Wild in the Country
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:52:13
Shh!
:52:33
Well.
:52:37
- I guess the grammar
and spelling are pretty bad.
- Pretty bad.

:52:41
- Are the characters here real people?
- Yes, ma'am.

:52:45
I do kinda mix 'em up though,
don't I?

:52:50
I mean, I guess you should
know right away if people...

:52:54
belong up with the angels
or down in the fire and brimstone, huh?

:52:58
Should you?
:53:00
Take for instance Betty Lee.
:53:03
At times I look at her and I think...
she's fat and dried up...

:53:07
and selfish.
:53:10

:53:10
And then again I think
she's warm and unselfish.

:53:14
What about this character, Norrie?
:53:19
She wasn't at the Grove.
I just wrote her in.

:53:23
That's a writer's privilege.
:53:26
I even get mixed up
about Norrie too.

:53:31
She says she'll have me any way--
plain, fried or scrambled.

:53:36
And I admit that
I am tempted at times...

:53:38
like at night when Uncle Rolfe's
off at the poker games.

:53:42
But I don't know about Norrie.
:53:44
In fact, proper folks would say
she's just downright no good.

:53:50
What would you say?
:53:53
You know me, ma'am.
I'm not proper folks.

:53:59
Norrie never had a chance.
Her ma ran out on Uncle Rolfe
about five or six years ago.


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