The Remains of the Day
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:53:01
Would you like some cake?
:53:03
-Sure?
-All right. It's a special occasion.

:53:06
Good.
:53:08
Waitress?
:53:10
-Could we have some cake?
-Yes, of course.

:53:15
-It's been a long time.
-Yes, indeed.

:53:17
You haven't changed at all.
:53:21
A little, perhaps.
:53:23
We've all changed, I think.
:53:24
I'd have known you anywhere.
:53:32
How long's it been?
Twenty years?

:53:34
Yes, just over, I think.
:53:36
The tea should be along.
:53:59
We read about the suit for libel.
:54:02
It's a shame...
:54:04
...calling His Lordship a traitor.
Those papers will print anything.

:54:08
They should have lost the case.
:54:11
When His Lordship went to court...
:54:13
...he sincerely expected
he would get justice.

:54:18
lnstead, the newspaper increased
its circulation, and His Lordship's...

:54:21
...good name was destroyed forever.
:54:25
Afterwards, in his last years, well...
:54:28
...quite honestly, Mrs. Benn...
:54:31
...his heart was broken.
:54:33
I'd take him tea in the library,
and he'd be sitting there...

:54:38
...and he wouldn't even see me,
so deep was he in his own thoughts.

:54:44
And he'd be talking to himself,
as though he was arguing with someone.

:54:48
There was no one, of course.
:54:51
No one came to see him anymore.
:54:54
What about his godson,
young Mr. Cardinal?

:54:58
Mr. Cardinal was killed in the war.
Waitress.


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