:16:02
- They were not!
- They were too.
:16:04
They always come out
on Fridays round midnight.
:16:07
They do not. Do they, Mummy?
:16:08
Yes, you don't see them
cos you're asleep.
:16:11
Tonight's Friday,
as a matter of fact.
:16:14
But then you'd be
too bloody bored to see them.
:16:17
No, I'm not, Mummy.
I promise I won't be bored.
:16:20
- Even bloody bored?
- Promise!
:16:24
Well, if you're gonna be up
at midnight, get to bed now.
:16:30
- Say good night to everybody.
- Good night, everybody.
:16:34
- Do they really come, Mummy?
- Fairies only live in books.
:16:39
The Industrial Revolution
killed the fairies.
:16:41
They were left with nowhere to live.
:16:44
- Except our imaginations.
- lmaginations are a luxury.
:16:49
- Beg your pardon?
- Most people can't afford them.
:16:52
I don't think imagination
is dependent on economics, is it?
:16:55
In a factory you're doing exactly
the same thing day after day.
:16:59
An active imagination is what allows
people to do that kind of work.
:17:03
Oh, well, you'd know, of course!
:17:07
I just think
that's what you'd have to do.
:17:10
You'd have to be imagining
other things.
:17:13
Please don't tell us
what the working class think,
:17:16
thanks very much.
:17:32
I think what the Bishop's
really hoping for
:17:35
is that we can come to a compromise,
:17:37
find some other examples
of your work.
:17:40
The great thing is no... Your chair.
:17:42
- No one wants to see you excluded.
- Now, that is a comfort.
:17:47
I hadn't realised the Church's
interest in contemporary painting.
:17:50
It's just The Crucified Venus
we're uncomfortable with.
:17:56
- Pooh?
- It's me.
:17:58
Come in.