1. and I'll tell you what,
the storm system's still moving west.
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2. What are you looking at, Caroline?
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3. The wind, Mom.
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4. They say the hurricane is coming.
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5. I'm on a boat.
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6. I'm drifting.
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7. Can I do anything for you, Mom?
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8. Make anything easier?
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9. Oh, sugar...
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10. There's nothing left to do.
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11. ls what it is.
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12. Finding it harder to keep my eyes open.
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13. My mouth's full of cotton.
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14. There, there, Miss Daisy.
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15. You gonna scratch yourself to ribbons.
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16. Do you want any more
medication, Mother?
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17. Doctor said you could have
as much as you want.
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18. No need for anybody to suffer.
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19. A friend told me
that she never had the chance
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20. to say goodbye to her mother.
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21. - I wanted to...
- It's okay.
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22. I wanted to tell you
how much I'm gonna miss you so...
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23. Mom.
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24. Oh, Caroline.
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25. Are you afraid?
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26. I'm curious.
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27. What comes next?
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28. They built the train station in 1918.
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29. My father was there the day it opened.
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30. He said they had
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31. a tuba band playing.
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32. They had the finest clockmaker
in all of the South
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33. to build that glorious clock.
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34. His name was...
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35. Mr. Gateau.
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36. Mr. Cake.
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37. He was married to a Creole
of Evangeline Parish
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38. and they had a son.
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39. Mr. Gateau was, from birth,
absolutely blind.
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40. When their son was old enough,
he joined the army.
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41. And they prayed God would
keep him out of harm's way.
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42. For months,
he did nothing but work on that clock.
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43. One day,
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44. a letter came.
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45. And Mr. Gateau, done for the night,
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46. went up, alone, to bed.
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47. And their son came home.
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48. They buried him in the family plot,
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49. where he would be with them
when their time came.
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50. Mr. Cake worked on his clock,
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51. laboring to finish.
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52. It was a morning to remember.
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53. Papa said
there were people everywhere.
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54. Even Teddy Roosevelt came.
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55. It's running backwards!
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56. I made it that way
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57. so that perhaps the boys
that we lost in the war
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58. might stand and come home again.
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59. Home to farm,
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60. work,
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61. have children.
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62. To live long, full lives.
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63. Perhaps my own son
might come home again.
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64. I'm sorry if I've offended anybody.
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65. I hope you enjoy my clock.
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66. Mr. Cake was never seen again.
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67. Some say he died of a broken heart.
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68. Some say he went to sea.
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69. Excuse me.
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70. Do you mind if I make a call?
Somebody's watching my little boy.
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71. Sure.
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72. I hope I haven't disappointed you.
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73. You couldn't disappoint me.
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74. Well, I know I don't have much
to show for myself.
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75. Find my dark suitcase.
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76. There's a diary.
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77. This?
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78. Could you read it to me?
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79. Is this what you want to do?
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80. I tried to read it
a hundred different times.
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81. Mom, it's not exactly...
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82. It's just the sound of your voice, darling.
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83. Okay.
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84. It's dated April 4th, 1985.
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85. And it says New Orleans.
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86. "This is my last will and testament.
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87. "l don't have much to leave,
few possessions, no money, really.
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88. "l will go out of this world the same way
I came in, alone and with nothing.
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89. "All I have is my story,
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90. "and I'm writing it now
while I still remember it.
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91. "My name is Benjamin.
Benjamin Button."
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92. And I was born under
unusual circumstances.
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93. The First World War had ended,
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94. and I've been told it was
an especially good night to be born.
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95. Thank God it's over!
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96. We won the war!
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97. The Great War is over!
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98. What are you doing here?
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99. Thomas,
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100. I'm afraid she's going to die.
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101. What?
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102. That's enough.
All of you, get away from her.
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103. I came as quickly as I could.
The streets are filled with people.
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104. Thomas.
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105. Promise me he has a place.
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106. Yeah.
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107. She gave her life for me.
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108. And for that, I am forever grateful.
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109. Mr. Button.
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110. Thomas!
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111. Thomas.
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112. Thomas? Where are you going?
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113. Hey! What are you doing there?
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114. What do you have there?
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115. - Come on, Queenie.
- Now, Mr. Weathers!
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116. Come on, now, you know I ain't got
nothing but work to do around here.
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117. - Come on. Just take some time.
- Stop all this foolishness.
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118. The air is sweet.
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119. You look very handsome tonight,
Miss Queenie.
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120. Handsome as I've ever seen.
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121. The brown matches your eyes.
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122. Oh, hush!
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123. Let's see here.
You ain't no slouch yourself.
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124. Hambert's back in town.
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125. He came home legless, but he's home.
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126. I know you were sweet on him one time.
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127. Sweeter than I should've been.
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128. Miss Simone messed herself.
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129. Oh, sweet Jesus.
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130. She got to stop doing that
or it's diapers for her.
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131. - I'll be right there, Miss Jameson!
- Now, Queenie, now come on.
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132. Okay, Queenie'll be right there.
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133. It's awful nice out here.
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134. Come on out back for a moment.
Take your mind off things.
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135. You're so bad.
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136. - What in God's name?
- What's this?
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137. Oh, the Lord done something here.
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138. Hope I didn't hurt it none
stepping on it like that.
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139. We best leave that for the police.
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140. Poor baby.
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141. I'll go.
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142. It's for sure nobody wanted to keep it.
Come on, baby.
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143. Queenie? Where are you, Queenie?
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144. Hold your water! You go deal with it.
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145. Okay. No, go, I'll be back.
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146. Queenie, Apple, she went and messed
herself all over again!
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147. Jane Childress, start her a bath!
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148. And mind your own business,
Mrs. Duprey.
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149. You'll be messing yourself
soon enough.
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150. Somebody stole my necklace.
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151. Okay. All right, Mrs. Hollister,
I'll be right with you, okay?
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152. Go on back upstairs, hear?
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153. You are as ugly as an old pot
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154. but you're still a child of God.
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155. Queenie, Apple,
she won't take a bath without you!
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156. Mercy.
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157. I'll be right there!
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158. Okay. You just wait right here
for me now, okay?
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159. My sister gave me those pearls.
I can't find them anywhere.
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160. - Somebody's been stealing my jewelry.
- They're right here, Mrs. Hollister. See?
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161. Right around your pretty white neck.
Now, come on. Hush all that noise.
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162. - ls Dr. Rose still here?
- I don't know.
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163. Your heart is strong.
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164. You just want to avoid
any undue stimulation.
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165. I trust you ladies
will help me out with that?
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166. I have something.
Could you come downstairs?
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167. Never seen anything like it.
Nearly blind from cataracts.
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168. I'm not sure if he can hear.
His bones indicate severe arthritis.
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169. His skin has lost all elasticity,
and his hands and feet are ossified.
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170. He shows all the deterioration,
the infirmities, not of a newborn,
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171. but of a man well in his 80s
on his way to the grave.
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172. He's dying?
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173. His body is failing him
before his life's begun.
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174. Where'd he come from?
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175. My sister's child. From Lafayette.
She had an unfortunate adventure.
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176. The poor child, he got the worst of it.
Come out white.
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177. There are places for unwanted babies
like these, Queenie.
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178. No room for another mouth to feed here.
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179. The Nolan Foundation,
despite their good intentions,
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180. thinks this place is
a large nuisance as it is.
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181. - A baby...
- You said he don't have long.
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182. Queenie, some creatures
aren't meant to survive.
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183. No, this baby, he is a miracle.
That's for certain.
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184. Just not the kind of miracle
one hopes to see.
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185. Y'all listen. Y'all listen up here.
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186. We're gonna have us a visitor
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187. that's gonna be staying with us
for a little while.
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188. My sister had a child
and she couldn't see right by it, so...
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189. He's known as...
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190. Benjamin.
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191. Benjamin.
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192. He's not a well child, so we're gonna
have to take good care of him.
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193. I had 10 children.
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194. There's not a baby I can't care for.
Let me see him.
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195. God in Heaven.
He looks just like my ex-husband.
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196. Look, he's prematurely old.
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197. Dr. Rose said he ain't got much more
time on this earth.
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198. Join the club.
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199. He's smiling!
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200. Hambert sends his
remembrances to you.
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201. Are you right out of your mind?
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202. I know you ain't got all the parts
it takes to make one of your own,
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203. but this ain't yours to keep.
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204. It may not even be humankind.
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205. Mr. Weathers, come back here.
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206. Please.
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207. You never know what's coming for you.
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208. It seemed I had found a home.
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209. ls any of this true?
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210. You have such a lovely voice.
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211. Mom, it's an ancient streetcar token.
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212. That clock just kept going,
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213. year after year after year.
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214. But I didn't know I was a child.
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215. Same old crap every day.
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216. I thought I was like everyone else there.
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217. An old man in the twilight of his life.
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218. Could you make him stop that?
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219. Stop banging that fork.
It's used for eating, not for playing with.
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220. And use your napkin, please,
Mr. Benjamin.
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221. Queenie!
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222. Hey, boy.
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223. Always had a healthy curiosity.
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224. What was up the street?
Or around the next corner?
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225. Go get him!
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226. Benjamin! That is dangerous.
Come back over here.
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227. Stay put, child.
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228. I loved her very much.
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229. She was my mother.
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230. Mama.
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231. Mama.
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232. Some days I feel different
than the day before.
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233. Everybody feels different about
themselves, one way or another.
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234. But we're all going the same way.
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235. Just taking different roads to get there,
that's all.
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236. You're on your own road, Benjamin.
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237. Mama? How much longer I got?
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238. Just be thankful
for what you're given, hear?
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239. You're already here longer
than you're supposed to.
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240. Some nights, I'd have to sleep alone.
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241. I didn't mind.
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242. I would listen to the house breathing.
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243. All those people sleeping.
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244. I felt safe.
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245. It was a place of great routine.
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246. Every morning at 5:30,
no matter the weather,
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247. General Winslow, U. S. Army, Retired,
would raise the flag.
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248. Mrs. Sybil Wagner,
once an opera singer of some note,
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249. well, she sang Wagner.
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250. All right, baby, come on.
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251. We got to put some life
into these old sticks for you.
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252. Get you walking so you can help me out
around here. Come on now, hear?
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253. No matter the season,
supper was served promptly at 5:30.
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254. Molasses.
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255. Molasses.
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256. Molasses.
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257. I learned to read when I was five.
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258. My grandfather was a dresser
for a famous actor.
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259. He brung home every play
for me to read.
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260. "Kind keepers of my weak decaying age,
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261. "Let dying Mortimer here rest himself.
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262. "Even like a man
new haled from the rack,
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263. "So fare my limbs
with long imprisonment.
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264. "And these gray locks,
the pursuivants of death,
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265. "Argue the end of Edmund Mortimer."
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266. You thought I was plain ignorant,
didn't you?
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267. The actor my grandfather worked for
was John Wilkes Booth.
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268. He killed Abraham Lincoln.
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269. You never know what's coming for you.
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270. On Saturday nights,
Mama would make me go to church.
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271. Benjamin!
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272. - Amen! Amen!
- Amen! Amen!
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273. What can I do for you, sister?
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274. Her parts are all twisted up inside
and she can't have little children.
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275. Lord, if you could see clear
to forgive this woman her sins
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276. so she can bear the fruit of the womb.
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277. Out, damnable affliction!
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278. - Praise God!
- Praise God!
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279. Hallelujah!
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280. - Hallelujah!
- Hallelujah!
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281. And what's this old man's irrediction?
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282. He's got the Devil on his back,
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283. trying to ride him into the grave
before his time.
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284. - Out, Zebuchar!
- Yes!
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285. - Out, Beelzebub!
- Yes!
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286. How old are you?
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287. Seven. But I look a lot older.
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288. God bless you.
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289. He's seven.
