The Europeans Drama-Romance Based on a novel by Henry James 1979 | Subtitles

  • last month
#desperateromantics #mansfieldpark #thebuccaneers https://www.dailymotion.com/bethfreed25/playlists
It's the fall of 1850, a few miles outside Boston. The household of the dour Mr. Wentworth receives two unannounced visitors from
Europe, Eugenia and Felix, the daughter and son of his half sister. Gertrude, one of Wentworth's two daughters, is instantly infatuated with her cousins, thinking them sophisticated and worldly. She turns her back on the local Unitarian minister, Mr. Brand, who has been calling on her, to delight in the pleasure and amusement Felix offers
Transcript
00:01:00Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
00:01:30oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh
00:02:00oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh
00:02:30I
00:02:52Hoped you were going to church. I wanted to walk with you. I'm very obliged to you, but I'm not going to church
00:03:00Have you any special reason for not going?
00:03:03Yes, mr. Brandt
00:03:06May I ask what it is?
00:03:08Make us the sky so blue
00:03:14I've heard of young ladies staying at home for bad weather, but never for good. I
00:03:18Was very wicked just now to my sister. I said things that puzzled her on purpose
00:03:25You say things that puzzle me I
00:03:28Always know when I do it
00:03:34You asked me to tell you about my
00:03:37My struggles. Yes, let's talk about that. I have so many things to say. I think you'd better go to church now
00:03:42Oh, no, I always have one thing to say, please don't say it now
00:03:48You're all alone all alone in this beautiful Sunday stillness
00:03:53Do me a favor and go to church
00:03:58May I speak when I come back
00:04:22I
00:04:52I
00:04:54I
00:04:56I
00:05:19She beheld the most beautiful youth she had ever seen and as she softly kissed his sleeping brow
00:05:26She thought what a marvel of beauty he must be when his eyes are open
00:05:57Oh
00:06:05Would you kindly tell me if I have the honor of speaking to miss Wentworth
00:06:09My name is Gertrude Wentworth. Then I have the honor
00:06:15The pleasure of being your cousin I
00:06:20Had a different plan I
00:06:22Expected the servant would take in my card that you'd all put your heads together and wonder who I was. I know I
00:06:30Know you come from Europe. Well, you've heard of us. We knew we had relations in France
00:06:36Have you ever wanted to see us?
00:06:40Yes, we wanted to see you so we came
00:06:46Well, yes on purpose
00:06:49Won't you come into the house
00:06:53I
00:07:11Walked all the way from Boston. I walked in the water. It's a good many miles
00:07:22I
00:07:40Are you all alone? Everyone has gone to church. Oh, you're not afraid of being alone with me. Are you?
00:07:47I
00:07:51What a very pleasant house I
00:08:01Don't believe you know my name. I'm Felix young
00:08:05Your father is my uncle
00:08:08My mother was his half-sister
00:08:11She turned Roman Catholic and then went to live in Europe, you know
00:08:17She married and she died
00:08:22Your your father's family didn't like her husband
00:08:34I was born in France and my sister in Vienna
00:08:39So you're French no, but though I could easily be French if you'd like
00:08:47I
00:09:18I
00:09:26Really am very hungry. I'm not at all tired, but I'm very hungry
00:09:34Tell me about your sister Eugenia. She is the bad in this monster
00:09:40Why
00:09:45Didn't she come to but she did she's in Boston at the hotel
00:09:52When will she come as soon as your letter tomorrow
00:10:00Tomorrow yes
00:10:04Is she
00:10:07Is she married she's married to Prince Adolf of Zuber start Shrek and Stein
00:10:14sober start Shrek and Stein
00:10:17Shrek and Stein
00:10:30Is she a princess no, they made her a baroness that's all they could do
00:10:37Now they want to dissolve her marriage
00:10:40against her will
00:10:42against her right
00:10:46She must be very unhappy
00:10:52I'm glad she's come to us
00:11:00This is the prince the prince of silver start Shrek and steam
00:11:07And
00:11:12The daughters how many of them are there to Charlotte and Gertrude are they pretty one of them
00:11:21Which one is that
00:11:25Charlotte so you're in love with Gertrude
00:11:30And is there no one besides the immediate family
00:11:34Yes, there's a mr. Robert Acton
00:11:37I think that you're like mr. Acton
00:11:40He's a man of the world. He's been to China a
00:11:43man of the Chinese world
00:11:45He sounds very interesting. I
00:11:48Have an idea. He brought home a fortune. Ah, that's always interesting
00:12:06I
00:12:37I
00:12:55See you've arranged your house your beautiful house in the in the Dutch taste
00:13:02It's a very old house
00:13:05General Washington once spent a week here. Oh, I've heard of Washington. My father used to adore him
00:13:15This is my son Clifford Wentworth, why didn't you come out to meet me? Mr. Clifford went with I
00:13:22Didn't think you'd want me one always wants a handsome cousin
00:13:28This is my cousin, mr. Robert Acton your cousin not mine
00:13:34Certainly yours if you wish and may I also claim relationship with this charming young lady. This is my sister Lizzie
00:13:45Now this is quite another type this is a different outline my uncle a different character from that of your own daughters I
00:13:56Didn't believe that you'd come back
00:13:59Come back. I
00:14:01Wanted to think will become of me I
00:14:04Don't know I thought I thought you might melt away
00:14:15The gentleman is I suppose
00:14:17Some sort of ecclesiastic. He is a minister
00:14:21Protestant I'm a Unitarian madam. I see something new
00:14:28You've come very far
00:14:31Very far
00:14:33very
00:14:34far I
00:14:38Came to
00:14:41To look to
00:14:45Ask
00:14:48To try
00:14:53I'm very tired. I want to rest
00:15:01I should like to stay here. Will you take me in my dear niece?
