Peter Ibbetson
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:16:01
And you're going
to be English, too.

:16:04
An English gentleman
that I shall be proud of.

:16:07
I have it. Peter!
:16:10
Yes, your name
shall be Peter.

:16:13
Yes.
:16:14
Yes. Peter.
:16:16
You may take my family name
and be Peter Forsythe,

:16:19
or you can take
your mother's name.

:16:22
I'll take my mother's name.
:16:24
Very well, then.
:16:25
From now on, your name shall
be Peter lbbetson.

:17:07
Leaving early, huh?
:17:08
Yes, but I'm leaving
by Greenwich time,

:17:11
not Slade's time.
:17:12
It's five minutes
to six now.

:17:13
Fast in the morning
and slow at night.

:17:18
What difference does it make
what time it is?

:17:20
What's that?
:17:22
Nothing... nothing.
:17:24
Look here, Peter,
:17:25
why do you keep saying
things like that for?

:17:27
As if you had
some kind of joke

:17:29
that no one else knew?
:17:30
No reason,
no reason at all.

:17:32
You know,
:17:33
I think there's
something wrong with you.

:17:35
Maybe you should come along
with us oftener and forget it.

:17:38
Where?
:17:39
Well, there's all London
and the whole night.

:17:41
We begin with gin bitters
and barmaids,

:17:44
and end up with
an aching head.

:17:45
What's wrong with that?
:17:46
I don't know.
:17:48
Well, wh-what else
is there to do?

:17:49
Nothing.
:17:50
Well, I'd rather have
barmaids and gin
than nothing.

:17:52
I'd rather have nothing.
Although I give you,

:17:54
it's better than
having an uncle

:17:56
that talks of nothing
but hocks and spavins!

:17:58
There he goes again!
:17:59
Well, have it your own way.

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