People Will Talk (1951) Cary Grant, Jeanne Crain, Finlay Currie | Hollywood classic movie

  • 2 days ago
Dr. Noah Praetorius falls in love with Deborah, a student who discovers that she is pregnant by her old boyfriend.
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Transcript
00:00:00You
00:00:30You
00:01:00You
00:01:30You
00:02:00You
00:02:24Now well I
00:02:26Am Rodney elbow you wish to see me pick it. I beg your pardon, sir
00:02:30Pick it quite so your name in any case. I'm late. They said for me to come right away
00:02:35Who said the agency the agency? What it?
00:02:39Of course the detective agency sergeant Coonan. Yes
00:02:44If I come in does the door get closed
00:02:47Naturally, then I don't come in. Why not? You know, why not? You're grown up my dear mrs
00:02:52And don't butter me up I have conducted my affairs behind closed doors for 20 years not with me
00:02:59You overestimate both of us have it your way
00:03:11Yes, here we are
00:03:14You are Rebecca Pickett, is that correct Sarah picket
00:03:18quite so
00:03:20Sarah Rebecca picket is my grandma was your grandma. She still is. She's a hundred and three
00:03:26Interesting. She's a liar
00:03:28Possibly hundred and eight. She's a day probably
00:03:33Miss Sarah picket you were engaged some 15 years ago by one Noah Pretorius as his housekeeper
00:03:39That's right. Where Goose Creek where I come from Goose Creek
00:03:44Goose Creek is a little village way downstate. Is it not way back in the hills and at that time
00:03:49What was the profession of this Pretorius? He was a doc a doc
00:03:54He healed people how if I knew how I'd be a doc myself. I mean what were his methods of treatment?
00:04:01well
00:04:02Some healers use one thing and some use another but doc Pretorius used them all once he'd give a powder
00:04:09sometimes syrup sometimes pills
00:04:11sometimes a jab with a needle and
00:04:14Sometimes just talk
00:04:16Just sit there and talk about a body's misery and talk about into being well
00:04:23like working a miracle a
00:04:26Miracle worker to a well if my grandma isn't a miracle. What is your grandma four times?
00:04:31She laid down to die and four times. He talked her off on her feet told her she was gonna live forever
00:04:36Looks like he was right
00:04:38Doc healer miracle worker possible hypnotist
00:04:44Check on narcotics administered now, miss Pickett
00:04:48Are you completely certain that this man's name was Noah Pretorius?
00:04:52What I make up a name like that and is this doc Pretorius by whom you were employed the same man as the famous?
00:04:59Dr. Pretorius of this University and the city doc Pretorius was already as famous as you can get back in Goose Creek
00:05:05He had people coming from miles around but is he now the famous?
00:05:09Dr. Pretorius when you say doctor, do you mean school doctor out of books?
00:05:14That is precisely what I mean can't say for my part. I wouldn't get caught dead in a room with one of them
00:05:21Miss Pickett, I am a school doctor out of books. That's one reason why the door is open
00:05:30This man
00:05:34Is he the healer
00:05:36The miracle worker is this doc Pretorius that's him
00:05:42Only he looked younger 15 years ago
00:05:45We all did not me
00:05:49We come now miss Pickett to the most important subject of all
00:05:55What can you tell me about a man named Shonda son
00:05:59Who did you say shunned her sir?
00:06:05Hello, it's it's Hoskins professor Elwell
00:06:09Well in case perhaps professor. Oh, well, you'd forgotten that the class is still waiting. Oh
00:06:15Yes, professor, of course. No, no, no, not at all. It's just that well, dr
00:06:21Pretorius is also waiting to see you dr. Pretorius to see me
00:06:25Well, he'll have to wait too
00:06:29But not for long a miss Pickett
00:06:34What's the matter with you what's in this for me professor Elwell, I thought that sergeant Coonan had made it quite clear
00:06:39He said you wanted some information from me, but also that you were going to give me a job
00:06:44That's right. What kind of a job in the dissecting rooms is sort of a housekeeper
00:06:49What I want to know is
00:06:51Will the job be worth it? Will the job be worth what miss Pickett?
00:07:06Shunned er son tell me about him. I didn't know very much. Nobody did tell me about him
00:07:12I don't know anything about him. I don't know anything about him
00:07:15I didn't know very much. Nobody did tell me everything you knew or heard every detail
00:07:29You're a professor and it's hard to make you understand anything that ain't in a book
00:07:33Well, most of what goes on in the world ain't in a book spare me your philosophy. What about Shonda's?
00:07:39To begin with we used to call him the bat
00:07:46Did it ever occur to you Shonda's in the skeletons always laugh
00:07:51No, why?
00:07:53Why should a man die and then laugh for the rest of eternity?
00:08:03What news you riot I've just spoken with professor Elwell doctor
00:08:07He regrets exceedingly that he is unavoidably detained a meaningless phrase
00:08:11Which could signify anything from oversleeping to being arrested for malpractice
00:08:15I've never known the professor to be late before he'd be the last to tolerate it and anyone else
00:08:21It saddens me you're an unmistakable symptom of human weakness professor Elwell of all men
00:08:41I
00:09:12Have you your notebooks ready?
00:09:22I would be quite unable to give the lecture you came to hear and I'm not sure you should hear the lecture
00:09:28I'd like to give we want to hear anything. You've got to say dr. Pretorius
00:09:34That's very flattering thank you
00:09:36That's very flattering. Thank you
00:09:39We thank you the cadaver and I a cadaver in a classroom
00:09:45As students of medicine, it's important at the outset that you realize that a cadaver in a classroom is not a dead human being
00:09:53I don't understand that doctor anatomy is more or less the study of the human body
00:09:58The human body is not necessarily the human being
00:10:01Here lies a cadaver the fact that she was not long ago a living warm lovely young girl
00:10:08Is a little consequence in this classroom
00:10:11You will not be required to dissect and examine the love that was in her or the hate
00:10:17Or the hope despair and memories and desires that motivated every moment of her existence
00:10:23They cease to exist when she ceased to exist
00:10:25They cease to exist when she ceased to exist
00:10:28Instead for weeks and months to come
00:10:33You would dissect examine and identify her organs bones muscles tissues and so on one by one
00:10:40And these you will faithfully record in your notebooks
00:10:44And when the notebooks are filled you will know all about this cadaver that the medical profession requires you to know
00:10:51Oh
00:10:56Get back
00:10:59Get back
00:11:01Don't touch her
00:11:03Quiet down
00:11:05A couple of cups of couch would know better than the crowd like this
00:11:07Back up
00:11:11Have you any idea why you fainted?
00:11:14Have you ever fainted before?
00:11:17How do you feel?
00:11:19Silly
00:11:21I think you better tell a doctor about this there may be a reason
00:11:25Can you get up now?
00:11:27Good
00:11:29Perhaps you better go somewhere and relax you go with her
00:11:33And you know if you insist upon studying anatomy I suggest you do not sit on the aisle
00:11:39Have a candy
00:11:41Thank you
00:11:49You're not leaving doctor
00:11:50Yes you are and please give my thanks to professor Elwell for the use of the hall it's been fun
00:11:55Oh I can't understand his not being here it's most unusual
00:11:59It's an unusual world you riot
00:12:04I understand I've kept you waiting please forgive me it was most urgent business
00:12:09My business on the other hand was the I list of curiosity you were going to let me know about a tumor you'd found
00:12:14Ah yes a malignant dysgerminoma
00:12:16Professor Elwell you are the only man I know who can say malignant the way other people say bingo
00:12:23A malignant dysgerminoma
00:12:26Good day professor Elwell
00:12:28Good day
00:12:42Coming back in?
00:12:43Mm-mm
00:12:45Aren't you going back at all?
00:12:47Mm-mm
00:12:49Are you going to see a doctor?
00:12:51I guess so
00:13:14Good morning doctor Pretorius
00:13:16Good morning
00:13:22Run another test how was she when you made this one depressed?
00:13:26Cried all through it
00:13:28Yeah well when you run it again call me we'll have a laugh through the next one see what happens with a different set of emotional factors
00:13:33Well if you like
00:13:35Doctor Pretorius a problem's come up about Mrs. Bixby
00:13:38Mrs. Bixby I thought she was doing so well
00:13:39She's nearly ready to go home but she wants to take her gallbladder with her in a bottle of alcohol
00:13:44I think that's quite touching let her have it
00:13:46Doctor Pretorius you know we don't keep gallbladders lying about once they've been removed
00:13:50Mrs. Pegg was so it's highly unlikely that Mrs. Bixby would recognize her own so why don't you just give her any old gallbladder and make her happy
00:14:00Doctor unless all of the patients are served breakfast at the same time I cannot operate the kitchen with our present personnel
00:14:07Then hire more people to work in the kitchen
00:14:09But it is common practice in hospitals
00:14:11There's still more in my clinic no patient shall be waken from a health giving sleep and forced to eat breakfast at a time which pleases the culinary union
00:14:18But in the interest of good economy
00:14:20Bad therapy is never good economy if you must economize do it in the doctor's dining room
00:14:24And I will not have all the patients bathed at the stroke of a gong for the convenience of the nurses
00:14:29One of the reasons for my founding this clinic is a firm conviction that patients are sick people not inmates
00:14:34Of course Doctor Pretorius
00:14:40I'll bet I know what you're thinking here comes Dr. Happiness a good human man
00:14:45He tries to cheer me up to help me I'll hit him with an ice bag right
00:14:49Wrong
00:14:51Not that I blame him one of the few places of being sick is the right to feel good and miserable and don't let any doctor tell you differently
00:14:57I was thinking it's not much fun when you get to be old
00:15:02It's even less fun if you don't get to be old
00:15:05I want to die
00:15:06You'd like that wouldn't you just lie around in a coffin all day with nothing to do
00:15:11How was last night?
00:15:13Just fine doctor
00:15:15Well if we have another good night tonight maybe tomorrow morning we'll go back into surgery and take another look
00:15:21Doctor does it hurt when you die?
00:15:24Not a bit where'd you get that idea?
00:15:27They tell me there's so much pain
00:15:30Did anyone who actually died ever tell you that?
00:15:33Of course not
00:15:34Of course not
00:15:36Well there you see all this silly gossip about dying
00:15:40You know I nearly died once when I was a kid
00:15:43The doctors gave me up for lost
00:15:46The nerve of some doctors giving people up for lost as though they found them in the first place
00:15:52Anyway I was dying and I was in a coma
00:15:55You know how it felt?
00:15:57No how?
00:15:59It was winter at the time
00:16:00And I felt as if I was flying very slowly in a sled high up in the sky
00:16:06And the world below was covered in snow and ice and bitter cold
00:16:11But I was warm and cozy in the back of the sled
00:16:15Wrapped in an ermine blanket
00:16:17And then I came out of the coma I came back to life
00:16:20How'd you feel?
00:16:22Awful I had a splitting headache and I vomited for three days
00:16:26I've never felt as good being alive as I did when I was dying
00:16:29You certainly make dying a pleasure Dr. Pretorius
00:16:33Well we'll keep that our little secret shall we? I wouldn't want that to get around
00:16:54Doctor?
00:16:56Are you feeling alright?
00:16:58Just my usual twilight sadness
00:17:02Did it ever strike you that days die pretty much the way people do?
00:17:06Fighting for every last minute of light before they give up to the dark
00:17:10You think about the strangest things doctor
00:17:14It's my unbalanced diet
00:17:17Who's waiting?
00:17:19Just one patient left Mrs. Higgins
00:17:22She was in earlier today you had Dr. Beauchamp run a test and told her to come back
00:17:26Here's the laboratory report
00:17:28Well from the day we're done a happy note at any rate
00:17:32Have Mrs. Higgins come in
00:17:36Mrs. Higgins?
00:17:45Pardon me for getting up it's the only exercise I take
00:17:48Sit down won't you?
00:17:51Mrs. Higgins
00:17:53As a doctor it's my duty if at all possible to find something for you to worry about
00:17:58However I cannot repudiate a laboratory report such as I hold in my hand
00:18:03Mrs. Higgins you have nothing to worry about
00:18:07You mean everything is alright?
00:18:09Perfect
00:18:11Then the fainting this morning it didn't mean a thing did it?
00:18:13Nothing of the ordinary
00:18:15You might eat lightly however on the days you dissect cadavers
00:18:18Oh that? I've given that up I wasn't really a medical student anyway just sitting in on some courses
00:18:23Well I imagine it'll be more fun just sitting home with Mr. Higgins
00:18:26Yes yes it will be I can't say how grateful I am to you Dr. Pretorius
00:18:31But just a routine examination after all it didn't exactly save your life
00:18:34Thank you anyway
00:18:36Not at all
00:18:38Now Mrs. Higgins don't forget to have Miss James give you another appointment in about a month
00:18:43In about a month? To see you?
