:36:04
- Where on Earth did he find her?
- She wrote to him.
:36:08
Ah. A pen pal.
:36:11
Hello.
:36:13
Is this your first trip
to England, Mrs. Gresham?
:36:16
Oh, yeah. It's my first, but I was
wanting to come for a long time.
:36:20
- What brings you to England?
- I'm working on a book...
:36:23
so I was hoping to find
a publisher over here.
:36:25
Christopher, there you are.
:36:28
Yes, Jack, here I am.
:36:31
Please let me introduce you
to Mrs. Joy Gresham.
:36:34
- Professor Christopher Riley.
- Professor Riley.
:36:36
- How do you do?
- Pleasure.
:36:41
What success have you had...
with your book?
:36:44
To be honest,
it's not ready to be seen yet.
:36:47
You mustn't let that stop you,
Mrs. Gresham.
:36:49
It doesn't stop Jack.
:36:51
I'm sorry?
:36:53
I am right in assuming you're
from the United States of America?
:36:56
- Yes, I am.
- Perhaps you can satisfy...
:36:59
my curiosity on a related matter.
:37:00
I had always understood Americans
to be hard-riding, tough-talking...
:37:04
no-nonsense sort of people,
yet Jack tells me...
:37:07
his children's stories
sell very well there.
:37:10
- Who can be buying them?
- Well, Professor Riley...
:37:13
we're not all cowboys.
:37:16
Have you read
any of Jack's children's books?
:37:18
Jack has read extracts
aloud to me.
:37:22
It is one of his
tests of friendship.
:37:24
I think they're rather magical.
:37:26
Congratulations, Jack.
You seem to have found a soul mate.
:37:29
I thought you believed
we didn't have souls, Christopher.
:37:33
Well, yes. Now, I regard the soul
as an essentially feminine accessory...
:37:38
anima quite different from animus,
the male variant.
:37:42
This is how I explain the otherwise
puzzling difference between the sexes.
:37:46
Where men have intellect...
:37:49
women have soul.
:37:52
As you say, Professor Riley...
:37:53
uh, I'm from the United States...
:37:55
and different cultures
have different modes of discourse.
:37:58
I need a little guidance. Are you trying
to be offensive, or just merely stupid?