Vanity Fair
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: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.

:53:02
I owe you nothing.!
I will give you nothing.!

:53:05
You owe me friendship.!
You have no friendship
coming from me, sir.!

:53:08
Oh!
:53:24
Do we have enough of this china?
:53:26
It's to be a buffet and I don't
want to risk the Crown Derby.

:53:31
Oh, listen to this.
:53:33
"Emperor Napoleon Escapes
from Elba and Marches on Paris.

:53:36
Allies Prepare for War. '"
:53:41
- Amelia, what's the matter, dear?
- Will it affect George?

:53:46
Well, he's a soldier, isn't he,
for all his swagger,

:53:48
and there's more to soldiering
than gold braid and regimental dinners.

:53:53
Amelia?
:53:55
Amelia!
Oh!

:53:59
If she means to be a soldier's wife,
she must learn to bear such things.


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