00:15:22Cousin William do you want to do something handsome?
00:15:26Make them a present for three or four months of the other house over the way
00:15:31Oh father do let them
00:15:35It would be very interesting
00:15:37It would be a new place to go to
00:15:40It would be a foreign house
00:15:44Are we very sure that we need a foreign house
00:15:49You talk as if it were a question of the poor baroness opening a wine shop or a gaming table
00:15:56It would be lovely
00:16:01You
00:16:03Should be careful you should watch
00:16:10We must all be careful
00:16:12This is a great change
00:16:14We're to be exposed to peculiar influences. I
00:16:18Don't say they're bad. I don't judge them in advance, but
00:16:24We should employ a great deal of wisdom and self-control
00:16:32She'll have a boudoir
00:16:37And she'll invite us to dinner very late
00:16:43She'll have breakfast in her room. I want you to make me a promise get rude
00:16:50What is it not to get excited
00:16:56Excited I
00:17:00Don't think I can promise you that father
00:17:04I'm excited already. I
00:17:11Think they'd better go to the other house. I shall keep them in the other house
00:17:25I
00:17:46Don't think she likes us to drop in uninvited
00:17:51Why do you think that
00:17:53Because of what she said about our house being like an inn with people dropping in and out of it all day
00:17:59But she said that was charming
00:18:03But she meant just the reverse
00:18:23I
00:18:54Only wish she'd speak in French
00:18:56See more in keeping
00:18:58hmm
00:19:00What I'd like to know is
00:19:03Just what the devil has brought her here
00:19:23I
00:19:53I
00:20:07Think if you move back a little you might get the Sun sit down
00:20:19Now keep your chin up
00:20:23Do you find us good company
00:20:27Company for a king
00:20:32There must be a thousand different ways to be dreary
00:20:37And sometimes I think we make use of them all
00:20:42Father
00:20:44Father Felix has a great deal of talent
00:20:48Nothing at all remarkable
00:20:50The world will never hear about me
00:20:53I'm little more than a featherhead a sort of bohemian a species of adventure
00:21:00No at bottom, I'm really a terrible Philistine I
00:21:04Mean that is to say a plain God-fearing man. I
00:21:11Trust I shall enjoy a venerable and venerated old age
00:21:16It's natural that one should desire to prolong an agreeable life
00:21:20So, I would very much like to do your head
00:21:24But it's very interesting. It's medieval
00:21:28The Lord made it I
00:21:30Don't think it's for a man to make it over again
00:21:33Well, I could do it as a prelate or or an old cardinal or the prior of an order
00:21:38cardinal prelate
00:21:41Do you refer to the Roman Catholic priesthood? Oh
00:21:45Well, I could do you was an old ecclesiastic who's lived a very pure and abstinent life I
00:21:52Take that is the case with you, sir. I
00:21:56Can see it in your face. You've been very moderate
00:22:02Don't you think one can always see that in a man's face
00:22:05You see more in a man's face than I should think of looking for
00:22:10I
00:22:12Think sitting for one's portrait is only one of the various forms of idleness
00:22:19Their name is Legion
00:22:25I
00:22:27Think sitting for one's portrait is only one of the various forms of idleness
00:22:34Their name is Legion
00:22:39I
00:23:09I
00:23:14I'm sure you find it very strange that I should come to this part of the world
00:23:19I'm certain you're wondering about my motives. They're very pure
00:23:23No, I don't find it at all strange that a clever woman should turn up in Boston or its suburbs
00:23:29It's a very fine place
00:23:32Especially at this moment
00:23:34It was precisely not
00:23:36To hear such things that I came
00:23:39I long to come into those natural relations. I knew I should find here over there. I had only
00:23:50Artificial relations, do you see the difference? I
00:23:56Suppose I'm an artificial relation
00:23:59Well, there's one way in which a lady and a gentleman may easily become natural
00:24:05Yes
00:24:08But
00:24:10Noon some pala. Oh, do you understand French a little?