00:18:46Of course if you can afford it it might be preferable to have a regular obstetrician
00:18:50In that case there are several I'd be pleased to recommend
00:18:52But didn't you say that I had nothing to worry about? That everything was alright?
00:18:57It couldn't be any better Mrs. Higgins you're pregnant
00:19:03Are you sure? I mean couldn't there be some mistake?
00:19:06There's always a possibility of error however with a result as positive as this that possibility is remote
00:19:12After all it wasn't a very thorough test I mean it only took a couple of hours
00:19:16I thought in order to be sure you had to wait weeks
00:19:18Not anymore nowadays we find out about everything a lot more quickly than we used to
00:19:23About life and even about death
00:19:27Now they used to use a little pink rabbit for the pregnancy test
00:19:31But now they use a frog not nearly as cute but it's a lot faster
00:19:35Only two hours and just as certain
00:19:38The name of the frog by the way is Rhinopippians
00:19:41Sounds like a movie star doesn't it?
00:19:43You're not married
00:19:46What about the baby's father?
00:19:48It has no father
00:19:50That would be the first time in the annals of biology
00:19:54I have no husband
00:19:56But when he knows about the baby
00:19:58He'll never know I got a telegram the other day
00:20:03The other day seems as if he left just the other day
00:20:07Seems as if we met just the other day
00:20:08The other day seems as if he left just the other day
00:20:11Seems as if we met just the other day
00:20:13It's all such a crazy mixed up nightmare
00:20:15He was in the reserve the medical corps
00:20:18That's why I took the courses when he came back and we were married
00:20:21I wanted to know something about his work
00:20:23When did he leave?
00:20:25Six weeks ago or was it five?
00:20:27How right you are doctor how quick we've become with life and death
00:20:31And had you known him long?
00:20:33No not even that not even long enough to be sure
00:20:35Neither of us
00:20:37You're not permitted enough time these days to be sure of anything
00:20:40And then when he had to go and we had to say goodbye
00:20:44I was suddenly afraid
00:20:47I wanted to prove to myself and to him that I wasn't afraid
00:20:54The frightening things we do sometimes when we're afraid to be afraid
00:20:59Sit down why don't you?
00:21:06What are you afraid of now?
00:21:08I'm not
00:21:10Then stop behaving as if fear was something to be ashamed of
00:21:13Stop being such a pompous know-it-all you don't even know what I'm crying about
00:21:16Do you?
00:21:18Yes
00:21:20Miss Higgins I can't call you Miss Higgins what's your first name?
00:21:22Deborah
00:21:24Blow your nose there's tissue in the top drawer
00:21:26No no here
00:21:29I can't speak with as much assurance as I usually do
00:21:33Because you just called me a pompous know-it-all
00:21:35I'm sorry
00:21:37Don't be I do get pompous but I'm really not a know-it-all
00:21:41As a matter of fact right now I'm confused
00:21:43By what?
00:21:45Well it seems to me that if you were crying because of the father of your baby
00:21:49The time for you to cry would have been when you thought you weren't pregnant
00:21:53Not now that you know you are
00:21:56Isn't that so?
00:21:59So he isn't the reason
00:22:02No he isn't
00:22:05Then were you crying because you were afraid for yourself?
00:22:08Afraid of what people will say?
00:22:10No
00:22:12Are you sure?
00:22:14Society has a strict set of rules about that sort of thing
00:22:17The bylaws of our social corporation
00:22:20You violated section A article 1
00:22:23That can bring heavy penalties up to and including expulsion
00:22:26You really think I'm a coward don't you?
00:22:29Are you?
00:22:30No
00:22:32Which brings us to the party of the third part the baby
00:22:35Are you crying because of the baby?
00:22:38You can't say there won't be time enough for you to love your baby
00:22:42And if you're a good mother to have it love you
00:22:47It is the baby you're afraid of
00:22:50In a way
00:22:52Don't you want it?
00:22:53Of course I do but I can't have it I just can't have it
00:22:57Why not?
00:22:59Why not Deborah?
00:23:02You couldn't understand
00:23:05Try
00:23:18Because of my father
00:23:21You can never tell about fathers
00:23:23They can be suddenly understanding at the most unexpected times
00:23:27He's the most understanding and most gentle man in the world
00:23:30Well then?
00:23:31I'm all he's got
00:23:32If he knew about this it would kill him
00:23:35Oh
00:23:37Well if you're all he's got
00:23:39Then the baby would give him just that much more
00:23:41He couldn't live if he knew
00:23:43Deborah
00:23:44No man could be as gentle and understanding as you say
00:23:47And still so deeply prejudiced
00:23:49It's got nothing to do with prejudice
00:23:51Then what has it to do with?
00:23:53Perhaps
00:23:55This is only a suggestion but perhaps if I were to tell him
00:23:58No
00:23:59It's possible I could put it to him in such a way
00:24:01No please
00:24:03It's very kind of you but you mustn't even consider it
00:24:06Doctor Pretorius believe me
00:24:08If you did see my father you couldn't tell him about me
00:24:11Even you wouldn't know how
00:24:13And if you did
00:24:15You wouldn't have the heart
00:24:17Thanks just the same
00:24:22What are you going to do?
00:24:25I don't know
00:24:26You had a pretty good idea didn't you?
00:24:27Even before you came to see me that you were having a baby
00:24:31I wasn't sure
00:24:33Tell me
00:24:34Of all the doctors you could have gone to
00:24:35Why did you pick me?
00:24:37There wasn't anyone else I could
00:24:40Well when you talked to us this morning
00:24:42I felt suddenly that you could help me somehow
00:24:44How?
00:24:46You seem to care so much more about people
00:24:48Than just any doctor would and so
00:24:50So you came to me for help
00:24:51And all I did was talk to you some more
00:24:54There is nothing I wanted from you Doctor Pretorius
00:24:57That would have affected your conscience in any way
00:24:58Not even the tiniest hope that
00:25:00Perhaps for your father's peace of mind
00:25:02I wouldn't want to buy my father's peace of mind
00:25:04At the cost of yours
00:25:29Did Miss Higgins make another appointment?
00:25:31Miss Higgins?
00:25:33Sorry I meant Mrs. Higgins of course
00:25:35No Doctor she left without saying a word
00:25:38Sometimes Shunderson it seems to me
00:25:40That half the women who come in here
00:25:42Want babies they can't have
00:25:44And that the other half
00:25:45She's old enough to know what she's doing
00:25:46And to take what's coming to her
00:25:48I never want to hear you say anything
00:25:50As idiotic and heartless as that again
00:25:52But Doctor I don't
00:25:53For one thing you're a nurse
00:25:54And for another you're a woman
00:25:55I'm ashamed of both of you
00:25:57Have her taken to the nearest
00:25:59Treatment room
00:26:01You prepare her yourself
00:26:03Left side flesh wound
00:26:05Doesn't look too bad
00:26:07Get Billings for intravenous anesthesia
00:26:09Yes Doctor
00:26:11I'm afraid I can't
00:26:13I'm afraid I can't
00:26:15I'm afraid I can't
00:26:17I'm afraid I can't
00:26:19I'm afraid I can't
00:26:21I'm afraid I can't
00:26:23I'm afraid I can't
00:26:24Yes Doctor
00:26:37Thank you Billings
00:26:38Yes Doctor
00:26:40Shall I have her taken to the ward Doctor?
00:26:42Yes and get some blankets please
00:26:55Is it bad?
00:26:57It's a good thing most people
00:26:58Haven't the foggiest notion
00:26:59Where the heart is actually located
00:27:01She didn't even come close
00:27:03Why'd she try to kill herself?
00:27:05I imagine Shunderson
00:27:07That when people need help the most
00:27:09It must sometimes seem
00:27:10As if they're all alone in the world
00:27:12Isn't that true?
00:27:14Then she'll try it again
00:27:17She's still all alone
00:27:19And if there's still nobody to help her
00:27:21She'll die
00:27:22And if there's still nobody to help her
00:27:24She'll try it again
00:27:53I'm afraid I can't
00:27:55I'm afraid I can't
00:27:57I'm afraid I can't
00:27:59I'm afraid I can't
00:28:01I'm afraid I can't
00:28:03I'm afraid I can't
00:28:05I'm afraid I can't
00:28:07I'm afraid I can't
00:28:09I'm afraid I can't
00:28:11I'm afraid I can't
00:28:13I'm afraid I can't
00:28:15I'm afraid I can't
00:28:17I'm afraid I can't
00:28:19I'm afraid I can't
00:28:20I'm afraid I can't
00:28:50I'm afraid I can't
00:28:52I'm afraid I can't
00:28:54I'm afraid I can't
00:28:57I'm afraid I can't
00:28:58I'm afraid I can't
00:28:59I'm afraid I can't
00:29:03I'm afraid I can't
00:29:12And so into the big score
00:29:14How's it coming along?
00:29:16Just fine Dr. Pretorius
00:29:17They're ready to start with you any time now
00:29:18They're ready to start with you any time now.
00:29:20Good, the sooner the better.
00:29:21Set the first full rehearsal for next week.
00:29:25Well, tonight for the first time,
00:29:28your attack was not premedical.
00:29:31The horns did not sound as if they'd been sterilized.
00:29:34The second fiddle still pull a little.
00:29:36You're still inclined to regard the strings as catgut
00:29:38for sewing rather than for playing.
00:29:40And as for the gentlemen on the third bowl fiddle,
00:29:44Professor Barker,
00:29:46is there any reason why you, Professor Barker,
00:29:49who lives so intimately with millions of neutrons
00:29:52and know them all by name,
00:29:53cannot maintain a simple beat on a bowl fiddle?
00:29:57Are you referring to me?
00:29:59I do not mean to impugn your academic standing, of course.
00:30:02My dear Dr. Pretorius,
00:30:04I would willingly entrust the life of my sister
00:30:06to your skill as a gynecologist,
00:30:09but I would not let you conduct
00:30:10my three-year-old nephew to the bathroom.
00:30:12The point is that I am the conductor of this orchestra
00:30:16that you pay no attention to me.
00:30:18I do pay attention.
00:30:19Very well, we shall see.
00:30:22Start at letter B, please, Professor Barker,
00:30:24just your part alone.
00:30:27It's going to sound a little silly.
00:30:28After all, the bass viola is not a solo instrument.
00:30:31On the contrary, for one Serge Koussevitzky
00:30:34has concertized as a virtuoso of the bass viola.
00:30:38Look who's talking about Koussevitzky.
00:30:41Ready?
00:30:42Yes.
00:30:47♪♪♪
00:31:12♪♪♪
00:31:18♪♪♪
00:31:24♪♪♪
00:31:30♪♪♪
00:31:35♪♪♪
00:31:41♪♪♪
00:31:47♪♪♪
00:31:53♪♪♪
00:31:58♪♪♪
00:32:05Tell me, Professor,
00:32:06do the neutrons bombard the electrons
00:32:08or do the electrons do it to the neutrons?
00:32:11Well, what's the difference?
00:32:27Same time next week, thank you,
00:32:28and goodnight all.
00:32:30Oh, my.
00:32:32I'm glad we're through with you.
00:32:41You drive my car home. I'll drive with Professor Barker.
00:32:48Or leave the quinoa first and the rest on the kitchen table. I'll cook them.
00:32:53I don't want you to wait up.
00:32:55You'll make me very unhappy if you don't go straight to bed.
00:33:03He gets up before I do and won't go to bed till I'm asleep.
00:33:06I keep forgetting he can't stand these long hours anymore.
00:33:12Noah, there's something I want to talk to you about.
00:33:17Here and now?
00:33:18Well, it's fresh on my mind. Just for a minute.
00:33:21Sit down.
00:33:33You behave as if you were about to propose.
00:33:36Noah, one of the differences between matter and mankind
00:33:40is that in matter all relationships can be stated,
00:33:44whereas between people they can rarely be put into words.
00:33:47Granted.
00:33:48Now, I want you to know that I'm your good and devoted friend.
00:33:51I've been aware of that for some time, and I am yours.
00:33:55Therefore, I have the right to point out to you
00:33:57that there are occasions when you behave like a cephalic idiot.
00:34:02Also granted. Any particular occasion?
00:34:05Out of a universe full of time and space,
00:34:08only you could pick Rodney Elwell's anatomy class.
00:34:12Ah, the good word gets around, doesn't it?
00:34:15Don't take this lightly, Noah.
