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A man dies of a mysterious tropical disease on which his cousin, his heir, is the sole authority. Starring: Jeremy Brett, Edward Hardwicke.
A man dies of a mysterious tropical disease on which his cousin, his heir, is the sole authority. Starring: Jeremy Brett, Edward Hardwicke.
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00:16Papyrs
00:58Transcription by CastingWords
01:11CastingWords
01:40CastingWords
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02:34CastingWords
02:35Stop it, sir. I didn't know, sir. Sir, I didn't know.
02:39It's all right, Benson. Last-minute decision.
02:44It's all right.
02:44It's all right.
03:05It's all right.
03:30Oh, there you are.
03:57It's all right.
04:03I pity for you.
04:07It's all right.
04:13It's all right.
04:17Unmising fault, I fear.
04:19I shall return to town and leave you in peace.
04:32Oh, Dr. Watson, we have been missing you.
04:36Oh, yeah. Only another ten days.
04:38Yes.
04:41Morning, Holmes.
04:45Oh, I did ask me to comment on your new tie.
04:52Quite heartless, Holmes.
05:00That woman is undoubtedly coming here.
05:04She's been staring up at this window for the past three minutes.
05:06Oh, I do wish she'd make up her mind.
05:09I could ask Mrs. Hudson to bring up an extra card.
05:13Handsome, isn't she?
05:14Who?
05:17May it ask me something of importance to make her hesitate so long.
05:22The client.
05:25No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
05:50All right, Polly, here's a good girl.
06:08Mr. Savage, John Gedgrave.
06:12Where the devil have you been?
06:14Two pounds.
06:16Mr. Savage, in advance.
06:18And three for the establishment.
06:20Five in total.
06:21I think it's worth it.
06:23Oh, anonymous was the word you used.
06:26Where we're going is as anonymous as you'll ever find.
06:29Every compartment.
06:31There's a curtain, even.
06:32I want to see you.
06:34Oh, good Lord.
06:34You're not taking these with you, are you?
06:38No.
06:38Oh, no, no, no, no.
06:41May as well tear them up and drop them in the Thames.
06:45Forty pounds.
06:47I'll give you a seat.
06:54Oh, that'll be our fair visit.
07:10Please, do sit down.
07:30Please, do sit down.
07:42This receipt, Gedgrave.
07:44What about it?
07:45Well, what are you playing at?
07:46Signed at Carter.
07:47You don't expect me to use my real name doing this sort of work, do you?
07:52Carter's my real name.
07:54I could have signed at anything.
07:55I've entrusted you with my real name, Mr. Savage.
08:01Please, don't complain.
08:15I need your help.
08:20I am...
08:23Anything you say here will, of course, be treated in the strictest confidence.
08:27We have kept the secrets of kings, madam.
08:32I...
08:34My husband...
08:37My husband, my husband, my husband...
08:50I...
08:51I...
08:53I...
08:55I...
09:03I...
