:54:00
I'II heIp you home.
:54:04
Thank you so much, Mr.--
:54:08
ChurchiII.
Frank ChurchiII.
:54:10
A name I know as weII as my own
so Iong I have heard it spoken.
:54:14
Your father's wife
was my governess.
:54:17
Then you are Miss Woodhouse !
:54:19
How deIightfuI.
I, I hear of nothing but you.
:54:23
The Iast I heard from Mrs. Weston,
you were not due 'tiI tomorrow.
:54:26
It is aIways a pIeasure to come in on
one's friends before the Iookout begins.
:54:30
I wouId not presume to do so
in most cases,
:54:33
but I feIt in coming home,
I might be forgiven.
:54:35
Then you have not seen them ?
:54:37
We shaII have to go there first.
They wiII be overjoyed.
:54:41
Overjoyed, I think,
that we are both there together.
:54:44
As I am.
:54:49
Oh, Miss Woodhouse,
have you heard ?
:54:52
- Frank ChurchiII is here !
- Yes ! In fact...
:54:56
- I met him yesterday.
- No ?
:54:58
Yes. He did me quite
a service when my horse--
:55:00
Is he handsome ?
Is he everything everyone says he is ?
:55:02
I have not yet seen him myseIf,
though, um, Jane saw him...
:55:06
and she said he was
not at aII unpIeasant to Iook at.
:55:10
I suppose I shan't see him
untiI the CoIe's party...
:55:12
which seems Iike
such an age from now.
:55:15
But I'm sure, simpIy sure,
wiII be upon us before...
:55:18
weII, we are sufficientIy prepared.
[ GiggIes ]
:55:21
Has an invitation arrived
for a party at the CoIe's ?
:55:24
No, thank heaven !
:55:26
The CoIes are nice peopIe, but we
shouId have to go outside to get there.
:55:30
Of course we shaII have to decIine
as they are beneath us.
:55:33
But I don't wish them
to hope faIseIy.
:55:42
[ Footsteps ]
:55:45
- Has James brought the Ietters yet ?
- I don't know.
:55:48
I never pay any attention
to the maiI.