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290. Now, this is a man
with optimism in his heart.
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291. - All right.
- Belief in his soul!
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292. - Yes!
- Yes!
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293. We are all children in the eyes of God!
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294. - Yes!
- Hallelujah!
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295. We are gonna get you out of that chair.
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296. - And we're gonna have you walk.
- Amen.
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297. It's all right.
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298. In the name of God's glory...
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299. Rise up!
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300. Come on.
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301. Come on. Walk.
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302. Come on, son. Come on.
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303. - Come on with it, son. Come on.
- Come on.
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304. Now God is gonna see you
the rest of the way.
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305. He's gonna see this little old man walk
without the use of a crutch or a cane.
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306. He's gonna see that you walk
from faith...
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307. - Hallelujah!
- ... and divine inspiration alone!
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308. - Yes.
- Hey, Ben!
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309. - Go, son!
- Now walk.
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310. - Yes.
- Come on.
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311. Don't touch him.
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312. Rise up, old man.
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313. Rise up like Lazarus.
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314. I said, rise up!
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315. Hallelujah!
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316. Yes.
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317. Come on.
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318. Say hallelujah.
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319. - Hallelujah!
- Hallelujah!
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320. Walk.
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321. Walk on. Yes.
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322. That's right, Benjamin.
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323. Now when I look back on it,
it was miraculous.
Copy !req
324. But you know the saying, the Lord
giveth and the Lord taketh away.
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325. Glory in the highest!
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326. Sweet Jesus!
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327. - No!
- No!
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328. There were so many birthdays.
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329. For he's a jolly good fellow
For he's a jolly good fellow...
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330. So we wouldn't run out,
we would spare the candles.
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331. Queenie, you know I don't like birthdays
and I don't like cake.
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332. And death was a common visitor.
People came and went.
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333. You always knew
when someone left us.
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334. There was a silence in the house.
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335. It was a wonderful place to grow up.
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336. I was with people who had shed
all the inconsequences of earlier life.
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337. Left wondering about the weather,
the temperature of a bath,
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338. the light at the end of a day.
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339. For everyone that died, someone would
come to take their place.
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340. I've been married five times.
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341. My fifth wife and I are captured
by a neighbor tribe of cannibals.
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342. Oh, goodness gracious.
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343. We escaped across the river.
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344. My wife, she can't swim,
so, sadly, she eaten.
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345. Oh, my God.
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346. My second wife steps on cobra
and dies.
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347. It was very bad luck
to be married to me.
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348. That's Mr. Oti. He's an acquaintance
of an acquaintance of mine.
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349. - The next summer I'm captured...
- He's a Pygmy.
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350. with three others
by the Baschiele tribe.
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351. They trade us for pigs, shoes, and beer
to a very strange American man.
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352. I hear you're not so old
as you're looking.
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353. You just fooling everybody.
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354. What's the matter?
Did you get Madjembe?
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355. What's Madjembe?
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356. Worms.
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357. I don't think I have worms.
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358. This is just how I am.
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359. - Did you take your pills today?
- No, ma'am.
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360. Come. Let's get a cold root beer.
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361. I found the medication
under your pillow.
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362. I'm not supposed to. It's dangerous.
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363. Who said that? Come on, little man.
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364. Hello, children.
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365. Hold, please.
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366. Then I'm in the monkey house
at Philadelphia Zoological Park.
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367. Three thousand people
show up my first day.
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368. Look.
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369. What's it like living in a cage?
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370. It stinks.
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371. But the monkeys.
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372. They do some tricks there.
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373. I throw a spear, wrestle with Kowali.
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374. She is orangutan.
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375. When I'm not playing with the monkeys,
they want me to run to the bars
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376. in my cage, with my teeth.
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377. So then what'd you do?
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378. Then I leave zoo, go here, go there.
Wandered most of the time.
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379. You were all alone?
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380. Plenty of time you'll be alone.
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381. When you're different like us,
it's gonna be that way.
Copy !req
382. But I'll tell you a little secret.
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383. Fat people, skinny people, tall people,
Copy !req
384. white people,
they're just as alone as we are.
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385. But they're scared shitless.
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386. I think about the river I grew up on.
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387. It would be nice to sit by my river again.
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388. Come, I have an appointment.
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389. There's my little man.
You ready, sugar?
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390. Always ready. Always ready.
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391. Filamena, Mr. Benjamin.
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392. - It's a pleasure to meet you, sir.
- My pleasure, ma'am.
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393. You can find your own way home,
can't you?
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394. Take the St. Charles line to Napoleon.
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395. Hey! Hey!
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396. Where in God's name have you been?
Get in here.
Copy !req
397. I mean, you take my breath away,
you know that?
Copy !req
398. Oh, Lord, I was so worried about you.
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399. It had been the best day of my life.
Copy !req
400. - How's her breathing?
- It's shallow.
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401. They say it'll reach us in a few hours,
Copy !req
402. so I gotta get my baby
and take him to my sister's.
Copy !req
403. They say there's nothing to worry about
here in the hospital.
Copy !req
404. Nurses'll be right here if you need them.
Are you okay?
Copy !req
405. - Yeah, I'm okay reading.
- I shouldn't be more than an hour.
Copy !req
406. Was there just company?
Copy !req
407. It was just Dorothy leaving.
Copy !req
408. Go on, Caroline.
Copy !req
409. "On Sundays, the families would come
and visit."
Copy !req
410. It was Thanksgiving, 1930.
Copy !req
411. I met the person
who changed my life forever.
Copy !req
412. Well, Benjamin.
Copy !req
413. Might I say you are looking
strikingly youthful.
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414. Good day, Mrs. Fuller.
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415. A single cane,
back straight as an arrow.
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416. What elixir have you been drinking?
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417. - Thank you, ma'am.
- Grandma! Look at me!
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418. That was really something.
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419. Come on over here, you.
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420. Now, this is my granddaughter, Daisy.
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421. This is Mr...
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422. I'm afraid, Benjamin,
I don't rightly know your last name.
Copy !req
423. Benjamin's fine.
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424. I never forgot her blue eyes.
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425. Good people, supper is served.
Copy !req
426. Health and food, for love and friends.
For everything thy goodness sends.
Copy !req
427. Amen.
Copy !req
428. - Amen!
- Amen!
Copy !req
429. Did you know turkeys aren't really birds?
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430. Why do you say that?
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431. They're in the pheasant family,
can't hardly fly.
Copy !req
432. It's sad, don't you think?
Birds that can't fly?
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433. I love birds that can't fly.
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434. They are so delicious.
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435. - That's terrible.
- I have something to tell y'all
Copy !req
436. while we're giving thanks
for God's blessings.
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437. I had a miracle happen.
Copy !req
438. The Lord saw fit to answer my prayers.
Copy !req
439. What does she mean,
answered her prayers?
Copy !req
440. Thanks. Thank you.
Copy !req
441. She's gonna have a baby, silly.
Copy !req
442. That's what my mama said
when I was gonna have a baby brother,
Copy !req
443. but he didn't live long,
Copy !req
444. 'cause he didn't breathe right.
Copy !req
445. "In the afternoon, when he had got
his beautiful hind legs
Copy !req
446. "just as Big God Nqong had promised.
Copy !req
447. "You can see that it is 5:00,
Copy !req
448. "because Big God Nqong's
clock says so."
Copy !req
449. isn't that something?
Copy !req
450. Again, read it again.
Copy !req
451. Oh, read it again, please.
Copy !req
452. All right.
But afterwards, you must go to bed.
Copy !req
453. I promise.
Copy !req
454. "Old Man Kangaroo."
Copy !req
455. Are you sleeping?
Copy !req
456. Who's that?
Copy !req
457. It's me, Daisy.
Copy !req
458. Oh, hi!
Copy !req
459. 'Kay, come on.
Copy !req
460. Where are we going?
Copy !req
461. Come on. Under here.
Copy !req
462. Here, you light it.
Copy !req
463. I'm not supposed to play with matches.
Copy !req
464. Don't be a chicken. Light it.
Copy !req
465. I'll tell you a secret if you'll tell me one.
Copy !req
466. Okay.
Copy !req
467. I saw my mama kissing another man.
Copy !req
468. Her face was red from it.
Copy !req
469. Your turn.
Copy !req
470. I'm not as old as I look.
Copy !req
471. I thought so.
Copy !req
472. You don't seem like an old person.
Copy !req
473. - Like my grandma.
- I'm not.
Copy !req
474. Are you sick?
Copy !req
475. Well, I heard Mama
and Tizzy whispering.
Copy !req
476. They said I was gonna die soon,
but maybe not.
Copy !req
477. You're odd.
Copy !req
478. You're different
than anybody I've ever met.
Copy !req
479. - May l?
- Okay.
Copy !req
480. What are you doing under there?
Copy !req
481. You come right out here
and get back up to bed!
Copy !req
482. It's after midnight!
Copy !req
483. You are not to be playing together.
Copy !req
484. Yes, ma'am.
Copy !req
485. Now you get back to bed, little lady.
Copy !req
486. You're too young to be wandering
around in the night on your own.
Copy !req
487. And you ought
to be ashamed of yourself.
Copy !req
488. You are a different child.
Copy !req
489. A man-child.
Copy !req
490. And, baby, people aren't gonna
understand just how different you are.
Copy !req
491. What's wrong with me, Mama?
Copy !req
492. Come here.
Copy !req
493. God hasn't said yet, baby.
Copy !req
494. Now go on to bed, hear?
And behave yourself.
Copy !req
495. Go on. Say your prayers, hear?
Copy !req
496. Did I ever tell you I've been struck
by lightning seven times?
Copy !req
497. Once when I was repairing
a leak on the roof.
Copy !req
498. Once I was just crossing
the road to get the mail.
Copy !req
499. I never forgot her...
Copy !req
500. "... blue eyes."
Copy !req
501. Mom?
Copy !req
502. Did you get that this Benjamin loved you
from the first time that he saw you?
Copy !req
503. Not many people experience that.
Copy !req
504. Want me to go on?
Copy !req
505. He crosses something out.
Copy !req
506. When that baby came,
things were different.
Copy !req
507. Your mama gone away
And your daddy gonna stay
Copy !req
508. Didn't leave nobody but the baby
Copy !req
509. Babies were born, people died.
Copy !req
510. A lot of folks been through
that old house.
Copy !req
511. I've come to say goodbye.
I'm going away.
Copy !req
512. Going?
Copy !req
513. Where?
Copy !req
514. I haven't figured that out yet,
Copy !req
515. but I'll send you a postcard
when I get there.
Copy !req
516. What about your friend, the tall lady?
Copy !req
517. We are not friends anymore.
Copy !req
518. That's what happens
with tall people sometimes.
Copy !req
519. Well, goodbye.
Copy !req
520. Spent a lot of time by myself that year.
Copy !req
521. Hello?
Copy !req
522. - Hi.
- I'm moving in today.
Copy !req
523. Welcome. We've been expecting you.
Copy !req
524. Can you please show her up
to Mrs. Rousseau's old room?
Copy !req
525. I'm sorry, but we usually
don't allow dogs in the house.
Copy !req
526. Well, she's old as the hills.
She's almost blind.
Copy !req
527. She won't be a bother much longer.
Copy !req
528. Well, all right,
long as she stays from up underfoot.
Copy !req
529. Right this way, ma'am.
Copy !req
530. As hard as I try,
I can't remember her name.
Copy !req
531. Mrs. Lawson, or Mrs. Hartford.
Copy !req
532. Maybe it was Maple.
Copy !req
533. It's funny how sometimes
the people we remember the least
Copy !req
534. make the greatest impression on us.
Copy !req
535. I do remember she wore diamonds.
Copy !req
536. And she always dressed in fine
clothing, as if she was going out.
Copy !req
537. Although she never did
and nobody ever came to visit her.