00:24:37I
00:24:47Didn't think you were at first did you come to see more so little by little
00:25:07I
00:25:37Seem so different from your father and your sister
00:25:41And for most of the people you've lived with they say themselves that I'm different. It makes them unhappy
00:25:48Many things make them unhappy. Yes, that's what strikes me. I mean, they don't get the pleasure out of life that they might
00:25:56Do you mind me saying this to me you can say anything I
00:26:02I
00:26:04Don't believe you've seen people like us. How do you know what I've seen?
00:26:10How can I tell you you might tell me a great many things if only you would what
00:26:18Everything now if you can only keep that look until tomorrow sitting
00:26:31I
00:26:36Goodbye
00:27:01I
00:27:31I
00:27:46Got rude
00:27:50That's rude
00:28:01I
00:28:05Very much preoccupied
00:28:10You have new interests
00:28:16I love you Gertrude. I love you very much. I love you more than ever
00:28:23You let me feel that I have an influence over you
00:28:27You've opened your mind to me I
00:28:30I've never opened my mind to you. Mr. Brand
00:28:36Then you weren't as frank as I thought
00:28:39As we all thought I
00:28:41Don't see what anyone else had to do with it. I mean your father and your sister
00:28:45You know, it makes them happy to think you listen to me
00:28:49Nothing makes them happy
00:28:54Very much change
00:28:57I'm glad to hear it. I'm not I've known you a long time and I've loved you as you were
00:29:10I walk back with you
00:29:14I'm not going back. Mr. Brand
00:29:26I
00:29:56I
00:30:22I'll take you to meet them
00:30:27Must I sit in there? I see you think it is my natural place
00:30:41Would you like to dance then
00:30:56I
00:31:26I
00:31:50Americans are very strange. You never ask anything out, right?
00:31:56Polite you don't like to tread upon people's toes. I
00:32:02Should think you'd want to know about my marriage
00:32:06Yes, I should like that very much
00:32:10The prince fell in love with me I was very young and I confess other flattered I
00:32:16Was living with an old countess a friend of my father's in Dresden. She encouraged the prince. I was very young
00:32:23I
00:32:28Congratulate your brother on his treasures. I
00:32:31Dust them every day. Don't I with my own hands?
00:32:36You must be the perfect little household fairy. Sometimes I feel like dropping them
00:32:43I'll just go and see if mother's ready
00:32:54Is
00:32:57She very critical she looks down the nose at everybody like this
00:33:05Perhaps I should have my lace cap. She likes Robert though. I
00:33:11Have a little document to my writing desk, which I have only to sign and send back to the prince
00:33:17Then your marriage will be over
00:33:19Well, of course I shall keep my title one must have a name and I'll keep my pension
00:33:24Small wretchedly small, but that's what I live on
00:33:27And you only have to sign that paper
00:33:32Do you urge it
00:33:36Mother will see you now
00:33:39If you go away I shall never see you again, that's your right to you don't I won't answer you
00:33:46Well, but you can you know
00:33:48I'm very discreet. I'll burn your letters
00:33:52Burn my letters
00:33:55You do say strange things I've tried very hard I've explained I've reasoned but
00:34:03Reason does not always penetrate as deeply as some other emotions
00:34:11Gertrude has learned a great deal from you
00:34:15We all have
00:34:20I've sometimes wished miss Gertrude had some share of your soundness your sense
00:34:26I've sometimes wished miss Gertrude had some share of your soundness
00:34:31your sense
00:34:33You're very fine understanding miss Charlotte
00:34:37I'll keep your letters. I
00:34:42Never write I don't know how to
00:34:57You
00:35:04Your sister is not indifferent to her clever companion. She has the highest opinion of mr. Brand
00:35:12Well, she's not in love with him she wants him to marry me
00:35:20But why did you never tell me this before I don't like to speak about it
00:35:27If you don't want to marry mr. Brandon
00:35:30No
00:35:31But your father and your sister think that you ought to I
00:35:35Shall never marry mr. Brand
00:35:40If he would address himself to your sister
00:35:44I'm sure she'd listen to me
00:35:50Why shouldn't they marry try to make them marry
00:35:56I believe she does care for him
00:35:59We'll marry them off
00:36:00That will make them happy. It will make everybody happy. It would make me happy
00:36:05To be rid of mr. Brand
00:36:08To see my sister married to so good a man
00:36:19What a delightful retreat I must admit I've fallen quite in love with your American arrangements
