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  • 2 days ago
#ladychatterleyslover # larkrisetocandleford #bethfreed25
Oliver was again freed from this predicament, being befriended by Mrs. Maylie and her adopted daughter. Starring: Lysette Anthony, Ben Rodska, Eric Porter, Michael Attwell, Godfrey James, Frank Middlemass.
Transcript
00:00Satsang with Mooji
00:30What are you doing down here at this hour?
00:39I couldn't sleep.
00:42Yes, I know.
00:49Me neither, lad.
00:52Miss Rose.
00:55How is she?
00:55They're still with her.
01:02Hurry, Mrs Oliver.
01:05Oliver, sorry.
01:11It's the final crisis.
01:13She has slept for three hours.
01:15Is that not a good sign?
01:17I cannot tell, Mrs Mayley.
01:20I promise to be truthful with you.
01:23It may go either way.
01:25Oh, Doctor.
01:27Is there no sign or word from your son?
01:30Not yet.
01:32He will never forgive himself.
01:34Hurry.
01:37If she awakens, it will be to recovery.
01:52If not, I fear her sleep will be eternal.
01:57Oh.
01:57Oh.
02:09Jacob!
02:10Jacob, where are you, man?
02:14Whoa.
02:15Whoa.
02:16That'll be young, Mr Mayley.
02:17He's made good speed.
02:20He's made good speed.
02:25She's sleeping.
02:26Harry, my boy.
02:28Mother, how is she?
02:33Oh, Rose.
02:35Oh, dear, dear Rose.
02:37Harry, please.
02:38Consider what you're saying.
02:40Rose.
02:41It's me.
02:44It's Harry.
02:48Can you hear me?
02:49Oh.
02:58You must take some breakfast, young man.
03:01No.
03:03No, I couldn't.
03:04You must take some breakfast.
03:05Oh.
03:06You're bread and tea.
03:07Keep your strength up.
03:10Doctor.
03:11Miss Rose.
03:13Have you?
03:14Calm yourself, boy.
03:16How's the young mistress, sir?
03:18She's awake and holding Mr Harry's hand.
03:20As God is good and merciful, she will live to bless us all for years to come.
03:25Oh, Giles!
03:27Thank God!
03:28Thank God!
03:30Thank him, indeed, Giles.
03:31And then don a more seemly costume.
03:34Yes, sir.
03:35I beg your pardon, sir.
03:37And then thank Mr Harry and me with a large breakfast.
03:41It shall be done, sir!
03:43His medicine was a sight more powerful than anything I had to offer.
03:55Come in, young man.
04:00You must be Oliver.
04:01Yes, sir.
04:03My mother wrote to me about you.
04:04I'm Harry Mayley.
04:05No, sir.
04:06Rose showed me your picture.
04:07Did she?
04:08Yes, she told me all about you.
04:11Hmm.
04:12I'm glad to hear that, Oliver.
04:14Poor Rose.
04:16She looks so...
04:16Shh, shh, shh.
04:18She'll be back to her old self again soon.
04:21Just like you.
04:23Here I thought to see a young invalid, and you're fit enough for cricket.
04:26Oh, mother.
04:30Oliver and I are becoming acquainted.
04:32Good.
04:33But this is hardly the place.
04:35Run along, Oliver.
04:38And it's high time you'll retire downstairs, Harry.
04:40I prefer to remain.
04:43Susan and I can manage perfectly well.
04:45Now that the danger is past, we must bring the household back to normal.
04:49I shall drive down and see Rose as often as I can.
05:09Ah, I intend to stay until she's completely recovered.
05:12Will your duties permit that?
05:14It may be some weeks.
05:15Nothing matters more to me than Rose.
05:17My dear boy, I don't doubt your feelings.
05:20But your mother would prefer you not to make them known.
05:22But I shall persuade her she is wrong, eventually.
05:26She's a stubborn woman, I admit.
05:29But she has common sense on her side.
05:31Nevertheless, doctor, I'm sure you understand my feelings in this matter.
05:35Boy, I do not doubt your feelings at all, but I do believe you should...
05:39Bless your heart, dear old by your head, in the back of the river.
05:41We're dealing with a matter of the heart.
05:43I wish you'd written to me earlier, mother.
05:53I wrote to you as soon as I knew Rose's condition was critical.
05:57She might have died.
05:59You would have suffered equally whether you came before or after her death.
06:03I thought this trial might have softened your heart, perhaps.
06:12Towards what?
06:14I do not believe I have a hard heart.
06:17Towards my love for her.
06:19My one thought in sending for you was to aid her recovery, if possible.
06:24Now that she is recovering, the sooner you go away again, the better for her, I think.