Copy !req
538. She taught me to play the piano.
Copy !req
539. It's not about how well you play.
Copy !req
540. It's how you feel
about what you're playing.
Copy !req
541. Try this.
Copy !req
542. You can't help putting yourself
in the music.
Copy !req
543. There were many changes.
Copy !req
544. Some you could see,
some you couldn't.
Copy !req
545. Hair had started growing
in all sorts of places,
Copy !req
546. along with other things.
Copy !req
547. I felt pretty good, considering.
Copy !req
548. Darling, the pain.
Copy !req
549. All right, Mom, I'll get the nurse.
Copy !req
550. Look at this eye.
This is a major hurricane,
Copy !req
551. a slow hurricane,
with maximum sustained winds of...
Copy !req
552. Not doing too good?
Copy !req
553. Nobody seems to know
whether to stay or leave.
Copy !req
554. I'm gonna ride it out.
Copy !req
555. There.
That should make things much easier.
Copy !req
556. Have you had a chance
to say your goodbyes?
Copy !req
557. My father waited four hours for
my brother to get here from Boger City.
Copy !req
558. Couldn't go without him.
Copy !req
559. - She seems like a sweet woman.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
560. I haven't had as much time with her
as I would've...
Copy !req
561. - You busy? I could use your help.
- Excuse me.
Copy !req
562. Sure.
Copy !req
563. "Queenie would let me go
with Mr. Daws..."
Copy !req
564. to Poverty Point to watch the boats
go up and down the river.
Copy !req
565. These were hard times.
Copy !req
566. Did I ever tell you I was struck
by lightning seven times?
Copy !req
567. Once when I was in the field,
just tending to my cows.
Copy !req
568. My fourth hand didn't show up.
Copy !req
569. Anybody want to make $2
for a day's work 'round here?
Copy !req
570. What's the matter?
Copy !req
571. Nobody wants to do an honest
day's work for an honest day's pay?
Copy !req
572. He never pays.
Copy !req
573. - Nobody wants a job?
- I do.
Copy !req
574. You got your sea legs about you,
old man?
Copy !req
575. I think.
Copy !req
576. Well, that's good enough for me.
Copy !req
577. Get your ass on board.
We'll sure as hell find out.
Copy !req
578. I was as happy as I could be.
Copy !req
579. I need a volunteer!
Copy !req
580. I would do anything.
Copy !req
581. Yes, Captain!
Copy !req
582. Scrape off all this bird shit!
Copy !req
583. Right away, sir.
Copy !req
584. And I was actually gonna be paid
for something I would've done for free.
Copy !req
585. His name was Captain Mike Clark.
Copy !req
586. He'd been on a tugboat
since he was seven.
Copy !req
587. Get moving, then.
Copy !req
588. Come here.
Copy !req
589. Can you still get it up?
Copy !req
590. I do every morning.
Copy !req
591. The old pole, huh? The high, hard one?
Copy !req
592. I guess.
Copy !req
593. When was the last time
you had a woman?
Copy !req
594. - Never.
- Never?
Copy !req
595. Not that I know of, sir.
Copy !req
596. Wait a minute, now.
Copy !req
597. You mean to say you've been
on this earth however many years
Copy !req
598. and you've never had a woman?
Copy !req
599. Damn, that's the saddest thing
I've ever heard in my life.
Copy !req
600. Never?
Copy !req
601. No.
Copy !req
602. Well, then, by Jesus,
you are coming with me.
Copy !req
603. What did your father do?
Copy !req
604. I never met my father.
Copy !req
605. You lucky bastard.
Copy !req
606. All fathers want to do is hold you down.
Copy !req
607. Out on my father's boat,
workin' the two-a-day,
Copy !req
608. this little, fat bastard.
Copy !req
609. "Tug lrish," they called him.
Copy !req
610. Anyway, I finally work up the nerve
and tell him,
Copy !req
611. "l don't want to spend the rest of my life
on a goddamn tugboat."
Copy !req
612. You know what I'm saying?
Copy !req
613. You don't want to spend
the rest of your life on a tugboat.
Copy !req
614. Absolutely! Damn right!
Copy !req
615. So you know
what my father says to me?
Copy !req
616. He says,
"Who the hell do you think you are?
Copy !req
617. "What the hell do you think you can do?"
Copy !req
618. So I tell him.
Copy !req
619. "Well, if you're asking,
Copy !req
620. "l want to be an artist."
Copy !req
621. He laughs.
Copy !req
622. "An artist? God meant for you
to work a tugboat, just like me.
Copy !req
623. "And that's exactly
what you're gonna do."
Copy !req
624. Well, I turned myself into an artist.
Copy !req
625. A tattoo artist!
Copy !req
626. I put on every one of these myself.
Copy !req
627. You have to skin me alive
to take my art away from me now.
Copy !req
628. When I'm dead,
I'm gonna send him my arm.
Copy !req
629. That one.
Copy !req
630. Don't let anyone tell you different.
Copy !req
631. You gotta do what you're meant to do.
Copy !req
632. And I happen to be a goddamned artist.
Copy !req
633. But you're a tugboat captain.
Copy !req
634. Captain Mike?
Copy !req
635. We're ready for you and your friend.
Copy !req
636. Let's go, old timer, eh?
Break your cherry.
Copy !req
637. - Hello, my lovelies!
- Hey, Captain.
Copy !req
638. - Hi, Captain.
- Hi.
Copy !req
639. - Hi.
- Hi.
Copy !req
640. He gives me the willies.
That is not for me.
Copy !req
641. How are you tonight, grandpa?
Copy !req
642. It was a night to remember.
Copy !req
643. What are you, Dick Tracy or something?
I've got to rest.
Copy !req
644. Again.
Copy !req
645. - Thank you.
- No, thank you. You have a nice night.
Copy !req
646. - Will you be here tomorrow?
- Every night but Sunday.
Copy !req
647. It sure made me understand
the value of earning a living.
Copy !req
648. Good night, sweetie. Come back now.
Copy !req
649. Things money can buy you.
Copy !req
650. It's nasty out.
Copy !req
651. Can I offer you a ride somewhere?
Copy !req
652. Well, that's awfully kind of you, sir.
Copy !req
653. My name is Thomas, Thomas Button.
Copy !req
654. - I'm Benjamin.
- Benjamin.
Copy !req
655. It's a pleasure to know you.
Copy !req
656. Would you like to stop somewhere
and have a drink?
Copy !req
657. All right.
Copy !req
658. Evening, Mr. Button.
Copy !req
659. What'll it be, sir?
Copy !req
660. - I'll have whatever he's having.
- Sazerac for the both of us.
Copy !req
661. With whiskey, not brandy.
Copy !req
662. You don't drink, do you?
Copy !req
663. - It's a night for firsts.
- How's that?
Copy !req
664. I've never been to a brothel, either.
Copy !req
665. Well, it's an experience.
Copy !req
666. It certainly is.
There's a time for everything.
Copy !req
667. - True enough.
- Your drinks.
Copy !req
668. I don't mean to be rude, but your hands.
Is that painful?
Copy !req
669. Well, I was born
with some form of disease.
Copy !req
670. What kind of disease?
Copy !req
671. I was born old.
Copy !req
672. - I'm sorry.
- No need to be.
Copy !req
673. There's nothing wrong with old age.
Copy !req
674. My wife passed away many years ago.
Copy !req
675. I'm so, so sorry.
Copy !req
676. She died in childbirth.
Copy !req
677. - To children.
- To mothers.
Copy !req
678. What line of work you in, Mr. Button?
Copy !req
679. Buttons. Button's Buttons.
There isn't a button that we don't make.
Copy !req
680. Our biggest competition
is B. F. Goodrich
Copy !req
681. and his infernal zippers.
Copy !req
682. Would you gentlemen like
anything else?
Copy !req
683. One for the road, Benjamin?
Copy !req
684. Only if you let me pay for it, Mr. Button.
Copy !req
685. So, what line of work do you do?
Copy !req
686. I'm a tugboat man.
Copy !req
687. I enjoyed talking to you.
Copy !req
688. I enjoyed drinking with you.
Copy !req
689. Benjamin?
Copy !req
690. Would you mind if, time to time,
I stopped by and said hello?
Copy !req
691. Anytime. Good night, Mr. Button.
Copy !req
692. Good night, Benjamin.
Copy !req
693. Drive on.
Copy !req
694. Where have you been?
Copy !req
695. Nothing. I met some people
and listened to some music.
Copy !req
696. Oh, sweet Jesus, boy!
Copy !req
697. Growing up's a funny thing.
Sneaks up on you.
Copy !req
698. One person is there, then suddenly
somebody else has taken her place.
Copy !req
699. She wasn't all elbows
and knees anymore.
Copy !req
700. Benjamin! Come on!
Copy !req
701. Okay.
Copy !req
702. I loved those weekends
when she'd come
Copy !req
703. and spend the night
with her grandmother.
Copy !req
704. Daisy. Daisy.
Copy !req
705. You want to see something?
Copy !req
706. You gotta keep it a secret,
so get dressed. I'll meet you out back.
Copy !req
707. Come on.
Copy !req
708. - Can you swim?
- I can do anything you can do.
Copy !req
709. Here, put this on. We gotta hurry.
Copy !req
710. Is he okay?
Copy !req
711. Captain?
Copy !req
712. Captain Mike?
Copy !req
713. Morning, Captain. Can you take us out?
Copy !req
714. Do you know what day it is?
Copy !req
715. Sunday?
Copy !req
716. Do you know what that means?
Copy !req
717. Means I was very drunk last night.
Copy !req
718. Well, you're drunk every night.
Copy !req
719. - Is that a girl?
- Close friend.
Copy !req
720. I want to show her the river.
Copy !req
721. You're not supposed to go joyriding
with civilians.
Copy !req
722. I could lose my license.
Copy !req
723. What are you waiting for?
Copy !req
724. Pulled in for repair a wounded duck.
Copy !req
725. She's flying now, huh?
Copy !req
726. Ahoy, sailor!
Copy !req
727. I wish we could go with them.
Copy !req
728. Did you say something, Mom?
Copy !req
729. It's getting really bad.
Copy !req
730. Can you hear me, Mom?
Copy !req
731. Time just seeped out of me.
Copy !req
732. "Things were changing quickly."
Copy !req
733. I don't know how it's possible,
but you seem to have more hair.
Copy !req
734. What if I told you
that I wasn't getting older,
Copy !req
735. but I was getting younger
than everybody else?
Copy !req
736. Well, I'd feel sorry for you,
Copy !req
737. to have to see everybody you love
die before you do.
Copy !req
738. It's an awful responsibility.
Copy !req
739. I'd never thought about life or death
that way before.
Copy !req
740. Benjamin, we're meant
to lose the people we love.
Copy !req
741. How else would we know
how important they are to us?
Copy !req
742. And one fall day, a familiar visitor
came knocking on our door.
Copy !req
743. You want to go with me
to the drugstore?
Copy !req
744. She taught me how to play the piano.
Copy !req
745. - Amen.
- Amen.
Copy !req
746. And she taught me
what it meant to miss somebody.
Copy !req
747. Let's go.
Copy !req
748. I had gone to a brothel.
Copy !req
749. I'd had my first drink.
Copy !req
750. Said goodbye to one friend
and buried another.
Copy !req
751. In 1936, when I was coming to the end
of the 17th year of my life,
Copy !req
752. I packed my bag, said goodbye.
Copy !req
753. - Bye, Benjamin.
- Goodbye.
Copy !req
754. I knew, life being what it was,
I'd probably never see them again.
Copy !req
755. Bye, Mr. Benjamin.
Copy !req
756. - Good luck to you, son.
- Thank you.
Copy !req
757. - I love you, Mama.
- I love you, too, baby.