00:36:26Everything is so tremendously
00:36:29natural
00:36:30primitive
00:36:31patriarchal
00:36:33Even your domestics have an air a style of their own
00:36:38That is Hattie
00:36:40Yes, I'd love to have one for myself, but I brought my own maid with me from Paris
00:36:44There was a French maid in the play that Robert took me to see she wore pink stockings. I
00:36:50Suppose your maids too old to wear pink stockings. She must have been with you for ages
00:36:55Is he
00:37:06I regret to say that Clifford has a vice you mean that he drinks I
00:37:12Quite agree that is a low taste
00:37:16Not a vice for a gentleman
00:37:18Mr. Brand is undertaken to help him. Ah, mr. Brand. Yes. He's an excellent influence
00:37:27But perhaps Clifford ought to cultivate the society of some agreeable woman a
00:37:31Clever agreeable woman who would give him a sense of how very ridiculous it is to be fathered
00:37:37What lady would you suggest well, there's a clever woman under your hand my sister
00:37:44your sister
00:37:48I
00:37:49Have my heart set on having a cook. I must have a cook an old Negress in a yellow turban
00:37:55I want to look out of the window and see her sitting there under the crooked little apple tree
00:38:00Pulling the husks off a lap full of Indian corn now, that would be local color, you know
00:38:11I fear I'm tiring your mother. I
00:38:14I
00:38:15Haven't been used to a great deal of conversation lately
00:38:19I see you live a life of the most exquisite retirement with your flowers your book
00:38:27Is mr. Emerson
00:38:30He is so very
00:38:35Improving you don't need much improving mother
00:38:41Now it is the rest of us who need that
00:38:44We have always been very quiet. I
00:38:50Fear I must hire you no further. Thank you again for allowing me to come
00:39:00I must go
00:39:02Why what has happened? I would like to leave
00:39:06Please tell me why I
00:39:09feel
00:39:11Out of tune, I hope not out of temper. No, no, no out of tune. I
00:39:18Sing too loud
00:39:21Robert mother wants you I'm coming directly. I
00:39:27Like your mother very much. I'm sure she likes you as she said we've always been very quiet. Yes
00:39:35That's what I want
00:39:38Ah, yes the quiet
00:39:42Robert yes coming
00:39:46Excuse me a moment
00:39:48I've almost decided to dispatch that letter
00:39:53Well when you have in fact done so I I hope you'll let me know
00:39:56I
00:40:04Say a word for Clifford
00:40:06Give him a hint to come and see him to come often. Tell him to be bold
00:40:11do I understand that I'm to suggest to my son to make a
00:40:16Profession
00:40:18Affection to madam Munster. Yes. He's a profession
00:40:22But as I understand it madam Munster is married woman
00:40:26But of course she can't marry him but she'll do what she can I
00:40:36Don't think I can undertake to recommend to my son any such course, would you call a carriage for me, please?
00:40:44But the fun is only just starting I have a migraine
00:40:47I
00:41:11You sure you want to go home what can you say to make me stay?
00:41:18We're having ice cream you made my share
00:41:31Encourage Cliff to come and see you his taste of the present are somewhat vulgar
00:41:35You mean he gets tipsy
00:41:38Inspire him with the taste for conversation
00:41:40And even if he should in the process fall in love with you doesn't matter
00:41:44I'm to offer myself as a superior form of intoxication a substitute for the brandy bottle
00:41:53Truly in this country one comes to strange uses
00:41:57It's unbecoming for Clifford to drink
00:42:00After all, he will be one day the principal gentleman in this neighborhood
00:42:05Yes, he and mr. Acton
00:42:09Are you by any chance offering me a second string to my bow
00:42:14But alas
00:42:17Self-interest sensuality and passion struggle together in the human breast
00:42:23There is a wilderness to be subdued and made fruitful
00:42:26tempest of passion to become
00:42:29luxuriance of sensuality to be loved
00:42:33All the benefits of a useful education may be lost by acquaintance with companions of bad habits
00:42:40Such is the natural propensity of evil
00:42:42So great is the vivacity the curiosity the love of novelty and the want of caution at a tender age
00:42:49So lively is the sympathy so active the spirit of imitation that even occasional intercourse with dangerous
00:42:57Companions will seldom fail to be highly injurious. I
00:43:01I
00:43:03Once was for several weeks with a foreigner of very fair natural abilities, but never subjected to the disciplines of early study
00:43:10Who would often arrive at his own conclusions by a kind of jump?
