Darling
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:17:04
He's a nice boy, Curzio.
:17:07
Yes, very.
:17:12
- It's so beautiful.
- I'm glad you like it.

:17:16
- There's nothing like this in England.
- Thank you.

:17:18
But England has the most beautiful
country houses in the world.

:17:21
Have a chocolate.
:17:24
No, it's different here. There's a sense of...
:17:27
eternity.
:17:29
A sort of peacefulness.
:17:33
It's almost religious,
if you know what I mean.

:17:37
Yes?
:17:40
It seems to make life easier to bear.
:17:43
But you don't have any problem
in bearing the weight of life, do you?

:17:47
I don't know about that.
:17:49
On you, it must weigh very lightly.
For me, it's different.

:17:56
I recently lost someone, too.
Not like you did, but...

:18:01
I don't much care
to go back to England just now.

:18:04
- You have a family?
- Not like yours.

:18:07
Not that supports one, gives one strength.
:18:11
You have God practically in the family.
:18:16
Every man is alone, in the last resolve.
And I more than most men.

:18:22
Perhaps not, in some ways.
:18:28
- They're beautiful.
- Yes. Like their mother.

:18:32
They are. They really are lovely.
:18:38
Now you must excuse me.
I swim with them every day.

:18:42
It's a duty which is also a pleasure.
:18:45
- Excuse me, will you?
- Of course. Thank you so much.

:18:53
I don't think I'd ever in my life needed
a holiday quite so much as I did then.

:18:58
And Capri was ideal.

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