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Dr. Henry Jekyll is a well-regarded physician whose evenings are spent researching a rare and sacred Amazonian flower so | dG1fcUpKcFo0TEZZS1U
Transcript
00:00The End
00:30Good and evil are so close as to be chained together in the soul.
00:34Man is not truly one, but two.
00:38Now supposing we could break that chain,
00:40separate those two cells,
00:42free the good in man and let it go on to its higher destiny,
00:45and segregate the bad.
00:47Let it destroy itself in its own degradation.
00:50Good heavens.
00:51Why, Dr. Jekyll?
00:52Hopelessly insane.
00:53This is pure boulder dash.
00:55You're dealing with things it would be better not to mention for your own sake.
00:58There might be trouble.
01:00Did you think that Dr. Jekyll was falling in love with you?
01:21You with your cheap little dreams?
01:23Or did you think as you looked at him
01:27that perhaps in his eyes you saw a bit of me hide?
01:33Was that it?
01:34No.
01:36It's interesting, isn't it?
01:39Bea, darling.
01:40Harry.
01:41I love you so very much, Bea.
01:47Oh, I...
01:48I ain't as bad as you might think.
01:52You liked me once a little, didn't you?
01:55On a certain night you walked out of my place, I laughed at you.
02:00But I didn't laugh after you'd gone.
02:02I'm wishing you'd come back.
02:04For your own sake, Lanyon.
02:05Now...
02:06Now, once more, Lanyon.
02:10Will you let me take this glass and go?
02:12No.
02:13Why should I?
02:14For your own sake, Lanyon.
02:17Do you want to live on as you have?
02:20Or do you want to have your safe peace?
02:23Your reason even?
02:25Blasted by a sight that would shock the lowest mean in the inferno.
02:29Let's go.

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