Copy !req
758. I want you to say your prayers
every night, hear?
Copy !req
759. Be safe, hear?
Copy !req
760. Benjamin!
Copy !req
761. - Where you going?
- To sea.
Copy !req
762. I'll send you a postcard.
Copy !req
763. From everywhere.
Copy !req
764. Write me a postcard from everywhere.
Copy !req
765. Can you imagine?
Copy !req
766. He sent me a postcard
from everywhere he went.
Copy !req
767. Every place he worked.
Copy !req
768. Newfoundland. Baffin Bay.
Copy !req
769. Glasgow. Liverpool. Narvik.
Copy !req
770. He had gone with that Captain Mike.
Copy !req
771. Captain Mike had contracted
for three years
Copy !req
772. with Moran Brothers Tug and Salvage.
Copy !req
773. The old ship had been refitted with
a diesel engine and a new sea winch.
Copy !req
774. We went around Florida
and up the Atlantic seaboard.
Copy !req
775. We were a crew ofseven now.
Captain Mike and me.
Copy !req
776. Cookie, Prentiss Mayes
from Wilmington, Delaware.
Copy !req
777. The Brody twins, Rick and Vic,
Copy !req
778. who got along fine at sea
but, for some reason,
Copy !req
779. once they were on dry land
couldn't stand the sight of each other.
Copy !req
780. You know, one in every
eight boats never returns.
Copy !req
781. There was John Grimm,
who sure fit his name.
Copy !req
782. All hands lost at sea.
Copy !req
783. From Belvedere, South Dakota.
Copy !req
784. And Pleasant Curtis
from Asheville, Notch.
Copy !req
785. Never said a word to anyone,
except himself.
Copy !req
786. I wrote him constantly.
Copy !req
787. I told him I had been invited to
audition in New York City
Copy !req
788. for the School of American Ballet.
Copy !req
789. Please stay.
Copy !req
790. Thank you. Thank you.
Copy !req
791. You can stay.
Copy !req
792. But I was relegated to the corps.
Copy !req
793. Another dancing gypsy.
Copy !req
794. Benjamin!
Copy !req
795. How is it when you showed up
Copy !req
796. you were no bigger than a bollard
with one foot in the grave,
Copy !req
797. but now, either I drink a hell
of a lot more than I think I do,
Copy !req
798. or you sprouted?
Copy !req
799. What's your secret?
Copy !req
800. Well, Captain,
Copy !req
801. you do drink a lot.
Copy !req
802. We stayed in a small hotel
with a grand name, The Winter Palace.
Copy !req
803. You have no idea
what you're talking about.
Copy !req
804. The hummingbird
is not just another bird.
Copy !req
805. lts heart rate's 1,200 beats per minute.
Copy !req
806. lts wings beat 80 times a second.
Copy !req
807. if you was to stop their wings
from beating,
Copy !req
808. it would be dead
in less than 10 seconds.
Copy !req
809. This is no ordinary bird.
Copy !req
810. This is a frickin' miracle.
Copy !req
811. They slowed down their wings
with moving pictures,
Copy !req
812. and you know what they saw?
Copy !req
813. Their wingtips are doing that.
Copy !req
814. You know what the figure eight
is the mathematical symbol for?
Copy !req
815. lnfinity.
Copy !req
816. lnfinity!
Copy !req
817. Everybody, no matter
what differences they had,
Copy !req
818. the languages, the color of their skin,
had one thing in common.
Copy !req
819. They were drunk every single night.
Copy !req
820. Three, please.
Copy !req
821. Could you hold, dear, for us, please?
Copy !req
822. Thank you very much. Good evening.
Copy !req
823. Her name was Elizabeth Abbott.
Copy !req
824. She was not beautiful.
She was plain as paper.
Copy !req
825. But she was pretty as any picture to me.
Copy !req
826. What are you looking at?
Copy !req
827. if you must know,
we have a longstanding agreement
Copy !req
828. never to go to bed sober.
Copy !req
829. - isn't that right, darling?
- Whatever you say, darling.
Copy !req
830. Her husband was Walter Abbott.
Copy !req
831. He was Chief Minister of
the British Trade Mission in Murmansk,
Copy !req
832. and he was a spy.
Copy !req
833. - Darling.
- Oh, thank you, my darling.
Copy !req
834. - Key, darling.
- Oh, yes.
Copy !req
835. I broke my heel off one of my shoes.
Copy !req
836. I'm not in the habit of walking about
in my stocking feet.
Copy !req
837. They were long days there.
Copy !req
838. And even longer nights.
Copy !req
839. One particular night,
I was having trouble sleeping.
Copy !req
840. I'm sorry.
Copy !req
841. I couldn't sleep.
Copy !req
842. I was gonna make some tea.
Would you like some?
Copy !req
843. Oh, no. Thank you.
Copy !req
844. Milk? Honey?
Copy !req
845. A bit of honey, please.
Copy !req
846. I hope you like flies in your honey.
Copy !req
847. Oh, perhaps not.
Copy !req
848. Oh, maybe better to let it steep a little.
Copy !req
849. Steep?
Copy !req
850. Soak.
Copy !req
851. I don't know, I mean,
there's a proper way of making tea.
Copy !req
852. Well, where I'm from,
people just want it to be hot.
Copy !req
853. Well, quite right.
Copy !req
854. - Now, you're a seaman.
- A sailor.
Copy !req
855. I hope you won't think me impolite,
but I have to ask,
Copy !req
856. aren't you a little old
to be working on a boat?
Copy !req
857. There's no age limit,
as long as you can do the work.
Copy !req
858. And you have trouble sleeping?
Thank you.
Copy !req
859. I didn't think I did.
I usually sleep like a baby.
Copy !req
860. Something's been keeping me up.
Copy !req
861. My father, in his 80s,
Copy !req
862. he was so convinced
he was gonna die in his sleep,
Copy !req
863. he limited himself
to having afternoon naps.
Copy !req
864. He was so determined
he was gonna cheat death.
Copy !req
865. - Did he?
- Did he what?
Copy !req
866. Die in his sleep?
Copy !req
867. He died sitting in his favorite chair
Copy !req
868. listening to his favorite program
on the wireless.
Copy !req
869. He must have known something.
Copy !req
870. My husband's the British Trade Minister,
and we've been here for 14 months.
Copy !req
871. - Good God.
- We were supposed to go to Peking
Copy !req
872. but it never seemed to work out.
Copy !req
873. Have you been in the Far East?
Copy !req
874. No. I've never been anywhere, really.
Copy !req
875. I mean, outside of harbors.
Copy !req
876. And where is it that you're from?
Copy !req
877. New Orleans. Louisiana.
Copy !req
878. I didn't know there was another.
Copy !req
879. And she told me about all the places
she had been, and what she had seen.
Copy !req
880. And we talked till just before the dawn.
Copy !req
881. I'm just a lush, myself.
Copy !req
882. And we went back to our rooms,
to our separate lives.
Copy !req
883. But every night,
we'd meet again in that lobby.
Copy !req
884. A hotel in the middle of the night
can be a magical place.
Copy !req
885. A mouse running, and stopping.
Copy !req
886. A radiator hissing.
Copy !req
887. A curtain blowing.
Copy !req
888. There's something peaceful,
even comforting
Copy !req
889. knowing that the people you love
are asleep in their beds
Copy !req
890. where nothing can harm them.
Copy !req
891. Elizabeth and I would lose track
of the night
Copy !req
892. until just before daybreak.
Copy !req
893. I think I may have given you
the wrong impression.
Copy !req
894. Beg pardon?
Copy !req
895. Well, married women don't customarily
sit around
Copy !req
896. in the middle of the night
with strange men in hotels.
Copy !req
897. I wouldn't know what a married woman
does or doesn't do.
Copy !req
898. Good night.
Copy !req
899. Murmansk.
Copy !req
900. "I've met somebody,
and I've fallen in love."
Copy !req
901. Mom?
Copy !req
902. That was over 60 years ago.
Copy !req
903. Did you love him, Mother?
Copy !req
904. What does a girl know about love?
Copy !req
905. Well...
Copy !req
906. - I'm not dressed.
- Oh, you look splendid, just as you are.
Copy !req
907. Don't waste any time bothering about
the wine or the cheese in Murmansk,
Copy !req
908. 'cause they're really
completely ordinary,
Copy !req
909. but the caviar and the vodka
Copy !req
910. are sublime and plentiful.
Copy !req
911. So.
Copy !req
912. Savor it.
Copy !req
913. And don't eat it all at once,
Copy !req
914. because that way,
there's nothing left to enjoy.
Copy !req
915. And now, take a little swallow of vodka
while it's still in your mouth.
Copy !req
916. You haven't been with many women,
have you?
Copy !req
917. Not on Sundays.
Copy !req
918. And you've never had caviar before,
have you?
Copy !req
919. No, ma'am.
Copy !req
920. When I was 19,
Copy !req
921. I attempted to become the first woman
ever to swim the English Channel.
Copy !req
922. Really?
Copy !req
923. But the current that day
was so strong that,
Copy !req
924. for every stroke I took,
I was pushed back two.
Copy !req
925. I was in the water for 32 hours.
Copy !req
926. And when I was two miles from Calais,
Copy !req
927. it started to rain.
Copy !req
928. That's it! Steady on!
Copy !req
929. When I couldn't go any further,
Copy !req
930. I stopped.
Copy !req
931. I just stopped.
Copy !req
932. And everybody asked me,
would I try again?
Copy !req
933. For why wouldn't l?
Copy !req
934. But I never did.
Copy !req
935. As a matter of fact, I've never done
anything with my life after that.
Copy !req
936. Your hands are so coarse.
Copy !req
937. I can feel the wind in your cheek.
Copy !req
938. I'm afraid it's the witching hour.
Copy !req
939. It was the first time
a woman had ever kissed me.
Copy !req
940. It's something you never forget.
Copy !req
941. I think you make me feel younger.
Copy !req
942. You make me feel years younger, too.
Copy !req
943. I wish I was.
Copy !req
944. So many things I'd change.
Copy !req
945. I'd undo all my mistakes.
Copy !req
946. What mistakes?
Copy !req
947. I kept waiting, you know?
Copy !req
948. Thinking that I'd do something
to change my circumstances.
Copy !req
949. Do something.
Copy !req
950. Such an awful waste.
You never get it back.
Copy !req
951. Wasted time.
Copy !req
952. if we're going to have an affair,
Copy !req
953. you're never to look at me
during the day.
Copy !req
954. And we're always to part before sunrise.
Copy !req
955. And we will never say "l love you."
Copy !req
956. Those are the rules.
Copy !req
957. - Are you cold?
- I'm freezing.
Copy !req
958. Oh, you! You're frozen.
Copy !req
959. What an idiot, I'm standing here
in this fur. How thoughtless of me.
Copy !req
960. She was the first woman
that ever loved me.
Copy !req
961. You want me to skip some?
Copy !req
962. No, I'm glad he had somebody
to keep him warm.
Copy !req
963. "l couldn't wait to see her again."
Copy !req
964. We saw each other every night.
Copy !req
965. We always used the same room.
Copy !req
966. But each time seemed new
and different.
Copy !req
967. Come here.
Copy !req
968. Elizabeth.
Copy !req
969. Good night.
Copy !req
970. Until one night.
Copy !req
971. Yesterday, December 7th, 1941,
Copy !req
972. a date which will live in infamy...
Copy !req
973. It's a meeting, a policy meeting
regarding your future,
Copy !req
974. possibly beyond.
Copy !req
975. There's been a change of plan, lads.
Copy !req
976. As you may or may not know,
Copy !req
977. the Japs bombed
Pearl Harbor yesterday.
Copy !req
978. Frank D. Roosevelt's asked
each of us to do our part.
Copy !req
979. The Chelsea's been commissioned
to serve in the United States Navy.
