Madame Curie
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:31:00
Packing.
Yes... Wasn't it lovely?

:31:25
Come in...
:31:33
Dr. Curie.
:31:34
How do you do?
:31:37
I missed you at the
Graduation Exercises.

:31:40
I looked all over for you.
:31:42
You were there?
:31:43
Yes.
:31:43
Then you heard.
:31:44
Yes. My congratulation
Mademoiselle.

:31:47
Thank you. You know, I was...
never dreamed that I would...

:31:51
I was even afraid that I might
may not...

:31:53
Oh, I'm glad you were able to go.
:31:56
Won't you sit down?
:31:58
Thank you
:32:01
I met David and he told me that
:32:04
you were leaving Poland
on Tuesday

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Yes.
:32:07
I see.
:32:08
Then you haven't reconsider
Mademoiselle.

:32:10
I'm afraid not.
:32:11
Of course. Of course.
Perhaps you might have.

:32:15
You were packing?
:32:18
Yes.
:32:19
Oh, yes... naturally.
Well, then...

:32:23
since you are leaving
so soon on Tuesday

:32:25
I presume there'd be no time for
something I had in mind,

:32:32
that is...
:32:34
my father...
:32:36
He is a doctor, you know.
:32:37
He is very short only, you know.
but intelligent.

:32:40
And my mother is quite gay.
:32:42
I think you'd enjoy knowing
both of them.

:32:44
But of course that would be
impossible

:32:47
because you'd be busy packing and
doing one thing or another.

:32:51
I had meant to
ask you down before

:32:53
but it slipped my mind.
:32:55
Still, I thought it would be nice
:32:57
for you to take away with you
some of Paris' countryside


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