The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
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:06:00
Well, I know very little
of, uh, Miss Lockhart.

:06:04
I leave her
to her jars and gases.

:06:06
We were talking
about your insight, Sandy.

:06:09
You do have insight...
:06:11
and Jenny...
has got instinct.

:06:15
Jenny will be
a great lover.

:06:18
She's like a heroine from a novel
by Mr. D.H. Lawrence.

:06:22
The common moral code will not
apply to her. She will be above it.

:06:26
This is a fact which only someone
with your insight should know about.

:06:29
You know, Sandy...
:06:32
you would make an excellent
secret service agent...

:06:36
a great spy.
:06:43
Sandy, you must try
not to peer at people.

:06:46
It makes a most
rude impression.

:06:48
Why do you think I would
make a good spy, Miss Brodie?

:06:52
Well, because you are intelligent
and not... emotional.

:06:57
I've observed this
constraint in you.

:06:59
It has, from time to time,
distressed me...

:07:01
as I myself
am a deeply emotional woman.

:07:05
I feel many things
passionately.

:07:08
I feel things,
Miss Brodie.

:07:10
Well, everybody does,
of course.

:07:13
It's simply
a matter of degree.

:07:16
Actually, passion would be
a great handicap to a spy.

:07:21
- It would?
- Definitely.

:07:25
What did you mean
when you said that, uh...

:07:27
Jenny was above
the common moral code?

:07:30
Oh, simply that it
will not apply to her.

:07:33
She is the exception...
:07:36
and we can helpJenny
to realize this.

:07:40
- Oh, Sandy, dear, I forgot the hot water.
- I'll get it.

:07:43
Thank you, dear.
:07:51
Miss Brodie, how do you think
that we can helpJenny?

:07:55
We can encourage her,
give her confidence.

:07:58
Confidence for what?

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