00:43:14In giving you an account of any piece of history, which and when my heart upward soar
00:43:21fly and float aloft and
00:43:24then and
00:43:25then looks down and sees on earth the spire of
00:43:30Our stony church
00:43:34Fears to be impaled there
00:43:37lively and sometimes to the purpose but
00:43:40produced by a sort of
00:43:42theatrical exhibition and not by a narration of consecutive facts
00:43:47Let then the skilled teacher make a point of accustoming his pupils to reason and regularity
00:43:53And especially his pupils of the female gender
00:43:56whose natural volatility
00:43:58most needs this discipline
00:44:29I've sometimes wished miss Gertrude had some share of your soundness sense
00:44:42Very fine understanding
00:44:58You
00:45:18Think of all that we owe mr. Brand he's helped you so
00:45:28He's helped you struggle with your
00:45:34Peculiarities
00:45:37You told me that he taught you how to govern your temper I
00:45:44Want to be wicked again
00:45:51Charlotte you're in love with him
00:45:59I wish he'd marry you
00:46:08This is very cool
00:46:12Not if it's true I
00:46:15Do wish he'd marry you you mustn't say things like that. I
00:46:20Mean to tell him so Gertrude
00:46:24Speaks to me again about myself I shall say why don't you marry Charlotte?
00:46:28She's a thousand times better than I you are wicked
00:46:32You are changed
00:46:41You make yourself out worse than you are to please him
00:46:45He doesn't care for the things we care for for the great questions of life
00:46:50Neither do I I've been pretending all this time. I've been dishonest
00:46:56It's pleasure that I care for
00:46:59pleasure and amusement
00:47:05Gertrude
00:47:08Gertrude
00:47:11Am I really losing you
00:47:14I
00:47:19Charlotte cares for the great questions of life. Mr. Brand
00:47:35When will I be back in a week you think she'll miss him
00:47:44Don't you like her
00:47:47She thinks that you are the most charming girl in the world when did she tell you that
00:47:56Anyway she doesn't you think that everything she said has to be taken the opposite way. I think that is
00:48:07Goodbye Robert
00:48:13I
00:48:43I
00:49:08Is this the prince
00:49:14a
00:49:20Mount Vesuvius, yes
00:49:23You must go to Europe make the tour
00:49:27Well, I know some fellows have been they say you can have better fun here
00:49:32Your friends probably weren't introduced
00:49:35They had no opportunity of going into society. They formed no relation
00:49:40Well, they went to a ball in Paris. I know that
00:49:44No, you must go you need it for your manners I
00:49:49Haven't got any
00:49:52Precisely, you must go to Europe and get a few
00:50:13I
00:50:44You must remember
00:50:47There is no agreeable man
00:50:50Who hasn't been to school to a clever woman
00:50:55Usually a little older than himself
00:50:59Trust me Clifford
00:51:05Laugh out laugh out if I'm you
00:51:07I'm here for that
00:51:12Are you seriously making love to your little cousin Lizzie
00:51:17Those things ought to be known I
00:51:20Don't care if it's known or not
00:51:22But I don't want people looking at me a young man of your importance ought to learn to be looked at
00:51:30And don't tell me you're not a young man of importance, oh no, you don't catch me saying that
00:51:36You must come to Europe it'll be talked about of course with me it will be said that you're my lover
00:51:46I'll show you how little one may mind that a little I shall mind it. I'd mind it a good deal
00:51:54Not too much, you know
00:51:57That would be uncivil
00:52:05I
00:52:35You
00:53:06I
00:53:14Thought I heard someone who is it? No one made a mistake
00:53:28Why are you so nervous I'm not your father doesn't like
00:53:36I thought it was Robert Acton. Oh, yes, of course. He's expected back tonight
00:53:43You've never answered my question about his little sister
00:53:46What's her name if one is arranging a marriage, you know one ought to tell one's friends
00:53:51I'm not arranging anything
00:53:53Then you don't intend to marry your cousin. Well, I expect I'll do as I choose
00:54:05Oh
00:54:20You're back Bob
00:54:22half an hour ago
00:54:25Where all your companions
00:54:27Charlotte's with mr.
00:54:28Brian in the parlor Gertrude is for the hundredth time doing the honors of the house to a foreign cousin and Clifford
00:54:35He is I suppose calling on the other foreign
00:54:40Hasn't the baroness been to visit you today
00:54:44The baroness has not honored us for three days why she'll know I
00:54:49Went to see her. What's the matter with her? I infer she's tired of us
00:54:59I'd slate you going home. I
00:55:07Think I'll go and take a look at the baroness
00:55:13If we ever had any virtue among us we'd better keep hold of it now
00:55:21Your cousin miss Acton is very charming
00:55:24She's the prettiest girl in this place
00:55:27I'm afraid you're entangled. I'm not entangled. Are you engaged?
