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The Iceman Cometh (1973)

  • 2:25 - 2:28
    (liquid dripping)
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    (loud snoring)
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    Make it fast.
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    Don't want the boys
    to get wise.
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    Jees!
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    (laughs)
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    Ain't the old bastard
    a riot
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    when he starts
    that bull about
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    "turnin' over a new leaf"?
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    "Not a damn drink
    on the house," he tells me,
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    "and all these bums have gotta
    pay up their room rent
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    beginning tomorrow,"
    he says.
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    (both men laughing)
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    I'm glad to pay up...
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    tomorrow.
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    And I know my fellow inmates
    will promise the same.
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    They've all
    a touching credulity
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    concerning tomorrows.
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    It'll be a great day
    for them tomorrow,
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    The Feast of All Fools.
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    And their ships will come in
    loaded to the gunwales,
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    with cancelled regrets
    and promises fulfilled,
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    and clean slates
    and new leases.
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    Yeah, and a ton of hope!
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    Don't mock their faith.
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    You no respect
    for religion,
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    you unregenerate Wop?
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    What does it matter
    if the truth is
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    that their favoring breeze
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    will have the stink
    of nickel whiskey
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    on its breath?
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    And their sea
    will be a growler
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    of lager and ale?
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    And their ships will long since
    be looted and scuttled,
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    and sunk
    on the bottom?
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    The hell with the truth.
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    The history of the world
    proves that truth
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    has no bearing
    on anything.
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    It's the lie of the pipe dream
    that gives life to the whole
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    misbegotten mad lot of us,
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    drunk or sober.
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    The old Foolosopher,
    like Hickey calls you.
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    I suppose you don't fall
    for no pipe dreams.
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    No, I don't.
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    Mine are dead and buried
    behind me.
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    What's before me
    is the fact
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    that death
    is a fine long sleep.
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    I'm damn tired,
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    and it can't come
    too soon for me.
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    Yeah, just hangin' around,
    hopin' you croak, ain't you?
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    Well, I'm bettin' you have
    a good long wait.
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    Jees, somebody'd have
    to take an ax to croak you!
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    (both chuckling)
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    Yeah, it's my bad luck to be
    cursed with an iron constitution
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    that even Harry's booze
    can't corrode.
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    The old Anarchist wise guy
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    that knows
    all the answers.
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    Forget the anarchist
    part of it.
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    I'm through with
    the Movement long since.
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    I saw that,
    if men wanted to be safe
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    from themselves,
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    that would mean they'd
    have to give up greed.
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    I wouldn't pay
    that price for liberty.
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    So I said to the world,
    "God bless all here
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    "and may
    the best man win...
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    and die of gluttony."
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    I took a seat
    in the grand stand
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    of philosophical detachment.
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    Fall asleep
    observing the cannibals
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    do their death dance.
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    Ain't I telling him
    the truth, Comrade Hugo?
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    Oh, for Chrissake!
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    Don't get
    that bughouse bum started!
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    (thick Russian accent)
    Capitalist swine!
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    Bourgeois stool pigeons!
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    Have the slaves
    no right to sleep even?
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    (giggling)
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    Hello, little Rocky,
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    little monkey face!
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    Where are your little
    slave girls?
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    (giggles)
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    Don't be a fool,
    loan me a dollar!
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    Damned bourgeois Wop!
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    Buy me a drink!
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    (snoring)
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    He's out again.
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    He's lucky no one don't take
    his cracks serious,
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    or he'd wake up every morning
    in a hospital.
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    "Nobody takes him
    seriously?"
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    That's his epitaph.
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    I've been through with
    the Movement long since.
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    It's been through with him.
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    And thanks to whiskey,
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    He's the only one
    that doesn't know it.
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    He's goin' to pull that
    slave girl stuff on me
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    once too often.
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    Hell, you'd think
    I was a pimp or somethin'.
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    A pimp don't hold a job.
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    I'm a bartender!
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    Them tarts,
    Margie and Pearl,
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    they're just a sideline
    to pick up some extra dough.
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    Strictly business,
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    like they were fighters
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    and I was their
    manager, see?
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    I fixed the cops for them,
    so they can hustle
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    without gettin' pinched.
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    And I don't beat 'em up
    like a pimp would.
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    They like me!
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    What if I,
    I take their money?
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    Tarts can't hang on
    to dough.
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    But I'm a bartender
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    and I work hard
    for my living
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    in this dump.
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    Shrewd businessman
    who doesn't miss
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    an opportunity
    to get on in the world, huh?
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    And that's me;
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    grab another ball,
    Larry.
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    You'd never think
    all these bums
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    had a bed upstairs
    to go to.
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    Scared if
    they hit the hay
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    they wouldn't be here
    when Hickey showed up,
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    and they'd miss
    a couple of drinks.
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    Me, it's not so much
    the hope of booze,
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    but I've got the blues.
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    And Hickey's a great one
    to make a joke of everything
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    and cheer you up.
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    Yes, some kidder!
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    Remember how he works up
    that gag about his wife
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    when he's cockeyed?
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    Crying over a picture
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    and then spilling in
    on you all of a sudden
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    that he left her in the hay
    with the iceman?
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    (chuckles)
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    Yeah, I wonder
    what's happenin'.
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    You could set your watch
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    by his periodicals
    before this.
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    We always got here
    a couple of days
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    before Harry's
    birthday party,
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    and now he's only got
    'till tonight to make it.
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    This dump...
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    (chuckles)
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    is like a morgue with
    all these bums passed out.
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    It's a lie, Papa!
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    (sobbing)
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    Papa!
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    Poor devil.
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    Ah, the hell with pity!
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    It does no good,
    I'm through with it.
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    Dreamin' about
    his old man.
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    From what
    the old timers say,
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    the old gent
    sure made a pile of dough
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    on a bucket-shop game
    before the cops got him.
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    Jees!
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    I've seen him bad before
    but never this bad.
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    Look at that get-up.
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    Sold his suit and shoes
    at Solly's two days ago.
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    Solly give him two bucks
    and a bum outfit.
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    Yesterday he sells the bum
    one back to Solly
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    for four bits
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    and gets these rags
    to put out,
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    now he's through.
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    That's Solly's
    final edition
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    and he wouldn't take back
    for nothin'.
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    Willie sure is
    on the bottom.
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    I ain't never seen
    no one so bad except Hickey
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    on end of a couple
    of his bats.
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    It's a great game,
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    the pursuit of happiness.
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    I don't even know
    what to do about him.
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    He called up
    his old lady's lawyer,
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    like he always does
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    when Willie gets licked.
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    You remember,
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    they used to send down
    a private dick
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    to give him
    the rush to a cure.
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    But the lawyer
    tells Harry nix.
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    The old lady is off of Willie
    for keeps this time,
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    and he can go to hell.
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    (grunting)
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    There's a consolation
    he hasn't got far to go.
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    Ahhhh!
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    It's a goddamned lie!
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    Nix, nix!
    Oh, papa!
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    Hey, you, nix!
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    Cut out the noise!
    Oh, Jesus, papa!
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    Shhh!
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    Cut out the...
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    Who's that yelling?
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    Willie, boss,
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    the Brooklyn boys
    is after him.
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    Then why don't you give
    the poor fella a drink
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    and keep him quiet?
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    Bejees, can't I get a wink
    of sleep in my own back room?
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    Listen to the blind-eyed
    old bastard, would you?
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    He give me strict orders
    not to let Willie
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    hang up no more drinks,
    no matter what...
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    What's that?
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    I can't hear ya.
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    You're a cockeyed liar.
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    Never refused a drink
    to anyone
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    needed bad in my life.
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    Told you to use
    your judgment!
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    You're too busy
    thinkin' up ways to cheat me.
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    And I ain't as blind
    as ya think.
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    I can still see
    a cash register, bejees.
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    Oh, sure boss,
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    swell chance
    of foolin' you.
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    I'm wise to you
    and your sidekick, Chuck.
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    Bejees, you're burglars,
    not barkeeps!
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    You'd steal the pennies
    of your dead mother's eyes.
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    I'll fire both of you.
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    No one never played
    Harry Hope for a sucker.
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    No one but everybody.
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    The least you could do
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    is keep things quiet.
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    Give me a drink,
    Rocky.
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    Harry said
    it was all right.
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    God, I need a drink.
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    Then grab it,
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    it's right under your nose.
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    Thank you.
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    When!
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    When!
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    I didn't say
    "Take a bath!"
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    Jees, look!
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    He's killed
    a half pint or more!
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    Leave him be,
    the poor devil.
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    (belches)
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    A half pint of
    that dynamite in one swig
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    will fix him for a while,
    if it doesn't kill him.
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    All right by me,
    it ain't my booze.
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    Who-whose booze?
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    Give me some!
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    Where's Hickey?
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    What time is it,
    Rocky?
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    Getting near time
    to open up.
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    Time you begun
    to sweep up in the bar.
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    Never mind the time.
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    If Hickey ain't come,
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    it's time Joe
    went to sleep again.
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    Hey...
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    I got a idea!
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    Say, Larry,
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    what about
    that young guy, Parritt?
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    Come look you up last night
    and rented a room.
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    He's upstairs asleep.
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    No hope there, Joe,
    he's broke.
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    Me and Rocky
    know different.
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    He had a roll when he
    paid you his room rent.
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    Didn't he, Rocky?
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    Yeah, he flashed it
    like he forgot
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    and then
    tried to hide it quick.
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    He did, did he?
    Yeah.
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    I figured
    he don't belong,
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    but he said he was
    a friend of yours.
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    He's a liar!
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    Ah, it's true, his...
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    his mother and I
    were friends
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    a few years ago
    on the coast.
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    Did you read in the papers
  • 14:19 - 14:20
    about that
    bombing on the coast
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    where a few people
    were killed?
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    Well, the one woman
    they pinched,
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    Rosa Parritt,
    is his mother.
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    They'll be coming up
    for trial soon,
  • 14:29 - 14:30
    they haven't got a chance.
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    She'll get life.
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    I'm telling you all this
    so you'll know why,
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    if Don acts a bit queer
    and not jump on him.
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    He's her only kid.
  • 14:40 - 14:42
    Why ain't he out there
    stickin' by her?
  • 14:42 - 14:44
    Must be a good reason.
  • 14:44 - 14:46
    I get it.
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    Then what kind of a sap is he
    to hang on to his right name?
  • 14:48 - 14:50
    I'm telling you,
    I don't know.
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    And I don't want to know!
  • 14:53 - 14:54
    The hell with the Movement
  • 14:54 - 14:56
    and everybody
    connected with it.
  • 14:56 - 14:58
    (laughing)
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    If there's one thing
    more than another
  • 15:04 - 15:06
    I can't stand
  • 15:06 - 15:07
    it's the sucker game
  • 15:07 - 15:10
    you and Hugo calls
    "Movement."
  • 15:11 - 15:14
    Reminds me of
    a damn full argument
  • 15:14 - 15:17
    me and Mose Porter
    had the other night.
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    He's drunk
    and I'm drunker,
  • 15:19 - 15:20
    and he says,
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    "Socialists and anarchists,
    we ought to shoot 'em dead."
  • 15:23 - 15:24
    I-I said:
    "Hold on, hold on."
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    "You talk as if
    the socialists"
  • 15:27 - 15:29
    "and anarchists
    was the same thing."
  • 15:29 - 15:31
    "Anarchist..."
  • 15:31 - 15:33
    "never works."
  • 15:33 - 15:35
    "He drinks,
    he never buys,"
  • 15:35 - 15:38
    and if you do ever
    get a nickel,
  • 15:38 - 15:39
    "he blows it on bombs,
  • 15:39 - 15:41
    "but he wouldn't
    give you nothin'.
  • 15:41 - 15:43
    "So you can go ahead
    and shoot him.
  • 15:43 - 15:45
    "But, uh, socialists...
  • 15:45 - 15:48
    "sometimes he gets a job.
  • 15:48 - 15:50
    "If he gives 10 bucks,
  • 15:50 - 15:52
    "he's bound
    by his religion
  • 15:52 - 15:55
    "to split it with ya
    50-50.
  • 15:55 - 15:57
    "So you don't shoot
    no socialist
  • 15:57 - 15:59
    "while I'm around.
  • 15:59 - 16:01
    "Of course,
    if they broke,
  • 16:01 - 16:04
    then they're no-good,
    bastards, too."
  • 16:04 - 16:06
    (giggling)
  • 16:07 - 16:09
    Be God, Joe!
  • 16:10 - 16:13
    You've got all
    the beauty of human nature
  • 16:13 - 16:14
    and the practical wisdom
    of the world
  • 16:14 - 16:15
    in that little parable.
  • 16:15 - 16:17
    (laughing)
    Sure.
  • 16:17 - 16:19
    Larry ain't the only
    wise guy in this dump.
  • 16:19 - 16:21
    Eh, Joe?
  • 16:21 - 16:22
    Here's your guy.
  • 16:26 - 16:29
    Hello, Larry.
  • 16:29 - 16:30
    Hello.
  • 16:30 - 16:32
    What's up?
  • 16:32 - 16:34
    Thought you'd be asleep.
  • 16:34 - 16:36
    I couldn't make it,
  • 16:36 - 16:39
    I, uh, thought I might see
    if you were around.
  • 16:39 - 16:41
    Well...
  • 16:41 - 16:43
    sit down
    and join the bums then.
  • 16:56 - 16:58
    The rules of the house
    are that drinks may be served
  • 16:58 - 16:59
    at all hours.
  • 17:04 - 17:06
    Oh, I get you but, uh,
    hell, I'm just about broke.
  • 17:13 - 17:15
    Oh, I know,
    you guys saw...
  • 17:16 - 17:18
    You think I have a roll,
    don't you?
  • 17:18 - 17:19
    Well, I'll show you
    you're wrong.
  • 17:19 - 17:20
    You see?
  • 17:20 - 17:22
    They're all one's.
  • 17:22 - 17:25
    See, I've got to live on this
    'till I get a job.
  • 17:29 - 17:31
    So you think I made
    up a phony, don't you?
  • 17:31 - 17:33
    Well, why the hell
    would I do that?
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    Where would I get
    a roll anyway?
  • 17:37 - 17:39
    You don't get rich doin'
    what I've been doin', ask Larry.
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    You're lucky in the Movement,
    you get enough to eat.
  • 17:42 - 17:44
    What's the song
    and dance about?
  • 17:44 - 17:46
    We ain't said nothin'.
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    Oh... Oh, I was just tryin'
    to put you right.
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    Hey, I don't want you
    to think I'm a tightwad.
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    I'll buy you a drink
    if you want one.
  • 17:53 - 17:54
    "If?"
  • 17:54 - 17:55
    Man, if I don't want
    a drink,
  • 17:55 - 17:57
    you call the morgue
    and you tell them.
  • 17:57 - 17:58
    "Come take
    Joe's body away,
  • 17:58 - 18:00
    'cause he sure look dead."
  • 18:00 - 18:01
    Now gimme the bottle,
    quick, Rocky,
  • 18:01 - 18:03
    before he changes
    his mind.
  • 18:03 - 18:05
    I'll take a cigar
    when I go in the bar.
  • 18:07 - 18:08
    What are you havin'?
  • 18:08 - 18:09
    Oh, nothin',
    I'm on the wagon.
  • 18:09 - 18:11
    What's the damage?
  • 18:11 - 18:12
    15 cents.
  • 18:14 - 18:16
    That must be some booze.
  • 18:16 - 18:18
    It's cyanide
    cut with carbolic acid,
  • 18:18 - 18:21
    to give it a mellow flavor.
  • 18:21 - 18:22
    Here's luck.
  • 18:33 - 18:35
    I guess I'll get back
    in the bar
  • 18:35 - 18:36
    and catch
    a couple of winks
  • 18:36 - 18:38
    before opening up time.
  • 18:42 - 18:44
    One-drink guy.
  • 18:46 - 18:49
    No hope till
    Harry's birthday party,
  • 18:49 - 18:50
    unless Hickey
    shows up.
  • 18:52 - 18:53
    If Hickey
    do come later,
  • 18:53 - 18:55
    you wake me up
  • 18:55 - 18:57
    if you have to bat me
    with a chair.
  • 18:57 - 18:59
    (laughing)
  • 19:07 - 19:08
    Who's Hickey?
  • 19:08 - 19:10
    A hardware drummer.
  • 19:11 - 19:13
    He's an old friend
    of Harry Hope's
  • 19:13 - 19:15
    and all the gang.
  • 19:15 - 19:17
    He's a grand guy.
  • 19:17 - 19:19
    Comes here twice
    a year regularly
  • 19:19 - 19:21
    on a periodical drunk,
  • 19:21 - 19:23
    and blows in
    all his dough.
  • 19:25 - 19:27
    He doesn't run into anyone
    he knows in his business here.
  • 19:27 - 19:29
    Oh, yes, that's what
    I want, too, Larry.
  • 19:29 - 19:31
    But like I told you
    last night,
  • 19:31 - 19:33
    I gotta stay undercover.
  • 19:34 - 19:36
    You did a lot of hinting,
  • 19:36 - 19:38
    but you didn't
    tell me anything.
  • 19:39 - 19:41
    Well, you can guess,
    can't you?
  • 19:41 - 19:42
    So what kind
    of joint is this, anyway?
  • 19:42 - 19:43
    This?
  • 19:44 - 19:47
    This is
    "No Chance Saloon,".
  • 19:47 - 19:49
    "Bedrock Bar,."
  • 19:49 - 19:51
    "End of The Line Café,."
  • 19:51 - 19:54
    "The Bottom of the Sea
    Rathskeller."
  • 19:54 - 19:56
    Don't you notice
    the beautiful calm
  • 19:56 - 19:58
    in the atmosphere?
  • 19:58 - 20:00
    That's because
    this is the last harbor.
  • 20:02 - 20:04
    No one here has to worry about
    where they're going next,
  • 20:04 - 20:07
    'cause they can
    go no further.
  • 20:07 - 20:08
    Although even here
  • 20:08 - 20:10
    they keep up
    the appearance of life
  • 20:10 - 20:12
    with a few harmless
    pipe dreams
  • 20:12 - 20:14
    about their yesterdays
    and tomorrows.
  • 20:16 - 20:18
    What's your
    pipe dream, Larry?
  • 20:18 - 20:21
    Oh, I'm the exception...
  • 20:21 - 20:23
    I haven't any left,
    thank God.
  • 20:24 - 20:26
    Don't complain
    about this place,
  • 20:26 - 20:28
    you couldn't find a better
    for lying low.
  • 20:28 - 20:30
    Oh, I'm glad of that.
  • 20:30 - 20:33
    I got, uh,
    knocked off base
  • 20:33 - 20:35
    by that business
    in the coast.
  • 20:35 - 20:37
    Since then it's been no fun
    dodging around the country
  • 20:37 - 20:39
    thinking every guy you see
    might be a dick.
  • 20:39 - 20:41
    You're safe here,
  • 20:41 - 20:43
    cops ignore this dump.
  • 20:43 - 20:44
    (sighs)
  • 20:44 - 20:46
    They think it's
    as harmless as a graveyard.
  • 20:46 - 20:48
    And be God, you know,
    they're right.
  • 20:50 - 20:52
    And it's been lonely as hell.
  • 20:54 - 20:56
    Christ, I'm glad
    I found you, Larry.
  • 20:56 - 20:58
    You know, I kept,
    I kept saying to myself:
  • 20:58 - 20:59
    If I can just find Larry,
    he's the one guy in the world
  • 20:59 - 21:01
    who can understand.
  • 21:01 - 21:02
    "Understand" what?
  • 21:04 - 21:05
    All I've been through.
  • 21:09 - 21:11
    Oh...
  • 21:11 - 21:13
    Oh, now you're thinking,
    "This guy has a hell of a nerve.
  • 21:13 - 21:16
    I haven't seen him
    since he was a kid."
  • 21:16 - 21:17
    Well, I've never
    forgotten you, Larry.
  • 21:19 - 21:21
    You're the one
    friend of mother's
  • 21:21 - 21:23
    who ever paid any
    attention to me.
  • 21:23 - 21:25
    I remember you used
    to ask me questions,
  • 21:25 - 21:26
    you took what I said
    seriously?
  • 21:28 - 21:30
    I guess I got the feeling
    in the years you lived with us,
  • 21:30 - 21:31
    you'd sort-of, you know,
    taken the place of my old man.
  • 21:31 - 21:33
    I don't suppose
    you remember it.
  • 21:33 - 21:35
    Ah, I remember it
    very well.
  • 21:37 - 21:39
    You were a lonely,
    serious little shaver then.
  • 21:42 - 21:44
    Why didn't they
    pick you up
  • 21:44 - 21:45
    when they got your mother
    and the rest?
  • 21:45 - 21:47
    Oh, I wasn't around.
  • 21:47 - 21:49
    And, as soon as
    I heard the news,
  • 21:49 - 21:50
    I went under cover.
  • 21:50 - 21:52
    You've noticed
    my glad rags here,
  • 21:52 - 21:54
    well, I will stake to them
    as a disguise,
  • 21:54 - 21:56
    and then I, you know,
    hung around gambling joints
  • 21:56 - 21:58
    and pool halls,
    and hooker shops.
  • 21:58 - 22:00
    Places where they wouldn't
    look for a Wobblie.
  • 22:00 - 22:02
    By pretending I was a...
  • 22:02 - 22:04
    a sport.
  • 22:04 - 22:05
    Anyway, they picked up
    everybody who was,
  • 22:05 - 22:07
    you know, really important,
    so I guess they didn't
  • 22:07 - 22:10
    think about me
    till afterwards.
  • 22:10 - 22:12
    Like you say,
    the cops got them.
  • 22:13 - 22:16
    The Burns dicks
    knew every move before hand.
  • 22:18 - 22:20
    Somebody in the movement
    must have sold out
  • 22:20 - 22:21
    and tipped them off.
  • 22:23 - 22:25
    Yeah, it hasn't come out
    who it was yet,
  • 22:25 - 22:27
    it may never come out.
  • 22:27 - 22:29
    I guess who it was must've made
    a bargain with the Burns men
  • 22:29 - 22:31
    to keep him out of it.
  • 22:31 - 22:33
    Be God...
  • 22:33 - 22:36
    I hate to believe
    it'd be any of that crowd.
  • 22:36 - 22:38
    All I know,
    they were damned fools!
  • 22:38 - 22:41
    As stupidly greedy for power
    as any capitalist they attacked,
  • 22:41 - 22:44
    but I'd have sworn there
    wasn't a yellow stool pigeon
  • 22:44 - 22:45
    among 'em.
  • 22:45 - 22:48
    Yeah, they'd sworn
    that, too, Larry.
  • 22:48 - 22:50
    I hope his soul
    rots in hell,
  • 22:50 - 22:51
    whoever it is.
  • 22:51 - 22:53
    Yes, so do I.
  • 22:56 - 22:59
    How did you locate me?
  • 22:59 - 23:00
    Oh, through mother.
  • 23:02 - 23:03
    I told her
    not to tell anyone.
  • 23:03 - 23:05
    Oh, uh, no,
    she didn't tell me,
  • 23:05 - 23:07
    but she kept
    all your letters.
  • 23:07 - 23:09
    I found where
    she'd hid them,
  • 23:09 - 23:11
    and I sneaked up there
    after she was arrested.
  • 23:15 - 23:16
    Never would've thought
    she was a woman
  • 23:16 - 23:18
    who kept letters.
  • 23:18 - 23:20
    No, I wouldn't either.
  • 23:20 - 23:23
    There's nothing soft
    or sentimental about mother.
  • 23:23 - 23:25
    I haven't written her
    for two years,
  • 23:25 - 23:26
    or anyone else.
  • 23:29 - 23:32
    You know, it's funny she kept
    in touch with you for so long.
  • 23:33 - 23:35
    When she's finished with someone
    she's finished with them.
  • 23:35 - 23:38
    And you know how she feels
    about the Movement.
  • 23:38 - 23:39
    Anyone that loses
    their faith in it
  • 23:39 - 23:40
    is more than dead to her.
  • 23:43 - 23:44
    Yet she seemed
    to forgive you.
  • 23:44 - 23:46
    She didn't.
  • 23:46 - 23:48
    She wrote to denounce me,
  • 23:48 - 23:50
    and bring the sinner
    to repentance.
  • 23:53 - 23:55
    Well, then what made you leave
    the Movement, Larry?
  • 23:55 - 23:57
    Was it on mother's account?
  • 23:57 - 24:00
    Who the hell put that idea
    in your head?
  • 24:00 - 24:02
    Well, nothing,
    it's just I remember that,
  • 24:02 - 24:03
    little fight you had with her
    just before you left.
  • 24:03 - 24:06
    Well, if you do I don't,
    that was 11 years ago.
  • 24:06 - 24:09
    You were only
    seven years old.
  • 24:09 - 24:10
    If we quarreled
  • 24:10 - 24:12
    it was because I told her
    I became convinced
  • 24:12 - 24:13
    that the Movement
  • 24:13 - 24:16
    was a beautiful
    pipe dream.
  • 24:18 - 24:21
    Oh, I don't remember it
    that way.
  • 24:21 - 24:22
    Well, blame it on
    your imagination
  • 24:22 - 24:24
    and forget it.
  • 24:26 - 24:28
    You asked me
    why I quit the Movement.
  • 24:28 - 24:31
    I had a lot of good reasons.
  • 24:31 - 24:32
    One was myself,
  • 24:32 - 24:35
    another was my comrades.
  • 24:35 - 24:38
    And the last
    was that breed of swine
  • 24:38 - 24:40
    called "men in general."
  • 24:40 - 24:43
    As for myself...
  • 24:43 - 24:44
    I'd become convinced
  • 24:44 - 24:46
    after 30 years
    of devotion to the cause
  • 24:46 - 24:49
    that I wasn't made for it.
  • 24:49 - 24:52
    I was born condemned
    to see both sides of a question.
  • 24:54 - 24:57
    And when
    you're damned that way...
  • 24:57 - 24:59
    the questions multiply
    until the end,
  • 24:59 - 25:01
    they're all questions
  • 25:01 - 25:02
    and no answers.
  • 25:04 - 25:05
    As history proves,
  • 25:05 - 25:07
    to be a worldly success
    at anything
  • 25:07 - 25:09
    especially revolution,
  • 25:09 - 25:11
    you've got to wear
    blinders like a horse
  • 25:11 - 25:13
    and only see
    what's straight ahead of you.
  • 25:15 - 25:17
    As for
    my comrades
  • 25:17 - 25:20
    in the great cause,
  • 25:20 - 25:23
    I've thought about them as
    Horace Walpole did about England
  • 25:23 - 25:24
    when he said
    he could love it,
  • 25:24 - 25:26
    if it wasn't for
    the people in it.
  • 25:26 - 25:28
    (laughing)
  • 25:28 - 25:30
    Well, that's why
    I quit the cause.
  • 25:30 - 25:32
    You see, it had nothing
    to do with your mother.
  • 25:32 - 25:33
    Well, but I bet mother
    always thought
  • 25:33 - 25:34
    it was on her account.
  • 25:34 - 25:36
    I mean, you know her, Larry,
    to hear her go on sometimes
  • 25:36 - 25:38
    you'd think
    she was the Movement.
  • 25:38 - 25:40
    That's a hell of a thing to say
    after what happened to her.
  • 25:40 - 25:42
    Oh, no,
    it wasn't sneering.
  • 25:42 - 25:44
    I said the same thing to her
    lots of times,
  • 25:44 - 25:45
    you know, to kid her.
  • 25:47 - 25:50
    I know I shouldn't now,
    but I keep forgetting
  • 25:50 - 25:52
    she's jail, she...
  • 25:52 - 25:55
    seemed so real to me,
    she's always been so free.
  • 25:58 - 26:01
    I don't want to even
    wanna think about it.
  • 26:04 - 26:07
    So what have you been doing
    all these years since you le...
  • 26:07 - 26:09
    ah, you know,
    left the coast, Larry?
  • 26:09 - 26:11
    I've been a
    philosophical drunken bum,
  • 26:11 - 26:13
    and proud of it.
  • 26:15 - 26:16
    I hope you've deduced
  • 26:16 - 26:18
    why I answer a lot
    of impertinent questions
  • 26:18 - 26:20
    from a total stranger.
  • 26:20 - 26:22
    For that's all you are to me.
  • 26:22 - 26:25
    I have a hunch you came
    to get something from me.
  • 26:25 - 26:28
    Well, I have no answers, no,
    not even for myself.
  • 26:28 - 26:30
    Unless you can call
  • 26:30 - 26:33
    what Heine wrote in his poem
    to Morphine an answer.
  • 26:34 - 26:36
    "Lo, sleep is good,
  • 26:36 - 26:38
    "better is death.
  • 26:38 - 26:40
    "In sooth,
    the best of all,
  • 26:40 - 26:42
    were never to be born."
  • 26:44 - 26:46
    That's a hell of an answer.
  • 26:52 - 26:55
    Still, you never may know
    when it might come in handy.
  • 26:57 - 26:58
    I don't suppose
    you've had a chance
  • 26:58 - 27:01
    to get any news of your mother
    since she was in jail?
  • 27:01 - 27:02
    Oh, no, no chance.
  • 27:02 - 27:05
    Anyway, I don't think
    she really wants to talk to me.
  • 27:05 - 27:06
    See, we got in this fight
  • 27:06 - 27:09
    just before
    that business happened.
  • 27:09 - 27:11
    She bawled me out because
    I was going around with tarts.
  • 27:11 - 27:14
    I told her, "You always acted
    the free woman",
  • 27:14 - 27:15
    you've never let
    anything stop you."
  • 27:17 - 27:20
    Anyway, she told me that she
    didn't give a damn what I did,
  • 27:20 - 27:22
    except she began to suspect
    that I was losing interest
  • 27:22 - 27:23
    in the Movement.
  • 27:23 - 27:26
    And where you?
    Sure I was.
  • 27:29 - 27:31
    I couldn't go on forever
    believing that gang
  • 27:31 - 27:33
    was gonna change the world
    by shooting off their loud traps
  • 27:33 - 27:35
    on soap boxes, sneaking around
    trying to blow up a bridge
  • 27:35 - 27:36
    or a lousy building.
  • 27:40 - 27:42
    And then I finally got wise
  • 27:42 - 27:44
    that it was all
    a crazy pipe dream.
  • 27:47 - 27:49
    And then this business
    of someone selling out,
  • 27:49 - 27:52
    that's what finished me off.
  • 27:58 - 28:01
    You can understand
    how I feel, can't you, Larry?
  • 28:03 - 28:06
    "The days grow hot,
    O Babylon!
  • 28:06 - 28:08
    "It's cool
  • 28:08 - 28:10
    beneath thy willow trees!"
  • 28:11 - 28:13
    Goddamned stool pigeon!
  • 28:13 - 28:14
    What,
    what do you mean?
  • 28:14 - 28:16
    You can't call me that!
  • 28:16 - 28:17
    (laughing)
  • 28:19 - 28:21
    Hello, little Don!
  • 28:21 - 28:22
    (laughing)
  • 28:22 - 28:24
    I didn't recognize you!
  • 28:24 - 28:27
    You've grown, big boy!
  • 28:27 - 28:29
    How's your mother?
  • 28:29 - 28:31
    Don't be a fool!
  • 28:31 - 28:32
    Loan me a dollar.
  • 28:32 - 28:34
    Buy me a drink!
  • 28:34 - 28:35
    Sure, I'll buy you
    a drink, Hugo.
  • 28:35 - 28:37
    I'm sorry, got, uh,
  • 28:37 - 28:39
    I got sore at you there.
  • 28:39 - 28:41
    I ought to remember
    that when you're sauced,
  • 28:41 - 28:44
    you call everyone
    "stool pigeon," ah?
  • 28:44 - 28:46
    It's just no damn joke
    right at this time.
  • 28:46 - 28:48
    (snores)
  • 28:52 - 28:54
    Oh, gee,
    he passed out again.
  • 29:05 - 29:08
    What are you giving me
    the hard look for, Larry?
  • 29:11 - 29:13
    You thought
    I was gonna to hit him?
  • 29:15 - 29:17
    What do you think I am?
  • 29:17 - 29:18
    I always stood up for him
    when everybody in the Movement
  • 29:18 - 29:20
    panned him for
    an old drunken has-been!
  • 29:22 - 29:24
    He had the guts to serve
  • 29:24 - 29:25
    10 years in the can
    in his own country,
  • 29:25 - 29:27
    got his eyes ruined
    in solitary.
  • 29:27 - 29:29
    I'd like to see
    some of 'em here stick that.
  • 29:29 - 29:30
    Well, they're gonna
    get their chance now tha...
  • 29:36 - 29:39
    Hey, Larry, tell me
    more about this dump.
  • 29:39 - 29:41
    Who are all these, uh,
    these tanks in here?
  • 29:41 - 29:43
    Who's that guy over there
    trying to catch pneumonia?
  • 29:47 - 29:49
    That's Captain Lewis,
  • 29:49 - 29:51
    one time hero
  • 29:51 - 29:52
    in The British Army.
  • 29:54 - 29:55
    He strips
    to display that scar,
  • 29:55 - 29:58
    which he got from
    a native spear,
  • 29:58 - 30:00
    whenever he's
    completely plastered.
  • 30:01 - 30:03
    The bewhiskered bloke
    next to him
  • 30:03 - 30:06
    is General Wetjoen,
  • 30:06 - 30:07
    who led a commando
    in the war.
  • 30:09 - 30:12
    They met up when they worked
    in The Boer War Spectacle
  • 30:12 - 30:13
    in the St. Louis Fair,
  • 30:13 - 30:15
    and they've been
    bosom friends ever since.
  • 30:18 - 30:20
    They dream away the hours
    and happy dispute
  • 30:20 - 30:24
    over the brave days
    in South Africa,
  • 30:24 - 30:26
    when they were trying
    to murder each other.
  • 30:28 - 30:30
    He was in it, too.
  • 30:30 - 30:33
    Correspondent for some
    English paper.
  • 30:33 - 30:35
    His nickname here
    is Jimmy Tomorrow.
  • 30:37 - 30:38
    But what do they do
    for a living?
  • 30:38 - 30:39
    As little as possible.
  • 30:39 - 30:40
    (laughs)
  • 30:40 - 30:42
    Once in a while
    one of them makes
  • 30:42 - 30:44
    a successful touch somewhere,
  • 30:44 - 30:46
    and some of them get
    a few dollars a month
  • 30:46 - 30:48
    from connections at home,
  • 30:48 - 30:51
    who pay it on the condition
    that they never come back.
  • 30:53 - 30:55
    The rest
    live on free lunch
  • 30:55 - 30:56
    and their old friend
    Harry Hope,
  • 30:56 - 30:58
    who doesn't give a damn
    what a man does
  • 30:58 - 31:00
    or doesn't do,
  • 31:00 - 31:02
    as long as he likes 'em.
  • 31:02 - 31:04
    That must be a tough life.
  • 31:04 - 31:07
    Don't waste your pity.
  • 31:07 - 31:09
    They manage to stay drunk
    and keep their pipe dreams,
  • 31:09 - 31:12
    and that's all they ask
    out of life.
  • 31:12 - 31:14
    It isn't often
    that men attain
  • 31:14 - 31:16
    the true goal
    of their heart's desire.
  • 31:19 - 31:21
    And that applies
    to Harry himself.
  • 31:21 - 31:23
    He's so satisfied with life
  • 31:23 - 31:25
    that he hasn't set foot
    out of this place
  • 31:25 - 31:27
    since his wife died
    20 years ago.
  • 31:28 - 31:31
    He has no need
    of the outside world.
  • 31:33 - 31:34
    Place does a fine trade from
    the market across the street
  • 31:34 - 31:36
    and the dock workers.
  • 31:36 - 31:37
    So in spite
    of Harry's thirst
  • 31:37 - 31:40
    and his generous heart,
    he comes out even.
  • 31:40 - 31:43
    He never worries
    about hard times,
  • 31:43 - 31:44
    as long as there's
    friends from the old days
  • 31:44 - 31:46
    when he was a
    jitney Tammany politician
  • 31:46 - 31:49
    and the friendly brewery
    that tied him over.
  • 31:50 - 31:52
    Pat McGloin, his pal
    sitting beside him,
  • 31:52 - 31:55
    was a police lieutenant
    in the lush times of graft,
  • 31:55 - 31:56
    when everything went,
  • 31:56 - 31:58
    but he got too greedy.
  • 31:58 - 32:01
    And when the usual reform
    investigation came along,
  • 32:01 - 32:02
    he was caught red handed
  • 32:02 - 32:04
    and thrown off the force.
  • 32:04 - 32:07
    Joe there ran a colored
    gambling house, and,
  • 32:07 - 32:09
    was a hell of a sport.
  • 32:09 - 32:11
    (laughs)
  • 32:11 - 32:14
    Well, that completes
    our family circle of inmates,
  • 32:14 - 32:16
    except for the two barkeeps
    and their girls,
  • 32:16 - 32:19
    three ladies of the pavement
    that room on the third floor.
  • 32:19 - 32:21
    I never wanna see
    a whore again.
  • 32:24 - 32:27
    I mean, they always
    get you in dutch.
  • 32:27 - 32:28
    Why omit me from your.
  • 32:28 - 32:31
    "Who's Who
    in Dipsomania," Larry?
  • 32:31 - 32:34
    It's an unpardonable
    slight...
  • 32:34 - 32:35
    that's generous, stranger.
  • 32:35 - 32:37
    I trust you're generous.
  • 32:37 - 32:40
    I was born in the purple,
  • 32:40 - 32:42
    the son... hmm,
  • 32:42 - 32:44
    but unfortunately not the heir
    of the late world-famous.
  • 32:44 - 32:46
    Bill Oban,
  • 32:46 - 32:48
    king of the bucket shops.
  • 32:50 - 32:51
    A revolution deposed him,
  • 32:51 - 32:53
    he was sent into exile.
  • 32:53 - 32:55
    The fact,
    not to mince matters,
  • 32:55 - 32:57
    (giggling)
  • 32:57 - 32:59
    they locked him in the can
    and threw away the key.
  • 33:01 - 33:03
    Alas,
  • 33:03 - 33:04
    his was
    an adventurous spirit
  • 33:04 - 33:07
    that pined in confinement...
  • 33:07 - 33:08
    and so he died!
  • 33:11 - 33:12
    That's tough luck.
  • 33:12 - 33:14
    Hmm, hmm.
  • 33:16 - 33:19
    Even in Harvard
    I discovered my father was...
  • 33:19 - 33:21
    well known
    by reputation.
  • 33:21 - 33:23
    Although that was
    sometime before
  • 33:23 - 33:25
    the district attorney
    gave him
  • 33:25 - 33:27
    so much
    unwelcomed publicity.
  • 33:27 - 33:30
    Even as a freshman,
    I was notorious.
  • 33:30 - 33:32
    I was accepted socially,
  • 33:32 - 33:34
    with all the warm
    cordiality that, uh,
  • 33:34 - 33:36
    Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,
  • 33:36 - 33:38
    who could've shown
    a drunken Negress
  • 33:38 - 33:40
    dancing the can can
    at high noon
  • 33:40 - 33:42
    on Brattle Street.
  • 33:44 - 33:46
    Harvard was my father's idea.
  • 33:49 - 33:52
    But I did make myself
    a brilliant student!
  • 33:55 - 33:57
    A dirty trick
    on my classmates...
  • 33:58 - 34:01
    inspired by revenge,
    I fear.
  • 34:01 - 34:02
    And I, I, I was
    a brilliant student
  • 34:02 - 34:05
    in Law School, too!
  • 34:05 - 34:07
    And my father
  • 34:07 - 34:09
    wanted a
    lawyer in the family.
  • 34:09 - 34:12
    Oh, a thorough
    knowledge of the law
  • 34:12 - 34:14
    close at hand
    in the house,
  • 34:14 - 34:16
    to help him find
    fresh ways to evade it.
  • 34:20 - 34:22
    But I discovered
  • 34:22 - 34:24
    a loophole in whiskey.
  • 34:24 - 34:25
    And so,
  • 34:25 - 34:28
    escaped his jurisdiction.
  • 34:28 - 34:30
    Speaking of whiskey,
    sir, reminds me,
  • 34:30 - 34:33
    and I hope reminds you,
  • 34:33 - 34:36
    that when greeting a prince,
  • 34:36 - 34:39
    the customary salutation
    is "What'll you have?"
  • 34:39 - 34:40
    Nix!
  • 34:40 - 34:42
    All you guys think
    I'm made of dough!
  • 34:42 - 34:44
    Broke?
  • 34:44 - 34:46
    You haven't the thirsty look
    of the impecunious.
  • 34:46 - 34:49
    I'd judge you
    to be a plutocrat,
  • 34:49 - 34:51
    your pocket's stuffed
    with ill-gotten gains.
  • 34:51 - 34:52
    Two or three dollars
    at least.
  • 34:52 - 34:55
    Don't think we question
    how you got it.
  • 34:55 - 34:57
    What do you mean
    "How I got it"?
  • 35:00 - 35:02
    That's a laugh,
    isn't it, Larry?
  • 35:02 - 35:04
    Him thinking me
    a plutocrat?
  • 35:04 - 35:07
    When I've been in
    the Movement all my life?
  • 35:08 - 35:11
    Ah, one of those,
    eh?
  • 35:11 - 35:13
    Why don't you go away
    and blow yourself up?
  • 35:13 - 35:15
    That's a good lad.
  • 35:15 - 35:17
    Hugo...
  • 35:17 - 35:19
    Hugo is the only
    licensed preacher
  • 35:19 - 35:20
    of that gospel here.
  • 35:20 - 35:23
    Oh, dangerous
    terrorist Hugo!
  • 35:23 - 35:26
    He'd as soon blow the collar
    off a schooner of beer
  • 35:26 - 35:27
    as look at you.
  • 35:29 - 35:32
    Let us ignore this
    useless youth, Larry,
  • 35:32 - 35:35
    And let us join in prayer
  • 35:35 - 35:36
    that Hickey,
    the great salesman,
  • 35:36 - 35:38
    will soon arrive bringing
  • 35:38 - 35:40
    the blessed bourgeoisie
    long green.
  • 35:41 - 35:43
    Would that Hickey
  • 35:43 - 35:46
    or Death would come, uh?
  • 35:46 - 35:48
    (laughs)
  • 35:48 - 35:49
    Meanwhile,
  • 35:49 - 35:52
    I will sing a song.
  • 35:52 - 35:55
    A beautiful old
    New England folk ballad,
  • 35:55 - 35:58
    which I'd picked at Harvard
    amid de debris of education.
  • 35:59 - 36:01
    * Oh
  • 36:01 - 36:03
    * Jack oh Jack
    was a sailor lad *
  • 36:03 - 36:06
    * And he went to
    a tavern for gin *
  • 36:06 - 36:08
    * And he rapped
    and he rapped with a *
  • 36:08 - 36:10
    (loud tapping)
  • 36:10 - 36:11
    * But
  • 36:11 - 36:14
    * Never a soul
    seemed in *
  • 36:15 - 36:18
    The origin of this
    beautiful ditty
  • 36:18 - 36:19
    is veiled
    in mystery, Larry.
