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#thebuccanees #byron #bethfreed25 https://dailymotion.com/bethfreed25
In Paris, Linda meets Fabrice de Sauveterre and an affair begins, but their happiness is soon threatened by war.
Transcript
00:30In London, there was a society, Lynda knew, which looked after ladies.
00:59They were stranded at railway stations.
01:01In France, more likely, there would be one for shipping them off to South America.
01:06Any moment now, somebody, some genial old woman or jolly French gentleman,
01:11might come up and give her an injection, after which she would disappear forever.
01:16Fiends! Fiends!
01:19Oh, how right Burr always was!
01:22Abroad, he's a bloody abhorrent of the fiends!
01:28Allez-vous-en!
01:30Bonjour, bonjour!
01:32Voulez-vous vous en aller?
01:37It is necessary that I explain to you that I am not a white slave.
01:44I am the daughter of a very important milord Anglais.
01:50One does not have to be Sherlock Holmes to get that.
01:55The French ladies, covered with the exterior sand of Wales,
01:59do not sit crying in their suitcases at the Gare du Nord at this hour of the morning.
02:04White slaves, on the other hand, always have protectors,
02:08and it's only to clear that just now you are unprotected.
02:12Alors, I invite you to luncheon with me, but first you must have a bath and a rest,
02:16and a cold compress on your face.
02:19Maintenant, venez!
02:23I ask to be excused for not taking you to the Ritz,
02:25but I have a feeling for the Hotel Montalembert just now,
02:28that it will suit your mood this morning.
02:30The food here is excellent, in a discreet way.
02:33I shall return at one o'clock, when you will join me in the dining room for luncheon.
02:38A tout à l'heure, madame.
02:53A tout à l'heure, madame.
03:14You've kept me waiting for half an hour.
03:18That's a very good sign.
03:20Of what?
03:21Oh, of this and that.
03:23A good agree for our affair. It will be happy and last long.
03:27We are not having an affair.
03:29My name is Fabrice. May one ask yours?
03:31Linda.
03:32Linda. Ah, comme c'est joli.
03:35With me, it usually lasts five years.
03:37Ah, let me see now.
03:39What would madame wish to eat?
03:41If madame could see a menu.
03:43Alors, le foie gras frais de canard,
03:45les quenelles de homard avec une salade verte,
03:49et un bâtard morache et trente-deux avec évian.
03:52Messieurs.
03:54I adore les femmes, but some matters are too important for them to be allowed to interfere.
04:00And now, madame, recount.
04:02Recount what?
04:04But of course, the story.
04:06Who was it that left you the cry on that suitcase?
04:09He didn't. I left him.
04:11It was my second husband, and I have left him forever,
04:14because he has fallen in love with a welfare worker.
04:17Not that you'd know what that is,
04:19because I'm sure they do not exist in France.
04:22What a very curious reason for leaving one's second husband.
04:27Surely with your experience of husbands,
04:29you must have noticed that falling in love with other women is one of the things they do.
04:35However, it's an ill omen, as they say, and I do not complain.
04:40But why the suitcase?
04:42Why did you not put yourself in the train and take yourself back to Monsieur,
04:46the very important miller and anglais, your father?
04:50It's a very long story.
04:52Oh, then please, tell it.
04:54Moi, j'adore les histoires.
05:01Perpignan.
05:03And in the name of heaven, what were you and your husband doing there?
05:07Trying to stop you frogs from teasing the poor Spaniards.
05:10Teasing them? Where were we?
05:12Herding them into camps.
05:14And what were we supposed to do with them?
05:17We never invited them, you know.
05:19You made them go into camps and then gave them no shelter.
05:22It's quite a job to provide shelter.
05:25At the moment, it's for half a million people.
05:28Then if you couldn't give them shelter, why did you make them go into your camps?
05:32Because there we could and did feed them.
05:38In any case, you could hardly expect us to turn them loose on the countryside with no money.
05:43What would have been the result of that?
05:45Do use your common sense.
05:47You should mobilize them all to fight in the war against fascism,
05:50which is coming any day now.
05:52Talk about what you know, madame, and you will not get so angry.
05:56We haven't enough equipment for our own soldiers during the war against Germany.
