In Search of the Castaways
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:02:11
- Good night, John.
- Good night, milord. Good night, milady.
- Good night.

:02:22
Excuse me, sir. Is that
Lord Glenarvan's yacht?

:02:25
- It is.
- Well, we'd like to see him, please.

:02:27
Oh, would you, now?
He'll be horribly hurt to know...

:02:30
you didn't arrive
for the start of the party.

:02:33
We didn't even know about it.
:02:35
I bring news of one of his ships,
disappeared at sea.

:02:37
A message from Captain Grant
of the Britannia.

:02:41
Captain Grant?
Why, he's dead, isn't he?

:02:44
And just how would he get
a bottle where he's at?

:02:47
- Go on. Get on with you.
- Captain Grant's our father,
and he's not dead.

:02:52
I'm Mary Grant,
and this is my brother, Robert.

:02:55
Oh, no offense intended, miss.
:02:58
He was a good man, he was.
The best this line ever had.

:03:01
It's just that it's, uh, hard to take
serious. The note in the bottle, I mean.

:03:07
Still, I-I suppose
it could happen.

:03:09
And that's why we just have to
see his lordship before he sails.

:03:13
Oh, I'm sorry, miss.
I've had my orders.

:03:15
Nobody aboard
except invited guests.

:03:18
But we've come all the way from Plymouth
today. It has cost me my last franc.

:03:22
And we haven't
had a thing to eat.

:03:26
So that's it.
Another trick, is it?

:03:29
Get out of here with your wild tales,
your hard-luck stories.

:03:33
You almost had me taken in for a minute.
Go on. Stand clear of the gate there.

:03:37
Come on, Robert.
:03:46
- Lovely.
- Good night to you.

:03:49
You two, come back here!
:03:52
Come back, I said.
:03:54
You children,
come here at once.

:03:57
- Did you hear me?
- Good evening.


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