  • 36:19 - 36:21
    There was a legend
    bruited about
  • 36:21 - 36:23
    in Cambridge lavatories
  • 36:23 - 36:26
    that Waldo Emerson
    composed it
  • 36:26 - 36:28
    during his uninformative period
    as a minister
  • 36:28 - 36:30
    while he was trying
    to write a sermon.
  • 36:30 - 36:32
    But my own view
  • 36:32 - 36:34
    is that it goes back
    much further,
  • 36:34 - 36:37
    and Jonathan Edwards
    is the author of both words
  • 36:37 - 36:39
    and the music.
  • 36:39 - 36:41
    * Oh he
    rapped and rapped *
  • 36:41 - 36:43
    * And he tapped
    and tapped *
  • 36:43 - 36:46
    * Enough to wake the dead
  • 36:46 - 36:47
    * 'Till he heard
    a damsel *
  • 36:47 - 36:49
    (tapping)
  • 36:49 - 36:50
    * On a window
  • 36:50 - 36:52
    * Right over his head *
  • 36:52 - 36:54
    Rocky!
  • 36:54 - 36:55
    Bejees,
  • 36:55 - 36:57
    can't you keep that
    crazy bastard quiet?
  • 36:57 - 36:59
    And now the influence
    of a good woman
  • 36:59 - 37:01
    enters our
    mariner's lifeline.
  • 37:01 - 37:03
    Well, perhaps "good"
    isn't the word,
  • 37:03 - 37:05
    but very, very kind.
  • 37:05 - 37:07
    * "Oh
  • 37:07 - 37:10
    * Come up" she cried
    "my sailor lad" *
  • 37:10 - 37:12
    * And you
    and I'll agree *
  • 37:12 - 37:15
    * And I'll show you
    the prettiest *
  • 37:15 - 37:16
    (tapping)
  • 37:16 - 37:19
    * That ever you ever
    did see *
  • 37:21 - 37:22
    You see, Larry?
  • 37:22 - 37:24
    The lewd puritan touch,
    obviously,
  • 37:24 - 37:26
    and it grows more marked
  • 37:26 - 37:27
    as we go on.
  • 37:28 - 37:31
    * Oh, he puts his arms
  • 37:31 - 37:33
    * Around her waist
  • 37:33 - 37:35
    * And gazed in her bright
  • 37:35 - 37:36
    * blue eyes *
  • 37:36 - 37:37
    Piano?
  • 37:37 - 37:40
    What do you think
    this dump is, a dump?
  • 37:40 - 37:41
    Give him a bum's
    rush upstairs.
  • 37:41 - 37:43
    Lock him in his room.
  • 37:43 - 37:45
    Come on.
  • 37:45 - 37:46
    No, please, Rocky, I'll go crazy
    up in that room alone!
  • 37:46 - 37:48
    It's haunted!
  • 37:48 - 37:50
    Please, Larry,
    please!
  • 37:50 - 37:51
    Let me stay here,
    I'll be quiet!
  • 37:51 - 37:53
    What the hell you
    doin' to him, Rocky?
  • 37:53 - 37:55
    Leave him alone...
  • 37:55 - 37:57
    as long as he's quiet.
  • 37:57 - 37:59
    Thanks, Harry,
  • 37:59 - 38:00
    you're a good scout.
  • 38:02 - 38:03
    Booze.
  • 38:04 - 38:06
    Yeah,
  • 38:06 - 38:08
    can't trust nobody.
  • 38:09 - 38:11
    Leave it to that Dago
    to keep order
  • 38:11 - 38:14
    and it's like bedlam
    in a cathouse!
  • 38:14 - 38:15
    Singin' and everything.
  • 38:17 - 38:20
    And you, a big barfly,
  • 38:20 - 38:22
    you're a hell
    of a help to me.
  • 38:22 - 38:25
    There ain't gonna be
    no more drinks on the house
  • 38:25 - 38:28
    'till hell freezes over.
  • 38:28 - 38:29
    (laughing)
  • 38:34 - 38:36
    Good God.
  • 38:36 - 38:39
    Have I been drinking
    at the same table
  • 38:39 - 38:41
    with a bloody Kaffir?
  • 38:41 - 38:43
    Hello, captain,
  • 38:43 - 38:44
    you comin' up for air?
  • 38:44 - 38:46
    (laughing)
  • 38:48 - 38:50
    A "Kaffir,"
  • 38:50 - 38:52
    who's he?
  • 38:52 - 38:54
    "Kaffir,"
    that's a nigger, Joe.
  • 38:56 - 38:58
    That's joke on him, Joe,
  • 38:58 - 39:00
    he don't know you.
  • 39:00 - 39:02
    He's still blind drunk.
  • 39:04 - 39:06
    A great mistake,
  • 39:06 - 39:09
    I missed him at The Battle
    of Modder River.
  • 39:09 - 39:11
    With mine rifle
  • 39:11 - 39:13
    I shoot
  • 39:13 - 39:15
    damn fool Limey officers
  • 39:15 - 39:17
    by the dozen,
  • 39:17 - 39:19
    but him I miss.
  • 39:19 - 39:20
    (laughing)
  • 39:20 - 39:23
    Hey, wake up,
    Cecil, you bloody fool.
  • 39:23 - 39:26
    Don't you know
    your old friend Joe?
  • 39:26 - 39:28
    He's white, Joe is!
  • 39:28 - 39:30
    (laughing)
  • 39:36 - 39:38
    Oh, profound apologies,
  • 39:38 - 39:40
    Joseph, old chum.
  • 39:40 - 39:43
    Eyesight's a trifle
    blurry, I'm afraid.
  • 39:43 - 39:46
    Whitest colored man
    I ever knew.
  • 39:46 - 39:48
    Proud to call you
    my friend.
  • 39:48 - 39:51
    Oh, I know
    it's mistake, captain.
  • 39:51 - 39:52
    You here is a regular,
  • 39:52 - 39:53
    even if you
    is a Limey.
  • 39:53 - 39:56
    (laughing)
  • 40:01 - 40:04
    But I don't stand for "nigger"
    from nobody.
  • 40:05 - 40:07
    In the old days,
    somebody calls me a "nigger"
  • 40:07 - 40:09
    he ends up in the hospital.
  • 40:11 - 40:14
    Me, in old days
    in Transvaal,
  • 40:14 - 40:17
    I was so tough!
  • 40:17 - 40:18
    And strong!
  • 40:18 - 40:20
    I, I grab axle
  • 40:20 - 40:22
    of ox wagon,
  • 40:22 - 40:24
    with full load,
  • 40:24 - 40:26
    and lift like feather.
  • 40:26 - 40:28
    As for you,
  • 40:28 - 40:30
    my balmy Boer
    that walks like a man,
  • 40:30 - 40:32
    I say it again,
  • 40:32 - 40:35
    It was a grave error
    in our foreign policy
  • 40:35 - 40:37
    ever to set you free.
  • 40:37 - 40:39
    Well, now,
    Cecil, Piet!
  • 40:39 - 40:42
    We must forget
    the war.
  • 40:42 - 40:45
    Boer and Britain,
    each fought fairly
  • 40:45 - 40:48
    and played the game
    until the better man won,
  • 40:48 - 40:50
    and then we shook hands.
  • 40:51 - 40:54
    We are all brothers
    within The Empire,
  • 40:54 - 40:56
    united beneath the flag
  • 40:56 - 40:59
    on which the sun
    never sets.
  • 41:00 - 41:03
    * Ship me somewhere
  • 41:03 - 41:05
    * East of Suez
  • 41:07 - 41:09
    * Where the best
  • 41:09 - 41:11
    * Is like
    the worst *
  • 41:12 - 41:14
    * Where there ain't
  • 41:14 - 41:16
    * No Ten Commandments
  • 41:18 - 41:20
    * And a man can raise
  • 41:20 - 41:22
    * A thirst
  • 41:24 - 41:26
    * On the road
  • 41:26 - 41:28
    * To Mandalay
  • 41:29 - 41:32
    * Where the flyin' fishes
  • 41:32 - 41:34
    * Play
  • 41:35 - 41:37
    * And the dawn
  • 41:37 - 41:39
    * Comes up
    like thunder *
  • 41:43 - 41:45
    * Outer China
  • 41:45 - 41:46
    * 'Crost the Bay *
  • 41:50 - 41:52
    God, you're there
    already, Jimmy.
  • 41:54 - 41:55
    Worst is best here,
  • 41:55 - 41:57
    and east is west,
  • 41:57 - 41:59
    and tomorrow
    is yesterday.
  • 41:59 - 42:01
    What more do you want?
  • 42:03 - 42:05
    Come now, Larry,
    old friend.
  • 42:07 - 42:09
    You pretend a bitter,
  • 42:09 - 42:11
    cynic philosophy,
  • 42:11 - 42:14
    but in your heart
  • 42:14 - 42:16
    you are the kindest man
    among us.
  • 42:18 - 42:20
    The hell you say.
  • 42:23 - 42:24
    Tomorrow, yes.
  • 42:24 - 42:26
    It's high time
  • 42:26 - 42:28
    I got myself
    straightened out.
  • 42:30 - 42:32
    I must have this suit
  • 42:32 - 42:34
    cleaned and pressed.
  • 42:34 - 42:36
    I can't look like
    a tramp when I...
  • 42:36 - 42:39
    Yes, sir,
  • 42:39 - 42:41
    white folks always said
    I was white.
  • 42:43 - 42:46
    In the days
    when I was flush,
  • 42:46 - 42:48
    Joe Mott's the only colored man
    they allows
  • 42:48 - 42:51
    in the white
    gamblin' houses.
  • 42:51 - 42:54
    "You're all right, Joe,
  • 42:54 - 42:55
    you're white,"
  • 42:55 - 42:56
    they tells me.
  • 42:56 - 42:58
    (laughs)
  • 42:58 - 43:00
    They wouldn't let me
    play craps, though.
  • 43:00 - 43:03
    'Cause they knew I could
    make them dice behave.
  • 43:03 - 43:05
    "Any other game,
  • 43:05 - 43:07
    any limit you like, Joe,"
  • 43:07 - 43:09
    they says.
  • 43:09 - 43:12
    Man, the money I lost.
  • 43:12 - 43:14
    (chuckling)
  • 43:19 - 43:21
    Yeah...
  • 43:21 - 43:24
    look at the
    Big Chief in them days.
  • 43:25 - 43:27
    He knew I was white.
  • 43:27 - 43:29
    I'd saved my dough
  • 43:29 - 43:32
    so I could start
    my own gamblin' house.
  • 43:32 - 43:34
    Folks in the know
    they tells me,
  • 43:34 - 43:37
    "You see the man
    at the top,
  • 43:37 - 43:39
    "then you never has trouble.
  • 43:39 - 43:42
    You get Harry Hope to give you
    a letter to the Chief."
  • 43:44 - 43:45
    And he does.
  • 43:45 - 43:46
    (chuckles)
  • 43:48 - 43:49
    Ain't that right,
    Harry?
  • 43:51 - 43:53
    Eh?
  • 43:53 - 43:56
    Sure,
    I gave you a letter.
  • 43:56 - 43:58
    I says you was white.
  • 43:58 - 44:01
    There, you see,
    captain?
  • 44:01 - 44:04
    I went to see the Chief,
    shakin' in my boots,
  • 44:04 - 44:06
    and there he was,
  • 44:06 - 44:08
    sittin' behind
    a big desk,
  • 44:08 - 44:10
    lookin' as big
    as a freight train.
  • 44:10 - 44:12
    He don't look up.
  • 44:12 - 44:15
    He keeps me
    waitin' and waitin',
  • 44:15 - 44:17
    and after what seems
    like an hour to me,
  • 44:17 - 44:20
    he says slow and quiet,
  • 44:20 - 44:22
    like he didn't mean no harm,
  • 44:22 - 44:25
    "You want to open a
    gamblin' joint, does you, Joe?"
  • 44:25 - 44:28
    But he don't give
    me no chance to answer.
  • 44:28 - 44:29
    He jumps up,
  • 44:29 - 44:32
    lookin' as big as
    two freight trains,
  • 44:32 - 44:34
    and he pounds his fist
    like a ham on the desk,
  • 44:34 - 44:35
    and he shouts,
  • 44:35 - 44:38
    "You black son of a bitch!
  • 44:38 - 44:41
    "Harry says you're white
    and you better be white!
  • 44:41 - 44:44
    "Or there's a little iron room
    up the river
  • 44:44 - 44:45
    waitin' for ya!"
  • 44:48 - 44:50
    Then he sits down,
  • 44:50 - 44:53
    and he says,
    quiet again,
  • 44:53 - 44:56
    "All right, you can open,
    get the hell outta here."
  • 44:56 - 44:59
    So I opens,
  • 44:59 - 45:02
    and he finds out
    I was white, sure 'nuff.
  • 45:02 - 45:04
    'Cause I run
    wide open for years
  • 45:04 - 45:07
    and I pays my sugar
    on the dot,
  • 45:07 - 45:10
    and me and the cops
    is friends.
  • 45:13 - 45:15
    Them old days!
  • 45:15 - 45:18
    Many's the night
    I used to come in here.
  • 45:18 - 45:19
    (laughs)
  • 45:19 - 45:22
    This used to be a
    first-class hangout for sports
  • 45:22 - 45:24
    in them days.
  • 45:24 - 45:25
    Good whiskey,
  • 45:25 - 45:27
    15 cents,
    two for two bits.
  • 45:27 - 45:29
    (laughs)
  • 45:29 - 45:31
    I throws down
    a $50 bill
  • 45:31 - 45:33
    like it was trash paper!
  • 45:33 - 45:36
    And I says,
  • 45:36 - 45:38
    "Drink it up,
    boys,
  • 45:38 - 45:40
    I don't want the change."
  • 45:42 - 45:44
    Ain't that right,
    Harry?
  • 45:44 - 45:46
    Yes,
  • 45:46 - 45:48
    and bejees,
    if I ever see you throw
  • 45:48 - 45:51
    50 cents on the bar now,
  • 45:51 - 45:53
    I'd know I had
    delirium tremens!
  • 45:53 - 45:54
    (men laughing)
  • 45:54 - 45:56
    Well thanks, Harry,
    old chum.
  • 45:56 - 45:59
    I will have a drink,
    now you mention it,
  • 45:59 - 46:00
    seeing it's so near
    your birthday.
  • 46:00 - 46:02
    I sorry,
    can't hear you.
  • 46:02 - 46:04
    (sighs)
  • 46:04 - 46:06
    No, I was afraid
    you wouldn't.
  • 46:06 - 46:08
    I don't have
    to hear you, bejees.
  • 46:08 - 46:11
    Booze is the only thing
    you ever talk about.
  • 46:11 - 46:13
    True, true.
  • 46:13 - 46:15
    Yet there was a time
    when my conversation
  • 46:15 - 46:17
    was more comprehensive.
  • 46:17 - 46:20
    But as I became
    burdened with the years,
  • 46:20 - 46:22
    it seemed rather pointless
    to discuss my other subject.
  • 46:22 - 46:25
    You can't joke with me.
  • 46:25 - 46:27
    How much room rent
    do you owe me?
  • 46:27 - 46:28
    Tell me that!
  • 46:28 - 46:29
    I'm sorry.
  • 46:29 - 46:31
    (chuckles)
  • 46:31 - 46:33
    Adding always
    baffled me,
  • 46:33 - 46:35
    subtraction's my forte.
  • 46:35 - 46:36
    (men laughing)
  • 46:36 - 46:38
    Oh, think
    you're funny.
  • 46:40 - 46:41
    Captain, bejees,
  • 46:41 - 46:44
    showin' off your wounds.
  • 46:44 - 46:46
    Put on your clothes,
    for Chrissake!
  • 46:46 - 46:48
    This ain't
    no Turkish bath!
  • 46:48 - 46:51
    Lousy Limey army.
  • 46:51 - 46:52
    Took 'em years
  • 46:52 - 46:54
    to lick a gang
    of Dutch hayseeds.
  • 46:54 - 46:57
    That's right, Harry,
    give him hell!
  • 46:57 - 46:59
    I give you
    my word of honor,
  • 46:59 - 47:01
    as an officer
    and a gentleman,
  • 47:01 - 47:03
    you shall be paid
    tomorrow.
  • 47:03 - 47:06
    We swear it,
    Harry,
  • 47:06 - 47:08
    tomorrow without fail!
  • 47:08 - 47:10
    There you are,
    Harry.
  • 47:10 - 47:11
    Sure,
    what could be fairer?
  • 47:11 - 47:14
    A promise is a promise,
    as I've often discovered.
  • 47:14 - 47:16
    Naming you, too...
  • 47:17 - 47:20
    old grafting flatfoot.
  • 47:20 - 47:23
    Fine company for me,
    bejees!
  • 47:23 - 47:26
    Been livin' in my flat
    since Christ knows when,
  • 47:26 - 47:27
    and you ain't even
    got the decency
  • 47:27 - 47:30
    to get me upstairs,
    where I got a good bed!
  • 47:30 - 47:31
    Kept me down here
  • 47:31 - 47:33
    waitin' for Hickey
    to show up,
  • 47:33 - 47:36
    hopin' I'd blow you
    to more drinks!
  • 47:36 - 47:38
    I did my damnedest
    to get you up.
  • 47:38 - 47:40
    But you said
    you couldn't bear the flat
  • 47:40 - 47:42
    because it was
    one of those nights
  • 47:42 - 47:43
    when memory brought
  • 47:43 - 47:45
    poor old Bessie
    back to you.
  • 47:45 - 47:47
    Ah, yes...
  • 47:47 - 47:48
    I remember now.
  • 47:50 - 47:52
    I could almost
    see her in every room
  • 47:52 - 47:54
    just as she used to be...
  • 47:54 - 47:57
    and it's 20 years
    since I...
  • 47:57 - 47:59
    Isn't a pipe dream
    of yesterday a touching thing?
  • 47:59 - 48:02
    By all accounts,
    20 years...
  • 48:02 - 48:03
    Bessie nagged the hell
    out of him.
  • 48:03 - 48:05
    And I've never set foot
    out of this house
  • 48:05 - 48:07
    since the day
    I buried her.
  • 48:07 - 48:10
    Once she's gone, I didn't
    give a damn for anything.
  • 48:11 - 48:13
    The boys was gonna
    nominate me for Alderman.
  • 48:13 - 48:15
    Mm, Bessie wanted it,
  • 48:15 - 48:17
    and she was so proud.
  • 48:17 - 48:19
    But when she was taken,
  • 48:19 - 48:21
    I told 'em,
    "No, boys, I can't do it.
  • 48:21 - 48:22
    I'm through."
  • 48:25 - 48:26
    I know, Lord,
  • 48:26 - 48:29
    why Bessie
    would appreciate my grief.
  • 48:29 - 48:31
    She wouldn't want it
    to keep me cooped up in here
  • 48:31 - 48:32
    all my life.
  • 48:32 - 48:35
    So I've made up my mind
    to go out soon.
  • 48:35 - 48:37
    Take a walk around the ward,
  • 48:37 - 48:38
    see all the friends
    I used to know.
  • 48:38 - 48:40
    Get together with the boys.
  • 48:41 - 48:44
    (hits table)
    My birthday, tomorrow!
  • 48:44 - 48:47
    That'd be the right time
    to turn over a new leaf!
  • 48:47 - 48:49
    60, that ain't too old.
  • 48:49 - 48:51
    The prime of life, Harry.
  • 48:51 - 48:53
    Hmm.
  • 48:54 - 48:57
    Time I took hold of myself.
  • 48:58 - 49:00
    Tomorrow
    I must get my things
  • 49:00 - 49:01
    from the laundry.
  • 49:01 - 49:04
    Clean collar and shirt.
  • 49:04 - 49:07
    If I wash the ones
    I've got on anymore,
  • 49:07 - 49:08
    they'll fall apart.
  • 49:08 - 49:10
    (chuckles)
  • 49:10 - 49:13
    I must make
    a good appearance.
  • 49:13 - 49:14
    I've heard rumors management
  • 49:14 - 49:16
    were at their wits' end
  • 49:16 - 49:18
    and would be
    only too willing
  • 49:18 - 49:20
    to have me run
    the publicity department
  • 49:20 - 49:22
    for them again.
  • 49:22 - 49:24
    All I have to do
    is get fixed up
  • 49:24 - 49:26
    with a decent
    front tomorrow,
  • 49:26 - 49:29
    and it's as good as done.
  • 49:29 - 49:32
    Poor Jimmy's off
    on his pipe dream again.
  • 49:35 - 49:37
    I'm sorry
    we had to postpone
  • 49:37 - 49:40
    our trip again
    this April, Piet.
  • 49:40 - 49:42
    I'd hoped
    the blasted old estate
  • 49:42 - 49:44
    would be settled by then.
  • 49:45 - 49:47
    We'll make it next year,
  • 49:47 - 49:49
    even if we have to work
  • 49:49 - 49:51
    and earn
    our passage money.
  • 49:54 - 49:57
    You'll stay with me
    at the old place
  • 49:57 - 49:59
    just as long as you like.
  • 50:00 - 50:03
    England in April.
  • 50:03 - 50:05
    Oh, I want you
    to see that, Piet.
  • 50:07 - 50:08
    I admit that the veldt
    has its points,
  • 50:08 - 50:11
    but it's not home.
  • 50:11 - 50:13
    Especially home in April.
  • 50:15 - 50:18
    * We've been
    together now *
  • 50:18 - 50:20
    * For 40 years
  • 50:20 - 50:22
    * And it don't seem
  • 50:22 - 50:25
    * A day too much
  • 50:25 - 50:27
    * There ain't a lady
  • 50:27 - 50:30
    * Livin' in the land
  • 50:30 - 50:31
    * As I'd swop
  • 50:31 - 50:34
    * For me dear old Dutch
  • 50:35 - 50:37
    * There ain't a lady
  • 50:37 - 50:40
    * Livin' in the land
  • 50:40 - 50:42
    * As I'd swop
  • 50:42 - 50:43
    * For me dear
  • 50:43 - 50:45
    * Old Dutch *
  • 50:48 - 50:51
    Yeah, Cecil,
    I can see
  • 50:51 - 50:53
    how beautiful
    it must be,
  • 50:53 - 50:55
    but I will enjoy
  • 50:55 - 50:58
    when I am home, too.
  • 50:58 - 51:00
    The veldt, ya!
  • 51:02 - 51:04
    You could put
    England on it,
  • 51:04 - 51:06
    and it would look like a
  • 51:06 - 51:08
    farmer's small garden.
  • 51:09 - 51:11
    By God,
  • 51:11 - 51:13
    there is space to be free,
  • 51:13 - 51:14
    the air...
  • 51:14 - 51:16
    (sniffs)
  • 51:16 - 51:18
    like wine is,
  • 51:18 - 51:21
    you don't need booze
    to be drunk.
  • 51:21 - 51:24
    I'll make my stake and
  • 51:24 - 51:26
    get my new
    gamblin' house open
  • 51:26 - 51:28
    before you boys leave.
  • 51:30 - 51:32
    You gotta come
    to the openin'.
  • 51:32 - 51:33
    Bejees,
    Jimmy's started them off
  • 51:33 - 51:35
    smoking the same hop.
  • 51:35 - 51:37
    Be God!
  • 51:37 - 51:40
    This bughouse will drive me
    stark, raving loony yet!
  • 51:40 - 51:42
    What, what'd you say?
  • 51:44 - 51:47
    Nothing, Harry.
  • 51:47 - 51:49
    I had a crazy thought
    in my head.
  • 51:50 - 51:53
    Crazy is right,
  • 51:53 - 51:54
    the old wise guy.
  • 51:54 - 51:56
    Damned old fool Anarchist.
  • 51:56 - 51:58
    I-Won't-Worker!
  • 51:58 - 52:00
    You'll pay up tomorrow,
  • 52:00 - 52:01
    or I'll,
  • 52:01 - 52:03
    I'll start
    a Harry Hope Revolution!
  • 52:03 - 52:04
    (chuckles)
  • 52:04 - 52:06
    I'll tie a dispossess bomb
    to your tails
  • 52:06 - 52:08
    that'll blow you out
    in the street!
  • 52:08 - 52:10
    (chuckles)
  • 52:10 - 52:12
    I'll, I'll make
    your Movement move!
  • 52:12 - 52:13
    (men laughing)
  • 52:20 - 52:22
    Sure it's hot,
    parching work
  • 52:22 - 52:25
    sittin' here laughin' at your
    jokes so early in the morning...
  • 52:25 - 52:28
    on an empty stomach.
  • 52:28 - 52:31
    Who asked you
    to laugh anyway?
  • 52:31 - 52:33
    Bejees, Bessie'd
    never forgive me
  • 52:33 - 52:36
    if she knew I had you
    living in her flat,
  • 52:36 - 52:38
    throwing ashes
    and cigar butts
  • 52:38 - 52:40
    on her carpet.
  • 52:40 - 52:42
    You know her opinion
    of you, Mac.
  • 52:42 - 52:45
    "That Pat McGloin
    is the biggest drunken grafter
  • 52:45 - 52:47
    that ever disgraced
    the police force,"
  • 52:47 - 52:48
    she used to say.
  • 52:48 - 52:50
    "If I had my way
  • 52:50 - 52:51
    "he'd get booted up
    in the gutter
  • 52:51 - 52:53
    of his fat behind."
  • 52:53 - 52:55
    And sometimes she didn't say
    "behind" either.
  • 52:55 - 52:56
    (laughs)
  • 52:56 - 52:59
    She didn't mean it.
  • 52:59 - 53:02
    She was angry at me because
    you used to get me drunk.
  • 53:02 - 53:03
    Hmm.
  • 53:03 - 53:05
    But Bess,
  • 53:05 - 53:07
    she had a heart of gold
    underneath her sharpness.
  • 53:09 - 53:11
    She knew I was innocent
  • 53:11 - 53:13
    of all the charges.
  • 53:13 - 53:15
    (slamming table with glass)
  • 53:15 - 53:17
    One moment, please.
  • 53:17 - 53:19
    Lieutenant McGloin!
  • 53:21 - 53:23
    Are you aware that
    you're under oath?
  • 53:23 - 53:26
    You know what the penalty
    for perjury is?
  • 53:28 - 53:31
    Come now, lieutenant.
  • 53:31 - 53:33
    Isn't it a fact
    you're guilty as hell?
  • 53:33 - 53:36
    No, don't say
    "How about your old man?"
  • 53:36 - 53:37
    I'm asking
    the questions!
  • 53:39 - 53:41
    Gentlemen of the Jury!
  • 53:44 - 53:46
    The court
    will now recess
  • 53:46 - 53:48
    while the D.A. sings out
    a little ditty
  • 53:48 - 53:50
    that he learned at Harvard.
  • 53:50 - 53:53
    It was composed
    in a wanton moment
  • 53:53 - 53:55
    by the Dean
    of the Divinity School
  • 53:55 - 53:58
    on a moonlight night
    in July, 1776,
  • 53:58 - 54:01
    while sobering up
    in a Turkish bath.
  • 54:01 - 54:03
    * "Oh come up,"
  • 54:03 - 54:06
    * She cried
    "my sailor lad *"
  • 54:06 - 54:09
    * And you and I'll agree
  • 54:09 - 54:10
    * And I'll show you
    the prettiest *
  • 54:10 - 54:12
    (slamming table)
    Rocky!
  • 54:12 - 54:14
    * Aay! *
    Yi.
  • 54:14 - 54:16
    Harry, please, please!
  • 54:16 - 54:18
    Don't make Rocky
    bounce me upstairs,
  • 54:18 - 54:19
    I'll go crazy alone!
  • 54:19 - 54:21
    I apologize,
  • 54:21 - 54:23
    I apologize, Mac.
  • 54:23 - 54:25
    Don't get sore,
    I was only kidding you.
  • 54:25 - 54:28
    You will let me...
  • 54:28 - 54:30
    take your case?
  • 54:30 - 54:32
    Won't you, Mac?
  • 54:32 - 54:34
    Yeah, sure Willie,
  • 54:34 - 54:37
    and it'll make
    your reputation.
  • 54:37 - 54:39
    Hey, Mac.
  • 54:39 - 54:42
    What the hell you thinks
    happened to Hickey?
  • 54:42 - 54:43
    I hope he turns up.
  • 54:43 - 54:45
    (chuckles)
  • 54:45 - 54:46
    You remember that gag
    he always pulls
  • 54:46 - 54:48
    about his wife
    and the iceman?
  • 54:48 - 54:50
    (men laughing)
  • 54:55 - 54:57
    Opening time, boss.
  • 54:57 - 54:58
    Why don't you go
    to bed, Boss?
  • 54:58 - 55:01
    Hickey'd never turn up
    this time of the mornin'.
  • 55:01 - 55:02
    Someone's comin' now!
  • 55:02 - 55:04
    Oh, that's only
    my two pigs,
  • 55:04 - 55:06
    it's about time
    they showed.
  • 55:06 - 55:08
    You keep them
    dumb broads quiet!
  • 55:08 - 55:10
    I'm gonna catch
    a couple more winks here,
  • 55:10 - 55:13
    and I don't want no damn fool
    laughin' and screechin'.
  • 55:13 - 55:15
    Hey.
  • 55:15 - 55:16
    Never thought
    I'd see the day
  • 55:16 - 55:19
    when Harry Hope's
    would have tarts living in.
  • 55:19 - 55:20
    What would Bessie
    think, hmm?
  • 55:22 - 55:24
    But he don't let 'em use
    my rooms for business.
  • 55:26 - 55:27
    Pay their rent, too,
  • 55:27 - 55:30
    which is more than
    I can say for...
  • 55:32 - 55:34
    Bejees, Mac,
  • 55:34 - 55:35
    I, I'll bet
    Bessie's doin' somersaults
  • 55:35 - 55:37
    in her grave!
  • 55:37 - 55:39
    (women giggling)
  • 55:39 - 55:40
    Hello.
  • 55:43 - 55:45
    Jees, Pearl.
  • 55:46 - 55:48
    This place is a morgue
  • 55:48 - 55:50
    with all these stiffs
    on deck.
  • 55:52 - 55:54
    Hey, you Old Wise Guy,
  • 55:54 - 55:56
    ain't you died yet?
  • 55:58 - 55:59
    Not yet, Margie.
  • 55:59 - 56:02
    But I'm waiting impatiently
    for the end.
  • 56:02 - 56:03
    Yeah.
  • 56:05 - 56:06
    Hey, who's the new guy?
  • 56:06 - 56:08
    Friend of yours?
  • 56:08 - 56:11
    Hey, kid!
  • 56:11 - 56:12
    You wanna have
    a good time, huh?
  • 56:12 - 56:15
    Hey, hell with him!
  • 56:15 - 56:16
    You dumb broads!
  • 56:16 - 56:18
    Cut the loud talk!
  • 56:18 - 56:20
    Sit down before
    I knock you down!
  • 56:20 - 56:22
    Ohh, you!
  • 56:24 - 56:25
    What, what, what, what?
  • 56:28 - 56:29
    (sighs)
  • 56:29 - 56:32
    Well, how do you
    tramps do?
  • 56:32 - 56:34
    Ah, pretty good,
    uh, Pearl?
  • 56:34 - 56:36
    Sure, we nailed
    a couple of all-night guys.
  • 56:36 - 56:38
    On Sixth Avenue,
    boobs from the sticks.
  • 56:38 - 56:40
    Stinko,
    the both of 'em!
  • 56:40 - 56:42
    We think
    we's in luck you know,
  • 56:42 - 56:44
    so we steers them
    to a real hotel.
  • 56:44 - 56:45
    We figured they're too stinko
    to bother us much
  • 56:45 - 56:47
    and we could cop
    a good night sleep in beds
  • 56:47 - 56:50
    that ain't got cobble stones
    in the mattress like the ones
  • 56:50 - 56:51
    in this dump.
    Yeah,
  • 56:51 - 56:52
    but we was outta luck.
  • 56:52 - 56:54
    They didn't bother
    us much that way,
  • 56:54 - 56:56
    but they wouldn't
    go to sleep either, see?
  • 56:56 - 57:00
    Jees, I never heard
    such gabby guys!
  • 57:00 - 57:03
    So... here we are.
  • 57:03 - 57:04
    Yeah, I see you,
  • 57:04 - 57:06
    but I don't see
    no dough yet.
  • 57:06 - 57:09
    Right on the job,
    ain't he, Margie?
  • 57:09 - 57:11
    Yeah, our little
    business man, that's him.
  • 57:11 - 57:13
    Come on, dig!
  • 57:13 - 57:14
    What, you're scared
    we're holdin' out on you?
  • 57:17 - 57:19
    Way he grabs, you'd think
    it was him done the work.
  • 57:19 - 57:21
    Here you are,
    grafter!
  • 57:21 - 57:23
    I hope it chokes you!
  • 57:23 - 57:26
    Hey, you dumb baby dolls
    give me a pain.
  • 57:26 - 57:29
    What would you do
    with money if I wasn't around?
  • 57:29 - 57:30
    Give it all
    to some pimp.
  • 57:30 - 57:32
    Jees, what's
    the difference?
  • 57:32 - 57:34
    Oh, didn't mean that,
    Rocky.
  • 57:34 - 57:36
    A lot of difference,
    get me?
  • 57:36 - 57:39
    Sure,
    don't get sore.
  • 57:39 - 57:42
    Jees, can't you take
    a little kiddin'?
  • 57:42 - 57:44
    Hey, come on, Rocky!
  • 57:44 - 57:46
    Pearl was only kiddin'.
  • 57:46 - 57:48
    We know you don't live off us,
    you got a regular job.
  • 57:48 - 57:51
    That's why we like you,
  • 57:51 - 57:52
    you're a bartender.
  • 57:52 - 57:55
    Sure, I'm a bartender,
  • 57:55 - 57:57
    and I treat you girls
    right, don't I?
  • 57:57 - 57:58
    (together)
    Yeah.
  • 57:58 - 58:01
    Jees, I'm wise
    you hold out on me,
  • 58:01 - 58:03
    but I know it ain't much.
  • 58:03 - 58:05
    So what the hell,
    I let you get away with it.
  • 58:05 - 58:07
    (both laughing)
  • 58:07 - 58:10
    Hey, you know ought not
    kid him about that stuff.
  • 58:10 - 58:12
    Serves you right
    if he beats you up.
  • 58:12 - 58:15
    Jees, I'd bet he'd give you an
    awful beatin' once he started.
  • 58:15 - 58:16
    Ginnies got
    awful tempers.
  • 58:16 - 58:17
    Anyways,
  • 58:17 - 58:20
    we wouldn't keep no pimp
    like we were regular old whores.
  • 58:20 - 58:21
    We ain't that bad.
  • 58:21 - 58:23
    Oh, no, we're tarts,
    but that's all.
  • 58:23 - 58:25
    Right.
  • 58:25 - 58:26
    Ahh!
  • 58:26 - 58:28
    Hey, Rocky.
  • 58:28 - 58:29
    Cora got back
    around 3:00 o'clock.
  • 58:29 - 58:31
    She woke up Chuck
  • 58:31 - 58:33
    and dragged him
    outta the hay
  • 58:33 - 58:35
    to go to for a
    chop suey joint.
  • 58:35 - 58:37
    Imagine him standin'
    for that stuff!
  • 58:37 - 58:40
    I bet they been sittin' around
    kiddin' themselves
  • 58:40 - 58:43
    with that old pipe dream
    about gettin' married
  • 58:43 - 58:45
    and settlin' down
    on a farm.
  • 58:45 - 58:47
    Jees, when Chuck's
    on the wagon,
  • 58:47 - 58:49
    they never
    lay off that dope.
  • 58:49 - 58:50
    Yeah,
  • 58:50 - 58:52
    of all the pipe dreams
    in this dump,
  • 58:52 - 58:54
    they got the nuttiest.
  • 58:54 - 58:57
    They been dreamin' it
    for years,
  • 58:57 - 59:00
    every time
    Chuck goes on the wagon.
  • 59:00 - 59:02
    What would gettin'
    married get them?
  • 59:02 - 59:04
    But the farm stuff
    is the sappiest part.
  • 59:04 - 59:07
    When both of 'em have been
    dragged up in this ward,
  • 59:07 - 59:09
    and ain't never been
    nearer a farm
  • 59:09 - 59:11
    than Coney Island.
  • 59:13 - 59:15
    They'd get D.T.'s
  • 59:15 - 59:17
    if they ever heard
    a cricket chirp.
  • 59:17 - 59:19
    I heard crickets once,
  • 59:19 - 59:21
    on my cousin's place
    in Jersey,
  • 59:21 - 59:22
    I couldn't sleep a wink.
  • 59:24 - 59:26
    Jees, can you picture
    a good barkeep like Chuck
  • 59:26 - 59:28
    diggin' spuds?
  • 59:28 - 59:31
    And imagine a whore
    hustlin' the cows home.
  • 59:31 - 59:32
    Hey, Rocky,
  • 59:32 - 59:33
    you oughtn't
    to call Cora that.
  • 59:33 - 59:35
    I mean, she may be
    a tart, but...
  • 59:35 - 59:38
    Oh sure, sure,
    that's all I meant, a tart.
  • 59:38 - 59:40
    Yeah, but he's right about
    the damned cows, Margie.
  • 59:40 - 59:42
    I bet Cora don't know
  • 59:42 - 59:43
    which end of the cow
    has the horns!
  • 59:43 - 59:45
    I'm goin' to ask her.
  • 59:45 - 59:47
    Here's your chance.
  • 59:47 - 59:49
    Hello, bums!
  • 59:51 - 59:53
    Jees...
  • 59:53 - 59:56
    the morgue
    on a rainy Sunday night.
  • 59:56 - 59:59
    Hello, Old Wise Guy,
    ain't you croaked yet?
  • 59:59 - 60:02
    Not yet, Cora.
  • 60:02 - 60:03
    Damned tiring
    this waiting for the end.
  • 60:03 - 60:05
    Aw, go on,
    you'll never die.
  • 60:05 - 60:07
    You'll have to hire someone
    to croak you with an axe.
  • 60:07 - 60:09
    Hey, you dumb hooker,
  • 60:09 - 60:11
    cut the loud talk.
  • 60:11 - 60:13
    This ain't a cathouse.
  • 60:13 - 60:14
    Ohh!
  • 60:16 - 60:18
    (Maggie)
    Hey, Cora, how you doin'?
  • 60:18 - 60:21
    (Pearl) Hey, Chuck,
    what's happening?
  • 60:21 - 60:23
    (women giggling)
  • 60:23 - 60:25
    If I'd known this dump
    was a hooker hangout,
  • 60:25 - 60:27
    I'd never come in.
  • 60:27 - 60:28
    You seem down
    on the ladies.
  • 60:28 - 60:30
    I hate every bitch
    that ever lived.
  • 60:32 - 60:34
    Well, you can understand
    how I feel, can't you?
  • 60:34 - 60:35
    When it was gettin'
    mixed up with a tart
  • 60:35 - 60:37
    that made me have
    that fight with mother.
  • 60:42 - 60:44
    Well, what the hell
    does it matter to you?
  • 60:44 - 60:45
    You're in the grandstand,
    you're through with life.
  • 60:45 - 60:48
    I'm glad
    you remember that.
  • 60:50 - 60:52
    Who's the guy with Larry?
  • 60:52 - 60:55
    A tightwad,
    the hell with him.
  • 60:55 - 60:56
    Say, Cora,
  • 60:56 - 60:58
    wise me up.
  • 60:58 - 61:00
    Which end of the cow
    is the horns on?
  • 61:00 - 61:02
    Aw, don't bring that up.
  • 61:02 - 61:05
    Me and this overgrown tramp's
    been scrappin' about the farm.
  • 61:05 - 61:08
    He says Jersey's the best place,
    and I said Long Island
  • 61:08 - 61:10
    on account it will be
    near Coney.
  • 61:10 - 61:11
    And then I tells him,
  • 61:11 - 61:13
    "How do I know you're off
    of periodicals for life?"
  • 61:13 - 61:15
    And I tells her
    "I'm off the stuff for life."
  • 61:15 - 61:17
    Then she beefs
    we won't be married a month
  • 61:17 - 61:19
    before I'll throw it
    in her face she was a tart.
  • 61:19 - 61:20
    "Jees, baby,"
    I tells her, "Why should I?
  • 61:20 - 61:22
    "What the hell you think
    I think I'm marryin', a virgin?
  • 61:22 - 61:24
    "Why should I kick
  • 61:24 - 61:26
    "as long as you lay off it
    and don't do no cheatin'
  • 61:26 - 61:28
    with the iceman or nobody?"
  • 61:28 - 61:29
    It's on the level, baby.
  • 61:29 - 61:31
    Eh?
  • 61:31 - 61:33
    Aw, you big tramp.
  • 61:33 - 61:34
    Can you tie it?
  • 61:34 - 61:37
    I'll buy a drink,
    I'll do anything.
  • 61:37 - 61:39
    No, this round's on me!
  • 61:39 - 61:40
    I run into luck.
  • 61:40 - 61:43
    That's why I dragged
    Chuck outta bed to celebrate.
  • 61:43 - 61:45
    It was a sailor,
    I rolled him.
  • 61:45 - 61:46
    Listen,
    it was a scream.
  • 61:46 - 61:48
    My dogs was givin' out
    when I seen this guy
  • 61:48 - 61:50
    holdin' up a lamp post,
  • 61:50 - 61:51
    so I hurry to get him
    before a cop did.
  • 61:51 - 61:54
    I says,
    "Hello, handsome,
  • 61:54 - 61:56
    wanna have a good time?"
  • 61:56 - 61:58
    Jees, he was paralyzed!
  • 61:58 - 62:01
    One of them polite jags.
  • 62:01 - 62:03
    He tries to bow to me,
    imagine,
  • 62:03 - 62:06
    and I had to prop him up
    or he'd fell on his nose.
  • 62:06 - 62:07
    "Lady," he says,
  • 62:07 - 62:09
    "can you kindly tell me
    the nearest way
  • 62:09 - 62:11
    to the Museum
    of Natural History?"
  • 62:11 - 62:12
    (laughing)
  • 62:12 - 62:14
    Can you imagine?
  • 62:14 - 62:15
    It's 2:00 A.M.!
  • 62:15 - 62:18
    As if I'd know where
    the dump was anyway.
  • 62:18 - 62:20
    But I says,
    "Sure thing, honey boy,".
  • 62:20 - 62:22
    "I'll be only too glad."
  • 62:22 - 62:24
    So I steered him into a
    side street where it was dark,
  • 62:24 - 62:27
    and propped him against a wall
    and I give him a frisk.
  • 62:27 - 62:30
    And what do you
    think he done?
  • 62:30 - 62:31
    I mean, Jees,
    I ain't lyin',
  • 62:31 - 62:33
    he begins to laugh,
    the big sap!
  • 62:33 - 62:35
    (laughing)
  • 62:35 - 62:37
    "Quit ticklin' me," he says,
  • 62:37 - 62:39
    while I was friskin' him
    for his roll!
