An Ideal Husband
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:36:00
I admire him immensely for it.
:36:04
I shall write at once...
:36:06
.. to the Prime Minister.
:36:08
If you'll excuse me for a moment,
Lord Caversham.

:36:12
Lord Caversham.
:36:16
What is the matter with this family?
:36:19
There's something wrong here, eh?
:36:21
Idiocy? Hereditary, perhaps.
Both of them, too.

:36:26
Very sad indeed.
:36:28
They're not an old family.
:36:32
Can't understand it.
:36:34
I suppose I'd better go back
to the Prime Minister...

:36:36
.. and tell him Chiltern won't take the seat.
:36:39
Not yet. I'd rather you took a seat yourself.
:36:42
- What are you prattling on about?
- Go in there for a while, Father.

:36:46
Second palm tree to the right.
The usual palm tree.

:36:50
- I want you to talk to somebody.
- What about?

:36:53
About me, sir, hmm?
:36:56
Not a subject on which
much eloquence is possible.

:37:06
Gertrude...
:37:13
Yes, Arthur. It is Robert
who wishes to retire from public life.

:37:17
- Really...
- It was he who first said so.

:37:19
Rather than lose your love,
he would do anything.

:37:22
- Has he not been punished enough?
- We've both been punished.

:37:25
I set him up too high.
:37:27
Do not, then, set him down now too low!
:37:30
It is not the perfect but the imperfect
who have need of love.

:37:34
You seem to know a great deal
about everything all of a sudden.

:37:38
Oh,... well, I hope not.
:37:40
All I do know...
:37:42
.. is that it takes courage to see the world
in all its tainted glory...

:37:46
.. and still to love it.
:37:48
Even more courage to see it
in the one you love.

:37:51
Dear Gertrude,...
:37:52
.. you have more courage
than any woman I know.

:37:55
Do not be afraid to use it.

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