:02:01
My dear Miss Doolittle.
:02:02
How kind of you to let me come.
:02:05
Delighted, my dear.
:02:07
- Lady Boxington.
- How do you do?
:02:11
- Lord Boxington.
- How do you do?
:02:13
How do you do?
:02:14
- Mrs. Eynsford-Hill, Miss Doolittle.
- How do you do?
:02:17
How do you do?
:02:18
And Freddy Eynsford-Hill.
:02:21
How do you do?
:02:25
How do you do?
:02:27
Miss Doolittle.
:02:29
Good afternoon, Professor Higgins.
:02:41
The first race was very exciting,
Miss Doolittle.
:02:43
I'm so sorry that you missed it.
:02:46
Will it rain, do you think?
:02:48
"The rain in Spain stays mainly
in the plain."
:02:56
"But in Hartford, Hereford and Hampshire,
hurricanes hardly ever happen."
:03:02
How awfully funny.
:03:04
What is wrong with that, young man?
I bet I got it right.
:03:07
Smashing.
:03:09
Has it suddenly turned chilly?
:03:11
I do hope we won't have
any unseasonable cold spells.
:03:15
They bring on so much influenza.
:03:17
And the whole of our family
is susceptible to it.
:03:20
My aunt died of influenza, so they said.
:03:24
But it's my belief they done
the old woman in.
:03:29
Done her in?
:03:31
Yes, Lord love you.
:03:33
Why should she die of influenza...
:03:35
...when she'd come through diphtheria
right enough the year before.
:03:39
Fairly blue with it she was.
:03:42
They all thought she was dead.
:03:44
But my father, he kept ladling gin
down her throat.
:03:52
Then she come to so sudden
she bit the bowl off the spoon.
:03:58
Dear me!