  • 62:39 - 62:41
    I near died!
  • 62:42 - 62:45
    Then I turned him 'round and
    give him a shove to start him.
  • 62:45 - 62:47
    "Just keep goin',"
    I told him.
  • 62:47 - 62:49
    "It's a big white building
    on your right,
  • 62:49 - 62:51
    you can't miss it."
  • 62:51 - 62:53
    Ohh!
  • 62:53 - 62:55
    He must be swimmin' in
    the North River yet.
  • 62:55 - 62:56
    Ain't Uncle Sam the sap
  • 62:56 - 62:58
    to trust guys like that
    with dough?
  • 62:58 - 63:01
    Well, I picked 12 bucks
    off of him.
  • 63:01 - 63:03
    So come on, Rocky,
    set 'em up.
  • 63:03 - 63:06
    Oh, say, Chuck's kiddin'
    about the iceman a minute ago
  • 63:06 - 63:08
    reminds me,
    where the hell's Hickey?
  • 63:08 - 63:10
    That's what
    we're all wonderin'.
  • 63:10 - 63:12
    Well, he oughta be here!
  • 63:12 - 63:13
    Me and Chuck seen him.
  • 63:13 - 63:15
    You've seen Hickey?
    Yeah.
  • 63:15 - 63:16
    Hey, boss!
  • 63:16 - 63:17
    Boss, boss,
    come to.
  • 63:17 - 63:19
    Cora's seen Hickey.
  • 63:19 - 63:21
    Where'd you see him,
    Cora?
  • 63:21 - 63:23
    Right on the next corner,
    he was standin' there.
  • 63:23 - 63:26
    We said,
    "Welcome to our city!
  • 63:26 - 63:28
    "The gang's expectin' ya
    with their tongues hangin' out
  • 63:28 - 63:29
    a yard long."
  • 63:29 - 63:32
    And I kidded him,
    "How's the iceman, Hickey?
  • 63:32 - 63:33
    How's he doin'
    at your house?"
  • 63:33 - 63:36
    And he laughs
    and says, "Fine."
  • 63:36 - 63:37
    And then he says,
  • 63:37 - 63:40
    "Tell the gang
    I'll be along in a minute.
  • 63:40 - 63:42
    "I'm just finishin'
    figurin' out the best way
  • 63:42 - 63:44
    to save 'em
    and bring 'em peace."
  • 63:44 - 63:46
    Bejees, he's thought up
    a new gag!
  • 63:46 - 63:48
    (chuckles)
  • 63:48 - 63:51
    It's a wonder he didn't borrow
    a Salvation Army uniform
  • 63:51 - 63:53
    and show up in that!
  • 63:53 - 63:55
    Go out and get him,
    Rocky.
  • 63:55 - 63:56
    Tell him we're waitin'
    to be saved!
  • 63:56 - 63:58
    Yeah, Harry,
    he was only kiddin'
  • 63:58 - 63:59
    but he was funny, too,
    somehow;
  • 63:59 - 64:01
    he was different
    or somethin'.
  • 64:01 - 64:03
    Sure, he was sober, baby,
    that's what made him different.
  • 64:03 - 64:05
    Sure!
  • 64:05 - 64:07
    Gee, ain't I dumb?
  • 64:07 - 64:09
    Dumbest broad
    I ever seen.
  • 64:09 - 64:11
    Hmm.
  • 64:11 - 64:12
    Sober?
  • 64:12 - 64:13
    That's funny.
  • 64:13 - 64:16
    He's always lapped up
    a good starter on his way here.
  • 64:16 - 64:18
    Well, bejees,
    he won't be sober long!
  • 64:18 - 64:21
    He'll be good and ripe
    for my birthday party
  • 64:21 - 64:22
    tonight at 12:00.
  • 64:22 - 64:25
    Listen, he's fixed
    some new gag to pull on us.
  • 64:25 - 64:28
    We'll pretend to
    let him kid us, see?
  • 64:28 - 64:31
    And we'll kid
    the pants off him!
  • 64:31 - 64:32
    (all laughing)
  • 64:32 - 64:35
    (Rocky)
    Here's the old son of a bitch!
  • 64:35 - 64:37
    (cheering and hollering)
    Hello, gang!
  • 64:37 - 64:39
    * Oh dear old pals
  • 64:39 - 64:41
    * We're jolly old pals
  • 64:41 - 64:42
    * In all kinds
    of weather *
  • 64:42 - 64:44
    * We always stick together
  • 64:44 - 64:46
    * Like we're always game
  • 64:46 - 64:48
    * Whenever the same soul
  • 64:48 - 64:50
    * Give me
    for friendship *
  • 64:50 - 64:53
    * My jolly old pals
  • 64:53 - 64:56
    * And another
    little drink
  • 64:56 - 64:58
    * Won't do us any harm *
  • 64:58 - 65:00
    (cheers, applause.
  • 65:00 - 65:02
    Do your duty,
    Brother Rocky,
  • 65:02 - 65:03
    bring on the rat poison!
  • 65:03 - 65:05
    How goes it,
    Governor?
  • 65:05 - 65:07
    Bejees, Hickey, you old bastard,
    it's good to see you!
  • 65:07 - 65:09
    Hello, Mac.
  • 65:09 - 65:11
    Welcome, "boyo!"
  • 65:11 - 65:12
    Willie!
  • 65:12 - 65:13
    Hey, Hickey!
  • 65:13 - 65:15
    How you've got...
  • 65:15 - 65:16
    (laughter)
  • 65:16 - 65:17
    Hello, Joe.
  • 65:17 - 65:19
    All right, Hickey,
    how you doin'?
  • 65:19 - 65:20
    Hello, Hickey,
    old timer.
  • 65:20 - 65:22
    Oh, Captain Lewis!
  • 65:22 - 65:23
    General Wetjoen!
  • 65:23 - 65:25
    (playful babbling)
    I said!
  • 65:26 - 65:28
    Hello, Hugo!
  • 65:28 - 65:30
    How goes it?
  • 65:30 - 65:31
    Wow, wow!
  • 65:31 - 65:33
    Too much wine underneath
    the willow trees, eh?
  • 65:36 - 65:37
    Hello, Jimmy.
  • 65:37 - 65:39
    It's grand to see ya.
    How's the old scout?
  • 65:39 - 65:40
    You look great.
  • 65:40 - 65:42
    Sit down, Hickey,
    sit down.
  • 65:42 - 65:44
    Well, I, I...
    Jimmy!
  • 65:44 - 65:46
    (laughing)
  • 65:46 - 65:48
    Bejees, it seems natural
  • 65:48 - 65:50
    to see your
    ugly, grinning map.
  • 65:50 - 65:51
    This dumb broad
    was tryin' to tell us
  • 65:51 - 65:52
    you'd changed,
  • 65:52 - 65:54
    but you ain't
    a damned bit!
  • 65:54 - 65:55
    Tell us about yourself.
  • 65:55 - 65:56
    Bejees, Hickey,
  • 65:56 - 65:58
    you look like
    a million dollars!
  • 65:58 - 66:00
    Here's your key, Hickey,
    same old room.
  • 66:00 - 66:01
    Oh, thanks, Rocky.
  • 66:01 - 66:03
    I'll be goin' up
    in a little while
  • 66:03 - 66:04
    and grab a snooze.
  • 66:04 - 66:05
    I haven't been able
    to sleep lately,
  • 66:05 - 66:07
    I'm tired as hell.
  • 66:07 - 66:10
    A couple of hours
    of good kip will fix me.
  • 66:10 - 66:13
    First time I ever heard
    you worry about sleep.
  • 66:13 - 66:15
    Bejees, you never
    would go to bed.
  • 66:15 - 66:16
    Get a couple of slugs
    under your belt,
  • 66:16 - 66:17
    you'll forget sleeping.
  • 66:17 - 66:19
    Here's mud in your eye,
    Hickey.
  • 66:19 - 66:20
    (everybody toasting)
  • 66:20 - 66:23
    Drink hearty,
    boys and girls.
  • 66:26 - 66:28
    Bejees,
    is that a new stunt?
  • 66:28 - 66:31
    Drinking your chaser first?
  • 66:31 - 66:32
    No, I forgot
    to tell Rocky.
  • 66:32 - 66:34
    You'll have to excuse me,
    boys and girls,
  • 66:34 - 66:36
    but I'm off the stuff,
    for keeps.
  • 66:36 - 66:37
    (gasping, repressed laughter)
  • 66:37 - 66:39
    (Harry)
    What the hell?
  • 66:39 - 66:42
    Sure, sure!
  • 66:42 - 66:44
    Joined the Salvation Army,
    ain't you?
  • 66:44 - 66:46
    Been elected President
    of the W.C.T.U.?
  • 66:46 - 66:49
    Take the bottle away
    from him, Rocky.
  • 66:49 - 66:50
    We don't want
    to tempt him into sin.
  • 66:50 - 66:52
    Eh, I know it's hard
    to believe, but, uh,
  • 66:52 - 66:55
    Cora was right, Harry,
    I have changed.
  • 66:55 - 66:56
    I mean
    about the booze,
  • 66:56 - 66:59
    I don't need it anymore.
  • 66:59 - 67:01
    Bejees, Cora says
    you was comin' here to save us.
  • 67:03 - 67:05
    Well, go on, get
    this joke off your chest.
  • 67:05 - 67:06
    Start the service!
  • 67:06 - 67:08
    Sing a Goddamned hymn
    if you like.
  • 67:08 - 67:09
    We'll all join
    in the chorus.
  • 67:09 - 67:12
    "No drunkard can enter
    this beautiful home."
  • 67:12 - 67:13
    You don't think
    I'd come around here
  • 67:13 - 67:15
    peddlin' any brand
    of temperance bunk, do you?
  • 67:15 - 67:17
    Just 'cause I quit the stuff
  • 67:17 - 67:18
    don't mean
    I'm going Prohibition.
  • 67:18 - 67:20
    I'm not that ungrateful,
  • 67:20 - 67:21
    it's given me
    too many good times.
  • 67:21 - 67:23
    So if anybody
    wants to get drunk,
  • 67:23 - 67:25
    if that's the only way
    they can be happy,
  • 67:25 - 67:26
    and feel at peace
    with themselves,
  • 67:26 - 67:27
    why the hell
    shouldn't they?
  • 67:27 - 67:29
    Hell, I know that game
    from soup to nuts.
  • 67:29 - 67:31
    I wrote the book.
  • 67:31 - 67:33
    The only reason
    I quit is...
  • 67:33 - 67:35
    well, I finally had
    the guts to face myself
  • 67:35 - 67:37
    and throw overboard
    that damned lying pipe dream
  • 67:37 - 67:39
    that'd make me miserable,
  • 67:39 - 67:41
    and do what I had to do
  • 67:41 - 67:43
    for the happiness
    of all concerned.
  • 67:43 - 67:44
    Then all at once,
  • 67:44 - 67:46
    I was at peace with myself
  • 67:46 - 67:48
    and I didn't need
    the booze anymore.
  • 67:51 - 67:53
    Well, what the hell?
  • 67:53 - 67:54
    Don't let me be
    a wet blanket.
  • 67:54 - 67:56
    Set 'em up again, Rocky.
  • 67:56 - 67:58
    Here, keep the balls coming
    until last kill,
  • 67:58 - 67:59
    then I'll ask for more.
  • 67:59 - 68:02
    Jees, a roll that'd choke
    a hippopotamus.
  • 68:02 - 68:04
    Fill up, you guys!
  • 68:04 - 68:06
    That sounds more
    like you, Hickey.
  • 68:06 - 68:09
    All that water-wagon bull!
  • 68:09 - 68:11
    Cut the act and have a drink,
    for Chrissake.
  • 68:11 - 68:13
    It's no act, Governor,
    but that don't mean
  • 68:13 - 68:15
    I'm a teetotal grouch
    and can't be in the party.
  • 68:15 - 68:17
    Why else do you think
    I'm here except to have a party,
  • 68:17 - 68:20
    like I've always done, and help
    celebrate your birthday tonight?
  • 68:20 - 68:22
    You've all been
    good pals to me,
  • 68:22 - 68:24
    best friends I've ever had.
  • 68:24 - 68:27
    And I've been thinking about you
    ever since I left the house,
  • 68:27 - 68:29
    all the time I was
    walking over here.
  • 68:29 - 68:30
    "Walkin'?"
  • 68:30 - 68:32
    Bejees, you mean
    to say you walked?
  • 68:32 - 68:34
    I sure as hell did.
  • 68:34 - 68:36
    All the way from the wilds
    of darkest Astoria.
  • 68:36 - 68:39
    I seemed to get here
    before I knew it.
  • 68:39 - 68:41
    And that ought
    to encourage you, Governor,
  • 68:41 - 68:42
    show you a little walk
    around the ward
  • 68:42 - 68:45
    is nothin'
    to be so scared about.
  • 68:45 - 68:47
    It was goin' on 12:00
    when I went into the bedroom
  • 68:47 - 68:49
    to tell Evelyn I was leaving,
    six hours, say.
  • 68:49 - 68:51
    No, less than that,
  • 68:51 - 68:52
    'cause I'd been standin'
    on the street corner
  • 68:52 - 68:53
    some time before
    Chuck and Cora came along,
  • 68:53 - 68:56
    thinkin' about all of you.
  • 68:56 - 68:57
    Of course,
    I was only kidding Cora
  • 68:57 - 68:59
    with that stuff
    about saving you.
  • 68:59 - 69:02
    But no,
    I wasn't either,
  • 69:02 - 69:04
    but I didn't mean booze.
  • 69:04 - 69:06
    I meant save you
    from pipe dreams.
  • 69:06 - 69:07
    Because I know now,
    from my experience,
  • 69:07 - 69:09
    that they're the things
  • 69:09 - 69:10
    that can really poison
    and ruin a guy's life
  • 69:10 - 69:13
    and keep him
    from finding any peace.
  • 69:13 - 69:15
    If you knew how free
    and contented I feel now.
  • 69:15 - 69:17
    Why, I'm like a new man,
  • 69:17 - 69:19
    and the cure for them
    is so damned simple
  • 69:19 - 69:22
    once you got the nerve.
  • 69:22 - 69:24
    Just stop lying to yourself
    and kidding yourself
  • 69:24 - 69:25
    about tomorrows.
  • 69:27 - 69:29
    Hell, this begins
    to sound like a damned sermon
  • 69:29 - 69:30
    on the way to lead
    the good life!
  • 69:30 - 69:32
    It's in my blood,
    I guess.
  • 69:32 - 69:33
    My old man used
    to whale salvation
  • 69:33 - 69:35
    into my heinie
    with a birch rod.
  • 69:35 - 69:36
    He was a preacher
    in the sticks of Indiana,
  • 69:36 - 69:38
    like I've told you,
  • 69:38 - 69:40
    got my knack of sales gab
    from him, too.
  • 69:40 - 69:42
    He was the boy that could sell
    those Hoosier hayseeds
  • 69:42 - 69:44
    building lots along
    the Golden Street!
  • 69:44 - 69:46
    Now don't look at me
    like that, boys and girls.
  • 69:46 - 69:47
    I'm not tryin' to sell
    you a goldbrick.
  • 69:47 - 69:49
    Nothin' up my sleeves,
    honest.
  • 69:49 - 69:51
    Let's take an example,
    any one of you, eh?
  • 69:51 - 69:53
    Take you, Governor.
  • 69:53 - 69:55
    That walk around the ward
    you never take.
  • 69:55 - 69:58
    What about it?
  • 69:58 - 69:59
    Well, you know
    as well as I do, Harry,
  • 69:59 - 70:00
    everything about it.
  • 70:03 - 70:05
    Well, Bejees,
    I'm going to take it!
  • 70:05 - 70:07
    Of course you are,
    because I'm gonna help you.
  • 70:07 - 70:09
    I know it's the thing
    that you've got to do
  • 70:09 - 70:10
    before you know
    what real peace means.
  • 70:12 - 70:13
    Same thing with you,
    Jimmy.
  • 70:13 - 70:15
    You're goin' have to try
    and get your old job back,
  • 70:15 - 70:16
    and no tomorrows about it.
  • 70:16 - 70:18
    Ahh, I...
  • 70:18 - 70:20
    No, don't tell me,
    I know all about tomorrows.
  • 70:20 - 70:21
    I wrote the book.
  • 70:23 - 70:26
    I, I don't
    understand you, Hickey.
  • 70:26 - 70:28
    I admit
    I've foolishly delayed,
  • 70:28 - 70:29
    but as it happens,
  • 70:29 - 70:31
    I'd just
    made up my mind
  • 70:31 - 70:33
    that as soon as I could
    get straightened out...
  • 70:33 - 70:35
    Fine, fine,
    that's the spirit,
  • 70:35 - 70:37
    and I'm gonna help you,
    Jimmy.
  • 70:37 - 70:39
    'Cause you've always been
    damned kind to me,
  • 70:39 - 70:41
    and I wanna prove
    how grateful I am to you.
  • 70:41 - 70:42
    When it's all over,
  • 70:42 - 70:44
    you don't have to nag
    yourself any more.
  • 70:44 - 70:46
    You'll be grateful
    to me, too.
  • 70:46 - 70:47
    And all the rest of you,
  • 70:47 - 70:50
    the ladies included,
  • 70:50 - 70:52
    are in the same boat,
    one way or another.
  • 70:52 - 70:55
    Be God, you've hit the nail
    on my head, Hickey.
  • 70:55 - 70:56
    This dump
  • 70:56 - 70:58
    is the Palace of Pipe Dreams!
  • 70:58 - 71:00
    Well, well,
  • 71:00 - 71:03
    the Old Grandstand
    Foolosopher speaks, ah?
  • 71:03 - 71:06
    And you think you're
    the big exception, eh?
  • 71:06 - 71:08
    Life doesn't mean a damn
    to you any more.
  • 71:08 - 71:09
    You're retired
    from the circus,
  • 71:09 - 71:12
    you're impatiently waiting
    for the end
  • 71:12 - 71:13
    in the good old Long Sleep.
  • 71:13 - 71:16
    Well, I think a lot of you,
    Larry, you old bastard,
  • 71:16 - 71:18
    and I'll try and make an
    honest man out of you, too.
  • 71:18 - 71:20
    What the devil
    are you hintin' at?
  • 71:20 - 71:22
    Well, you don't
    have to ask me, do you,
  • 71:22 - 71:23
    wise old guy like you?
  • 71:23 - 71:26
    Just ask yourself,
    I'll bet you know.
  • 71:26 - 71:27
    He's got your number
    all right, Larry.
  • 71:27 - 71:28
    That's the stuff,
    Hickey.
  • 71:28 - 71:30
    He's got no right
    to sneak out of everything.
  • 71:30 - 71:32
    Well, hello!
  • 71:32 - 71:34
    A stranger in our midst.
  • 71:36 - 71:38
    I didn't notice you
    before, brother.
  • 71:42 - 71:44
    My name's, uh, Parritt,
    I'm an old friend of Larry's.
  • 71:49 - 71:50
    What are you staring at?
  • 71:50 - 71:53
    Oh, no offense, brother,
    I was just trying to figure.
  • 71:53 - 71:55
    Haven't we met before...
  • 71:55 - 71:56
    some place?
  • 71:58 - 72:01
    No, it's the first time
    I've been East.
  • 72:01 - 72:03
    No, you're right,
    I know that's not it.
  • 72:03 - 72:04
    You see, in my game,
    to be a shark at it,
  • 72:04 - 72:05
    you teach yourself
  • 72:05 - 72:08
    never to forget
    a name or a face.
  • 72:08 - 72:10
    But still
    I know damned well there's...
  • 72:10 - 72:13
    something that
    I recognize about you.
  • 72:14 - 72:17
    We're members
    of the same lodge...
  • 72:17 - 72:19
    in some way.
  • 72:19 - 72:21
    What are you
    talkin' about?
  • 72:22 - 72:23
    You're nuts.
  • 72:23 - 72:26
    Don't kid me, little boy.
  • 72:26 - 72:28
    I'm a good salesman,
    so damned good the firm was glad
  • 72:28 - 72:30
    to take me back
    after every drunk.
  • 72:30 - 72:32
    And what made me good
    was I could size up anyone.
  • 72:35 - 72:36
    But still, I don't...
  • 72:39 - 72:40
    Well, never mind.
  • 72:40 - 72:42
    I can tell you're havin'
    trouble with yourself,
  • 72:42 - 72:43
    and I'll be glad
    to do anything I can
  • 72:43 - 72:45
    to help a friend of Larry's.
  • 72:45 - 72:46
    Mind your own
    business, Hickey.
  • 72:46 - 72:48
    He's nothing to you,
  • 72:48 - 72:49
    or to me.
  • 72:52 - 72:54
    You're keeping us all
    in suspense.
  • 72:54 - 72:56
    Tell us more about
    how you're going to save us.
  • 72:56 - 72:58
    Well, hell,
  • 72:58 - 73:00
    don't get sore, Larry.
  • 73:00 - 73:01
    We're old pals,
  • 73:01 - 73:03
    I've always liked you a lot,
    you know that.
  • 73:06 - 73:08
    Forget it, Hickey.
  • 73:08 - 73:10
    Fine, fine...
  • 73:10 - 73:12
    Well,
    that's the spirit.
  • 73:16 - 73:17
    What's the matter,
    everybody?
  • 73:17 - 73:18
    Come on, drink up!
  • 73:18 - 73:20
    A little action!
  • 73:24 - 73:25
    Have another...
  • 73:25 - 73:27
    Hell, this is
    a celebration!
  • 73:28 - 73:31
    Oh, forget it if anything I said
    sounded too serious.
  • 73:31 - 73:33
    You think
    I'm talkin' out of turn,
  • 73:33 - 73:35
    just tell me
    to go chase myself.
  • 73:35 - 73:36
    (yawning)
  • 73:36 - 73:37
    No, boys and girls,
  • 73:37 - 73:40
    I'm not trying to put
    anything over on you.
  • 73:40 - 73:41
    It's just
    that I know now,
  • 73:41 - 73:43
    from experience,
  • 73:43 - 73:46
    what a lying pipe dream
    can do to you.
  • 73:46 - 73:48
    And how damned relieved
    and contented with yourself
  • 73:48 - 73:50
    you'll feel when you're
    rid of it.
  • 73:50 - 73:52
    (yawning)
  • 73:53 - 73:56
    Oh, my God...
  • 73:56 - 73:58
    I'm sleepy
    all of a sudden.
  • 74:00 - 74:03
    That long walk
    must be gettin' to me.
  • 74:04 - 74:06
    I better go upstairs.
  • 74:13 - 74:15
    Hell of a trick
    to go dead on you like this.
  • 74:18 - 74:20
    And no,
    boys and girls, I've...
  • 74:23 - 74:26
    never known
    what real peace was until now.
  • 74:28 - 74:30
    It's a grand feeling.
  • 74:33 - 74:35
    Like when you're sick and
    suffering like hell and then...
  • 74:37 - 74:38
    doc gives you
    a shot in the arm.
  • 74:42 - 74:43
    The pain goes and...
  • 74:45 - 74:46
    you drift off.
  • 74:50 - 74:52
    You let yourself go at last.
  • 74:55 - 74:57
    You sink down
    to the bottom of the sea.
  • 75:00 - 75:01
    Rest in peace.
  • 75:01 - 75:03
    (keys clattering)
  • 75:06 - 75:09
    There's no further
    you have to go.
  • 75:11 - 75:14
    Not one single
  • 75:14 - 75:17
    hope or dream
    left to nag you.
  • 75:22 - 75:24
    But you'll all know
    what I mean.
  • 75:29 - 75:32
    Excuse me,
    I'll just grab 40 winks.
  • 75:35 - 75:36
    Drink up,
    everybody...
  • 75:39 - 75:40
    on me.
  • 75:43 - 75:46
    Don't let me be
    a wet blanket.
  • 75:46 - 75:49
    All I want
    is to see you happy.
  • 76:24 - 76:26
    (dishes rattling)
  • 76:34 - 76:36
    Well, how's that, kid?
  • 76:36 - 76:38
    What the hell do I know
    about flowers?
  • 76:38 - 76:41
    You can see they're pretty,
    can't you, you big dummy?
  • 76:41 - 76:42
    Yeah, baby, sure,
    if you like 'em,
  • 76:42 - 76:43
    they're all right with me.
  • 76:46 - 76:48
    Oh, Jees, Pearl!
  • 76:48 - 76:50
    Look at that cake, eh?
  • 76:50 - 76:52
    Come here,
    look, six candles,
  • 76:52 - 76:53
    each for 10 years.
  • 76:53 - 76:55
    Oh...
  • 76:55 - 76:56
    when do we light
    the candles, Rocky?
  • 76:56 - 76:58
    Ask that bughouse
    Hickey.
  • 76:58 - 77:00
    "Just before Harry
    come down," he says.
  • 77:00 - 77:03
    "Then Harry blows them out
    with one breath, for luck."
  • 77:03 - 77:05
    (spits)
  • 77:05 - 77:07
    Hickey was gonna have
    60 candles,
  • 77:07 - 77:10
    but I says "Jees, if the old guy
    took that big a breath",
  • 77:10 - 77:12
    he'd croak himself."
  • 77:12 - 77:13
    Anyways, it's a nice cake,
    ain't it?
  • 77:13 - 77:16
    Oh, sure,
    it's all right by me.
  • 77:16 - 77:17
    But what is Harry
    gonna do with a cake?
  • 77:17 - 77:20
    If he ever ate a hunk,
    it'd croak him.
  • 77:21 - 77:23
    Jees, you're a dope!
  • 77:23 - 77:24
    Ain't he, Margie?
  • 77:24 - 77:26
    Yeah, dope is right.
  • 77:26 - 77:28
    You broads better watch
    your step or I'll...
  • 77:28 - 77:30
    Or what?
    Yeah, what, what?
  • 77:30 - 77:32
    Say, what the hell's
    got into ya's?
  • 77:32 - 77:35
    It'll be 12:00 o'clock and
    Harry's birthday before long.
  • 77:35 - 77:36
    I ain't lookin'
    for no trouble.
  • 77:36 - 77:39
    Oh, we ain't
    neither, Rocky.
  • 77:42 - 77:44
    A guy what can't see
    flowers is pretty
  • 77:44 - 77:46
    must be some dumbbell.
  • 77:46 - 77:49
    Yeah, well,
    if I was as dumb as you...
  • 77:49 - 77:51
    Jees, you got your
    scrappin' pants on, ain't you?
  • 77:53 - 77:54
    What the hell, baby,
    what's eatin' you?
  • 77:54 - 77:55
    All I'm thinkin' is,
  • 77:55 - 77:57
    "What the hell
    could Harry do with flowers?"
  • 77:57 - 77:59
    He don't know a cauliflower
    from a geranium.
  • 77:59 - 78:01
    Jees,
  • 78:01 - 78:03
    ever since Hickeys woke up,
    you can't hold him.
  • 78:03 - 78:06
    He's taken on the party
    like it was his birthday.
  • 78:06 - 78:08
    Well, he's payin'
    for everything, ain't he?
  • 78:08 - 78:11
    Aw, I don't mind
    the birthday stuff so much.
  • 78:11 - 78:12
    What gets my goat
  • 78:12 - 78:15
    is the way he's buttin' in
    all over the place,
  • 78:15 - 78:17
    tellin' everybody
    where they get off.
  • 78:17 - 78:19
    He just keeps
    hintin' around.
  • 78:19 - 78:21
    Yeah, he was hintin'
    to me and Margie.
  • 78:21 - 78:23
    Yeah,
    the lousy drummer.
  • 78:23 - 78:25
    He just gives you an earful
    of that line of bull about
  • 78:25 - 78:27
    you gotta be honest
    with yourself
  • 78:27 - 78:29
    and not kid yourself,
  • 78:29 - 78:31
    and you gotta have the guts
    to be what you are.
  • 78:31 - 78:33
    I told him,
  • 78:33 - 78:35
    "That's all right
    for the bums in this dump.
  • 78:35 - 78:37
    "But it don't go
    with me, see?
  • 78:37 - 78:39
    I don't kid myself
    with no pipe dreams."
  • 78:41 - 78:42
    What are you grinnin' at?
  • 78:42 - 78:44
    Nothin'.
    Nothin'.
  • 78:44 - 78:45
    It better be nothin'!
  • 78:45 - 78:48
    And don't let Hickey
    put no ideas in your nuts
  • 78:48 - 78:49
    if you wanna stay healthy.
  • 78:51 - 78:54
    He's ridin' someone
    every minute.
  • 78:54 - 78:56
    He's got Harry
    and Jimmy Tomorrow run ragged.
  • 78:56 - 78:58
    And the rest are hidin'
    in their rooms,
  • 78:58 - 79:01
    so they don't won't
    have to listen to him.
  • 79:01 - 79:03
    They're all actin' cagey
    with the booze, too,
  • 79:03 - 79:06
    like they was scared
    if they get too drunk,
  • 79:06 - 79:08
    they might spill
    their guts.
  • 79:08 - 79:11
    And everybody's getting
    a prize grouch on.
  • 79:11 - 79:12
    Yeah,
  • 79:12 - 79:14
    he's been hintin' around
    to me and Chuck, too.
  • 79:14 - 79:16
    You-you'd think
    he suspected me and Chuck
  • 79:16 - 79:18
    had no real intention
    of gettin' married.
  • 79:18 - 79:20
    You'd think he suspected
    Chuck wasn't goin' to lay off
  • 79:20 - 79:21
    of periodicals,
  • 79:21 - 79:23
    or maybe
    didn't even want to.
  • 79:23 - 79:25
    I told him,
    "I'm on the wagon for keeps,
  • 79:25 - 79:26
    and Cora knows it."
  • 79:26 - 79:28
    And I told him:
    "Sure, I know it.
  • 79:28 - 79:30
    "And Chuck ain't never goin'
    to throw it in my face.
  • 79:30 - 79:32
    "I was a tart, neither.
  • 79:32 - 79:34
    "And if you think
    we're just kiddin' ourselves,
  • 79:34 - 79:35
    "we'll show ya!
  • 79:35 - 79:36
    We are gettin' married
    tomorrow."
  • 79:36 - 79:38
    Ain't we, honey?
  • 79:38 - 79:39
    You bet, baby.
  • 79:39 - 79:40
    Christ, Chuck!
  • 79:40 - 79:43
    Are you lettin' that bughouse
    louse Hickey kid you into...
  • 79:43 - 79:45
    Nobody's kiddin' him into it,
    nor me neither!
  • 79:45 - 79:47
    Hickey's right,
  • 79:47 - 79:48
    if this big tramp's
    goin' to marry me,
  • 79:48 - 79:49
    he ought to do it,
    and not just shoot off
  • 79:49 - 79:51
    his old bazoo about it.
  • 79:51 - 79:52
    You can't be that dumb,
    Chuck.
  • 79:52 - 79:54
    Rocky, you keep
    outta this, you hear?
  • 79:54 - 79:57
    And don't start beefin' about
    the crickets on the farm
  • 79:57 - 79:59
    drivin' us nuts.
  • 79:59 - 80:01
    Christ, you'd think
    they was elephants!
  • 80:01 - 80:04
    Ah, Rocky,
    don't notice that broad.
  • 80:04 - 80:05
    You heard what she said,
    right?
  • 80:05 - 80:06
    "Tomorrow, tomorrow!"
  • 80:06 - 80:08
    The same old crap.
  • 80:08 - 80:10
    Is that so?
    Uh.
  • 80:10 - 80:12
    Imagine Cora a bride!
  • 80:12 - 80:13
    That's a hot one!
  • 80:13 - 80:14
    Jees, Cora,
  • 80:14 - 80:16
    if all the guys you've
    stayed with was side by side,
  • 80:16 - 80:19
    you could walk on 'em
    from here to Texas!
  • 80:19 - 80:21
    You can't talk to me like that,
    you skinny Dago hooker!
  • 80:21 - 80:24
    I may be a tart, but I ain't a
    cheap old whore like you!
  • 80:24 - 80:26
    I'll show you
    who's a whore!
  • 80:26 - 80:28
    (unintelligible
    loud screaming)
  • 80:28 - 80:30
    Dago whore!
  • 80:30 - 80:33
    (yelling, screaming)
  • 80:33 - 80:34
    Oh, bury it!
  • 80:34 - 80:36
    What are you, a virgin?
  • 80:36 - 80:38
    You mean you think
    I'm a whore, too?
  • 80:38 - 80:39
    Yeah, me, too?
  • 80:39 - 80:40
    Now don't start nothin'!
  • 80:40 - 80:43
    I suppose it'd tickle you
    if me and Margie did
  • 80:43 - 80:44
    what that louse Hickey
    was hintin',
  • 80:44 - 80:46
    and come right out
    and admitted we was whores!
  • 80:46 - 80:47
    Yeah.
  • 80:47 - 80:49
    It's the truth, ain't it?
  • 80:49 - 80:50
    Jees, Rocky,
  • 80:50 - 80:52
    that's a fine hell of a thing
    to say to two girls
  • 80:52 - 80:54
    that's been as good
    to you as Pearl and Margie!
  • 80:56 - 80:57
    Oh, oh look,
  • 80:57 - 80:59
    I-I didn't mean
    to call you that, Pearl.
  • 80:59 - 81:01
    No hard feelings,
    Cora.
  • 81:03 - 81:04
    There,
  • 81:04 - 81:05
    that fixes everything,
    don't it?
  • 81:05 - 81:08
    Okay, Rocky,
    we're whores.
  • 81:08 - 81:09
    You know what
    that makes you, don't you?
  • 81:09 - 81:11
    Look out, now!
  • 81:11 - 81:13
    A lousy little pimp,
    that's what.
  • 81:13 - 81:14
    I'll loin you!
  • 81:14 - 81:16
    A dirty little Ginny pimp,
    that's what!
  • 81:16 - 81:17
    Yes,
  • 81:17 - 81:19
    you provin' it to us,
    Pearl!
  • 81:19 - 81:21
    Sure!
  • 81:21 - 81:23
    Hickey's converted him,
  • 81:23 - 81:24
    he's given up
    his pipe dream.
  • 81:24 - 81:25
    Lay off of me or I'll...
  • 81:25 - 81:27
    Oh, lay off them!
  • 81:27 - 81:29
    Harry's party ain't no time
    to beat up your stable.
  • 81:29 - 81:30
    Whose stable?
  • 81:30 - 81:31
    Who do you think
    you're talkin' to?
  • 81:31 - 81:32
    I ain't never
    beat 'em up!
  • 81:32 - 81:34
    What do you think I am?
  • 81:34 - 81:36
    I just give 'em a slap,
    like any guy would his wife,
  • 81:36 - 81:38
    if she got too gabby.
  • 81:38 - 81:41
    I'm not lookin' for no trouble
    on Harry's birthday party!
  • 81:41 - 81:42
    (gasps)
  • 81:42 - 81:45
    You lousy little Ginny!
  • 81:45 - 81:48
    I'll lay off you until
    the party's over,
  • 81:48 - 81:49
    if Pearl will.
  • 81:49 - 81:50
    Sure I will...
  • 81:50 - 81:52
    For Harry's sake, not yours,
    you little Wop!
  • 81:52 - 81:54
    Say, listen, you!
    (laughing)
  • 81:54 - 81:56
    If you don't get
    no wrong I...
  • 81:56 - 81:57
    What the hell
    are you laughin' at,
  • 81:57 - 81:59
    you half-dead old
    stew bum?
  • 81:59 - 82:01
    At himself,
    and he ought to be.
  • 82:01 - 82:04
    Jees, Hickey's
    sure got his number.
  • 82:04 - 82:07
    Wake up, comrade!
  • 82:07 - 82:09
    Here's a revolution
    starting all around you,
  • 82:09 - 82:10
    and you're sleeping
    through it!
  • 82:10 - 82:12
    Be God, it's not
    to Bakunin's ghost
  • 82:12 - 82:14
    you ought to be
    prayin' your dreams,
  • 82:14 - 82:16
    but to the great
    nihilist, Hickey!
  • 82:16 - 82:18
    He started a movement
    that'll blow up the world!
  • 82:20 - 82:21
    You, Larry!
  • 82:21 - 82:22
    Renegade!
  • 82:22 - 82:23
    Traitor!
  • 82:23 - 82:25
    I'll have you shot!
  • 82:25 - 82:28
    Don't be a fool,
    buy me a drink.
  • 82:29 - 82:30
    (laughing maniacally)
  • 82:36 - 82:39
    Bourgeois swine, Hickey!
  • 82:41 - 82:44
    He laughs like good fellow,
  • 82:44 - 82:45
    he makes jokes.
  • 82:47 - 82:50
    He dares to hint to me,
  • 82:50 - 82:52
    so I see what
    he dares to think!
  • 82:54 - 82:57
    He thinks I'm finish,
  • 82:57 - 82:59
    it is too late.
  • 82:59 - 83:01
    So I do not wish
    the day to come
  • 83:01 - 83:04
    because it will
    not be my day.
  • 83:04 - 83:05
    Ahh?
  • 83:05 - 83:07
    I see what he thinks!
  • 83:09 - 83:11
    He thinks lies
  • 83:11 - 83:12
    even worse,
  • 83:12 - 83:14
    that I...
  • 83:17 - 83:19
    I'll have him hanged
    the first one of all
  • 83:19 - 83:21
    to the first lamppost!
  • 83:22 - 83:24
    (laughing maniacally)
  • 83:25 - 83:27
    Why you so serious,
  • 83:27 - 83:29
    you little monkey-faces?
  • 83:29 - 83:32
    It's all great joke,
    no?
  • 83:32 - 83:34
    So we get drunk,
  • 83:34 - 83:36
    and we laugh like hell,
  • 83:36 - 83:38
    and then we die,
  • 83:38 - 83:40
    and the pipe dream vanish!
  • 83:40 - 83:41
    (laughing)
  • 83:43 - 83:45
    But be of good cheer,
    little stupid peoples!
  • 83:45 - 83:48
    "The days grow hot,
  • 83:48 - 83:49
    O Babylon!"
  • 83:49 - 83:51
    Soon,
    little proletarians,
  • 83:51 - 83:54
    we will have free picnic
    in the cool shade,
  • 83:54 - 83:56
    and we will eat hot dogs
  • 83:56 - 83:58
    and drink free wine
  • 83:58 - 84:00
    beneath the willow trees!
  • 84:00 - 84:02
    Like hogs, yes!
  • 84:02 - 84:04
    Like beautiful,
    little hogs!
  • 84:10 - 84:12
    Goddamned liar, Hickey!
  • 84:14 - 84:17
    It's he who makes me sneer.
  • 84:18 - 84:19
    I want to sleep!
  • 84:25 - 84:27
    Hickey ain't
    overlookin' no bets.
  • 84:27 - 84:29
    Tell it to
    Old Wise Guy Larry,
  • 84:29 - 84:31
    who's still pretendin'
    he's the one exception
  • 84:31 - 84:32
    who don't do no
    pipe dreamin'!
  • 84:32 - 84:34
    I...
  • 84:35 - 84:36
    All right.
  • 84:38 - 84:40
    Take it out on me,
    if it makes you more content.
  • 84:42 - 84:44
    Sure, I love every hair
    of your heads,
  • 84:44 - 84:47
    my great big
    beautiful baby dolls,
  • 84:47 - 84:49
    and there's nothing
    I wouldn't do for you.
  • 84:49 - 84:51
    The old
    Irish bunk, huh?
  • 84:51 - 84:52
    We ain't big
  • 84:52 - 84:55
    and we ain't
    your baby dolls!
  • 84:55 - 84:56
    But we admit
    we're beautiful,
  • 84:56 - 84:58
    huh, Margie?
    Yeah, sure thing.
  • 84:58 - 85:00
    But what would he do
    with beautiful dolls
  • 85:00 - 85:02
    even if he had the price,
    the old goat?
  • 85:02 - 85:04
    Ahh!
  • 85:04 - 85:07
    Larry, you're okay even though
    you are full of bull.
  • 85:07 - 85:09
    Sure,
    you're aces with us;
  • 85:09 - 85:10
    we're nervous,
    that's all.
  • 85:10 - 85:12
    It's Hickey,
    that lousy drummer!
  • 85:12 - 85:14
    Why can't he be like
    he's always been?
  • 85:14 - 85:16
    I ain't never seen
    a guy change so.
  • 85:16 - 85:18
    What do you think
    happened to him, Larry?
  • 85:18 - 85:20
    I don't know.
  • 85:20 - 85:22
    With all his gab
  • 85:22 - 85:24
    I noticed he's kept
    that to himself so far.
  • 85:24 - 85:27
    Maybe he's saving
    the great revelation
  • 85:27 - 85:28
    for Harry's party.
  • 85:28 - 85:30
    Oh!
  • 85:30 - 85:32
    Let him mind his own business
    and I'll mind mine.
  • 85:32 - 85:34
    Yeah,
    that's what I say.
  • 85:34 - 85:35
    Say, Larry,
  • 85:35 - 85:37
    where's that young friend
    of yours disappeared to?
  • 85:37 - 85:38
    I don't care where he is,
  • 85:38 - 85:40
    except I wish he was
    a thousand miles away!
  • 85:44 - 85:45
    He's a pest.
  • 85:45 - 85:47
    I told him,
  • 85:47 - 85:48
    "I'll take
    a lot from you, Hickey,"
  • 85:48 - 85:50
    "like everyone else
    in this dump,"
  • 85:50 - 85:53
    "because you always
    been a grand guy."
  • 85:53 - 85:56
    "But there's things I don't take
    from you nor nobody, see?"
  • 85:56 - 85:57
    "Remember that,"
  • 85:57 - 85:59
    or you'll wake up
    in a hospital,
  • 85:59 - 86:00
    "or maybe worse,
  • 86:00 - 86:02
    "with your wife
    and the iceman
  • 86:02 - 86:04
    walkin' slow behind ya."
  • 86:04 - 86:06
    Aw, you oughtn't make
    that iceman crack, Rocky.
  • 86:06 - 86:09
    I noticed he ain't pulled
    that old gag this time.
  • 86:09 - 86:10
    (gasps)
  • 86:10 - 86:13
    Do you suppose he did
    catch his wife cheatin', hum?
  • 86:13 - 86:15
    Oh, that's the bunk!
  • 86:15 - 86:18
    He ain't pulled that gag
    or showed a photo around
  • 86:18 - 86:19
    because he ain't drunk.
  • 86:19 - 86:20
    And if he's caught her
    cheatin'
  • 86:20 - 86:22
    he'd be drunk,
    wouldn't he?
  • 86:22 - 86:23
    He'd have beat her up
    and then gone on the worst drunk
  • 86:23 - 86:25
    he'd ever staged.
  • 86:25 - 86:27
    Sure, Rocky's got
    the right dope, baby.
  • 86:35 - 86:38
    I stood tellin' people this dump
    is closed for the night
  • 86:38 - 86:40
    all I'm gonna!
  • 86:40 - 86:42
    Let Harry hire a doorman,
    pay him wages, if he wants one.