06:00That's coming.
06:01And not any day, my dear Linda.
06:03But probably after the harvest.
06:07And now, go on telling me about your husband Christian
06:10and why you had no money at the gardener.
06:13It is, I promise you, so much more interesting.
06:19So before the poor husband Christian,
06:22there was the rich husband Tony,
06:26who had more money than taste.
06:29Let me give you this truly hideous fur coat that you were wearing on the suitcase.
06:35You are very rude.
06:37It's a lovely fur coat.
06:39It's only expensive.
06:42Mink, a vison.
06:45Color is nightmare and the cut is bad.
06:48Anyway, coats are getting longer.
06:50I see I must get you some clothes.
06:53If you were well dressed, you would be quite good looking.
06:59Even so, your eyes are too small.
07:03Brown, a good color, but too small.
07:10In England, I am considered a beauty.
07:13Well, you have points.
07:18More coffee?
07:21Or will you come now and see my flat?
07:26I would rather see Paris.
07:30Do you know Paris well?
07:32I've never been here before in my life.
07:35Never been here before?
07:37Then what a pleasure for me to show it to you.
07:40There is so much to show.
07:43It will take weeks.
07:47Unfortunately, I leave for England tomorrow.
07:50Ah, yes, of course, yes.
07:53Then we must see it all this afternoon.
09:59Yes.
10:23Et après, we shall go to see my flat.
10:26You may go where you please.
10:28I will return to the Hotel Montalampère.
10:31Very well, madame.
10:40It's a magnificent resistance, madame,
10:42and I congratulate you with all my heart.
10:53Ah, be it never so humble. There is no place like home.
10:57A housekeeper to have a set of rooms prepared for Mr. Dugdale.
11:00The ones he always used to have.
11:02He will be staying indefinitely.
11:04Sonia, of course I'd love to stay for a few days, but...
11:07Hampton must be your home from now on.
11:11What about Polly?
11:12You simply have to face it, my darling.
11:14She's gone off with that old Paddington creature,
11:16and she's not coming back.
11:18Now, you know you're going to love being here with Sonia,
11:21not to mention one.
11:23So, just say thank you nicely in the way that Nanny taught you,
11:26and let's not have any more nonsense, eh?
11:37Hello?
11:38Hello, hello. Are you having breakfast?
11:40How clever of you to know.
11:42Is it good?
11:43It's delicious.
11:44I have to keep stopping to make it go on longer.
11:47Are you having yours?
11:48Had it.
11:49I must tell you that I like very long conversations in the morning,
11:52and I shall expect you to recount lots of histoires.
11:55Like Scheherazade?
11:56Yes, just like.
11:58But for now you must get up, because in one hour I must fetch you.
12:02I have something to show you.
12:04You have never before been to Paris.
12:07Of course, you know the old story of the two English ladies who were walking here,
12:11and suddenly they were surrounded by people in 18th century clothes,
12:15and they saw Marie Antoinette sitting in her garden at the little Trianon.
12:20A very silly and boring tale.
12:22Histoires are of interest only when they are true,
12:25or when you make them up specially to amuse me.
12:27Histoires of phantoms imagined by some dim old English virgins
12:31are neither true nor interesting,
12:33so no more stories of ghosts, madame, if you please.
12:37I'm only doing my best to please you.
12:40You tell a story.
12:42Yes, I will.
12:46And this story is true.
12:53My grandmother was very beautiful and had many lovers,
12:57all her life, even when she was quite old.
13:02A short time before she died, she was in Venice with my mother,
13:06and one day they saw from the gondola a little palazzo of pink marble,
13:11very exquisite.
13:13They stopped the gondola to look at it, and my mother said,
13:17I don't believe anybody lived there.
13:20Let's try to see the inside.
13:24So they rang the bell, and another servant came and said
13:27that nobody had lived there for many, many years,
13:31and that he would show it to them if they liked.
13:35So they went in and upstairs to the Salone,
13:38which had three windows looking over the canal,
13:42and was decorated in 15th-century plasterwork,
13:47white on the background of pale blue.
13:52It was a perfect room.
13:55My grandmother seemed strangely moved
14:00and stood for a long time in silence.
