:13:00
Americans don't understand
about inhibitions.
:13:04
Ah. She's coming to England.
:13:08
She's coming to Oxford.
She wants to meet us.
:13:10
- Well, she can't come here.
- She knows.
:13:13
Of course not. But she does suggest
tea in her hotel.
:13:17
Tea is safe.
A hotel is safe.
:13:20
Though she might be mad.
:13:22
No, I don't think so.
She does write poems.
:13:26
Poems?
:13:29
She'll be barking.
:13:33
You won't be too agreeable,
will you, Jack?
:13:36
Don't worry, Warnie.
:13:53
She'll turn out to be writing
a dissertation on Wardrobe.
:13:57
She'll ask if she can come watch you
while you create.
:14:00
She'll say, "I'll sit in a corner.
You'll never know I'm there."
:14:04
It's only tea, Warnie.
:14:06
An hour or so of polite conversation,
then we go home...
:14:09
and everything goes on
just the way it always has.
:14:11
Shall we have some sandwiches?
:14:14
I wonder if they do
toasted tea cakes.
:14:22
Excuse me. I'm here to meet
Mr. C.S. Lewis, the writer.
:14:25
Yes, madam.
:14:29
- Well, do you know what he looks like?
- No, madam.
:14:32
Well, he doesn't know
what I look like either.
:14:34
Yes, madam.
:14:37
Any ideas?
:14:39
No, madam.
:14:47
Anybody here called Lewis?