Vanity Fair
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:51:03
Oh, you brilliant, darling girl.
:51:09
Well, that will mend fences
if nothing else will.

:51:14
Oh, Becky!
:51:20
When one thinks of how she tended you.
:51:25
And all the time...
Oh, I should have guessed that
nobody does anything for nothing.

:51:29
But for a pauper's daughter,
a penniless governess,

:51:32
to make off with my Rawdon.
Ohh.

:51:34
Oh, dear.
:51:37
Oh, at least her mother was a Montmorency.
I suppose we must cling to that.

:51:41
Not a bit of it. I have it
on the best authority.

:51:45
Her mother was an opera girl
in the chorus at Montmartre!

:51:50
- What?
- I have it on the best authority.

:51:52
Yes, yes, yes! All right!
:51:56
Oh, very well. I know what I must do.
:52:00
Would you be so kind
as to bring my little desk here?

:52:02
Certainly. Where is it?
Where's her little desk? I can't see it.

:52:06
It's over here.
:52:09
- I almost feel sorry for poor Rawdon.
- Mm...

:52:14
But I cannot let that girl
profit from her scheming.

:52:17
Nor should you.
:52:21
I'm glad to see that
you've changed your opinions.
Firkin.

:52:25
Do you remember when
you told us all at Queen's Crawley...

:52:32
That you adored imprudent marriages?
:52:37
Not in real life.
:52:59
What do you want?
Time, Osborne, that's what I want.


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