Copy !req
980. To repair, to salvage, and to rescue.
Copy !req
981. Anybody doesn't want to go to war,
now is the time to say so.
Copy !req
982. Once you set foot on that boat,
you're in the Navy, friend.
Copy !req
983. Yeah, I've been meaning
to talk with you, Mike.
Copy !req
984. My wife's doing poorly.
Copy !req
985. I'd like to maybe see her one more time.
Copy !req
986. You're free to make your way home
any way you can, Mr. Mayes.
Copy !req
987. Well, if he's leaving, who's gonna cook?
Copy !req
988. Food poisoning's one of the leading
causes of death at sea.
Copy !req
989. Right after
inadequate safety equipment.
Copy !req
990. I can cook, Captain.
Been doing it all my life.
Copy !req
991. I don't know.
You're a little moody for war, Benjamin.
Copy !req
992. What the hell?
Copy !req
993. I'll take any man wants to kick the shite
out of the Japs and the Huns.
Copy !req
994. That's it, pack your gear.
We're going to war, gentlemen!
Copy !req
995. She had left a note.
Copy !req
996. She wrote,
"It was nice to have met you."
Copy !req
997. And that was it.
Copy !req
998. It wasn't the war any of us expected.
Copy !req
999. We would just tow crippled ships,
scraps of metal, really.
Copy !req
1000. if there was a war, we didn't see it.
Copy !req
1001. There was a man assigned to us.
The Chief Gunner loved the Navy.
Copy !req
1002. But most of all, he loved America.
Copy !req
1003. There is no other country in the world.
Copy !req
1004. When you spell America...
Copy !req
1005. His name was Dennis Smith,
and he was a full-blooded Cherokee.
Copy !req
1006. His family had been Americans
for over 500 years.
Copy !req
1007. These pacifists.
They say they won't fight on conscience.
Copy !req
1008. Now, where would be
if everybody decided to act
Copy !req
1009. - according to their conscience?
- Keep it down, would you, Chief?
Copy !req
1010. Hey. I've been watching you.
Copy !req
1011. You seem trustworthy.
Copy !req
1012. if something happens to me,
Copy !req
1013. could you see that this gets to my wife?
Copy !req
1014. He'd given me all of his pay.
Hadn't spent a dime of it.
Copy !req
1015. I want my family to know
I was thinking about them.
Copy !req
1016. All hands on deck!
Copy !req
1017. Get your asses up here,
you lazy bastards!
Copy !req
1018. The war had finally found us.
Copy !req
1019. All stop!
Copy !req
1020. Pleasant, man that light.
Copy !req
1021. A transport carrying 1,300 men
had been split by a torpedo.
Copy !req
1022. We were first to arrive at the scene.
Copy !req
1023. - Cut the engines!
- All stop!
Copy !req
1024. We were the only sound.
Copy !req
1025. Fellas!
Copy !req
1026. Sub!
Copy !req
1027. We sure as hell
can't outrun them fuckers.
Copy !req
1028. Battle stations!
Copy !req
1029. Thank you, Chief.
Copy !req
1030. What?
Copy !req
1031. Is that the last one?
Copy !req
1032. Captain!
Copy !req
1033. They shot the hell out of my painting!
Copy !req
1034. Give me your other hand.
Copy !req
1035. You'll be all right, Captain.
Copy !req
1036. They got a nice spot in Heaven
waiting for you. Nice spot.
Copy !req
1037. You can be as mad as a mad dog
at the way things went.
Copy !req
1038. You could swear, curse the Fates.
Copy !req
1039. But when it comes to the end,
Copy !req
1040. you have to let go.
Copy !req
1041. Captain?
Copy !req
1042. Thirteen hundred and twenty eight men
died that day.
Copy !req
1043. I said my goodbyes to the Cherokee,
Dennis Smith.
Copy !req
1044. John Grimm, who was right,
he was gonna die there.
Copy !req
1045. I sent Pleasant Curtis' wife his money.
Copy !req
1046. I said goodbye to the twin, Vic Brody,
Copy !req
1047. and to Mike Clark,
captain of the tugboat Chelsea.
Copy !req
1048. I said goodbye to all the other men
who had dreams of their own,
Copy !req
1049. all the men
who wanted to be insurance salesmen
Copy !req
1050. or doctors or lawyers or lndian chiefs.
Copy !req
1051. This don't get fixed.
Copy !req
1052. Out here, death didn't seem natural.
Copy !req
1053. I'd never seen a hummingbird
that far out to sea.
Copy !req
1054. Before or since.
Copy !req
1055. And in May of 1945,
when I was 26 years old,
Copy !req
1056. I came home.
Copy !req
1057. I'm ready! I'm ready!
Copy !req
1058. I'm coming!
Copy !req
1059. - I'm ready!
- All right, I'm coming, Miss Alfalina.
Copy !req
1060. - Queenie?
- Yes?
Copy !req
1061. Sweet Jesus! Oh, you're home!
Oh, Lord, you came back!
Copy !req
1062. - Let me look at you.
- Who's that, Mama?
Copy !req
1063. - Child, it's your brother, Benjamin.
- I didn't know he was my brother.
Copy !req
1064. There's a shitload of things
you don't know, child.
Copy !req
1065. Get on out there and finish sweeping.
Copy !req
1066. Come here, wash your hands,
help me with the table. Go on, now.
Copy !req
1067. Turn around.
You look like you've been born again.
Copy !req
1068. Younger than the springtime.
Copy !req
1069. I think that preacher laid hands on you
gave you a second life.
Copy !req
1070. I knew it that moment I saw you,
you were special.
Copy !req
1071. I tell you what, my knees are sore,
Copy !req
1072. 'cause I've been on them every night
asking the Lord,
Copy !req
1073. I said,
"God, just bring him home safely."
Copy !req
1074. Remember what I told you?
Copy !req
1075. "You never know
what's coming for you?"
Copy !req
1076. That's right. Sit down.
Copy !req
1077. Well, you learn anything
worth repeating?
Copy !req
1078. - I sure saw some things.
- Oh, you seen some pain.
Copy !req
1079. - Some joy, too?
- Sure. Sure, I did.
Copy !req
1080. Yeah, that's what I want to hear.
Look at you.
Copy !req
1081. - Where's Tizzy?
- Oh, baby.
Copy !req
1082. Mr. Weathers died in his sleep
one night last April.
Copy !req
1083. - Mama, I'm so sorry.
- Don't you worry about that, baby.
Copy !req
1084. Yeah, well, it's only
one or two of them left now.
Copy !req
1085. They all just about new.
Copy !req
1086. Guess they're waiting their turn
like everybody else, huh?
Copy !req
1087. I'm so glad you're back home with me!
Copy !req
1088. Now, we're gonna have to find you
a wife and a new job! That's right.
Copy !req
1089. Come on in here,
help me with this table.
Copy !req
1090. Benjamin.
Copy !req
1091. You're wasting your time, baby.
She's stone deaf.
Copy !req
1092. Oh, and you'll be staying in
what was Mrs. DeSeroux's old room.
Copy !req
1093. You're too big to be rooming
with anybody else.
Copy !req
1094. It's a funny thing about coming home.
Copy !req
1095. Looks the same,
smells the same, feels the same.
Copy !req
1096. Did I ever tell you I've been struck
by lightning seven times?
Copy !req
1097. Once when I was sitting in my truck,
just minding my own business.
Copy !req
1098. You realize what's changed is you.
Copy !req
1099. And late one morning,
not long after I'd been back...
Copy !req
1100. Thank you.
Copy !req
1101. Hey.
Copy !req
1102. - Excuse me, is Queenie here?
- Daisy?
Copy !req
1103. - It's me, Benjamin.
- Benjamin?
Copy !req
1104. Oh, my God!
Copy !req
1105. Of course it's you! Benjamin!
Copy !req
1106. How are you?
It's been such a long time.
Copy !req
1107. There's so much I want to know.
When did you get back?
Copy !req
1108. Well, I got back a few weeks ago.
Copy !req
1109. I spoke to Queenie, she said you were
in the war, somewhere at sea.
Copy !req
1110. - We were so, so worried about you.
- Oh, I'm okay.
Copy !req
1111. Well, look at you. You're so lovely.
Copy !req
1112. You stopped writing.
Copy !req
1113. "When I had left, she was a girl.
And a woman had taken her place.
Copy !req
1114. "She was the most beautiful woman
I'd ever seen."
Copy !req
1115. Beautiful.
Copy !req
1116. "The most beautiful."
Copy !req
1117. - You remember Grandma Fuller?
- Why, sure I do.
Copy !req
1118. - She passed.
- I heard that. I'm sorry.
Copy !req
1119. I just can't believe we're both here.
Must be fate.
Copy !req
1120. No, no, what do they call it?
Copy !req
1121. Kismet.
Copy !req
1122. Do you know about Edgar Cayce,
the psychic?
Copy !req
1123. I don't believe l...
Copy !req
1124. He says
that everything is predetermined,
Copy !req
1125. but I like to think of it as fate.
Copy !req
1126. I'm not sure how it works,
but I'm glad it happened.
Copy !req
1127. Have you been to Manhattan?
It's right across the river from me.
Copy !req
1128. Now, I can see
the Empire State Building
Copy !req
1129. if I stand on my bed.
Copy !req
1130. What about you?
Where have you been?
Copy !req
1131. Tell me everything. Last time you wrote,
you said you'd been to Russia.
Copy !req
1132. I've always wanted to go to Russia.
Is it as cold as they say?
Copy !req
1133. - Twice as cold.
- My goodness.
Copy !req
1134. We always said you were different.
But I think you really are.
Copy !req
1135. You wrote that you met somebody.
Did it work out?
Copy !req
1136. It ran its course.
Copy !req
1137. Hey, do you remember this?
Copy !req
1138. "This is the picture
of Old Man Kangaroo
Copy !req
1139. "at 5:00 in the afternoon."
Copy !req
1140. Would you like to have dinner?
Copy !req
1141. Did I tell you
that I danced for Balanchine?
Copy !req
1142. Oh, he's a famous choreographer.
He said that I had perfect line.
Copy !req
1143. You know, in a rehearsal once,
a dancer fell.
Copy !req
1144. And he just...
He just put it right into the production.
Copy !req
1145. I mean, can you imagine that?
Like in a... In a classical ballet?
Copy !req
1146. You know, a dancer,
intentionally falling.
Copy !req
1147. There's a whole new word
for dance now. It's called "abstract."
Copy !req
1148. No, he's not the only one, though.
Copy !req
1149. There's Lincoln Kirstein
and Lucia Chase, and oh, my...
Copy !req
1150. Oh, there's Agnes de Mille.
Copy !req
1151. She's just torn up all those conventions,
Copy !req
1152. you know,
all that straight-up-and-down stuff.
Copy !req
1153. It's not about the formality of the dance,
it's about what the dancer's feeling.
Copy !req
1154. As she told me
about this big new world,
Copy !req
1155. names that didn't mean a thing to me,
Copy !req
1156. I didn't really hear very much
of what she was saying.
Copy !req
1157. It's new and it's modern
and it's American.
Copy !req
1158. They understand our vigor
and our physicality.
Copy !req
1159. Oh, my God.
I've just been talking and talking.
Copy !req
1160. No, no, I've enjoyed listening.
I didn't know you smoked.
Copy !req
1161. I'm old enough.
Copy !req
1162. I'm old enough for a lot of things.
Copy !req
1163. In New York, we stay up all night,
Copy !req
1164. watch the sun come up
over the warehouses.
Copy !req
1165. There's always something to do.
Copy !req
1166. I have to go back tomorrow.
Copy !req
1167. - So soon.
- Wish I could stay.
Copy !req
1168. Dancers don't need costumes
or scenery anymore.
Copy !req
1169. I can imagine
dancing completely naked.
