:49:32
You simply cannot go on
working the girl this way.
:49:35
Making her say her alphabet
over and over...
:49:37
...from sunup to sundown,
even during meals.
:49:40
You'll exhaust yourself. When will it stop?
:49:42
When she does it properly, of course.
Is that all, Mrs. Pearce?
:49:46
There's another letter from the
American millionaire, Ezra D. Wallingford.
:49:49
He still wants you
for his Moral Reform League.
:49:51
Throw it away.
:49:53
It's the third letter he's written you.
You should at least answer it.
:49:56
All right, leave it on the desk, Mrs. Pearce.
I'll try and get to it.
:50:02
If you please, sir. There's a dustman
downstairs, Alfred P. Doolittle...
:50:06
...who wants to see you.
He says you have his daughter here.
:50:09
I say!
:50:11
Well, send the blackguard up.
:50:13
He may not be a blackguard, Higgins.
:50:15
Nonsense. Of course
he's a blackguard, Pickering.
:50:18
I'm afraid we'll have some trouble
with him.
:50:20
No, I think not. Any trouble to be had,
he'll have it with me. Not I with him.
:50:28
Doolittle, sir.
:50:35
- Professor Higgins?
- Here!
:50:38
Where?
:50:40
Good morning, Governor.
:50:42
I come about a very serious matter,
Governor.
:50:48
Brought up in Houndslow.
:50:51
Mother Welsh, I should think.
:50:54
What is it you want, Doolittle?
:50:55
I want my daughter, that's what I want.
See?
:50:58
Of course you do.
You're her father, aren't you?