At the Circus
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:42:01
Law?
:42:03
But you don't have to go right now,
do you?

:42:06
There's nothing to keep me here
that I can see from this angle.

:42:09
But we hardly know each other.
:42:12
I can be very entertaining if I want to be.
:42:17
There must be some way
of getting the money...

:42:19
without getting in trouble
with the Hays Office.

:42:21
Will you walk on your hands?
:42:24
Silly boy, of course not.
:42:25
All right, forget about it.
Will you walk on the ceiling?

:42:29
And when I'm on the ceiling,
you'll run out and call...

:42:32
You'll run away.
:42:33
That's the farthest thought from my mind,
so help me the law of gravity.

:42:37
All right, I'll walk on the ceiling
if you will, too.

:42:39
No, thanks. I'll sit this one out.
:42:44
I'm just an old groundhog.
I shouldn't even be out until February.

:42:48
But it's so easy.
:42:49
The bottom of the shoe creates a suction
that holds you up on the ceiling.

:42:53
No, I'd rather not.
I have an agreement with the houseflies.

:42:57
The flies don't practice law,
and I don't walk on the ceiling.

:43:00
You'll love it.
:43:05
Come on, Cheever.
:43:06
Are you sure we're not being too hasty?
After all, I am just a boy.

:43:10
- You're a trouper, an aerial star.
- You could be, too.

:43:14
You're tall, you're strong.
:43:17
You're nearsighted.
:43:19
Hurry, Cheever.
:43:20
You're not fooling, now?
You will walk on the ceiling?

:43:23
Only with you.
:43:26
Don't look, now. No peeky-weeky.
:43:31
I'll bet you're laughing at me inside.
:43:36
And to think I might have roamed
the whole world over and never found you.

:43:41
Ready, darling?
:43:43
I know I'm going to hate myself for this
in the morning.

:43:45
- Why, you look like a million.
- I'll settle for $10,000.

:43:50
- Suppose you go first.
- Why?

:43:53
In case you fall, I'll be here to pick it up.
:43:56
No. Let's go up together.
:43:58
If that's your best offer,
but I'm not making a nickel on it.


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