A Room with a View
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:43:04
...music and life will mingle.
:43:07
Then she will be wonderful in both.
:43:10
I trust that day is at hand.
She has just promised to marry me.

:43:18
I'm sorry if I've given you a shock.
:43:21
I'm awfully sorry.
I'd no idea you were so intimate with her.

:43:25
You should have stopped me.
Shall we join the others?

:43:32
Congratulations.
:43:34
Blessings. Your vicar's benediction.
:43:38
I want you to be supremely happy.
:43:41
And supremely good,
both as man and wife, mother and father.

:43:46
And now I want my tea.
:43:48
Just in time. How dare you be so serious!
:43:57
- Summer Street will never be the same.
- It's too small for anyone like ourselves.

:44:02
It might attract the wrong type.
The trains have improved so.

:44:06
Fatal. What are five miles
from the station these days?

:44:11
Sir Harry, how about spinsters as tenants?
:44:14
Most certainly!
That is, if they are gentlewomen.

:44:17
Indeed they are. Miss Teresa
and Miss Catharine Alan. I met them in Italy.

:44:23
Sir Harry, beware of these gentlewomen.
Only let to a man.

:44:29
Provided, of course, he's clean.
:44:31
You'd love the Miss Alans.
:44:33
I don't think I'd like anyone at that pensione.
:44:37
Wasn't there a lady novelist
and a free-thinking father and son?

:44:42
I have no profession.
My attitude - quite indefensible -

:44:46
is that, if I trouble no one, I may do as I like.
:44:50
It is, I dare say, an example of my decadence.
:44:53
You're very fortunate.
Leisure is a wonderful opportunity.


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