:15:02
	Alas, life's a nightmare bad enough.
Leave our dreams out of it.
:15:06
	Articulate!
:15:07
	Yes, Uncle.
:15:16
	How often do my own dreams
rise before me?
:15:19
	They represent what's most intelligent
in the young generation,
:15:25
	in this Europe,
:15:26
	not purified,
but corrupted by suffering...
:15:29
	To tell me how
they resemble reality.
:15:33
	Not exalted,
:15:35
	but humiliated
by its new-won freedom.
:15:38
	...because l refuse them
:15:42
	and they appear suddenly
from the exterior.
:15:52
	You too,
:15:54
	nothing but youth for sale.
:16:05
	Who's the father
of characters in a play?
:16:10
	lt was your idea
to do theater there...
:16:15
	lt's the author, Dad.
:16:18
	And who is the mother?
:16:20
	The actor.
:16:22
	Come with us... please.
:16:26
	l have to stop by Paris.
:16:29
	Listen to my idea.
:16:32
	Remember Hemingway's house?
:16:37
	My Lord,
l come to ask a favor of you.
:16:42
	The villagers to whom l spoke
say you love your cousin
:16:46
	and that you wooed me
as a kind of joke.
:16:50
	You'll need some money.
:16:52
	l've saved up.