The Last Unicorn
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:07:04
Say my name, then. If you know my name, tell it to me.
:07:08
Your name is a golden bell hung in my heart.
:07:11
I would break my body to pieces to call you once by your name!
:07:16
Say it, if you know.
:07:17
Rumpelstilstkin! Gotcha!
:07:20
I should know better than to expect
a silly butterfly to know my name.

:07:23
One, two, three o'lairy!
:07:26
Butterfly, in all your wanderings, have you seen others like me?
Have you seen even one?

:07:36
Oh, have you seen the muffin man, the muffin man, the muffin man?
:07:41
Butterfly, even one? Tell me that you saw only one?
:07:48
One? One alone, to be my own... Up goes downwind, up go down!
Go and catch a falling star...

:08:03
It serves me right for even asking you.
:08:06
All butterflies know are songs and poetry
and anything else they hear.

:08:10
I guess you mean well.
:08:12
Fly away, butterfly.
:08:16
Oh, I must take the A train,
:08:22
oh, I am a cook and a captain bold and the mate of the Nancy brig.
:08:26
Has anybody here seen Kelly?
:08:31
I hope you hear many more songs.
:08:33
I must find someone who knows me, who has seen others like me.
:08:38
"Unicorn". Old French, "unicorne". Latin, "unicornis".
:08:43
Literally, one horned: "unus", one, and "cornu", a horn.
:08:47
A fabulous animal resembling a horse with one horn.
:08:51
Visible only to those who search and trust, and generally mistaken
for a white mare.

:08:57
Unicorn.
:08:59
Oh, you do know me!

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