14:05At last she said to my mother,
14:08If in the third drawer of that bureau
14:12there is a filigree box containing a small gold key
14:16and a black velvet ribbon, this house belongs to me.
14:22And my mother looked, and there was, and it did.
14:29One of my grandmother's lovers had given it to her
14:32years and years before when she was quite young,
14:35and she had forgotten all about it.
14:37Goodness, what fascinating lives you foreigners do lead.
14:44And it belongs to me now.
14:59I would take you there tomorrow, but...
15:01But what?
15:03One must stay here now, you see, for the war.
15:06Oh, I keep forgetting about the war.
15:09Yes, let's forget it.
15:14You are very badly coiffé, ma chérie.
15:19If you don't like my hair, and you don't like my clothes,
15:22and you think my eyes are so small,
15:25I don't know what you see in me.
15:28Nevertheless, I swear that there is...
15:34quelque chose.
15:58Such perfect meals you give a girl.
16:02Have you no other engagements?
16:04Of course. I've cancelled them.
16:07Who are your friends?
16:09Les gens du monde.
16:11The men and women of the polite world.
16:14And yours?
16:16When I was married to Tony, I used to go out in the monde.
16:19It was my life.
16:21But Christian disapproved of it.
16:23He stopped me going to parties and frightened away my friends,
16:26whom he considered frivolous and idiotic.
16:30Everybody's getting more serious.
16:32Is that the way things are going?
16:35But whatever one may be in politics,
16:37left, right, fascist, communist,
16:40les gens du monde are the only possible ones for friends.
16:45And what else is there to distinguish man from the animals
16:49but his social life?
16:52Who understands it so well?
16:54Who can make it so smooth and amusing as les gens du monde?
16:58But one cannot have le monde at the same time as a love affair.
17:04One must be wholehearted to enjoy it.
17:08So I have cancelled all my engagements.
17:13What a pity.
17:15Because I leave for London tomorrow.
17:18Oh, yes. I had forgotten.
17:22What a pity.
17:29Hello?
17:31Hello, hello. Are you asleep?
17:34What do you think? What time is it?
17:36About two.
17:38Shall I come round and see you?
17:40Do you mean now?
17:42Yes.
17:44I must say, that would be very nice.
17:46But the thing is, what would the night porter think?
17:49Oh, mon cher.
17:51How English you are.
17:53I must break it to you.
17:56He will not be under any illusion.
17:58I suppose not.
18:00But then, he is under no illusion as it is.
18:04After all, I come for you three or four times every day.
18:08And French people, even those who are not les gens du monde,
18:13are quite quick at noticing these things.
18:17In short, your reputation in the hotel
18:20will become no worse than it already is.
18:23Oh, I see.
18:25Very well. We understand each other.
18:29I shall be with you very shortly.
18:53Ah, this is Germaine.
18:55I will look after your every request.
18:58So, you see, it will be altogether plus commode
19:03than the Hotel Montalembert.
19:06Altogether, the most sensible and convenient thing.
19:12Yes, I do see, Fabrice. Extremely sensible.
19:16When I was young, I liked to be very romantic.
19:20And run all kinds of risks.
19:23I used to hide in wardrobes,
19:25to be brought into the house in a trunk,
19:28to climb up the stairs,
19:30to climb up the stairs,
19:32to climb up the stairs,
19:34to climb up the stairs,
19:36to climb up the stairs,
19:38to be brought into the house in a trunk,
19:41to climb in at windows,
19:43how I used to climb.
19:45Then one night, I climbed into a wasp's nest.
19:49The agony.
19:50So now I prefer to be comfortable
19:52and have my own key.
19:55I shall be back here for dinner,
19:57which Germaine will prepare at half past eight.
20:01I think it's important, you see,
20:04to have and follow a routine.
20:07It is necessary, when all is said,
20:10to be practical.
20:13Au revoir, madame.
20:15Indeed, Linda thought,
20:17nobody could be more practical than Fabrice.
20:20No nonsense about him.
20:22A little nonsense, she thought,
20:24would have been rather nice.
20:27And then Linda thought rather wistfully of her mother.