06:33I shall never be welcome in this house until I'm safely married off elsewhere.
06:38But you haven't changed.
06:41Circumstances have not changed.
06:42Rose deserves the best and purest love that any man could give her.
06:48It is no fault of hers that she is illegitimate.
06:51But society cares nothing for that.
06:54Then I care nothing for society.
06:58People would still visit her birth upon her, Harry.
07:01And upon you, and upon your children.
07:03The greater your success, the more they would sneer.
07:06No matter how kind and generous you are, you would one day repent of such a marriage.
07:13You must.
07:15And she would have all the pain of knowing it.
07:19I'd never repent.
07:27You think so now, my son?
07:36Will you be going away soon?
08:03Oh, quite soon, I expect.
08:06Well, I suppose you have to.
08:10To be in Parliament and the law.
08:12Hmm, I'm afraid so.
08:15I'd prefer to stay here for a while.
08:19I'd like to stay here forever, I think.
08:24Well, perhaps that could be arranged.
08:31No.
08:33I'm pleased you're happy here, Oliver.
08:35Are you never troubled by thoughts of your old life?
08:45At night sometimes.
08:48Bad dreams.
08:50Hmm.
08:51But you feel safe?
08:53Oh, yes.
08:56Except for the man I met.
08:59Which man?
09:00The day Roos fell ill, I met him at the inn.
09:05He seemed to know me.
09:08How so?
09:09He was mad, I think.
09:11But he stared so hard and made me want to run away.
09:14Just finished, Fagin.
09:30You get no more money from me.
09:31Oh, come now, Mr. Monks.
09:35Take heart.
09:36You've spent too much time wandering around Berkshire in the cold.
09:40We cannot reach the boy now.
09:41He's lost to us.
09:42If he's lost to us, then we are lost.
09:47We've held him twice before.
09:48Third time he won't escape, believe me.
09:50No, now he's with them.
09:51Those people.
09:52It's too dangerous to meddle.
09:54Ah, the fires of hell!
10:01Ah, there's something unnatural in this.
10:05Who are they?
10:07That need not concern you.
10:10But one of them would give a thousand pound to know what her two-legged spaniel was.
10:18This is wild talk.
10:21Foolish riddles from a fevered brain.
10:24I've laid out time and money to catch that boy and claim the gold you promised.
10:29The bargain must be kept.
10:30I hired you for your villainy.
10:34And your villainy is bankrupt.
10:37How could it prosper?
10:39There is something more than mortal arranged against us.
10:44I'll be good to think you're afraid of the boy.
10:47Afraid of him?
10:48Never.
10:48Upon my mother's deathbed, I swore to compass his ruin.
10:57She gave me lasting proofs of his shame.
11:01I carry them next to my heart, night and day.
11:06He can do me no harm.
11:10In this life, at least.
11:13But how come he and her roof?
11:17You're a sick man, Monk.
11:30This is your sickness, Torky.
11:33Now, let me help you.
11:36Now, what's this here, eh?
11:37No, no, no, no.
11:38Show your old friend, Fagin.
11:40It can mean nothing to you.
11:42It can mean nothing.
11:44But it means something to you,
11:46which makes it worth a great deal to me.
11:50So I'll just keep it somewhere safe for you, eh?
11:53Well, it depends on what Dr. Lossburn says today.
11:55We're equal partners now, Monks, my dear.
12:01The bargain must be kept,
12:03and little Oliver brought back once and for all.
12:10Oliver!
12:10Oliver, there'll be none left.
12:14Do you think Rooks will be allowed downstairs tomorrow?
12:18Well, it depends on what Dr. Lossburn says today.
12:21I'm sorry.
12:24Never, I'm sorry.
12:27I'm sorry.
12:30Let's go.
12:39I'm sorry.
12:43I'm sorry.
12:49Are you real?
13:03Or do you hold me?
13:07I'll send you out.
13:10And you'll rise up your way.
13:19I'll send you out.
13:26Oliver.
13:29Oliver.
13:32Oliver.
13:35Oliver.
13:38Oliver, my dear.
13:45There he is.
13:47Help!
13:52Help!
13:53Help!
13:54Help!
13:55Help!
13:56What is it, boy?
13:58Oliver, what's wrong?
13:59Shitting like a jelly, sir.
14:01Calmly now, there's nothing here to harm you.
14:03What about the miss?
14:04Out with it.
14:05The man I told you about, the one at the inn.
14:08He was standing there.
14:10I fed yours with him.
14:12Just there.
14:13And they were both watching me.
14:17Come with me.
14:18Ah, yes.
14:19This way.
14:20Come with me.
14:21Ah, yes.
14:22This way.
