Oscar and Lucinda
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:29:02
You will help me to exercise it carefully,
with caution?

:29:05
We shall co-opt, of course. I have a friend...
a clever chap called Wilson.

:29:09
- I wish you'd let me carry those.
- Oh, they're nothing. I have
worked on a farm, you know.

:29:11
London, of course,
is where you should go.

:29:13
London? But I have only
just arrived here.

:29:15
To buy the very latest machinery.
That will make Sydney sit up.

:29:21
Um...
:29:26
- Is he...
- Yes, miss.

:29:30
I have signed!
:29:33
I own the glassworks.
:29:35
My congratulations.
:29:42
I must confess
to feeling scared.

:29:48
I broke with my friend
Tom Wilson this afternoon.

:29:54
Why is that?
:29:55
He said things about you
that are scurrilous.

:29:57
He said things about you
that are scurrilous.

:30:01
What things?
:30:03
That you stay up
all night gambling...

:30:05
with Jimmy D'Abbs
and Charlie Fig...

:30:07
and others of that type.
:30:11
I told Wilson such stories
are pure fabrication...

:30:13
that they should not
be repeated.

:30:15
I told him that D'Abbs
was your accountant...

:30:17
that you did go and see him,
that, indeed, I went with you.

:30:23
There's no more to it,
is there?

:30:28
I am sorry you argued
with your friend.

:30:32
Is there any truth
in his story?

:30:39
I have been
to Mr. D'Abbs's house.

:30:43
Gambling?
:30:46
I was lonely.
:30:51
But you have been here
three or four evenings each week.

:30:59
Wilson mentioned
gambling parties...


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