20:31She hadn't liked it when Linda had committed adultery with Christian.
20:35But he at least was English.
20:37And Linda had been properly introduced to him
20:40and knew his surname.
20:42Also, Christian had all along intended to marry her.
20:47But how much less would my Aunt Sadie, like her daughter,
20:50to pick up an unknown, nameless foreigner
20:53and go off with him to live in luxury?
20:56Linda profoundly hoped she would never find out.
21:01Nor Uncle Matthew.
21:03If he knew her situation,
21:05he would come charging down the street with his shotgun.
21:08Or at the very least, one of his stock whips.
21:11Madame?
21:13Madame?
21:15I think it is time for Madame to take her bath.
21:18M. Le Duc will be here in three quarters of an hour.
21:26Merci, Germaine.
21:34Could one know your name?
21:38Haven't you discovered that?
21:41My name is Sauveteur.
21:44I'm happy to tell you, Madame,
21:46I am a very rich duke.
21:48A most agreeable thing to be, even in these days.
21:52How lovely for you.
21:54And while we're on the subject of your private life,
21:58are you married?
22:01No.
22:04Why not?
22:08My fiancée died.
22:11Oh, how sad.
22:15What was she like?
22:18Very pretty.
22:23Prettier than me?
22:27Much prettier.
22:31Very correct.
22:36More correct than me?
22:40You, Madame,
22:43one doesn't think of in terms of correctness.
22:50And then she was so gentle.
22:54Gentle.
22:58Mais d'une gentillesse à la pauvre.
23:04What was her name?
23:08Louise.
23:12Only child of the last Duc de Reims.
23:17You know, five years.
23:20You did say that with you it normally lasts five years.
23:24It's quite a long time when it's all in front of you.
23:31But Louise died more than five years ago.
23:37Fifteen years in the autumn.
23:41Fifteen years in the autumn.
23:47I always go and put late roses on her grave.
23:54Those little tight roses
23:57with very dark green leaves
24:01that never open properly.
24:05Adieu, que c'est triste.
24:10Do you always laugh when you make love?
24:13I haven't thought about it.
24:15But I suppose I do.
24:17Do you find it odd?
24:20Very disconcerting at first, I must say.
24:25Why? Don't most women laugh?
24:28Indeed, they do not.
24:30Indeed, they do not.
24:33More often, they cry.
24:35How extraordinary. Don't they enjoy it?
24:39It's nothing to do with enjoyment.
24:42If they are young, they call on their mothers.
24:46If they are religious, they call on the Virgin to forgive them.
24:52But I've never known one who laughed, except you.
24:57What else do they do?
25:00What they all do, except you, is say
25:05how you must despise me.
25:09Why should you despise them?
25:11Really, my dear, one does, that's all.
25:13How unfair.
25:15First you seduce them, then you despise them, poor things.
25:19What a monster you are.
25:21They like it.
25:22They like groveling about and saying,
25:25Oh, whatever have I done?
25:27Oh, my God, Fabrice, alas.
25:29Whatever must you think of me?
25:32Oh, how bitterly I'm ashamed.
25:37But you...
25:41You seem unaware of your shame.
25:47You just roar with laughter.
25:51It's very strange.
25:55And rather agreeable, I must admit.
26:04What about Louise, your fiancée?
26:09Didn't you despise her?
26:14Of course not.
26:16Of course not.
26:19She was a virtuous woman.
26:31Do you mean to say you never went to bed with her?
26:34Never.
26:37Never would such a thing have crossed my mind in a thousand years.
26:43Goodness.
26:45In England, we always do.
26:48My dear, it's well known, the animal side of the English.
26:54The English are a drunken and incontinent race.
26:58And the whole world agrees.
27:01The English don't know it.
27:04They think it's you foreigners that are all those things.
27:09French women are the most virtuous in the world.
27:16Good night, Basil. I'll come and tuck you in later.
27:19Good night, David.
27:27I narrowly avoided a domestic scene.
27:29What a pity, darling. I should have so enjoyed watching you playing the mother.
27:33Perhaps it's just as well you didn't. It is a very private role.
27:36Surely you wouldn't have resented an audience of one.
27:38After all, you've seen me often enough, playing the son.
