2:09:00
...around London this hour of the morning.
2:09:04
No, thank you.
2:09:15
## Someone's head restin' on my knee #
2:09:19
# Warm and tender as he can be #
2:09:24
# Who takes good care of me #
2:09:27
# Oh, wouldn't it... #
2:09:31
# ...be loverly? #
2:09:35
# Loverly ##
2:09:50
Do come again, Mr. Doolittle.
We value your patronage always.
2:09:54
Thank you, my good man. Thank you.
Here. Come 'ere.
2:09:58
Take the missus on a trip to Brighton
with my compliments.
2:10:01
Thank you, Mr. Doolittle.
2:10:04
Jolly spot this, Harry.
We must visit it more often.
2:10:08
Father?
2:10:11
Oh, no. You see, Harry, he has no mercy.
2:10:14
Sent her down to spy on me in me misery,
he did. Me own flesh and blood.
2:10:21
Well, I'm miserable, all right.
You can tell him that straight.
2:10:24
What are you talking about?
What are you dressed up for?
2:10:27
As if you didn't know.
2:10:28
Go on back to that Wimpole Street devil.
Tell him what he's done to me.
2:10:32
What's he done to you?
2:10:34
Ruined me, that's all.
2:10:35
Tied me up and delivered me
into the hands of middle-class morality.
2:10:40
And don't you defend him.
2:10:41
Was it 'im or was it not 'im wrote to an old
American blighter named Wallingford...
2:10:45
...who was giving $5,000,000
to found Moral Reform societies...
2:10:50
...to tell him the most original moralist
in England was Mr. Alfred P. Doolittle...
2:10:54
...a common dustman?
2:10:57
Sounds like one of his jokes.
2:10:59
You may call it a joke.
It's put the lid on me. Proper.