00:34:17There's been trouble brewing.
00:34:19Talk of rummaging about in your past.
00:34:21Let them rummage. They're spitting into the wind.
00:34:23And all this talk about charges and whatnot, of an investigation.
00:34:27Noah, as a friend, tell me,
00:34:29can Elwell dig up anything in your past
00:34:31that would conceivably discredit you enough
00:34:33to justify, say, a hearing before a faculty committee?
00:34:37How much discredit is enough?
00:34:39I've known you intimately for ten years,
00:34:41and I can't even guess at what you were up to
00:34:43the day before I met you.
00:34:45Suppose I told you all. Could it affect our friendship?
00:34:48Of course not.
00:34:49I'm glad to hear that.
00:34:51You know, it's not much to have a friend who knows all about you.
00:34:53But one who's a friend even though he's not quite sure,
00:34:57that's worth having.
00:35:01Then will you tell me just this?
00:35:05About the bat.
00:35:07The bat?
00:35:09I thought you knew that's what they called him.
00:35:11Shenderson.
00:35:13Who calls him that?
00:35:15Why, the students, the faculty,
00:35:17even the staff at your own clinic.
00:35:19No, I didn't know.
00:35:21There's not a proper name for him.
00:35:23Noah, who is he?
00:35:25A man named Shenderson.
00:35:27Where does he come from?
00:35:29Why is he with you day and night, everywhere you go?
00:35:31I have no right to tell even you
00:35:33anything about Mr. Shenderson.
00:35:35Can Elwell uncover something about his past,
00:35:37or yours, or both,
00:35:39that he can use to make trouble?
00:35:41That depends.
00:35:43Drop me by the clinic first, will you?
00:35:45I want to look in on a patient.
00:35:47Drop me by the clinic first, will you?
00:35:49I want to look in on a patient.
00:36:17I want to look in on a patient.
00:36:47I want to look in on a patient.
00:37:17Don't turn the light on, please.
00:37:31You've been crying again.
00:37:33That doesn't necessarily follow.
00:37:35Well, it's a pretty good guess
00:37:37when a woman wants the light kept off,
00:37:39either that or her face isn't on.
00:37:41I don't mind being seen without make-up.
00:37:43I don't mind seeing you without make-up.
00:37:47You know all about women, don't you?
00:37:50Not nearly enough.
00:37:51I don't mean just as a doctor.
00:37:54Not even as a doctor.
00:37:57Deborah, I... I've got something to tell you.
00:38:00And as a pompous know-it-all...
00:38:02I didn't mean that, even when I said it.
00:38:04As a pompous know-it-all, it isn't going to be easy.
00:38:08But do you remember the remote possibility that I thought could never occur...
00:38:12about the frog being wrong?
00:38:15Well, the frog wasn't wrong.
00:38:17But you've got the wrong frog.
00:38:19It seems the possibility of a laboratory assistant making a mistake is not remote at all.
00:38:24I don't understand.
00:38:27Two tests were being run at the same time.
00:38:30One had a positive result, and the other negative.
00:38:34Through unforgivable negligence...
00:38:36your report read positive...
00:38:39when it should have read negative.
00:38:44Then... I'm not having a baby after all.
00:38:49You're not having a baby after all.
00:38:53Sleep well. You've got nothing to worry about.
00:38:56That's what you think.
00:39:00Now what are you crying about?
00:39:02It's just awful.
00:39:03What is?
00:39:05To think I had to go and tell you all about myself and what I did.
00:39:09Now it turns out I didn't really have to.
00:39:13Well, it did you good to have someone to tell it to.
00:39:16But not to you.
00:39:18Why not?
00:39:31I'll see you in the morning, Deborah.
00:39:33Dr. Pretorius...
00:39:37Are all your patients women?
00:39:40Almost.
00:39:42I guess they all fall in love with you.
00:39:45Not all of them.
00:39:47Just most.
00:39:48Not even most.
00:39:51Good night.
00:39:59What a mess.
00:40:04Why do you have to stop by the clinic?
00:40:07Anything interesting?
00:40:09A physician respects the confidence of his patients...
00:40:12and does not discuss them with anyone.
00:40:14How true, how true.
00:40:16Was it the young girl who tried to shoot herself?
00:40:19Why?
00:40:21Because of an unpremeditated baby.
00:40:23Her condition pretty bad?
00:40:25Better than yours on the whole. Just a superficial flesh wound.
00:40:28Then why drive all the way up to the clinic to see her?
00:40:31I wanted to tell her she was not pregnant.
00:40:33Lost the baby, eh?
00:40:35Was it shock? And when she fell?
00:40:38She's as pregnant now as she ever was.
00:40:41And why in the name of good sense tell her that she isn't?
00:40:44Pregnancy, my dear boy, is not a state of the mind.
00:40:47Here, get me some more knackerwurst.
00:40:49Two reasons.
00:40:51One to get her a good night's sleep...
00:40:53and the second to keep her from trying it again...
00:40:55until I can find her father and talk with him.
00:40:58What has her father got to do with it?
00:41:00She has an unshakable conviction...
00:41:02that the knowledge of what she's done will kill her.
00:41:05You intend to talk him...
00:41:07into clicking his heels with joy over the situation?
00:41:10I intend to convince him either to be compassionate about it...
00:41:13or to convince her that her father will survive her disgrace...
00:41:17and that her chief responsibility is to the baby.
00:41:20Noah.
00:41:22Has it ever occurred to you, aside from certain medical considerations...
00:41:25that most of this is none of your business?
00:41:27Thanks.
00:41:29Well, what is my business?
00:41:31To diagnose the physical ailments of human beings and to cure them.
00:41:34Wrong.
00:41:36My business is to make sick people well.
00:41:38There's a vast difference between curing an ailment...
00:41:40and making a sick person well.
00:41:42We won't go into that. I'm too tired.
00:41:44Besides, doctors bore me.
00:41:46Just one little question.
00:41:48What have you great men of science done with atomic energy...
00:41:51to make people well?
00:41:53That's wonderful sauerkraut.
00:41:55It tastes like sauerkraut used to taste.
00:41:57There's a German woman who makes it in a barrel.
00:41:59I'll send you some. More beer?
00:42:01Yes, please.
00:42:03Sauerkraut belongs in a barrel, not a can.
00:42:06Our American mania for sterile packages...
00:42:09has removed the flavor from most of our foods.
00:42:12Butter is no longer sold out of wooden tubs...
00:42:14and the whole generation thinks butter tastes like paper.
00:42:17There was never a perfume like an old-time perfume.
00:42:21There was never a perfume like an old-time grocery store.
00:42:24Now they smell like drugstores.
00:42:26They don't even smell like drugstores anymore.
00:42:31You country doctors live romantic lives.
00:42:33Just think, it might be quintuplets.
00:42:35This time of the morning is usually heartburn or loneliness.
00:42:38Hello?
00:42:40Dr. Pretorius?
00:42:42Dr. Pretorius?
00:42:44One of our patients is missing.
00:42:46Miss Higgins.
00:42:48That's it, Deborah Higgins.
00:42:50It must have been in the last hour, doctor.
00:42:52Miss Myers said Miss Higgins was sleeping...
00:42:54when she made her rounds about an hour ago.
00:42:56We've searched the grounds.
00:42:59Doctor, I just can't imagine how she got out.
00:43:02I can tell you exactly how she got out...
00:43:04by walking down the corridor and out the front door...
00:43:06just as I did a couple of hours ago.
00:43:09No, don't notify the police. I'll take care of it in the morning.
00:43:12Keep looking, of course, and let me know if you find her.
00:43:15Good night.
00:43:19Who flew the coop?
00:43:21The young lady we were discussing?
00:43:23Yeah.
00:43:25Why would she run away?
00:43:27I don't know, but I've got to find her.
00:43:29I should think so.
00:43:31It seems you've got some important information about her...
00:43:33that she hasn't got.
00:43:48You'd better wait in the car while I ask.
00:44:18DOG BARKING
00:44:48DOG BARKING
00:45:19I wondered what Beelzebub was barking at.
00:45:21Beelzebub?
00:45:23Beasts like that are usually called pals.
00:45:25I call him Beelzebub because he's an evil dog.
00:45:28Well, I am delighted to meet someone...
00:45:30courageous enough not to love all dogs.
00:45:32My name is Pretorius.
00:45:34Dr. Pretorius? This is a pleasure.
00:45:36I'm Arthur Higgins.
00:45:38I'm delighted Beelzebub didn't frighten you away...
00:45:40but I am surprised he gave up so easily.
00:45:42Mr. Shunderson has a way with dogs.
00:45:44Mr. Shunderson?
00:45:46How do you do? Would you come sit down?
00:45:48Thank you.
00:45:50You're far from a stranger to me, Dr. Pretorius.
00:45:53I've heard so much about you from my daughter, Deborah.
00:45:55Have you?
00:45:57How fortunate you were such good friends...
00:45:59when she had that ridiculous little accident.
00:46:01Yes, it was ridiculous, wasn't it?
00:46:03I still do not understand how a woman...
00:46:05can accidentally burn a deep welt in her side...
00:46:07with a curling iron.
00:46:09Well, it's not uncommon for women...
00:46:11female students in particular...
00:46:13to curl their hair, eat, read and telephone...
00:46:15all at the same time.
00:46:17The results are often disastrous.
00:46:19Yes, I imagine it could have been worse.
00:46:21Much worse.
00:46:23I happen to be devoted to porch sitting.
00:46:25If you'd rather go inside.
00:46:27Oh, this is very pleasant.
00:46:29And I see that you're properly protected...
00:46:31against too much fresh air.
00:46:33Don't you believe in the benefits of fresh air?
00:46:35I do not. Nor do I believe that eating fish...
00:46:37develops the brain...
00:46:39or that oysters will increase virility.
00:46:41Don't tell that to Deborah.
00:46:43She's forever driving me out of the house.
00:46:45You're an unusual man of science...
00:46:47Dr. Pretorius.
00:46:49You're an unusual farmer, Mr. Higgins.
00:46:51But I'm not a farmer.
00:46:53This isn't my farm. It belongs to my brother.
00:46:55I see. Then you're just visiting here.
00:46:57You might say...
00:46:59I'm staying here.
00:47:01We need help.
00:47:03Beelzebub called in under the ice house...
00:47:05and he won't come out.
00:47:07Beelzebub belongs under the ice house.
00:47:09Deborah, we have guests.
00:47:11Yes, I see. Hello, Doctor.
00:47:13Hello, Mr. Shunderson.
00:47:15I was wondering about that nasty little burn...
00:47:17you got from the curling iron.
00:47:19It's fine.
00:47:21It's been almost a week...
00:47:23and since we happen to be driving out this way...
00:47:25Happen to be out this way?
00:47:27Hours from your clinic and the university?
00:47:29Dr. Pretorius has far-flung interests.
00:47:31Then I'm sure both he and Mr. Shunderson...
00:47:33will be interested in joining us for Sunday dinner.
00:47:35No, really, we couldn't impose upon you.
00:47:37Dr. Pretorius must have more important matters.
00:47:39Nonsense.
00:47:41We can't let them drive miles to get here...
00:47:43and send them away unfed.
00:47:45We'd love to have you.
00:47:47We'll be happy to stay.
00:47:53I'll tell Bella.
00:47:57Have you been here long?
00:47:59Your father and I have just been getting acquainted.
00:48:01Dr. Pretorius has a way...
00:48:03of knowing people very well very quickly.
00:48:05He's entitled to as much time as he wants.
00:48:07After all, you've told me so much about him.
00:48:11Father, I'm not at all sure...
00:48:13that it's good for you to be out of doors.
00:48:15There is nothing healthier than fresh air.
00:48:19You said something about telling Bella?
00:48:23I haven't the slightest intention of leaving here.
00:48:25Bella!
00:48:29It seems also that Deborah has told me...
00:48:31a great deal about you, Mr. Higgins.
00:48:33You haven't much to know, has there?
00:48:35The number of accomplishments in my life, Doctor...
00:48:37is one.
00:48:39Deborah.
00:48:41Quite an accomplishment.
00:48:43If you don't mind, I'd rather not be discussed this intimately...
00:48:45on the front porch.
00:48:47On the front porch? We're in a test tube.
00:48:49It is obvious that you're going to be discussed.
00:48:51So why do you insist upon remaining where you're not wanted?
00:48:55Well, why should you want to discuss me?
00:48:57There's nothing to discuss, is there?
00:48:59Is there?
00:49:01Deborah.
00:49:03Doctor Pretorius has not driven this great distance...
00:49:05to see Beelzebub...