09:10my husband is a financier you have heard of the oxford and lombard bank yes the chief
09:18shareholders are the conures my husband's family on his mother's side he is one of the directors
09:25the job is well within his powers only victor has found the work increasingly irksome
09:33he entertains an ambition you see which none of his family would begin to understand
09:39what is that he wishes to be a poet
09:48he has come to believe that opium heightens his powers intensifies the evidence of his senses
10:18this may be so temporally but as i'm sure you know the effect only survives the first few times the
10:24drug is taken that is so is it not oh yes indeed addiction quickly follows very often for life
10:30the infernal substance soon offers the addict nothing except relief from the terrible effects
10:37of its absence
10:40i believe victor stands on the threshold of addiction
10:44he left a note for me this morning which suggests he knows what danger he's in
10:49you are going well clearly dr watson is the person to consult in this matter no mr holmes no there
10:55is much more to it than that there is mr calvert and smith calvert and smith victor's cousin
11:05he is a malign influence i am sure he has driven victor to this and i am certain he has
11:11done it for
11:40his own ends
11:42how can it be well i think you've had your head turned by a pretty woman thank you oh yes
11:51what about
11:52culverton smith i looked him up culverton smith did some important medical work while he was in the east
11:58he pushed back the boundaries of science however he was obliged to publish his findings at his own expense
12:10why he's an amateur and the professionals are jealous well i can see why he interests you
12:30ah your mystery guests who are they i couldn't let colonel karnak could be the only celebrity
12:38i don't want him at our table because he's a celebrity my darling it's just that he's horribly rich
12:44or rather his wife is and they bank with the oxford and lombard personally i can't think of anything
12:51worse than hunting stories all through dinner nor i so i persuaded a rather more interesting hunter to join us
12:59who is it don't tease addy
13:03who is it don't tease me
13:07i say that is something of a coup
13:11well done
13:14oh look culverton smith's here too i'm so glad he felt able to invite him again addy darling
13:20look at him anyone would think somebody was his i do dislike it
13:41mr sherlock holmes yeah culverton smith dear adelaide promised me a surprise guest
13:48i feared it might be somebody who was famous for being famous someone of your distinction
13:52i had not expected at all not i one of yours mine i make no claims to distinction mr holmes
14:00you are too modest your account of the pathology of the sumatran river fever is a masterpiece
14:08thank you thank you for a lure to work of course you have to make the animal believe it's safe
14:14now
14:15that's all very well the animals involved however have a highly developed sense of danger i'm sure mr
14:21holmes must have that sense too do you mr holmes yes i see it yes you mean that the detective
14:30could
14:30be said to move in a world of predators and victims oh we all do that carl even humble family
14:36solicitors
14:39yes and you would have enemies mr holmes would you not yes yes it would take something i dare
14:46say to bring mr holmes onto a lure and dispatch him it would take careful study of his habits
14:53but a half-light shot or worse it might even be necessary to follow him up to his lair even
15:01bertram be quiet
15:24you're not eating mr holmes with so much to observe food becomes a secondary importance
15:34what have you observed so far courage fever
15:42gluttony acute irritation envy
15:49wit intelligence i mean just the usual vices and virtues with any large english country
15:56this is very good
16:08do you know the game of shove happening well it's similar i call this one rug skatering
16:19my more serious gambling friends the stockbroking fraternity that is to say
16:23i've introduced it to their establishments to the fury of their wives it is agreed however that the
16:30authentic summary version is best
16:37and she never wore them at all
16:41will the men be mortified if we don't cheer them on at their silly games i dare say they will
16:46there's almost a reason for not doing it
16:50but for the sake of harmony we indulge little boys
17:03it's
17:03here
17:08our host has again out jumped all his questions
17:11so the lawyer takes the pot
17:15Well done, Charles.
17:16My turn now.
17:21Faith for sure, gentlemen.
17:22I should halve your estimates of last time.
17:37Oh, ma.
17:43It's quite all right.
17:43My children.
17:44It's quite all right.
17:48Oh, ma.
17:57What is wrong with papa?
18:00When he hugged me, he felt horrid.
18:04He felt awkward and shivery.
18:08What do you mean by that, darling?
18:10He felt as if he was dead.
18:13You swallowed it.
18:18I'll fer竹.
18:25I don't know.
18:26I'm sorry.
18:34I don't know.
18:39I just looked all up.
18:41I wonder.
21:07Smith?
21:11Poor fellow.
21:12I could do nothing for him, Mr. Holmes.
21:15Not even I.
21:18The nursing was all right, too.
21:21A tragic business.
21:23It was satisfying upon one point.
21:25Of course.
21:26This disease, do you know what it was?
21:29All the signs point to that class of fevers in which the Sumatran River fever is the most deadly.
21:37It was not necessarily that, however.
21:39Or something very like it.
21:41I have advised that the poor fellow's body is handled with extreme care.
