Goodbye, Mr. Chips
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:41:00
- Because...
- Because?

:41:02
Well, because you're so very nice-looking,
I think, and charming.

:41:07
So are you, Mr. Chipping, frankly.
:41:09
Good heavens,
no one has ever called me that!

:41:18
What extraordinary ideas
come into one's head up here.

:41:22
- It's the altitude.
- Do you experience a sort of exhilaration?

:41:26
- Definitely.
- As though we owned the mountain?

:41:29
- To put it mildly.
- We're pretty superior persons.

:41:31
We're gods!
:41:34
Up here there's no time...
:41:36
...no growing old...
:41:38
...nothing lost.
- We're young.

:41:41
- We believe in ourselves.
- We have faith in the future.

:41:44
It must be the altitude.
:41:52
Do you suppose a person in middle-age
could start life over again...

:41:56
...and make a go of it?
:41:59
I'm sure of it.
:42:01
Quite sure.
:42:05
It must be tremendously
interesting to be a schoolmaster.

:42:08
I thought so once.
:42:10
To watch boys grow up
and help them along...

:42:13
...see their characters develop
and what they become...

:42:16
...when they leave school
and the world gets hold of them.

:42:20
I don't see how you could
ever get old...

:42:23
...in a world that's always young.
:42:26
I never really thought of it that way.
:42:30
When you talk about it,
you make it sound exciting and heroic.

:42:34
It is.
:42:37
And the schoolmaster?
:42:40
Is he exciting and heroic too?
:42:45
I've met only one...
:42:47
...a reckless person...
:42:49
...who climbed the Glockner
in a mist to...

:42:54
Oh, look!
:42:58
The mist is lifting.

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