A Room with a View
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:12:03
- Are you writing a novel, too?
- If I were, you would be my heroine.

:12:08
And I should write "If Miss Honeychurch
ever takes to live as she plays...

:12:16
"...it will be very exciting,
both for us and for her."

:12:27
Mother doesn't like me playing Beethoven.
She says I'm peevish afterwards.

:12:33
Naturally, one would be stirred up.
:12:37
Won't you play some more?
:12:39
No, I think I'll go out.
:12:41
Alone? Is that wise, Miss Honeychurch?
:12:46
To be wise, one might have stayed at home.
:12:51
I'll not go far. I promise.
:12:56
I'm sorry.
:13:02
Whatever's the matter with dear Miss Lucy?
:13:05
I put it down to too much Beethoven.
:13:08
I heard her beautiful playing.
:13:10
Miss Catharine,
you have flowers in your hair.

:13:25
Buongiorno, buongiorno, Ferdinando!
:13:30
We salute thee.
:13:33
The bronze came from Turkish cannons,
captured by the Knights of San Stefano.

:13:38
Come along.
:13:51
Stop a minute. Let that man go on
or I shall have to speak to him.

:13:56
Oh, the British abroad!
:13:59
I'd set an examination at Dover
and turn back any tourists who failed.


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