  • 86:42 - 86:44
    Yeah?
  • 86:44 - 86:46
    Harry's pretty
    damned good to ya.
  • 86:46 - 86:47
    Sure he is,
  • 86:47 - 86:48
    I don't mean that.
  • 86:48 - 86:50
    Anyways,
    it's all right.
  • 86:50 - 86:52
    I told Schwartz,
    the cop,
  • 86:52 - 86:54
    we closed for the party.
  • 86:54 - 86:56
    He'll keep folks away.
  • 86:56 - 86:59
    I wants me a big drink,
    that's what.
  • 86:59 - 87:01
    Who's stoppin' yuh?
  • 87:01 - 87:02
    You can have all you want
    on Hickey.
  • 87:04 - 87:05
    All right,
  • 87:05 - 87:08
    I earned all the drinks on him
    I could drink in a year
  • 87:08 - 87:11
    for listenin' to his
    crazy bull.
  • 87:11 - 87:13
    And here's hopin'
    he gets the lockjaw.
  • 87:15 - 87:17
    I drinks on him,
    but I don't drink with him.
  • 87:17 - 87:20
    No, sir,
    never no more!
  • 87:20 - 87:22
    Oh, bull.
  • 87:22 - 87:24
    Hickey's all right,
    what's he done to you?
  • 87:24 - 87:26
    That's my business.
  • 87:26 - 87:28
    Sure, you would think
    he's all right.
  • 87:28 - 87:31
    He's a white man,
    ain't he?
  • 87:31 - 87:34
    Now listen to me,
    you white boys!
  • 87:34 - 87:35
    Now don't you
    get it in your head
  • 87:35 - 87:36
    that I was pretendin' to be
    what I ain't,
  • 87:36 - 87:39
    or that I ain't
    proud to be what I am
  • 87:39 - 87:40
    you gettin' me?
  • 87:44 - 87:47
    Or you and me
    is goin' to have trouble.
  • 87:51 - 87:52
    What nerve!
  • 87:52 - 87:54
    Just because
    you act nice to him,
  • 87:54 - 87:56
    he gets a swelled nut...
  • 87:56 - 87:58
    if that ain't
    a coon all over.
  • 87:58 - 87:59
    He talkin' fight talk, huh?
  • 87:59 - 88:01
    I'll murder the nigger.
  • 88:01 - 88:02
    Listen, listen, boys,
  • 88:02 - 88:04
    I, I'm sorry.
  • 88:06 - 88:08
    You been
    good friends to me.
  • 88:08 - 88:11
    It's that Hickey,
  • 88:11 - 88:13
    he gets my head all mixed up
    with craziness.
  • 88:13 - 88:16
    Oh, that's
    all right, Joe.
  • 88:16 - 88:18
    The boys wasn't
    takin' you serious.
  • 88:18 - 88:20
    Jees, what did I say?
  • 88:20 - 88:22
    Hickey ain't
    overlookin' no bets.
  • 88:22 - 88:23
    And you gotta admit
  • 88:23 - 88:24
    he's got
    the right dope.
  • 88:24 - 88:26
    I mean, on some
    of the bums here.
  • 88:26 - 88:29
    He's certainly got one guy
    I know sized up right.
  • 88:29 - 88:30
    Ain't he, Pearl?
  • 88:30 - 88:32
    He certainly has.
  • 88:32 - 88:33
    Cut it out,
    I told ya!
  • 88:33 - 88:35
    It's nothing to me
    what happened to him.
  • 88:36 - 88:39
    But I have a feeling he's dying
    to tell us inside him,
  • 88:39 - 88:41
    and yet he's afraid.
  • 88:41 - 88:42
    Like that damned kid.
  • 88:44 - 88:46
    Strange the queer way
    he seemed to recognize him.
  • 88:48 - 88:49
    If he's afraid,
  • 88:49 - 88:50
    that explains
    why he's off booze.
  • 88:50 - 88:53
    Afraid if he got drunk,
    he might tell...
  • 88:53 - 88:54
    Well, well, well!
  • 88:54 - 88:56
    Here I am
    in the nick of time.
  • 88:56 - 88:57
    Well, come on, somebody,
  • 88:57 - 88:59
    give me a hand
    with these packages.
  • 88:59 - 89:01
    Jees, Hickey,
  • 89:01 - 89:02
    you scared me outta
    a year's growth,
  • 89:02 - 89:04
    sneakin' in like that.
  • 89:04 - 89:05
    "Sneakin'?"
  • 89:05 - 89:07
    You were all so busy
    drinking in words of wisdom
  • 89:07 - 89:08
    from Old Wise Guy here,
  • 89:08 - 89:10
    you couldn't hear
    anything else.
  • 89:10 - 89:12
    And from what
    I heard, Larry,
  • 89:12 - 89:13
    you're not so good
  • 89:13 - 89:15
    when you start playing
    Sherlock Holmes.
  • 89:15 - 89:16
    You've got me all wrong.
  • 89:16 - 89:19
    I'm not afraid
    of anything now,
  • 89:19 - 89:21
    not even myself.
  • 89:21 - 89:23
    You better stick to
    the part of Old Cemetery,
  • 89:23 - 89:25
    the Barker
    for the Big Sleep.
  • 89:25 - 89:26
    That is, if you can still
    let yourself get away with it.
  • 89:26 - 89:27
    "Old Cemetery!"
  • 89:27 - 89:29
    That's him, Hickey.
  • 89:29 - 89:30
    We'll have
    to call him that.
  • 89:30 - 89:32
    Beginning to do
    a lot of puzzling about me,
  • 89:32 - 89:34
    aren't you, Larry?
  • 89:34 - 89:36
    But that won't help you.
  • 89:36 - 89:38
    You've got
    to think of yourself,
  • 89:38 - 89:40
    I couldn't give you
    my peace.
  • 89:40 - 89:42
    You've got to find
    your own,
  • 89:42 - 89:43
    all I can do
    is to help you,
  • 89:43 - 89:45
    and the rest of the gang,
  • 89:45 - 89:47
    by showing you the way
    to find it.
  • 89:47 - 89:49
    Oh, hire a church!
  • 89:49 - 89:51
    All right, boys and girls,
    don't get sore.
  • 89:51 - 89:54
    I guess that did sound too much
    like a lousy preacher.
  • 89:54 - 89:55
    Well, let's forget it
    and get on with the party.
  • 89:55 - 89:57
    Is those bundles
    grub, Hickey?
  • 89:57 - 89:58
    You bought enough already
    to feed an army.
  • 89:58 - 90:01
    I want this to be the biggest
    birthday Harry's ever had.
  • 90:01 - 90:02
    Now you and Rocky
    go out in the hall
  • 90:02 - 90:03
    and bring in
    the big surprise!
  • 90:03 - 90:05
    My arms are busted
    lugging it.
  • 90:05 - 90:06
    Jees, you got us all
    head up!
  • 90:06 - 90:07
    What is it, Hickey?
  • 90:07 - 90:08
    Wait and see!
  • 90:08 - 90:10
    I thought to myself,
  • 90:10 - 90:11
    "I'll bet this is what would
    please those whores
  • 90:11 - 90:12
    more than anything."
  • 90:12 - 90:14
    Then I said to myself,
    "I don't care
  • 90:14 - 90:15
    "how much money it costs,
    they're worth it,
  • 90:15 - 90:16
    "they're the best
    little scouts in the world,
  • 90:16 - 90:18
    "and they've always been
    damned kind to me
  • 90:18 - 90:19
    when I was down and out."
  • 90:19 - 90:21
    And I meant
    every word of that.
  • 90:21 - 90:22
    Well,
    what's the matter?
  • 90:22 - 90:23
    Ehh...
  • 90:23 - 90:25
    Oh, I see.
  • 90:25 - 90:26
    Now look, you know I didn't
    say that to offend you.
  • 90:26 - 90:28
    So don't be silly now.
  • 90:28 - 90:29
    All right,
    all right.
  • 90:29 - 90:31
    Oh, look,
    here it comes!
  • 90:31 - 90:33
    Hickey, what...
  • 90:33 - 90:34
    What'd you get?
  • 90:34 - 90:36
    Unveil it, boys!
  • 90:38 - 90:40
    Oh, it's champagne!
  • 90:40 - 90:42
    Oh, jees, Hickey,
    if you ain't a sport!
  • 90:42 - 90:43
    I never been soused
    on champagne!
  • 90:43 - 90:44
    Hey, let's get stinko!
  • 90:44 - 90:46
    Oh, you betcha my life!
  • 90:46 - 90:47
    All of us!
  • 90:47 - 90:50
    You sure is hittin'
    the high spots, Hickey.
  • 90:50 - 90:51
    When I runs
    my gamblin' house,
  • 90:51 - 90:55
    I drink that old bubbly
    water in steins.
  • 90:55 - 90:57
    And I'm gonna drink
    that way again, too,
  • 90:57 - 90:59
    as soon's I make
    my stake.
  • 91:00 - 91:03
    And that ain't
    no pipe dream, neither.
  • 91:03 - 91:05
    What'll we drink
    it outta, Hickey?
  • 91:05 - 91:07
    There ain't no
    wine glasses.
  • 91:07 - 91:09
    Well, Joe's got
    the right idea, steins!
  • 91:09 - 91:11
    That's the spirit
    for Harry's party.
  • 91:11 - 91:12
    We will drink wine
  • 91:12 - 91:14
    beneath the willow trees!
  • 91:14 - 91:16
    That's the spirit,
    brother,
  • 91:16 - 91:18
    and let the lousy slaves
    drink vinegar.
  • 91:18 - 91:19
    (chuckles)
  • 91:21 - 91:23
    Got damned liar!
  • 91:24 - 91:26
    Leave Hugo be!
  • 91:26 - 91:29
    He rotted 10 years in prison
    for his faith.
  • 91:29 - 91:30
    He earned his dream!
  • 91:31 - 91:34
    Have you no decency
    or pity?
  • 91:34 - 91:35
    Hello, what's this?
  • 91:36 - 91:38
    I thought you were in
    the grandstand.
  • 91:40 - 91:41
    Listen, Larry,
    you're gettin' me all wrong.
  • 91:41 - 91:43
    Hell, you ought
    to know me better.
  • 91:43 - 91:45
    Of course I have pity,
  • 91:45 - 91:46
    but now that
    I've seen the light,
  • 91:46 - 91:47
    it's not my old kind
    of pity,
  • 91:47 - 91:49
    the kind yours is.
  • 91:49 - 91:51
    The kind that lets itself off
    by encouraging some poor guy
  • 91:51 - 91:53
    to go on kidding himself
    with a lie.
  • 91:53 - 91:55
    The kind that leaves
    the poor slob worse off
  • 91:55 - 91:58
    because he feels
    guiltier than ever.
  • 91:58 - 92:00
    The kind that makes
    his lying hopes nag at him,
  • 92:00 - 92:03
    and reproach him until he's
    a rotten skunk in his own eyes.
  • 92:03 - 92:04
    No, sir.
  • 92:04 - 92:07
    The kind of pity I feel now
    is after final results
  • 92:07 - 92:09
    that really help
    save the poor guy.
  • 92:09 - 92:10
    Make him contented
    with what he is,
  • 92:10 - 92:12
    and quit battling himself,
  • 92:12 - 92:14
    so he can find peace
    for the rest of his life.
  • 92:16 - 92:17
    Oh, I know
    how you resent the way
  • 92:17 - 92:18
    I have to show you up
    to yourself,
  • 92:18 - 92:20
    but you'll be grateful to me
  • 92:20 - 92:21
    when all at once
    you're able to admit,
  • 92:21 - 92:22
    without feeling ashamed,
  • 92:22 - 92:24
    that all the grandstand
    foolosopher bunk
  • 92:24 - 92:26
    and the waiting for
    the Big Sleep stuff
  • 92:26 - 92:28
    is a pipe dream.
  • 92:28 - 92:30
    You'll be able to say
    to yourself,
  • 92:30 - 92:33
    "I'm just an old man
    who is scared of life,
  • 92:33 - 92:36
    "but even more
    scared of dying.
  • 92:36 - 92:38
    "So I'm keeping drunk
    and hanging on to life
  • 92:38 - 92:40
    at any price,
    and what of it?"
  • 92:40 - 92:42
    Be God,
  • 92:42 - 92:45
    if I'm not beginning
    to think you've gone mad.
  • 92:47 - 92:48
    You're a liar!
  • 92:48 - 92:50
    Now, listen, that's no way
    to talk to an old pal
  • 92:50 - 92:51
    who's trying to help you.
  • 92:51 - 92:53
    Hell, if you
    really wanted to die,
  • 92:53 - 92:54
    you'd just take a hop off
    the fire escape, wouldn't you?
  • 92:54 - 92:56
    And if you really were
    in the grandstand,
  • 92:56 - 92:59
    you wouldn't be
    pitying everyone.
  • 93:01 - 93:03
    As for my being bughouse,
  • 93:03 - 93:05
    you can't crawl out of it
    that way.
  • 93:05 - 93:06
    I'm too damned sane.
  • 93:06 - 93:07
    I can size up guys
    and turn 'em inside out
  • 93:07 - 93:09
    better than I ever could,
  • 93:09 - 93:11
    even where they're strangers
    like that Parritt kid.
  • 93:13 - 93:15
    He's licked, Larry.
  • 93:15 - 93:16
    I think there's only
    one possible way out
  • 93:16 - 93:18
    you can help him take.
  • 93:18 - 93:21
    That is, if you have
    the right kind of pity for him.
  • 93:22 - 93:25
    What do you mean?
  • 93:25 - 93:26
    I'm not advising him,
  • 93:26 - 93:29
    except to leave me
    out of his troubles...
  • 93:29 - 93:30
    he's nothing to me.
  • 93:30 - 93:32
    You'll find
    he won't agree to that.
  • 93:32 - 93:35
    He'll keep after you
    until he makes you help him.
  • 93:35 - 93:37
    Because he's got
    to be punished,
  • 93:37 - 93:39
    so he can
    forgive himself.
  • 93:39 - 93:41
    He hasn't got the guts,
  • 93:41 - 93:43
    he can't
    manage it alone.
  • 93:43 - 93:45
    And you're the only one
    he can turn to.
  • 93:45 - 93:48
    For the love of God,
    mind your own business.
  • 93:49 - 93:52
    How'd you know about him?
  • 93:52 - 93:53
    He's hardly
    spoken to you.
  • 93:53 - 93:54
    No, that's right,
  • 93:54 - 93:56
    but I do know a lot about him
    just the same.
  • 93:56 - 93:59
    I've had hell inside of me,
    I can spot it in others.
  • 94:01 - 94:02
    Maybe that's what
    gives me the feeling
  • 94:02 - 94:05
    there's something
    familiar about him,
  • 94:05 - 94:07
    something between us.
  • 94:07 - 94:09
    No, it's more than that.
  • 94:09 - 94:10
    Tell me about him,
    for example,
  • 94:10 - 94:12
    I don't imagine
    he's married, is he?
  • 94:12 - 94:14
    No.
  • 94:14 - 94:15
    Hasn't he been mixed up
    with some woman?
  • 94:15 - 94:17
    Oh, I don't mean trollops.
  • 94:17 - 94:18
    I mean
    the old real love stuff
  • 94:18 - 94:20
    that crucifies you.
  • 94:20 - 94:23
    Maybe you're right,
  • 94:23 - 94:25
    I wouldn't be surprised.
  • 94:27 - 94:28
    I see.
  • 94:28 - 94:31
    You think I'm on the wrong track
    and you're glad I am.
  • 94:31 - 94:33
    Because then I won't suspect
    whatever it is he did
  • 94:33 - 94:34
    about the Great Cause.
  • 94:36 - 94:39
    That's another lie you keep
    telling yourself, Larry,
  • 94:39 - 94:42
    that the good old cause
    means nothing to you any more.
  • 94:42 - 94:43
    What the hell...
  • 94:43 - 94:44
    But you're wrong
    about Parritt.
  • 94:44 - 94:46
    That's not
    what's got him stopped,
  • 94:46 - 94:48
    it's what's behind that.
  • 94:48 - 94:50
    And it's a woman,
  • 94:50 - 94:51
    I recognize the symptoms.
  • 94:53 - 94:55
    And you're the boy
    who's never wrong.
  • 94:57 - 95:00
    His trouble is he was
    brought up a devout believer
  • 95:00 - 95:02
    in the Movement,
    and now he's lost his faith!
  • 95:02 - 95:05
    It's a shock...
  • 95:05 - 95:06
    but he's young,
  • 95:06 - 95:09
    and he'll soon find
    another dream just as good
  • 95:09 - 95:10
    or as bad.
  • 95:10 - 95:12
    All right, I'll let it go
    at that, Larry.
  • 95:12 - 95:15
    He's nothing to me,
    except that I'm glad he's here
  • 95:15 - 95:18
    'cause he'll help me
    make you wake up to yourself.
  • 95:19 - 95:21
    I don't even like the guy,
  • 95:21 - 95:23
    or the feeling there's
    anything between us.
  • 95:23 - 95:26
    But you'll find out
    that I'm right just the same,
  • 95:26 - 95:28
    when you get to the final
    showdown with him.
  • 95:28 - 95:29
    There'll be no showdown!
  • 95:29 - 95:31
    I don't give a tinker's...
  • 95:31 - 95:33
    Sticking to
    the grandstand, eh?
  • 95:34 - 95:36
    I always knew that you'd be
    the toughest of all the gang
  • 95:36 - 95:38
    to convince, Larry.
  • 95:38 - 95:40
    And along with Harry
    and Jimmy Tomorrow.
  • 95:42 - 95:44
    It was you
    I wanted to help the most.
  • 95:48 - 95:50
    I've always liked you a lot,
    you old bastard.
  • 95:52 - 95:53
    Hey, not much time
    before 12:00!
  • 95:53 - 95:55
    Well, come on, gang,
    let's get going.
  • 95:55 - 95:57
    Come on, boys and girls,
    let's get busy.
  • 95:57 - 95:59
    Let's see,
    cake's all set.
  • 95:59 - 96:01
    And my gifts
    and yours, girls.
  • 96:01 - 96:02
    It's a tie,
    tie and a handkerchief.
  • 96:02 - 96:04
    Chuck and Rocky, hmm?
  • 96:04 - 96:05
    What's this for,
    Hickey?
  • 96:05 - 96:08
    Harry certainly will be very
    touched by your thoughts of him.
  • 96:08 - 96:09
    Now Margie and Pearl,
    get back in the bar
  • 96:09 - 96:10
    and get ready
    to bring the grub right in.
  • 96:10 - 96:12
    There'll be some
    drinking first and some toasts.
  • 96:12 - 96:13
    My idea was to use
    the wine for that,
  • 96:13 - 96:15
    so get that all set.
  • 96:15 - 96:16
    Now I'll go upstairs
    and root everybody up,
  • 96:16 - 96:17
    Harry the last.
  • 96:17 - 96:19
    When you hear us coming,
    somebody light the candles
  • 96:19 - 96:21
    and start playing
    his favorite tune on the piano.
  • 96:21 - 96:23
    Well, come on, Cora,
    everybody, let's hustle!
  • 96:23 - 96:24
    We want this to come off
    in style, uh?
  • 96:24 - 96:26
    But Jees,
    I gotta practice.
  • 96:26 - 96:28
    I ain't laid my mitts on a box
    in God knows when.
  • 96:28 - 96:29
    Hey, Joe!
  • 96:29 - 96:31
    *
  • 96:31 - 96:33
    Oh, Jees, I've forgotten
    this has-been tune.
  • 96:33 - 96:35
    Come on, Joe,
    hum it so I can follow.
  • 96:36 - 96:39
    (humming)
  • 96:48 - 96:49
    Be God!
  • 96:49 - 96:51
    It's the second feast
    of Belshazzar,
  • 96:51 - 96:54
    with Hickey to do
    the writing on the wall!
  • 96:54 - 96:56
    Aw, shut up,
    Old Cemetery!
  • 96:56 - 96:59
    Well, if it ain't
    Prince Willie.
  • 96:59 - 97:01
    Gee, kid,
    you look sick.
  • 97:01 - 97:03
    Get a couple
    of shots in ya.
  • 97:03 - 97:05
    No, thanks, not now,
    I'm-I'm-I'm tapering off.
  • 97:15 - 97:18
    It's been hell up in
    that damned room, Larry.
  • 97:19 - 97:21
    The-the-the things
    I've imagined!
  • 97:22 - 97:24
    (piano music, humming)
  • 97:24 - 97:26
    But...
  • 97:26 - 97:28
    I've-I've got it beat now.
  • 97:28 - 97:30
    By-by tomorrow morning I'll...
  • 97:30 - 97:32
    I'll be on the wagon.
  • 97:32 - 97:34
    And I'll, uh...
  • 97:34 - 97:36
    I'll get back my clothes
    first thing.
  • 97:36 - 97:39
    Hickey's loaning
    me the money.
  • 97:39 - 97:41
    And I'm goin' to do
    what I always said.
  • 97:41 - 97:44
    I'm-I'm-I'm gonna go
    to the D.A.'s office,
  • 97:44 - 97:45
    because he knows that I...
  • 97:45 - 97:48
    I-I really
    was a brilliant student.
  • 97:49 - 97:51
    Oh, I know I can make good.
  • 97:53 - 97:55
    I-I owe a lot to Hickey.
  • 97:55 - 97:56
    He's...
  • 97:56 - 97:59
    made me wake up to myself
    and see what a fool...
  • 97:59 - 98:00
    (laughs)
  • 98:00 - 98:02
    It wasn't nice to face but...
  • 98:05 - 98:08
    It's not what he says.
  • 98:08 - 98:10
    It's what you feel
    behind what he hints!
  • 98:10 - 98:11
    Christ, you'd think
  • 98:11 - 98:13
    all I really wanted
    to do with my life
  • 98:13 - 98:14
    was sit here
    and stay drunk!
  • 98:14 - 98:15
    I'll show him!
  • 98:19 - 98:22
    You want my advice...
  • 98:22 - 98:23
    you'll put your mouth
    on this bottle
  • 98:23 - 98:25
    and keep it there
  • 98:25 - 98:27
    until you don't
    give a damn about Hickey.
  • 98:27 - 98:29
    (laughs)
  • 98:29 - 98:31
    That's fine advice.
  • 98:33 - 98:35
    I thought you
    were my friend!
  • 98:41 - 98:42
    (piano music stops)
  • 98:44 - 98:46
    (steps approaching)
  • 98:51 - 98:53
    Gee, I'm glad
    you're here, Larry.
  • 98:55 - 98:57
    That damned fool Hickey
    knocked on my door.
  • 98:57 - 98:59
    I opened up because
    I thought it must be you.
  • 98:59 - 99:02
    He came bustin' in and
    made me come downstairs here.
  • 99:02 - 99:03
    (piano music resumes)
  • 99:03 - 99:05
    I don't know what for,
  • 99:05 - 99:06
    I don't belong at this
    birthday celebration,
  • 99:06 - 99:08
    I don't know this gang,
  • 99:08 - 99:09
    and I don't wanna be
    mixed up with them.
  • 99:09 - 99:10
    All I came here for
    was to find you!
  • 99:10 - 99:12
    I've warned you that...
  • 99:12 - 99:14
    Can't you make Hickey
    mind his own business?
  • 99:15 - 99:17
    Just now he pats me
    on the shoulder,
  • 99:17 - 99:19
    like he's
    sympathizing with me.
  • 99:19 - 99:21
    He says,
    "I know how it is, son,
  • 99:21 - 99:22
    "but you can't hide
    from yourself,
  • 99:22 - 99:24
    "not even here
    on the bottom of the sea.
  • 99:24 - 99:26
    "You've gotta face the truth
    and then do what must be done
  • 99:26 - 99:27
    "for your own peace
    and for the happiness
  • 99:27 - 99:28
    of all concerned."
  • 99:28 - 99:30
    Now, what'd he mean
    by that, Larry?
  • 99:30 - 99:31
    How the hell would I know?
  • 99:31 - 99:33
    Then he grins at me and says,
    "Oh, never mind,
  • 99:33 - 99:34
    "Larry's getting
    wise to himself.
  • 99:34 - 99:36
    "I think you can rely on his
    help in the end.
  • 99:36 - 99:37
    "He's gonna have to choose
    between living and dying,
  • 99:37 - 99:39
    "and he'll never
    choose to die
  • 99:39 - 99:41
    while there's a breath
    left in the old bastard!"
  • 99:41 - 99:43
    Then he laughs
    like it's a joke on you.
  • 99:46 - 99:47
    Well, what do you say
    to that, Larry?
  • 99:47 - 99:50
    I've got nothing to say.
  • 99:50 - 99:51
    Except you're a bigger fool
  • 99:51 - 99:53
    than he is
    to listen to him.
  • 99:53 - 99:54
    Oh, is that so?
  • 99:54 - 99:56
    Well, he's no fool
    where you're concerned.
  • 99:56 - 99:57
    He's got your number,
    all right.
  • 99:57 - 99:59
    (piano playing continues)
  • 100:02 - 100:04
    You know
    I don't mean that.
  • 100:04 - 100:05
    Larry, you know what I want most
    is to be friends with you.
  • 100:05 - 100:07
    I haven't a single friend
    left in the world.
  • 100:07 - 100:08
    I hoped...
  • 100:10 - 100:11
    I hoped you'd...
  • 100:14 - 100:17
    And you could, too,
    without it hurting you.
  • 100:17 - 100:18
    You ought to,
    for mother's sake, Larry.
  • 100:18 - 100:21
    She really loved you.
  • 100:21 - 100:23
    You loved her, too,
    didn't you?
  • 100:25 - 100:27
    Leave what's dead
    in its grave.
  • 100:29 - 100:30
    Oh, I suppose
    because I was only a kid
  • 100:30 - 100:33
    you don't think I was
    wise about you and her, uh?
  • 100:33 - 100:35
    Well, I've been wise
    ever since I can remember
  • 100:35 - 100:37
    to all the guys
    she's had.
  • 100:38 - 100:40
    Although she used to try
    to kid me along
  • 100:40 - 100:42
    it wasn't so.
  • 100:42 - 100:43
    That's a silly stunt
  • 100:43 - 100:44
    for a free
    Anarchist woman, isn't it?
  • 100:44 - 100:46
    To be ashamed
    of being free!
  • 100:46 - 100:48
    Shut your damned trap!
  • 100:50 - 100:52
    Yes, I know I shouldn't
    say that now.
  • 100:54 - 100:56
    I keep forgetting
    she isn't free anymore.
  • 101:06 - 101:07
    You know, Larry,
    you're the one of them all
  • 101:07 - 101:09
    she cared most about.
  • 101:12 - 101:14
    Anybody else who left
    the Movement
  • 101:14 - 101:15
    would've been
    more than dead to her,
  • 101:15 - 101:16
    but she couldn't forget you.
  • 101:16 - 101:18
    She used to make
    excuses for you.
  • 101:20 - 101:21
    I used to try to get
    her goat about you.
  • 101:21 - 101:24
    I'd say,
    "Larry's got brains
  • 101:24 - 101:27
    and yet thinks the Movement's
    a crazy pipe dream."
  • 101:27 - 101:30
    She'd blame it
    on the booze getting you.
  • 101:30 - 101:32
    She'd kid herself that you'd
    give up booze
  • 101:32 - 101:34
    and come back to
    the Movement, tomorrow.
  • 101:34 - 101:36
    She used to say,
    "Larry can't kill in himself
  • 101:36 - 101:38
    "a faith he's given
    his life to,
  • 101:38 - 101:40
    not without
    killing himself."
  • 101:43 - 101:45
    How about that, Larry,
    what she right?
  • 101:45 - 101:47
    (Cora singing)
  • 101:51 - 101:54
    I suppose what she meant by that
    was to come back to her.
  • 101:54 - 101:55
    She was always getting
    the Movement
  • 101:55 - 101:56
    mixed up with herself.
  • 101:56 - 101:57
    (dishes rattling)
  • 102:00 - 102:02
    But I'm sure she really
    must've loved you, Larry.
  • 102:02 - 102:04
    As much as she could love
    anyone besides herself.
  • 102:06 - 102:09
    No, she wasn't even faithful
    to you at that though, was she?
  • 102:09 - 102:11
    That's why you walked out
    on her, isn't it?
  • 102:13 - 102:14
    I remember that last fight
    you had with her.
  • 102:14 - 102:16
    I was listening.
  • 102:16 - 102:18
    I was on your side,
    even if she was my mother,
  • 102:18 - 102:20
    because I liked you
    so much.
  • 102:22 - 102:24
    I remember
    she was putting on her
  • 102:24 - 102:26
    high-and-mighty
    free-woman stuff,
  • 102:26 - 102:28
    telling you
    you were still a slave
  • 102:28 - 102:31
    to bourgeois morality
    and jealousy.
  • 102:31 - 102:34
    And that you thought
    that the woman you loved
  • 102:34 - 102:36
    was a piece of
    private property you owned.
  • 102:36 - 102:37
    And I remember you got mad,
    you told her, "I don't like"
  • 102:37 - 102:39
    living with a whore,
    if that's what you mean!"
  • 102:39 - 102:40
    You lie,
    I never called her that!
  • 102:40 - 102:42
    And that's why
    she still respects you!
  • 102:42 - 102:44
    See, 'cause you
    walked out on her.
  • 102:44 - 102:46
    She got sick
    of the others.
  • 102:46 - 102:48
    She just had to keep on having
    lovers to prove to herself
  • 102:48 - 102:50
    how free she was.
  • 102:52 - 102:53
    Made home a lousy place.
  • 102:53 - 102:55
    I felt like you
    did about it.
  • 102:55 - 102:57
    It was like living in
    a whorehouse, only worse,
  • 102:57 - 102:59
    because she didn't have to make
    her living at it, you know.
  • 102:59 - 103:02
    You bastard!
  • 103:02 - 103:04
    She's your mother.
  • 103:04 - 103:06
    Have you no shame?
  • 103:07 - 103:08
    No.
  • 103:10 - 103:13
    She brought me up to believe
    that family-respect stuff
  • 103:13 - 103:14
    is all bourgeois,
    property-owning crap.
  • 103:14 - 103:16
    Why should I be ashamed?
  • 103:16 - 103:17
    I've had enough of this!
    No, Larry!
  • 103:17 - 103:19
    Please don't leave me!
  • 103:19 - 103:21
    Larry, I promise,
    I only mentioned her name
  • 103:21 - 103:23
    to make you
    understand better.
  • 103:27 - 103:28
    Why didn't you
    come up to my room
  • 103:28 - 103:29
    like I asked you to?
  • 103:29 - 103:30
    I kept waiting...
  • 103:30 - 103:32
    We can talk over
    everything up there.
  • 103:32 - 103:33
    There's nothing
    to talk about.
  • 103:33 - 103:35
    But Larry, I gotta talk to you
    or I'm gonna talk to Hickey!
  • 103:37 - 103:38
    I feel he knows, anyway,
  • 103:38 - 103:40
    and I'm sure
    he'd understand all right,
  • 103:40 - 103:41
    but I hate his guts!
  • 103:43 - 103:45
    I'm scared of him, honest,
    there's something not human
  • 103:45 - 103:47
    behind his damned grinning
    and kidding.
  • 103:47 - 103:48
    Ah, you feel that too, eh?
  • 103:48 - 103:51
    But I can't go on like this,
    I've gotta tell you, Larry.
  • 103:51 - 103:53
    I won't listen!
    Okay, I won't!
  • 103:53 - 103:54
    Larry!
  • 104:05 - 104:07
    Who do you think
    you're kidding?
  • 104:09 - 104:11
    I know damned well
    you've guessed.
  • 104:11 - 104:12
    I guessed nothing.
  • 104:12 - 104:15
    No, but I want you
    to guess now.
  • 104:15 - 104:17
    I'm glad you have.
  • 104:19 - 104:20
    I know now, since
    Hickey's been after me,
  • 104:20 - 104:21
    that I meant you to guess
    right from the start.
  • 104:21 - 104:23
    That's why I came to you.
  • 104:27 - 104:29
    I want you
    to understand the reason.
  • 104:34 - 104:36
    You see,
    I, I began to study
  • 104:36 - 104:38
    American history.
  • 104:38 - 104:41
    And I got admiring
    Washington and Jefferson,
  • 104:41 - 104:42
    Jackson and Lincoln,
  • 104:42 - 104:44
    and I began to feel
    patriotic
  • 104:44 - 104:46
    and love this country.
  • 104:46 - 104:47
    I saw it was the best
    government in the world,
  • 104:47 - 104:48
    where everybody
    was equal,
  • 104:48 - 104:50
    everybody had a chance.
  • 104:50 - 104:53
    And I saw all the ideas
    behind the Movement,
  • 104:53 - 104:55
    they came from a lot of Russians
    like Bakunin and Kropotkin.
  • 104:55 - 104:57
    They were all meant
    for Europe.
  • 104:57 - 104:59
    So we didn't need them here
    in a democracy,
  • 104:59 - 105:01
    the way we were
    free already.
  • 105:04 - 105:06
    I didn't want this country
    to be destroyed
  • 105:06 - 105:08
    for a damned
    foreign pipe dream!
  • 105:08 - 105:10
    I began to feel like
    I was a traitor
  • 105:10 - 105:12
    for helping
    a lot of cranks and bums
  • 105:12 - 105:14
    and free women plot
    to overthrow our government.
  • 105:17 - 105:19
    And I saw it was my,
    my duty to my country...
  • 105:19 - 105:22
    You stinking rotten liar.
  • 105:23 - 105:24
    You think
    you can fool me
  • 105:24 - 105:27
    with such hypocrite cant?
  • 105:27 - 105:28
    I don't give a damn
    what you did!
  • 105:28 - 105:30
    It's on your own head,
    whatever it was!
  • 105:30 - 105:32
    I don't know
    and I don't want to know!
  • 105:32 - 105:34
    But Larry, I never thought
    mother would be caught.
  • 105:34 - 105:35
    Please believe that,
    I never would...
  • 105:35 - 105:38
    All I know is that
    I am sick of living!
  • 105:39 - 105:40
    I'm through.
  • 105:42 - 105:45
    I'm drowned and contented
    on the bottom of a bottle!
  • 105:47 - 105:49
    Honor or dishonor,
  • 105:49 - 105:52
    faith or treachery,
  • 105:52 - 105:54
    are nothing to me but opposites
    of the same stupidity
  • 105:54 - 105:56
    that is the king
    and ruler of life,
  • 105:56 - 105:58
    and in the end
  • 105:58 - 106:00
    they'll both rot into dust
  • 106:00 - 106:03
    in the same grave.
  • 106:03 - 106:05
    All things
    are meaningless to me,
  • 106:05 - 106:07
    because they grin at me
  • 106:07 - 106:10
    from the one skull
    of death.
  • 106:10 - 106:12
    So go away...
  • 106:12 - 106:13
    I've forgotten your mother.
  • 106:17 - 106:19
    You "old foolosopher," eh?
  • 106:20 - 106:22
    You lousy old faker!
  • 106:22 - 106:24
    For the love of God,
    leave me in peace
  • 106:24 - 106:25
    the little time
    that's left to me!
  • 106:25 - 106:26
    No!
  • 106:26 - 106:29
    Don't pull that pitiful
    old-man junk on me!
  • 106:29 - 106:30
    You old bastard,
    you'll never die
  • 106:30 - 106:33
    because there's a drink
    of whiskey left!
  • 106:33 - 106:35
    You be careful how you
    taunt me back into life,
  • 106:35 - 106:36
    I warn you.
  • 106:36 - 106:39
    Because I might remember
    this thing called justice there,
  • 106:39 - 106:41
    and the punishment for...
  • 106:45 - 106:47
    You're as mad as Hickey...
  • 106:49 - 106:51
    just as big a liar.
  • 106:51 - 106:54
    Wait'll Hickey
    gets through with you.
  • 106:58 - 107:01
    Well, hello,
    "Tightwad Kid."
  • 107:01 - 107:02
    Hey, did you come
    to join the party?
  • 107:02 - 107:05
    Oh, wow, boy,
    don't he act bashful, Pearl?
  • 107:05 - 107:07
    Yeah, especially
    with his dough.
  • 107:07 - 107:10
    (loud arguing in distance)
  • 107:10 - 107:12
    Hey, Rocky,
    fighting in the hall!
  • 107:12 - 107:14
    (unintelligible shouting)
  • 107:18 - 107:19
    Don't touch me!
  • 107:19 - 107:21
    Can you beat it?
  • 107:21 - 107:22
    I heard you's two
    call each other
  • 107:22 - 107:24
    every name
    you can think of
  • 107:24 - 107:25
    but I never seen...
  • 107:25 - 107:27
    A swell time
    to stage your first bout,
  • 107:27 - 107:30
    on Harry's birthday party!
  • 107:30 - 107:31
    What started
    the scrap?
  • 107:31 - 107:32
    Nothing, old chap.
  • 107:32 - 107:34
    Our business, you know,
  • 107:34 - 107:36
    but that bloody ass, Hickey,
    made some insinuation about me,
  • 107:36 - 107:39
    and the boorish Boer
    had the impertinence
  • 107:39 - 107:40
    to agree with him!
  • 107:40 - 107:42
    That's a lie!
  • 107:42 - 107:45
    Hickey made joke about me,
  • 107:45 - 107:48
    and this Limey said
    yes, it was true!
  • 107:48 - 107:50
    Well, sit down
    the both of you!
  • 107:50 - 107:52
    And cut out
    this rough stuff!
  • 107:59 - 108:01
    Jees, would you
    look at those bums!
  • 108:01 - 108:02
    Like a couple of kids!
  • 108:02 - 108:05
    For God's sake, would you
    kiss and make up, ah?
  • 108:05 - 108:08
    Yeah, Harry's party
    begins in a minute,
  • 108:08 - 108:11
    and we don't want
    no soreheads around here.
  • 108:13 - 108:14
    Oh, very well then.
  • 108:14 - 108:15
    In deference
    to the occasion,
  • 108:15 - 108:17
    I apologize,
  • 108:17 - 108:19
    General Wetjoen,
  • 108:19 - 108:22
    provided
    you do also.
  • 108:22 - 108:25
    I apologize,
    Captain Lewis,
  • 108:25 - 108:28
    because Harry
    is my good friend.
  • 108:28 - 108:29
    Aw, hell!
  • 108:29 - 108:30
    If you can't do
    better than that...
  • 108:30 - 108:32
    Here's the star
    boarder.
  • 108:32 - 108:34
    It's serious
    this time.
  • 108:34 - 108:36
    I'm tellin' all of you,
  • 108:36 - 108:39
    that bastard Hickey's
    got Harry on the hip.
  • 108:39 - 108:42
    And it ain't gonna do us
    no good if he gets Harry
  • 108:42 - 108:44
    to take
    that walk tomorrow.
  • 108:44 - 108:45
    He's sure to call
    on Bessie's relations
  • 108:45 - 108:48
    and have a little
    cry over poor old Bessie.
  • 108:48 - 108:50
    And you know
    what that bitch
  • 108:50 - 108:52
    and all her family
    thought of me!
  • 108:53 - 108:56
    Once Bessie's relations
    get their hooks into him,
  • 108:56 - 108:58
    it'll be as tough for us
  • 108:58 - 109:00
    as if she
    wasn't even gone.
  • 109:01 - 109:02
    Everything all set?
  • 109:02 - 109:03
    Ah, fine.
  • 109:03 - 109:05
    Half-a-minute to go,
  • 109:05 - 109:06
    Harry's starting down
    with Jimmy now.
  • 109:06 - 109:08
    I had a hard time
    getting him to move.
  • 109:08 - 109:10
    Harry don't even want to
    remember it's his birthday now!
  • 109:10 - 109:11
    Oh, here they come!
  • 109:11 - 109:13
    Come on, everybody,
    light the candles!
  • 109:13 - 109:15
    Cora, get ready to play,
    stand up, everybody, eh?
  • 109:15 - 109:17
    Chuck, Rocky,
    the wine!
  • 109:17 - 109:20
    Let's see, 12:00 o'clock
    on the dot.
  • 109:20 - 109:23
    Come on, everybody,
    with a "Happy Birthday, Harry!"
  • 109:23 - 109:25
    (all)
    Happy Birthday, Harry!
  • 109:25 - 109:26
    Hey!
  • 109:26 - 109:28
    (Cora singing, playing piano)
  • 109:28 - 109:29
    Cut out the glad hand,
    Hickey!
  • 109:29 - 109:31
    You think
    I'm a sucker?
  • 109:31 - 109:33
    Bejees, I know you,
  • 109:33 - 109:35
    you sneaking,
    lying drummer!
  • 109:35 - 109:37
    And all you bums,
  • 109:37 - 109:39
    what the hell
    you trying to do,
  • 109:39 - 109:41
    yelling and raising
    the roof?
  • 109:41 - 109:43
    You want the cops
    to close the joint,
  • 109:43 - 109:45
    and take
    my license away?
  • 109:45 - 109:47
    Hey,
    you dumb tart,
  • 109:47 - 109:48
    quit banging that box.
  • 109:48 - 109:51
    Jees, Harry, I...
  • 109:51 - 109:54
    Bejees, the least you could do
    is learn a tune.
  • 109:54 - 109:55
    You two hookers,
  • 109:55 - 109:58
    screaming at the top
    of your lungs!
  • 109:58 - 110:00
    What do you think this is,
    a dollar cathouse?
  • 110:00 - 110:02
    Bejees,
    that's where you belong!
  • 110:02 - 110:03
    (crying)
  • 110:05 - 110:06
    Jees, Harry,
  • 110:06 - 110:08
    I never thought you'd say it
    like you meant it.
  • 110:11 - 110:13
    Now, Harry, you don't want
    to get sore at the gang
  • 110:13 - 110:14
    just 'cause you're upset
    about yourself, hmm?
  • 110:14 - 110:16
    Look, anyway, I promised you
    it'd come through all right,
  • 110:16 - 110:17
    haven't I?
  • 110:17 - 110:19
    So quit worrying.
    Ahh...
  • 110:19 - 110:20
    You don't wanna
    blow out the old gang
  • 110:20 - 110:21
    just when they're
    congratulating you
  • 110:21 - 110:23
    on your birthday,
    do you?
  • 110:23 - 110:24
    Bejees,
  • 110:24 - 110:26
    they ain't as dumb as you.
  • 110:26 - 110:29
    They know I was
    only kiddin' 'em.
  • 110:29 - 110:31
    They know I appreciate
    their congratulations.
  • 110:31 - 110:32
    Don't you, fellas, huh?
  • 110:32 - 110:34
    (Pat)
    Yeah, sure Harry.
  • 110:34 - 110:36
    (affirmative exclamations)
  • 110:38 - 110:41
    Bejees,
    I like you broads.
  • 110:41 - 110:43
    You know
    I was only kiddin'.
  • 110:43 - 110:45
    Sure, we know,
    Harry.
  • 110:45 - 110:47
    Sure!
  • 110:47 - 110:49
    Sure, Harry's the greatest
    kidder in this dump,
  • 110:49 - 110:50
    and that's
    sayin' somethin'.
