:23:01
There is so little
that I can add to her words.
:23:06
There is so little anyone can add.
:23:09
Possibly, I'm prejudiced
because she's my aunt.
:23:12
I don't think so.
:23:13
Her life and her work
speak eloquently enough.
:23:17
Twenty years ago,
she was the youngest leader...
:23:19
...in the feminist movement.
:23:21
Today she's a tremendous force
in the battle...
:23:24
...to preserve and extend democracy.
:23:28
Let us draw from her the inspiration
to use the freedom we have won...
:23:32
...to defend the freedom of all.
:24:29
- Well...
- Miss Harding.
:24:35
You'd better park the car
and meet us at gate 2.
:24:41
It made me feel very strange,
having Tess call me "aunt."
:24:44
I've come to regard myself
so completely as her mother.
:24:48
See, my sister died
when Tess was a little baby.
:24:50
- Tess was once a baby?
- To begin with.
:24:53
She and her father were in China.
:24:55
I went out to take care of her.
And him.
:24:57
- Interesting place, China.
- Yes.
:24:59
Especially if you're a maiden aunt
teaching a Chinese nurse...