:15:00
No, sir.
:15:01
Mr. and Mrs. Taylor
were extremely kind.
:15:05
I say, I hope you don't
think me very rude...
:15:10
...but you aren't a manservant
of some sort, are you?
:15:16
Yes, sir. I am, indeed.
:15:18
In fact, I'm the butler
of Darlington Hall, near Oxford.
:15:23
It wasn't my intention
to deceive anyone.
:15:26
Don't explain.
I can see how it happened.
:15:29
Darlington.
:15:31
Wasn't there a
Lord Darlington involved...
:15:34
...in that appeasement business
that got us into the war?
:15:37
Sorry, I never knew
that Lord Darlington.
:15:40
My employer's an American
gentleman, Mr. Lewis.
:15:45
Lord Darlington was among those who
tried to make a deal with Hitler.
:15:50
Then there was a case after the war...
:15:53
...where he sued a newspaper
for libel.
:15:56
The Express, was it?
News Chronicle?
:15:59
-I couldn't say, sir.
-Anyway, he lost.
:16:03
He was lucky, really, not to have
been tried for treason.
:16:07
There it is, just ahead.
:16:24
Sir, I must confess...
:16:26
...that I failed to tell
you the truth.
:16:30
I did know Lord Darlington, and I can
declare that he was a truly good man.
:16:35
A gentleman through and through...
:16:37
...to whom I'm proud to have given
my best years of service.
:16:44
That should get you
to the next petrol station.
:16:49
Thank you very much, sir.
I'm most grateful.
:16:52
But did you...
:16:54
...share his opinions?
:16:55
Who?
:16:57
Lord Darlington.