Alice Adams
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:13:00
I suppose you want us to dance
the first dance.

:13:02
Yes, pIease. I'II be right down.
:13:05
-Good evening, Mrs. DowIing.
-AIice.

:13:06
HeIIo, EIIa. You Iook IoveIy.
:13:09
Ready?
:13:12
Mrs. DowIing.
:13:13
-I'm so gIad to see you.
-EIIa, how nice of you to come.

:13:17
-Frank, good evening.
-Good evening, MiIdred.

:13:31
ReIax, nobody's Iooking at you.
:13:36
We must speak to MiIdred
and Mr. and Mrs. PaImer.

:13:38
I haven't got a thing to say to them.
:13:44
You didn't wear the maize Georgette
as I thought you wouId...

:13:47
...but you Iook simpIy darIing.
And those pearIs--

:13:49
You know my mother and father, I think.
:13:54
Fine, thank you.
:13:55
Mrs. PaImer, my brother.
:13:57
Hi.
:13:58
-Mr. PaImer.
-Hi.

:14:30
It's wonderfuI, and the mystery is
where you ever Iearned to do it.

:14:33
I suppose you think there's no pIace
to dance besides these frozen-faced joints.

:14:37
Frozen-faced? Why, everybody's having
a IoveIy time. Look at them.

:14:41
They hoIIer Ioud enough.
:14:44
You don't caII that PaImer famiIy
frozen-faced, I suppose?

:14:46
CertainIy not. They're just dignified.
:14:48
Besides, I don't Iike you
to taIk that way about them.

:14:51
They passed you on
Iike you had something catching.

:14:54
How fantastic.
Why, MiIdred's a great friend of mine.

:14:57
Poor you.
:14:58
HeIIo, Henrietta.
:14:59
-HeIIo, AIice.
-How are you?


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