00:55:36What's the matter there is someone
00:55:39Which father
00:55:45No, no
00:55:56I
00:56:26I
00:56:56I
00:57:08Don't think I ought to tell you to sit down. It's too late to begin a visit. That's too early to anyone. I
00:57:15Went first to the big house. I expected to find you there. No, I haven't been to the big house
00:57:20Yesterday nor the day before a oh, hi. I don't know how many days it's been you're tired of us
00:57:27I expected something of the kind
00:57:35I'm much rather being here with you. I
00:57:38Never get tired of people I like
00:57:41But you're not a poor
00:57:43Wicked foreign woman with irritable nerves
00:57:47Something's happened to you since I went away
00:57:49If
00:57:54You're bored you needn't be afraid to say so to me at least
00:58:06Someone there no, no, no, it's only my maid
00:58:10She always chooses the middle of the night to arrange her things. It's one of those odd French habits
00:58:20You
00:58:25Know that document you were to send to Germany
00:58:29You call it your renunciation
00:58:32Did you ever send it?
00:58:35Why do you ask me that now? I've wanted to ask you many times. I thought you might tell me yourself. I
00:58:45Think I've told you too much
00:58:50Wish you'd ask something of me. Isn't there anything I can do for you?
00:58:54If you can't stand this dull life anymore, let me amuse you
00:59:02See something of the country won't you won't you go to Niagara? You should see I agree, you know with you
00:59:12You alone well, yes, we might go alone. I
00:59:16I
00:59:18Think I ought to feel insulted
00:59:25You'd much better come to Niagara with me
00:59:31Is that the extent of what you're offering me
00:59:38Have you sent that document to Germany
00:59:47He was in Felix's studio he wanted to see some of his sketches you didn't have much light in there I
00:59:56Didn't have any oh your candle went out a I didn't have a candle
01:00:03You didn't give me any you had much better go home. Good night
01:00:11Good night
01:00:17Oh, what's the matter with him? He seemed rather muddled was he
01:00:22Do you think oh?
01:00:24He doesn't drink anymore. I've cured him of that and in return
01:00:30He's in love with me
01:00:34He wasn't in the studio I invented that at the moment
01:00:38He has an idea of being
01:00:40Romantic he's adopted the habit of coming to see me
01:00:43At midnight stealing in by the back way it seems to amuse him
01:00:52I'm still sitting up with a big house
01:00:55You can see the lights. Oh the big house. I don't know what they do up there
01:01:03I'm a quiet little humdrum woman
01:01:08Humdrum woman
01:01:16So good night
01:01:24Good night, Eugenia
01:01:26She
01:01:35Said the younger one begins the better
01:01:45She wants to introduce me to her circle of charming friends and just what is her circle of charming friends
01:01:56Oh
01:02:07Catch a cold
01:02:12What were you doing at Madame Munster's last night
01:02:18What did she tell you I'd want to tell you the same
01:02:26I
01:02:27Thought you were my father
01:02:30So you ran away she told me to
01:02:34But I felt ashamed to be hiding away in the dark like a coward
01:02:41So I came back
01:02:45It was surprised to see you
01:02:49But Eugenia carried it off didn't she beautifully
01:02:56What was her story
01:03:01Well, she said that she couldn't imagine what it got into you
01:03:07You appear to have taken a violent dislike to her what
01:03:14And that whenever you come to the house all you do is lock yourself up in Felix's studio and
01:03:22Look at his sketches. Oh
01:03:25Oh
01:03:28Well, it's not true, what do you think
01:03:33Baroness wouldn't tell a lie wouldn't she?
01:03:38Have you ever known her to tell an untruth yes lots of them
01:03:44She knew it wasn't father coming in she knew it was you
01:03:48She knows everything
01:03:51Are you by any chance
01:03:55The least bit sweet on her
01:03:58No, sir
01:04:20You
01:04:50I
01:04:58Have a very bad conscience
01:05:02We oughtn't to be together this way not until I've got your father's consent I
01:05:07Don't understand you
01:05:10You very often say that
01:05:14Considering how little we understand each other. It's a wonder we get on so well
01:05:18We've been alone together ever since you came the first time I ever saw you we were alone
01:05:26Why is it different now is it because everyone's at church
01:05:33The difference is good
01:05:38The difference is I love you more
01:05:42More and more
01:05:47I
01:06:18I
01:06:31Wanted to be in what a climate
01:06:47Oh
01:06:55Christine you mother it appears no one will be calling on us today
01:07:02I
01:07:13Were you expecting someone whom should I be expecting in this place?