27:40And I hope you're as dutiful as ever, Siegfried.
27:42Oh, yes. And it's so much easier now.
27:45Boy's in the house, you see, to take her off my hands a lot of the time.
27:48Still no sign of Polly coming back?
27:50Not a chance, my darling. She's far too engrossed with her randy old Paddington.
27:54And even if she wanted to come back, Boy wouldn't have her.
27:57Boy, my dear, has other fish to fry.
27:59A fish whose name begins with C?
28:01And will one day begin with M. Boy will love that.
28:05So, always round, my darling, things have worked out well for everybody.
28:08Poor old Montaud has retired into a mist of senility, but he's quite content inside it.
28:13Polly's happy with Poppa Paddington.
28:15Boy is quite potty about one, and one is in total blisseykins with Boy.
28:20And Sonia's absolutely delirious about both of us.
28:22So delirious, in fact, that she's forgotten how to be mean
28:25and pays the most alarming bills from Cartier's without a murmur.
28:28So, here we all are, my darling, having our lovely cake and eating it.
28:34One's great aim in life.
28:36I know. Alfred thinks it's terrible.
28:39Parcels, madame, from Leno and Molyneux.
28:43And there are two gentlemen to see madame, from England.
29:04Gracious heavens!
29:06Well, you do look pretty.
29:11Are you in disguise?
29:13What can you mean?
29:15Oh, the spectacles. Oh, I have to wear them when I'm abroad.
29:18I have such kind eyes, you see.
29:21Beggars and things cluster round and annoy me.
29:25What have you come for?
29:27Well, I've come to see you.
29:30What have you come for?
29:32Well, actually, we came to see if you were all right.
29:36As it's perfectly clear that you are,
29:39we might as well go away again.
29:41How did you find out? Do Mummy and Fa know?
29:44No, no, no. Not a thing.
29:46They still think you're in Perm, anyhow, with Christian.
29:49Thank God!
29:51But we heard that you'd left.
29:54So, I went round to Cheney Walk,
29:57where you obviously weren't,
29:59and Mur and I got faintly worried to think of you wandering about the continent,
30:03so ill-suited, we thought.
30:05Look after yourself.
30:07How wrong we were.
30:09And at the same time,
30:11we became madly curious to know what had become of you,
30:14so we put into motion a little discreet detective work,
30:17and here we are.
30:18You gave us quite a fright.
30:20Another time, when you're putting on this Clair de Merode act,
30:23you might send a postcard.
30:25For one thing, it's a great pleasure to see you in the part.
30:27I wouldn't have missed it for worlds.
30:29Deliveries, madame.
30:31From Fatou, Balenciaga, and from Fatou.
30:34Oh, goodness!
30:36How funny it all is.
30:38Parcels, fliers.
30:40So tremendously Victorian.
30:44Have you yet told him that he must give you up,
30:47and marry a pure young girl?
30:49Oh, don't tease, Dave.
30:51I'm so happy.
30:53Yes.
30:55Well, you look happy, I must say.
31:00This flat is a joke.
31:02There are some things here which raise the level.
31:05A Gauguin.
31:07These two Matisse.
31:09Chintzy, but accomplished.
31:11Your protector must be very rich.
31:14He is.
31:15I thought you knew all about him.
31:17You and your detective work.
31:19We found out where, but not who.
31:22Do Stan see him?
31:23He's a terrific Han.
31:24No, no, no.
31:25I think we've intruded enough for one day.
31:27Who is he?
31:29He is called the Duke of Sauveterre.
31:33Fabrice de Sauveterre?
31:35Do you know him?
31:36Well, of course we know him.
31:37No one will advise him.
31:39And so does everyone else in the whole world.
31:41Except you.
31:42Well, don't you think he's a terrific Han?
31:44Do admit.
31:46Fabrice is undoubtedly one of the wickedest men in Europe
31:49where women are concerned.
31:51What a scene there'll be when he smells my cigar.
31:54There'll be a creme passionnelle, I shouldn't wonder.
31:57Why, Linda, darling,
31:59we're off to dine with our intellectual friends.
32:02Oh, I shall pay for this later.