  • 110:50 - 110:52
    Look how he's kidded himself
    for 20 years.
  • 110:52 - 110:55
    But unless I'm wrong, Governor,
    and I'm bettin' I'm not,
  • 110:55 - 110:56
    we'll soon know, eh?
  • 110:56 - 110:58
    Tomorrow morning.
  • 110:58 - 111:01
    No, by God,
    it's this morning now.
  • 111:01 - 111:04
    This... this is
    this morning?
  • 111:04 - 111:05
    Yes, it's the day
    at last, Jimmy.
  • 111:05 - 111:07
    But don't be scared,
    I'll help you,
  • 111:07 - 111:08
    I promised that.
  • 111:08 - 111:10
    I don't understand you.
  • 111:10 - 111:12
    Kindly remember
  • 111:12 - 111:14
    I'm fully capable
    of settlin' my own affairs!
  • 111:14 - 111:16
    Well, isn't that exactly
    what I want you to do?
  • 111:16 - 111:19
    Only watch out on the booze.
  • 111:19 - 111:21
    You've had a lot
    to drink already,
  • 111:21 - 111:22
    and you don't want to let
    yourself duck out of it
  • 111:22 - 111:24
    by being
    too drunk to move,
  • 111:24 - 111:25
    not this time.
  • 111:25 - 111:28
    Bejees, Margie,
    you know I didn't mean it.
  • 111:29 - 111:32
    It's that lousy drummer
    riding me
  • 111:32 - 111:33
    that's got my goat.
  • 111:33 - 111:35
    I know, Harry,
    I know.
  • 111:35 - 111:37
    Hey, come on,
    look at your cake,
  • 111:37 - 111:39
    you haven't even
    noticed it yet!
  • 111:39 - 111:41
    Ain't it grand?
  • 111:41 - 111:43
    Yeah, say,
    that's pretty.
  • 111:43 - 111:45
    I ain't have had a cake
    since Bessie...
  • 111:45 - 111:47
    And six candles, eh?
  • 111:47 - 111:48
    Mm-phm.
  • 111:48 - 111:50
    Each for 10 years, eh?
  • 111:50 - 111:51
    You got it.
  • 111:53 - 111:55
    That was
    thoughtful of him.
  • 111:55 - 111:57
    He means well,
    I guess...
  • 111:57 - 111:59
    The hell with this cake!
    Oh, oh, wait, Harry!
  • 111:59 - 112:01
    You ain't seen
    the presents
  • 112:01 - 112:02
    from me
    and Margie and Cora,
  • 112:02 - 112:04
    and Chuck and Rocky.
  • 112:04 - 112:05
    And there's a watch
    all engraved
  • 112:05 - 112:07
    with your name
    and the date from Hickey.
  • 112:07 - 112:09
    Ah, the hell with it!
  • 112:09 - 112:12
    Bejees,
    he can keep it!
  • 112:12 - 112:14
    Jees,
  • 112:14 - 112:16
    he ain't even goin'
    to look at our presents!
  • 112:16 - 112:18
    Hey, hey,
    come on everybody,
  • 112:18 - 112:20
    this is all wrong!
  • 112:20 - 112:21
    If someone don't put
    some life in this party
  • 112:21 - 112:22
    I'm gonna go nuts!
  • 112:22 - 112:23
    Hey, Cora, come on!
  • 112:23 - 112:25
    Why don't
    you bang on that box?
  • 112:25 - 112:27
    Eh...
  • 112:27 - 112:28
    ohh, play somethin'
    for Harry, uh?
  • 112:28 - 112:31
    You don't have to stop
    just 'cause he kidded you.
  • 112:31 - 112:33
    Yeah, now you was
    playing it fine, Cora.
  • 112:33 - 112:35
    It was Bessie's
    favorite tune.
  • 112:35 - 112:37
    She was always
    singing it.
  • 112:37 - 112:39
    It brings her back,
    I wish...
  • 112:39 - 112:41
    Yes, we've all heard
    you tell us
  • 112:41 - 112:43
    that you thought
    the world of her, Governor.
  • 112:44 - 112:46
    So I did, bejees...
  • 112:46 - 112:48
    everyone knows I did.
  • 112:48 - 112:50
    And bejees,
    if you say I didn't...
  • 112:50 - 112:53
    Now, Governor,
    I didn't say anything.
  • 112:53 - 112:56
    You're the only one that knows
    the truth about that.
  • 112:56 - 112:59
    Marjorie's favorite song
    was "Loch Lomond."
  • 113:01 - 113:03
    She was beautiful,
  • 113:03 - 113:05
    she had
    a beautiful voice,
  • 113:05 - 113:07
    and she played the piano
    beautifully.
  • 113:09 - 113:10
    You were lucky, Harry,
  • 113:10 - 113:12
    Bessie died.
  • 113:12 - 113:14
    But there are more
    bitter sorrows
  • 113:14 - 113:16
    than losing
    the woman one loves
  • 113:16 - 113:17
    by the hand of death.
  • 113:17 - 113:19
    Now, you needn't
    go on, Jimmy.
  • 113:19 - 113:21
    We've all heard the story about
    how you came back to Cape Town
  • 113:21 - 113:23
    and found her in the hay
    with a staff officer.
  • 113:23 - 113:24
    We all know that you'd
    like to believe that
  • 113:24 - 113:26
    that's what started you
    on the booze
  • 113:26 - 113:27
    and ruined your life.
  • 113:27 - 113:28
    (crying)
  • 113:28 - 113:31
    I... I'm talking to Harry.
  • 113:31 - 113:33
    Will you kindly
    keep out of...
  • 113:33 - 113:35
    (weeping)
  • 113:35 - 113:37
    My life is not ruined!
  • 113:38 - 113:41
    But I'll bet when you admit
    the truth to yourself,
  • 113:41 - 113:42
    you'll confess it,
    you were pretty sick
  • 113:42 - 113:44
    of her hating you
    for getting drunk.
  • 113:44 - 113:46
    And I'll bet you were
    really damned relieved
  • 113:46 - 113:48
    when she gave you
    such a good excuse.
  • 113:48 - 113:50
    I know how it is,
    Jimmy,
  • 113:50 - 113:51
    you see, I...
  • 113:51 - 113:52
    Ha!
  • 113:52 - 113:54
    So that's what
    happened, is it?
  • 113:54 - 113:57
    Your iceman joke finally
    came home to roost, did it?
  • 113:59 - 114:00
    Maybe you
    should've remembered
  • 114:00 - 114:01
    there's truth
    in the old superstition
  • 114:01 - 114:04
    that you'd better
    look out what you call,
  • 114:04 - 114:06
    because in the end
    it comes to you.
  • 114:06 - 114:08
    Was that a fact,
    Larry?
  • 114:08 - 114:09
    Well, well.
  • 114:09 - 114:10
    Then you'd better
    be careful
  • 114:10 - 114:13
    how you keep calling
    for the old Big Sleep.
  • 114:13 - 114:15
    Chair.
  • 114:15 - 114:16
    Well, what are we
    waiting for, boys and girls?
  • 114:16 - 114:18
    Let's get
    this party rolling!
  • 114:18 - 114:21
    Chuck, Rocky,
    bring on the big surprise!
  • 114:21 - 114:23
    Oh, Governor, you sit over here
    at the head of the table.
  • 114:23 - 114:24
    Come on.
  • 114:26 - 114:27
    Well, sit down,
    girls, sit down.
  • 114:32 - 114:33
    And I'll sit here
    at the foot.
  • 114:35 - 114:37
    Real champagne, bums,
    cheer up!
  • 114:46 - 114:48
    What is this,
    a funeral?
  • 114:48 - 114:50
    Mixin' champagne
    with Harry's redeye
  • 114:50 - 114:53
    will knock you
    paralyzed!
  • 114:53 - 114:55
    Ain't you never
    satisfied?
  • 114:58 - 115:00
    Order, order,
    Ladies and gents!
  • 115:02 - 115:04
    Oh, yes, I am going to drink
    with you this time, Larry.
  • 115:04 - 115:06
    To prove
    that I'm not teetotal
  • 115:06 - 115:07
    because the booze'll
    make me spill my secrets,
  • 115:07 - 115:08
    as you think.
  • 115:08 - 115:10
    I don't need
    the booze anymore,
  • 115:10 - 115:11
    or anything else.
  • 115:11 - 115:14
    I just want to be sociable
    and propose a toast
  • 115:14 - 115:15
    in honor of our
    old friend, Harry,
  • 115:15 - 115:17
    and drink it with you.
  • 115:17 - 115:19
    Wake up our
    demon bomb-tosser, Rocky.
  • 115:19 - 115:22
    We don't want any corpses
    at this feast.
  • 115:22 - 115:24
    Hey, Hugo,
    come up for air!
  • 115:24 - 115:26
    Don't you see
    the champagne?
  • 115:26 - 115:27
    Hah.
  • 115:27 - 115:30
    We will eat birthday cake
  • 115:30 - 115:32
    and drink champagne
    beneath the willow trees!
  • 115:32 - 115:34
    (chuckling)
  • 115:37 - 115:38
    (chokes)
  • 115:38 - 115:41
    This wine
    is unfit to drink!
  • 115:41 - 115:43
    It has not properly
    been iced!
  • 115:43 - 115:45
    Always a high-toned
    swell at heart,
  • 115:45 - 115:47
    eh, Hugo?
  • 115:47 - 115:49
    Well, God help us poor bums
    if you'd ever got
  • 115:49 - 115:50
    to telling us
    where to get off.
  • 115:50 - 115:52
    You'd have been drinking
    our blood beneath
  • 115:52 - 115:54
    (fake Russian accent)
    those willow trees!
  • 115:54 - 115:55
    But here's the toast,
    Ladies and gents.
  • 115:55 - 115:57
    Here's to Harry Hope,
  • 115:57 - 116:00
    who's been a friend in need
    to every one of us.
  • 116:00 - 116:02
    And here's to
    the old Governor,
  • 116:02 - 116:04
    the best sport
    and the kindest,
  • 116:04 - 116:07
    biggest-hearted guy
    in the world.
  • 116:07 - 116:08
    Come on, everybody,
    to Harry!
  • 116:08 - 116:09
    Bottoms up.
  • 116:09 - 116:11
    (all)
    To Harry!
  • 116:11 - 116:13
    To you, boss.
    Happy Birthday!
  • 116:15 - 116:18
    Thanks, all of you.
  • 116:18 - 116:21
    Hickey,
    you old son of a bitch,
  • 116:21 - 116:23
    that's white of you.
  • 116:23 - 116:25
    I know you
    meant it, too.
  • 116:25 - 116:28
    Of course I meant it,
    Harry, old friend.
  • 116:28 - 116:29
    And I mean it when I say
    that I hope that this will be
  • 116:29 - 116:31
    the biggest day
    in your life,
  • 116:31 - 116:34
    and in the lives
    of everyone here,
  • 116:34 - 116:35
    and the beginning
    of a new life
  • 116:35 - 116:37
    of peace and contentment.
  • 116:37 - 116:39
    And here's to that,
    Harry.
  • 116:39 - 116:41
    Oh, forget
    that bughouse line
  • 116:41 - 116:43
    of bull for a minute,
    can't you?
  • 116:43 - 116:46
    You're right, Rocky,
    I am talking too much.
  • 116:46 - 116:47
    It's Harry
    we want to hear from.
  • 116:47 - 116:49
    Speech, speech, speech!
  • 116:49 - 116:51
    (all agreeing)
  • 116:52 - 116:54
    Bejees, I'm...
  • 116:54 - 116:56
    I'm no good
    at speeches.
  • 116:56 - 116:58
    All I can say is
  • 116:58 - 117:01
    thanks to everybody again
  • 117:01 - 117:03
    for remembering me
    on my birthday.
  • 117:06 - 117:09
    Only don't think
    because I'm 60,
  • 117:09 - 117:11
    I'll be a bigger damned fool
    easy mark than ever!
  • 117:12 - 117:15
    Like Hickey says,
    it's gonna be a new day!
  • 117:15 - 117:17
    This dump has got to be run
    like other dumps,
  • 117:17 - 117:20
    so I can make some money
    and not just split even.
  • 117:20 - 117:22
    I'm sick of bein'
    played for a sucker.
  • 117:24 - 117:26
    I know you're all
  • 117:26 - 117:29
    laughin' at me now
    behind my back,
  • 117:29 - 117:31
    thinking to yourselves,
  • 117:31 - 117:33
    "The old, lying'
    pipe-dreaming faker,
  • 117:33 - 117:35
    "we've heard his bull
  • 117:35 - 117:37
    "about takin' a walk
    around the ward for years,
  • 117:37 - 117:39
    "he'll never make it!
  • 117:39 - 117:41
    "He's scared,
    he's yellow,
  • 117:41 - 117:42
    "he ain't got the guts!
  • 117:42 - 117:44
    He's scared
    he'll find out... ".
  • 117:46 - 117:48
    But I'll show you,
    bejees!
  • 117:48 - 117:51
    And I'll show you, too,
    you son of a bitch
  • 117:51 - 117:53
    of a frying-pan-peddling
    bastard!
  • 117:53 - 117:56
    Hu, hu, hu,
    that's the stuff, Harry!
  • 117:56 - 117:57
    Of course
    you'll try to show me,
  • 117:57 - 117:59
    that's what
    I want you to do.
  • 118:03 - 118:04
    Bejees...
  • 118:04 - 118:06
    all of you, forgive me.
  • 118:08 - 118:10
    I lost my temper.
  • 118:10 - 118:12
    I ain't feeling well.
  • 118:15 - 118:17
    I got a hell
    of a grouch on.
  • 118:18 - 118:21
    You're as welcome
    as the flowers in May!
  • 118:24 - 118:27
    Oh, sure, boss,
  • 118:27 - 118:30
    you're always aces
    with us, see?
  • 118:32 - 118:34
    Listen, everybody.
  • 118:34 - 118:37
    I know you're sick
    of my gabbing, but, uh,
  • 118:37 - 118:39
    I think I owe it to you
    to do a little explaining
  • 118:39 - 118:40
    and apologize
    for some of the rough stuff
  • 118:40 - 118:42
    I've had to pull on you.
  • 118:42 - 118:45
    I had to make you help
    each other with me, eh?
  • 118:45 - 118:47
    I saw that I couldn't do
    what I had to do alone.
  • 118:47 - 118:49
    Not in the time
    at my disposal.
  • 118:49 - 118:51
    I knew when I came here
    I wouldn't be able to stay long.
  • 118:51 - 118:54
    I'm slated to leave
    on a trip.
  • 118:54 - 118:55
    Now I know
    every one of you,
  • 118:55 - 118:57
    inside and out,
    by heart.
  • 118:57 - 119:00
    I may have been drunk
    when I've been here before,
  • 119:00 - 119:02
    but old Hickey
    could never be so drunk
  • 119:02 - 119:04
    he couldn't have to see
    through everybody.
  • 119:04 - 119:06
    Everybody, that is,
    except himself.
  • 119:06 - 119:09
    And finally, he had to
    see through himself, too.
  • 119:09 - 119:11
    Now I swear I would've
    never acted this way
  • 119:11 - 119:13
    if I didn't absolutely believe
    it'd be worthwhile to you
  • 119:13 - 119:14
    in the end.
  • 119:14 - 119:15
    When you're rid of
    the damned guilt
  • 119:15 - 119:17
    that makes you
    lie to yourselves
  • 119:17 - 119:18
    that you're something
    you're not,
  • 119:18 - 119:20
    and the remorse
    that nags at you
  • 119:20 - 119:23
    and makes you hide behind
    lousy pipe dreams,
  • 119:23 - 119:26
    you won't give a damn
    what you are anymore.
  • 119:26 - 119:28
    I wouldn't say this unless
    I knew, brothers and sisters.
  • 119:28 - 119:30
    This peace is real,
    it is a fact.
  • 119:30 - 119:32
    I know, because I've got it,
    here, now,
  • 119:32 - 119:34
    right in front of you.
  • 119:34 - 119:36
    Well, you can see
    the difference in me.
  • 119:36 - 119:38
    You remember
    how I used to be.
  • 119:38 - 119:39
    Even when I had two quarts
    of rotgut under my belt,
  • 119:39 - 119:41
    and joked and sang
    "Sweet Adeline,"
  • 119:41 - 119:44
    I still felt like
    a guilty skunk.
  • 119:44 - 119:45
    But you can see that I don't
    give a damn
  • 119:45 - 119:48
    about anything anymore.
  • 119:48 - 119:49
    And I promise you,
  • 119:49 - 119:51
    by the time
    this day is over,
  • 119:51 - 119:54
    I'll have every one of you
    feeling the same way.
  • 119:56 - 119:58
    I guess that's about all from me
    for the present, boys and girls.
  • 119:58 - 120:00
    So, let's get on
    with the party.
  • 120:00 - 120:02
    (Larry)
    Wait!
  • 120:03 - 120:06
    I think it would help us,
    poor pipe-dreaming sinners
  • 120:06 - 120:09
    along the sawdust trail
    to salvation,
  • 120:09 - 120:11
    if you told us now
    what it was happened
  • 120:11 - 120:13
    that converted you
  • 120:13 - 120:15
    to this great peace
    you've found.
  • 120:15 - 120:17
    I noticed you
    didn't say anything
  • 120:17 - 120:18
    when I asked you
    about the iceman.
  • 120:20 - 120:21
    Did this great revelation
  • 120:21 - 120:24
    of the evil habit
    of dreaming about tomorrow
  • 120:24 - 120:26
    come to you after you found out
    your wife was sick of you?
  • 120:28 - 120:30
    Bejees, you've hit it,
    Larry.
  • 120:30 - 120:32
    I've noticed he hasn't
    shown her picture around
  • 120:32 - 120:34
    this time.
  • 120:34 - 120:35
    He hasn't got it!
  • 120:35 - 120:37
    The iceman took it
    away from him!
  • 120:37 - 120:38
    Jees,
    look at him!
  • 120:38 - 120:41
    Who could blame her?
  • 120:41 - 120:43
    She must be hard up
    to fall for an iceman!
  • 120:43 - 120:45
    Imagine a sap like him
  • 120:45 - 120:47
    advisin' me and Chuck
    to get married.
  • 120:47 - 120:48
    Yeah, he done
    so good with it.
  • 120:48 - 120:50
    At least I can say
    that Marjorie
  • 120:50 - 120:53
    chose an officer
    and a gentleman.
  • 120:53 - 120:55
    Come to look at you,
    Hickey, old chap,
  • 120:55 - 120:57
    you've sprouting horns
  • 120:57 - 121:00
    like a bloody
    antelope!
  • 121:00 - 121:02
    Bigger, by God,
  • 121:02 - 121:04
    like a water buffalo's!
  • 121:04 - 121:06
    (imitating buffalo sound)
  • 121:07 - 121:09
    * "Oh come up"
    she cried, *
  • 121:09 - 121:10
    * "My iceman lad
  • 121:10 - 121:12
    * "And you
    and I'll agree *
  • 121:12 - 121:14
    * "And I'll show you
    the prettiest *
  • 121:14 - 121:15
    (banging table)
  • 121:15 - 121:17
    * "That ever you
    did see" *
  • 121:17 - 121:19
    (mocking laughter)
  • 121:19 - 121:21
    Well, I'm glad to see you
    get in good spirits
  • 121:21 - 121:22
    for Harry's party,
  • 121:22 - 121:24
    even if the joke
    is on me.
  • 121:24 - 121:25
    Well, I'll admit
  • 121:25 - 121:27
    I always asked for it
    in the old days
  • 121:27 - 121:30
    by pulling that iceman gag,
    so, uh, laugh all you like.
  • 121:30 - 121:31
    (mocking laughter)
  • 121:41 - 121:43
    Well, I guess
    this forces my hand,
  • 121:43 - 121:45
    by brining up the subject
    of Evelyn.
  • 121:45 - 121:47
    I had wanted to wait
    until the party was over,
  • 121:47 - 121:49
    But, uh,
  • 121:49 - 121:51
    you're getting the wrong idea
    about poor Evelyn,
  • 121:51 - 121:52
    and I've got to stop that.
  • 121:54 - 121:57
    I'm sorry to tell you
    that my dearly beloved wife
  • 121:57 - 121:58
    is dead.
  • 122:05 - 122:07
    Be God...
  • 122:10 - 122:12
    I felt he had
    the touch of death on him.
  • 122:14 - 122:16
    Forgive me, Hickey...
  • 122:18 - 122:20
    I'd like to cut
    my dirty tongue out.
  • 122:23 - 122:25
    Now, look everybody, you mustn't
    let this be a wet blanket on.
  • 122:25 - 122:28
    Harry's birthday party.
  • 122:28 - 122:29
    You're still
    getting me all wrong.
  • 122:29 - 122:31
    There's no reason...
  • 122:31 - 122:34
    You see,
    I don't feel any grief.
  • 122:34 - 122:36
    I've got to feel glad,
    for her sake,
  • 122:36 - 122:39
    because she's at peace;
  • 122:39 - 122:41
    she's rid of me
    at last.
  • 122:41 - 122:43
    And you can imagine
    what I was like being married
  • 122:43 - 122:45
    to a no-good
    drunken cheater like me.
  • 122:45 - 122:48
    And there was no way
    out of it for her,
  • 122:48 - 122:50
    because she loved me.
  • 122:51 - 122:52
    But now she is at peace,
  • 122:52 - 122:54
    like she always
    longed to be.
  • 122:54 - 122:57
    So why should I feel sad?
  • 122:57 - 123:00
    She wouldn't want me
    to feel sad.
  • 123:00 - 123:02
    Why, all that Evelyn
    ever wanted out of life
  • 123:02 - 123:03
    was to make me happy.
  • 123:28 - 123:33
    Eh, nothin' now 'till
    the noon rush from the market.
  • 123:33 - 123:36
    If I ain't a sap to let Chuck
    kid me into workin' his time
  • 123:36 - 123:38
    so he can take
    the morning off.
  • 123:38 - 123:40
    But I got sick
    of arguing.
  • 123:40 - 123:44
    I says: "All right, get
    married! What's it to me?"
  • 123:44 - 123:48
    (Joe sighing)
  • 123:48 - 123:50
    Some party
    last night, eh?
  • 123:50 - 123:52
    It was jinxed
    from the start,
  • 123:52 - 123:57
    but his tellin' about his wife
    croakin' put de K.O. on it.
  • 123:57 - 124:01
    It was the birthday feast
    that turned out to be a wake.
  • 124:01 - 124:05
    Him promisin' he'd cut out that
    bughouse bull about peace.
  • 124:05 - 124:11
    And then he went on talkin' and
    talkin' like he couldn't stop.
  • 124:11 - 124:14
    And the gang, sneakin'
    upstairs, leavin' free booze
  • 124:14 - 124:16
    and eats like they
    was poison.
  • 124:16 - 124:19
    He's been hoppin' from room
    to room, all night.
  • 124:19 - 124:23
    He's got his Reform Wave
    goin' strong this mornin'.
  • 124:23 - 124:25
    Did you notice him drag
    Jimmy out the first thing
  • 124:25 - 124:28
    to get his laundry
    and his clothes pressed
  • 124:28 - 124:30
    so he wouldn't have
    no excuse?
  • 124:30 - 124:31
    And he give Willie
    the dough
  • 124:31 - 124:34
    to buy his stuff
    back from Solly's.
  • 124:34 - 124:36
    And all the rest
    have been brushin'
  • 124:36 - 124:38
    and shavin' themselves
    with the shakes.
  • 124:38 - 124:40
    He didn't come
    to my room.
  • 124:40 - 124:43
    Afraid I might ask him
    a few questions.
  • 124:43 - 124:46
    Yeah? I'd say you
    was scared of him.
  • 124:46 - 124:49
    You'd lie then.
    Don't let him kid you, Rocky.
  • 124:49 - 124:52
    He had his door locked,
    I couldn't get in, either.
  • 124:52 - 124:55
    Yeah, who do you think
    you're kiddin', Larry?
  • 124:55 - 124:57
    Like he says, if you
    was so anxious to croak,
  • 124:57 - 125:01
    why wouldn't you hop off
    your fire escape long ago?
  • 125:01 - 125:05
    Because it'd be a coward's
    quitting, that's why.
  • 125:05 - 125:09
    He's all
    quitter, Rocky.
  • 125:09 - 125:10
    He's a yellow
    old faker.
  • 125:10 - 125:16
    You lying punk!
    Yeah, keep out of this, you!
  • 125:16 - 125:18
    Shall I give him
    the bum's rush, Larry?
  • 125:18 - 125:20
    You don't want him around,
    nobody else don't.
  • 125:20 - 125:21
    No, let him stay,
    I don't mind.
  • 125:21 - 125:24
    He's nothing to me.
  • 125:24 - 125:27
    You're right.
  • 125:27 - 125:30
    I have nowhere I can go now,
    you're the only one
  • 125:30 - 125:32
    in the world
    I can turn to.
  • 125:32 - 125:35
    Eh, you're a soft
    old sap, Larry.
  • 125:35 - 125:37
    He's a no-good
    louse like Hickey.
  • 125:37 - 125:39
    He don't belong!
  • 125:39 - 125:43
    I'm all in,
    not a wink of sleep.
  • 125:58 - 126:01
    Larry, I'm sorry
    for ridin' you.
  • 126:01 - 126:02
    But you get my goat
    when you act as if
  • 126:02 - 126:05
    you didn't care a damn
    what happened to me.
  • 126:05 - 126:08
    And you keep your door locked
    so I can't talk to you.
  • 126:08 - 126:11
    But that was to keep
    Hickey out, wasn't it?
  • 126:11 - 126:14
    I don't blame you, I'm getting
    more and more to hate him.
  • 126:14 - 126:17
    More and more
    scared of him.
  • 126:17 - 126:22
    Especially since he told us
    about his wife being dead.
  • 126:22 - 126:23
    It's that queer
    feeling he gives me
  • 126:23 - 126:25
    that I'm mixed up
    with him in some way.
  • 126:25 - 126:30
    I don't know why, but it started
    me thinking about mother.
  • 126:30 - 126:34
    As if she
    was dead.
  • 126:34 - 126:39
    I suppose she
    might as well be.
  • 126:39 - 126:43
    It must kill her when
    she thinks of me.
  • 126:43 - 126:50
    I know she doesn't want to,
    but... she can't help it.
  • 126:50 - 126:53
    After all,
    I'm her only kid.
  • 126:53 - 126:58
    She used to spoil me,
    and made a pet of me.
  • 126:58 - 127:02
    Once in a
    great while...
  • 127:02 - 127:06
    when she
    remembered me.
  • 127:06 - 127:08
    As if she was trying to
    make up for something.
  • 127:08 - 127:13
    As if she was...
    feeling guilty.
  • 127:13 - 127:16
    So I guess she must have
    loved me a little,
  • 127:16 - 127:19
    even if she never let it
    interfere with her freedom.
  • 127:24 - 127:28
    You know, Larry...
  • 127:28 - 127:30
    I once had a sneaking
    suspicion that,
  • 127:30 - 127:33
    if the truth were
    known, you were my father.
  • 127:33 - 127:35
    You damned fool!
  • 127:35 - 127:40
    Who put that insane
    idea in your head?
  • 127:40 - 127:42
    Anyone in the coast crowd
    could tell I never laid eyes
  • 127:42 - 127:45
    on your mother 'till
    after you were born.
  • 127:45 - 127:51
    Well, I'd hardly
    ask them, would I?
  • 127:51 - 127:58
    I know you're right,
    though, because I asked her.
  • 127:58 - 128:04
    She brought me up to be frank
    and ask her anything.
  • 128:04 - 128:10
    I was talking about how
    she must feel now about me.
  • 128:10 - 128:11
    My getting through
    with the Movement.
  • 128:11 - 128:15
    Oh, she'll never
    forgive me for that.
  • 128:15 - 128:17
    That must be the final knockout,
    if she knows that I was the one
  • 128:17 - 128:19
    who sold out...
    Shut up, damn you! Shut up.
  • 128:19 - 128:24
    It'll kill her!
    But Larry...
  • 128:24 - 128:28
    I never thought that they
    would have caught her!
  • 128:28 - 128:33
    You've got to believe
    what the only reason was.
  • 128:33 - 128:37
    Now I'll admit, what I told you
    last night... that was a lie.
  • 128:37 - 128:39
    All that bunk
    about feeling patriotic
  • 128:39 - 128:42
    and my duty
    to my country.
  • 128:42 - 128:46
    But here's the true reason,
    the only reason, Larry.
  • 128:46 - 128:50
    See, I got stuck on this
    whore... and I wanted dough!
  • 128:50 - 128:52
    That's the only reason,
    that's all I did it for!
  • 128:52 - 128:53
    Just the money,
    honest!
  • 128:53 - 128:55
    God damn you,
    shut up!
  • 128:55 - 128:57
    What the hell
    is it to me?
  • 128:57 - 128:59
    What's comin' off here?
    Nothing.
  • 128:59 - 129:00
    This young punk
    is talking my ear off.
  • 129:00 - 129:02
    He's a worse pest
    than Hickey.
  • 129:02 - 129:05
    (yawning)
    Oh, yeah, Hickey.
  • 129:05 - 129:08
    Say, listen, what do you
    mean about him being scared
  • 129:08 - 129:11
    you'd ask him questions?
    What questions?
  • 129:11 - 129:14
    What questions? Well, you noticed
    he didn't tell us what his wife died of.
  • 129:14 - 129:17
    Oh, lay off of that,
    the poor guy!
  • 129:17 - 129:19
    What are you
    gettin' at, anyway?
  • 129:19 - 129:22
    You don't think it's just a gag of his?
    No, no I don't.
  • 129:22 - 129:26
    I'm damned sure he brought
    death here with him,
  • 129:26 - 129:29
    I can smell the cold touch of it upon him.
    Oh, bunk.
  • 129:29 - 129:32
    You got croakin' on
    the brain, Old Cemetery.
  • 129:32 - 129:36
    Say, do you mean you think
    she committed suicide
  • 129:36 - 129:38
    on account of his
    cheatin' or something?
  • 129:38 - 129:41
    It wouldn't surprise me.
    But that's crazy.
  • 129:41 - 129:44
    Jees, if she'd done that,
    he wouldn't tell us
  • 129:44 - 129:45
    he was glad about it,
    would he?
  • 129:45 - 129:46
    You know her
    better than that, Larry.
  • 129:46 - 129:47
    You know she'd never
    commit suicide.
  • 129:47 - 129:49
    She's like you,
    she'll hang on to life
  • 129:49 - 129:50
    even when there's nothing...
    And what about you?
  • 129:50 - 129:52
    Be God, if you had
    any guts or decency!
  • 129:52 - 129:54
    I'd take that hop off
    the fire escape
  • 129:54 - 129:56
    you're too yellow to take, I suppose, ah?
    No!
  • 129:56 - 129:58
    I'm done with...
    Yeah, I suppose you'd like that!
  • 129:58 - 130:00
    What the hell's
    all this about?
  • 130:00 - 130:02
    What do you know
    about Hickey's wife?
  • 130:02 - 130:05
    How do you know she didn't...?
    He doesn't!
  • 130:05 - 130:06
    Hickey's addled
    the little brains he's got.
  • 130:06 - 130:08
    Shove him back
    to his table, Rocky.
  • 130:08 - 130:10
    I'm sick of him.
  • 130:10 - 130:14
    You heard Larry!
    So move, quick.
  • 130:17 - 130:20
    Gee, Larry... that's
    a hell of a way to treat me
  • 130:20 - 130:25
    after I've trusted you,
    and I need your help.
  • 130:30 - 130:35
    Jees... if she
    committed suicide,
  • 130:35 - 130:37
    you gotta feel sorry
    for Hickey, huh?
  • 130:37 - 130:40
    You can understand how
    he'd go bughouse, and not be
  • 130:40 - 130:44
    responsible for all the crazy
    stunts he's stagin' here.
  • 130:44 - 130:46
    But how can you be
    sorry for him when he says
  • 130:46 - 130:51
    he's glad she croaked?
    Oh, nuts!
  • 130:51 - 130:54
    I don't get nowhere
    tryin' to figure his game.
  • 130:54 - 130:59
    But I know this: He better
    lay off of me and my stable.
  • 130:59 - 131:05
    Jees, Larry! What a night
    them two pigs give me.
  • 131:05 - 131:08
    When the party went dead,
    they pinched a couple of bottles
  • 131:08 - 131:11
    and brung them
    up their room.
  • 131:11 - 131:13
    I don't get a wink
    of sleep, see?
  • 131:13 - 131:15
    Just as I'd drop off
    on that chair there,
  • 131:15 - 131:17
    they come down
    lookin' for trouble.
  • 131:17 - 131:21
    Or else they'd raise hell
    upstairs, laughin' and singin',
  • 131:21 - 131:23
    so that I'd get scared
    they'd get the joint pinched
  • 131:23 - 131:26
    and go up to tell
    them to can the noise.
  • 131:26 - 131:30
    And every time they'd crawl my
    frame with de same old argument.
  • 131:30 - 131:31
    They'd say:
  • 131:31 - 131:34
    (imitating Maggie)
    "So you agree with Hickey, do you?
  • 131:34 - 131:36
    "You dirty little Ginny!
    So we're whores, are we?
  • 131:36 - 131:39
    "Well, we agree with Hickey
    about you, see?
  • 131:39 - 131:44
    "You're nothin' but a lousy
    pimp!" Then I'd slap them.
  • 131:44 - 131:48
    But it don't do no good!
    They keep at it over and over.
  • 131:48 - 131:52
    Jees, I get the earache
    just thinkin' of it.
  • 131:52 - 131:56
    "Listen," they'd say, "if we're
    whores, we got a right to have
  • 131:56 - 132:00
    "a regular pimp and not stand
    for no punk imitation!"
  • 132:00 - 132:03
    "We're sick of wearin'
    out our dogs poundin'"
  • 132:03 - 132:05
    "the sidewalks for
    a double-crossin' bartender,"
  • 132:05 - 132:09
    "when all the thanks we get
    is he looks down on us."
  • 132:09 - 132:13
    "Don't expect us to work
    tonight, 'cause we won't, see?"
  • 132:13 - 132:16
    "Not if the streets
    were blocked with sailors!"
  • 132:16 - 132:18
    "We're goin' on strike!"
  • 132:18 - 132:23
    Whores goin' on strike!
    Can you tie that?
  • 132:23 - 132:25
    They'd say:
    "We're takin' a holiday.
  • 132:25 - 132:28
    "We're goin' to beat it
    to Coney Island and shoot
  • 132:28 - 132:32
    "the chutes, and maybe we'll
    come back and maybe we won't.
  • 132:32 - 132:35
    "And you can go to hell!"
    So they put on their lids
  • 132:35 - 132:43
    and beat it, the both
    of them stinko!
  • 132:43 - 132:45
    Hey, Rocky, Cora wants
    a sherry flip, for her nerves.
  • 132:45 - 132:47
    "Sherry flip?"
  • 132:47 - 132:48
    Christ, she don't need nothin'
    for her nerve.
  • 132:48 - 132:50
    What's she think this is, the Waldorf?
    Yeah, I told her.
  • 132:50 - 132:52
    "What would we use
    for sherry?"
  • 132:52 - 132:54
    And there wasn't no egg
    unless she laid one.
  • 132:54 - 132:56
    (imitating Cora) She says,
    "Is there a law you can't go out"
  • 132:56 - 132:58
    "and buy the makings,
    you big tramp?"
  • 132:58 - 133:01
    Ah, the hell with her! She'll
    drink booze or nothin'. Oh, jees!
  • 133:01 - 133:05
    A guy oughta give his
    bride anything she wants
  • 133:05 - 133:07
    on her weddin' day,
    I should think.
  • 133:07 - 133:12
    Pipe the bridegroom, Larry!
    All dolled up for the killin'. Aw, shut up.
  • 133:12 - 133:15
    One week on that farm in Jersey,
    that's what I'll give you.
  • 133:15 - 133:18
    And you'll come runnin'
    in here some night yellin'
  • 133:18 - 133:22
    for a shot of booze because
    the crickets is after you.
  • 133:22 - 133:24
    Oh, jees, Chuck, that
    louse Hickey's certainly
  • 133:24 - 133:27
    made a prize couple
    of suckers outta you.
  • 133:27 - 133:33
    I'd like to give him one sock
    in the puss, just one.
  • 133:33 - 133:35
    Oh, can that!
    What's he got to do with it?
  • 133:35 - 133:37
    And ain't we always
    said we was gonna?
  • 133:37 - 133:39
    So we're gonna, see? And
    don't give me no arguments!
  • 133:39 - 133:41
    If only Cora cut out
    the beefin',
  • 133:41 - 133:42
    and she don't gimme
    a minute's rest all night.
  • 133:42 - 133:44
    It's the same old stuff,
    over and over.
  • 133:44 - 133:46
    (imitating Cora's voice)
    Do I really want to marry her?
  • 133:46 - 133:49
    I says: "Sure, Baby, why
    not?" "Yeah," she says,
  • 133:49 - 133:51
    "but after a week you'll be
    thinkin' what a sap you was."
  • 133:51 - 133:53
    "You'll make that an excuse
    to go off on a periodical,"
  • 133:53 - 133:55
    "and then I'll be tied
    for life to a no-good soak!"
  • 133:55 - 133:57
    "And the first thing
    I know you'll have me out"
  • 133:57 - 133:59
    "hustlin' again,
    your own wife!"
  • 133:59 - 134:02
    Then she'd bust out cryin',
    and I'd get sore.
  • 134:02 - 134:05
    "You're a liar!" I tells her,
    "I ain't never taken your dough
  • 134:05 - 134:07
    "except when I was drunk
    and not workin'."
  • 134:07 - 134:09
    "Yeah," she says, "and how
    long will you stay sober now?
  • 134:09 - 134:12
    "Don't think you can kid me
    with that water-wagon bull.
  • 134:12 - 134:14
    "I've heard it too often!"
    That'd make me sore,
  • 134:14 - 134:16
    and I'd say: "Don't
    call me a liar",
  • 134:16 - 134:19
    "but I wish I was drunk
    right now, because if I was,
  • 134:19 - 134:21
    "you wouldn't be keepin' me
    awake all night beefin'.
  • 134:21 - 134:23
    You opened your yap, I'd knock
    de stuffins outta you!"
  • 134:23 - 134:25
    Then she'd yell:
    "That's a sweet way"
  • 134:25 - 134:27
    "to talk to the girl you're
    goin' to marry!"
  • 134:27 - 134:34
    Jees, she got me
    hangin' in the ropes!
  • 134:34 - 134:37
    I'd like to get a quart
    of that redeye under my belt!
  • 134:37 - 134:40
    Well, why the hell
    don't you?
  • 134:40 - 134:44
    Sure, you'd like that,
    wouldn'tyou? I'm wise to you.
  • 134:44 - 134:45
    You don't wanna
    see me get married
  • 134:45 - 134:47
    and settle down,
    like a regular guy.
  • 134:47 - 134:49
    You'd like me to stay
    paralyzed all the time,
  • 134:49 - 134:52
    so I'd be like you,
    a lousy pimp!
  • 134:52 - 134:54
    Listen! I don't take that
    even from you, see?
  • 134:54 - 134:56
    Yeah? You wanna make
    somethin' of it?
  • 134:56 - 134:59
    Don't make me laugh! I can
    lick ten of you with one mitt!
  • 134:59 - 135:01
    Not with lead in
    your belly, you won't!
  • 135:01 - 135:04
    Hey you, Rocky
    and Chuck, cut it out!
  • 135:04 - 135:07
    Don't let that Hickey
    make you crazy.
  • 135:07 - 135:08
    Keep out of our business,
    you black bastard.
  • 135:08 - 135:08
    Stay where you belong,
    you dirty nigger!
  • 135:08 - 135:11
    You white sons of bitches!
    I'll rip your guts out!
  • 135:11 - 135:13
    (glass shattering)
  • 135:13 - 135:15
    That's it! Murder each
    other, you damned loons!
  • 135:15 - 135:16
    With Hickey's
    blessing!
  • 135:16 - 135:18
    Didn't I tell you he
    brought death with him?
  • 135:18 - 135:21
    All right, you...
    let go of that shiv,
  • 135:21 - 135:25
    and I'll put
    this gun away.
  • 135:32 - 135:35
    (Hugo giggling maniacally)
  • 135:35 - 135:39
    Hello, little people!
    Never mind.
  • 135:39 - 135:44
    Soon you will eat hot dogs
    beneath the willow trees,
  • 135:44 - 135:49
    and drink free wine!
  • 135:49 - 135:53
    The champagne
    was not properly iced.
  • 135:53 - 135:55
    Goddamned liar,
    Hickey!
  • 135:55 - 135:59
    Does that prove
    I want to be aristocrat?
  • 135:59 - 136:01
    I love only
    the proletariat!
  • 136:01 - 136:07
    I will lead them! I will
    be like a God to them!
  • 136:07 - 136:09
    They will be
    my slaves!
  • 136:20 - 136:22
    I'm very drunk,
    no, Larry?
  • 136:22 - 136:25
    I talk foolishness.
  • 136:25 - 136:27
    I am so drunk, Larry,
    old friend, am I not?
  • 136:27 - 136:29
    I don't know
    what I say.
  • 136:29 - 136:33
    I've never seen you
    so paralyzed.
  • 136:33 - 136:35
    Now lay your head on
    the table and sleep it off.
  • 136:35 - 136:41
    Yeah, I should sleep...
    I'm too crazy drunk.
  • 136:53 - 136:59
    You right, Larry.
  • 136:59 - 137:03
    Bad luck come in the door
    the day Hickey come.
  • 137:03 - 137:06
    I'm an old
    gamblin' man,
  • 137:06 - 137:10
    and I knows bad luck
    when I feels it.
  • 137:10 - 137:14
    But it's white
    man's bad luck.
  • 137:14 - 137:15
    He can't jinx me.
  • 137:22 - 137:27
    The bread's cut, and
    I finished my job.
  • 137:27 - 137:32
    Now, do I get
    the drink I earned?
  • 137:32 - 137:35
    Here's the key
    to my room.
  • 137:35 - 137:37
    I ain't
    comin' back!
  • 137:37 - 137:39
    I'm goin' to my own
    folks where I belong.
  • 137:39 - 137:45
    I'm sick and tired of messin'
    around with white men.
  • 137:45 - 137:47
    (glass shattering)
    What the hell?
  • 137:47 - 137:50
    I'm only savin' you
    the trouble, white boy!
  • 137:50 - 137:52
    Now you don't have to break it
    as soon's my back's turned,
  • 137:52 - 137:54
    so there's no
    white man can kick about
  • 137:54 - 137:57
    drinkin' from
    the same glass!
  • 137:57 - 138:01
    I'm tired of loafin' around
    with a lot of bums.
  • 138:01 - 138:03
    I'm a gamblin' man.
  • 138:03 - 138:07
    I'm gonna get in a big crap game
    and win me a big bankroll.
