:44:04
Let's stay out here, shaII we?
:44:06
-The moonIight's so IoveIy.
-Yes.
:44:12
I've spent two evenings wanting to come...
:44:14
...but a coupIe of dinners interfered,
Iarge and Iong dinners.
:44:17
You have been in a sociaI whirI,
Mr. RusseII.
:44:20
I envy you.
:44:22
Father's iIIness has simpIy tied me
to the house...
:44:25
...and everyone has to come here.
:44:27
That is, if they want to see me.
:44:30
The worst of it is that the poor thing
has to have peace and quiet...
:44:33
...and I must entertain on the porch,
as I'm doing tonight.
:44:36
Though, of course,
now there's just the two of us.
:44:39
I'm gIad there's just the two of us.
I wanted to taIk to you aIone, Miss Adams.
:44:43
Miss Adams, how formaI.
:44:47
What shaII we taIk about, Arthur?
:44:49
About you.
:44:51
No. Don't Iet's taIk about me.
Let's taIk about you.
:44:55
What kind of man are you?
:44:57
I've often wondered.
What kind of girI are you?
:45:00
Don't you remember? I toId you.
:45:03
I'm just me.
:45:05
But who is that?
:45:06
I've often wondered.
:45:09
You know, the other day
when you waIked home with me...
:45:13
...I got to wondering
what I wanted you to think of me...
:45:16
...in case I shouId ever happen
to see you again.
:45:19
What did you decide?
:45:21
I decided I shouId probabIy never dare
to be just myseIf with you.
:45:25
Not if I cared
to have you want to see me again...
:45:29
...and yet, here I am,
just being myseIf, after aII.
:45:37
AIice, I'd Iike to see you pretty often,
if you'II Iet me.
:45:39
WiII you?
:45:41
WeII?
:45:43
Lean toward me a IittIe.
:45:44
Yes!
:45:45
Now, when wiII it be?
I mean, when wiII I see you again?
:45:49
Anytime.
:45:51
You're going to Henrietta's dance,
aren't you?
:45:56
You mean Henrietta Lamb?