:27:00
You can't object in such a landscape.
:27:03
As long as she is his sister.
:27:07
So, Miss Honeychurch, you're traveling.
As a student of art?
:27:12
- No, I'm afraid not.
- As a student of human nature like myself?
:27:17
- I'm here as a tourist.
- Indeed?
:27:21
We residents sometimes pity
you poor tourists not a little.
:27:26
Handed about like parcels
from Venice to Florence to Rome,
:27:30
unconscious of anything outside Baedeker,
anxious to get done and go on elsewhere.
:27:36
I abhor Baedeker.
I'd fling every copy in the Arno.
:27:40
Towns, rivers, palaces,
all mixed up in an inextricable whirl.
:27:49
Over there, Miss Honeychurch,
:27:52
the villa of my dear friend Lady Laverstock,
:27:54
at present busy
with a Fra Angelico definitive study.
:27:58
And, on your left - no, just there -
:28:03
Mr. Henry Burridge lives.
:28:06
An American of the best type. So rare!
:28:09
Doubtless you know his monographs
in "Medieval Byways".
:28:21
Your father, Mr. Emerson, is a journalist?
:28:25
- He used to be.
- He's retired? And you, yourself?
:28:29
I'm on the railways.
:28:32
You know the American girl
in "Punch" who says to her father,
:28:36
"Say, Poppa, what did we see in Rome?"
:28:39
The father replies,
"Guess Rome was where we saw the yellow dog."
:28:44
Yellow dog!
:28:47
There's traveling for you!
:28:50
What?! Stop at once!
:28:58
I'm not having this.