  • 138:07 - 138:09
    And then I'll get
    the okay to open up
  • 138:09 - 138:12
    my old gamblin' house
    for colored men.
  • 138:12 - 138:14
    And then maybe
    I comes back here
  • 138:14 - 138:17
    sometimes to see
    the bums.
  • 138:17 - 138:21
    And maybe I throws a $20 bill
    down on the bar and says:
  • 138:21 - 138:24
    "Drink it up,"
    and listen when
  • 138:24 - 138:26
    they all pat me
    on the back and say:
  • 138:26 - 138:28
    "Joe, you sure is white,"
    but I'll say:
  • 138:28 - 138:32
    "No, I'm black and
    my dough is black man's dough!"
  • 138:32 - 138:35
    "And you's proud to drink with
    me or you don't get no drink!"
  • 138:35 - 138:41
    Or maybe I'd just says:
    "You can all go to hell!"
  • 138:41 - 138:48
    "I don't lower myself
    drinkin' with no white trash."
  • 138:48 - 138:50
    And that ain't
    no pipe dream.
  • 138:50 - 138:54
    I'll get the money for my stake
    today, somewhere, somehow.
  • 138:54 - 138:56
    If I have to borrow
    a gun and stick up
  • 138:56 - 138:59
    some white man,
    I gets it!
  • 139:03 - 139:06
    You wait and see.
  • 139:12 - 139:15
    Can you beat the nerve
    of that "dinge."
  • 139:15 - 139:17
    Jees, if I wasn't
    dressed up I'd go out
  • 139:17 - 139:20
    and mop up the street with him.
    Oh, let him go.
  • 139:20 - 139:24
    The poor old dope, him
    and his gamblin' house.
  • 139:24 - 139:26
    He'll be back tonight
    askin' Harry for his room
  • 139:26 - 139:28
    and bummin' me
    for a ball.
  • 139:28 - 139:31
    Then I'll be the one
    to smash the glass.
  • 139:31 - 139:34
    I'll loin him
    his place.
  • 139:34 - 139:36
    Another guy
    all dolled up.
  • 139:39 - 139:41
    Got your clothes
    from Solly's, huh, Willie?
  • 139:41 - 139:44
    Now you can sell it back
    to him again tomorrow. (indistinct)
  • 139:44 - 139:46
    No, I-I'm through
    with that stuff.
  • 139:46 - 139:49
    You look sick, Willie; here,
    take a ball, will pick you up.
  • 139:49 - 139:53
    Eh, no thanks, the only way
    to stop is to stop.
  • 139:53 - 139:55
    I'd have no chance if I
    went to the D.A.'s office
  • 139:55 - 139:58
    smelling of booze.
    You're really goin' there?
  • 139:58 - 140:00
    I said I was,
    didn't I?
  • 140:00 - 140:04
    I just came back here
    to rest for a few minutes.
  • 140:04 - 140:06
    I'll show
    that cheap drummer!
  • 140:06 - 140:11
    I don't need to have to have
    any Dutch courage.
  • 140:11 - 140:19
    But he's, he's been very kind
    and generous staking me.
  • 140:19 - 140:22
    You know, my, my
    legs are a bit shaky.
  • 140:22 - 140:24
    I better sit down
    a while.
  • 140:38 - 140:41
    Here's another one.
  • 140:41 - 140:43
    Hey, good morning,
    gentlemen all.
  • 140:51 - 140:56
    And a jolly good
    morning it is, too.
  • 140:56 - 140:58
    An eye-opener?
    I think not,
  • 140:58 - 141:02
    Rocky, old chum...
    not required, you know?
  • 141:02 - 141:05
    Feel extremely fit,
    as a matter of fact.
  • 141:05 - 141:07
    Can't say that
    I slept much, though,
  • 141:07 - 141:09
    thanks to that interfering
    ass, Hickey,
  • 141:09 - 141:12
    and that stupid
    bounder of a Boer.
  • 141:12 - 141:15
    I've had about all I can
    take from that fellow.
  • 141:15 - 141:18
    Oh, well, it's my own
    fault, I suppose, for allowing
  • 141:18 - 141:21
    a brute of a Dutch farmer
    to become familiar.
  • 141:21 - 141:25
    Well, it's come
    to a parting of the ways.
  • 141:25 - 141:27
    And jolly
    good riddance.
  • 141:27 - 141:31
    Oh, that reminds me...
    here's my key.
  • 141:31 - 141:36
    I shan't be coming back.
  • 141:36 - 141:39
    Sorry to be leaving good old
    Harry and the rest of you,
  • 141:39 - 141:42
    of course, but I simply
    cannot continue to live
  • 141:42 - 141:44
    under the same roof
    with that fellow.
  • 141:44 - 141:47
    So Hickey's kidded the pants
    off of you, too?
  • 141:47 - 141:49
    You think you're
    leavin' here, huh?
  • 141:49 - 141:54
    Ja! That's what
    he kids himself.
  • 141:54 - 141:56
    Yes, I'm leaving,
    Rocky.
  • 141:56 - 141:59
    Not that that ass, Hickey,
    has anything to do with it.
  • 141:59 - 142:01
    But been thinking
    this over, you know?
  • 142:01 - 142:03
    Time I turned over
    a new leaf.
  • 142:03 - 142:06
    He's gonna get a job,
    that's what he says.
  • 142:06 - 142:08
    What at,
    for Christ's sake?
  • 142:08 - 142:12
    Oh, anything... not manual
    labor, of course.
  • 142:12 - 142:15
    Anything that calls for a bit
    of brains and education.
  • 142:15 - 142:17
    I'll see a pal of mine
    at the Consulate.
  • 142:17 - 142:20
    He promised me whenever
    I felt an energetic fit
  • 142:20 - 142:22
    he'd get me a post
    with the Cunard.
  • 142:22 - 142:25
    Clark, in the office,
    something of that kind.
  • 142:25 - 142:28
    Ja! At Limey Consulate
    they promise anything
  • 142:28 - 142:33
    to get rid of him when
    he comes there drunk.
  • 142:33 - 142:35
    They're scared to call the
    police and have him pinched,
  • 142:35 - 142:37
    because it would scandal
    in the papers make
  • 142:37 - 142:43
    about a Limey
    officer and gentleman.
  • 142:43 - 142:45
    I only need the post
    temporarily, Rocky.
  • 142:45 - 142:47
    Means to an end,
    you know.
  • 142:47 - 142:49
    Save enough for
    a passage...
  • 142:49 - 142:52
    a first-class passage home,
    that's the bright idea.
  • 142:52 - 142:55
    (Wetjoen laughing)
  • 142:55 - 142:57
    He's sailing back
    to home, sweet home!
  • 142:57 - 143:02
    That's biggest pipe
    dream of all!
  • 143:02 - 143:04
    What little brain
    the poor Limey has left
  • 143:04 - 143:09
    that isn't in whiskey pickled,
    Hickey has made crazy!
  • 143:09 - 143:11
    Hickey ain't made
    no sucker out of you, eh?
  • 143:11 - 143:14
    You're too
    foxy, huh?
  • 143:14 - 143:16
    But I bet you think you're goin'
    out and land a job, too.
  • 143:16 - 143:19
    I am, ja! For me,
    it is easy.
  • 143:19 - 143:23
    Because I put on
    no airs of gentleman.
  • 143:23 - 143:26
    I'm not ashamed to work
    with my hands.
  • 143:26 - 143:28
    I was a farmer
    before the war,
  • 143:28 - 143:32
    when bloody Limey thieves
    steal my country.
  • 143:32 - 143:36
    Anyone I ask for job
    can see with one look
  • 143:36 - 143:42
    I have the great strength to do
    work of ten ordinary mens.
  • 143:42 - 143:45
    Yes, you remember, Chuck,
    he gave us a demonstration
  • 143:45 - 143:47
    of his extraordinary
    muscles last night
  • 143:47 - 143:50
    when he helped
    to move the piano.
  • 143:50 - 143:52
    You couldn't even
    hold up your corner.
  • 143:52 - 143:54
    It was your fault the damned
    box almost fell over.
  • 143:54 - 143:59
    My hands was sweaty! Could I
    help that my hands slip?
  • 143:59 - 144:01
    I could do whole
    weight of it lift!
  • 144:01 - 144:06
    In old days in Transvaal, I lift
    loaded oxcart by the axle.
  • 144:06 - 144:09
    So, why
    shouldn't I get job?
  • 144:09 - 144:12
    That longshoreman
    boss, Dan, he tell me
  • 144:12 - 144:16
    any time I like,
    he'd take me on.
  • 144:16 - 144:19
    And Benny, from de Market,
    he promise me same!
  • 144:19 - 144:22
    You remember, Rocky, it was
    one of those rare occasions
  • 144:22 - 144:24
    when the Boer
    that walks like a man,
  • 144:24 - 144:27
    spelled with a double "O",
    by the way,
  • 144:27 - 144:31
    was buying drinks when Dan
    and Benny were stony.
  • 144:31 - 144:34
    They'd have promised
    him the bloody moon!
  • 144:34 - 144:36
    (Lewis laughing)
    Yeah, yuh big boob.
  • 144:36 - 144:38
    Them birds was only
    kiddin' you.
  • 144:38 - 144:40
    (pounding bar) That's lie!
    You will see, this morning I get job.
  • 144:40 - 144:43
    I'll show that...
    bloody Limey gentleman,
  • 144:43 - 144:46
    and that liar,
    Hickey!
  • 144:46 - 144:49
    And I need work
    only little while
  • 144:49 - 144:51
    to save money
    for my passage home.
  • 144:51 - 144:55
    I need not much money
    because I am not ashamed
  • 144:55 - 144:57
    to travel steerage.
  • 144:57 - 145:01
    I don't put on
    first-cabin airs!
  • 145:01 - 145:05
    And I can go home
    to my country!
  • 145:05 - 145:10
    When I get there, they
    will let me in! Heh!
  • 145:10 - 145:12
    There was a rumor
    in South Africa
  • 145:12 - 145:15
    that a certain Boer
    officer, if you can call
  • 145:15 - 145:19
    the leaders of a rabble of Dutch
    farmers officers, he kept
  • 145:19 - 145:24
    advising Cronje to retreat,
    and to not stand and fight.
  • 145:24 - 145:26
    And I was right!
    I was right!
  • 145:26 - 145:28
    He got surrounded
    at Poardeberg!
  • 145:28 - 145:30
    (giggling)
    He had to surrender.
  • 145:30 - 145:34
    Good strategy, no doubt,
    but a suspicion
  • 145:34 - 145:38
    grew afterwards into a
    conviction among the Boers
  • 145:38 - 145:41
    that the officer's caution
    was prompted by a desire
  • 145:41 - 145:44
    for his personal
    escape.
  • 145:44 - 145:47
    His countrymen were
    extremely savage about it,
  • 145:47 - 145:50
    and his
    family disowned him.
  • 145:50 - 145:53
    So I imagine there won't be
    any welcoming committee waiting
  • 145:53 - 145:57
    on the dock... nor any
    delighted relatives
  • 145:57 - 146:01
    making the "veldt" ring
    with their happy cries
  • 146:01 - 146:03
    of "Welcome home,
    Gen. Wet..."
  • 146:03 - 146:10
    All lies!
    You Goddamned Limey!
  • 146:10 - 146:13
    I also have heard rumors
    of a Limey officer who
  • 146:13 - 146:15
    after the war
    lost all his money
  • 146:15 - 146:19
    gambling when he
    was drunk.
  • 146:19 - 146:23
    But they found out it was
    regiment money, too, he lost!
  • 146:23 - 146:24
    Ah, you bloody
    Dutch scum!
  • 146:24 - 146:26
    Cut it out!
    Let him come!
  • 146:26 - 146:31
    I saw them come before!
    Modder River, Magersfontein,
  • 146:31 - 146:36
    Spion Kopje, waving their silly
    swords, so afraid they couldn't
  • 146:36 - 146:39
    show how brave
    they was!
  • 146:39 - 146:42
    And I kill them with
    my rifle so easy!
  • 146:42 - 146:45
    Listen to me,
    you Cecil!
  • 146:45 - 146:49
    Often when I'm drunk
    and kidding you I say I'm sorry
  • 146:49 - 146:54
    I missed you, but now,
    by God, I am sober!
  • 146:54 - 146:57
    And I don't joke, and I say it!
    (slamming table) Be God!
  • 146:57 - 146:59
    You can't say Hickey hasn't got
    the miraculous touch to raise
  • 146:59 - 147:04
    the dead, when he can start
    the Boer War raging again!
  • 147:04 - 147:09
    Well... it's time
    I was on my merry way.
  • 147:09 - 147:12
    The early bird catches
    the job, what?
  • 147:12 - 147:16
    Good-bye and good luck,
    Rocky, and the rest of you.
  • 147:20 - 147:26
    By God, if that Limey
    can go... I can go.
  • 147:35 - 147:38
    Well, why don't
    you beat it?
  • 147:38 - 147:41
    Eh? Oh... just
    been thinking.
  • 147:41 - 147:43
    Hardly the decent thing
    to push off without
  • 147:43 - 147:45
    saying good-bye
    to old Harry.
  • 147:45 - 147:48
    One of the best, old Harry,
    and good old Jimmy.
  • 147:48 - 147:51
    They ought to be
    down very soon.
  • 147:51 - 147:53
    Oh, I'm sorry.
  • 147:53 - 147:57
    I seem to be
    blocking your way out.
  • 147:57 - 148:06
    No... I will wait to say
    good-bye to Harry, too.
  • 148:06 - 148:08
    Jees, can you beat
    them simps!
  • 148:08 - 148:12
    Oh, hell, I forgot Cora!
    She'll be throwin' a fit!
  • 148:12 - 148:16
    That's right, wait on her
    and spoil her, you poor sap!
  • 148:19 - 148:21
    Psst! Look here,
    Parritt.
  • 148:21 - 148:23
    I'd like to have
    a talk with you.
  • 148:23 - 148:25
    About what?
    About the trouble you're in.
  • 148:25 - 148:27
    Oh, I know, I know,
    you don't admit it.
  • 148:27 - 148:30
    And you're quite right,
    that's my advice.
  • 148:30 - 148:32
    Deny everything,
    Say, what the hell are you accusing me of?
  • 148:32 - 148:33
    Make no statements whatever
    without consulting
  • 148:33 - 148:35
    your attorney,
    keep your mouth shut.
  • 148:35 - 148:38
    Look, you can trust me,
    I'm a lawyer.
  • 148:38 - 148:43
    And it's occurred to me that
    you and I ought to co-operate.
  • 148:43 - 148:46
    Of course I'm... going to see
    the D.A. this morning
  • 148:46 - 148:50
    about a job on his staff,
    but... that may take time.
  • 148:50 - 148:54
    There may not be...
    an immediate opening.
  • 148:54 - 148:57
    And meanwhile it, it would
    be a good idea for me to take
  • 148:57 - 149:02
    a case or two, on my own,
    just to prove that
  • 149:02 - 149:05
    my... brilliant record in law
    school was no flash in the pan.
  • 149:05 - 149:10
    So, why not... retain me
    as your attorney?
  • 149:10 - 149:13
    You're crazy, what do I
    want with a lawyer?
  • 149:13 - 149:15
    Yeah, that's right,
    don't admit anything.
  • 149:15 - 149:21
    But you can trust me, so let's
    not beat about the bush.
  • 149:21 - 149:23
    You got in trouble
    out on the coast, eh?
  • 149:23 - 149:26
    Now you're in hiding,
    any fool can spot that.
  • 149:26 - 149:29
    You... feel safe here, and
    maybe you are for a while.
  • 149:29 - 149:31
    But remember, they
    get you in the end.
  • 149:31 - 149:34
    (Parritt laughing)
    I know, from my father's experience.
  • 149:34 - 149:36
    Nobody could have felt
    safer than he did.
  • 149:36 - 149:41
    When anybody mentioned the law
    to him, he nearly died laughing.
  • 149:41 - 149:43
    But...
    You crazy mutt!
  • 149:43 - 149:45
    (shouting)
    You hear that, Larry?
  • 149:45 - 149:48
    This damned fool here thinks
    the cops are after me!
  • 149:48 - 149:51
    I wish to God
    they were.
  • 149:51 - 149:55
    And so should you, if you
    had the honor of a louse!
  • 149:55 - 149:57
    Oh, and you're the guy
    who kids himself he's through
  • 149:57 - 149:59
    with the Movement; you're
    still in love with it!
  • 149:59 - 150:01
    You mean you're not
    in trouble, Parritt?
  • 150:01 - 150:03
    I was hoping...
    Eh, never mind.
  • 150:03 - 150:05
    No, no offense
    meant... Parritt.
  • 150:05 - 150:09
    That's all right, Willie...
    I'm not sore at you.
  • 150:09 - 150:11
    It's that damned yellow
    faker that gets in my goat.
  • 150:24 - 150:26
    I think I
    understand, Larry.
  • 150:26 - 150:32
    It's really mother that
    you still love... isn't it?
  • 150:32 - 150:36
    In spite of that dirty
    deal she gave you.
  • 150:36 - 150:37
    But what the hell
    did you expect?
  • 150:37 - 150:42
    She was never true to anyone
    but herself and the Movement.
  • 150:42 - 150:44
    But Larry, I can,
    I can understand
  • 150:44 - 150:48
    how you still
    can't help feeling.
  • 150:48 - 150:52
    See, because I still
    love her too.
  • 150:52 - 150:53
    So you see,
    I couldn't have
  • 150:53 - 150:56
    expected that they'd
    catch her, Larry.
  • 150:56 - 150:58
    You gotta believe me that I
    only sold them out just to get
  • 150:58 - 151:00
    a few lousy dollars
    to blow in on a whore.
  • 151:00 - 151:01
    Now there's no
    other reason, honest!
  • 151:01 - 151:04
    For the love of Christ,
    will you leave me in peace!
  • 151:04 - 151:07
    If you don't keep still, you'll
    be saying something soon
  • 151:07 - 151:11
    that will make you vomit
    your own soul like a drink
  • 151:11 - 151:13
    of nickel rotgut
    that won't stay down!
  • 151:13 - 151:14
    Larry, don't go!
    You've got to help me!
  • 151:14 - 151:16
    Set 'em up, Rocky! I swore
    I'd have no more drinks
  • 151:16 - 151:19
    on Hickey, if I died of drought,
    but I've changed my mind!
  • 151:19 - 151:21
    Be God, he
    owed it to me!
  • 151:27 - 151:30
    I'd be blind
    to the world now,
  • 151:30 - 151:36
    if it was the Iceman of Death
    himself treating.
  • 151:36 - 151:39
    What made me say
    that, I wonder.
  • 151:39 - 151:42
    Oh, my God, it fits,
    for Death was
  • 151:42 - 151:44
    the iceman that Hickey
    called to his home.
  • 151:44 - 151:46
    Oh, forget
    the iceman gag!
  • 151:46 - 151:48
    The poor dame
    is dead!
  • 151:48 - 151:50
    Go on
    and get paralyzed.
  • 151:50 - 152:00
    I'll be glad to see one bum
    in this dump act natural.
  • 152:00 - 152:02
    Come and sit
    here, Mac.
  • 152:02 - 152:03
    You're just the man
    I wanna see.
  • 152:03 - 152:05
    If I'm to take
    your case, we ought
  • 152:05 - 152:08
    to have a talk before we leave.
    There'll be no talk.
  • 152:08 - 152:10
    You damned fool,
    do you think I'd have
  • 152:10 - 152:13
    your father's son
    for my lawyer?
  • 152:13 - 152:15
    They'd take
    one look at you
  • 152:15 - 152:16
    and bounce us both
    out on our necks.
  • 152:16 - 152:18
    Hmm!
    I don't need a lawyer, anyway.
  • 152:18 - 152:20
    Hell with the law!
  • 152:20 - 152:22
    All I've got to do
    is see the right ones,
  • 152:22 - 152:24
    get them to pass
    the word.
  • 152:24 - 152:31
    They will, too,
    they know I was framed.
  • 152:31 - 152:33
    And once the word
    is passed,
  • 152:33 - 152:38
    it's as good as
    done, law or no law!
  • 152:38 - 152:40
    Here's my key,
    Rocky.
  • 152:40 - 152:42
    I'd rather sleep
    in the gutter than spend
  • 152:42 - 152:45
    another night under the same
    roof as that drummer.
  • 152:45 - 152:49
    Son of a drummer!
    Well, you birds give me a pain.
  • 152:49 - 152:50
    It'd serve you right
    if I wouldn't give
  • 152:50 - 152:55
    the keys back
    to you tonight.
  • 152:55 - 153:00
    Hello, everybody!
    Here we go!
  • 153:05 - 153:08
    Hi-Hi-Hickey just told us
    ain't it time we beat it,
  • 153:08 - 153:10
    if we was
    really goin'.
  • 153:10 - 153:14
    So we're showin' the
    bastard, ain't we, honey?
  • 153:14 - 153:16
    He's comin' right down
    with Harry and Jimmy.
  • 153:16 - 153:26
    Jees... them two look like they
    was goin' to the electric chair!
  • 153:26 - 153:28
    Well, let's get
    goin', honey.
  • 153:28 - 153:30
    Before
    he comes down.
  • 153:30 - 153:33
    Sure, anything you say, baby.
    Yeah?
  • 153:33 - 153:36
    Well, I say we stop at
    the first regular dump
  • 153:36 - 153:39
    and, and you gotta blow me
    to a sherry flip,
  • 153:39 - 153:42
    or four or five,
    if I want 'em!
  • 153:42 - 153:45
    Or all bets is off!
    But you got a fine bun on now!
  • 153:45 - 153:47
    Oh, cheap skate.
  • 153:47 - 153:50
    Well, here, use my money
    then, if you're so stingy.
  • 153:50 - 153:53
    You'll grab it all, anyways,
    right after de ceremony.
  • 153:53 - 153:54
    I know you.
  • 153:54 - 153:58
    Here, you
    big tramp.
  • 153:58 - 153:59
    Keep your
    lousy dough!
  • 153:59 - 154:01
    And don't show your legs off
    to these bums when you're goin'
  • 154:01 - 154:03
    to be married if you don't
    want a sock in the puss!
  • 154:03 - 154:05
    Oh, all right,
    honey!
  • 154:11 - 154:16
    Say, why don't all you barflies
    come to the weddin'?
  • 154:23 - 154:31
    Well, we're
    goin', guys.
  • 154:31 - 154:33
    Say, Rocky, are you
    goin' "deef"?
  • 154:33 - 154:36
    I said me and Chuck
    was goin' now!
  • 154:36 - 154:38
    Well, good-bye, give
    my love to Jersey.
  • 154:38 - 154:40
    Well, ain't you
    even goin' to wish us
  • 154:40 - 154:42
    happiness, you dirty
    little Ginny?
  • 154:42 - 154:45
    Sure...
    here's hopin' you
  • 154:45 - 154:48
    don't murder each other
    before next week.
  • 154:48 - 154:51
    Oh, baby, what do we
    care for that pimp?
  • 154:51 - 154:53
    Here's Hickey comin'!
    Let's get outta here!
  • 154:53 - 154:57
    (voices of Hickey and Harry
    approaching)
  • 155:05 - 155:10
    Well, here we are, we got
    this far at least.
  • 155:10 - 155:11
    Good work, Jimmy.
  • 155:11 - 155:13
    I told you you weren't half as
    sick as you're pretending to be.
  • 155:13 - 155:15
    No excuse whatever
    for postponing now.
  • 155:15 - 155:19
    Kindly keep your hands
    to yourself.
  • 155:19 - 155:22
    I merely mentioned
    I would feel more fit tomorrow.
  • 155:22 - 155:27
    But... it might as well
    be today, I suppose.
  • 155:27 - 155:30
    Finish it now so it'll be dead
    forever, and you'll be free.
  • 155:30 - 155:31
    Well, cheer up,
    Harry.
  • 155:31 - 155:33
    You noticed your
    rheumatism didn't bother you
  • 155:33 - 155:34
    coming down the stairs,
    didn't you?
  • 155:34 - 155:37
    You're the damnedest
    one for alibis, Governor.
  • 155:37 - 155:39
    I can't hear you...
    You're a liar!
  • 155:39 - 155:42
    I've had rheumatism
    on and off for 20 years.
  • 155:42 - 155:43
    Ever since Bessie died.
    Yes, we all know
  • 155:43 - 155:46
    it's the kind of rheumatism
    you turn on and off.
  • 155:46 - 155:49
    We're on to you,
    you old faker!
  • 155:49 - 155:51
    Bejees, what are all you bums
    hanging round staring at me for?
  • 155:51 - 155:53
    Why don't you get
    the hell out of here
  • 155:53 - 155:57
    and 'tend to your own business,
    like Hickey's told you?
  • 155:57 - 155:59
    Yes, Harry, I certainly
    thought they would have
  • 155:59 - 156:02
    had the guts to have
    been gone by this time.
  • 156:02 - 156:04
    Or maybe I did
    have my doubts.
  • 156:04 - 156:07
    Because I know exactly
    what you're up against, boys.
  • 156:07 - 156:09
    I know you'll turn into such
    a coward that you'll grab
  • 156:09 - 156:12
    at any lousy excuse not
    to kill your pipe dreams.
  • 156:12 - 156:14
    And yet, as I've said
    over and over again,
  • 156:14 - 156:16
    it's exactly those damned
    lying tomorrow dreams
  • 156:16 - 156:18
    that keep you from
    making peace with yourself.
  • 156:18 - 156:22
    So you've got to kill them,
    like I did mine.
  • 156:22 - 156:25
    Well, come on,
    boys, get moving!
  • 156:25 - 156:29
    Who's going to start
    the ball rolling?
  • 156:29 - 156:32
    Well you, captain,
    and you, general.
  • 156:32 - 156:33
    You're nearest
    to the door.
  • 156:33 - 156:35
    And besides, you're
    old war heroes.
  • 156:35 - 156:37
    You ought to lead
    this forlorn hope.
  • 156:37 - 156:39
    Well, come on, now!
    And show us a little
  • 156:39 - 156:40
    of that old
    Battle of The Modder River
  • 156:40 - 156:42
    spirit we've heard
    so much about.
  • 156:42 - 156:43
    You can't hang around
    here all day looking
  • 156:43 - 156:46
    like you were scared the street
    outside would bite you.
  • 156:46 - 156:50
    Right you are, Mr. Nosey
    Bloody Parker!
  • 156:50 - 156:52
    Time I pushed off.
  • 156:52 - 156:56
    Was only waiting to say good-bye
    to you, Harry, old chum.
  • 156:56 - 157:01
    Good-bye, captain,
    hope you have luck.
  • 157:01 - 157:05
    Oh, I'm bound to, old chap,
    and the same to you.
  • 157:15 - 157:21
    By God, if that
    Limey can, I can.
  • 157:21 - 157:25
    (Wetjoen grunting)
  • 157:27 - 157:30
    Well, next?
  • 157:30 - 157:31
    Come on, Mac.
  • 157:31 - 157:34
    It's a fine
    summer's day.
  • 157:46 - 157:50
    That's the stuff,
    Mac.
  • 157:55 - 158:01
    Good-bye, Harry, thanks
    for all your kindness.
  • 158:01 - 158:04
    That's
    the way, Willie.
  • 158:04 - 158:06
    Oh, the D.A.'s
    a busy man, Willie.
  • 158:06 - 158:10
    You can't keep him waiting
    all day, you know.
  • 158:12 - 158:14
    Good luck,
    Willie.
  • 158:21 - 158:26
    Now it's your turn,
    Jimmy, old pal.
  • 158:27 - 158:29
    Jimmy.
  • 158:48 - 158:51
    You can't do that to yourself,
    Jimmy, old pal!
  • 158:51 - 158:52
    One drink on top
    of your hangover
  • 158:52 - 158:54
    on an empty stomach,
    you'll be oreyeyed.
  • 158:54 - 159:01
    Tomorrow... I'll be
    in good shape tomorrow!
  • 159:01 - 159:06
    All right,
    I'm going.
  • 159:06 - 159:09
    Take your hands
    off me!
  • 159:15 - 159:17
    Dirty swine!
  • 159:19 - 159:23
    (laughing)
    All set for an alcohol rub!
  • 159:23 - 159:30
    I... no hard feelings,
    I know how he feels.
  • 159:30 - 159:34
    I wrote the book!
    I've seen the day if...
  • 159:34 - 159:35
    anybody forced me
    to face the truth
  • 159:35 - 159:38
    about my pipe dreams,
    I'd have shot them dead!
  • 159:43 - 159:46
    Well, Governor...
    Jimmy made the grade.
  • 159:46 - 159:48
    Now it's your turn.
  • 159:48 - 159:52
    Leave Harry
    alone, damn you!
  • 159:52 - 159:53
    I'd make up my mind
    about myself if I
  • 159:53 - 159:56
    were you, Larry,
    and not bother over Harry.
  • 159:56 - 159:58
    He doesn't need anyone's bum
    pity, do you, Governor?
  • 159:58 - 160:02
    No, bejees! Keep your nose
    out of this, Larry.
  • 160:02 - 160:06
    I've always been going
    to take this walk, ain't I?
  • 160:06 - 160:10
    You bums want to keep me locked
    up in here as if I was in jail!
  • 160:10 - 160:11
    I've stood it
    long enough.
  • 160:11 - 160:14
    I'll do as I
    damned please, bejees.
  • 160:14 - 160:16
    You keep your nose
    out too, Hickey.
  • 160:16 - 160:21
    Bejees, you'd think you was
    the boss of this dump, not me.
  • 160:21 - 160:23
    What the hell's
    to be scared of?
  • 160:23 - 160:28
    Sure I'm all right! Just taking
    a stroll around my own ward.
  • 160:28 - 160:31
    What's the weather like outside, Rocky?
    Fine day, boss.
  • 160:31 - 160:33
    Sorry I can't hear you.
  • 160:33 - 160:35
    Don't look fine
    to me.
  • 160:35 - 160:38
    Looks if it'd pour down
    cats and dogs any minute.
  • 160:38 - 160:41
    My rheumati...
    No, no, must be my eyes.
  • 160:41 - 160:43
    Half blind, bejees.
  • 160:43 - 160:48
    Makes things look black;
    I see now it's a fine day.
  • 160:48 - 160:52
    Too damned hot for a walk,
    though, if you ask me, eh?
  • 160:52 - 160:57
    Well, do me good to sweat
    the booze out of me.
  • 160:57 - 161:00
    But I'll have to watch out
    for the damned automobiles.
  • 161:00 - 161:02
    Wasn't none of them
    around the last time.
  • 161:02 - 161:04
    From what I've seen
    through the window,
  • 161:04 - 161:07
    they'd run over you as
    soon as look at you.
  • 161:07 - 161:11
    Well,
    so long.
  • 161:11 - 161:14
    Bejees, where are you, Hickey?
    It's time we got started.
  • 161:14 - 161:16
    No, no, Harry,
    can't be done.
  • 161:16 - 161:17
    You got to keep a date
    with yourself alone.
  • 161:17 - 161:21
    Hell of a guy
    you are.
  • 161:21 - 161:22
    I thought you'd be willing
    to help me across the street,
  • 161:22 - 161:25
    seeing I'm half blind!
    Half "deef," too.
  • 161:25 - 161:27
    I can't hear those
    damned automobiles!
  • 161:27 - 161:29
    Oh, the hell
    with you!
  • 161:29 - 161:33
    I've never, never needed
    no one's help and I don't now.
  • 161:33 - 161:35
    I'll take a good long walk
    now I've started.
  • 161:35 - 161:37
    See all my old friends.
  • 161:37 - 161:40
    Bejees, they must have
    given me up for dead.
  • 161:40 - 161:44
    But they know it was grief over
    Bessie's death that made me...
  • 161:44 - 161:47
    Well, the sooner
    I get started...
  • 161:47 - 161:49
    You know, Hickey,
    that's what gets me.
  • 161:49 - 161:51
    I can't help thinking
    the last time I went out,
  • 161:51 - 161:54
    was to Bessie's
    funeral.
  • 161:54 - 161:58
    After she'd gone, I didn't
    feel life was worth living.
  • 161:58 - 162:02
    I can't feel it's right for me
    to go, even now, Hickey.
  • 162:02 - 162:04
    It's like I was doing
    wrong to her memory.
  • 162:04 - 162:06
    Now, Governor, you
    can't let yourself
  • 162:06 - 162:08
    get away with
    that one any more.
  • 162:08 - 162:12
    What's that?
    I can't hear you.
  • 162:12 - 162:19
    Bejees, I remember... clear as
    day, the last time before she...
  • 162:19 - 162:22
    (weeping)
    It was a fine Sunday morning.
  • 162:22 - 162:26
    We went out
    to church together.
  • 162:26 - 162:27
    It's a great act,
    Governor,
  • 162:27 - 162:30
    but I know better
    and so do you.
  • 162:30 - 162:31
    You never did
    want to go to church
  • 162:31 - 162:33
    or any place else
    with her.
  • 162:33 - 162:35
    She was always on your neck,
    wanting you to have ambition
  • 162:35 - 162:37
    and go out and do things,
    when all you wanted to do
  • 162:37 - 162:40
    was to get
    drunk in peace.
  • 162:40 - 162:43
    Can't hear a word
    you're saying.
  • 162:43 - 162:47
    He's a God damned
    liar, anyway!
  • 162:47 - 162:52
    Bejees, you son of a bitch!
    If there was a mad dog out there
  • 162:52 - 162:57
    I'd go and shake hands with it
    rather than stay here with you!
  • 162:57 - 163:01
    (whispering to himself)
  • 163:06 - 163:08
    Jees, he made it!
  • 163:08 - 163:11
    I'd give you 50 to 1
    he'd never...
  • 163:11 - 163:14
    Oh, he stopped.
  • 163:14 - 163:16
    I'll bet you he's comin' back.
    Of course he's coming back.
  • 163:16 - 163:18
    By tonight they'll
    all be here again,
  • 163:18 - 163:20
    you dumbbell, that's
    the whole point.
  • 163:20 - 163:22
    No, he ain't neither!
    He's gone to the curb.
  • 163:22 - 163:26
    He's lookin' up and down,
    scared stiff of automobiles.
  • 163:26 - 163:27
    They ain't more
    than two an hour
  • 163:27 - 163:31
    comes down this street,
    the old boob!
  • 163:31 - 163:34
    (door opening)
  • 163:35 - 163:37
    Bejees, give me
    a drink, quick!
  • 163:37 - 163:40
    Scared me out
    of a year's growth!
  • 163:40 - 163:43
    Bejees, that guy
    ought to be pinched!
  • 163:43 - 163:45
    Bejees, it ain't safe
    to walk in the streets!
  • 163:45 - 163:48
    Give me that bottle.
  • 163:53 - 163:56
    You seen it, didn't you, Rocky?
    Seen what?
  • 163:56 - 163:58
    That automobile,
    you dumb Wop!
  • 163:58 - 164:02
    Fella driving it must
    be drunk or crazy.
  • 164:02 - 164:05
    He'd run right over me
    if I hadn't jumped!
  • 164:05 - 164:07
    Larry, have
    a drink.
  • 164:07 - 164:08
    Come on, everybody,
    have a drink.
  • 164:08 - 164:11
    Have a cigar, Rocky, I know
    you hardly touch it.
  • 164:11 - 164:14
    This is one time
    I do touch it!
  • 164:14 - 164:16
    And I'm goin'
    to get stinko, see?
  • 164:16 - 164:20
    Well, jees, Harry! I thought
    you had some guts!
  • 164:20 - 164:25
    I was bettin' you'd make it
    and show that four-flusher up.
  • 164:25 - 164:26
    Automobile, hell! Who
    do you think you're kiddin'?
  • 164:26 - 164:30
    There was no automobile!
    You just quit cold!
  • 164:30 - 164:35
    I guess I ought to know!
    Bejees, it almost killed me!
  • 164:35 - 164:36
    Now, now, Governor,
    don't be foolish.
  • 164:36 - 164:38
    You've faced the test
    and you've come through,
  • 164:38 - 164:40
    and you're rid of that
    nagging dream stuff now.
  • 164:40 - 164:42
    You know you can't
    believe it any more.
  • 164:42 - 164:45
    You saw it,
    didn't you, Larry?
  • 164:45 - 164:48
    Have a drink, have another!
    Have all you want!
  • 164:48 - 164:50
    We'll, we'll go, go on a
    grand old souse together.
  • 164:50 - 164:53
    You saw that automobile,
    didn't you?
  • 164:53 - 164:56
    Sure, I saw it, Harry,
    you had a narrow escape.
  • 164:56 - 164:58
    Be God, I thought
    you were a goner.
  • 164:58 - 164:59
    What the hell are you
    doing, Larry?
  • 164:59 - 165:01
    Remember what I told you
    about the wrong kind of pity,
  • 165:01 - 165:03
    now leave him alone!
  • 165:03 - 165:05
    You'd think I was trying to harm
    him, the fool way you act.
  • 165:05 - 165:07
    Why, there isn't
    anything I wouldn't do
  • 165:07 - 165:08
    for Harry,
    and he knows it.
  • 165:08 - 165:10
    All I wanted was to
    fix it so he'd finally be
  • 165:10 - 165:12
    at peace with himself.
  • 165:12 - 165:14
    And if you'll just wait until
    the final returns are in,
  • 165:14 - 165:17
    that's exactly what
    I've accomplished.
  • 165:17 - 165:20
    Come on, Governor, what's
    the use of being stubborn,
  • 165:20 - 165:22
    now when it's
    over and dead?
  • 165:22 - 165:23
    Give up that ghost
    automobile.
  • 165:23 - 165:26
    Yeah, what's
    the use now?
  • 165:26 - 165:32
    It's all a lie...
    no automobile.
  • 165:32 - 165:34
    Bejees, something
    ran over me.
  • 165:34 - 165:38
    Must have been
    myself, I guess.
  • 165:38 - 165:41
    I guess
    I'll sit down.
  • 165:41 - 165:46
    Feel all in.
  • 165:46 - 165:51
    Like a corpse,
    bejees.
  • 165:57 - 166:02
    Hello, Hugo,
    coming up for air?
  • 166:02 - 166:06
    You stay passed out,
    that's the right dope.
  • 166:06 - 166:09
    There ain't any cool
    willow trees,
  • 166:09 - 166:14
    except you grow
    your own in a bottle.
  • 166:14 - 166:17
    (Hugo giggling)
  • 166:17 - 166:19
    Hello, Harry.
  • 166:19 - 166:24
    Stupid proletarian
    monkey-face!
  • 166:24 - 166:28
    I will drink champagne
    beneath the wi-llow...
  • 166:28 - 166:34
    But the slaves must
    ice it properly!
  • 166:34 - 166:36
    Goddamned Hickey!
  • 166:36 - 166:42
    Peddler pimp for
    nouveau-riche capitalism!
  • 166:42 - 166:45
    When I lead the jackass mob
    to the sack of Babylon,
  • 166:45 - 166:50
    I will make them hang
    him to the first lamppost!
  • 166:50 - 166:55
    Good work... I'll help
    pull the rope.
  • 166:59 - 167:07
    Here... have
    a drink, Hugo.
  • 167:07 - 167:13
    Eh, no,
    thank you.
  • 167:13 - 167:21
    I'm too crazy drunk... I hear
    myself say crazy things.
  • 167:21 - 167:24
    Do not listen,
    please!
  • 167:24 - 167:31
    Larry will tell you,
    I've never been so crazy drunk.
  • 167:31 - 167:34
    I must
    sleep it off.
  • 167:40 - 167:44
    What's the matter,
    Harry? You look funny.
  • 167:44 - 167:48
    (exclamatory sighing)
  • 167:48 - 167:52
    You look dead!
  • 167:52 - 167:57
    What's happened?
    I don't know you!
  • 167:57 - 168:02
    Listen... I feel
    I'm dying, too.
  • 168:02 - 168:06
    Because I'm
    so crazy drunk.
  • 168:06 - 168:09
    It's very necessary
    that I sleep!
  • 168:09 - 168:11
    I can't sleep
    here with you!
  • 168:11 - 168:14
    You look dead!
  • 168:22 - 168:28
    Another one who's begun
    to enjoy your peace.
  • 168:28 - 168:29
    Oh, I know
    it's rough on him
  • 168:29 - 168:32
    right now, same
    as it is on Harry.
  • 168:32 - 168:34
    That's just
    the first shock.
  • 168:34 - 168:36
    I promise you they'll
    both be all right.
  • 168:36 - 168:38
    And you believe that?
  • 168:38 - 168:43
    I see you do,
    you mad fool.
  • 168:43 - 168:45
    Of course
    I believe it.
  • 168:45 - 168:47
    I know from my own
    experience.
  • 168:47 - 168:50
    And now it's my
    turn, I suppose?
  • 168:50 - 168:54
    What is it I'm to do to achieve
    this blessed peace of yours?
  • 168:54 - 168:57
    We've discussed
    all of that, Larry.
  • 168:57 - 168:59
    Just stop lying
    to yourself.
  • 168:59 - 169:02
    You think when I say
    I'm finished with life,
  • 169:02 - 169:06
    and tired of watching the stupid
    greed of the human circus,
  • 169:06 - 169:10
    and I'll welcome closing my
    eyes in the long sleep of death,
  • 169:10 - 169:14
    you think that's
    a coward's lie?
  • 169:14 - 169:16
    Well, what
    do you think?
  • 169:16 - 169:19
    I'm afraid
    to live, am I?
  • 169:19 - 169:22
    And even more
    afraid to die!
  • 169:22 - 169:23
    So I sit here
    with my pride drowned
  • 169:23 - 169:26
    on the bottom of a bottle,
    keeping drunk so I won't see
  • 169:26 - 169:28
    myself shaking in
    my britches with fright,
  • 169:28 - 169:31
    or hear myself whining
    and praying:
  • 169:31 - 169:34
    "Beloved Christ, let me live
    a little longer at any price.
  • 169:34 - 169:39
    "If it's only for a few days
    more, or a few hours even,
  • 169:39 - 169:40
    "have mercy, Almighty God,
    and let me still clutch greedily
  • 169:40 - 169:44
    "to my yellow heart,
    this sweet treasure,
  • 169:44 - 169:48
    "this jewel beyond price,
    this dirty, stinking bit
  • 169:48 - 169:53
    of withered old flesh which
    is my beautiful little life!"
  • 169:53 - 169:58
    You think you'll make me
    admit that to myself?
  • 169:58 - 170:02
    But you just did
    admit it, didn't you?
  • 170:06 - 170:09
    That's the stuff,
    Hickey.
  • 170:09 - 170:11
    Show that
    old yellow faker up.
  • 170:11 - 170:13
    He can't play dead
    on me like this.
  • 170:13 - 170:16
    Yes, you're gonna have
    to settle with him, Larry.
  • 170:16 - 170:19
    I'm leaving you
    entirely in his hands.
  • 170:19 - 170:21
    And he'll do as good a job
    as I could at making you
  • 170:21 - 170:24
    give up the old
    grandstand bluff.
  • 170:24 - 170:28
    Close that big clam
    of yours, Hickey.
