:33:01
How could you find time
for all of that?
:33:04
I could cook while you're reading,
you see?
:33:09
- I think someone more mature...
- Let me try. I'd love to work for you.
:33:14
It'd be a mental holiday for me. You
only need a cook until your man arrives.
:33:18
It'd be a shame
to hire a woman temporarily.
:33:22
It doesn't matter to me. I'm a
teacher and this is my summer vacation.
:33:26
Don't you agree with me?
:33:28
You'll never regret this move.
:33:33
Your clothes, Miss Shelley.
We got them here as quick as we could.
:33:39
Take them right upstairs.
First door to the right.
:33:42
Yes, ma'am.
:33:45
I'll get out of these pyjamas.
Collect your thoughts.
:33:49
When I come down,
you can plunge right into work.
:34:13
The beginning is always
a little difficult.
:34:17
Yes, sir.
:34:19
Jot down this title:
:34:21
The Relation of Literature to
Legislation in 18th-Century England.
:34:27
Yes, sir.
:34:28
The effects...
:34:30
There's no need to say "Yes, sir."
:34:33
No, sir.
:34:38
The effects of literature
upon legislation...
:34:43
...is a study that has long claimed
the interests of scientists...
:34:47
...social scientists...
:34:50
...in every country in the world.
:34:55
The law is the sum of the experience
of civilized man...