Pride and Prejudice
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

:40:01
Lydia.
:40:03
I want to hear
every little detail, Lydia, dear.

:40:07
I've been enlisted
in a regiment in the North of England.

:40:10
Glad to hear it.
:40:12
Near Newcastle.
We travel there next week.

:40:15
- Can I come and stay with you?
- That is out of the question.

:40:19
Monday morning came
and I was in such a fuss.

:40:22
I don't want to hear.
:40:23
There was my aunt preaching away
as if reading a sermon.

:40:27
- She was horrid unpleasant.
- Can't you understand why?

:40:30
But I didn't hear a word because
I was thinking of my dear Wickham.

:40:35
I longed to know if
he'd be married in his bluecoat.

:40:37
The North of England, I believe,
boasts some spectacular scenery.

:40:42
So I thought, who is to be
our best man if he doesn't come back?

:40:46
Lucky, he did,
or I would've had to ask Mr Darcy.

:40:49
- Mr Darcy!
- I forgot!

:40:54
- But I shouldn't have said a word.
- Mr Darcy was at your wedding?

:40:57
He was the one that discovered us.
:41:00
He paid for the wedding,
Wickham's commission, everything.

:41:05
But he told me not to tell.
:41:08
- Mr Darcy?
- Stop it, Lizzie.

:41:11
Mr Darcy's not half as high and mighty
as you sometimes.

:41:21
Kitty, have you seen my ring?
:41:24
Write to me often, my dear.
:41:26
Married women
never have much time for writing.

:41:29
I dare say you won't.
:41:31
When I married your father, there didn't
seem to be enough hours in the day.

:41:37
My sisters may write to me,
for they'll have nothing else to do.

:41:49
There's nothing so bad
as parting with one's children.

:41:54
One seems so forlorn without them.

prev.
next.