32:06Will you have luncheon with us at the Ritz tomorrow?
32:09I'd like that.
32:10Fabrice has never taken me to the Ritz.
32:12One o'clock, then, in the bar.
32:15Give our love to Fabrice.
32:19Au revoir.
32:21Au revoir.
32:31Ah, your taste is improving every day, ma chère.
32:34Walk up and down.
32:36It will need a soupçon off there
32:40and a slight lensing there.
32:43Otherwise, admirable.
32:45Continue, continue, ma chère.
32:47Buy more, much more.
32:51I'm not, by any chance, taken to smoking cigars.
32:55Oh, that was an old friend of Mummy's and mine,
32:59Lord Merlin.
33:00He came with Davy Warbeck, who married my Aunt Emily.
33:04They say they know you.
33:06Oh, yes, indeed.
33:08Lord Merlin, tellement gentil.
33:11And that poor Warbeck, always thinking himself so ill.
33:14I knew them in Venice.
33:16What did they make of all this?
33:19They roared at the flat.
33:21Oh, yes, I can imagine.
33:23It's not suitable for you, this flat, but it's convenient.
33:27And with the war coming...
33:28Oh, but I love it!
33:30I wouldn't want anything else.
33:32Wasn't it clever of them, though, to find me?
33:36Do you mean to say
33:38you never told anybody where you were?
33:41I really didn't think of it.
33:44The days go by.
33:46You know,
33:47one simply doesn't remember these things.
33:49Doesn't one?
33:51And it was six weeks
33:53before anyone thought of looking for you?
33:56Oh, as a family,
33:58you seem to me remarkably casual.
34:02Never, never let me go back to them again.
34:07My darling.
34:09But you love them, hmm?
34:12Mummy and Fa,
34:14little Matt and Bob and Victoria and Fanny.
34:18What is all this?
34:20I never want to leave you as long as I live.
34:24Uh-huh.
34:26But you'll probably have to quite soon.
34:30The war is going to begin, you know.
34:32Oh, why can't I stay here?
34:35I could work.
34:36I could be a nurse.
34:38Well, perhaps not a nurse, but something.
34:41I was quite a success at Papineau.
34:45If you promise me
34:48to do what I tell you,
34:51you may stay here for a time.
34:54At the beginning,
34:55we shall sit and look at the Germans
34:57across the Maginot Line.
34:59Then I shall be a great deal in Paris,
35:02between Paris and the front, but mostly here.
35:05Then somebody, we or the Germans,
35:09I'm very much afraid the Germans
35:11will pour across the line
35:13and a war of movement will begin.
35:16I shall have notice of that.
35:19But what you must promise me
35:23is that the very minute
35:26I tell you to leave for London,
35:29you will leave,
35:31even you see no reason for doing so.
35:37I should be hampered beyond words in my duties
35:40if you are still here.
35:43So, will you solemnly promise me?
35:50All right, solemnly.
35:54I don't believe anything so dreadful
35:56could possibly happen to me.
35:59But I promise to do what you say.
36:02Now, in return,
36:05will you promise me
36:06that you will come to London
36:08as soon as this is all over
36:09and find me again?
36:12Promise?
36:19Yes, my chère.
36:21I will do that.
36:36I'm here to meet Lord Merlin.
36:39The bill has been delayed, madame.
36:41You have to make 1,000 regrets
36:43and serve madame with her choice.
36:45Nothing, thank you.
36:47I'll just wait over there.
36:49Madame.
36:51Oh, Pierre, dear.
36:53I'm so sorry.
36:55It's all right.
36:57It's all right.
36:59It's all right.
37:01It's all right.
37:03Oh, Pierre, dear.
37:05And have you seen Fabrice at all?
37:08Well, I have,
37:09because I quite often see him
37:10at all madame's au pairs.
37:12But he never goes out anywhere,
37:13as you know.
37:14Then what about Jacqueline?
37:16Still in England,
37:17waiting for her old aunt to die.
37:20She daren't leave her alone for a second
37:22in case she changes her will.
37:25Ah, mais le pauvre Fabrice
37:27is utterly lost without her,
37:29like a dog looking for its master.
