:48:01
	Of course, he and Mr.Kane
didn't exactly see eye to eye.
:48:04
	You take the Spanish-American war.
:48:06
	I guess Mr.Leland was right.
That was Mr.Kane's war.
:48:10
	We didn't really have anything
to fight about.
:48:14
	Do you think if it hadn't been for that war
of Mr.Kane's...
:48:17
	...we'd have the Panama Canal?
:48:21
	I wish I knew where Mr.Leland was.
:48:24
	A lot of the time now
they don't tell me these things.
:48:28
	Maybe even he's dead.
:48:30
	In case you'd like to know...
:48:32
	...he's at the Huntington Memorial Hospital
on 180th Street.
:48:35
	You don't say. I had--
:48:37
	Nothing particular the matter with him,
they tell me, just....
:48:40
	Just old age.
:48:44
	It's the only disease that you don't
look forward to being cured of.
:49:01
	I can remember absolutely everything,
young man.
:49:04
	That's my curse.
:49:05
	That's one of the greatest curses
ever inflicted on the human race: memory.
:49:10
	I was his oldest friend, and as far as
I was concerned, he behaved like a swine.
:49:16
	Not that Charlie was ever brutal.
He just did brutal things.
:49:20
	Maybe I wasn't his friend,
but if I wasn't, he never had one.
:49:25
	Maybe I was what you nowadays
call a stooge.
:49:29
	You were about to say something
about Rosebud.
:49:31
	Do you happen to have a good cigar?
:49:33
	I've got a young physician here
who thinks I'm going to give up smoking.
:49:37
	No, I'm afraid I haven't. Sorry.
:49:40
	I changed the subject, didn't l?
:49:42
	What a disagreeable old man
I have become.
:49:45
	You're a reporter and you want to know
what I think about Charlie Kane.
:49:53
	I suppose he had some private sort
of greatness.
:49:56
	But he kept it to himself.
:49:58
	He never gave himself away.
He never gave anything away.