01:07:20What expectations could there be I hope you don't think I'm reduced to waiting for a mr.. Robert act
01:07:33How long do you propose to remain in this lovely spot
01:07:37Well, you don't want to go away already
01:07:40Already is delicious
01:07:47Do you intend to spend the rest of your life making love to Gertrude what way yes
01:07:56Unfortunately her father wants her to marry mr.. Brown I know nothing about it
01:08:02Pleased to put on a log I
01:08:14Think you're the most heartless person living
01:08:23Don't you see that I'm in trouble
01:08:26You
01:08:31Robert Acton wants to marry me
01:08:36Don't you believe me
01:08:39Why does it make you unhappy
01:08:42Because I can't decide except him
01:08:47Except him
01:08:50He's immensely
01:08:55I
01:09:11There's a party at the Barrett's next Saturday
01:09:14Well, I'm sure you'll be one of the principal ornaments
01:09:18Everyone's tired of seeing me in my same old blue or my green
01:09:22This coffin is some pretty new patterns. No one else has seen
01:09:26And you better hurry before they do she promised not to show them till I've had first choice
01:09:45I do there's a bonnet to
01:09:52I
01:10:06Hope you're not giving gifts to that Baroness Robert
01:10:10You're not in love with her I
01:10:14Don't know
01:10:17That means you're not I like to be with her
01:10:22I think of a great deal
01:10:26But if this is love
01:10:29It's overrated
01:10:33No, it's not
01:10:40Wouldn't you like to get married
01:10:43To someone really nice
01:10:46That's what I'm trying to decide
01:10:48I'll find her for you
01:10:51Prettiest the best girl in all this place. That's you. I mean second to me
01:11:07It's for you I bought it for you
01:11:18You
01:11:30Thank You Robert
01:11:35I'm not to go
01:11:39Go where?
01:11:41Did you know that Felix was an actor with a troop of strolling players?
01:11:45They went everywhere and played Shakespeare
01:12:15Oh
01:12:46I've been preaching one of your beautiful sermons
01:13:03Did you bring me over here for the purpose of making that inquiry
01:13:07No, no, not for that. No, I wanted to tell you something
01:13:12Only as it's rather private I thought perhaps we might go into my studio
01:13:21It's very delicate what I want to say
01:13:24Please to say it as quickly as possible
01:13:27It's only because you're a clergyman, you know, I don't think I'd venture to say to a common man
01:13:33It's a question of resenting an injury I'm afraid I'm a very common man indeed
01:13:38Both my sister and I have taken a great fancy to our cousin Charlotte
01:13:44Cousin shot we fell in love with her from the first
01:13:48You fell in love with shot. She's a very charming person
01:13:53But she's not happy. Mr. Brand. She's not happy
01:14:01Charlotte is in love
01:14:04Charlotte is in love with you. Oh, she's in love with you
01:14:14Is that what you wanted to say to me I told you it was very delicate
01:14:28Don't let her languish I
01:14:30I
01:14:33Congratulate you
01:14:35It's in your interests
01:14:40You've interfered with me I
01:14:43Won't pretend I don't know what you mean
01:14:47But with one person you've lost nothing and think of what you've gained with another
01:14:55Seems to me that I'm the proper judge on both sides. Good day
01:15:00Oh
01:15:22My dear cousin
01:15:30I
01:15:46Want you to help me help you I mean with your father and with the world in general including mr. Brand
01:15:55Don't say poor mr. Brand. Well, I don't pity him at all
01:16:01I
01:16:08But it ought to be enough for any man that you take an interest in him Oh
01:16:14Charlotte take pity on me say a good word about me to your father because
01:16:23Well, because I'm terribly in love with your sister
01:16:28In love Charlotte in love
01:16:31I
01:16:38There is no great hope that we shall any of us advance much till we make religion a matter of business
01:16:45Character is no dead capital. It bears interest like the pound in the parable. It gains ten pounds
01:16:53Father I have
01:16:57As it multiplies more like an immense property it makes incalculable increase
01:17:08Father I have something to say to you about Gertrude. I
01:17:16Hope to have bought a bouquet in France they always do
01:17:20We are not in France
01:17:23The uncle I
01:17:26Desire very earnestly to marry your daughter Gertrude
01:17:34Huh
01:17:37You don't like it I
01:17:41Was afraid
01:17:44Well, I know I'm not the sort of man you might have looked for I have no position no fortune
01:17:50I can give Gertrude no place in the world
01:17:53She'll be hiding her light under a bushel that I've been the bushel
01:17:58Now I know that you like me. Well, you've shown that
01:18:02But you think I'm frivolous penniless and shabby
01:18:07Well granted granted granted a thousand times granted
01:18:11I've been a loose fish. I've I've been a fiddler painter
01:18:17an actor
01:18:18I've been a bohemian
01:18:20But in Bohemia, I always pass for a gentleman
01:18:24Now I find I can earn a living a very fair one from going about the world and painting bad portraits
01:18:30Gertrude declares she's willing to share my wanderings and help to pose my models
01:18:35Well that brings me to my third point
01:18:37Gertrude likes me
01:18:40Encourage her a little and she'll tell you sir
01:18:44We've been talking about you I know it that's why I came it is better you should be present
01:18:51We were discussing your future
01:18:53Well, you've never had any confidence in me. Never. I don't know why I have never seen you so passionate
01:19:03You have not profited as we had hoped I have profited you wanted to form my character well, it's formed
01:19:10I know what I want. I've chosen
01:19:14I'm determined to marry this gentleman
01:19:16Come in sir, you should be here you would better consent, sir
01:19:25I'm not sure that I understand
01:19:28Mr. Brandt asks you to let Felix take me away
01:19:31Isn't this rather a change?