Copy !req
1170. Have you read D. H. Lawrence?
Copy !req
1171. - Well...
- His books were banned.
Copy !req
1172. The words are like making love.
Copy !req
1173. In our company,
we have to trust each other.
Copy !req
1174. Sex is a part of it.
Copy !req
1175. You know,
a lot of the dancers are lesbians.
Copy !req
1176. There was one woman
who wanted to sleep with me.
Copy !req
1177. - Does that upset you?
- Which part?
Copy !req
1178. Somebody wanting to sleep with me.
Copy !req
1179. You're a desirable woman.
Copy !req
1180. I would think most of them
would want to sleep with you.
Copy !req
1181. Let's go back to the house.
Copy !req
1182. Or we could get a room somewhere.
Copy !req
1183. - We could lay down your jacket.
- I don't know, Daisy.
Copy !req
1184. It's not that I wouldn't like to or anything.
I think I'll just disappoint you.
Copy !req
1185. Oh, Benjamin, I've been with older men.
Copy !req
1186. You're going back to New York
in the morning.
Copy !req
1187. You should be with your friends.
Copy !req
1188. - You're only young once.
- Oh, I'm old enough.
Copy !req
1189. Daisy, just not tonight, is all.
Copy !req
1190. We could go hear some music.
Copy !req
1191. Our lives are defined by opportunities.
Copy !req
1192. Even the ones we miss.
Copy !req
1193. You look so handsome
and so distinguished.
Copy !req
1194. They're saying the hurricane's
gonna miss us, blow right on by.
Copy !req
1195. - Oh, that's great.
- I'll stay under the blankets with Mother.
Copy !req
1196. She says nothing... Benjamin?
Copy !req
1197. "Things were becoming different..."
Copy !req
1198. for me.
Copy !req
1199. My hair had very little gray
and grew like weeds.
Copy !req
1200. My sense of smell was keener.
My hearing, more acute.
Copy !req
1201. I could walk further and faster.
Copy !req
1202. While everybody else was aging,
I was getting younger, all alone.
Copy !req
1203. Come in.
Copy !req
1204. Benjamin.
Copy !req
1205. - Do you remember me?
- Well, sure I do, Mr. Button.
Copy !req
1206. - What happened to you?
- Darn foot. Got infected, so...
Copy !req
1207. Welcome home, my friend.
Copy !req
1208. I see you're still drinking
your Sazerac with whiskey.
Copy !req
1209. Creature of habit.
Copy !req
1210. You still visiting the house
on Bourbon Street?
Copy !req
1211. Not for a long time.
Copy !req
1212. Interesting times, though.
Copy !req
1213. We went from making 40,000
to nearly half a million buttons a day.
Copy !req
1214. We employed 10 times
the number of people.
Copy !req
1215. We were operating around the clock.
Copy !req
1216. Damn shame.
Copy !req
1217. The war has been kind
to the button industry.
Copy !req
1218. You know,
Copy !req
1219. I'm sick.
I don't know how much longer I have.
Copy !req
1220. - I'm sorry to hear that, Mr. Button.
- No...
Copy !req
1221. I don't have any people.
I keep to myself.
Copy !req
1222. I hope you don't mind,
but, whenever possible,
Copy !req
1223. I'd enjoy your company.
Copy !req
1224. I'll certainly do what I can.
Copy !req
1225. Benjamin, do you know anything
about buttons?
Copy !req
1226. Now, Button's Buttons has been
in our family for 124 years.
Copy !req
1227. My grandfather was a tailor,
and he had a small shop in Richmond.
Copy !req
1228. After the Civil War,
he moved to New Orleans,
Copy !req
1229. where my father had the wisdom
to make our own buttons.
Copy !req
1230. So, with his help,
the tailor shop grew to this.
Copy !req
1231. And today, I can't sew a stitch.
Copy !req
1232. That's very, very interesting.
Copy !req
1233. You sure have done well for yourself.
Copy !req
1234. So, what can I do for you, Mr. Button?
Copy !req
1235. Benjamin? You're my son.
Copy !req
1236. I'm so sorry I never told you before.
Copy !req
1237. You were born
the night the Great War ended.
Copy !req
1238. Your mother died giving birth to you.
Copy !req
1239. I thought you were a monster.
Copy !req
1240. I promised your mother
I'd make sure you were safe.
Copy !req
1241. I should never have abandoned you.
Copy !req
1242. My mother?
Copy !req
1243. At the summer house
on Lake Pontchartrain.
Copy !req
1244. When I was a boy,
I'd love to wake up before anyone else,
Copy !req
1245. run down to that lake
and watch the day begin.
Copy !req
1246. It was as if I was the only one alive.
Copy !req
1247. I fell in love the first time I saw her.
Copy !req
1248. Your mother's name
was Caroline Murphy.
Copy !req
1249. She worked
in your grandfather's kitchen.
Copy !req
1250. She's from Dublin.
Copy !req
1251. In 1903, Caroline and all her brothers
and sisters came to live here,
Copy !req
1252. in New Orleans.
Copy !req
1253. I'd find excuses
to go down to that kitchen
Copy !req
1254. just so I could look at her.
Copy !req
1255. April 25th, 1918.
Happiest day of my life.
Copy !req
1256. The day I married your mother.
Copy !req
1257. Why didn't you just tell me?
Copy !req
1258. I plan on leaving everything I have
to you.
Copy !req
1259. - I have to go.
- Where?
Copy !req
1260. Home.
Copy !req
1261. And what does he think, anyway?
Copy !req
1262. He thinks he can just show up
Copy !req
1263. and everything's
supposed to be fine and dandy.
Copy !req
1264. Everybody's just supposed to be friends.
Copy !req
1265. Well, he got another thing coming,
that's for sure.
Copy !req
1266. God be my witness,
he got another thing coming.
Copy !req
1267. He left us $18 that night you was found.
Copy !req
1268. Eighteen ratty dollars
Copy !req
1269. - and a filthy diaper.
- Good night, Mama.
Copy !req
1270. Good night, baby.
Copy !req
1271. Did I ever tell you
I was struck by lightning seven times?
Copy !req
1272. Once, I was walking my dog
down the road.
Copy !req
1273. I'm blind in the one eye,
can't hardly hear,
Copy !req
1274. get twitches and shakes out of nowhere,
always losing my line of thought.
Copy !req
1275. But you know what?
Copy !req
1276. God keeps reminding me
I'm lucky to be alive.
Copy !req
1277. Storm's coming.
Copy !req
1278. May I help you, sir?
Up the stairs, first bedroom.
Copy !req
1279. Thank you.
Copy !req
1280. Wake up.
Copy !req
1281. Let's get you dressed.
Copy !req
1282. Now that's something.
Copy !req
1283. Thank you.
Copy !req
1284. You can be mad as a mad dog
at the way things went.
Copy !req
1285. You can swear and curse the Fates.
Copy !req
1286. But when it comes to the end,
Copy !req
1287. you have to let go.
Copy !req
1288. Well, it sure is a beautiful service.
Copy !req
1289. He'll be buried
right next to your mother.
Copy !req
1290. You're my mother.
Copy !req
1291. My baby.
Copy !req
1292. Now, I'd never seen New York.
Copy !req
1293. - Excuse me, I'm a friend of Daisy's.
- Right this way.
Copy !req
1294. - Daisy has company. Daisy! Daisy!
- Yes!
Copy !req
1295. - We need the wardrobe.
- ls somebody looking for me?
Copy !req
1296. - Benjamin.
- Hi.
Copy !req
1297. - What are you doing here?
- Thought I'd come visit.
Copy !req
1298. Spend some time with you, if I could.
Copy !req
1299. Oh, well, I wish you would've called.
You took me by surprise.
Copy !req
1300. - You can just throw them out.
- No. Thank you, they're lovely.
Copy !req
1301. I couldn't take my eyes off of you.
I thought you were mesmerizing.
Copy !req
1302. Thank you.
That's very kind of you to say.
Copy !req
1303. I better get changed.
A group of us are going to a party.
Copy !req
1304. - Would you want to come?
- Someone told me about a restaurant
Copy !req
1305. I thought you might enjoy.
Copy !req
1306. I made a reservation, just in case.
Copy !req
1307. Just, all the dancers go out
after the show. You're...
Copy !req
1308. You're welcome to come with us.
I'll get changed. All right?
Copy !req
1309. She choreographs
for the Ballets Russes.
Copy !req
1310. She's divine.
Copy !req
1311. You were breathtaking.
Copy !req
1312. Sweetie.
Copy !req
1313. This is David.
He dances with the company.
Copy !req
1314. - This is Benjamin.
- Who?
Copy !req
1315. - I told you about him.
- Oh, yeah. How you doing?
Copy !req
1316. - I'll go get you a drink.
- All right. Thanks.
Copy !req
1317. So, you were a friend
of her grandmother's?
Copy !req
1318. Or something like that?
Copy !req
1319. Something like that.
Copy !req
1320. Hey, excuse me.
Copy !req
1321. Come on.
Copy !req
1322. Hey!
Copy !req
1323. Now, I had no idea you were coming.
Copy !req
1324. Lord, Benjamin.
Copy !req
1325. What did you expect?
What, you want me to drop everything?
Copy !req
1326. Now, this is my life.
Copy !req
1327. Babe! You going downtown?
Copy !req
1328. Come on. You'll have a good time.
Copy !req
1329. There's lots of musicians,
interesting people.
Copy !req
1330. You don't have to do that.
This is my fault.
Copy !req
1331. I should've called.
Copy !req
1332. I thought I'd come here
Copy !req
1333. and sweep you off your feet
or something.
Copy !req
1334. - Daisy! Come on! Let's go.
- Be right there.
Copy !req
1335. Seems nice.
Copy !req
1336. Do you love him?
Copy !req
1337. I think so.
Copy !req
1338. I'm happy for you.
Copy !req
1339. Maybe I'll see you at home.
Copy !req
1340. Okay.
Copy !req
1341. I enjoyed the show!
Copy !req
1342. He came to tell me his father had died.
Copy !req
1343. - You couldn't have known.
- I was 23. l... I just didn't care.
Copy !req
1344. What did you do next?
Copy !req
1345. Some photographs, I think,
in the front of my bag.
Copy !req
1346. I was as good a dancer
as I was ever gonna be.
Copy !req
1347. For five years, l...
Copy !req
1348. I danced everywhere.
Copy !req
1349. London, Vienna, Prague.
Copy !req
1350. I've never seen these.
Copy !req
1351. Mom.
Copy !req
1352. You never talked about your dancing.
Copy !req
1353. Well, I was the only American
Copy !req
1354. to be invited to dance
with the Bolshoi, sugar.
Copy !req
1355. It was glorious.
Copy !req
1356. But Benjamin was never far
from my thoughts.
Copy !req
1357. And I'd find myself saying...
Copy !req
1358. Good night, Benjamin.
Copy !req
1359. - "Good night, Daisy."
- He said that?
Copy !req
1360. "Life wasn't all that complicated.
Copy !req
1361. "if you want, you might say
I was looking for something."
Copy !req
1362. Benjamin?
Mrs. La Tourneau just passed.
Copy !req
1363. - Letter for Mr. Benjamin Button?
- That'd be me.
Copy !req
1364. Thank you.
Copy !req
1365. Miss Daisy Fuller.
Copy !req
1366. - Just a minute. Please have a seat.
- Sure.
Copy !req
1367. Sometimes we're on a collision course
and we just don't know it.
Copy !req
1368. Whether it's by accident or by design,
there's not a thing we can do about it.
Copy !req
1369. A woman in Paris was on her way
to go shopping.
Copy !req
1370. But she had forgotten her coat,
went back to get it.
Copy !req
1371. When she had gotten her coat,
the phone had rung.