37:32He sits sadly at home,
37:33never goes to parties,
37:34never goes to his classes,
37:35nobody.
37:37His mother is really worried about him.
37:39And yet it is such a happy ménage.
37:41He has been faithful for five years.
37:44Surely she will come back soon.
37:46On verra, on verra.
37:48But not until her aunt dies, I think.
37:51You know that his mother says
37:52he rings her up every morning
37:54and talks for an hour.
37:57Do you mind if I cut luncheon with you?
37:59I've just remembered something very urgent.
38:02Oh, my dear Linda,
38:03neither of us is in any condition to protest.
38:07Our intellectual friends have undone us quite.
38:10My main problem is how to get Davy
38:12home to England alive.
38:14You see.
38:15Then you'll excuse me?
38:17Oh, just a moment.
38:18Before you go,
38:20here, open it later.
38:24Oh, no.
38:39This is the house of the Duc de Sauterre?
38:41Yes, madame.
38:42Then I wish to speak with Monsieur le Duc
38:44at once, please.
38:46Monsieur le Duc has gone out
38:48with madame his mother.
38:50Then I shall wait.
39:13As she waited, Linda began to feel more calm.
39:16But at the same time,
39:17But at the same time, very sad.
39:19She saw that this room indicated
39:21a side of Fabrice's character
39:23which she had hardly been allowed to apprehend
39:25and which had its roots
39:27in old and civilized French grandeur.
39:29Something in which she could never have a share,
39:32from which she would always be kept rigidly apart
39:34in her sunny modern flat.
39:36Even if there really isn't one,
39:38she'd last forever.
39:40She began to realize
39:42that here were her competitors,
39:44her enemies.
39:46Here, in the grave of his fiancée Louise.
39:48And to come here and make a scene
39:50about a rival mistress would be utterly meaningless.
39:53She would be one non-reality
39:55complaining about another.
40:16I enclose something which may one day be useful, Merlin.
40:27For a man with such cruel eyes,
40:29he is extremely considerate.
40:47Yes, another month, I should think.
40:50As soon as they've got the harvesting.
40:53If it depended on the English,
40:55they'd wait until after the Christmas shopping.
40:59Oh, Fabrice, it won't last very long, will it?
41:02It will be very disagreeable, what it does.
41:05Did you come to my house today?
41:07Oh, yes.
41:09I suddenly felt I wanted to see you very, very much.
41:12Comme c'est gentil.
41:14But why didn't you wait?
41:16Your ancestors brightened me up.
41:18Oh, they did?
41:20But you have ancestors yourself, I believe, madame.
41:23Yes, but they don't hang about in quite the way that yours do.
41:27You should have waited.
41:29It's always a great pleasure to see you,
41:32both for me and my ancestors.
41:34It cheers us all up.
41:39Tell me, Fabrice,
41:41tell me, Fabrice,
41:44what did you think the first time you saw me?
41:49If you really want to know, I thought,
41:52tiens, she's like the little Bosquet.
41:56Who's that?
41:58There are two Bosquet sisters,
42:00the elder, who is a beauty,
42:03and the little one who looks like you.
42:07Thank you, sir.
42:09I would rather resemble the other.
42:11No, no, ma chère.
42:13To be too beautiful as she is to be untouchable.
42:17One doesn't dare dally with perfection.
42:22It's far more appetizing
42:27to dally with you.
42:39It's so sad, so many being away at Christmas.
42:43Little Matt and Bob.
42:46I did hope Jassie would come over from America.
42:49Of course, the war's made that impossible.
42:53Victor being a wren.
42:58No leave for her till she's been commissioned and passed out of her course.
43:04Oh, but it's lovely having Louisa and her three,
43:06and it's wonderful that you and Alfred and the boys could come.
43:09Otherwise it has hardly been worth doing the decorations.
43:13I remember these decorations from years and years ago.
43:18Oh.
43:22It's only right that some things should never change.
43:27I had a letter from Linda the other day.
43:29She seems very happy in Paris.
43:31Yes, Davy saw her.
43:33She's very busy doing her war work, providing comforts for the French troops.
43:38Matthew approves of that.
43:41He approves of war work.
43:45I only wish the war office would offer him a job.