00:49:07or to inquire whether you're being more careful...
00:49:09with your curling iron.
00:49:11It's quite apparent that he's come to talk with me.
00:49:13Now go and tell Bella...
00:49:15there will be two extra for dinner.
00:49:17Somebody yelled for me?
00:49:19Yes, Bella. These two gentlemen are staying for dinner.
00:49:21Does Mr. John know about it?
00:49:23There's plenty of food.
00:49:25Mr. John better know about it.
00:49:27I'll tell him.
00:49:29He's doing his books now, and he don't like to be disturbed.
00:49:31I'll tell him when he's finished, Bella.
00:49:33Well...
00:49:35I'll put two plates on anyway.
00:49:37You left the peas half done.
00:49:39I'll be right in.
00:49:41I would like to help.
00:49:43Oh, really, it isn't necessary.
00:49:45Don't let him. It's a good idea. He'll be of great help.
00:49:47May I ask...
00:49:49is Mr. Shunderson your servant?
00:49:51He's my friend.
00:49:53But he likes to help.
00:49:55I see.
00:49:57Dr. Pretorius...
00:49:59I referred a moment ago to Deborah...
00:50:01as the only accomplishment of my life.
00:50:03I'm sure you were being modest.
00:50:05She's more than my only accomplishment.
00:50:07Quite simply, she's my only contact with...
00:50:09and reason for...
00:50:11what is sometimes called...
00:50:13the only reason.
00:50:15If you'll permit a rather lurid analogy...
00:50:17Deborah is my heartbeat.
00:50:19Mr. Hager...
00:50:21please don't feel that you have to tell me anything.
00:50:23No, no, I want to tell you about myself...
00:50:25for just a moment.
00:50:27I can't say what makes me want to.
00:50:29Perhaps it was Bella's rudeness.
00:50:31Perhaps because I think of you already as a friend.
00:50:33Have you got a match?
00:50:35No.
00:50:37I smoke too much anyway.
00:50:39Well, if you don't mind...
00:50:41I'd like to ask you...
00:50:43if you smoke too much anyway.
00:50:45The Mr. John Bella...
00:50:47seems so concerned about...
00:50:49is my brother.
00:50:51He owns this farm.
00:50:53He owns the food I invited you to share...
00:50:55the beds we sleep in...
00:50:57the clothes we wear...
00:50:59Deborah's tuition...
00:51:01and the tobacco in my pipe.
00:51:03The pipe is mine.
00:51:05I have...
00:51:07other possessions...
00:51:09some scrapbooks...
00:51:11a portrait, mine too...
00:51:13it was published but didn't sell, of course...
00:51:15and Deborah...
00:51:17and the memory of my wife.
00:51:19I wondered about her.
00:51:21She died when Deborah was very little...
00:51:23in London.
00:51:25That's where Deborah was born.
00:51:27What were you doing in London?
00:51:29I did the same thing, Dr. Pretorius...
00:51:31in most of the major cities of the world.
00:51:33I failed miserably...
00:51:35at whatever it was I tried to do.
00:51:38We haven't any matches.
00:51:40Why?
00:51:42Oh, it's become a nervous habit, I guess.
00:51:45My brother John...
00:51:47never left this farm...
00:51:49physically, mentally, spiritually...
00:51:51or in any other fashion.
00:51:53I don't imagine John's been more than a hundred miles...
00:51:55from this porch in any given direction.
00:51:57When you left the farm...
00:51:59what did you set out to be?
00:52:01Nothing in particular...
00:52:03except to be as far from here as possible.
00:52:05I remained both throughout my life...
00:52:07far from here...
00:52:09and nothing in particular.
00:52:11I was an indifferent journalist...
00:52:13a minor poet...
00:52:15an ineffective teacher...
00:52:17a wretched businessman...
00:52:19unable to provide properly...
00:52:21for my wife and child...
00:52:23and then not even for just my child.
00:52:25When my heart gave way...
00:52:27it seemed to me that my functions...
00:52:29had achieved a unanimous failure.
00:52:31And so I applied to my brother...
00:52:33for permission to return here...
00:52:35with Deborah...
00:52:37as a complete dependent...
00:52:39which I am in every sense of the word...
00:52:41including being listed as such...
00:52:43in his income tax report.
00:52:49And now...
00:52:51if you'll excuse me...
00:52:53I'll ask John about dinner.
00:52:55Perhaps it would be better if you didn't.
00:52:57Please, I'd consider it a favor.
00:52:59Would you like to come inside?
00:53:01Just for a minute.
00:53:31I thought you were helping in the kitchen.
00:53:33The woman didn't want me.
00:53:35I can't say I approve...
00:53:37of the company you keep.
00:53:39The dog is frightened...
00:53:41and unhappy.
00:53:43He has that in common...
00:53:45with most of humanity.
00:53:47It's not going to be easy...
00:53:49what you came here for.
00:53:53Let's just say...
00:53:55it's not going to be easy.
00:53:57What you came here for.
00:54:01Let's go for a walk.
00:54:17Sunday ain't Sunday without chicken.
00:54:19Two things I guess I did...
00:54:21every Sunday of my life...
00:54:23go to church and eat chicken.
00:54:26Don't you ever eat chicken on a weekday?
00:54:28Only on Sundays.
00:54:32But if you like chicken so much...
00:54:34why don't you eat it more often?
00:54:36Because I only eat it on Sundays.
00:54:38Uncle John lives according to a very strict schedule.
00:54:40Two things I live by...
00:54:42the good book and the calendar.
00:54:44I got a day's work to do every day in the year.
00:54:46I take care of my work...
00:54:48and the good book takes care of me.
00:54:50Then you do the same thing...
00:54:52every day of every year, is that it?
00:54:54That's right.
00:54:56That's what the good Lord and Old Mother Nature put us here for.
00:54:58To do the job they set out for us.
00:55:00Oh.
00:55:02Well, I can't speak for the good Lord, of course...
00:55:04but I know a little about Old Mother Nature.
00:55:06If Old Mother Nature had her way...
00:55:08there wouldn't be a human being alive.
00:55:10How do you mean that?
00:55:12I mean, among other things, that Old Mother Nature...
00:55:14tries to destroy us periodically...
00:55:16by means of pestilence, disease and disaster.
00:55:18That's why the human race has been at war...
00:55:20with Old Mother Nature ever since it became the human race.
00:55:22What do you mean, became the human race?
00:55:24Is that what you teach?
00:55:26No, and I'm not really a teacher.
00:55:28That merely happens to be my opinion.
00:55:30Oh.
00:55:32You make a lot of money?
00:55:34John, really, I don't think you...
00:55:36I don't mind telling him.
00:55:38Yes, Mr. Higgins, I make a lot of money...
00:55:40as a doctor.
00:55:42But then I'm one of the few fortunate ones.
00:55:44I'll say.
00:55:46We've got one here in town who works night and day...
00:55:48hasn't got a red cent.
00:55:50I'm sure you're in town.
00:55:52He'd be a little worse off than even your doctor.
00:55:54But then the government doesn't pay them...
00:55:56for the patients they don't treat...
00:55:58or the children they don't teach.
00:56:00Oh, you mean like, uh...
00:56:02I get paid for not growing some crops.
00:56:04I never could figure that one out.
00:56:06But then, uh...
00:56:08never ask too many questions about it.
00:56:10Never look a gift horse in the mouth.
00:56:12You?
00:56:14I never look any horse in the mouth.
00:56:16Oh.
00:56:18I'm going to write down my books.
00:56:20Then I'm going to sleep a while...
00:56:22till it's time for my radio programs.
00:56:24Off the schedule today, income tax.
00:56:26I ain't complaining, though.
00:56:28Got more deductions than I thought.
00:56:30Doc, do you mind if I put you and your friend down...
00:56:32as a couple of feed salesmen?
00:56:34Flattered. Just don't call me Doc.
00:56:36That way I deduct the whole dinner.
00:56:38Every little bit helps.
00:56:40I write it all down in a book.
00:56:42Most of my equipment don't cost me a thing...
00:56:44writing it off year by year.
00:56:46Depletion and depreciation.
00:56:48Yeah, that's it. Means it's running down.
00:56:50Don't work so good as it did.
00:56:52One thing about teachers and writers and such...
00:56:54they have less bother with their income tax...
00:56:56than farmers and oil well owners.
00:56:58That so? Why?
00:57:00Because their equipment is talent...
00:57:02and a highly developed mind.
00:57:04And when they run down...
00:57:06and don't work so good as they did...
00:57:08the depletion and depreciation...
00:57:10can't be written off their income tax.
00:57:12See what I mean?
00:57:14What's so smart about them?
00:57:16Don't play the radio loud while I'm sleeping, Arthur.
00:57:18No, John.
00:57:26Deborah, why don't you show Dr. Pretorius the farm?
00:57:29I'm sure he'd be interested.
00:57:31Still a lot of depletion and depreciation.
00:57:33That's all.
00:57:35Let's see it before it's all written off.
00:57:40I'll get a sweater and meet you outside.
00:57:45How old were you...
00:57:47when you learned to walk?
00:57:49I did pretty well by the time I was four.
00:57:51When did you leave the farm?
00:57:53I was 16.
00:57:55It couldn't have taken you 12 years...
00:57:57to make up your mind.
00:58:02You enjoy music, Mr. Shennison?
00:58:04More than anything.
00:58:14Thank you.
00:58:34Mr. Shennison...
00:58:36Dr. Pretorius has come here...
00:58:38to ask Deborah to marry him, hasn't he?
00:58:41I wouldn't be surprised.
00:58:45I'm sorry.
00:58:55This, as you see, is the dairy.
00:58:57The cows are out in the pasture.
00:58:59Doing the job the good Lord gave them.
00:59:03Uncle has eight cows.
00:59:05That's far more milk, butter and cheese than what we need.
00:59:08He sells the rest in town.
00:59:10That makes it a commercial enterprise.
00:59:12The dairy and the equipment and the cows.
00:59:20I think I like the dairy best of all.
00:59:22It's certainly spotless, isn't it?
00:59:24The Board of Health is very strict about that.
00:59:26Where do you hide Bella when they come around?
00:59:28Under the ice house?
00:59:31Down here.
00:59:33This room is for the separator and things.
00:59:35I'd stay out of there if I were you.
00:59:37You might get caught in a room with a dead end.
00:59:43The milk gets certified, you know.
00:59:46According to the amount of butter fed in it.
00:59:51Why did you run away from the clinic?
00:59:53And this, of course, is the separator...
00:59:55where the cream gets separated from the milk.
00:59:57Why did you run away?
00:59:58It works by centrifugal action.
01:00:00It used to be done by just skimming it off.
01:00:02But the cream, being lighter than the milk, rises to the surface.
01:00:05Deborah.
01:00:06Because I had to.
01:00:07Why?
01:00:08I had to, that's all.
01:00:09Why?
01:00:10Because.
01:00:11I had reasons.
01:00:12What?
01:00:13They were private and personal.
01:00:14I don't have to tell you everything.
01:00:16Why?
01:00:24I'm in love with you.
01:00:29What makes you think so?
01:00:31I can't give you symptoms.
01:00:32It's love, not measles.
01:00:34Am I being pompous again?
01:00:36Well, there are some things you can't be scientific about.
01:00:39Even so.
01:00:40Why should that make you want to run away in the middle of the night...
01:00:42in your bathrobe and slippers?
01:00:44I didn't want to see you the next morning.
01:00:46I wanted to see you.
01:00:48Not if I knew about you what you knew about me.
01:00:51You wouldn't want to.
01:00:53Possibly. I don't know.
01:00:55A person just doesn't fall in love that fast.
01:00:58Or that often.
01:00:59I just couldn't lie there anymore and think about it.
01:01:01I couldn't stand it.
01:01:03Don't you see?
01:01:04If I do love you, then how could I have been in love with him?
01:01:08And if I didn't love him, then why...
01:01:11And anyway, even if I did, why did I have to go and tell you about it?
01:01:16Are you crying again?
01:01:18No, but I want to run away again.
01:01:20No, no more running away.
01:01:24No, you were right about your father.
01:01:26I couldn't have told him.
01:01:27He'd have understood, but I couldn't have told him.
01:01:30Certainly you couldn't have.
01:01:39Now you tell me something.
01:01:41Why did you come here?
01:01:43What do you mean?
01:01:45It couldn't have been to talk to my father.
01:01:49Well, as a matter of fact...
01:01:51Because if it was, what about?
01:01:53There wasn't anything to tell him, really, was there?
01:01:55Well, no, not really.
01:01:57A superficial flesh wound like mine.
