Metropolitan
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1:13:00
Is the 21 Club very expensive?
1:13:04
( Mother )
I believe so.

1:13:08
That's priceless.
1:13:09
And then she told Miss Radford,
''They look awfully big for mice.''

1:13:13
- She believed it?
- Oh, completely.

1:13:15
Oh, that's priceless.
1:13:17
You mentioned something about it
in one of your letters.

1:13:20
When I was going through
some stuff over Christmas,
I found a packet of your old letters.

1:13:23
- You saved my letters?
- Of course.

1:13:26
I save all the personal letters I get.
Don't you?

1:13:30
No.
1:13:33
You mean, you threw away
all the letters I wrote you?

1:13:35
I throw away nearly everything.
1:13:37
I don't want to go through the rest of my life
with the mail I got when I was 1 6.

1:13:41
I'm surprised.
1:13:43
Someone goes through the trouble
of writing you a real letter, I save it.

1:13:47
People don't write
many personal letters anymore.

1:13:49
People in boarding school do.
1:13:53
And what if someone who wrote you
becomes famous?

1:13:56
Those letters could be the only record
of what they were thinking at that time.
Crucial for their biographers.

1:14:00
Anybody who writes me who expects
to become famous should keep carbons.

1:14:05
It just seems to me
that it's a kind of trust.

1:14:08
If someone takes the trouble to write you
a substantial letter, you do not throw it out.

1:14:14
I didn't save your letters,
but I didn't throw them out.

1:14:18
I don't understand.
Is that a riddle?

1:14:21
There was a girl at school
who had some kind of a crush on you.

1:14:25
She came into my room when I was throwing
things out, so I gave her your letters.

1:14:29
Really?
1:14:31
I know it sounds queer.
1:14:34
- She kept them?
- Mmm. I'm sure.

1:14:38
How strange.
She must be really odd.

1:14:40
No, she's very nice.
1:14:43
In fact, you know her.
1:14:46
Audrey Rouget.
1:14:55
You mean, you think
you've gotten over Serena again.

1:14:58
Yes, but it's different this time.

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