:04:04
	Well, Adso, it would appear that
we're in a labyrinth.
:04:22
	Are you still there?
:04:23
	Yes.
How do we get out?
:04:28
	With some difficulty.
If at all.
:04:33
	You see, Adso, that is the charm
of a labyrinth.
:04:38
	Adso, stay calm.
Open a book...
:04:42
	and read it aloud.
Leave the room you're in...
:04:46
	and keep turning left.
:04:49
	"Love does not originate as an
illness but is transformed into it..."
:04:52
	when it becomes obsessive thoughts."
:04:55
	"It was the theologian Ibn Hazim who
stated the love sick person..."
:04:58
	"does not want to be healed
and his amorous day dreams..."
:05:01
	"cause irregular breathing
and quicken the pulse."
:05:04
	"He identifies amorous
melancholy with lycanthropy..."
:05:07
	"the disease that induces
wolf-like behavior in humans."
:05:11
	"The lover's outer appearance..."
:05:14
	"begins to change."
:05:16
	"Soon his eyesight fails,
his lips drivel..."
:05:19
	"and his face becomes covered
with pustules."
:05:22
	"Marks resembling the bites of
a dog appear on his face..."
:05:26
	"and he ends his days
by prowling graveyards..."
:05:30
	"at night, like a wolf."
:05:34
	Master?
:05:36
	I can see a lantern.
:05:37
	Don't move.
Stay where you are.
:05:42
	I see a man.
:05:44
	He's stopped.
:05:45
	What is he doing?
:05:48
	He's raising his lantern.
:05:50
	How many times?
:05:54
	Three times.
:05:56
	It's I.
Raise your lantern.