:16:04
Actually, look, l...
:16:06
I'm a little in awe of you
and so I'm a little tense...
:16:09
and when I get like that
I get kind of...
:16:12
I don't know.
:16:14
It's very childish.
I'm sure I'll get over it soon.
:16:17
Not too soon, I hope,
please...
:16:18
because I like
a good fight myself.
:16:21
- You do?
- Yes.
:16:23
You sound surprised.
:16:27
That's great.
You like a good fight. Great.
:16:32
But?
:16:35
When's the last time
you lost?
:16:40
- I've been at Morland since 1925.
- It's beautiful here.
:16:44
How old is it?
:16:45
The college was founded
very nearly 500 years ago.
:16:48
Not all the buildings
are that old, of course.
:16:50
My room is there.
That's the new building.
:16:53
- New, huh?
- 1733.
:16:59
What does your husband do,
Mrs. Gresham?
:17:00
Oh, Bill?
Bill's a writer.
:17:03
Oh. And you too,
Jack tells me.
:17:07
- You call him Jack?
- I never liked the name Clive.
:17:12
Oh, well, if you're a Jack...
:17:15
- What?
- No, you look fine for a Jack.
:17:18
Thank you.
:17:20
Well, Jewish, but not Jewish-Jewish,
if you can follow that.
:17:23
I mean, I'm a Christian, but I was
brought up to be a good atheist.
:17:28
- An atheist?
- Don't sound so shocked.
:17:31
I'm not.
I was an atheist once.
:17:34
You? So we're both
lapsed atheists?
:17:37
Yes, but I was never
a Communist.
:17:40
- Why not?
- What do you mean, "why not"?
:17:43
Well, I mean, back in '38 it seemed
to me there was only two choices...
:17:48
either you were a fascist
and you conquered the world...
:17:50
or you were a Communist
and you saved it.
:17:53
Is that so?
:17:58
I must have been otherwise engaged
at the time.