Copy !req
1372. So she had stopped to answer it
and talked for a couple of minutes.
Copy !req
1373. While the woman was on the phone,
Copy !req
1374. Daisy was rehearsing for a performance
at the Paris Opera House.
Copy !req
1375. And while she was rehearsing,
the woman, off the phone now,
Copy !req
1376. had gone outside to get a taxi.
Copy !req
1377. Now, a taxi driver had
dropped off a fare earlier,
Copy !req
1378. and had stopped to get a cup of coffee.
Copy !req
1379. And all the while, Daisy was rehearsing.
Copy !req
1380. And this cab driver,
who dropped off the earlier fare
Copy !req
1381. and had stopped
to get the cup of coffee,
Copy !req
1382. he picked up the lady
who was going shopping
Copy !req
1383. and had missed getting the earlier cab.
Copy !req
1384. The taxi had to stop
for a man crossing the street,
Copy !req
1385. who had left for work five minutes later
than he normally did
Copy !req
1386. because he forgot to set his alarm.
Copy !req
1387. While that man, late for work,
was crossing the street,
Copy !req
1388. Daisy had finished rehearsing
and was taking a shower.
Copy !req
1389. And while Daisy was showering,
Copy !req
1390. the taxi was waiting outside a boutique
for the woman to pick up a package
Copy !req
1391. which hadn't been wrapped yet,
Copy !req
1392. because the girl
who was supposed to wrap it
Copy !req
1393. had broken up with her boyfriend
the night before and forgot.
Copy !req
1394. When the package was wrapped,
the woman, who was back in the cab,
Copy !req
1395. was blocked by a delivery truck.
Copy !req
1396. All the while,
Daisy was getting dressed.
Copy !req
1397. The delivery truck pulled away,
and the taxi was able to move
Copy !req
1398. while Daisy, the last to be dressed,
Copy !req
1399. waited for one of her friends
who had broken a shoelace.
Copy !req
1400. While the taxi was stopped,
waiting for a traffic light,
Copy !req
1401. Daisy and her friend
came out the back of the theater.
Copy !req
1402. And if only one thing
had happened differently,
Copy !req
1403. if that shoelace hadn't broken
Copy !req
1404. or that delivery truck
had moved moments earlier
Copy !req
1405. or that package
had been wrapped and ready
Copy !req
1406. because the girl hadn't broken up
with her boyfriend,
Copy !req
1407. or that man had set his alarm
and got up five minutes earlier
Copy !req
1408. or that taxi driver hadn't stopped
for a cup of coffee
Copy !req
1409. or that woman had remembered
her coat and got into an earlier cab,
Copy !req
1410. Daisy and her friend
would have crossed the street
Copy !req
1411. and the taxi would have driven by.
Copy !req
1412. But, life being what it is,
Copy !req
1413. a series of intersecting lives
and incidents
Copy !req
1414. out of anyone's control,
Copy !req
1415. that taxi did not go by,
Copy !req
1416. and that driver was
momentarily distracted.
Copy !req
1417. Daisy!
Copy !req
1418. And that taxi hit Daisy.
Copy !req
1419. Daisy! Help!
Copy !req
1420. And her leg was crushed.
Copy !req
1421. Daisy?
Copy !req
1422. - Who told you?
- Your friend wired me.
Copy !req
1423. Very kind of you to come all this way
to see that I was all right.
Copy !req
1424. You'd do the same for me.
Copy !req
1425. My God.
Copy !req
1426. Look at you. You're perfect.
Copy !req
1427. I wish you hadn't come here.
I don't want you to see me like this.
Copy !req
1428. Her leg had been broken in five places.
Copy !req
1429. And with therapy and time,
she might walk again.
Copy !req
1430. But she'd never dance.
Copy !req
1431. I'm gonna take you home with me.
Copy !req
1432. - I want to look after you.
- I'm not going back to New Orleans.
Copy !req
1433. Then I'll stay here in Paris.
Copy !req
1434. Don't you understand?
I don't want your help.
Copy !req
1435. I know I'm feeling sorry for myself,
but I don't want to be with you.
Copy !req
1436. Tried to tell you that in New York.
You don't listen.
Copy !req
1437. You might change your mind.
Copy !req
1438. We are not little children
anymore, Benjamin.
Copy !req
1439. Just stay out of my life.
Copy !req
1440. I was awfully cruel.
Copy !req
1441. He didn't understand.
I couldn't have him see me like that.
Copy !req
1442. "l didn't leave right away.
Copy !req
1443. "l stayed in Paris for a while
to look out for her."
Copy !req
1444. I never knew that.
Copy !req
1445. Oh, darling, could you get the nurse?
Copy !req
1446. I taught myself to walk again.
Copy !req
1447. I took the train to Lourdes.
Copy !req
1448. Let's take a look. That's normal.
Pulse rate is slowing.
Copy !req
1449. She is gonna struggle to breathe.
Copy !req
1450. - Will you be all right?
- Yeah.
Copy !req
1451. All right, he says, "l went back home."
And then there's a lot of pages torn out.
Copy !req
1452. "l listened to the sound of the house."
I read that already.
Copy !req
1453. He...
Copy !req
1454. He spilt something on it,
so it's hard to read, Mom.
Copy !req
1455. Something about sailing,
does that make sense?
Copy !req
1456. I learned to sail an old boat
of my father's from the lake house.
Copy !req
1457. I can't lie.
Copy !req
1458. I did enjoy the company
of a woman or two.
Copy !req
1459. Or maybe three.
Copy !req
1460. Don't know why you bother, Sam,
just gonna be there again tomorrow.
Copy !req
1461. Mama.
Copy !req
1462. And in the spring of 1962,
Copy !req
1463. she came back.
Copy !req
1464. - You want to know where I've been?
- No.
Copy !req
1465. How come you didn't write or nothing?
Just disappearing like that.
Copy !req
1466. It was something I needed to do
for myself.
Copy !req
1467. Yeah, well, I never took you
to be the selfish type.
Copy !req
1468. I sure hope I'm not wrong.
Copy !req
1469. I'm usually not wrong about people.
Copy !req
1470. - Good night, Mama.
- Good night, baby.
Copy !req
1471. Y'all have fun.
Copy !req
1472. - You haven't said two words.
- I don't want to ruin it.
Copy !req
1473. - Sleep with me?
- Absolutely.
Copy !req
1474. I asked her to come away with me.
Copy !req
1475. We sailed into the Gulf
along the Florida Keys.
Copy !req
1476. I am so glad we didn't find one another
when I was 26.
Copy !req
1477. - Why do you say that?
- I was so young.
Copy !req
1478. And you were so old.
Copy !req
1479. It happened
when it was supposed to happen.
Copy !req
1480. I will enjoy each and every moment
I have with you.
Copy !req
1481. I bet I can stay out here longer than you.
Copy !req
1482. I bet you can't.
Copy !req
1483. Barely a line or a crease.
Copy !req
1484. Every day I have more wrinkles.
It's not fair.
Copy !req
1485. I love your wrinkles. Both of them.
Copy !req
1486. What's it like growing younger?
Copy !req
1487. I can't really say.
I'm always looking out my own eyes.
Copy !req
1488. Will you still love me
when my skin grows old and saggy?
Copy !req
1489. Will you still love me when I have acne?
When I wet the bed?
Copy !req
1490. When I'm afraid
of what's under the stairs?
Copy !req
1491. What?
Copy !req
1492. - What are you thinking?
- Well, I was thinking how nothing lasts.
Copy !req
1493. And what a shame that is.
Copy !req
1494. Some things last.
Copy !req
1495. - Good night, Daisy.
- Good night, Benjamin.
Copy !req
1496. Mom?
Copy !req
1497. - When did you meet Dad?
- Some time after that.
Copy !req
1498. - Did you tell him about this Benjamin?
- He knew enough, darling.
Copy !req
1499. Mama?
Copy !req
1500. Queenie?
Copy !req
1501. Hello?
Copy !req
1502. Oh, hi, Mrs. Carter, it's Benjamin.
Where is everybody?
Copy !req
1503. Oh, Benjamin. Queenie died.
I'm so sorry.
Copy !req
1504. I'm so sorry for your loss.
She was a great woman.
Copy !req
1505. Our deepest condolences.
Copy !req
1506. We buried her
beside her beloved Mr. Weathers.
Copy !req
1507. And so we might have memories
of our own,
Copy !req
1508. we sold my father's house
on Esplanade.
Copy !req
1509. It is a wonderful old place, darling.
Copy !req
1510. I think we are going to be
so happy here.
Copy !req
1511. Oh, what a long family history you have.
Copy !req
1512. They come with the house.
Copy !req
1513. - Come on.
- You have to see the master suite.
Copy !req
1514. We bought ourselves a duplex.
Copy !req
1515. I loved that house.
Copy !req
1516. It smelled like firewood.
Copy !req
1517. Don't... Don't stop, darling.
Copy !req
1518. "It was one of the happiest times
of my life."
Copy !req
1519. We didn't have a stick of furniture.
Copy !req
1520. We would have picnics
in the living room.
Copy !req
1521. We ate when we felt like it.
Stayed up all night when we wanted.
Copy !req
1522. We vowed never to fall into routine,
Copy !req
1523. to go to bed or wake up
at the same time.
Copy !req
1524. We lived on that mattress.
Copy !req
1525. Our neighbor, a Mrs. Van Dam,
was a physical therapist.
Copy !req
1526. We lived four blocks from a public pool.
Copy !req
1527. You know, you might've got
a few more years out of it,
Copy !req
1528. but you chose to do
something so special and unique
Copy !req
1529. that there was only
a short window of time you could do it.
Copy !req
1530. So, even if nothing ever happened,
Copy !req
1531. you'd still be right here
where you are now.
Copy !req
1532. I just don't like getting old.
Copy !req
1533. They put too much chlorine in here.
Copy !req
1534. I promise you I'll never lose myself
to self-pity again.
Copy !req
1535. And I think right there and then
Copy !req
1536. she realized
none of us is perfect forever.
Copy !req
1537. She found peace.
Copy !req
1538. She opened a studio
and taught young girls how to dance.
Copy !req
1539. And tendu.
Copy !req
1540. Come back the other way.
And spot, spot, spot. Excellent.
Copy !req
1541. - Good night, Miss Daisy.
- Good night.
Copy !req
1542. You certainly are beautiful to watch.
Copy !req
1543. Dancing's all about the line.
Copy !req
1544. The line of your body.
Copy !req
1545. Sooner or later, you lose that line,
and you never get it back.
Copy !req
1546. I figure, you were born in 1918,
49 years ago.
Copy !req
1547. I'm 43.
Copy !req
1548. We are almost the same age.
Copy !req
1549. - We're meeting in the middle.
- We finally caught up with each other.
Copy !req
1550. Wait.
Copy !req
1551. I want to remember us
just as we are now.
Copy !req
1552. I'm pregnant.
Copy !req
1553. You know, I swear the nurse slipped
and said it was a boy.
Copy !req
1554. But I think it's a girl.
Copy !req
1555. - I know you're afraid.
- I'm not hiding it.
Copy !req
1556. Okay.
Copy !req
1557. - What's your worst fear?
- Baby born like me.
Copy !req
1558. Then I will love it all the more.
Copy !req
1559. Okay. How can I be a father
when I'm heading in the other direction?
Copy !req
1560. It's not fair to a child.
I don't want to be anybody's burden.
Copy !req
1561. Sugar, we all end up in diapers.
Copy !req
1562. I am gonna make this work.
Copy !req
1563. I want this, and I want it with you.
Copy !req
1564. I want you to have everything you want,
all of it.
Copy !req
1565. I'm just not sure how to reconcile this.
Copy !req
1566. Would you tell a blind man
he couldn't have children?
