An Affair to Remember
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:11:01
You could light it from that inscription,
couldn't you?

:11:04
l like that. l must stay tuned into you.
:11:08
He's a very lucky fellow.
Must be a remarkable man.

:11:11
Well, you can imagine how attractive he is
when l can resist so charming a person as...

:11:17
Yes, yes. l understand.
:11:20
Well, it was nice, wasn't it?
:11:24
Oh, well. Well, there's still
deck tennis, shuffleboard, bingo.

:11:29
Don't tell me you're embarrassed?
Yes. As a matter of fact, l am.

:11:34
Oh, l am sorry.
That's all right. Don't apologise.

:11:36
l do hope it won't affect your ego!
:11:39
No, please, don't think anything of it.
l'll just take my ego for a walk.

:11:43
Unless you'd care to...
Have dinner with you?

:11:46
l'd love to.
:11:55
Here comes my friend Ferrante now.
:11:57
Mr Ferrante, l'd like to have you meet
my sister, Miss Hathaway, and my wife...

:12:09
And when you were little, what did
your nurse read to you at bedtime?

:12:15
Let me think...
The memoirs of Casanova?

:12:17
Every night. And then we'd turn out the light.
:12:20
''We''?
l was only so big.

:12:23
You must have had a happy childhood.
:12:25
Ah, yes.
:12:27
And women...
Oh, women.

:12:30
You've known quite a few, haven't you?
l don't know.

:12:33
Perhaps ''few'' is the wrong word.
Let's say it's not precise.

:12:37
l beg pardon, Signor Ferrante. Shall
l reserve this table for you every night?

:12:44
Why not?
Thank you.

:12:47
Now, where were we?
l suppose they were all in love with you.

:12:50
l doubt it.
But you haven't had much respect for them.

:12:53
On the contrary.
You've always been fair in yourjudgments.

:12:57
l've been more than fair. l idealise them.

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