  • 170:28 - 170:29
    Bejees, you're
    a worse gabber
  • 170:29 - 170:32
    than that nagging
    bitch, Bessie, was.
  • 170:32 - 170:35
    Jees, did you
    hear that?
  • 170:38 - 170:43
    What's wrong with this booze?
    There's no kick in it.
  • 170:43 - 170:47
    Jees, Larry, Hugo
    had it right.
  • 170:47 - 170:50
    He does look
    like he croaked.
  • 170:50 - 170:52
    Oh, don't be a damned
    fool, he's all right.
  • 170:52 - 170:55
    It's just
    the first shock.
  • 170:55 - 170:58
    You are all right,
    aren't you, Harry?
  • 170:58 - 171:05
    I... I want to
    pass out, like Hugo.
  • 171:05 - 171:08
    It's the peace of death
    you've brought him.
  • 171:08 - 171:13
    That's a lie!
  • 171:13 - 171:16
    Well, well, you did manage to
    get a rise out of me that time,
  • 171:16 - 171:20
    didn't you? That's just
    plain damned foolishness.
  • 171:20 - 171:21
    Look at me,
    I've been through it.
  • 171:21 - 171:23
    Do I look dead?
  • 171:23 - 171:25
    Just leave Harry alone
    and give him time.
  • 171:25 - 171:27
    It's just the first shock,
    he'll be all right.
  • 171:27 - 171:31
    He'll be
    a new man, like I am.
  • 171:34 - 171:37
    How's it coming,
    Governor?
  • 171:37 - 171:41
    Beginning to feel
    free, aren't you?
  • 171:41 - 171:44
    Relieved and not
    guilty any more?
  • 171:44 - 171:47
    Hmm, bejees! You must
    have been monkeying
  • 171:47 - 171:50
    with the booze too,
    you interfering bastard!
  • 171:50 - 171:53
    There's no life
    in it now.
  • 171:53 - 171:57
    I wanna get drunk
    and pass out.
  • 171:57 - 172:00
    I'll admit I didn't think
    it'd hit him so hard.
  • 172:00 - 172:02
    He's always been a
    happy-go-lucky slob,
  • 172:02 - 172:04
    like I was.
  • 172:04 - 172:08
    Well, it hit me hard, too,
    but only for a minute.
  • 172:08 - 172:10
    And then I felt
    as if a ton of guilt
  • 172:10 - 172:13
    had been lifted
    off my mind.
  • 172:13 - 172:16
    I saw what had happened
    was the only possible way
  • 172:16 - 172:19
    for the peace
    of all concerned.
  • 172:19 - 172:22
    What was it happened?
    Tell us that.
  • 172:22 - 172:23
    And don't try
    to get out of it,
  • 172:23 - 172:25
    I want
    a straight answer!
  • 172:25 - 172:29
    I think it's something you
    drove someone else to do.
  • 172:29 - 172:32
    "Someone else?"
  • 172:32 - 172:34
    What did your wife
    die of?
  • 172:34 - 172:39
    You've kept that
    a deep secret.
  • 172:39 - 172:42
    That's not very
    considerate of you, Larry.
  • 172:42 - 172:44
    But if you insist
    on knowing now,
  • 172:44 - 172:45
    there's no reason
    you shouldn't.
  • 172:45 - 172:50
    It was a bullet through the head
    that killed poor Evelyn.
  • 172:50 - 172:57
    Who, who
    the hell cares?
  • 172:57 - 173:02
    The hell with her and that
    nagging old hag, Bessie!
  • 173:02 - 173:07
    Christ! You had
    the right dope, Larry.
  • 173:07 - 173:11
    You drove your poor wife
    to suicide, I knew it.
  • 173:11 - 173:13
    Be God, I don't blame her!
    I'd almost do the same thing
  • 173:13 - 173:15
    myself to get
    rid of you.
  • 173:15 - 173:18
    It's what you'd like
    to drive us all to...
  • 173:21 - 173:24
    I'm sorry, Hickey,
    I'm sorry.
  • 173:24 - 173:28
    I'm a rotten louse
    to throw that in your face.
  • 173:28 - 173:30
    Oh, that's
    all right, Larry.
  • 173:30 - 173:31
    But don't jump
    to conclusions.
  • 173:31 - 173:35
    I didn't say poor Evelyn
    committed suicide.
  • 173:35 - 173:37
    That's the last thing she'd
    have done, while I was
  • 173:37 - 173:42
    still alive so she could take
    care of me and forgive me.
  • 173:42 - 173:44
    No, if you'd known
    her at all,
  • 173:44 - 173:48
    you'd never have
    such a crazy suspicion.
  • 173:48 - 173:54
    No, I'm sorry to tell you
    that my poor wife was killed.
  • 173:54 - 173:56
    She was murdered?
  • 173:56 - 174:00
    You're a
    liar, Larry!
  • 174:00 - 174:02
    You must be crazy
    to say that to me.
  • 174:02 - 174:05
    You know damn well
    she's still alive.
  • 174:05 - 174:06
    "Murdered?"
    Who done it?
  • 174:06 - 174:10
    Shut up, you dumb Wop! It's none
    of our damned business!
  • 174:10 - 174:12
    Leave him alone.
  • 174:12 - 174:14
    Still the old
    grandstand bluff?
  • 174:14 - 174:17
    Or just some more
    bum pity?
  • 174:17 - 174:20
    The police don't know
    who killed her yet, Rocky.
  • 174:20 - 174:23
    But I expect they will
    before very long.
  • 174:23 - 174:25
    How's it coming,
    Governor?
  • 174:25 - 174:29
    Getting over
    the first shock?
  • 174:29 - 174:31
    Beginning to feel
    free of guilt
  • 174:31 - 174:36
    and lying hopes, and at
    peace with yourself?
  • 174:36 - 174:39
    Somebody croaked
    your Evelyn, eh?
  • 174:39 - 174:42
    Bejees, my bets
    are on the iceman!
  • 174:42 - 174:45
    But who
    the hell cares?
  • 174:45 - 174:51
    Let's get drunk
    and pass out.
  • 174:51 - 174:55
    Bejees, what did you do
    to the booze, Hickey?
  • 174:55 - 174:59
    There's no damned
    life left in it.
  • 174:59 - 175:02
    Larry, don't look
    like that.
  • 175:02 - 175:03
    You've got to believe
    what I told you!
  • 175:03 - 175:04
    It had nothing
    to do with her!
  • 175:04 - 175:06
    It was for a few
    lousy dollars, honest!
  • 175:06 - 175:11
    (banging table)
    Don't be a fool! Buy me a drink!
  • 175:11 - 175:17
    But no more wine!
    It is not properly iced!
  • 175:17 - 175:21
    Goddamned stupid
    proletarian slaves!
  • 175:21 - 175:27
    Buy me a drink
    or I'll have you shot!
  • 175:27 - 175:30
    (crying)
    Please, for God's sake!
  • 175:30 - 175:36
    I am not drunk enough!
    I cannot sleep!
  • 175:36 - 175:40
    Life is a crazy
    monkey-face.
  • 175:40 - 175:45
    Always there's blood
    beneath the willow trees!
  • 175:45 - 175:48
    I hate it!
  • 175:48 - 175:53
    I'm afraid!
  • 175:53 - 175:59
    Oh, please, please,
    please!
  • 175:59 - 176:04
    I'm too crazy drunk!
    I say crazy things!
  • 176:04 - 176:09
    For God's sake,
    do not listen to me!
  • 176:09 - 176:14
    Do not listen
    to me!
  • 176:14 - 176:18
    (weeping)
    I'm afraid!
  • 176:21 - 176:24
    You're beginning
    to worry me, Governor.
  • 176:24 - 176:26
    Something is holding
    you up somewhere,
  • 176:26 - 176:28
    but I don't see why.
  • 176:28 - 176:31
    You've faced the truth
    about yourself.
  • 176:31 - 176:32
    You've done what
    you had to do
  • 176:32 - 176:35
    to kill your nagging
    pipe dreams.
  • 176:35 - 176:37
    Oh, I know it
    knocks you cold.
  • 176:37 - 176:39
    But only for a minute.
  • 176:39 - 176:41
    Then you'll see it was the
    only possible way to peace.
  • 176:41 - 176:45
    And you'll feel happy,
    like I did.
  • 176:45 - 176:50
    That's what worries me
    about you, Governor.
  • 176:50 - 176:51
    It's time you began
    to feel happy.
  • 177:31 - 177:32
    Come on, you
    damned nigger!
  • 177:32 - 177:34
    Beat it in the back room,
    it's after hours.
  • 177:34 - 177:36
    (Joe grumbling)
  • 177:36 - 177:41
    Oh, the hell with it!
    Let the dump get pinched.
  • 177:41 - 177:44
    I'm through with this
    lousy job, anyway.
  • 177:44 - 177:46
    Been scrappin',
    huh?
  • 177:46 - 177:49
    Started off on your periodical, ain't you?
    Yeah, ain't you glad?
  • 177:49 - 177:50
    That I'm out on my feet
    holdin' down your job?
  • 177:50 - 177:52
    You said if I'd take your day,
    you'd relieve me at 6:00.
  • 177:52 - 177:57
    And here it's
    1/2 past 1:00 A.M.!
  • 177:57 - 177:58
    Well, you're takin'
    over now, get me?
  • 177:58 - 178:00
    No matter how
    plastered you are!
  • 178:00 - 178:02
    Ah, "plastered?"
    Hell, I wish I was!
  • 178:02 - 178:05
    I've lapped up a gallon,
    but it don't hit me right.
  • 178:05 - 178:06
    And the hell with the job!
    I'm goin' to tell Harry
  • 178:06 - 178:09
    I'm quittin'!
    Yeah? Well, I'm quittin' too.
  • 178:09 - 178:11
    I've played sucker for that
    crummy blonde long enough,
  • 178:11 - 178:14
    lettin' her kid me into workin';
    from now on I take it easy.
  • 178:14 - 178:15
    I'm glad you're gettin'
    some sense.
  • 178:15 - 178:17
    Yeah, I hope you're
    gettin' some.
  • 178:17 - 178:18
    By the way, the prize
    sap you've been,
  • 178:18 - 178:21
    tendin' bar when you got two
    good hustlers in your stable.
  • 178:21 - 178:23
    Yeah, but I ain't
    no sap now.
  • 178:23 - 178:25
    I'll loin them, when they
    get back from Coney.
  • 178:25 - 178:29
    Jees, that Cora sure
    played you for a dope.
  • 178:29 - 178:32
    Feedin' you that
    marriage-on-a-farm hop!
  • 178:32 - 178:35
    Yeah, Hickey got it right,
    a lousy pipe dream.
  • 178:35 - 178:37
    It was her pullin' sherry
    flips on me woke me up.
  • 178:37 - 178:39
    All the way
    walkin' to the ferry,
  • 178:39 - 178:42
    every gin mill we come to
    she'd drag me in to blow her.
  • 178:42 - 178:44
    I got thinkin' "Christ,
    what won't she want when"
  • 178:44 - 178:45
    she gets the ring on
    her finger and I'm hooked?
  • 178:45 - 178:47
    So I tells her at the ferry:
    "Kiddo, you can go"
  • 178:47 - 178:50
    "to Jersey or to hell,
    but count me out!"
  • 178:50 - 178:52
    She says it was her
    told you to go to hell,
  • 178:52 - 178:54
    because you start
    hittin' the booze.
  • 178:54 - 178:56
    I got thinkin' too
    "Jees, won't I look sweet"
  • 178:56 - 178:58
    "with a wife that if you put
    all the guys she stayed with"
  • 178:58 - 179:01
    "side by side,
    they'd reach to Chicago."
  • 179:01 - 179:02
    That kind of dame,
    you can't trust 'em.
  • 179:02 - 179:04
    The minute your back
    is turned, they're
  • 179:04 - 179:05
    cheatin' with
    the iceman or someone!
  • 179:05 - 179:10
    Hickey done me a favor,
    makin' me wake up!
  • 179:10 - 179:16
    Only it was fun, kinda,
    me and Cora kiddin' ourselves.
  • 179:16 - 179:19
    Say, where is that
    son of a bitch Hickey?
  • 179:19 - 179:22
    I want one good sock
    at day guy, just one!
  • 179:22 - 179:23
    And the next buttin' in he'll
    do will be in the morgue!
  • 179:23 - 179:26
    I'll take a chance on goin'
    to the chair! Piano!
  • 179:26 - 179:28
    Keep away from
    him, Chuck.
  • 179:28 - 179:31
    He ain't here now, anyway;
    he went out to phone, he said.
  • 179:31 - 179:34
    I got a hunch he beat it,
    but if he does come back,
  • 179:34 - 179:37
    you don't know him if anyone
    asks you, get me?
  • 179:37 - 179:39
    The chair, maybe that's
    where he's goin'.
  • 179:39 - 179:42
    I don't know nuttin',
    see? But it looks
  • 179:42 - 179:44
    like he
    croaked his wife.
  • 179:44 - 179:46
    You mean she really
    was cheatin' on him?
  • 179:46 - 179:48
    Then I don't blame the guy!
    And who's blamin' him?
  • 179:48 - 179:51
    Is any of the gang wise?
    Larry is.
  • 179:51 - 179:52
    And the boss
    ought to be.
  • 179:52 - 179:55
    I tried to wise the rest
    of them up to stay clear of him,
  • 179:55 - 179:59
    but they're all so licked,
    I don't know if they got it.
  • 179:59 - 180:03
    Oh, I don't give a damn
    what he done to his wife.
  • 180:03 - 180:06
    But if he gets the hot seat
    I won't go into no mournin'.
  • 180:06 - 180:08
    Me, neither. Not after his
    throwin' it in my face I'm a pimp.
  • 180:08 - 180:11
    What if I am? And what's
    he done to Harry?
  • 180:11 - 180:14
    Jees, the poor
    old slob is so licked
  • 180:14 - 180:16
    he can't even get drunk!
    And all the gang.
  • 180:16 - 180:19
    I couldn't help feelin'
    sorry for the poor bums
  • 180:19 - 180:21
    when they showed up
    tonight, one by one,
  • 180:21 - 180:24
    lookin' like pooches with
    their tails between their legs
  • 180:24 - 180:26
    that everyone'd been
    kickin' 'till they
  • 180:26 - 180:28
    was too punch-drunk
    to feel it no more.
  • 180:28 - 180:30
    Jimmy Tomorrow
    was the last.
  • 180:30 - 180:32
    Schwartz, the copper,
    brung him in.
  • 180:32 - 180:34
    Seen him sittin' on the
    dock on West Street,
  • 180:34 - 180:36
    lookin' at the water
    and cryin'.
  • 180:36 - 180:39
    Schwartz thought he was drunk,
    and I let him think it.
  • 180:39 - 180:42
    But he was cold sober;
    he was tryin' to jump in
  • 180:42 - 180:44
    and didn't have
    the nerve, I figured it.
  • 180:44 - 180:48
    Jees, there ain't
    enough guts left
  • 180:48 - 180:50
    in the whole gang
    to battle a mosquito.
  • 180:50 - 180:53
    Oh, to hell with 'em!
    Who cares? Gimme a drink.
  • 180:53 - 180:57
    I see you been hittin'
    the redeye too.
  • 180:57 - 181:00
    Yeah, but it don't do no good,
    I can't get drunk right.
  • 181:00 - 181:07
    This dirty "dinge" was able to
    get his "snootful" and pass out.
  • 181:07 - 181:08
    Jees, even Hickey
    can't faze a nigger.
  • 181:08 - 181:10
    You'd think he was fazed
    if you'd seen him come in.
  • 181:10 - 181:11
    Stinko, and he pulled
    a gun and said
  • 181:11 - 181:14
    he'd plug Hickey
    for insultin' him.
  • 181:14 - 181:17
    Then he dropped it
    and began to cry,
  • 181:17 - 181:19
    and said he wasn't a gamblin'
    man or a tough guy no more.
  • 181:19 - 181:24
    He got drunk panhandlin' drinks
    in nigger joints, I suppose.
  • 181:24 - 181:26
    I guess they felt
    sorry for him.
  • 181:26 - 181:28
    He ain't got no business
    in the bar after hours.
  • 181:28 - 181:30
    Why don't you
    chuck him out?
  • 181:30 - 181:35
    Oh, to hell with it! Who cares?
    Yeah, I don't.
  • 181:35 - 181:39
    Excuse me,
    white boy.
  • 181:39 - 181:44
    I don't want to be
    where I'm not wanted.
  • 181:44 - 181:46
    (Chuck)
    My pig's in the back room, ain't she?
  • 181:46 - 181:48
    I wanna collect the dough
    I wouldn't take this mornin',
  • 181:48 - 181:51
    like a sucker,
    before she blows it.
  • 181:51 - 181:56
    (Rocky)
    I'm comin', too, I'm through workin'.
  • 181:56 - 181:59
    I ain't no
    lousy bartender.
  • 182:03 - 182:06
    I'm waitin', baby, dig!
    Yeah.
  • 182:06 - 182:10
    I been expectin' you,
    I got it all ready here.
  • 182:10 - 182:14
    Jees, imagine me
    kiddin' myself
  • 182:14 - 182:18
    I wanted to marry a drunken pimp.
    That's nothin', baby.
  • 182:18 - 182:20
    Imagine what a sap
    I'd have been when I
  • 182:20 - 182:22
    can get your dough
    just as easy without it.
  • 182:32 - 182:35
    Hello,
    Old Cemetery.
  • 182:35 - 182:39
    Hello, Tightwad,
    you still around?
  • 182:39 - 182:42
    Ask Larry.
  • 182:42 - 182:47
    He knows I'm here, all right,
    although he's pretending not to.
  • 182:47 - 182:51
    He'd like to forget
    I'm alive!
  • 182:51 - 182:53
    He's trying
    to kid himself
  • 182:53 - 182:57
    with that grandstand
    philosopher stuff.
  • 182:57 - 183:02
    But he knows he can't
    get away with that now!
  • 183:02 - 183:04
    He kept himself
    locked up in his room
  • 183:04 - 183:07
    until a while ago, alone
    with a bottle of booze.
  • 183:07 - 183:08
    He couldn't
    make it work, though,
  • 183:08 - 183:13
    he couldn't even get drunk!
    So he had to come out.
  • 183:13 - 183:15
    There must have been
    something up there
  • 183:15 - 183:20
    he's even more scared
    to face than me and Hickey.
  • 183:20 - 183:26
    I guess he got looking
    at the fire escape.
  • 183:26 - 183:29
    Thinking how handy it was,
    if he was really sick of life
  • 183:29 - 183:33
    and only had
    the nerve to die!
  • 183:33 - 183:36
    And he's been thinking
    about me too, Rocky.
  • 183:36 - 183:40
    He's trying to figure a way
    to get out of helping me.
  • 183:40 - 183:43
    He loved her too,
    so he thinks I ought
  • 183:43 - 183:46
    to take a hop off
    the fire escape.
  • 183:52 - 183:56
    For God's sake!
    Can't you say something?!
  • 183:56 - 183:59
    Larry!
  • 184:03 - 184:07
    Larry... I think what
    Hickey must have done
  • 184:07 - 184:11
    has got me so I don't know
    any more what I did or why.
  • 184:11 - 184:15
    (crying)
    I can't go on like this!
  • 184:15 - 184:17
    I've got to do
    what I got to do!
  • 184:17 - 184:20
    God damn you! Are you trying
    to make me your executioner?
  • 184:20 - 184:22
    Execution?
  • 184:25 - 184:26
    Then you, you
    think I...
  • 184:26 - 184:31
    I don't think anything.
  • 184:31 - 184:36
    I... I suppose you think
    I ought to die, uh?
  • 184:36 - 184:39
    Because I sold out
    a lot of loudmouth fakers?
  • 184:41 - 184:43
    Ha!
  • 184:43 - 184:46
    Don't make me laugh!
    I ought to get a medal!
  • 184:49 - 184:52
    Oh, you little sap!
  • 184:52 - 184:56
    You must still
    believe in the Movement.
  • 184:56 - 184:58
    Hickey's right about
    him, isn't he, Rocky?
  • 184:58 - 185:00
    An old no-good drunken
    tramp, as dumb as he is,
  • 185:00 - 185:03
    ought to take a hop
    off the fire escape.
  • 185:03 - 185:09
    Sure, why don't he?
    Or you, or me?
  • 185:09 - 185:15
    Oh, what the hell's
    the difference? Who cares?
  • 185:15 - 185:20
    What am I doin' here
    with "youse" two?
  • 185:20 - 185:24
    I remember I had somethin'
    on my mind to tell you, what?
  • 185:24 - 185:28
    Oh, I got it now.
  • 185:28 - 185:32
    I was thinkin' how you
    was both regular guys.
  • 185:32 - 185:36
    I thinks "Ain't two guys
    like them saps to be hangin'"
  • 185:36 - 185:41
    "around like a couple of stew
    bums and wastin' themselves?"
  • 185:41 - 185:46
    What do you think, Parritt?
    You ain't a bad-lookin' guy.
  • 185:46 - 185:48
    You could easy
    make some gal
  • 185:48 - 185:51
    who's a good hustler,
    and start a stable.
  • 185:51 - 185:53
    And I'll help you
    and wise you up
  • 185:53 - 185:56
    to the inside dope
    on the game.
  • 185:56 - 185:58
    Well,
    what about it?
  • 185:58 - 186:04
    What if they do
    call you a pimp?
  • 186:04 - 186:05
    I don't want anything
    to do with whores!
  • 186:05 - 186:07
    I wish they were all
    in jail or dead!
  • 186:07 - 186:10
    All right,
    stay a bum!
  • 186:10 - 186:13
    Well, how about you,
    Larry? You ain't dumb.
  • 186:13 - 186:17
    Sure, you're old,
    but that don't matter.
  • 186:17 - 186:20
    All the girls think
    you're aces.
  • 186:20 - 186:22
    They fall for you
    like you were their uncle
  • 186:22 - 186:24
    or old man,
    or somethin'.
  • 186:24 - 186:26
    They like takin'
    care of you.
  • 186:26 - 186:29
    And the cops around here,
    they like you too.
  • 186:29 - 186:31
    You wouldn't have to worry
    where the next drink's
  • 186:31 - 186:35
    comin' from, or wear
    dirty clothes.
  • 186:35 - 186:38
    Well... don't it
    look good to you?
  • 186:38 - 186:40
    No, it doesn't
    look good, Rocky.
  • 186:40 - 186:43
    I mean, the peace
    Hickey's brought you.
  • 186:43 - 186:45
    It isn't contented
    enough, if you have to
  • 186:45 - 186:47
    make a pimp
    of everyone else.
  • 186:47 - 186:50
    I'm a sap to waste
    my time on you.
  • 186:50 - 186:54
    A stew bum
    is a stew bum.
  • 186:54 - 186:58
    Like I was sayin' to Chuck,
    if anyone asks you,
  • 186:58 - 187:00
    you don't know nothin'
    about Hickey, get me?
  • 187:00 - 187:03
    You never even heard
    he had a wife.
  • 187:03 - 187:09
    Jees, we all ought to get drunk
    and stage a celebration
  • 187:09 - 187:12
    when that bastard
    goes to the chair.
  • 187:12 - 187:14
    Be God, I'll
    celebrate with you.
  • 187:14 - 187:17
    Drink to his long,
    long life in hell.
  • 187:17 - 187:19
    The poor devil!
  • 187:19 - 187:22
    No, that's pity,
    the wrong kind.
  • 187:22 - 187:23
    He'll welcome
    the chair.
  • 187:23 - 187:27
    Yes, what are you so damned
    scared about death for?
  • 187:27 - 187:30
    I don't want
    your lousy pity.
  • 187:30 - 187:33
    (Rocky)
    I hope he don't come back, Larry.
  • 187:33 - 187:35
    We don't know
    nothin' now.
  • 187:35 - 187:37
    We're only
    guessin', see?
  • 187:37 - 187:40
    But if that bastard
    keeps on talkin'...
  • 187:40 - 187:44
    He'll come back and
    he'll keep on talking.
  • 187:44 - 187:46
    He's lost his confidence
    that the peace he's sold us
  • 187:46 - 187:49
    is the real McCoy, and it's
    made him uneasy about his own.
  • 187:49 - 187:52
    He'll have to prove to us...
    That's a damned lie, Larry.
  • 187:52 - 187:55
    I haven't lost
    confidence.
  • 187:55 - 187:58
    By God, when I made up my mind
    to sell someone something
  • 187:58 - 188:00
    I thought they ought
    to want, I've sold 'em.
  • 188:00 - 188:02
    I mean, I don't think is very
    kind of you to make that kind
  • 188:02 - 188:07
    of a crack when I've been
    doing my best to help.
  • 188:07 - 188:09
    Keep away from me,
    will you?
  • 188:09 - 188:14
    I don't know nothin'
    about you, see?
  • 188:14 - 188:20
    Well, how is it
    coming, everybody?
  • 188:20 - 188:22
    I'm sorry I had to leave you
    for a little while,
  • 188:22 - 188:24
    but there was something
    I had to get finally settled.
  • 188:24 - 188:25
    It's all fixed now.
  • 188:25 - 188:27
    When are you going
    to do somethin'
  • 188:27 - 188:32
    about this booze, Hickey?
    We can't pass out,
  • 188:32 - 188:34
    and you
    promised us peace!
  • 188:34 - 188:37
    Yes, yes!
    I wonder why that is.
  • 188:37 - 188:38
    For God's sake,
    Harry! You're still
  • 188:38 - 188:40
    harping on that
    same damn nonsense?
  • 188:40 - 188:42
    You've kept it up
    all afternoon and night,
  • 188:42 - 188:43
    and you got everybody else
    singing the same crazy tune!
  • 188:43 - 188:47
    I've had about all I can
    stand, that's why I phoned.
  • 188:51 - 188:52
    Excuse me, boys and girls,
    I-I don't mean that.
  • 188:52 - 188:55
    It's just that I
    worry about you
  • 188:55 - 188:58
    when you play dead
    on me like this.
  • 188:58 - 189:00
    I was hoping by
    the time I got back
  • 189:00 - 189:01
    you'd be like
    you ought to be.
  • 189:01 - 189:03
    I thought you were deliberately
    holding back on me before
  • 189:03 - 189:04
    when I was here, because
    you didn't want to give me
  • 189:04 - 189:06
    the satisfaction of showing me
    that I had the right dope!
  • 189:06 - 189:09
    And I did have, I know
    from my own experience.
  • 189:09 - 189:13
    But I've explained that
    a million times.
  • 189:13 - 189:15
    Now you've all done
    what you needed to do.
  • 189:15 - 189:17
    By rights you should be
    contented with yourself, and
  • 189:17 - 189:22
    free from the lying hopes and
    nagging dreams that torment you.
  • 189:22 - 189:24
    But here you are,
    sitting around like
  • 189:24 - 189:27
    a lot of stiffs
    cheating the undertaker!
  • 189:27 - 189:31
    I can't figure it...
  • 189:31 - 189:36
    unless it's just your damned
    stubborn pigheadedness.
  • 189:36 - 189:40
    Oh, hell... don't act
    like this with me, gang!
  • 189:40 - 189:43
    You're my old pals,
    the only friends I've got!
  • 189:43 - 189:44
    You know, the one
    thing that I want
  • 189:44 - 189:47
    is to see you
    happy before I go.
  • 189:47 - 189:51
    And there's damned
    little time left now.
  • 189:51 - 189:52
    I've made a date
    for 2:00 o'clock.
  • 189:52 - 189:56
    So, we've got to get busy right
    away and find out what's wrong!
  • 189:58 - 190:02
    Can't you appreciate what
    you've got, for God's sake?
  • 190:02 - 190:04
    Don't you see you're free
    to be yourselves now,
  • 190:04 - 190:05
    without feeling
    remorse or guilt,
  • 190:05 - 190:08
    or having to lie to yourselves
    about reforming tomorrow?
  • 190:08 - 190:11
    Don't you see?
    There is no tomorrow now!
  • 190:11 - 190:14
    You're rid of it forever,
    you've killed it!
  • 190:14 - 190:17
    You don't have to care
    a damn about anything any more!
  • 190:17 - 190:21
    You've finally got the game of
    life licked, don't you see that?
  • 190:21 - 190:24
    Then why the hell don't you get
    drunk and sing "Sweet Adeline"?
  • 190:24 - 190:32
    Why don't you laugh and
    celebrate, and get pie-eyed?
  • 190:32 - 190:34
    The only reason I can think
    of is you're putting on
  • 190:34 - 190:37
    this rotten half-dead act
    just to get back at me,
  • 190:37 - 190:39
    because you
    hate my guts.
  • 190:39 - 190:43
    God, don't do
    that, gang!
  • 190:43 - 190:46
    It makes me feel like hell
    to think that you hate me.
  • 190:46 - 190:49
    Makes me feel that you
    suspected that I hated you.
  • 190:49 - 190:50
    But that is a lie!
  • 190:50 - 190:52
    Oh, I know I used to hate
    everybody in the world
  • 190:52 - 190:54
    that wasn't as rotten
    a bastard as I was,
  • 190:54 - 190:56
    but that's when I
    was still living in hell!
  • 190:56 - 191:00
    Before I faced
    the truth.
  • 191:00 - 191:04
    And saw the one possible way
    to free poor Evelyn,
  • 191:04 - 191:07
    and give her the peace that
    she'd always dreamed about.
  • 191:07 - 191:09
    Oh, put a bag over it!
    To hell with Evelyn.
  • 191:09 - 191:10
    What if she
    was cheatin'?
  • 191:10 - 191:13
    And who cares what you did
    to her? That's your funeral.
  • 191:13 - 191:15
    We don't give
    a damn, see?
  • 191:15 - 191:16
    All we want
    outta you is keep
  • 191:16 - 191:19
    the hell away from us
    and give us a rest!
  • 191:19 - 191:21
    The one possible way
    to make up to her
  • 191:21 - 191:23
    for all that I
    made her go through,
  • 191:23 - 191:25
    and get her rid
    of me so that I
  • 191:25 - 191:28
    couldn't make her
    suffer any more,
  • 191:28 - 191:32
    and she wouldn't have
    to forgive me again.
  • 191:32 - 191:33
    I saw I couldn't do it
    by killing myself,
  • 191:33 - 191:37
    like I wanted to
    for a long time.
  • 191:37 - 191:40
    That would have been
    the last straw for her.
  • 191:40 - 191:42
    She'd have died
    of a broken heart
  • 191:42 - 191:45
    to think that I
    could do that to her.
  • 191:45 - 191:48
    She'd have blamed
    herself, too.
  • 191:48 - 191:51
    Or I just couldn't
    run away from her.
  • 191:51 - 191:53
    She'd have died
    of grief and humiliation
  • 191:53 - 191:56
    if I'd done
    that to her.
  • 191:56 - 192:00
    She'd have thought
    I stopped loving her.
  • 192:00 - 192:09
    You see... Evelyn
    loved me, and I loved her.
  • 192:09 - 192:12
    That was the trouble.
  • 192:12 - 192:14
    Oh, it would have been easy
    to find a way out
  • 192:14 - 192:16
    if she hadn't
    loved me so much.
  • 192:16 - 192:19
    Or if I hadn't
    loved her.
  • 192:19 - 192:24
    But as it was, there was
    only one possible way.
  • 192:24 - 192:28
    I had to kill her.
  • 192:28 - 192:32
    Mad fool! Can't you
    keep your mouth shut?
  • 192:32 - 192:35
    We may hate you for what
    you've done this time,
  • 192:35 - 192:37
    but we remember the old times,
    when you brought laughter
  • 192:37 - 192:40
    and kindness here
    instead of death!
  • 192:40 - 192:41
    We don't want
    to know things
  • 192:41 - 192:43
    that will make us help
    send you to the chair!
  • 192:43 - 192:45
    Oh, shut up!
  • 192:45 - 192:46
    You yellow faker! Can't
    you face anything?
  • 192:46 - 192:52
    Wouldn't I deserve
    the chair too if I...
  • 192:52 - 192:54
    It's, it's worse
    if you kill someone
  • 192:54 - 192:59
    and they have
    to go on living.
  • 192:59 - 193:01
    I'd be glad
    of the chair.
  • 193:01 - 193:06
    It'd wipe it out and
    square me with myself.
  • 193:06 - 193:09
    I wish you'd get rid
    of that bastard, Larry.
  • 193:09 - 193:11
    I can't have him
    pretending there's something
  • 193:11 - 193:16
    in common between
    him and me.
  • 193:16 - 193:19
    It's what's in your
    heart that counts.
  • 193:19 - 193:23
    And there was love
    in my heart, not hate.
  • 193:23 - 193:26
    You're a liar!
  • 193:26 - 193:28
    I don't hate her!
    I couldn't!
  • 193:28 - 193:30
    And anyway, it had
    nothing to do with her!
  • 193:30 - 193:31
    You ask Larry!
  • 193:31 - 193:35
    God damn you, stop shoving
    your rotten soul in my lap!
  • 193:35 - 193:38
    Don't worry about
    the chair, Larry.
  • 193:38 - 193:42
    I know you're still
    terrified by death.
  • 193:42 - 193:46
    But when you've made peace
    with yourself, like I have,
  • 193:46 - 193:49
    you won't give
    a damn.
  • 193:53 - 193:55
    Listen, everybody.
  • 193:55 - 193:57
    I've made up my mind, the only
    way I can clear this up for you,
  • 193:57 - 194:00
    so you'll realize how contented
    and carefree you ought to feel,
  • 194:00 - 194:03
    now that I've made you
    get rid of your pipe dreams,
  • 194:03 - 194:07
    is to show you what a pipe dream
    did to me and Evelyn.
  • 194:07 - 194:10
    And I'm certain, if I tell you
    about it from the beginning,
  • 194:10 - 194:13
    you'll appreciate what I've
    done for you and why I did it.
  • 194:13 - 194:15
    And how damned grateful
    you ought to be,
  • 194:15 - 194:20
    instead of hating me.
  • 194:20 - 194:22
    You see, even as
    kids, Evelyn and me...
  • 194:22 - 194:27
    (banging glass on table)
    All we want is to pass out and get drunk,
  • 194:27 - 194:29
    and a little peace!
  • 194:29 - 194:32
    (approving whispering
    and glasses banging tables)
  • 194:32 - 194:34
    All right, if that's
    the way you feel!
  • 194:34 - 194:36
    I don't want to cram
    it down your throats!
  • 194:36 - 194:40
    I don't need to tell anyone,
    I don't feel guilty.
  • 194:40 - 194:43
    I'm only worried
    about you.
  • 194:43 - 194:47
    What did you do
    to this booze?
  • 194:47 - 194:50
    That's what
    we'd like to hear.
  • 194:50 - 194:53
    Ain't that right,
    Jimmy?
  • 194:53 - 194:57
    Yes,
    quite right.
  • 194:57 - 195:02
    It was all a stupid lie,
    my nonsense about tomorrow.
  • 195:02 - 195:06
    Naturally they would never
    give me my position back,
  • 195:06 - 195:10
    that I would never
    dream of asking them.
  • 195:10 - 195:16
    I didn't resign, I was
    fired for drunkenness.
  • 195:16 - 195:19
    And it was absurd of me
    to excuse my drunkenness
  • 195:19 - 195:25
    by pretending it was my wife's
    adultery that ruined my life.
  • 195:25 - 195:30
    As Hickey guessed, I was
    a drunkard before that.
  • 195:30 - 195:33
    I discovered early
    in life that living
  • 195:33 - 195:38
    frightened me
    when I was sober.
  • 195:38 - 195:42
    I've even forgotten
    why I married Marjorie.
  • 195:42 - 195:47
    I had some idea of
    wanting a home, perhaps.
  • 195:47 - 195:53
    But, of course, I, I much
    preferred the nearest pub.
  • 195:53 - 195:57
    Why Marjorie married me,
    God knows.
  • 195:57 - 196:01
    She soon found that I much
    preferred drinking all night
  • 196:01 - 196:07
    with my pals to being
    at home in bed with her.
  • 196:07 - 196:13
    So naturally...
    she was unfaithful.
  • 196:13 - 196:18
    And I was glad
    to be free.
  • 196:18 - 196:22
    Even... grateful
    to her, I think,
  • 196:22 - 196:29
    for giving me such a...
    a good tragic excuse.
  • 196:34 - 196:37
    In the back room
    if you wanna drink.
  • 196:37 - 196:38
    A guy named Hickman
    in the back room?
  • 196:38 - 196:42
    Think I know the names...
    Listen, you! This is murder.
  • 196:42 - 196:44
    It was Hickman himself
    who phoned in and said
  • 196:44 - 196:46
    we'd find him here
    around 2:00.
  • 196:46 - 196:48
    So that's who
    he phoned to.
  • 196:48 - 196:50
    Yeah, he's in there,
    and if you want
  • 196:50 - 196:52
    a confession all you
    got to do is listen.
  • 196:52 - 196:56
    You can't stop
    the bastard talkin'.
  • 196:56 - 196:57
    I've got to tell you,
    your being this way
  • 196:57 - 197:01
    now gets my goat,
    and it's all wrong!
  • 197:01 - 197:03
    It puts things
    in my mind.
  • 197:03 - 197:06
    It makes me think that if I
    got balled up about you,
  • 197:06 - 197:08
    then how do I know I wasn't
    balled up about myself?
  • 197:08 - 197:11
    And that is just plain
    damned foolishness.
  • 197:11 - 197:14
    But when you know the story
    of me and Evelyn, you'll see
  • 197:14 - 197:16
    it was the only possible
    way out, for her sake.
  • 197:16 - 197:19
    Only I've got to start
    way back at the beginning,
  • 197:19 - 197:23
    otherwise
    you won't understand.
  • 197:23 - 197:26
    You see, even as a kid
    I was always restless.
  • 197:26 - 197:28
    I had to keep
    on the go.
  • 197:28 - 197:29
    You've heard the old saying
    that "Ministers' sons"
  • 197:29 - 197:33
    "are sons of guns?" Well,
    that was me and then some.
  • 197:33 - 197:35
    Home was like a jail.
  • 197:35 - 197:38
    Listening to my old man whooping
    up hell fire and scaring
  • 197:38 - 197:40
    those Hoosier suckers into
    shelling out their dough
  • 197:40 - 197:43
    only handed me a laugh! Although
    I gotta to hand it to him,
  • 197:43 - 197:46
    the way he sold them
    nothing for something.
  • 197:46 - 197:48
    I guess I take after him,
    and that's what made me
  • 197:48 - 197:50
    a good salesman;
    well, like I said,
  • 197:50 - 197:53
    home was like jail,
    and so was school,
  • 197:53 - 197:55
    and so was that damned
    hick town.
  • 197:55 - 197:57
    The only places I liked
    were the pool halls,
  • 197:57 - 197:59
    where I could smoke
    Sweet Caporals
  • 197:59 - 198:01
    and mop up
    a couple of beers, eh?
  • 198:01 - 198:03
    Thinking I was a
    hell-on-wheels sport.
  • 198:03 - 198:05
    We had one hooker
    shop in town.
  • 198:05 - 198:08
    Of course I
    liked that, too.
  • 198:08 - 198:09
    Not that I hardly ever
    had the entrance money.
  • 198:09 - 198:12
    My old man was
    a tight old bastard.
  • 198:12 - 198:14
    But I liked to sit around in the
    parlor and joke with the girls.
  • 198:14 - 198:16
    And they liked me too,
    because I kid 'em along
  • 198:16 - 198:18
    and make 'em laugh.
  • 198:18 - 198:21
    And you know how
    a small town is.
  • 198:21 - 198:23
    Everybody
    got wise to me.
  • 198:23 - 198:25
    They said I was
    a no-good tramp,
  • 198:25 - 198:27
    but I didn't give
    a damn what they said.
  • 198:27 - 198:28
    I hated everybody
    in the place.
  • 198:28 - 198:30
    That is,
    except Evelyn.
  • 198:30 - 198:34
    And I loved Evelyn,
    even as a kid.
  • 198:34 - 198:38
    And Evelyn loved me.
  • 198:38 - 198:40
    Larry, I loved mother!
    No matter what she did!
  • 198:40 - 198:43
    I still do!
    Yes, sir, as far back as I can remember,
  • 198:43 - 198:46
    Evelyn and I
    loved each other.
  • 198:46 - 198:48
    She always
    stood out for me.
  • 198:48 - 198:52
    She wouldn't believe the gossip,
    or she pretended she wouldn't.
  • 198:52 - 198:56
    No one could convince her
    that I was no good.
  • 198:56 - 199:00
    Evelyn was stubborn as hell
    once she made up her mind.
  • 199:00 - 199:05
    You know, even when I'd admit
    things and ask her forgiveness,
  • 199:05 - 199:10
    she'd make excuses for me
    and defend me against myself.
  • 199:10 - 199:12
    And she'd kiss me,
    she'd say that she knew
  • 199:12 - 199:15
    that I wouldn't do it again
    and I said that I wouldn't.
  • 199:15 - 199:19
    And I'd promise,
    I'd have to promise.
  • 199:19 - 199:23
    She was so damn
    sweet and good.
  • 199:23 - 199:26
    Yet I knew
    darned well...
  • 199:26 - 199:28
    No, sir, you couldn't
    stop Evelyn!
  • 199:28 - 199:31
    Nothing on Earth could
    shake her faith in me!
  • 199:31 - 199:34
    Even I couldn't!
  • 199:34 - 199:39
    She was a sucker
    for a pipe dream.
  • 199:39 - 199:42
    Well, naturally, her family
    forbid her seeing me.
  • 199:42 - 199:44
    (laughing)
  • 199:44 - 199:48
    They were one of the town's
    best, rich for that hick burg.
  • 199:48 - 199:50
    They owned the trolley line
    and the lumber company.
  • 199:50 - 199:55
    Strict Methodists, too;
    oh, did they hate my guts!
  • 199:55 - 199:58
    Even they couldn't
    stop Evelyn.
  • 199:58 - 200:02
    And she'd sneak notes to me
    and we'd meet me on the side.
  • 200:02 - 200:06
    But I was getting
    more restless.
  • 200:06 - 200:09
    The town was getting
    more like a jail.
  • 200:09 - 200:11
    I made up my mind
    to beat it.
  • 200:11 - 200:14
    I knew exactly what I wanted
    to be by that time.
  • 200:14 - 200:17
    I met a lot of drummers around
    the hotel, and I liked 'em.
  • 200:17 - 200:19
    They were always
    telling jokes, eh?
  • 200:19 - 200:23
    They were sports, always on
    the move, I liked their life.
  • 200:23 - 200:26
    And I knew I could kid people
    and sell things.
  • 200:26 - 200:31
    The hitch was, how to get the
    railroad fare to the Big Town?
  • 200:31 - 200:36
    Hell, I... I told
    Mollie Arlington my trouble.
  • 200:36 - 200:38
    She was the Madame
    of the cathouse.
  • 200:38 - 200:39
    She liked me.
  • 200:39 - 200:42
    She laughed and she said:
    "Hell, I'll stake you, kid.
