A Room with a View
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:03:10
Any nook does for me,
but it is hard that you have no view.

:03:14
No, you must have a view, too.
:03:16
- Buonasera.
- Buonasera.

:03:18
Miss Lavish,
what a recommendation for a place!

:03:22
Indeed, Miss Alan, it is.
:03:24
Between the squalor of London and the squalor
of Prato, there is a great gulf fixed.

:03:43
By going off the track,
you get to know the country,

:03:47
see the little towns,
Gubbio, Settignano, Galuzzo,

:03:52
San Gimignano, Monteriggioni.
:03:56
Their mixture of the primitive
with the classical is irresistible.

:04:01
- Miss Pole?
- Yes, Mr. Emerson.

:04:04
What is that you are taking?
It's not lemonade, is it?

:04:07
- Yes, it is.
- Put it right away, Miss Pole.

:04:11
Lemonade is very bad for the stomach.
:04:14
Oh!
:04:18
I shall tell the signora to give
the next south view available to you.

:04:23
- Why not to you?
- No, I insist.

:04:28
This meat has surely been boiled.
:04:31
For stock. It's lost all its flavor.
:04:36
Monteriggioni is not only quaint,
:04:39
but one meets the Italians
in all their simplicity and charm.

:04:43
Wasn't Monteriggioni
where we saw the cornflowers, Teresa?

:04:49
An entire carpet of them. It was delightful!
:04:54
I find the cornflower
the most delightful of flowers.

:04:59
I prefer something bolder -
the reckless rose, the tempestuous tulip.


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