On the Waterfront
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:36:05
Hey, you, mac.
:36:08
Two Glockenheimers and two for chasers.
:36:12
-Did you see the fight last night?
-No.

:36:15
A kid named Riley, both hands.
Like you used to do.

:36:20
I hope he got better dice than me.
:36:26
Were you really a prizefighter?
:36:29
I used to be.
:36:32
How did you get interested in that?
:36:34
I don't know. I had to scrap all my life,
I might as well get paid for it.

:36:40
When I was a kid
my old man got bumped off.

:36:43
Never mind how.
Then they stuck Charley and me...

:36:49
...in a dump they call a ''children's home.''
:36:53
Boy, that was some home.
:36:56
Anyhow, I ran away from there
and fought in the club smokers...

:36:59
...and peddled papers and Johnny Friendly
bought a piece of me.

:37:02
Bought a piece of you?
:37:04
Yes. Then...
:37:08
...I was going pretty good there for awhile.
:37:11
And after that....
:37:16
What do you really care, am I right?
:37:21
Shouldn't everybody care about
everybody else?

:37:27
Boy, what a fruitcake you are.
:37:30
I mean, isn't everybody
a part of everybody else?

:37:33
And you really believe that drool?
:37:35
Yes, I do.
:37:39
Here we are. One for the lady
and for the gent.

:37:44
Here's to the first one,
I hope it ain't the last.

:37:49
Go ahead.
:37:56
No, not like that. One hum.

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