Elephant Walk
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1:10:01
Well, that's finished.
I'm telling you for the last time.

1:10:04
This is no longer Tom Wiley's
Elephant Walk.

1:10:06
This is John's home, and mine.
1:10:09
Now get out of here.
1:10:11
Very well, Mrs. Wiley.
1:10:35
- Good morning, John.
- Where are my friends?

1:10:42
- I asked them to leave.
- Why?

1:10:46
Because I don't believe
they are your friends.

1:10:49
They're a lot of drunks
who are trying to take advantage of you.

1:10:52
Now, listen...
1:10:53
these drunks, as you call them,
work harder than dogs all the week.

1:10:56
They go for months without taking a drink...
1:10:58
and you object
to them coming here and relaxing?

1:11:01
Please, John. Let's not quarrel. I'm sorry.
1:11:03
There's been a tradition in this house...
1:11:05
of hospitality for over 50 years,
which you see fit to change in a night.

1:11:10
I can't talk to you, can I?
1:11:12
The man I married in England
I could talk to...

1:11:15
but you're not that man.
1:11:17
- You're Tom Wiley's son.
- I see, it's my father's fault, is it?

1:11:21
Isn't it?
1:11:23
You hate him, don't you? You always have.
1:11:26
No, I don't hate him. I only...
1:11:30
Say it.
1:11:32
I hate what he's doing to you,
the way he's ruling you from his grave...

1:11:37
making you like him...
1:11:39
so he can preserve his house,
his traditions, his world.

1:11:43
Ruth, stop it!
1:11:46
Foolish girl. Foolish and very young.
1:11:50
Am I, John?
1:11:52
I should never have brought you here.
1:11:56
Maybe you're right,
because I know something now...


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