21:46It is a disease transmitted through broken skin, you see.
21:49They cannot be too careful.
21:53How did Savage come by such a thing?
21:56I can rely on your discretion.
22:00Of course.
22:01I understand Savage sometimes frequented.
22:05Well, that's to say his affairs took him to a part of Rotherhithe, inhabited mostly by Chinese and Lascars.
22:12He must have picked it up there.
22:14The authorities in Rotherhithe must be informed.
22:17They will be.
22:18Whether the measures they take turn out to be appropriate is another matter.
22:21Most institutions, I'm afraid, are run by the criminally lazy.
22:25I'm a Penrose Fisher and the director of Little Edward Ica.
22:29I'm grateful for your interest, Mr. Holmes.
22:32Poor Adelaide.
22:33This will hit her very hard.
22:57I'm afraid, Mr. Holmes.
23:27Leave Somerly.
23:30I must leave Somerly.
23:33As soon as will is proved, Calverton Smith is within his rights to ask you to go.
23:38I'm very sorry, Adelaide.
23:41All this has its origins in Sir Bernard's will.
23:44Partly I blame myself.
23:46This entailment to Victor Zelda's cousin of the house and the rest of it is something that I...
23:50The rest of it?
23:53The income from the Berkshire estate.
23:56That will go to him, too?
23:58Yes.
24:00Dear God.
24:02What is left?
24:04Enough for you to live modestly and respectably.
24:09You will not be able to continue as you have done.
24:12No.
24:13I see.
24:16As I say, I had asked Victor many times to change the terms of the entail to favour you in
24:22your lifetime.
24:23It would have been legal, of course, and easily done, but...
24:29Victor was young.
24:30Surely.
24:32Coverton Smith will not exercise his right to evict Mrs. Savage.
24:36He might.
24:37Why do you think that?
24:38He's been in touch.
24:39He seems to know the main dispositions of the will.
24:42He talked of the estate income being put to a proper use, whatever that meant.
24:47He seemed to think that Adelaide would be able to rely on her family.
24:51They haven't the means.
24:53When he knows that, he must relent.
24:55I doubt it.
24:57He has wanted something like this to happen ever since he came into our lives.
25:02He encouraged all that was weakest in Victor in the hope of some disaster.
25:08This is a triumph for him.
25:13It may be worth talking to him, Adelaide.
25:17I suppose so.
25:19If you could bring yourself to plead with him.
25:26For the children, I will do even that.
25:33Oh, Percy, do blow your nose.
25:36Now, remember, all this happened nine days ago.
25:39That was the day when the Queen entertained the Sultan of Kalipur
25:44and Frivolous won the Birkenhead Stakes.
25:48Goodwood.
25:49Right.
25:53Harry, where are your boots?
25:56Oh, I see.
25:57Well, then, off to all the hives.
25:59Ah!
26:01Good luck.
26:02Good luck.
26:26There, Hermes.
26:29That is a list of every blemish I could find on the skin surface.
26:33I presume you were seeking the means of transmission.
26:35Yes.
26:37Through broken skin.
26:38That is how Carlton Smith believes it was transmitted.
26:43Well, his opinion is worth knowing, certainly.
26:50What do you think of him, Fisher?
26:54He is a friend of yours?
26:55Not at all.
26:55I hardly know him.
26:57I have read a couple of his papers, that's all.
27:02Well, I think his work, in parts, brilliant.
27:09If he has a fault, it is that he can accept no criticism whatsoever.
27:14I did find an insect bite, but no other puncture of the skin at all.
27:18I even looked inside the mouth.
27:20Seems clear that no human agency was involved.
27:24I assume you're investigating the possibility of this disease having been passed on deliberately.
27:30Well, what a unique delight to meet a man with a mind as logical as yours.
27:40Is this him?
27:41Yes.
27:42Mr. Holmes?
27:43Ah!
27:44Well, then!
27:45You are?
