Peyton Place
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:27:01
No.
:27:03
No, I've thought of everything,
but nothing seems to fit me.

:27:06
Maybe I'll be unique
and retire at the age of 18.

:27:09
Norman, it's about time
you got home.

:27:12
Hello, Ms. Page.
:27:14
- Goodbye, Norman.
- Wait just a minute, will you?

:27:17
- But you...
- I don't want to go in just yet.

:27:20
Norman, what an awful thing,
hating to go home.

:27:24
Come on in here.
:27:27
Well, thanks for walking with me.
:27:30
I enjoyed it, really.
:27:33
Goodbye.
:27:34
Goodbye.
:27:42
- May I walk on it, Nellie?
- Sure, it's dry by now.

:27:46
- Your mother wants you to call her.
- I really don't feel like it.

:27:50
You two have a fight again?
:27:52
Same fight, different round.
:27:55
- Nellie?
- Yeah.

:27:57
You've been both a daughter and
a mother. Which one is worse?

:28:02
- Being a mother.
- Why?

:28:04
You find yourself
doing the same things...

:28:07
...you hated your own
mother and father doing.

:28:09
That's very interesting.
:28:11
Doesn't somebody get intelligent...
:28:13
...and realize children
must grow up their own way?

:28:17
The mind's nothing to do with it.
It's your feelings.

:28:20
Kids get born and you just worry
about them and you hope for them.

:28:26
Well, I gotta get going.
:28:30
- Good night, Nellie.
- Good night, Allison.


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