My Fair Lady
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:13:02
...it'll be on your head alone.
:13:03
Eliza can do anything.
:13:05
Suppose she's discovered?
Remember Ascot.

:13:06
Suppose she makes
another ghastly mistake?

:13:08
There'll be no horses at the ball, Pickering.
:13:13
Think of how agonizing it would be.
:13:15
If anything happened tonight,
I don't know what I'd do.

:13:18
You could always rejoin your regiment.
:13:19
This is no time for flippancy, Higgins.
:13:21
The way you've driven her
the last six weeks...

:13:23
...has exceeded all bounds
of common decency.

:13:25
For God's sake, stop pacing.
Can't you settle somewhere?

:13:28
Have some port. It'll quieten your nerves.
:13:30
I'm not nervous.
:13:33
- Where is it?
- On the piano.

:13:36
The car's here, sir.
:13:38
Good. Tell Miss Doolittle.
:13:39
Tell Miss Doolittle indeed.
I'll bet you that damned gown doesn't fit.

:13:43
I warned you about these French designers.
:13:45
We should've gone to an English shop.
They would've been on our side.

:13:48
- Have a glass of port?
- No, thank you.

:13:57
Are you so sure this girl will retain
everything you've hammered into her?

:14:01
Well, we shall see.
:14:03
Suppose she doesn't?
:14:06
I lose my bet.
:14:07
There's one thing I can't stand about you,
your confounded complacency.

:14:11
At a moment like this,
with so much at stake...

:14:13
...it's utterly indecent
that you don't need a glass of port.

:14:18
And what about the girl? You act
as though she doesn't matter at all.

:14:22
Rubbish, Pickering. Of course she matters.
:14:25
What do you think I've been doing
all these months?

:14:27
What could possibly matter more
than to take a human being...

:14:30
...and change her into a different human
being by creating a new speech for her?

:14:35
It's filling up the deepest gap
that separates class from class...

:14:38
...and soul from soul.
:14:40
Oh, she matters immensely.

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