Dead Poets Society
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:35:01
I hereby reconvene
the Dead Poets Society.

:35:05
Welton Chapter. The, uh, meetings
will be conducted by myself
and the other new initiates now present.

:35:11
Uh, Todd Anderson,
because he prefers not to read,
will keep the minutes of the meetings.

:35:15
I'll now read the traditional
opening message...

:35:17
by society member
Henry David Thoreau.

:35:20
"I went to the woods because
I wanted to live deliberately.

:35:23
I wanted to live deep,
and suck out all the marrow of life."

:35:25
I'll second that.
:35:27
"To put to rout all that was not life...
:35:30
and not, when I had come to die,
discover that I had not lived."

:35:36
And, uh, Keating's marked
a bunch of other pages.

:35:39
All right, intermission. Dig deep.
Right here, right here, lay it down.

:35:42
On the mud?
We're gonna put our food on the mud?

:35:44
Meeks, put your coat down.
Picnic blanket.

:35:46
- Yes, sir!
- Excuse me.
- Use Meeks' coat.

:35:49
Don't keep anything back, either.
:35:51
You guys are always bumming my smokes.
:35:53
- Raisins?
- Yeah.

:35:55
Wait a minute.
Who gave us half a roll?

:35:58
- I'm eating the other half.
- Come on!

:36:00
What? You want me to put it back?
:36:02
It was a dark and rainy night.
:36:04
And this old lady,
who had a passion for jigsaw puzzles...

:36:07
sat by herself in her house at her table
to complete the new jigsaw puzzle.

:36:11
As she pieced the puzzle together...
:36:14
she realized to her astonishment...
:36:16
that the image that was formed
was her very own room...

:36:20
and the figure in the centre of the
puzzle as she completed it was herself.

:36:24
And with trembling hands,
she placed the last four pieces...

:36:29
and stared in horror at the face
of a demented madman at the window.

:36:35
The last thing that this old lady ever
heard was the sound of breaking glass.

:36:39
- No shit.
- Yes. This is true. This is true.

:36:42
I've got one that's even
better than that. I do.

:36:46
There's a young married couple
and they're driving through the forest
at night from a long trip.

:36:50
And they run out of gas,
and there's a madman on the loose.

:36:52
- Oh, that thing with the hand?
- This is the madman on the roof?

:36:54
- I love that story.
- I told you that one.

:36:57
- You did not. I got that in,
uh, camp in sixth grade.
- Yeah. Were you six last year?


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