Saint Ralph
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:34:06
- What did you say?
- You ran the 1936 Olympic Marathon

:34:09
for Canada.
- No, I didn't.

:34:11
- I saw it in a book.
- Well, the book was wrong.

:34:13
Follow me, gentlemen.
Come along, Mr. Walker.

:34:28
- Ralph?
:34:31
What's wrong?
- I'm fine,

:34:32
I'm just a little light-headed,
:34:35
that's all.
:34:38
- Ralph!
:34:45
You fainted.
:34:48
- Yeah, I'm fine.
:34:49
I might have run too far today.
:34:52
- You run?
:34:54
Cross-country?
:34:55
- No, the marathon.
:34:58
- The marathon?
:34:59
Oh.
:35:01
I used to train
with the Finnish Marathoners.

:35:03
- You were a runner?
:35:05
- No, uh, I was
:35:07
a Canadian nurse
on overseas assignment

:35:09
and amateur bobsledder.
:35:12
If you're serious about training,
come over some time,

:35:15
and we can lift weights.
Paavo Nurmi did,

:35:17
and he won
nine Olympic gold medals.

:35:19
- Wow.
:35:30
- You OK?
:35:32
- My glucose levels are down.
:35:34
Claire, listen.
:35:35
The book on martyrs has helped,
but I still can't pray.

:35:38
- Well, divine revelations aside,
you've obviously got a serious blockage.

:35:42
Are you sure you were baptized?
:35:44
- No, and it's kind of hard
to ask anyone right now.

:35:47
- Yeah. Sorry.
:35:49
Why don't you try, uh,
rubbing your knees with sandpaper

:35:52
until they bleed, and then kneeling down
in a pan of alcohol to pray?

:35:59
- What grit paper?

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