:42:00
You go when I tell you to go.
Remember that.
:42:03
-I'll try.
-See, he's right.
:42:06
You can't go.
You couldn't do that to us.
:42:08
Lower the bridge, open the gates!
Charles Waterman is here!
:42:13
-lt must be Thursday.
-Speaks poetry and borrows money.
:42:18
-The better to drink brandy.
-Ready to pay homage to an immortal!
:42:22
Fair princess, most noble princes, I
bring greetings f rom a humble peasant.
:42:28
Welcome, thespian.
:42:30
There he goes again.
He can never figure that step out.
:42:35
-You may arise, thespian.
-Easier said than done.
:42:38
You've come at the wrong time.
We were putting Dix to bed.
:42:42
Do me the honour
and let me prepare him f or repose.
:42:45
To secure pleasant slumbers,
I shall recite to him.
:42:50
-Wouldn't you rather have a brandy?
-Most beautif ul words in English.
:42:54
Come, royal boy.
:42:57
When in disgrace
With fortune and men's eyes
:43:01
I all alone beweep my outcast state
:43:05
And trouble deaf heaven
With my bootless cries
:43:10
And look upon myself and curse my fate
:43:15
Really, you must stop snooping!
:43:18
Just a few pages.
I won't say a word.
:43:20
-He'll show you when it's finished.
-How many pages?
:43:24
-Many.
-ls he sticking close to the book?
:43:27
I don't know. I didn't read the book.
:43:33
Miss Gray,
there's a man upstairs to see you.
:43:36
Thank you, Effie. Don't vacuum.
Mr. Steele's just gone to sleep.
:43:40
-Well, I gotta vacuum sometime.
-By all the bulls of Bashan!
:43:45
If anyone else did it, I would shout,
" lgnorant swine!"
:43:49
I am perplex ed. As I said:
:43:51
" From sullen earth sings hymns at
heaven's gate, " he began to snore.
:43:55
There's no hope, no hope at all.