:30:03
What's this?
:30:05
- I believe this is my place,
Mr.Jennings.
- Oh.
:30:08
And since when did a baroness
outrank a countess?
:30:12
Miss Trentham, would you
take the place of honor, please?
:30:16
- Miss Trentham?
:30:18
I'm all right here,
Mr.Jennings. Thank you.
:30:21
Go on.
Don't keep him waiting.
:30:25
Ah, Miss Meredith.
:30:27
Would you come and sit
on my left?
:30:30
Naturally, I'm nothing when
there are visitors in the house.
:30:32
- Nevermind. I'm used to it.
- Good evening, Mrs. Wilson.
:30:34
Good evening.
:30:39
For what weare about to receive,
:30:41
may the Lord make us
truly grateful.
:30:43
Right.
Start when you get it.
:30:45
No time for loitering.
:30:50
I'm not serving tonight,
Mr.Jennings, am I?
:30:52
Not tonight, Elsie,
but probably tomorrow.
:30:56
Where is Mrs. Croft?
:30:59
Always eats
with her own staff.
:31:01
Does she take her pudding to
Mrs. Wilson's room? Our cook does that.
:31:04
Fat chance.
They hate each other.
:31:07
- Can I ask a question?
- Certainly, Mr. Weissman.
:31:11
How can we help you?
:31:13
I just wondered, how many people here
had parents in service?
:31:17
And was that why
they chose to go into it?
:31:20
What an interesting question,
and one to which, I'm afraid,
I cannot provide the answer.
:31:25
All of you whose parents
were in service, raise your hand.
:31:30
- My father was.
- Both-- nanny and groom.
:31:32
- Not you, Dorothy?
- My father was a farmer, Mr.Jennings.
:31:35
A tenant of Lord Carton's.
:31:38
- Mr. Meredith?
- Factory hands, both of them.
:31:41
- And if you ask me,
they were better off.
:31:43
What aboutyou,
Mr. Stockbridge?
:31:48
What's the matter? Don't you know?
:31:50
Yeah, I know
what they did.
:31:52
But it didn't have any effect
on me or my choice of work.
:31:56
- And why's that?
- Because I grew up in an orphanage.