!
21:02Ah!
21:04Ah!
21:04Ah!
21:05He's fed it!
21:07He's fed it!
21:09Ah!
21:10Ah!
21:11Ah!
21:12Ms. Weakley!
21:12Help me!
21:14Can you move?
21:16No, I don't think so.
21:19Oh, please, go and get help, please.
21:21I do not know where Ryder or Hayward are.
21:24Here, let me.
21:27Be careful, be careful.
21:29I'm trying, I'm trying.
21:32I've got it.
21:35Put your arm around me.
21:37Oh, my God.
21:38What?
21:38What?
21:40Oh, my God.
21:42I cannot steal my gun.
21:45Don't walk on the scope.
21:47They're slippery.
21:48Miss Millet!
21:50Miss Millet!
21:52Miss Bingley!
21:54She fell, she fell.
21:57I can help.
21:59I've got her, Miss Millet.
22:01Do you know how I would feel if anything were to happen to you?
22:10Oh, my God!
22:12Oh, my God!
22:12Hold on, Miss Bingley.
22:26They're taking too long.
22:27Do you think something's happened?
22:28I'm sure they're fine.
22:30I should go and look for them.
22:34There they are.
22:35I'm so sorry, I lost you all on the way down.
22:38Miss Bingley is badly hurt.
22:39We must get her inside.
22:40We've had to carry her down the mountain.
22:43Oh, Mary!
22:44My foot!
22:45Mary!
22:46My foot!
22:47Miss Bingley!
22:48Get her inside!
22:49Yes!
22:50Let her...
22:51Let her...
22:54Hurry!
22:55You're okay.
22:56Miss Bingley.
22:57Here we go.
23:05Here we go.
23:21Oh.
23:25Oh.
23:28Go.
24:01What did the doctor say? Any change?
24:06Not as yet.
24:08You should get some rest, Tom.
24:55What did the doctor say?
25:00Mary?
25:02Mary?
25:03Are you awake?
25:06Tom!
25:07Tom!
25:08Is she awake?
25:09I think so.
25:11Let me fetch the doctor.
25:12Shh.
25:13Like that?
25:26She's doing well.
25:28She's going to make a full recovery.
25:45She's going to make a full recovery.
25:50I can't see her.
25:56I can't see her.
26:03And so it was that Mr. Heywood left the lakes.
26:08A trip that had promised so much, had delivered very little.
26:15He didn't return to London.
26:19I did not know when I would see him again.
26:57I did not know when I would see him again.
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