01:01:59You weren't worried about my condition, were you?
01:02:02Of course not.
01:02:03Going to all the trouble of finding me,
01:02:05searching the registrar's records and whatnot.
01:02:07Why did you come all the way out here?
01:02:09I don't know, really.
01:02:10I think you do know.
01:02:12What's your first name?
01:02:13I can't go on calling you Dr. Pretorius.
01:02:15Uh, Noah.
01:02:17Why did you come after me, Noah?
01:02:19You know, what you said before about cream being lighter than milk,
01:02:21that wasn't quite accurate.
01:02:23Noah's a cute name.
01:02:24My real name is Ludwig.
01:02:26You see, cream is the oily part of the milk.
01:02:28It's not actually a separate product.
01:02:30I prefer Noah.
01:02:31In homogenizing milk, for instance,
01:02:33the particles of fat become emulsified.
01:02:35I do not want to appear unladylike about this,
01:02:37but I'd feel silly acting coy.
01:02:39So the cream becomes part of the general body of the milk.
01:02:42With you, of all men.
01:02:44You couldn't have come out here
01:02:45because you wanted to talk to my father.
01:02:47And you couldn't have come out
01:02:48because you were worried about my health.
01:02:50And there comes a time
01:02:51when a patient asks a doctor questions.
01:02:54Why did you come all this way just to see me, Noah?
01:02:58I did have a reason, you know.
01:03:00I know.
01:03:01Well, you know,
01:03:02it doesn't seem to matter at the moment.
01:03:04You're being pompous again at the moment.
01:03:06You'd be surprised how un-pompous.
01:03:09Then what are you being?
01:03:22Well, things do have a way of happening, don't they?
01:03:26Old mother nature.
01:03:28Old mother nature.
01:03:30Old mother nature knows best.
01:04:01What's Uncle John up to?
01:04:03He's got the radio on full blast.
01:04:05Something about rustlers.
01:04:06It seems somebody rustled 15,000 television sets.
01:04:10Here, use this.
01:04:12Dropping my things out of the window.
01:04:14You'd think I was escaping from a girls' reformatory.
01:04:17There is no reason
01:04:18why we can't just walk out the front door.
01:04:20It's more fun this way.
01:04:21When are you going to break the news
01:04:23to the gentleman farmer?
01:04:24John?
01:04:25During his favorite quiz program,
01:04:27I tend to let him have it,
01:04:28as a personal jackpot.
01:04:29He'll be mad.
01:04:30I hope so.
01:04:31I am scared.
01:04:34Deborah, I thought I was going to have to die
01:04:36without seeing you safely out of here
01:04:38and without telling him off.
01:04:40Remember your promise to come and live with us.
01:04:42Of course he will.
01:04:43Much against everybody's better judgment,
01:04:45including my own,
01:04:46I intend to live very happily with you.
01:04:48I'm still scared.
01:04:49There's nothing that John can do to either of us.
01:04:51Oh, she's not scared of John,
01:04:52she's scared of me.
01:04:53Pompous know-it-all.
01:04:55It just so happens to be
01:04:57that what I'm afraid of
01:04:58is that you don't really want to marry me
01:05:00and that I won't make you a good enough wife.
01:05:02In the first place,
01:05:03I'm not in the habit of marrying women
01:05:05I don't really want to marry.
01:05:06His first name isn't Noah, you know,
01:05:07it's Ludwig.
01:05:08And in the second place,
01:05:10a woman has yet to be born
01:05:11who doesn't in her heart believe
01:05:12she'll make her husband a much better wife
01:05:14than he has any possible right to expect.
01:05:16I just don't want to get married tonight.
01:05:18I don't want a long engagement,
01:05:20but can't I even have one day?
01:05:22You'll be married in New York.
01:05:23That takes three days.
01:05:24All right?
01:05:25It's just so I can feel more feminine about it.
01:05:29I must say,
01:05:30you're the only man I ever heard of
01:05:31who acts exactly like some poor girl
01:05:33that has to get married.
01:05:36I imagine that as a man,
01:05:38I've come as close to it
01:05:39as any other man who ever lived.
01:05:56Come in.
01:05:58I got it, Professor.
01:05:59Sergeant Coonan.
01:06:01I got your man.
01:06:08Excellent.
01:06:09Is that the same Shunderson?
01:06:11Very probably.
01:06:12Could you identify him from this?
01:06:14Almost positively.
01:06:15Well, let's see.
01:06:16I'm going to have to ask you
01:06:17if you can identify him from this.
01:06:19Well, let's see.
01:06:20I'm going to have to ask you
01:06:21if you can identify him from this.
01:06:23Almost positively.
01:06:24You got to do better than bury an almost.
01:06:27My dear man,
01:06:28this newspaper appeared in 1917.
01:06:31The photograph is 34 years old at least.
01:06:34The identification may not be entirely positive,
01:06:38but it satisfies me.
01:06:40We got to be sure.
01:06:41Get me a new picture of this character.
01:06:43There are none that I know of.
01:06:44Mr. Shunderson has always manifested
01:06:46a violent aversion to being photographed,
01:06:48even to snapshots by students.
01:06:50Want me to handle it?
01:06:52Please.
01:06:53Okay.
01:06:54Comes tomorrow,
01:06:55we slap a tail on this monkey.
01:06:58Mr. Coonan,
01:06:59I have spoken to you about this before.
01:07:02I must be able to understand you.
01:07:04Oh.
01:07:05What I mean is,
01:07:06starting tomorrow,
01:07:07we have him followed.
01:07:08Unhappily,
01:07:09it'll have to wait until Monday.
01:07:10Dr. Pretorius is undermining
01:07:12a medical convention in New York
01:07:13and will not return until then.
01:07:15Monday it is.
01:07:16Good luck to you.
01:07:22May I be of service to you, madam?
01:07:40Yes, you may.
01:07:41I want to buy an electric train outfit,
01:07:42very fancy and very elaborate.
01:07:44It's for a birthday.
01:07:45I'm sure we can find something nice.
01:07:47May I ask how old is the boy?
01:07:4941.
01:07:50He'll be 42 tomorrow.
01:07:52Mr. Shunderson.
01:08:17Is anything the matter?
01:08:18No.
01:08:19I thought I saw a friend.
01:08:20Well, if you'd like to...
01:08:21No, it doesn't matter.
01:08:22Then would you help me with the trains?
01:08:24We've got more equipment
01:08:25than the Union Pacific.
01:08:26Sure.
01:08:34Good night, Dr. Pretorius.
01:08:35Good night.
01:08:36Good night, Doctor.
01:08:37Good night.
01:08:43I think you should know,
01:08:45someone took my picture today.
01:08:47Give me one to wear
01:08:48and a locket around my neck.
01:08:49It wasn't that kind.
01:08:51He ran away after he took it.
01:08:53I see.
01:08:55Perhaps it would be better
01:08:56if I went away, too.
01:08:57No.
01:08:58You've made a great career.
01:08:59You have a home now,
01:09:01a wife, responsibilities.
01:09:03No.
01:09:12Want me to answer, Mrs. Pretorius?
01:09:14Oh, don't bother, Anna.
01:09:15Mr. Shunderson's somewhere out front.
01:09:16He'll get it.
01:09:28Professor Elwell from the university.
01:09:30At this time of day?
01:09:31What about?
01:09:32He's come to see Dr. Pretorius
01:09:33in very urgent business.
01:09:34Shall I call him?
01:09:35Certainly not.
01:09:36Dr. Pretorius is not to be disturbed.
01:09:39I'll talk to Professor Elwell.
01:09:47Good evening, Professor Elwell.
01:09:50Mrs. Pretorius?
01:09:52This is indeed an honor.
01:09:54I'd heard, of course,
01:09:55of Dr. Pretorius' marriage,
01:09:57but until now,
01:09:58I had no knowledge
01:09:59of the extent to which
01:10:00he was to be complimented
01:10:01upon his exquisite taste.
01:10:02Thank you, Professor.
01:10:03How sweet of you
01:10:04to come all this way
01:10:05just to say those nice things.
01:10:06Won't you sit down?
01:10:07Thank you.
01:10:08No, my business
01:10:09is with Dr. Pretorius,
01:10:10a most urgent
01:10:11and confidential matter,
01:10:12and I have no wish
01:10:13to intrude for long
01:10:14upon what seems
01:10:15to be a festive occasion.
01:10:17His birthday.
01:10:18So, these must be happy days
01:10:20indeed for your husband.
01:10:22Unfortunately,
01:10:23they're busy days, too,
01:10:24and at the moment,
01:10:25he's in a very important conference.
01:10:26But surely,
01:10:27if you were to tell him
01:10:28that a most pressing matter
01:10:29concerning the university...
01:10:30I'm afraid he cannot be disturbed.
01:10:33Mrs. Pretorius,
01:10:34I assure you
01:10:35that it is necessary
01:10:36for me to talk with him.
01:10:37It just is not possible.
01:10:41You're welcome to wait
01:10:42if you like,
01:10:43but I assure you
01:10:44my husband will be in conference
01:10:45until dinner time.
01:10:47I, too, have a home,
01:10:48Mrs. Pretorius.
01:10:49I have come here
01:10:50at no little inconvenience
01:10:51to myself.
01:10:52Exactly what have you
01:10:53come here for,
01:10:54Professor Elwell?
01:10:55I have a message
01:10:56for your husband.
01:10:57Not a happy one,
01:10:58I regret to say.
01:10:59Oh?
01:11:01Well, if you'll give it to me,
01:11:02I'll see that he gets it.
01:11:05I had hoped,
01:11:07that is,
01:11:08I have been asked
01:11:09to inform Dr. Pretorius
01:11:10of it in person.
01:11:11Has the message
01:11:12to do with
01:11:13some confidential information
01:11:14about a patient?
01:11:15It has to do only
01:11:16with your husband.
01:11:17Well, then, in that case,
01:11:18it doesn't matter
01:11:19whether I tell him about it
01:11:20or he tells me.
01:11:21A relationship of...
01:11:23A relationship
01:11:24of such mutual trust
01:11:25is heartwarming.
01:11:26Thank you.
01:11:27You understand, of course,
01:11:28that my presence here
01:11:29is a matter of duty,
01:11:30not necessarily
01:11:31personal information.
01:11:32You are well known,
01:11:33Professor,
01:11:34as a man without
01:11:35personal inclinations.
01:11:36Thank you.
01:11:41May I have a glass of water?
01:11:43On the table.
01:11:44Help yourself.
01:11:45So beautifully arranged.
01:11:46Just drinking some water
01:11:47won't hurt it.
01:11:48You're extremely generous.
01:11:59Mrs. Pretorius,
01:12:01there have been
01:12:02for some time now
01:12:03persistent,
01:12:04but obviously unreliable,
01:12:06rumors about your husband.
01:12:08About women?
01:12:10About the circumstances
01:12:11under which he has
01:12:12practiced medicine.
01:12:13About his methods.
01:12:15And certain events
01:12:16both past and present.
01:12:18Oh, that.
01:12:21And in view
01:12:22of certain disclosures,
01:12:24unfounded, of course,
01:12:25which have come to light recently
01:12:27concerning both Dr. Pretorius
01:12:29and his most intimate associate...
01:12:31My husband is intimate.
01:12:32Only with me.
01:12:35The dean of our university
01:12:36has asked me to present
01:12:37to Dr. Pretorius
01:12:38a list of the charges
01:12:39that have been brought
01:12:40against him.
01:12:41Who brought these charges?
01:12:43Dean Brock will invite
01:12:44your husband to disprove
01:12:45these charges.
01:12:46In confidence, of course.
01:12:48Should your husband
01:12:49be unwilling to accept
01:12:50this offer of a private hearing,
01:12:52then the dean
01:12:53will have no recourse
01:12:54other than to summon
01:12:55Dr. Pretorius
01:12:56before a faculty committee
01:12:57for an open discussion
01:12:59of the charges in question.
01:13:02They must be pretty serious.
01:13:04What are they?
01:13:05I'm not privileged
01:13:06to reveal them.
01:13:07But you know what they are.
01:13:09Unhappily, I do.
01:13:13This must be
01:13:14a great strain on you, professor.
01:13:16The performance
01:13:17of one's duty
01:13:18in a profession
01:13:19founded upon such
01:13:20high standards
01:13:21of honor,
01:13:22dignity,
01:13:23of learning
01:13:24and ethics...
01:13:25One thing you can be sure of,
01:13:26my husband isn't going
01:13:27to sneak into the dean's office
01:13:28to clear his name
01:13:29in private.