01:19:34Yes, sir
01:19:37Yes, sir
01:19:42Where are our moral grounds
01:19:46I
01:19:50Should like in my ministerial capacity to unite this young couple
01:19:57That's very beautiful of you mr. Brandt I
01:20:01Should like to marry you
01:20:03It would give me great pleasure
01:20:06That is very nice
01:20:08I'm very handsome
01:20:11I
01:20:22Consent since mr. Brandt recommends it
01:20:30They tell me you are so comfortable here that you've got such a beautiful little house
01:20:35My son is so fond of going to see you. I
01:20:38I'm afraid my son will miss you
01:20:41dear, madam, I
01:20:43Can't stay in America
01:20:46for your son
01:20:50I want to see my children cheerful and
01:20:55Happy
01:20:58My daughter will probably marry her cousin
01:21:02To such interesting young people
01:21:05You seem to me all so happy here just as you are
01:21:09So I wish you would stay
01:21:14To be so pleasant for Robert
01:21:22Goodbye dear madam. I must remember your strength is precious
01:21:29You have been happy here haven't you and
01:21:32And you like us don't you so I wish you'd stay in your
01:21:37Beautiful little house. Yes, my house is beautiful now not to be compared with yours
01:22:07Oh
01:22:32He wasn't in Felix's studio I invented that at the moment
01:22:37He has an idea of being
01:22:40Romantic he's adopted the habit of coming to see me at midnight
01:22:46Stealing in by the back way
01:23:08You
01:23:11Use my ridiculous position I was thinking of you
01:23:17The occupation of extreme leisure. No, I'm delighted. I'm honored
01:23:22Won't you come into the house?
01:23:24I've just come out of it. I've been calling on your mother
01:23:29Bidding her farewell
01:23:32I'm going away
01:23:35when
01:23:38As soon as possible
01:23:48Why haven't you been to see me
01:23:53Must you go straight home
01:23:59Why don't you answer my question
01:24:04Let me walk with you
01:24:07Like
01:24:09You really are going away it's very serious
01:24:13Why are you going I
01:24:20Had hoped you would stay I
01:24:28Asked you a question the other night, but you haven't answered have you sent off that document to Germany?
01:24:38Yes
01:24:43What could I say to keep you
01:24:49Tell me a reason why I should stay
01:24:56We all admire you so
01:25:01That's no reason
01:25:04I'm admired also in Germany
01:25:07I
01:25:37Was here
01:25:50It is the continent for really superior women we are appreciated there
01:26:07You
01:26:12Must wear this to the opera in Paris
01:26:23Shall we go off into the opera? Yes to the opera very often
01:26:28We
01:26:35Had hoped that your brother's marriage might detain you I think I've grown rather tired of marriages
01:26:43Well since you are determined to leave us may I have one last request I
01:26:50Would like to put my carriage at your disposal for your departure it would give me great pleasure
01:26:56It gives me even greater pleasure to accept your kind proposal
01:27:08Thank You mr. Acton
01:27:25You
01:27:41The path of the railroad runs rocks and hills just so
01:27:47Just
01:27:51So must the path of salvation cleave its way through the wilderness of our passions
01:27:59Awaken to stir up another soul to this necessity that
01:28:07That is a noble exertion a higher power a greater ambition
01:28:17Okay
01:28:47You
01:29:17You

Recommended