43:47He goes about like a bear with a sore head.
43:49What makes it worse is that Little Matt is an officer in his own regiment.
43:52And Christian too, it seems.
43:54Yes.
43:56They're training in one of those secret areas up in the north of Scotland.
44:00Oh, I expect that's why Linda's free to stay on in Paris for a bit.
44:11What are you thinking of?
44:13Of Christmas at home.
44:15I would much rather be here with you.
44:18But I think of them.
44:20Open your presents, ma chère.
44:30Oh.
44:52For you, I have this.
45:01I bought it with some money Lord Merlin gave me.
45:09Merlin gave you money?
45:13I think it was in case something went very wrong and I had to go away in a hurry.
45:19But I won't have to go away, so I spent his money on this.
45:25Money. Money is nothing.
45:30Mais écoutez-moi, ma chère.
45:33What I said will happen may still happen.
45:36Will happen.
45:38Sooner or later, probably sooner.
45:41I shall have to send you to England.
45:43Where shall you go?
45:45Home to your father?
45:47Oh, no.
45:48Anyway, it won't happen.
45:50All the English papers say we are killing Germany with our blockade.
45:54Le blocus, quelle blague.
45:55I must tell you, madame, they don't give a rap for your blockade.
45:58So, where would you go?
46:01To my own house in Chelsea.
46:03To wait for you to come.
46:06It might be a month.
46:09Or years.
46:12I shall wait.
46:17What a beautiful day.
46:19Easter is always fine in Paris.
46:23On Sunday, I must remember to go to church.
46:26But, Louise, how can you go to church when there's no...
46:29Why not?
46:30You're a Catholic, aren't you?
46:32Of course.
46:33Do I look like a Calvinist?
46:36Then aren't you living in mortal sin?
46:39So, what about when you confess?
46:41One need not to be too precise.
46:44In any case, these little sins of the body are quite unimportant.
46:48Would Louise agree?
46:51Louise?
46:53What are you saying of Louise?
46:55All that climbing in at people's bedroom windows.
46:58Wouldn't that have upset her?
47:01After marriage, there would have been no more climbing.
47:07My whole life would have been devoted to making Louise happy.
47:11Then the sins of the body are important.
47:16The English are mad.
47:18The English are mad.
47:20I've always said so.
47:22You almost sound as if you want to be given up.
47:26Not tired of your war work, I hope?
47:28No, no, Fabrice. I just wondered, that's all.
47:31But you look so sad, ma chérie.
47:33What is it?
47:35Perhaps it is because I want to be more than just a little sin of the body.
47:40Mais vous êtes, madame.
47:43You are the most enticing,
47:45most enchanting thing,
47:48and such laughter,
47:50as never I heard to go with it.
47:53I suppose that will have to do.
47:55Is it not enough?
47:58It's time now to go chez nous, ma chérie,
48:02for more of your special laughter.
48:16What is it, Fabrice?
48:20What has happened?
48:23What had to happen,
48:25or rather, very soon will.
48:29Meanwhile, there will be a place for you in the airport this afternoon.
48:34You must pack a small suitcase and the rest of your things.
48:38You must go after you by train.
48:40I have to go to the Ministère de la Guerre.
48:42I have to go to the Ministère de la Guerre
48:45and get your ticket and your special visa.
48:48When I come back, I must take you straight to Le Bourget.
48:54But before I go to the Ministère,
48:58there is just time for that little spot of war work
49:03of which we were speaking in Dubois.
49:09Madame,
49:12Madame.
49:24Jamais. No, no.
49:32Tatia, what is this?
49:34A fancy dress party?
49:36Fabrice, I cannot take away the things you have given me.
49:39I loved having them while I was here
49:41and while it gave you pleasure to see me wearing them.
49:43But I have some pride,
49:45and I was not brought up dans un bordel.
49:47Oh, ma chère, try not to be so middle class.
49:50It doesn't suit you at all.
49:52There is no time for you to change, but take this.
49:55And I will send your thing after you.
49:57Come now, you must go.
49:59I must explain to Germain why I am leaving so suddenly.
50:01There is no time, Germain understands.
50:03Au revoir, Germain. Adieu, Madame.
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