01:13:30He'll drag those nasty,
01:13:31vicious rumors of yours
01:13:32right out into the open
01:13:33and get rid of them
01:13:34in the open,
01:13:35where you've been spreading them.
01:13:36Mrs. Pretorius,
01:13:37you're not being objective.
01:13:38We are discussing my husband,
01:13:39not a kidney.
01:13:40You are also
01:13:41leaping at conclusions.
01:13:42All rumors need not
01:13:43necessarily be vicious
01:13:44and nasty.
01:13:45It depends upon the viewpoint.
01:13:46I am pretty well committed
01:13:47to one particular
01:13:48viewpoint, professor.
01:13:50Quite so.
01:13:51Well,
01:13:52I must be going.
01:13:59I admire your
01:14:00courage and faith.
01:14:01Most women would be
01:14:02perhaps apprehensive.
01:14:04Most women are not
01:14:05married to my husband.
01:14:06True.
01:14:07Whatever he did,
01:14:08he did for good
01:14:09and sufficient reason.
01:14:10Even if it turns out
01:14:11he murdered somebody.
01:14:18I have never had
01:14:19occasion to envy
01:14:20Dr. Pretorius.
01:14:21May I say that
01:14:22I envy him you?
01:14:23You have that right
01:14:24under the Constitution
01:14:25of the United States.
01:14:26Will you show the
01:14:27professor to the door,
01:14:28Mr. Shunderson?
01:14:29He's leaving.
01:14:37Thank you
01:14:38for your hospitality.
01:14:39Drop in anytime.
01:14:57Give this
01:14:58to the miracle man.
01:15:10I'll take it to him.
01:15:24Beep!
01:15:27Beep!
01:15:38Beep! Beep!
01:15:46Beep! Beep! Beep!
01:15:57Beep!
01:16:03Beep!
01:16:17Beep!
01:16:19Beep!
01:16:21Beep!
01:16:23Beep!
01:16:24Beep!
01:16:25Beep!
01:16:26Beep!
01:16:27Beep!
01:16:28Beep!
01:16:29Beep!
01:16:30Beep!
01:16:31Beep!
01:16:32What was that?
01:16:36Darling.
01:16:40Professor Lionel Barker.
01:16:42What happened?
01:16:43What happened?
01:16:44Did your train leave
01:16:45on beep, beep
01:16:46or beep, beep, beep?
01:16:47Beep, beep, beep.
01:16:48Your signal was beep, beep.
01:16:50Other signal was beep, beep.
01:16:51Mine was beep, beep, beep.
01:16:52We'll soon find out about that.
01:16:53It was beep, beep, beep.
01:16:55What a bloody mess.
01:16:57And whose fault is it,
01:16:58my fine atomic friend?
01:17:00You can't go around
01:17:01smashing everything you see.
01:17:02You know everything isn't atoms.
01:17:03Yes, it is.
01:17:04Not for smashing it isn't.
01:17:05Not in my house and not in my train.
01:17:07Deborah, get out of the way
01:17:08before Professor Barker
01:17:09smashes you.
01:17:10He's on a smashing band.
01:17:11Darling.
01:17:12Beep, beep, beep.
01:17:13Those were your orders.
01:17:14Beep, beep, beep.
01:17:15Beep, beep, beep.
01:17:16I told you so.
01:17:17Mine was beep, beep, beep.
01:17:18Beep, beep.
01:17:19Arthur, yours was beep, beep, beep.
01:17:20Beep, beep.
01:17:21Beep, beep, beep.
01:17:22Beep, beep.
01:17:23Now look, they're my trains
01:17:24and I'm the chief dispatcher.
01:17:25I know how I set them up.
01:17:26Beep from me,
01:17:27beep, beep from you
01:17:28and beep, beep, beep from Arthur.
01:17:29What difference does it make?
01:17:30What difference does it make?
01:17:31Look at this disaster.
01:17:32In case of disaster,
01:17:33the responsibility remains
01:17:34with the chief dispatcher.
01:17:35And in a catastrophe like this,
01:17:36he either resigns
01:17:37or blows his brains out.
01:17:38I refuse to be held accountable
01:17:39for the inability
01:17:40of two idiotic assistants
01:17:41to remember two simple signals.
01:17:43I consider your high-handed refusal
01:17:44to accept the testimony
01:17:45of two responsible men
01:17:46as worse than idiotic.
01:17:48Under the circumstances,
01:17:49I consider it criminal.
01:17:50Your signal was beep, beep, beep
01:17:51and you know it was beep, beep, beep.
01:17:53Noah!
01:17:54Deborah, I leave it to you,
01:17:55but remember you're my wife.
01:17:56Deborah, I am your father
01:17:57and I am not your wife.
01:17:58I am not your wife.
01:17:59These trains were supposed
01:18:00to leave these various rooms
01:18:01at different times.
01:18:02Why should I know
01:18:03what you're going to say?
01:18:04I am not your wife.
01:18:05I am not your wife.
01:18:06He began to issue...
01:18:21He began to issue...
01:18:52Is this what you're crying about?
01:18:54Then what?
01:18:55It's just that I love you so much
01:18:57and I went and put
01:18:58all those candles on that cake
01:19:00when you were really
01:19:01only nine years old.
01:19:03According to this document,
01:19:04I am not the picture
01:19:05of childish innocence
01:19:06you imagine me to be.
01:19:09Do you want to read it?
01:19:10No.
01:19:11Do you want me to tell you about it?
01:19:14Not if you think you shouldn't.
01:19:16Not if you think you shouldn't.
01:19:19Not if you think you shouldn't.
01:19:22It's a phrase used exclusively
01:19:23by women who assume
01:19:24a man's guilt
01:19:25without having the guts
01:19:26to come out and say so.
01:19:27Nothing could be less important
01:19:28to me than this whole business
01:19:29of rumors and charges against you.
01:19:33That's my girl.
01:19:36Just a minute.
01:19:41Just from the type of men
01:19:42who attack you,
01:19:43anybody would know
01:19:44you were innocent.
01:19:45Anybody but half and I.
01:19:47You haven't done anything
01:19:48you shouldn't have,
01:19:49have you, Noah?
01:19:50Many times,
01:19:51but none as a doctor.
01:19:53Don't let it worry you.
01:19:54I won't.
01:19:57Noah,
01:20:00does it seem to you
01:20:01that I cry a lot?
01:20:03Truthfully, darling,
01:20:04there's never been anything like it
01:20:05since the little Dutch boy
01:20:06took his finger out of the dike.
01:20:08He never took it out.
01:20:09That's what killed him.
01:20:10Pompous know it all.
01:20:12Never used to cry at all,
01:20:13you know.
01:20:14Oh, if I bump my head,
01:20:15something like that.
01:20:16But now the least little thing
01:20:17that happens, I start to bawl.
01:20:19Why do you suppose it is?
01:20:21Why do you suppose it is?
01:20:23Well, I get upset
01:20:24so easily these days,
01:20:25and I used to be,
01:20:26well, if anything,
01:20:27sort of calm,
01:20:28even placid about things.
01:20:30What did you say
01:20:31the name of that frog was?
01:20:33What frog?
01:20:34The one that gets pregnant
01:20:35in two hours.
01:20:36A frog doesn't get pregnant,
01:20:37darling.
01:20:38It just shows certain indications.
01:20:40Well, I'm beginning to
01:20:41show certain indications.
01:20:44Anyway I think I am.
01:20:46I feel so silly
01:20:47talking to you about it.
01:20:48No, no, I understand.
01:20:50It's the kind of thing
01:20:51you'd rather discuss
01:20:52with a doctor.
01:20:53I don't pretend to be an expert
01:20:54about such things,
01:20:55but I've always thought
01:20:56I was a fairly normal
01:20:57adult young lady
01:20:58who knew roughly
01:20:59what every fairly normal
01:21:00adult young lady should know.
01:21:02Right now,
01:21:03I feel like a kind of idiot
01:21:04Elsie Dinsmore.
01:21:06What seems to be
01:21:07your problem,
01:21:08Mrs. Vitorious?
01:21:09I'm confused.
01:21:11I can't figure anything out.
01:21:12I'm all mixed up.
01:21:14Heaven knows, after all
01:21:15I've been through
01:21:16these past few weeks,
01:21:17I've got a right to be,
01:21:18but not this mixed up,
01:21:19not this confused.
01:21:21Married exactly
01:21:22two weeks and three days.
01:21:25Noah, darling,
01:21:26forgive me for being
01:21:27little Nell from the country
01:21:28about this,
01:21:29but is it possible
01:21:30that I could be
01:21:31having a baby already?
01:21:33Little Nell, Elsie Dinsmore,
01:21:34or Catherine the Great.
01:21:36It is entirely possible.
01:21:39Well, if it's possible,
01:21:40then you should be
01:21:41the first to know.
01:21:42It is also probable.
01:21:44Why?
01:21:46Comes the dawn,
01:21:47I'll stand on that
01:21:48windowsill and crow.
01:21:54Comes the dawn next December,
01:21:55you'll be walking
01:21:56the floor with it.
01:21:58Next September.
01:21:59December, dear.
01:22:01September.
01:22:02Now you're getting mixed up.
01:22:03This is April.
01:22:04December.
01:22:06September.
01:22:07My dear Dr. Vitorious,
01:22:08unless they've changed
01:22:09the rules about
01:22:10how long it takes,
01:22:11or unless there's
01:22:12a new way to count,
01:22:13it's December.
01:22:14Oh, there's nothing wrong
01:22:15with the way you're counting.
01:22:16You're just not starting
01:22:17back far enough.
01:22:19Well, how can I possibly
01:22:20start any farther back than...
01:22:25No.
01:22:27Oh, no.
01:22:35You're quite a noble
01:22:36character, aren't you?
01:22:38I've never thought of myself
01:22:39as one particularly.
01:22:40No, really.
01:22:41I mean, I've heard of doctors
01:22:42who were self-sacrificing
01:22:43and unselfish,
01:22:44but apparently there's
01:22:45no limit to yours.
01:22:47Deborah,
01:22:48you couldn't be more wrong.
01:22:50Were you that afraid
01:22:51I'd kill myself?
01:22:53How afraid is that afraid?
01:22:55Afraid enough to marry me,
01:22:56to keep me from it.
01:22:57Is it conceivable to you
01:22:59that I would?
01:23:01It seems obvious,
01:23:02doesn't it?
01:23:05You mean that as a doctor
01:23:06I was faced by a situation
01:23:07which I could only meet
01:23:08by marrying you.
01:23:10I did it as a remedy.
01:23:12Deborah,
01:23:14as you know,
01:23:15I believe in using
01:23:16any form of therapy
01:23:17that would make people well,
01:23:18but it would be highly
01:23:19impractical to make
01:23:20marrying my patients
01:23:21a standard form of treatment.
01:23:23Why did you marry me?
01:23:25Because I was in love with you.
01:23:27Is that why you came to the farm?
01:23:28To ask me to marry you?
01:23:30No.
01:23:31Not consciously, at any rate.
01:23:33Let's not mess with
01:23:34the unconscious right now.
01:23:35We've got enough conscious
01:23:36trouble to worry about.
01:23:41You fell in love
01:23:42all of a sudden,
01:23:43didn't you?
01:23:44All of a sudden.
01:23:45I'm still falling.
01:23:46Let me know
01:23:47when you hit bottom.
01:23:48Anytime,
01:23:49within the next 30 or 40 years.
01:23:51You came to the farm
01:23:52because you knew
01:23:53I was pregnant.
01:23:54Then you met my father
01:23:56and my uncle,
01:23:57and you understood
01:23:58why I tried to kill myself.
01:24:01But by that time
01:24:02you were all mixed up in it
01:24:04because you told me
01:24:05that silly lie
01:24:06about the wrong frog.
01:24:07And I was so obviously
01:24:08in love with you.
01:24:09It was all over me
01:24:10like a tattoo.
01:24:12And so,
01:24:13with no possible way
01:24:14out for anybody,
01:24:15all of a sudden
01:24:16you fell in love with me
01:24:17and that solved everything.
01:24:18And everybody
01:24:19lived happily ever after.
01:24:22For two weeks
01:24:23and three days, that is.
01:24:25Until I found out
01:24:26that my baby
01:24:27isn't going to be yours.
01:24:31Funny.
01:24:33This calls for tears.
01:24:35And I haven't got any.
01:24:37I take it all back
01:24:38for being normal
01:24:39and adult
01:24:40and lady.
01:24:41What makes you think
01:24:42it isn't going to be my baby?
01:24:44Because it isn't.
01:24:45Because its father
01:24:46is someone you never even knew.
01:24:47Someone I can't even remember
01:24:48as well as I should.