Copy !req
1567. Here you go.
Copy !req
1568. You'll be a father for as long as you can.
Copy !req
1569. I know the consequences.
I've accepted that.
Copy !req
1570. Loving you is worth everything to me.
Copy !req
1571. I have to go pee.
Copy !req
1572. The oldest woman
to ever swim the English Channel
Copy !req
1573. arrived here today in Calais...
Copy !req
1574. - Keep it.
- ... having made the swim in 34 hours,
Copy !req
1575. 22 minutes and 14 seconds.
Copy !req
1576. The 68-year-old Elizabeth Abbott
arrived at 5:38 Greenwich mean time,
Copy !req
1577. exhausted but happy.
Copy !req
1578. Miss Abbott, how would you sum up,
in words, this achievement?
Copy !req
1579. I suppose...
Copy !req
1580. Anything's possible.
Copy !req
1581. - All right?
- Yes. Thank you.
Copy !req
1582. - You ready?
- Thank you very much.
Copy !req
1583. Thank you. Thank you all.
Copy !req
1584. - Yeah.
- You're very kind.
Copy !req
1585. In the spring, on a day like any other...
Copy !req
1586. I'll be back in an hour!
Copy !req
1587. Honey?
Copy !req
1588. Go and call an ambulance!
Copy !req
1589. The baby's coming.
Copy !req
1590. Operator, I need an ambulance.
Copy !req
1591. - The baby's coming!
- 2714 Napoleon.
Copy !req
1592. There you go. Keep breathing.
Copy !req
1593. Deep breaths. Push.
Copy !req
1594. There we go.
Copy !req
1595. Everyone's fine.
She's a perfectly healthy baby girl.
Copy !req
1596. Honey?
Copy !req
1597. She gave birth to a five pound,
four ounce baby girl.
Copy !req
1598. Did you count the toes?
Copy !req
1599. She's perfect.
Copy !req
1600. "And we named her
for my mother, Caroline."
Copy !req
1601. This Benjamin was my father?
Copy !req
1602. And this is how you tell me?
Copy !req
1603. Excuse me.
Copy !req
1604. because all the ingredients are there
for a major storm,
Copy !req
1605. possibly even up to a Category 5.
Copy !req
1606. Hey, I know it's hard.
You can't smoke in here.
Copy !req
1607. Nobody can tell you exactly
where it's gonna hit,
Copy !req
1608. but we have to go with the guidance
that we have,
Copy !req
1609. incorporate that information
and then pass it along to you.
Copy !req
1610. "You grew as the doctor had promised,
normal and healthy."
Copy !req
1611. You're gonna have to find a real father
for her.
Copy !req
1612. What are you talking about?
Copy !req
1613. She's gonna need someone
to grow old with.
Copy !req
1614. She'll learn to accept
whatever happens. She loves you.
Copy !req
1615. Honey, she needs a father,
not a playmate.
Copy !req
1616. - Is it me?
- Of course not.
Copy !req
1617. - ls my age beginning to bother you?
- Of course not.
Copy !req
1618. - Is that what you're telling me?
- You can't raise the both of us.
Copy !req
1619. It was your first birthday.
We had a party for you.
Copy !req
1620. The house was filled with children.
Copy !req
1621. - How are you?
- Hey, man.
Copy !req
1622. Before you turn around,
they'll be in high school, dating.
Copy !req
1623. I sold the summer house
on Lake Pontchartrain,
Copy !req
1624. I sold Button's Buttons,
Copy !req
1625. I sold my father's sailboat,
put it all into a savings account.
Copy !req
1626. And so that you
and your mother might have a life,
Copy !req
1627. I left,
before you could ever remember me.
Copy !req
1628. "l left with just the clothes on my back."
Copy !req
1629. I don't want to read this now.
Can you just tell me where he went?
Copy !req
1630. I don't really know.
Copy !req
1631. It's for me. 1970. I was two.
"Happy Birthday.
Copy !req
1632. "l wish
I could have kissed you good night."
Copy !req
1633. They're all for me.
Copy !req
1634. Five. "l wish I could have taken you
to your first day of school."
Copy !req
1635. Six. "l wish I could have been there
to teach you to play piano."
Copy !req
1636. 1981, 13.
Copy !req
1637. "l wish I could have told you
not to chase some boy.
Copy !req
1638. "l wish I could have held you
when you had a broken heart.
Copy !req
1639. "l wish I could have been your father.
Nothing I ever did will replace that."
Copy !req
1640. I guess he went to lndia.
Copy !req
1641. "For what it's worth, it's never too late,
Copy !req
1642. - "or, in my case, too early..."
- ... or, in my case, too early,
Copy !req
1643. to be whoever you want to be.
Copy !req
1644. There's no time limit.
Start whenever you want.
Copy !req
1645. You can change or stay the same.
There are no rules to this thing.
Copy !req
1646. We can make the best or the worst of it.
Copy !req
1647. And I hope you make the best of it.
Copy !req
1648. I hope you see things that startle you.
Copy !req
1649. I hope you feel things
you never felt before.
Copy !req
1650. I hope you meet people
with a different point of view.
Copy !req
1651. I hope you live a life you're proud of.
Copy !req
1652. And if you find that you're not,
I hope you have the strength
Copy !req
1653. - to start all over again.
- "... start all over again."
Copy !req
1654. He had been gone a long time.
Copy !req
1655. I'll see you next Thursday.
Copy !req
1656. - Good night, Miss Daisy.
- Oh, good night, sweetheart.
Copy !req
1657. I'm sorry, we're closing.
Copy !req
1658. Can I help you?
Copy !req
1659. Are you here to pick somebody up?
Copy !req
1660. Why did you come back?
Copy !req
1661. Mom?
Copy !req
1662. Mom?
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1663. You ready yet?
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1664. Mom, what's wrong?
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1665. I was just hearing a very sad story
about a mutual friend
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1666. who I hadn't seen for a very long time.
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1667. Caroline, this is Benjamin.
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1668. You knew him
when you were just a baby.
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1669. - Hi.
- Hi.
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1670. Hey.
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1671. - Oh, I'm sorry, I thought you were done.
- Oh, this is a friend of my family's.
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1672. Benjamin Button,
this is my husband, Robert.
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1673. - How do you do?
- A pleasure.
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1674. Well, it was very nice to meet you.
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1675. - We'll be in the car, darling.
- All right.
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1676. Bye.
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1677. I'm just locking up.
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1678. Wow.
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1679. She's beautiful. Like her mother.
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1680. - Does she dance?
- Not very well.
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1681. I guess that'd be
from my side of things.
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1682. She's a dear, sweet girl.
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1683. She seems a little lost.
But then, who isn't at 12?
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1684. A lot of her reminds me of you.
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1685. My husband, he's a widower, or was...
Was a widower.
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1686. He's an incredibly kind, just bright,
adventurous man.
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1687. - He's been a terrific father.
- Good.
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1688. - You are so much younger.
- Only on the outside.
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1689. You were right.
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1690. I couldn't have been raising both of you.
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1691. I'm not that strong.
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1692. So, where are you staying?
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1693. What are you gonna do?
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1694. I'm staying at the Pontchartrain Hotel
on the Avenue.
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1695. I don't know what I'm gonna do.
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1696. But...
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1697. They're waiting.
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1698. I remember that. That was him?
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1699. The hurricane has changed directions.
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1700. It's going to make landfall
sometime soon.
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1701. - Am I supposed to do something?
- Arrangements are being made
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1702. to move people, but it's up to you.
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1703. No. No, we're... We're staying.
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1704. I'll let you know if anything changes.
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1705. "That night, while I was sitting
and wondering why I came back at all,
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1706. "there was a knock at the door."
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1707. Come in.
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1708. Are you all right?
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1709. I'm sorry,
I don't know what I'm doing here.
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1710. Nothing lasts.
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1711. I have never stopped loving you.
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1712. Oh, but, Benjamin,
I'm an old woman now.
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1713. Some things you never forget.
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1714. so few people even know
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1715. that you were ever in jail
in the first place.
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1716. I'll tell you, I am sick about it, too,
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1717. because, please,
if they're not gonna give you an award
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1718. like "Man of the Year,"
at least what they could do
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1719. is stop having you listed
as an ex-convict
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1720. which I think is, again, so unfair.
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1721. Good night, Benjamin.
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1722. Good night, Daisy.
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1723. And as I knew I would,
I watched her go.
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1724. That's the last thing he wrote.
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1725. Sometime after your father passed,
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1726. there was a call.
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1727. Hello.
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1728. Yes, speaking.
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1729. I'm sorry, I don't understand.
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1730. It's the corner house.
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1731. Come on in.
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1732. - I'm Daisy Fuller.
- I'm David Hernandez,
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1733. with the Orleans Parish Department
of Child Welfare Services.
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1734. He was living in a condemned building.
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1735. The police found this with him.
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1736. This address.
It's got your name in it a lot.
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1737. He's in very poor health.
He was taken to the hospital.
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1738. He doesn't seem to know who
or where he is. He's very confused.
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1739. I was telling Mr. Hernandez
that Benjamin is one of us.
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1740. if he needs a place to stay,
it's all right, he can stay here.
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1741. Benjamin?
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1742. You play beautifully.
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1743. He doesn't seem to like to be touched.
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1744. He goes in and out
of states of recognition.
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1745. The doctors say,
if they didn't know any better,
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1746. he has the beginnings of dementia.
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1747. Do you remember me?
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1748. I'm Daisy.
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1749. I'm Benjamin.
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1750. It's nice to meet you, Benjamin.
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1751. Would you mind if I sit with you?
I would love to hear you play.
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1752. Do I know you?
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1753. - I want some breakfast.
- And every day,
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1754. I would stop by to make sure
that he was comfortable.
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1755. - No, I didn't.
- You just finished eating.
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1756. Don't think I don't know
what you're doing!
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1757. You're all fucking liars!
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1758. He doesn't believe
he just had his breakfast.
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1759. Now, why don't we see
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1760. if we can't find something else
for you to do?
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1761. I have a feeling
there's a lot of things I can't remember.
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1762. Well, like what, sugar?
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1763. It's like there's this whole life I had,
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1764. and I can't remember what it was.
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1765. It's okay.
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1766. It's okay to forget things.
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1767. Many times, he would simply forget
who or where he was.
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1768. There he is, he's up there on the roof.
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1769. It wasn't easy.
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1770. - Benjamin!
- I can see everything!
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1771. - I can see the big river!
- That's right,
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1772. you can see everything, sweetheart.
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1773. I can see the graveyard
where Mama's buried,
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1774. - and all those other people.
- I want you to come down!
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1775. - What if I could fly?
- I knew a man who could fly.
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1776. You come down
and I'll tell you all about him.
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1777. Somebody go up there.
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1778. He was five when I moved in.
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1779. Nearly the same age I was
when I had met him.
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1780. "This is the picture
of Old Man Kangaroo
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1781. "at 5:00 in the afternoon
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1782. "when he had got
his beautiful hind legs."
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1783. The days passed.
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1784. And I watched as he forgot how to walk
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1785. - and how to talk.
- What's my name?
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1786. I'm Daisy.
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1787. Can you say "Daisy"?
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1788. In 2002, they put up a new clock
in that train station.
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1789. And in the spring of 2003,
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1790. he looked at me
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1791. and I knew that he knew who I was.
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1792. And then he closed his eyes
as if to go to sleep.
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1793. - I wish I'd known him.
- Now you do.
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1794. Mom, I think I should go see
what's going on.
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1795. Good night, Benjamin.
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1796. We're expecting flash flooding
after the levee break.
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1797. It occurred in the Ninth Ward.
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1798. Some people are born to sit by a river.
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1799. Some get struck by lightning.
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1800. Some have an ear for music.
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1801. Some are artists.
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1802. Some swim.
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1803. Some know buttons.
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1804. Some know Shakespeare.
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