Spellbound
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

:15:02
Excuse me.
:15:05
Hello.
:15:06
Yes, Dr. Edwardes.
:15:08
What? Yes, Anthony Edwardes.
:15:11
Who? Sorry,
I don't get your name.

:15:16
Norma Cramer?
:15:20
Please, Miss Cramer, I'm very
busy and I don't know you.

:15:25
Some girl, claiming to be...
:15:30
I hate practical jokes, don't you?
:15:33
People calling up
and chirping, "Guess who I am?"

:15:35
Sounds like an ex-patient.
They're always full of coy tricks.

:15:39
Very likely.
Come on, let's go.

:15:41
We'll look at some sane trees, normal
grass and clouds without complexes.

:15:51
I think the greatest harm done to
the human race was done by poets.

:15:54
Poets are dull, most of them,
but not especially fiendish.

:15:58
They keep filling peoples's heads
with delusions about love...

:16:01
writing as if it were a symphony
orchestra, or a flight of angels.

:16:05
- Which it isn't?
- Of course not...

:16:08
People fall in love because they
respond to certain hair colouring...

:16:12
or mannerisms that
remind them of their parents.

:16:15
- Or sometimes for no reason at all.
- But the point is that...

:16:18
people read about love as one
thing and experience it as another.

:16:23
Or they expect kisses to be
like lyrical poems...

:16:27
embraces to be like
Shakesperian drama.

:16:31
Then when they find out differently,
they get sick and need analysis?

:16:35
Yes, very often.
:16:36
Professor, you're suffering
from mogo on the gogo.

:16:39
I beg your pardon?
:16:43
- You can't get through there.
- Of course I can...

:16:45
I've been through here
many times.

:16:49
- Hurt?
- Not at all.

:16:50
- Here.
- I'm all right.

:16:54
- I usually come here alone.
- That doesn't sound like fun.

:16:58
I haven't done it for fun.
Isn't this beautiful?


prev.
next.