Witness for the Prosecution
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:03:05
Teeny-weeny steps, now. Remember
we had a teeny-weeny heart attack.

:03:09
Oh, shut up!
:03:11
Williams, my cane.
:03:19
Here he comes!
:03:32
Good afternoon. Thank you very much.
Everybody back to work.

:03:36
Sir Wilfrid, if you don't mind, I'd like
to read you a poem to welcome you back.

:03:40
Very touching. You can recite it
after office hours in your own time.

:03:44
Now back to work.
What's the matter with you?

:03:47
Nothing. I'm just happy
that you're your old self again.

:03:50
Any more sentimentality around here,
I shall go back to the hospital!

:03:54
They won't take him back.
He wasn't really discharged, you know,

:03:58
he was expelled for conduct
unbecoming a cardiac patient.

:04:01
Put these in water, blabbermouth!
Come on in, Carter.

:04:11
Look at this room.
It's ugly, old and musty.

:04:15
But I never knew
I could miss anything so much.

:04:19
- Missed you too, you musty old buzzard.
- Oh, thank you, sir.

:04:22
I'm not a religious man, but when they
carted you off, I went out and lit a candle.

:04:27
- Why, thank you, Carter.
- Actually, sir, I was lighting it for myself.

:04:30
If anything happened to you,
what would happen to me, after 37 years?

:04:34
37 years! Has it been all that long?
:04:37
Yes, sir. This is 1952, that was in October
1915. The Shepherd's Bush murder.

:04:42
The chemist accused of putting
cyanide in his uncle's toothpaste.

:04:47
My first murder trial.
I was more frightened than the defendant.

:04:52
First time I rose to make an objection,
my wig fell off. Where's my wig?

:04:57
Right here.

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