14:23Come with me.
14:24Ah, yes.
14:25This way.
14:26I did see them both.
14:27I did.
14:28As plain as I can see you all now.
14:29We searched everywhere, ma'am.
14:30Every field and cops and ditch.
14:31Every field and cops and ditch.
14:32As plain as I can see you all now.
14:33We searched everywhere, ma'am.
14:34Every field and cops and ditch.
14:39Say goodnight and off up to bed with you, child.
14:40Giles will go with you.
14:41Goodnight, ma'am.
14:42And no more dreaming.
14:43I forbid it.
14:44Goodnight, ma'am.
14:45Goodnight, Oliver.
14:46Goodnight, ma'am.
14:47Goodnight.
14:48Goodnight, my boy.
14:49Poor child.
14:50His short life has been so full of terrors.
14:51Yes, and me going with you.
14:52As plain as I can see you all now.
14:53As plain as I can see you all now.
14:55We searched everywhere, ma'am.
14:56Every field and cops and ditch.
14:59Say goodnight and off up to bed with you, child.
15:04Giles will go with you.
15:05Goodnight, ma'am.
15:06And no more dreaming.
15:08I forbid it.
15:10Goodnight, Oliver.
15:11Goodnight, my boy.
15:13Poor child.
15:15His short life has been so full of terrors.
15:19Yes, and may God forgive Parliament.
15:21It all began with that Richard Poor law.
15:39Master of this workhouse I may be, Corny.
15:43But it ain't the same.
15:46Don't compare it to bein' a beetle, no-how.
15:55Oh, it's all very well you lookin' at me as if I was a fool of a mariner.
15:59But you couldn't help you mount a wall on me, could you?
16:05Three months next Tuesday fortnight it was done.
16:08Oh, Lord.
16:10Oh, Lord.
16:13It seems an age.
16:17I sold myself Corny.
16:19I sold myself my six teaspoons.
16:22A pair of sugar tongs.
16:24A milk pot.
16:25A quantity of second-hand furniture and twenty pounds money.
16:29Good.
16:30Good.
16:31I went reasonable.
16:32Cheap.
16:34Dirt cheap.
16:36Cheap.
16:38You would have been dear at any price.
16:40And dear enough I paid for you.
16:42The Lord knows that.
16:44I should have had more sense than to make the sacrifice that I did.
16:48The sacrifice, Mrs. Bumble.
16:53You may well repeat the word.
16:55It ought never to be out of my mouth, gracious nose.
16:58Well, I'm not aware, ma'am, that it ever is.
17:00It's always a comin' out, ma'am.
17:02But it's always there, Mrs. Bumble, ma'am.
17:05Well...
17:08Have the goodness to look at me, ma'am.
17:14I am lookin' at you.
17:16You...
17:26Macy.
17:28Beyond human belief.
17:32That look has froze a hundred porpoise dead.
17:41Oh, well.
17:42Are you going to sit there snoring all day?
17:48I shall sit here as long as I think proper, ma'am.
17:52And although I was not snoring, I shall snore, gape, sneeze, laugh or cry as the humour strikes me.
17:58Such being my prerogative, ma'am.
18:01Your prerogative?
18:02Aye, said the word, ma'am.
18:03The prerogative of a man is to command.
18:07And what is the prerogative of a woman in the name of goodness?
18:12To obey, ma'am, to obey.
18:14You late, unfortunate husband there should have taught it to you, ma'am.
18:18And then perhaps, ma'am, he might be alive now.
18:21I wish he was, poor man.
18:23Oh!
18:24You hard-hearted brute!
18:27You cruel, hard-hearted brute!
18:31Oh, cry your hardest, ma'am.
18:33Cry your hardest.
18:35The medical faculty look upon it as beneficial to the elf.
18:39It opens in lungs, washes the countenance, exercises the eyes and softens down the temper.
18:43So cry away, ma'am.
18:45Cry away.
18:46No.
18:49I think I shall take a little walk, ma'am.
19:01You brute!
19:03Brute!
19:04Brute!
19:06Now you talk about your prerogative, you dare!
19:09Get him!
19:10Get him!
19:12Fuck you!
19:13Get yourself away from here unless you want me to do something desperate!
19:17Yes, ma'am.
19:18Yes, ma'am.
19:19Are you going?
19:20Yes, ma'am.
19:21Look out!
19:32Oh!
19:33Call me.
19:34Call me.
19:36But I have to suffer.
19:38No.
19:56I ought to see a bachelor beetle!
19:59Why is she weakening?
20:00Why is he weakening?
20:10So you took him to the farriers yesterday morning?
20:12Yes sir.
20:13Master Harry, send your box off this morning sir.
