Desire
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:10:12
- Dr. Pauquet?
- Yes, madame. Would you please be seated?

:10:16
- Your name, please?
- Mme. Duvalle.

:10:19
Mme. Aristide Duvalle.
:10:21
Aristide Duvalle, the famous jeweller?
:10:24
Yes, I am his wife. Do you know him?
:10:26
I've never had that pleasure,
but of course I've heard of him.

:10:29
Who hasn't in Paris?
:10:30
That's what makes it so much worse.
:10:33
Doctor, I...
:10:36
It's too terrible to speak of.
:10:38
No. Come, come, come now.
:10:41
Do you want me to have you for a patient?
:10:44
You're right. I must be calm for his sake.
:10:47
You see, all of a sudden,
for the past few weeks...

:10:50
my husband has been suffering from...
:10:53
Well, I suppose
you would call it hallucinations.

:10:55
Can you tell me the symptoms?
:10:58
They are different.
:10:59
- He has an obsession about money.
- Who hasn't nowadays?

:11:02
But better times will cure these things.
:11:04
I doubt if you have much to worry about
if it's just a question of money.

:11:07
But it isn't.
:11:10
Doctor...
:11:13
It's too embarrassing.
:11:15
You are talking to your doctor, madame.
:11:17
When we were married,
he was such a strong, virile man...

:11:24
and now...
:11:28
Doctor...
:11:31
sometimes he imagines he's a schoolgirl
running away from school.

:11:35
Oh.
:11:36
And do you know,
he has given up pyjamas...

:11:38
and taken to wearing nightgowns?
:11:41
I don't like that.
:11:42
I don't like it, either.
:11:45
It's all so hopeless.
:11:47
Not at all, madame. Modern psychiatry
has a way of dealing with these problems.

:11:51
Believe me, a few careful treatments...
:11:53
and we'll have him out of his nightgowns
and back into pyjamas in no time.

:11:57
- He belongs in them.
- Unquestionably.

:11:59
Now shall we make an appointment for him?

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