:57:00
l can remember the day we took it
like it was yesterday...
:57:03
and the trouble we had
puttin' the collar on him.
:57:05
- Well, Ma, where are we gonna hang him?
- Hang him?
:57:08
You'll do no such. He's gonna
spend the rest
of his days on this organ.
:57:12
lf he only could have seen it himself.
:57:15
lsn't he beautiful?
l want the baby to see it.
:57:22
Look, that's
your grandpa.
:57:25
Aw, Pat,
would you believe it?
:57:29
And Bob
just a baby himself.
:57:32
lf you turn out half as good as the blood
that's in you, l'll not complain.
:57:36
You know, Ma,
it looks like Pa had...
:57:39
sort of a roving eye
for the ladies.
:57:41
l'll thank you to keep
a civil tongue in your head.
:57:44
Roving eye, ha!
l'd like to catch him.
:57:46
Look.
:57:50
You're so good to me, the lot of you.
You'll have me in tears.
:57:54
- Ma. Beer always did make you cry.
- Listen to him.
:57:57
We'll play him a tune,
his favorite one.
:58:00
- Come on, Ma, and play it.
- Come on, the four of you.
:58:03
We'll show him a thing or two.
The O'Learys against the world.
:58:06
- The O'Learys against the world!
- We will. Come on, Ma.
:58:39
You should've seen your father dance,
as light as a canary...
:58:42
and stealing a kiss
before you could shut your eyes.
:58:44
And the fair Molly Callahan
loving it, l'm thinking.
:58:46
And why shouldn't l
be loving it?
:58:48
Himself as fine a man as ever stood up
with a girl in front of an altar.
:58:52
And that's what
you should be doin'.
:58:54
- That's what l was telling him today.
- ls it herself, you mean?
:58:57
l met Miss Fawcett. She's a fine woman.
You oughta know her.