01:24:49All of which,
01:24:50however true,
01:24:51has nothing to do
01:24:52with our baby.
01:24:53His interest in this world
01:24:54will begin
01:24:55as it does with all babies
01:24:56when suddenly,
01:24:57through no fault of his own,
01:24:58he is rudely deprived
01:24:59of a warm,
01:25:00secure,
01:25:01and well-fed existence
01:25:02which he has every reason
01:25:03to believe
01:25:04will go on forever
01:25:05and finds himself
01:25:06upside down in the air
01:25:07and being smacked
01:25:08on the backside.
01:25:09Are you going to love him?
01:25:11Of course I am.
01:25:12So am I.
01:25:13And we'll keep him warm
01:25:14and we'll feed him
01:25:15and make him feel secure again.
01:25:16And give him brothers
01:25:17to play with.
01:25:18All boys, eh?
01:25:19Now it's time
01:25:20you stopped thinking
01:25:21about yourself
01:25:22and started thinking
01:25:23about my baby.
01:25:25No.
01:25:26If you really
01:25:27suddenly fell in love with me.
01:25:28No if.
01:25:29Why?
01:25:30I couldn't say why.
01:25:31Haven't you ever wondered?
01:25:32Falling as fast as I am,
01:25:33I don't have time.
01:25:34A man as exact as you
01:25:35with a reason for everything?
01:25:36Then I'll find it.
01:25:37Anytime in the next
01:25:3830 or 40 years
01:25:39I'll start wondering.
01:25:40I won't be doing
01:25:41much else it looks like
01:25:42except wondering
01:25:43about you and me,
01:25:44about you and the baby,
01:25:46me and my fine character.
01:25:48Are you feeling
01:25:49sorry for yourself?
01:25:50I'm feeling sorry for you.
01:25:51Don't be.
01:25:52I love you.
01:25:53Be that.
01:25:54Forgive me.
01:25:55Shut up.
01:25:56Love me.
01:26:07Dinner is served.
01:26:09I have forbidden you
01:26:10to bring that disgusting
01:26:11echo chamber into my house.
01:26:13As your friend
01:26:14it is my duty.
01:26:15Why is it here?
01:26:16Am I not the master
01:26:17in my own house?
01:26:18To provide for your wife
01:26:19some contact
01:26:20with a world of sensitivity
01:26:21of which you have no knowledge.
01:26:22Here, here.
01:26:23Happy birthday to you.
01:26:27Happy birthday to you.
01:26:31Happy birthday to you.
01:26:35Happy birthday dear Noah.
01:26:41Happy birthday to you.
01:27:06Excuse me.
01:27:10Pardon me.
01:27:14Lord Noah.
01:27:18Oh, I'm late.
01:27:22The hearing must have started.
01:27:23Why aren't you there?
01:27:24No, not yet,
01:27:25but in a second.
01:27:26Now you mustn't be nervous.
01:27:27There's nothing to be worried
01:27:28about.
01:27:29It's just a matter of time
01:27:30before I get back to you.
01:27:31I'm sorry.
01:27:32I'm sorry.
01:27:33I'm sorry.
01:27:34There's nothing to be worried about.
01:27:36Just see to it
01:27:37that they get it over
01:27:38with quickly.
01:27:39Such nonsense.
01:27:40May I?
01:27:41Thank you.
01:27:47How dare they hold
01:27:48their silly investigation
01:27:49the same night as the concert.
01:27:50It's unforgivable.
01:27:51It may be worse.
01:27:52From what I hear
01:27:53Professor Elwell
01:27:54and his gang
01:27:55insisted upon it.
01:27:56They consider it unlikely
01:27:57that Noah will conduct
01:27:58if the hearing goes against him.
01:28:00The reasons for it
01:28:01could then hardly
01:28:02be kept confidential.
01:28:03The hearing
01:28:04will not go against him.
01:28:05And besides,
01:28:06Noah would conduct
01:28:07on his way to be hanged.
01:28:23I'm terribly sorry, gentlemen.
01:28:24It was unavoidable.
01:28:26My apologies.
01:28:29Well, now that we're all here,
01:28:30shall we begin?
01:28:32It is my intention, gentlemen,
01:28:33to conduct this hearing informally.
01:28:35Dr. Pretorius,
01:28:36wouldn't you like to sit closer?
01:28:38Thank you.
01:28:39I prefer to remain
01:28:40as remote as possible.
01:28:42I suggested it merely
01:28:43to avoid having our discussion
01:28:44take on the appearance of a trial.
01:28:46I appreciate your thoughtfulness,
01:28:47but I consider this trial
01:28:49to be a trial.
01:28:51I have no intention
01:28:52of regarding an investigation
01:28:53of my methods and myself
01:28:55as a cozy little chat
01:28:57among friends.
01:28:58Hear, hear.
01:28:59Professor Barker,
01:29:00I will have to insist
01:29:01that no one speak
01:29:02without being recognized
01:29:03by the chair.
01:29:04I am, by nature,
01:29:05a man who interrupts.
01:29:07However, I shall try.
01:29:08Thank you.
01:29:10Dr. Pretorius,
01:29:11may I suggest to begin with,
01:29:13in order to avoid
01:29:14both the embarrassment
01:29:15and time involved
01:29:16in the examination,
01:29:17that you give,
01:29:18of your own accord,
01:29:19a pertinent account
01:29:20of your life
01:29:21and professional activities
01:29:22prior to your arrival
01:29:23in this city,
01:29:24in this university.
01:29:25I prefer to be questioned.
01:29:26Why?
01:29:27Because I do not intend
01:29:28to tell things about myself
01:29:29of my own accord,
01:29:30which are nobody's business
01:29:31but my own.
01:29:32They have the concern
01:29:33of the entire medical profession.
01:29:35Uh-uh.
01:29:36Be recognized.
01:29:37You too, Professor Barker.
01:29:39Your objection
01:29:40is understandable,
01:29:41Dr. Pretorius.
01:29:42Professor Elwell,
01:29:43you may begin your questioning.
01:29:44My colleagues
01:29:45have appointed me
01:29:46to speak in their name.
01:29:47I hope I may prove worthy
01:29:48of what is not only an honor,
01:29:49but a grave responsibility.
01:29:51Dr. Pretorius,
01:29:53will you stipulate
01:29:54and agree to abide
01:29:55by the verdict
01:29:56of this committee?
01:29:57I would do nothing of the kind.
01:29:59Why not?
01:30:00Because I don't know
01:30:01what the verdict will be.
01:30:02The verdict
01:30:03will affect you seriously
01:30:04whether you agree
01:30:05to abide by it or not.
01:30:06Then why ask idiotic questions
01:30:08to which you already
01:30:09know the answers?
01:30:12One horse on you, Elwell.
01:30:15Will you admit
01:30:16that in 1936
01:30:17you were a highly successful
01:30:19quack and miracle healer
01:30:21in a remote little village
01:30:22in the southern part
01:30:23of this state?
01:30:24I will admit
01:30:25nothing of the kind.
01:30:27Where did you live
01:30:28in 1936?
01:30:30In Goose Creek.
01:30:31Would you describe
01:30:32Goose Creek
01:30:33as a thriving metropolis?
01:30:35It is a remote little village
01:30:36in the southern part
01:30:37of this state.
01:30:38Exactly.
01:30:39And what was your source
01:30:41of income
01:30:42in Goose Creek
01:30:43in 1936?
01:30:44My practice.
01:30:45You practiced openly?
01:30:47I was available
01:30:48to anyone at any time.
01:30:50I mean to say,
01:30:51did you set up practice
01:30:52as a doctor of medicine?
01:30:54When I came to Goose Creek,
01:30:55I had my degree
01:30:56as a doctor of medicine.
01:30:57I did not, however,
01:30:58display my M.D.
01:30:59upon my door.
01:31:00Upon your shop door?
01:31:02I beg your pardon?
01:31:03His shop door?
01:31:04Isn't it true,
01:31:05Dr. Pretorius,
01:31:06that in that remote
01:31:07little village
01:31:08called Goose Creek,
01:31:09you opened
01:31:10a butcher shop?
01:31:12An honorable trade
01:31:13if ever there was one.
01:31:14In itself,
01:31:15unimpeachable.
01:31:16But what did you sell
01:31:17in your butcher shop?
01:31:18Meat
01:31:19at cost.
01:31:21At cost?
01:31:22Without profit?
01:31:23Then,
01:31:24how did you make your living?
01:31:25I made sick people
01:31:26well.
01:31:28Uh-huh.
01:31:30Why should that startle you?
01:31:32I still do.
01:31:33Do you deny
01:31:34that at that time,
01:31:35your patients were under
01:31:36the impression
01:31:37that you were a butcher
01:31:38and not a doctor?
01:31:39Do you prefer
01:31:40the impression
01:31:41given to their patients
01:31:42by so many of our colleagues
01:31:43that they are doctors
01:31:44and not butchers?
01:31:45Bravo.
01:31:46Bravo.
01:31:48Dr. Pretorius,
01:31:50won't you admit
01:31:51that your practice
01:31:52flourished in Goose Creek
01:31:53because you took advantage
01:31:54of the ignorance
01:31:55of its backward inhabitants?
01:31:57Of the pathetic willingness
01:31:58of those poor people
01:31:59to rely upon a belief
01:32:00in miraculous cure
01:32:01rather than scientific knowledge?
01:32:03And because of the readiness
01:32:04with which so many people
01:32:05will prefer
01:32:06the glamorous quack
01:32:08to the licensed practitioner?
01:32:10Despite your definition
01:32:11of a quack
01:32:12as someone who does not
01:32:13practice medicine
01:32:14according to your rules,
01:32:15Professor Helwer,
01:32:16the fact remains
01:32:17that a quack
01:32:18is an unqualified person
01:32:19who pretends to be a doctor.
01:32:20I was a licensed practitioner
01:32:21and therefore not a quack.
01:32:23And as to the willingness
01:32:24of those so-called ignorant
01:32:25and backward people
01:32:26to rely upon
01:32:27the curative powers of faith
01:32:28and possibly miracles too,
01:32:30I consider faith
01:32:31properly injected
01:32:32into a patient
01:32:33as effective
01:32:34in maintaining life
01:32:35as adrenaline.
01:32:36And a belief in miracles
01:32:37has been the difference
01:32:38between living and dying
01:32:39as often as any surgeon's skull falls.
01:32:41That is not the issue
01:32:42under discussion.
01:32:43It is precisely the issue
01:32:44whether the practice
01:32:45of medicine
01:32:46should become more
01:32:47and more intimately involved
01:32:48with the human beings
01:32:49it treats
01:32:50or whether it's to go on
01:32:51in this present way
01:32:52of becoming more and more
01:32:53a thing of pills,
01:32:54serums, and knives
01:32:55until eventually
01:32:56we shall undoubtedly evolve
01:32:57an electronic doctor.
01:32:59The issue at hand
01:33:00is quite simply
01:33:01that you amassed a fortune
01:33:02by treating sick people
01:33:03who believed that you were
01:33:04a miracle-working butcher.
01:33:06I could not have amassed
01:33:07that fortune
01:33:08unless I had made
01:33:09an enormous number
01:33:10of sick people well.
01:33:12All this folderol,
01:33:13as I see it,
01:33:14has got nothing to do
01:33:15with the ethics
01:33:16and honor of our profession.
01:33:18It has everything to do
01:33:19with envy
01:33:20of one man's genius
01:33:21for healing the sick,
01:33:22of his use of remedies
01:33:23you can't prescribe
01:33:24buy in bottles
01:33:25or apply with a knife.
01:33:26Call Praetorius
01:33:27a psychiatrist,
01:33:28high priest,
01:33:29voodoo,
01:33:30medicine man,
01:33:31witch doctor,
01:33:32anything you like.
01:33:33But don't investigate him,
01:33:34gentlemen.
01:33:35Learn from him.
01:33:36Professor Barker.
01:33:37It was understood
01:33:38you would not interrupt.
01:33:39I'm sorry.
01:33:41You can strike
01:33:42my remarks from the record.
01:33:44I'm sure you all agree
01:33:45with me anyway,
01:33:46so why don't we call
01:33:47this whole silly thing off
01:33:48and start the concert?
01:33:51It would interest me,
01:33:52Dr. Praetorius,
01:33:53to know why
01:33:54you ever left
01:33:55this lucrative practice
01:33:56in Goose Creek
01:33:57and under what circumstances.
01:33:59I'd always intended
01:34:00to leave when I'd acquired
01:34:01enough money
01:34:02to start a clinic of my own.