27:46Er, Getgrave.
27:48John Getgrave.
27:50Holmes.
27:53This way.
27:57Recognise him soon as I see the newspaper.
28:00That's him, all right.
28:01How did you come to be acting for him?
28:04Advert.
28:05Gentleman of discretion required, with knowledge of doc etiquette.
28:09Doc etiquette?
28:10For knowing your way round the poppy houses.
28:13Opium.
28:14Well, I knew one or two of the, er, better places.
28:18Was it not just been placed by Savage?
28:20No.
28:21Who, then?
28:22I don't know.
28:23Mr. Getgrave, you wouldn't lie to me, would you?
28:27No, no.
28:28It was some fellow I met in a rented office.
28:30It's a striven for me.
28:32Well, I can't.
28:34Well, what I mean is, I never saw the fellow.
28:38He didn't mean me to.
28:39He kept a light shining in my eyes all the time.
28:43Indeed.
28:44When was this?
28:45The 14th.
28:46He paid, all right.
28:48He told me I was to be contacted.
28:50And I was.
28:52To meet him.
28:54What happened to him?
28:55I don't want any trouble.
28:56That's why I come to you.
28:57Where did you take him?
28:59Uh, house in Duke's alley.
29:02It's a good place.
29:03Good?
29:04Oh.
29:04Never had any problems there.
29:06Good place.
29:08What happened to him?
29:09Oh, I'm sorry.
29:13Thank you, Mr. Gedray, for your trouble.
29:16Any time, Mr. Holmes, any time.
29:18Oh, generous.
29:19That is, uh, generous.
29:21I will need a guide.
29:23In Rotherhithe.
29:25You want the best places.
29:26I'm your man.
29:27Look no further.
29:28Tomorrow morning.
29:3010.30.
29:32Done.
29:35The, uh, the Red Slipper Club.
29:39Ask for, uh, Carter.
29:42Frank Carter.
29:44Will that be you, Mr. Gedray?
29:51Mrs. Watson?
29:53Dr. Watson may be staying for dinner.
29:59Now, Watson.
30:00Culverton Smith means to throw Mrs. Savage and her children out of Summerley House.
30:04How is he able to do that?
30:05The house is entailed to him an old will which has never been revised.
30:09Well, that is interesting.
30:10You know what this means?
30:11It means that Culverton Smith had a motive for doing away with his cousin.
30:16Savage is dead.
30:18Killed by a disease in which Culverton Smith was the acknowledged expert.
30:24No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
30:26Are you deliberately trying to misunderstand me?
30:28You have pointed out a remarkable coincidence, that is all.
30:33But...
30:33No...
30:34No...
30:34No...
30:35Inferences can be drawn from him.
30:36We cannot allow Mrs. Savage to be thrown into the street by this fellow.
30:39We may have to.
31:28It must have been Carverton Smith who rented the office.
31:31I dare say, but it proves nothing.
31:34There must be a way of stopping at home, surely.
31:37No.
31:38I doubt it more and more.
31:43Suppose you were convinced of his guilt.
31:46What would you do then?
31:47Do you know my reference? I would gain entry to the house.
31:50Then that's what I shall do.
31:51You don't have to come.
31:54Nevertheless, I shall.
31:55You've already had your head turned.
31:58I must make sure you don't get your neck broken as well.
32:05Once poor Savage had been convinced that opium would open the door to the mysteries of the poetic craft,
32:12Coverton Smith would have had him in his power, wouldn't he?
32:15He traded on Savage's sense of guilt.
32:18He knew that Savage would want to continue experimenting with the drug far away from somebody.
32:24What you have to face, Watson, is that Savage's catching the disease in Rotherhithe is entirely plausible.
32:32The coincidence that Smith's expertise in the matter is exactly that.
32:39A coincidence.
32:41You can't hang a man on coincidence.
33:00A coincidence.
33:04Mom?
33:06Mom?
