High Society
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:51:01
Actually, l don't know who it
concerns except your father.

:51:04
That is very wise of you, Margaret.
What most wives don't seem to realize...

:51:09
...is that a husband's philandering,
even as innocuous as my own...

:51:13
...has nothing whatever to do with them.
:51:16
And pray, just what has it
to do with, then?

:51:19
A reluctance to grow old, l think.
:51:22
l suppose the best mainstay a man can
have as he gets along in years...

:51:26
...is a daughter.
:51:27
The right kind of daughter,
one who's full of warmth and affection...

:51:31
...a kind of foolish, unquestioning,
uncritical affection.

:51:35
None of which l've got, of course.
l'm a cold goddess.

:51:39
lf your vanity thinks
in terms of goddesses.

:51:43
You have a good mind, Tracy.
:51:45
You have a pretty face, a fine,
disciplined body that does what you tell it.

:51:49
You have everything it takes to make
a lovely woman, except the one essential:

:51:54
An understanding heart.
:51:56
Without it, you might just as well
be made of bronze.

:52:03
That's an awful thing to say to anyone.
:52:05
-lt's an awful thing to have to say.
-Seth, that's too much.

:52:09
l'm afraid it isn't enough.
:52:11
Darling, your father doesn't mean that.
:52:14
Neither one of you means it.
:52:17
Both of you seem to forget
that in striking out at each other...

:52:21
...you hurt others besides yourself.
:52:43
What's the matter with everyone
all of a sudden?


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