The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex
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:41:05
Yes, yes. Or one woman's
to be like any other woman's.

:41:08
- Not mine for you.
- Nor mine for you, you lying villain.

:41:11
- You deceiver, curse you.
- Curse you and double curse you.

:41:14
- You devil of brass.
- Silver, darling.

:41:17
Let me be a devil in silver.
:41:19
It reminds me of Raleigh.
:41:21
Raleigh?
:41:24
Must you forever be thinking of him?
:41:27
What else do you expect...
:41:29
...when you prefer the ants
and the squirrels of Wanstead to me?

:41:34
What's today?
:41:36
Thursday.
:41:38
Come again when I'm in a better mood.
:41:40
Next Wednesday, say.
:41:42
Or any Wednesday later in the summer.
:41:45
Any summer.
:41:49
What, you still here?
:41:50
- Lf I could only walk out that door.
- It's not locked.

:41:54
If I went, I'd only come back
like a fool, and you know it.

:41:58
Would you?
:41:59
- Why didn't you write to me?
- Why didn't you return?

:42:02
Return? You let it be known
you'd not admit me.

:42:05
I may have meant it at the time.
:42:07
If ever a man was possessed of a devil,
you're mine. Why I don't knock...

:42:11
And if ever a devil tortured a woman,
you're my devil and torture me!

:42:18
For pity's sake, let us part now
and quickly, or it will grow worse.

:42:22
- Go, please!
- I'll not go!

:42:31
Darling.
:42:32
Come here.
:42:39
Robert.
:42:41
Robert, let us be kind for a moment.
:42:44
No, I'll be kind. You needn't be.
:42:47
You're young and strangely sweet.
:42:50
And my heart cries out to you
wherever you are.

:42:54
And there's something in me
that has drawn you.

:42:57
But this same lovely, dreadful thing
that draws us together...


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