01:34:04As it turned out,
01:34:05I left a little sooner
01:34:06than I'd planned.
01:34:07You see,
01:34:08I'd fired my housekeeper.
01:34:09She was falsifying
01:34:10my grocery bills
01:34:11and splitting the money
01:34:12with the grocer.
01:34:13Unfortunately,
01:34:14she had previously discovered
01:34:15my medical diploma
01:34:16in a bottle
01:34:17that had been
01:34:18in a bottom drawer
01:34:19of my desk.
01:34:20In revenge
01:34:21for being fired,
01:34:22she let it be known
01:34:23around Goose Creek
01:34:24that I was not
01:34:25a butcher at all
01:34:26but a licensed M.D.
01:34:28I was confronted
01:34:29by a crowd
01:34:30of angry townspeople
01:34:31and forced
01:34:32to admit the truth.
01:34:33I narrowly escaped
01:34:34being run out of town
01:34:35on a rail.
01:34:40Any more questions,
01:34:41Professor Elbow?
01:34:42A great many more,
01:34:43thank you.
01:34:48Thank you.
01:34:49Thank you.
01:34:50Thank you.
01:34:51Thank you.
01:34:52Thank you.
01:34:53Thank you.
01:34:54Thank you.
01:34:55Thank you.
01:34:56Thank you.
01:34:57Thank you.
01:34:58Thank you.
01:34:59Thank you.
01:35:00Thank you.
01:35:01Thank you.
01:35:02Thank you.
01:35:03Thank you.
01:35:04Thank you.
01:35:05Thank you.
01:35:06Thank you.
01:35:07Thank you.
01:35:08Thank you.
01:35:09Thank you.
01:35:10Thank you.
01:35:11Thank you.
01:35:12Thank you.
01:35:13Thank you.
01:35:14Thank you.
01:35:15Thank you.
01:35:16Thank you.
01:35:18Thank you.
01:35:19Professor Barker.
01:35:20May I point out
01:35:21that these monkey shines
01:35:22are seriously delaying
01:35:23the concert of
01:35:24our student orchestra?
01:35:25Our concern here
01:35:26is the future good and welfare
01:35:27of our students
01:35:28as doctors of medicine,
01:35:29not as troubadors.
01:35:30Were you recognized?
01:35:31Professor Barker,
01:35:32we are all concerned
01:35:33about the delay of the concert.
01:35:34The fact that this hearing
01:35:35conflicts with it
01:35:36is a most
01:35:37unfortunate coincidence.
01:35:38You don't believe that
01:35:39any more than I do.
01:35:40Continue,
01:35:41Professor Elbow.
01:35:42Mr. Elbow.
01:35:50Dr. Pretorius.
01:35:52I thought you'd forgotten me.
01:35:54Who is Shunderson?
01:35:58I take it you mean Mr. Shunderson.
01:36:01Mr. Shunderson is my friend.
01:36:04Is he associated with you professionally?
01:36:07Not as a professional. He helps whatever he can.
01:36:13He is also employed in your home as a manservant or a butler, is he not?
01:36:18I do not employ him at all.
01:36:20He works at whatever he pleases, where he pleases, and when.
01:36:23He is never very far from your side, or for long it seems.
01:36:27Rarely.
01:36:28Dr. Pretorius.
01:36:30What was Mr. Shunderson before you knew him?
01:36:38I refuse to answer that question.
01:36:43What were the circumstances under which you made his acquaintance?
01:36:47I refuse to answer that question.
01:36:56You have always evidenced a remarkable tolerance for this strange and mysterious man.
01:37:01His qualifications have been questioned.
01:37:04His blundering and slow-wittedness have caused complaint,
01:37:07and yet you have protected him at all times to the fullest extent of your authority.
01:37:11His qualifications concern no one but me, since his responsibility is to no one but me.
01:37:18As to his so-called blundering and so-called slow-wittedness,
01:37:22perhaps I overlook them because I know the reason for them.
01:37:25And is the reason of so delicate a nature that you cannot divulge it even here?
01:37:30I have no right to divulge it anywhere.
01:37:33May I suggest to you then, Dr. Pretorius,
01:37:36that your refusal to divulge it is not out of loyalty to Mr. Shunderson,
01:37:40but is due to some unsavory and dishonorable coercion upon you,
01:37:44because the reason, which has been so delicately characterized here,
01:37:48has to do simply with Mr. Shunderson having been a convicted murderer.
01:38:00What are you doing here?
01:38:03I was listening through the door.
01:38:06I protest against this highly irregular, unethical, and probably prearranged eavesdropping.
01:38:11Elwell, you can use more words more unpleasantly
01:38:14than any irritating little pipsqueak I've ever known.
01:38:17Gentlemen, I suggest we leave the saloon floor
01:38:20and return to a more academic level of behavior.
01:38:25I want to tell my story.
01:38:27He'll never tell it,
01:38:29but what you want to know about me has nothing to do with him.
01:38:33Well, let's hear it by all means.
01:38:35Okay?
01:38:36Certainly, Mr. Shunderson.
01:38:49Okay.
01:38:55I'm not a fancy talker.
01:38:58I don't know a lot of words.
01:39:00That alone is a welcome relief.
01:39:03Well, now, I...
01:39:05Don't start with well, now.
01:39:08Where should I begin?
01:39:11Tell them when you were condemned to death for murder.
01:39:14The first time?
01:39:16Of course.
01:39:18Well, the first time was in Canada in 1917.
01:39:23It was Christmas.
01:39:26It wasn't a very merry Christmas.
01:39:28Don't editorialize. Just tell the facts.
01:39:32I had a sweetheart and a friend.
01:39:35We were very close, the three of us.
01:39:37We went everywhere together.
01:39:39Well, this one time, we went mountain climbing.
01:39:43My sweetheart couldn't climb very high,
01:39:45so she stayed behind at a hotel while my friend and I went on.
01:39:50We didn't get very far before we started to argue.
01:39:54I don't remember what about.
01:39:56We always argued, as friends do.
01:39:59But this time, he hit me with a rock.
01:40:03So I hit him with one.
01:40:06Not too much detail.
01:40:08Anyway, we had a bloody fight, and he ran away.
01:40:13So I went back to my sweetheart.
01:40:16She was waiting in the lobby of the hotel.
01:40:19She didn't even say hello.
01:40:22She took one look at the blood on my clothes
01:40:25and saw that I was alone
01:40:27and started to scream, murderer, murderer.
01:40:31That was how I found out that my sweetheart and my friend were sweethearts.
01:40:36Who saw to it that you were arrested and charged with murder?
01:40:40Oh, my sweetheart, of course.
01:40:42Her testimony and the blood on my clothes were enough.
01:40:46I was found guilty of murdering my friend,
01:40:49and I was condemned to death.
01:40:51But because nobody could produce the corpse of my friend, living or dead,
01:40:56my sentence was commuted to 15 years at hard labor.
01:41:01And was the corpse of your friend never found?
01:41:03I found it myself.
01:41:05After I served out my full 15 years at hard labor,
01:41:09I found it accidentally.
01:41:11I was walking past a restaurant in Toronto.
01:41:15I happened to look in the window,
01:41:17and there was the corpse of my friend sitting at a table eating a bowl of soup.
01:41:22I think it was pea soup.
01:41:26Immaterial and irrelevant.
01:41:28Well, I went in and spoke to my friend in a very friendly fashion.
01:41:33I asked him very nicely where he had been for 15 years
01:41:37and why he never admitted that I didn't kill him.
01:41:40His answer, gentlemen, was unsatisfactory.
01:41:44So I hit him in the face with the bowl of soup.
01:41:47Then I hit him with a chair.
01:41:49Somebody called a policeman.
01:41:51The policeman had a club.
01:41:53I took the club away from him,
01:41:55and it was with the policeman's club I finished up on my friend.
01:41:59I tried to explain to the policeman that if I was committing a crime,
01:42:03it was a crime for which I had already paid the penalty.
01:42:07He arrested me anyway.
01:42:09You were released, of course.
01:42:11No. I was tried for his murder again and sentenced to death again.
01:42:16But how could you be tried twice for the murder of the same man?
01:42:20The prosecutor insisted that this was not the same murder.
01:42:24The first time, no dead body was produced as evidence.
01:42:28The prosecutor was very fair about it.
01:42:30He was willing to admit that my first conviction was probably a miscarriage of justice,
01:42:35but even though the first jury made a mistake,
01:42:38he said I didn't have the right to commit a murder just to correct that mistake.
01:42:42He demanded the death penalty, and I was condemned to death.
01:42:47But this time you were pardoned.
01:42:49No. This time they didn't even commute my sentence.
01:42:53You see, the fact that I killed my friend with the policeman's club made it a very serious crime.
01:42:59Then will you tell us, Mr. Shunderson, how did you manage to escape?
01:43:03I didn't escape.
01:43:05Well, what happened to get you out of it?
01:43:07Nothing. I was executed.
01:43:10Executed? This is absurd.
01:43:13It was on the morning of the 29th of February, 1932.
01:43:18A leap year.
01:43:20It was a gray and rainy morning.
01:43:23The hangman put the noose around my neck.
01:43:26Then we had to wait because some official forgot his glasses.
01:43:30They held an umbrella over me so I wouldn't get wet.
01:43:33Then the official's glasses came.
01:43:36He read something.
01:43:38The minister prayed.
01:43:40I closed my eyes and thought of my mother.
01:43:44The floor went out from under me and that was that.
01:43:49I must protest against this fantastic and childish assault upon our intelligence.
01:43:55You be quiet.
01:43:57Then what happened?
01:43:59The next thing I felt was a finger with a rubber glove on it.
01:44:03It was in my mouth pressing down on my tongue.
01:44:06I bit it and somebody yelled.
01:44:09I opened my eyes and that was the first time I saw Dr. Pretorius.
01:44:17Only he wasn't a doctor then, just a medical student.
01:44:22I think I can make this next part of the story clear to you.
01:44:26At the time all this happened, I was just finishing my studies as a medical student.
01:44:30I was also keeping company, as they say, with a young lady who happened to be the hangman's daughter.
01:44:37Both the hangman and his daughter were generous and sympathetic.
01:44:41The hangman in particular was sympathetic to my desire as a student of anatomy to have a cadaver of my own.
01:44:48Knowing that Mr. Shunderson's body would go unclaimed,
01:44:51because certainly no one was ever more alone in this world than poor Mr. Shunderson was,
01:44:56the hangman managed to send it to me immediately after the hanging,
01:45:00along with a sweet note from his daughter.
01:45:03I was delighted, of course.
01:45:05But not for long. I soon found out that Mr. Shunderson was still alive.
01:45:10You must have been furious.
01:45:12He told me a story.
01:45:14He put some pig iron in the cheap wooden coffin that he'd arrived in and had it buried in a charity graveyard.
01:45:22From that day on he has never left me.
01:45:25And I think it is understandable that from time to time he may seem a little confused
01:45:31and perhaps even a little dull-witted.
01:45:36I don't mean to intrude too much, gentlemen, but I'm sure that by now you must have made up your minds.
01:45:41Deborah! A wife simply does not come barging into a room when her husband is being investigated.
01:45:47After all, if he's innocent, he's late for the concert.
01:45:50And if he isn't, well, he'd better start conducting anyway, because he may have to earn his living at it.
01:45:55I don't think so.
01:45:57I don't think so either.
01:45:59If he's innocent, he's late for the concert.
01:46:01And if he isn't, well, he'd better start conducting anyway, because he may have to earn his living at it.
01:46:06I am of the opinion the hearing is at an end.
01:46:09Do you agree, Professor Elwell?
01:46:16The trouble with you is, Elwell, you've never had a cadaver of your own, much less one that bit your finger.
01:46:22And as for this incredible evening, gentlemen, the sooner we can forget it, the better for all concerned.
01:46:27And I think we've held up the concert far too long.
01:46:44Professor Elwell, you're a little man.
01:46:48It's not that you're short, you're little in the mind and in the heart.
01:46:53Tonight you tried to make a man little whose boots you couldn't touch if you stood on tiptoe on top of the highest mountain in the world.
01:47:01And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:47:53And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:47:58And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:48:03And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:48:08And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:48:13And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:48:18And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:48:23And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:48:28And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:48:33And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:48:38And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:48:43And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:48:48And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:48:53And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:48:58And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:49:03And as it turned out, you're even littler than you were before.
01:49:08Alma Mater, Gloria,
01:49:13By Moses who called me,
01:49:18Behold him whom all fear him,
01:49:23Behold him whom all fear him,
01:49:28Send mercy in him glory.
01:49:35Send mercy in him glory.

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