The Polar Express
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:40:01
It's mighty slick.
Mighty slick, I tell you.

:40:05
There you go. What did I tell you?
:40:07
Years ago, on my first Christmas Eve run,
I was up on the roof making my rounds...

:40:12
...when I slipped on the ice myself.
:40:14
I reached out for a hand iron,
but it broke off. I slid and fell.

:40:18
And yet, I did not fall off this train.
:40:22
Someone saved you?
:40:24
Or something.
:40:29
An angel.
:40:31
Maybe.
:40:33
Wait. Wait.
:40:36
What did he look like? Did you see him?
:40:40
No, sir. But sometimes
seeing is believing.

:40:44
And sometimes the most real things
in the world are the things we can't see.

:40:54
The forsaken and the abandoned.
:40:58
Mind your step, now.
These poor toys have suffered enough...

:41:02
...being left to rust and decay in the
back alleys and vacant lots of the world.

:41:06
What are they doing here?
:41:08
It's a new concept
the boss came up with.

:41:11
Instead of being thrown away,
they're collected. Refurbished.

:41:15
He calls it "rebicycling. "
Something like that.

:41:22
Makes me wanna cry...
:41:24
...seeing toys that were
treated this way.

:41:28
These hopelessly entangled
string puppets and marionettes...

:41:32
...pose a particular problem. We found
the nimble fingers of our work force...

:41:36
...here at the North Pole are best
for working out those knots and tangles.

:41:41
Thank you. Double-locked here.
:41:54
You are just like me, my friend.
:41:57
A scrooge!

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