33:08We have reason to believe that, as a matter of fact, you are trespassing.
33:23Sergeant.
33:25I'm sure you're as aware as I am with the laws of trespass in this country.
33:28I'm most curious, not to say odd.
33:32I should know.
33:35I have responsibility for hundreds of acres, which are about to be stolen from me through legal trickery.
33:45I am that man, a man who preyed on my husband like some bloated parasite, corrupted him and drove him
34:00to his death.
34:01Then now, now he will not speak to the woman he has widowed!
34:09Of course he won't!
34:11Of course he won't!
34:13He knows he has no justice on his side!
34:18Merely code legality!
34:25Benson!
34:26Mrs Savage should now return to Summerley House.
34:29Yes, sir.
34:33Ma'am, you have my assurance.
34:36I will pursue Carverton Smith.
34:39I will not rest until he has renounced his plans to ruin you.
34:44And Mr Holmes?
34:47I see.
34:48I do not blame him.
34:51He only sees it as the world sees it.
34:55Unfortunate and cold-hearted on Mr Smith's spot, perhaps.
34:59But no case to answer.
35:03No case to answer.
35:09Smith!
35:14Smith!
35:17Ah!
35:19It is a singular coincidence, is it not, that you should inherit so much from the man who dies of
35:30a disease upon which you are the sole expert?
35:35Well!
35:42Coincidence bordering upon the unbelievable!
35:46Let me tell you!
35:49The doors of your profession,
35:54which have been closed to you,
35:56will now be locked and bolted against you!
36:05It is my mission!
36:32Yes?
36:35The post, Mr Holmes!
36:50You're a decent tobacco.
36:52Tell him I call I'll.
37:00Hmm.
37:07Mrs Sarge, I know you will be sensible enough not to come to rely on this, but it will help
37:13you through these difficult days.
37:15Thank you, Doctor.
37:24Doctor!
37:25You must come quickly!
37:26It's Mr Holmes!
37:28Oh, Mr Holmes!
37:28Yes!
37:31Why didn't you call me sooner?
37:33But he wouldn't give me leave!
37:35So I said, permission or no, I am!
37:38And he said, well, let him be watched then.
37:41Oh, Doctor!
37:43I think he's dying!
37:45Now, now, Mrs Hudson, I'm sure it's not as bad as you fear.
37:49But he won't let me leave!
37:51He hasn't eaten the scrap!
37:54He has had plenty to drink, I just...
37:56He can't notice.
37:57Drop us past his lips these three days.
38:00And he's been to Rotherhithe.
38:01He thinks he caught the fever there.
38:04He's dying, Doctor!
38:05He's dying!
38:10He's dying!
38:12Holmes?
38:19Holmes!
38:24Watson, we have fallen upon bad times.
38:26My dear fellow!
38:27Stand back!
38:28Please stand right back!
38:29I'll have you thrown out of the house.
38:31I only wish to help.
38:32The best thing we can do to help is to do as you're told.
38:35Of course.
38:36Are you wrong?
38:38What about Carlton Smith?
38:41Maybe not like the man, but he's no murderer.
38:43The river fever is abroad in Rotherhithe.
38:46Holmes, we must get you to hospital at once.
38:49God, now give your distance, please!
38:51Don't you see this thing is contagious?
38:53Do you think such a consideration weighs with me?
38:56Give your distance!
38:59This could run through London!
39:06Well, if there are bivalves, presumably there are monovulves.
39:19It's tramps!
39:21Holmes?
39:26Well, if I'm to have a doctor, at least let me have someone in whom I have confidence.
39:32You have none in me.
39:33Your friendship, yes, but I mean you're only a general practitioner with mediocre qualifications.
39:39That remark is unworthy of you, Holmes.
39:42It shows me very clearly the state of your nerves.
39:44I demonstrate your ignorance.
39:46What do you know that's happened, Oly Fever?
39:48What do you know that Black Formosal Corruption?
