1:27:01
Well, it was
a stroke of luck...
1:27:03
that Cynthia was able
to look Mr. Camford over.
1:27:06
You can always trust
Cynthia completely.
1:27:13
Hello, my dear.
We just sat down.
1:27:18
(Slurring)
I'm sorry to be late.
1:27:21
I was finishing a letter
to Maud Devises.
1:27:25
Do you know Maud Devises?
1:27:27
No, I'm afraid I don't.
1:27:29
She's the daughter
of the Earl of Leigh.
1:27:32
We're old, old friends.
1:27:35
Ohh.
1:27:38
Would you...
1:27:40
would you care for
some bread?
1:27:42
It's so close.
1:27:44
There's thunder in the air.
1:27:46
Well, take a pill,
dear, and go to bed.
1:27:49
I wish I could go to Athens.
1:27:51
Anything to get away
from here.
1:27:55
The Acropolis is really
quite pretty by moonlight.
1:27:59
I'm afraid my wife
fails to respond...
1:28:01
to the glories
of classic art.
1:28:03
I'm tired of classic art.
1:28:06
All those broken columns...
1:28:08
and statues
without arms and legs.
1:28:11
Oh, Greece isn't so bad.
1:28:13
Think of Blackpool in November.
1:28:15
(Chuckles)
1:28:16
One can't make friends
with people here.
1:28:20
Even those shipping
magnates... who are they?
1:28:23
For all their yachts
and their villas...
1:28:25
nouveau riche.
1:28:26
Take Madame Habib.
1:28:28
Imagine a woman like that
being received.
1:28:31
Cynthia.
1:28:32
A scrubwoman's daughter
from Alexandria.
1:28:35
That's what she was.
1:28:36
Married five or six times.
1:28:39
Cynthia, I hardly think...
1:28:40
Sailing around the world
in that enormous yacht...
1:28:43
entertaining royalty.
1:28:45
Who's Madame Habib?
1:28:47
C YNTHIA: Why,
she's the woman that...
1:28:48
(Clears throat)
1:28:50
Eat your curried eggs, dear.
1:28:51
I'm tired of curried eggs.
1:28:55
Maud Devises
wouldn't have allowed her...
1:28:58
inside the house.