1:03:01
Is this a leap year, by any chance?
1:03:04
I don't know, and I don't care.
1:03:06
- I've said it and I mean it.
- I'll have to think it over.
1:03:09
Anyway, don't you think
that I might come here in the holidays...
1:03:13
and sort of take care of you?
1:03:15
- What would Mother say?
- Jill? She wouldn't mind.
1:03:17
- She loves to get rid of me.
- Kitty!
1:03:20
You'll write to me, won't you?
1:03:22
- Kitty!
- Will you?
1:03:24
All right, if you want me to.
1:03:26
Here I am, waiting.
1:03:28
Goodbye, Charles. Goodbye, Sheldon.
1:03:30
- I've simply got to fly.
- Goodbye, my dear.
1:03:32
- Lovely to see you. Come along, Kitty!
- Goodbye.
1:03:36
- Goodbye, Kitty.
- Goodbye, Uncle Charles.
1:03:39
Thanks for asking me
to come and visit you in the holidays.
1:04:09
- Will you be dining at home, sir?
- Yes, I suppose so.
1:04:12
- Alone, sir?
- There's no one else, is there?
1:04:14
I thought perhaps you might like to ask
the vicar or Dr. Hampstead.
1:04:18
I don't think so, Sheldon. Thank you.
1:04:21
I'm afraid you'll be very lonely
in this great house.
1:04:24
May one ask, sir,
have you any plans for the future?
1:04:28
No. I might go back to Cambridge.
1:04:31
I never got my degree.
1:04:33
I might take a fling at writing.
I always wanted to, if you remember.
1:04:41
I wonder what he would have
liked me to do.
1:04:44
I think he always wanted you to carry on
at Rainier's where he left off, sir.
1:04:48
But Mr. Chetwynd
is head of Rainier's now.
1:04:50
Yes, now, sir, but... We shall see.
1:04:55
In any case, I'm not a businessman.
1:04:58
- Have you ever tried, sir?
- No.