39:51I have never heard of either.
39:52There are strange pathological disorders in the East.
39:56If you have no faith in me, let me fetch Jasper Mead.
39:58Penrose Fisher Ainschair here is in London.
40:00Let me fetch him!
40:02No, it's only one man who can help me.
40:06The man we have maligned.
40:09Carverton Smith, do you believe he would help?
40:11He must.
40:14It is my only chance.
40:20Oysters.
40:22No.
40:24They do breed, don't they?
40:27I cannot think but the whole bed of the ocean is one solid mass of oysters.
40:35Holmes.
40:37Can you hear me?
40:40I'm going for Carverton Smith this instant.
40:45Then go.
40:47I'm to bring him back here with me.
40:49Oh, he is the emperor of river fevers.
40:54Of course you must persuade him, but you must return alone.
40:59Any excuse not to come with him?
41:03Don't I apologize?
41:05I do.
41:07Don't fail me, Watson.
41:10Of course not.
41:15And what of rivers?
41:19Are there no natural enemies to limit the increase of these creatures?
41:27It's horrible.
41:30Horrible.
41:44It's essential that I see Mr. Carverton Smith.
41:46Mr. Carverton Smith, sir, does not appreciate being disturbed during his hours of study. Just a minute, sir. You can't
41:52just...
41:58You can't just walk in, sir.
42:08Ah, Smith.
42:10What the devil do you mean by this, sir?
42:12I've come from Sherlock Holmes.
42:15He is desperately ill, and he begs you to come to him.
42:19Why? You are a physician. Tend him yourself?
42:22He believes that you are the only man who can save him.
42:26Save him?
42:28I beg you to come.
42:30What has he contracted?
42:32He thinks it is the fever which killed your cousin.
42:35How did he come by it?
42:36He has been in rather high.
42:38Oh.
42:40I'm sorry to hear this.
42:43I hope you are wrong.
42:46Despite his insulting behavior the other day, I have every respect for his talents.
42:51He is an amateur of crime, as I am of disease.
42:55For him, the villain.
42:57For me, the microbe.
43:01Here are my prisoners.
43:03Among these gelatin cultivations, some of the worst offenders in the world are doing time.
43:09Please, please, there is no time to lose. He is desperately ill.
43:12Of what consequence is that to me?
43:16He maligned me in the most outrageous manner.
43:18He regrets it. He was most insistent upon that point.
43:20He knows that the fever was abroad in Rotherhithe.
43:27How long has he been ill?
43:28Three days.
43:30Is he delirious?
43:31Sometimes seriously so.
43:33I will come with you at once.
43:35I have another appointment, sir.
43:37Very well, I shall go alone.
43:38Staples!
43:38You can rely upon my being there in half an hour at most.
43:44Did you see him?
43:45Yes, he's coming.
43:46Oh, I know the best of messages.
43:48He can disappear from the scene now.
43:51I should state he hears opinion, Holmes. I really should.
43:53No, he's morbidly sensitive. We must let him practice his arts alone.
43:57My dear, Holmes, I should...
43:58That's the doctor.
44:00It's him.
44:01Hide!
44:02Hide!
44:03Pick your gun of me!
44:12Pick your gun of me!
44:15Pick your gun of me!
44:24Oh, he's crying, Holmes.
44:27Oh, he's crying!
44:27Oh, he's crying!
44:29Holmes?
44:53Holmes?
44:55Oh, Smith, I hardly tend to hope.
44:58I should imagine not.
45:00Yet, you see, I am here.
45:02Coals of fire, Holmes, coals of fire.
45:05It's noble.
45:06You know what is wrong with you?
45:08Yes.
45:08You recognize the symptoms?
45:10Yes, quite well.
45:11Three days with you, then?
45:13Yes.
45:13You have lasted well.
45:15With Victor, it was all over by now.
45:17I have noticed this.
45:18The more mature coolies seemed to last longer.
