Gripsholm
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:45:07
Want one, too?
:45:12
Are you going back for the trial?
:45:16
Would you?
:45:18
''You have to face your problems,''
as Jacob always says.

:45:23
lf l had his problems,
:45:24
l'd listen to my instincts
and not to my own necessity.

:45:28
Can you revoke it?
:45:31
Of course.
:45:35
Should l deny myself?
:45:36
Sometimes you need courage
to be a coward. lt wouldn't hurt.

:45:41
What have they got on you anyway?
:45:46
You're an educated young man.
:45:49
And you know about
the history of totalitarian,

:45:52
power-hungry populists.
:45:54
First, they go after
the writers and journalists. . .

:45:56
real journalists,
and not these corrupt serfs.

:45:59
They are silenced.
Then their books are burned.

:46:02
Then it's the artists' turn.
Then the court jesters'. . .

:46:04
Jews first.
:46:07
Don't give me that nonsense.
:46:10
Who would sacrifice
his intelligence?

:46:13
Our people need law and order
and self-confidence

:46:15
after the chaos of the past,
:46:17
a future worth living for.
:46:19
Or dying for.
:46:23
Karl, we're holding speeches. . .
of the worst kind.

:46:29
lt hurts to even listen. Terrible.
:46:35
lt hurts me
to see you this way, Kurt.

:46:38
You've become so pessimistic.
l don't hardly know you.

:46:42
Where is your famous irony?
:46:45
l lost it somewhere.
:46:47
How did we become friends?
:46:50
Come on, let's play a round.

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