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:49:02
great.
:49:08
See me after class, Mr. Melon.
:49:13
I mean, please,
try to understand.

:49:15
I don't have
the background for this.

:49:17
The high school I went to...
:49:18
they asked a kid to prove
the law of gravity.

:49:20
He threw the teacher
out the window.

:49:22
I know what I need.
I need a tutor.

:49:27
What do you say? Come on.
:49:30
You got some spare time.
:49:33
All right, Mr. Melon.
:49:34
I have some spare time
this evening.

:49:36
Why don't you come around
about 7:00?

:49:38
- Great.
- I'll give you my address.

:49:42
- Thanks.
- Please be on time.

:49:44
I'll be on time.
:49:48
What penmanship.
:49:52
"Everywhere the ceremony
of innocence is drowned;

:49:55
"The best
lack all conviction...

:49:57
"while the worst are full
of passionate intensity."

:50:00
There's a lot
of other stuff here.

:50:02
Yeats goes on and on...
and here's the finish.

:50:06
"What rough beast,
its hour come round at last...

:50:10
"slouches towards Bethlehem
to be born?"

:50:12
What does that
make you think of?

:50:14
Rough beast. My ex-wife.
:50:17
Well, that's
one interpretation.

:50:19
Not the right one,
but it's a start.

:50:21
Surely a man of your age
and experience...

:50:23
must have read some
of the things on my list.

:50:25
- What about "Macbeth"?
- I saw the movie.

:50:27
Orson Welles.
Great actor, big actor.

:50:30
He was a Tall and Fat
customer for years.

:50:33
How about
"Cat on a Hot Tin Roof"?

:50:34
I saw the movie. Burl lves.
:50:36
Great actor, extra stout.
He was a customer, too.

:50:40
- "Streetcar Named Desire."
- Great movie. Marlon Brando.

:50:42
He wasn't that big then,
but he ballooned up nicely.

:50:46
I'd say pound for pound,
our finest American actor.

:50:49
Don't you ever read?
:50:51
Who has time? I see the movie.
I'm in and out in two hours.

:50:54
Oh, Thornton, don't you see?
:50:56
The reason you want
to read these works...

:50:58
is so you can experience them
for yourself...


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