45:22Water, please. Could I have some water?
45:23Oh, the final thirst.
45:26You're near the end.
45:34Please help me.
45:35Help me if you can.
45:37I can.
45:39I could champion your cause.
45:42My cause?
45:43Your work.
45:44It deserves to be trumpeted.
45:46I could be a service.
45:47I doubt it.
45:49Thanks to you, the damage done to my reputation is irreparable.
45:54You mean Victor Savage or Carson?
45:57No, I'd forgotten that.
46:00Did you?
46:01Were you involved?
46:02I couldn't be sure.
46:09The great detective couldn't be sure.
46:13Well, it doesn't matter to me if you know how Savage died.
46:16I don't see you in the witness box.
46:18Quite another sort of box.
46:25I put an infected mosquito to his neck while he was in an opiate stupor.
46:32There.
46:35But you.
46:37How did you come to contract it?
46:40That fellow who came for me told me you thought you'd caught it in Rotherhithe.
46:45Oh, I could only account for it, sir.
46:47Cast your mind back.
46:49Oh, God!
46:50Cramps?
46:51Yes!
46:52Cramps!
46:52Help me!
46:53I will.
46:54The pain!
46:56Yes.
46:57The coolies used to do some squealing before the end.
47:01Well, now.
47:06A few days before your symptoms began, did you receive anything by post?
47:12I can't think.
47:13A parcel?
47:14No.
47:15You did.
47:16Only a sample of some tobacco.
47:19That's right.
47:20Did you notice the construction of the box?
47:23Under the tobacco, two small tacks stuck out.
47:27You didn't see them?
47:32They were infected.
47:36You fool.
47:38You would tangle with me and now you are finished.
47:44The box.
47:46The box.
47:48Where is it?
47:52Where is it?
48:01Turn up the gas.
48:03The shadows.
48:04The shadows begin to lengthen, do they?
48:06Yes.
48:06I'll do that.
48:13I'd prefer to see you die in the light.
48:26There it is.
48:29Your last shred of evidence.
48:32Well, well.
48:34Is there any other little service I can do you, my friend?
48:37Imagine the cigarette would be most welcome.
48:56Three days without food and water is one thing.
49:00But to be without tobacco, I have found most irksome.
49:04Come in, Inspector.
49:09By turning up the gas, Smith was good enough to give our signal himself.
49:16This is the self-confessed murderer of Victor Savage.
49:20You may lie as you like, Holmes.
49:22You have no corroboration for your insane suspicions.
49:25What?
49:27He has a box behind his back.
49:30Treat it very gingerly.
49:32And don't open it!
49:34Damn you.
49:36Stop it!
49:36Damn you!
49:37Damn you!
50:02The best way of acting a part successfully is to be it.
50:06It's the Vaseline.
50:07For the forehead.
50:10Belladonna in the eye.
50:11Mm-hmm.
50:13Beeswax.
50:14Encrustation around the lips.
50:17Why...
50:18Why wouldn't you let me know when in truth there was no infection?
50:22Can you imagine that I have no respect for your medical talents?
50:26At six feet, I could deceive you.
50:29But any closer...
50:32With your astute judgment...
50:33No, no, no, no, no, no.
50:35No, it was essential...
50:37That you and Mrs Hudson believed me to be at death's door.
50:41Otherwise, Smith would have smelt a rat.
50:44Rats!
50:45Beeswax!
50:47Mr Holmes, you are the very worst tenant in London!
50:51Come on!
51:01Georgie says he's going to guard the house.
51:03Oh, they're fine children, Mrs...
51:05They're little angels.
51:07We're usually known as little savages!
51:15Thank you, Dr Watson, for letting us keep our home.
51:19Oh, thank you, my dear. I'd like to take the credit, but...
51:23It belongs to Mr Holmes.
51:37We are very grateful to you, sir.
51:43My privilege, Miss Savage.
51:45Thank you, sir.
51:49See you later.
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