Camille
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1:10:02
...and who is certain to leave her
in the end.

1:10:06
l don't suppose you can understand
how any woman...

1:10:10
...unprotected, as you say l am,
can be lifted above self-interest...

1:10:16
...by a sentiment so delicate and pure
that she feels only humiliation...

1:10:20
...when you speak of such things.
1:10:23
l realize now that you
do love him unselfishly.

1:10:27
But even so, l say it can't go on.
1:10:30
-But it will go on!
-Armand is a young man...

1:10:33
...with his way to make,
with a career waiting for him.

1:10:36
And in his case, he can't serve
his best interests by being tied...

1:10:39
...to a woman he can't present
to his family or his friends.

1:10:45
-Armand is no different than other men.
-Oh, come, madame.

1:10:48
Be honest.
Haven't you found him different?

1:10:51
Haven't you found him
more sensitive, more loyal?

1:10:55
Or am l prejudiced
because l'm his father?

1:10:58
No. No, no. Armand is different.
1:11:02
And so you see, as long as Armand loves
you, he'll not enter rooms that you can't.

1:11:08
But a man can go back.
He can always go back.

1:11:12
Monsieur...
1:11:14
...suppose l told you l have a feeling
l shan't live very long?

1:11:18
Well, then l'd scold you for being fanciful
and a little foolish.

1:11:23
What you probably feel
is the melancholy of happiness...

1:11:27
...that mood that comes over
all of us when we realize...

1:11:30
...that even love can't remain
at flood tide forever.

1:11:34
-Without Armand, l'm doomed.
-With him, you're both doomed.

1:11:38
Without a profession of any sort,
what can he do?

1:11:42
Unless he sinks so low
he's willing to let some other man...

1:11:45
...foot the bills for his life with you.
1:11:47
You don't know Armand.
You wouldn't say that.

1:11:50
No one knows the man he might become
if he loses his self-respect.

1:11:54
But l think that's too high
a price to pay, even for love.

1:11:58
l want Armand to enjoy life,
not to be sacrificed to it.


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