:05:08
- What is it?
- Good evening.
:05:10
I stay in the neighborhood...
:05:11
and, hearing of your master's illness,
I took the liberty of calling.
:05:15
How is he tonight?
:05:16
He'll never see the morning.
:05:18
- He hasn't asked for anyone of my cloth?
- Nor will he.
:05:21
He's set in his ways,
and they are the ways of the heathen.
:05:24
I know he won't see the rector...
:05:26
but though I'm a stranger,
I don't like to leave a man to die like that.
:05:29
He'll die in his own fashion, as he has lived.
:05:32
- Still, sometimes at the end...
- Not with him.
:05:35
He's stubborn and unbending
and will be so at the throne itself.
:05:41
I suppose I can be of no use then.
:05:42
No manner of use.
:05:48
Good night.
:06:01
He's asking for you.
:06:05
Where can I find Mr. Broughton?
:06:21
Who is it?
:06:22
Come in or go out.
:06:33
You'll have to go up soon
if you want to see him again.
:06:40
Curious house, this.
:06:42
Curious owner.
:06:43
Yes, but I suppose a great Egyptologist
can't be expected to be like other people.
:06:47
He'll be like a great many other people soon.
:06:50
That's not a very sympathetic thing to say.
:06:52
I'm not a sympathetic man.
:06:54
Want a drink?
:06:58
- That's across the hall, isn't it?
- I dare say.