:09:00
	Thank you, Martha.
:09:01
	Darling, I've got so much to do.
:09:03
	You have the big specialist
examine her.
:09:08
	Goodbye, children.
:09:23
	Careful.
:09:27
	No, I'm sorry, Dr. Parsons,
I'm afraid it would be useless.
:09:30
	Dr. Steele has closed
his office, you know.
:09:33
	Permanently.
No, he's not coming back.
:09:35
	- You're welcome.
- Sounds good, eh, Wainwright?
:09:38
	- I'm gonna cry in a minute.
- I gotta be out in 45 minutes.
:09:41
	What shall I do
with this case of Dr. Parsons'?
:09:43
	He's worried. He asked me
to hold you here by force if necessary.
:09:47
	You tell Dr. Parsons I waited
nine years to catch this train.
:09:50
	I'm not gonna miss it just because
some nitwit fell off her horse.
:09:53
	Listen to this:
:09:55
	"Miss Judith Traherne, daughter of the
late sportsman and wire manufacturer."
:09:58
	- Imagine putting that in a case history.
- You have Dr. Carter waiting for you.
:10:06
	Say, I'm awfully sorry, doctor. I believe
when I left, you were calling me an idiot.
:10:10
	The boys at the club
were talking about you.
:10:13
	- They won't believe it.
- What?
:10:14
	A man in your position
giving up a practice like this.
:10:18
	Joe, what do you know
about brain surgery?
:10:20
	Well, I think if I had the surgical courage,
I'd be in it.
:10:24
	To go inside a human's skull...
:10:25
	...and tinker with the machinery
that makes the whole works go.
:10:28
	- That is romance, isn't it?
- Romance, huh?
:10:30
	There's your romance.
:10:33
	- Florist bill?
- Yes.
:10:35
	Flowers for my last patient.
He was a gifted young composer.
:10:39
	The night before the operation,
he started a new composition.
:10:42
	He didn't finish it.
:10:44
	- Maybe you read about it in the papers.
- Yes.
:10:46
	The operation was a brilliant success.
But the patient just happened to die.
:10:52
	- That's a pretty old joke, Fred.
- Is it?
:10:54
	Look at any brain surgeon's
mortality rate...
:10:56
	...you'll find out
just how unfunny it is.
:10:59
	Are you quitting because
you've lost your nerve?