The Remains of the Day
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:08:02
You're responsible to Miss Kenton.
She'll explain the house rules.

:08:06
Number one: no gentlemen callers,
or other such.

:08:09
-Yes, sir.
-Good.

:08:11
-Welcome.
-Thank you, sir.

:08:14
Well done.
I'll show you to your room.

:09:09
I'd forgotten how much petrol
the Daimler uses.

:09:12
It's an impractical motor to be
going about the country, Mister....

:09:17
Smith. Harry Smith. It's a privilege
to have you here in Moscombe.

:09:21
-It's a privilege to be here.
-Your health, sir.

:09:24
Dr. Carlisle usually drops in
around now. He'd enjoy meeting you.

:09:28
He's a gentleman like yourself.
:09:30
I don't know what you call
a gentleman.

:09:33
It's a name every man
in this country has a right to.

:09:36
There's Harry Smith now, giving
you an earful of his philosophy.

:09:40
We English...
:09:41
...have the advantage and privilege
of expressing our opinions...

:09:45
...and voting for Parliament.
That's what we fought Hitler for.

:09:49
Have you had much to do
with politics yourself?

:09:53
Not directly as such, no,
particularly in these days.

:09:58
Perhaps more so in the early 1 930s
and just before the war.


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