20:16Thank you Giles.
20:18I must say my goodbyes now.
20:20Goodbye mother.
20:36God be with you Harry.
20:38Give me leave to speak to her before I go.
20:41This once I beg of you.
20:43If you insist.
20:45It was my intention to save you some distress too.
20:50I think you know what I have to say.
21:05Not to have left here.
21:08I wish you had.
21:15I was brought here by the most...
21:17Dreadful of fears.
21:19The fear of losing the one person on whom I every hope and wish are fixed.
21:23I beg you to say no more.
21:26Oh Rose.
21:28Rose.
21:31For years I have loved you.
21:36You must try to forget me Harry.
21:38But you return my love.
21:42I know it.
21:47There is a brilliant prospect before you.
21:49Great honours are in store.
21:51I will not take advantage of your generous nature to spoil those hopes.
22:00And I will not mingle with those who despise my birth and the mother who gave me life.
22:06And I will not bring distress to your mother who has taken her place.
22:10No.
22:11Please.
22:12You must go.
22:13Rose.
22:14Me.
22:15No.
22:16No.
22:17No.
22:18No.
22:19No.
22:20No.
22:21No.
22:22No.
22:23No.
22:24No.
22:25No.
22:26No.
22:27No.
22:28No.
22:29No.
22:30No.
22:31No.
22:32No.
22:33No.
22:34No.
22:35No.
22:36No.
22:37No.
22:38No.
22:39No.
22:40No.
22:41No.
22:42it may be some time before i see you all again i wish that you would write to me as often as you
22:52can to the general post office in london will you yes sir certainly sir i should like to know how
22:58my mother and rose are and whether they seem well and happy oh and of course you can tell
23:01me about yourself you understand me yes yes i do
23:05i'd rather you didn't mention it to them i don't want my mother to be troubled
23:13let it be a secret between us shall be sir goodbye goodbye
23:43oh
23:57we're reciting of the scriptures sir saving of our souls mr barpall it keeps our spirits
24:04oh my dear i i didn't see you standing there didn't see me what you're doing i say my dear it
24:22is true that you're i tell you what mr bumble we don't want any of your interference be off i tell
24:28you're a great deal too fond of poking your nose into what don't concern you
24:33too fond of what
24:34poke in his nose
24:36oh
24:58good day dear
25:01don't be alarmed
25:03one of your paupers brought me here
25:08your name sir
25:11i would not recommend you to ask for my name
25:16then your business sir
25:19parochial business mr bumble
25:27you have the same eye to your own interest that you've always had i don't doubt
25:30a married man is not averse to turning an honest penis when he can sir
25:40i want some information about a certain pauper
25:47dear mr maylie we are all very well and the weather is excellent rose is quite better now
25:55yesterday we walked across the common
25:58i still have bad dreams and i'm afraid to go out alone for fear of the madman i spoke of
26:03i still cannot get him out of my mind perhaps i did not see him at the window but i truly did see him at the inn
26:13that's the boy you mean
26:18that's the boy you mean ain't it sir
26:20oliver twist
26:21yes
26:22i expect the other gentleman sent you sir
26:28what
26:30what other gentleman
26:33very nice property in bentonville name of a brownlow
26:37what is brownlow to do with the boy speak your fool i didn't ask him sir
26:53he's been advertising for young oliver run off him he took his head a 12 month back
26:57yeah we're going to understand the boy's either blessed or cursed i guess no witch
27:06it was me that gave him his name sir
27:11i remember him better than most
27:14anything than i can damn the boy it's none of him i want to hear i've heard enough of him
27:19it's a woman the hag that nursed his mother on her deathbed no my god i must find her now
27:26where is she where is she that would be hard to tell there's money in it think
27:3712 years ago
27:41oh yeah oh sally she'd have been midwife then
27:44curse your midwives where is she where is she oh she might be one place and she might be another
27:51speak plainly man she died a while back sir
27:57god she's out of the way it's something
28:06you know no more of her
28:07i know of a woman who was with her sir when she died i have reason to believe that this person
28:18could tell you something about old sally how can i find her ah well sir only through me when
28:29a day after tomorrow tomorrow well that may not suit her sir uh tomorrow i say at nine o'clock
28:37i needn't tell you to be secret
28:42here's the address
28:46oh yes sir i know this place be careful there sir there are some evil characters there
28:56there's no escaping evil bumble
29:00it creeps into every corner of the kingdom
29:03it hangs about this workhouse like grimy london fog
29:22it's
29:23oh
29:31oh
29:33oh
29:35ORGAN PLAYS
30:05ORGAN PLAYS
30:35ORGAN PLAYS
30:40ORGAN PLAYS

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