  • 200:42 - 200:44
    "I'll bet on you, with that grin
    of yours and that line of bull
  • 200:44 - 200:48
    you ought to be able to sell
    skunks for good ratters."
  • 200:48 - 200:51
    Yeah, Mollie
    was all right.
  • 200:51 - 200:55
    She made me feel
    confident in myself.
  • 200:55 - 200:58
    Well, I paid her back too,
    first money I earned.
  • 200:58 - 201:00
    I remember sending her
    a kidding letter saying
  • 201:00 - 201:02
    that I was peddling
    baby carriages, and she
  • 201:02 - 201:04
    and the girls had better
    get in on our bargain offer!
  • 201:04 - 201:08
    Ho, ho, ho, ho!
  • 201:08 - 201:13
    That's getting
    ahead of my story.
  • 201:13 - 201:17
    That last night
    before I left town...
  • 201:17 - 201:20
    I had a date
    with Evelyn.
  • 201:20 - 201:23
    I got all worked up.
  • 201:23 - 201:27
    She was so pretty
    and sweet and good.
  • 201:27 - 201:29
    I told her straight.
  • 201:29 - 201:33
    I said: "You better forget me,
    Evelyn, for your own sake."
  • 201:33 - 201:38
    "I'm no good
    and I never will be."
  • 201:38 - 201:41
    And I broke down
    and cried.
  • 201:41 - 201:44
    And she just said,
    looking white and scared:
  • 201:44 - 201:48
    "Why, Teddy, don't you
    still love me?"
  • 201:48 - 201:50
    And I said:
    "Love you?
  • 201:50 - 201:53
    "God, Evelyn, I love you more
    than anything in the world.
  • 201:53 - 201:56
    And I always will."
  • 201:56 - 202:03
    And she said: "Nothing
    matters, Teddy."
  • 202:03 - 202:08
    "Because nothing but death
    could stop my loving you.
  • 202:08 - 202:13
    "So when you're ready you send
    for me, and we'll be married.
  • 202:13 - 202:17
    "And I know I can
    make you happy, Teddy.
  • 202:17 - 202:18
    "And when you're happy,
    you won't want to do
  • 202:18 - 202:23
    any of those bad things
    you've done any more."
  • 202:23 - 202:26
    And I said: "Of course
    I won't, Evelyn."
  • 202:26 - 202:32
    And I meant it,
    I believed it.
  • 202:32 - 202:36
    I loved her so much she could
    make me believe anything.
  • 202:36 - 202:41
    (Harry) You married her, you caught
    her cheating with the iceman,
  • 202:41 - 202:43
    and you croaked her,
    and all we want
  • 202:43 - 202:46
    is to pass out
    in peace, bejees!
  • 202:46 - 202:49
    (everyone whispering)
    So I beat it to the Big Town!
  • 202:49 - 202:51
    I got a job easy,
    it was a cinch for me
  • 202:51 - 202:54
    to make good,
    I had the knack.
  • 202:54 - 202:55
    It was like a game,
    sizing people up quick,
  • 202:55 - 202:57
    spotting what their pet
    pipe dreams were,
  • 202:57 - 202:58
    and then kidding 'em
    along that line.
  • 202:58 - 202:59
    Pretending you believed
    what they wanted
  • 202:59 - 203:01
    to believe
    about themselves.
  • 203:01 - 203:02
    Then they liked you,
    they trusted you.
  • 203:02 - 203:04
    They want to buy something
    to show their gratitude.
  • 203:04 - 203:06
    It was fun!
  • 203:06 - 203:10
    But still, all the while
    I felt guilty, as though
  • 203:10 - 203:13
    I shouldn't be having such
    a good time away from Evelyn.
  • 203:13 - 203:16
    In each of my letters I'd
    tell her how I missed her,
  • 203:16 - 203:18
    but I'd warn her, too;
    I'd tell her about my faults.
  • 203:18 - 203:21
    How I liked my booze every now
    and then, and so on.
  • 203:21 - 203:23
    But you couldn't shake
    Evelyn's belief in me,
  • 203:23 - 203:26
    or her dreams
    about the future.
  • 203:26 - 203:28
    And then after each one
    of her letters,
  • 203:28 - 203:31
    I'd be as full of
    faith as she was.
  • 203:31 - 203:33
    So when I got enough saved
    to start us off,
  • 203:33 - 203:36
    I sent for her
    and we got married.
  • 203:36 - 203:39
    Christ, wasn't I
    happy for a while!
  • 203:39 - 203:42
    And wasn't she happy.
  • 203:42 - 203:44
    I don't care what anybody says,
    I'll bet there were never
  • 203:44 - 203:45
    two people who loved each
    other more than me and Evelyn.
  • 203:45 - 203:47
    Not only then,
    but ever afterwards.
  • 203:47 - 203:49
    In spite of everything I did.
  • 203:49 - 203:51
    Well, it's all
    there at the start,
  • 203:51 - 203:53
    everything that happened
    afterwards.
  • 203:53 - 203:56
    Though I never could
    learn to handle temptation.
  • 203:56 - 203:57
    I'd want to reform
    and mean it.
  • 203:57 - 203:59
    Then I'd promise her,
    and I'd promise myself,
  • 203:59 - 204:01
    and I'd believe it.
  • 204:01 - 204:03
    I'd even tell her:
    "It's the last time, Evelyn."
  • 204:03 - 204:06
    And she'd say: "I know it's
    the last time, Teddy."
  • 204:06 - 204:07
    "You'll never
    do it again."
  • 204:07 - 204:09
    And that's what
    made it so hard!
  • 204:09 - 204:12
    That's what made me
    feel such a rotten skunk!
  • 204:12 - 204:15
    Her always
    forgiving me.
  • 204:15 - 204:16
    My playing around
    with women, for instance.
  • 204:16 - 204:18
    It was just a harmless
    good time to me.
  • 204:18 - 204:19
    It didn't
    mean anything,
  • 204:19 - 204:21
    but I'd know what it
    meant to her!
  • 204:21 - 204:23
    So I'd swear
    to myself "Never again."
  • 204:23 - 204:25
    But you know how it is,
    traveling around,
  • 204:25 - 204:27
    those damned
    hotel rooms.
  • 204:27 - 204:30
    You get to seeing things
    in the wall paper.
  • 204:30 - 204:33
    I'd get so damn bored,
    so lonely and homesick.
  • 204:33 - 204:36
    But at the same time,
    sick of home.
  • 204:36 - 204:39
    I'd feel free, I'd want
    to celebrate a little.
  • 204:39 - 204:43
    Well, I never drank on the job
    so it had to be dames, any tart.
  • 204:43 - 204:45
    What I'd want
    was some tramp that I
  • 204:45 - 204:47
    could be myself with,
    without being ashamed.
  • 204:47 - 204:49
    Someone I could tell a
    dirty joke to and she'd laugh!
  • 204:49 - 204:51
    (girly giggling)
  • 204:51 - 204:53
    Jees... all
    the lousy jokes
  • 204:53 - 204:56
    I've had to listen to
    and pretend was funny.
  • 204:56 - 204:58
    Sometimes I'd try
    a joke that I thought
  • 204:58 - 205:01
    was a real corker
    on Evelyn!
  • 205:01 - 205:03
    And she'd always
    make herself laugh.
  • 205:03 - 205:08
    But I could tell she thought
    it was dirty and not funny.
  • 205:08 - 205:10
    And she always knew about
    the tarts that I'd been with
  • 205:10 - 205:12
    when I came home
    from a trip.
  • 205:12 - 205:16
    She'd kiss me and look
    in my eyes, and she'd know.
  • 205:16 - 205:19
    And I could see in her eyes
    her not wanting to know.
  • 205:19 - 205:22
    And telling herself: "Even if
    it is true, he can't help it."
  • 205:22 - 205:25
    "They tempt him, he's
    lonely, he hasn't got me.
  • 205:25 - 205:27
    "It's only his body,
    he doesn't love them.
  • 205:27 - 205:30
    "I'm the only one he loves,"
    and she was right, too!
  • 205:30 - 205:36
    I never loved anyone else!
    Couldn't if I wanted to.
  • 205:36 - 205:39
    She forgave me even when it all
    had to come out in the open.
  • 205:39 - 205:43
    You know how it is when you
    keep taking chances.
  • 205:43 - 205:45
    You may be lucky
    for a long time,
  • 205:45 - 205:48
    but you'll get nicked
    in the end.
  • 205:48 - 205:51
    I picked up a nail
    from some tart in Altoona.
  • 205:51 - 205:53
    Yeah, and she picked it up
    from some guy.
  • 205:53 - 205:56
    It's all in the game.
  • 205:56 - 205:59
    I had to do a lot of lying
    and stalling when I got home,
  • 205:59 - 206:02
    but it didn't do
    any good.
  • 206:02 - 206:05
    The quack I went to
    got all my dough,
  • 206:05 - 206:09
    and he told me I was cured,
    and I believed him.
  • 206:09 - 206:13
    But I wasn't...
    and poor Evelyn.
  • 206:13 - 206:16
    But she did her best to make me
    believe that she fell for my lie
  • 206:16 - 206:19
    about how... traveling men
    get things from drinking cups
  • 206:19 - 206:25
    on...
    on trains.
  • 206:25 - 206:29
    Anyway, she
    forgave me.
  • 206:29 - 206:31
    The same way she forgave me
    every time I'd show up
  • 206:31 - 206:35
    after a periodical
    drunk!
  • 206:35 - 206:36
    And you all knew
    what I'd look like
  • 206:36 - 206:38
    after one of those,
    you saw me!
  • 206:38 - 206:39
    Like something lying
    in the gutter
  • 206:39 - 206:42
    that no alley cat would
    lower himself to drag in!
  • 206:42 - 206:44
    Something they threw out of
    the D.T. ward at Bellevue!
  • 206:44 - 206:50
    Along with the garbage,
    something that should be dead!
  • 206:50 - 206:52
    But isn't.
  • 207:02 - 207:06
    Evelyn wouldn't have heard
    from me in a month or more.
  • 207:06 - 207:10
    She'd been waiting
    there alone.
  • 207:10 - 207:12
    The neighbors feeling
    sorry for her out loud
  • 207:12 - 207:16
    and shaking
    their heads.
  • 207:16 - 207:20
    That was until she got me
    to move to the outskirts,
  • 207:20 - 207:27
    where there weren't
    any next-door neighbors.
  • 207:27 - 207:33
    Then the door would open...
    and I'd stumble...
  • 207:33 - 207:38
    looking like
    what I've just said.
  • 207:38 - 207:43
    Into her home, that she always
    kept so... spotless and clean.
  • 207:43 - 207:47
    And I'd sworn it would
    never happen again!
  • 207:47 - 207:48
    And now I'd have
    to start swearing again
  • 207:48 - 207:50
    that this was
    the last time!
  • 207:50 - 207:53
    I could see disgust
    having a battle in her eyes
  • 207:53 - 207:59
    with love,
    but love always won!
  • 207:59 - 208:06
    She'd make her-self...
    kiss me!
  • 208:06 - 208:11
    As though nothing
    had happened.
  • 208:11 - 208:17
    As though I'd just come home
    from a business trip.
  • 208:17 - 208:22
    She'd never complain
    or bawl me out.
  • 208:22 - 208:25
    Christ, can you imagine what a
    guilty skunk she made me feel!
  • 208:25 - 208:28
    If only once she admitted that
    her pipe dream about tomorrow,
  • 208:28 - 208:30
    and my behaving myself
    would never be any good!
  • 208:30 - 208:33
    But she wouldn't!
  • 208:33 - 208:36
    She was stubborn
    as hell!
  • 208:36 - 208:38
    Once she'd set her mind on
    anything, you couldn't shake
  • 208:38 - 208:47
    her faith that it had
    to come true tomorrow!
  • 208:47 - 208:54
    It was the same old story, over
    and over, for years and years.
  • 208:54 - 208:58
    And it kept piling up,
    inside her and inside me.
  • 208:58 - 209:01
    God, can you picture
    what I made her suffer?
  • 209:01 - 209:04
    And all the guilt that
    she made me feel?
  • 209:04 - 209:07
    And how I
    hated myself?
  • 209:07 - 209:11
    If she only hadn't been
    so damned good!
  • 209:11 - 209:14
    If she'd been the same kind
    of wife that I was a husband.
  • 209:14 - 209:19
    God, sometimes I used
    to pray that she'd...
  • 209:19 - 209:22
    I'd even say to her:
    "Go on, why don't you, Evelyn?"
  • 209:22 - 209:26
    "Serve me right, I wouldn't
    mind, I'd forgive you."
  • 209:26 - 209:28
    Of course I'd pretend
    I was kidding.
  • 209:28 - 209:30
    The same way
    I used to joke here
  • 209:30 - 209:34
    about her being in the hay
    with the iceman.
  • 209:34 - 209:38
    She'd have felt so hurt
    if I'd said it seriously.
  • 209:38 - 209:41
    She'd have thought
    I'd stopped loving her.
  • 209:41 - 209:46
    I suppose you think I'm a liar,
    that no woman could have stood
  • 209:46 - 209:49
    all she stood
    and still loved me so much.
  • 209:49 - 209:51
    That it isn't human for a woman
    to be so pitying and forgiving!
  • 209:51 - 209:54
    Well, I am not lying!
  • 209:54 - 209:58
    And if you'd ever seen her,
    you'd realize that I wasn't.
  • 209:58 - 210:00
    It was written
    all over her face:
  • 210:00 - 210:05
    Sweetness, love,
    pity, forgiveness.
  • 210:05 - 210:08
    Although, wait,
    I'll... show you.
  • 210:08 - 210:10
    I always carry
    her picture.
  • 210:18 - 210:23
    No, I'm forgetting...
    I tore it up afterwards.
  • 210:23 - 210:28
    I didn't need it
    any more.
  • 210:28 - 210:31
    Jees, Hickey!
    Jees!
  • 210:31 - 210:33
    I burnt up mother's
    picture, Larry.
  • 210:33 - 210:35
    Her eyes kept following
    me around all the time.
  • 210:35 - 210:36
    They seemed to
    be wishing I was dead!
  • 210:36 - 210:40
    It kept piling up,
    like I've said.
  • 210:40 - 210:43
    I got so I thought
    about it all the time.
  • 210:43 - 210:45
    And I hated myself
    more and more,
  • 210:45 - 210:47
    thinking of all the wrong
    I'd done to the sweetest woman
  • 210:47 - 210:49
    in the world
    that loved me so much!
  • 210:49 - 210:51
    It even got so I'd curse
    myself for a lousy bastard
  • 210:51 - 210:54
    every time I saw
    myself in the mirror!
  • 210:54 - 210:57
    I felt such pity for her
    it drove me crazy!
  • 210:57 - 210:59
    You'd never believe
    it, would you, Larry?
  • 210:59 - 211:01
    A guy like me that's
    knocked around so much
  • 211:01 - 211:06
    could feel such pity!
  • 211:06 - 211:10
    It got so
    every night I'd...
  • 211:10 - 211:12
    wind up hiding
    my face in her lap,
  • 211:12 - 211:16
    bawling and begging
    for forgiveness.
  • 211:16 - 211:20
    Of course she'd always
    comfort me and say:
  • 211:20 - 211:25
    "Never mind, Teddy,
    I know you won't ever again."
  • 211:25 - 211:30
    Christ,
    I loved her so.
  • 211:30 - 211:35
    But I began to hate
    that pipe dream!
  • 211:35 - 211:37
    I began to think
    I was going bughouse!
  • 211:37 - 211:41
    Because sometimes I couldn't
    forgive her for forgiving me!
  • 211:41 - 211:43
    I even caught myself
    hating her
  • 211:43 - 211:45
    for making me
    hate myself so much!
  • 211:45 - 211:46
    You know, there's a limit
    to the guilt you can feel
  • 211:46 - 211:48
    and the forgiveness
    and pity you can take!
  • 211:48 - 211:52
    You have to begin blaming
    somebody else, too!
  • 211:52 - 211:55
    It got so...
  • 211:55 - 211:59
    sometimes,
    when she'd kiss me,
  • 211:59 - 212:02
    it was like she was
    doing it on purpose...
  • 212:02 - 212:06
    to humiliate me...
  • 212:06 - 212:08
    as if she'd spit
    in my face!
  • 212:08 - 212:12
    But I saw how crazy
    and rotten that was of me!
  • 212:12 - 212:17
    And I just hated
    myself more and more!
  • 212:17 - 212:20
    You'd never believe that I could
    hate so much!
  • 212:20 - 212:30
    Ah, Larry? A good-natured,
    happy-go-lucky... slob like me.
  • 212:30 - 212:32
    As the time got nearer to
    when I was due to come here
  • 212:32 - 212:37
    for my drunk around Harry's
    birthday, I got nearly crazy.
  • 212:37 - 212:39
    I kept swearing to her
    every night that this time
  • 212:39 - 212:41
    I really wouldn't,
    until I'd made it
  • 212:41 - 212:44
    a real final test
    to myself and to her!
  • 212:44 - 212:46
    And she kept encouraging
    me and saying:
  • 212:46 - 212:48
    "I can see you really
    mean it now, Teddy."
  • 212:48 - 212:52
    "I know you'll conquer it this
    time, and we'll be so happy."
  • 212:52 - 212:56
    And when she'd say
    that, and kiss me...
  • 212:56 - 213:00
    I'd believe
    it, too.
  • 213:00 - 213:04
    Then she'd go to bed,
  • 213:04 - 213:06
    and I'd stay up because
    I couldn't sleep.
  • 213:06 - 213:09
    And I didn't want
    to disturb her,
  • 213:09 - 213:14
    rolling and twisting around;
    I'd get so damned lonely!
  • 213:14 - 213:17
    I'd get to thinking
    how peaceful it was here.
  • 213:17 - 213:20
    Sitting around with
    the old gang, getting drunk
  • 213:20 - 213:22
    and forgetting about love;
    laughing and singing
  • 213:22 - 213:25
    and joking,
    and swapping lies.
  • 213:25 - 213:29
    And finally I knew
    I had to come.
  • 213:29 - 213:33
    And I knew if I came this time,
    it would be the finish!
  • 213:33 - 213:35
    Because I'd never have
    the guts to go back
  • 213:35 - 213:40
    and be forgiven again! And that
    would break Evelyn's heart.
  • 213:40 - 213:44
    Because to her
    that would mean...
  • 213:44 - 213:49
    I didn't love
    her any more.
  • 213:49 - 213:52
    That last night
    I'd driven myself crazy
  • 213:52 - 213:56
    trying to figure
    a way out for her.
  • 213:56 - 213:59
    I went into
    the bedroom.
  • 213:59 - 214:03
    I was going to tell her
    it was the end.
  • 214:03 - 214:06
    But I couldn't
    do that to her.
  • 214:06 - 214:09
    She was sound asleep.
  • 214:09 - 214:11
    And I thought
    "God, if only she'd"
  • 214:11 - 214:15
    "never wake up,
    she'd never know."
  • 214:15 - 214:19
    And then it came to me.
  • 214:19 - 214:25
    The one possible way out,
    for her sake.
  • 214:25 - 214:27
    I remembered I'd given
    her a gun for protection
  • 214:27 - 214:35
    while I was away...
    it was in the bureau drawer.
  • 214:35 - 214:42
    She'd never feel any pain, she'd
    never wake up from her dream.
  • 214:42 - 214:47
    So I...
  • 214:47 - 214:50
    so I killed her.
  • 214:50 - 214:53
    I may as well
    confess, Larry.
  • 214:53 - 214:58
    There's no use lying any more;
    you know, anyway.
  • 214:58 - 215:00
    I didn't give
    a damn about the money,
  • 215:00 - 215:03
    it was because I
    hated her.
  • 215:03 - 215:05
    And then I saw that
    I'd always known
  • 215:05 - 215:06
    that was
    the only possible way
  • 215:06 - 215:08
    to give her peace,
    and free her
  • 215:08 - 215:10
    from the misery
    of loving me.
  • 215:10 - 215:14
    And I saw it meant peace for me,
    too, knowing she was at peace.
  • 215:14 - 215:18
    I felt as though a ton of guilt
    was lifted off my mind.
  • 215:18 - 215:21
    I remember I stood by the bed
    and suddenly I had to laugh.
  • 215:21 - 215:24
    I couldn't help it, and I knew
    Evelyn would forgive me!
  • 215:24 - 215:26
    I remember I heard
    myself speaking to her,
  • 215:26 - 215:29
    as though it was something that
    I'd always wanted to say:
  • 215:29 - 215:33
    "Well, you know what you can do
    with your pipe dream now,"
  • 215:33 - 215:35
    "you damned bitch!"
  • 215:45 - 215:47
    No! I never...
    Yes, yes, that's it!
  • 215:47 - 215:51
    Her and that damned Movement
    pipe dream! Eh, Larry? No, that's a lie!
  • 215:51 - 215:52
    Good God, I could
    have never said that!
  • 215:52 - 215:55
    If I had, I'd have
    gone insane!
  • 215:55 - 215:58
    Why, I loved Evelyn better
    than anything in life!
  • 215:58 - 216:00
    Boys, you're
    all my old pals!
  • 216:00 - 216:02
    You've known old
    Hickey for years!
  • 216:02 - 216:03
    You know that
    I could never...
  • 216:03 - 216:07
    Harry! Harry, you've known me
    longer than anybody else!
  • 216:07 - 216:10
    You know that I must have been
    insane! Don't you, Governor?
  • 216:10 - 216:14
    Who the hell cares?
  • 216:14 - 216:16
    (excited tone)
    "Insane?"
  • 216:16 - 216:18
    You mean you went really insane?
    Yes!
  • 216:18 - 216:21
    Or I couldn't have laughed! I
    couldn't have said that to her!
  • 216:21 - 216:22
    That's enough,
    Hickman!
  • 216:22 - 216:26
    You know who we are,
    you're under arrest.
  • 216:26 - 216:28
    Come along and spill your guts where...
    Don't touch me!
  • 216:28 - 216:30
    You owe me a break!
    I phoned and made it
  • 216:30 - 216:32
    easy for you, didn't I?
    Just a few minutes!
  • 216:32 - 216:34
    Harry, you know I couldn't say
    that to Evelyn, don't you?
  • 216:34 - 216:37
    Unless...
    And you've been crazy ever since?
  • 216:37 - 216:40
    Everything you've said and done here...
    Now, Governor!
  • 216:40 - 216:42
    Up to your
    old tricks, eh?
  • 216:42 - 216:45
    I see what you're
    driving at, but I ca...
  • 217:01 - 217:03
    Yes, of course,
    Harry!
  • 217:03 - 217:05
    Ahh!
    I've been out of my mind ever since,
  • 217:05 - 217:06
    ever since
    I've been here!
  • 217:06 - 217:08
    You saw I was insane,
    didn't you?
  • 217:08 - 217:09
    (Moran)
    Can it! I've had enough of your act.
  • 217:09 - 217:11
    Save it for the jury.
  • 217:11 - 217:14
    Now listen, you guys,
    don't fall for his lies.
  • 217:14 - 217:16
    He's starting to get foxy now
    and thinks he'll plead insanity.
  • 217:16 - 217:18
    But he can't
    get away with that.
  • 217:18 - 217:21
    Bejees, you dumb dick!
  • 217:21 - 217:23
    You've got a crust trying
    to tell us about Hickey.
  • 217:23 - 217:27
    We've known him for years,
    and every one of us noticed
  • 217:27 - 217:29
    he was nutty the minute
    he showed up here.
  • 217:29 - 217:31
    If you'd seen the damned-fool
    things he made us do!
  • 217:31 - 217:33
    We only did
    them because we...
  • 217:33 - 217:35
    because we, we hoped
    he'd come out of it,
  • 217:35 - 217:38
    if we kidded him
    along and humored him.
  • 217:38 - 217:39
    Ain't that right,
    fellas?
  • 217:39 - 217:40
    That's right!
  • 217:40 - 217:43
    A fine bunch of rats!
  • 217:43 - 217:46
    Covering up for a dirty,
    cold-blooded murderer!
  • 217:46 - 217:48
    Is that so?
  • 217:48 - 217:50
    Bejees, you know
    the old story.
  • 217:50 - 217:53
    When Saint Patrick drove
    the snakes out of Ireland,
  • 217:53 - 217:56
    they swam to New York
    and joined the police force!
  • 217:56 - 217:58
    Ha, ha!
  • 217:58 - 218:00
    (snickering laughter)
  • 218:00 - 218:02
    You stand up for your
    rights, bejees, Hickey.
  • 218:02 - 218:05
    I've still got friends
    at the Hall.
  • 218:05 - 218:06
    I'll have this guy
    back in uniform
  • 218:06 - 218:08
    pounding a beat,
    where the only graft
  • 218:08 - 218:11
    he'll get will be stealing
    tin cans from the goats.
  • 218:11 - 218:14
    (everybody laughing)
  • 218:14 - 218:17
    Listen, you cockeyed old bum!
    For a plugged nickel I'd...
  • 218:17 - 218:21
    Come on, you.
    Oh, I want to go, officer.
  • 218:21 - 218:22
    I can hardly
    wait now.
  • 218:22 - 218:24
    I should have phoned you from
    the house right afterwards.
  • 218:24 - 218:27
    It was a waste
    of time coming here!
  • 218:27 - 218:29
    I've got to explain to Evelyn,
    but I know she's forgiven me.
  • 218:29 - 218:31
    She knows
    I was insane.
  • 218:31 - 218:33
    You've got me
    all wrong, officer.
  • 218:33 - 218:35
    I want to go to
    the chair.
  • 218:35 - 218:37
    Crap!
  • 218:37 - 218:39
    God, you're
    a dumb dick!
  • 218:39 - 218:42
    Do you suppose I
    give a damn about life now?
  • 218:42 - 218:44
    Why, you bone head.
  • 218:44 - 218:48
    I haven't got a single damned
    lying hope or pipe dream left.
  • 218:54 - 218:58
    Don't worry, Hickey! They
    can't give you the chair!
  • 218:58 - 219:02
    We'll testify you was crazy!
    Won't we, fellas?
  • 219:02 - 219:04
    Yeah, sure.
    Sure!
  • 219:04 - 219:07
    You'll be
    all right, Hickey.
  • 219:07 - 219:11
    He's gone... poor
    crazy son of a bitch.
  • 219:11 - 219:15
    Bejees, I need
    a drink.
  • 219:15 - 219:19
    Maybe it'll have the
    old kick now he's gone.
  • 219:19 - 219:23
    Yeah, boss, maybe
    we can get drunk now.
  • 219:33 - 219:37
    May the chair bring him
    peace at last,
  • 219:37 - 219:41
    the poor
    tortured bastard!
  • 219:41 - 219:48
    Yes, but he isn't the only one
    who needs peace, Larry.
  • 219:48 - 219:50
    I can't feel
    sorry for him.
  • 219:50 - 219:53
    He's lucky.
  • 219:53 - 219:57
    He's through now,
    it's all decided for him.
  • 220:00 - 220:03
    I wish it was
    decided for me.
  • 220:03 - 220:07
    I've never been any good
    at deciding things.
  • 220:07 - 220:09
    Even about selling out,
    it was that tart that
  • 220:09 - 220:15
    the detective agency got after
    me that put it in my mind.
  • 220:15 - 220:18
    You remember
    what Mother's like, Larry.
  • 220:18 - 220:21
    She always decided
    what I must do.
  • 220:21 - 220:26
    She made all
    the decisions for me.
  • 220:26 - 220:29
    She doesn't like anyone
    but herself to be free.
  • 220:35 - 220:37
    I suppose you think
    I ought to make
  • 220:37 - 220:42
    those dicks take me
    away with Hickey.
  • 220:42 - 220:48
    How could I
    prove it, Larry?
  • 220:48 - 220:53
    They'd think I was nutty
    'cause she's still alive!
  • 220:53 - 220:58
    You're the only one who can
    understand how guilty I am.
  • 220:58 - 221:01
    Because you know her, you know
    what I've done to her.
  • 221:01 - 221:02
    You're the only one
    who can understand
  • 221:02 - 221:06
    that I'm much
    guiltier than he is.
  • 221:06 - 221:07
    That what I did
    is a much worse than murder
  • 221:07 - 221:12
    because she is dead,
    and yet she has to live!
  • 221:12 - 221:17
    For a little while... but she
    can't live long in jail.
  • 221:17 - 221:23
    She loves her
    freedom too much.
  • 221:23 - 221:29
    I can't kid myself
    like Hickey...
  • 221:29 - 221:36
    that
    she's at peace.
  • 221:36 - 221:39
    As long as she lives,
    she'll never be able
  • 221:39 - 221:45
    to forget what I've done
    to her, not even in her sleep.
  • 221:45 - 221:48
    She'll never have
    a second's peace.
  • 221:59 - 222:04
    Jesus, Larry,
    say something!
  • 222:04 - 222:10
    I'm not bluffing either
    that I was crazy...
  • 222:10 - 222:12
    afterwards when I
    laughed and thought to myself.
  • 222:12 - 222:15
    "You know what you can do with
    your freedom pipe dream now,
  • 222:15 - 222:18
    "don't you, you damned old bitch."
    Go!
  • 222:18 - 222:21
    Get the hell out
    of life, God damn you!
  • 222:21 - 222:22
    Before I choke it
    out of you!
  • 222:22 - 222:25
    Go up... go up!
  • 222:25 - 222:28
    (sighing)
    Thanks, Larry!
  • 222:35 - 222:36
    I can see now
    that's the only
  • 222:36 - 222:40
    possible way I can ever
    get free from her.
  • 222:40 - 222:44
    I guess I've
    known that all my life.
  • 222:44 - 222:47
    (laughing nervously)
  • 222:51 - 222:55
    Oh!
  • 222:56 - 223:03
    It ought to give mother
    a little comfort, too.
  • 223:03 - 223:05
    She'll finally be able
    to play the incorruptible.
  • 223:05 - 223:12
    Mother of the Revolution, whose
    only child is a proletariat.
  • 223:12 - 223:16
    She'll be able to say:
    "Justice is done!
  • 223:16 - 223:22
    "So may all traitors die!"
    She'll be able to say...
  • 223:22 - 223:27
    "I'm glad
    he's dead!"
  • 223:27 - 223:35
    "Long live
    the Revolution!"
  • 223:35 - 223:37
    You know her, Larry,
    she's always a ham!
  • 223:37 - 223:41
    Go, for the love of Christ!
    You mad tortured bastard,
  • 223:41 - 223:43
    for your own sake!
  • 223:50 - 223:57
    Thanks, Larry,
    that's kind.
  • 223:57 - 224:01
    I knew you were the only one who
    could understand my side of it.
  • 224:09 - 224:12
    (giggling)
  • 224:12 - 224:16
    Hello, little Don,
    little monkey-face!
  • 224:16 - 224:20
    Don't be a fool,
    buy me a drink.
  • 224:20 - 224:24
    Sure I will,
    Hugo.
  • 224:24 - 224:29
    Tomorrow, beneath
    the willow trees.
  • 224:29 - 224:33
    Stupid fool! Hickey make
    you crazy, too.
  • 224:46 - 224:53
    I'm glad, Larry, they take that
    crazy Hickey away to asylum.
  • 224:53 - 224:55
    He makes me
    have bad dreams.
  • 224:55 - 224:57
    He makes me tell
    lies about myself.
  • 224:57 - 225:00
    He makes me want to spit
    on all I've ever dreamed.
  • 225:00 - 225:07
    Yes, I'm glad they
    take him to asylum!
  • 225:07 - 225:10
    (sighing)
  • 225:10 - 225:13
    I don't feel
    I'm dying now.
  • 225:13 - 225:19
    He was selling death to me,
    that crazy salesman.
  • 225:19 - 225:25
    I think I have a
    drink now, Larry.
  • 225:25 - 225:30
    Bejees, fellas, I'm feeling
    the old kick or I'm a liar!
  • 225:30 - 225:32
    It's putting life
    back in me.
  • 225:32 - 225:34
    It was Hickey that
    kept it from...
  • 225:34 - 225:37
    Bejees, I know that sounds
    crazy but he was crazy,
  • 225:37 - 225:40
    and he got all of us
    as bughouse as he was.
  • 225:40 - 225:43
    It's dangerous, too.
  • 225:43 - 225:45
    Look at me, pretend
    to start for a walk
  • 225:45 - 225:47
    just to keep
    him quiet.
  • 225:47 - 225:50
    I knew damned well it wasn't
    the right day for it.
  • 225:50 - 225:52
    The sun was broiling
  • 225:52 - 225:54
    and the streets full
    of automobiles.
  • 225:54 - 225:57
    Why, I could feel
    myself getting sunstroke.
  • 225:57 - 225:59
    An automobile damn
    near ran over me.
  • 225:59 - 226:01
    Didn't it, Rocky?
    He was watchin',
  • 226:01 - 226:03
    ask Rocky, didn't it?
    The automobile, boss?
  • 226:03 - 226:08
    Sure, I seen it,
    just missed you!
  • 226:08 - 226:10
    I thought you
    was a goner!
  • 226:10 - 226:16
    On the word of an
    honest bartender!
  • 226:16 - 226:18
    You're a bartender,
    all right.
  • 226:18 - 226:20
    And no one
    can say different.
  • 226:20 - 226:25
    But bejees, don't, don't
    pull that honest junk.
  • 226:25 - 226:29
    You and Chuck ought to have
    cards in the Burglars' Union!
  • 226:29 - 226:35
    (everybody laughing)
  • 226:35 - 226:36
    Bejees, it's good to hear
    someone laugh again.
  • 226:36 - 226:43
    All the time that bastar...
    Eh... poor old Hickey was here,
  • 226:43 - 226:45
    I didn't have
    the heart...
  • 226:45 - 226:50
    Bejees, I'm getting drunk
    and glad of it!
  • 226:50 - 226:54
    Come on, fellas,
    it's on the house!
  • 226:54 - 226:58
    (man giggling)
  • 226:59 - 227:01
    Ah... that poor
    old Hickey.
  • 227:01 - 227:07
    We mustn't hold him responsible
    for anything he's done.
  • 227:07 - 227:11
    We'll remember him the way
    we've always known him before:
  • 227:11 - 227:16
    The kindest, biggest-hearted guy
    that ever wore shoe leather. Oh, yeah.
  • 227:16 - 227:20
    Yeah, the best.
    Fine chap, fine chap!
  • 227:20 - 227:22
    Good luck to him
    in Matteawan!
  • 227:22 - 227:24
    Come on, bottoms up!
  • 227:32 - 227:35
    Christ!
    Why don't he?
  • 227:35 - 227:38
    "Why don't he"
    what?
  • 227:38 - 227:41
    Ah, don't be a fool,
    Hickey's gone!
  • 227:41 - 227:47
    He was crazy!
    Here, have a drink.
  • 227:47 - 227:50
    What's the matter
    with you, Larry?
  • 227:50 - 227:53
    You look funny.
  • 227:53 - 227:58
    What do you listen for
    out in backyard?
  • 227:58 - 228:00
    Well, I thank God now
    that me and Chuck did
  • 228:00 - 228:03
    all we could to humor
    the poor nut.
  • 228:03 - 228:06
    Imagine us goin' off like we
    really meant to get married,
  • 228:06 - 228:09
    when we ain't even
    picked out the farm yet!
  • 228:09 - 228:11
    (men giggling)
  • 228:11 - 228:15
    (laughing) Sure thing, baby!
    We kidded him we was serious.
  • 228:15 - 228:18
    I may as well say,
    though, I detected
  • 228:18 - 228:21
    his condition almost at once!
    Yeah.
  • 228:21 - 228:25
    All that talk of his
    about tomorrow, for example.
  • 228:25 - 228:29
    He had the fixed idea
    of the insane!
  • 228:29 - 228:32
    It only makes them
    worse to cross them!
  • 228:32 - 228:35
    Same with me, Jimmy, only I
    spent the day at the park.
  • 228:35 - 228:37
    I wasn't such a
    damned fool as to...
  • 228:37 - 228:39
    (laughing)
  • 228:39 - 228:43
    Pic-picture my predicament
    if I had gone to the consulate.
  • 228:43 - 228:47
    The pal of mine there is
    a bit of a humorous blighter.
  • 228:47 - 228:50
    He'd have gotten me a job
    out of pure spite.
  • 228:50 - 228:56
    So I strolled about, and finally
    came to roost in the park.
  • 228:56 - 228:59
    And lo and behold,
    who should be on
  • 228:59 - 229:02
    the neighboring bench
    but my battlefield companion,
  • 229:02 - 229:05
    the Boer that walks
    like a man!
  • 229:05 - 229:07
    (cheers and someone clapping)
  • 229:07 - 229:10
    Who, if the British Government
    had taken my advice,
  • 229:10 - 229:14
    would have been removed from
    his fetid corral on the "veldt"
  • 229:14 - 229:19
    straight to the baboon's cage
    in the London Zoo!
  • 229:19 - 229:22
    And little children would
    now be asking their nurses:
  • 229:22 - 229:26
    "Tell me, nana,
    is that the Boer General?"
  • 229:26 - 229:29
    "The one with
    the blue behind?"
  • 229:29 - 229:33
    (uproarious laughing)
  • 229:39 - 229:43
    No offense meant,
    Piet, old chap.
  • 229:43 - 229:47
    No offense taken,
    you... damned Limey!
  • 229:47 - 229:49
    (glasses clinking)
  • 229:49 - 229:52
    (laughing)
  • 230:04 - 230:09
    About the job, I felt
    the same as you, Cecil.
  • 230:09 - 230:15
    (Wetjoen spits
    and laughing continues)
  • 230:15 - 230:18
    What's the matter,
    Larry?
  • 230:18 - 230:20
    You look scared!
  • 230:20 - 230:22
    What you listen for
    out there?
  • 230:22 - 230:25
    No, sir.
  • 230:25 - 230:28
    I wasn't fool enough
    to get in no crap game,
  • 230:28 - 230:30
    not while
    Hickey's around.
  • 230:30 - 230:34
    The crazy people
    put a jinx on you!
  • 230:35 - 230:38
    It was of no good trying
    to explain to a crazy guy,
  • 230:38 - 230:41
    but it ain't
    the right time!
  • 230:41 - 230:45
    Hey! You know how
    getting reinstated is.
  • 230:45 - 230:48
    Bejees,
    I'm cockeyed!
  • 230:48 - 230:51
    Bejees, you're
    all cockeyed!
  • 230:51 - 230:54
    And bejees, we're
    all all right!
  • 230:54 - 230:59
    Let's have another.
  • 230:59 - 231:02
    What's the matter,
    Larry?
  • 231:02 - 231:06
    Why you keep
    eyes shut?
  • 231:06 - 231:10
    Huff!
    You look dead!
  • 231:10 - 231:13
    What you listen for
    in backyard?
  • 231:13 - 231:18
    You crazy fool!
    You give me bad dreams, too!
  • 231:18 - 231:20
    Hello there,
    Hugo!
  • 231:20 - 231:25
    (rattling and laughing)
  • 231:25 - 231:28
    Welcome
    to the party!
  • 231:28 - 231:30
    Yes, bejees, Hugo!
    Sit down, have a drink!
  • 231:30 - 231:32
    Have ten
    drinks, bejees!
  • 231:32 - 231:36
    (uncontrollable giggling)
  • 231:36 - 231:42
    Hello, little Harry!
  • 231:42 - 231:47
    Hello, nice funny
    little monkey faces!
  • 231:47 - 231:50
    Goddamned stupid
    bourgeois!
  • 231:50 - 231:51
    (loud cheering)
  • 231:51 - 231:53
    Soon comes
    the Day of Judgment!
  • 231:53 - 231:56
    (laughing and cheering)
  • 231:56 - 231:58
    Give me
    ten drinks, Harry.
  • 231:58 - 232:01
    Don't be a fool!
  • 232:01 - 232:03
    Gangway for two
    good whores!
  • 232:03 - 232:05
    (everybody cheers)
  • 232:05 - 232:07
    Yeah! And we want
    a drink, quick!
  • 232:07 - 232:11
    Yeah, yeah! Shake the lead
    outta your pants, pimp!
  • 232:11 - 232:14
    A little service, eh?
    Well, look who's here!
  • 232:14 - 232:16
    Hello there,
    sweethearts.
  • 232:16 - 232:22
    Jees, I was beginnin' to
    worry about you, honest!
  • 232:22 - 232:23
    Yeah? What kind
    of gag is this?
  • 232:23 - 232:26
    Come on and join
    the party, you broads!
  • 232:26 - 232:28
    Bejees, I'm glad
    to see you!
  • 232:28 - 232:30
    Hey, what? Come on!
    What's come off here?
  • 232:30 - 232:31
    Where's that
    louse, Hickey?
  • 232:31 - 232:33
    (laughing)
    Oh, the cops got him.
  • 232:33 - 232:36
    He's gone crazy
    and croaked his wife.
  • 232:36 - 232:38
    Oh, Jees!
  • 232:38 - 232:41
    So forget about
    that whore stuff.
  • 232:41 - 232:45
    I'll knock the block off
    if anyone calls you whores.
  • 232:45 - 232:48
    You're tarts, and what
    the hell of it?
  • 232:48 - 232:50
    You're as good
    as anyone.
  • 232:50 - 232:53
    Eeeh!
    So forget it, see?
  • 232:53 - 232:58
    That's our little bartender!
    Ain't he, Pearl?
  • 232:58 - 233:01
    Yeah, and a cute
    little Ginny at that!
  • 233:01 - 233:05
    And is he stinko!
  • 233:05 - 233:08
    Stinko is right, but he ain't
    got nothin' on us!
  • 233:08 - 233:11
    Jees, Rocky, did we have
    a big time at Coney!
  • 233:11 - 233:14
    Bejees, sit down,
    you dumb whores!
  • 233:14 - 233:16
    Welcome home,
    have a drink.
  • 233:16 - 233:18
    Have ten drinks,
    bejees!
  • 233:18 - 233:20
    Bejees, this
    is all right!
  • 233:20 - 233:24
    We'll make this my birthday
    party, and forget the other.
  • 233:24 - 233:27
    But who's missing?
    Where's the Old Wise Guy?
  • 233:27 - 233:29
    Where's Larry?
  • 233:29 - 233:32
    (Rocky)
    Oh, over by the window, boss.
  • 233:32 - 233:35
    Ah?
    He's got his eyes shut!
  • 233:35 - 233:40
    The old bastard's asleep!
    Oh, to hell with him!
  • 233:40 - 233:42
    Let's have a drink.
  • 233:42 - 233:43
    (glasses clinking)
  • 233:43 - 233:46
    (unintelligible conversations)
  • 233:46 - 233:50
    It's the only way
    out for him.
  • 233:50 - 233:55
    For the peace of all
    concerned, as Hickey said.
  • 233:55 - 233:58
    God damn his yellow soul!
  • 233:58 - 234:02
    If he doesn't soon, I'll
    go up and throw him off...
  • 234:02 - 234:04
    like a dog with
    its guts ripped out
  • 234:04 - 234:07
    that you'd put
    out of its misery!
  • 234:07 - 234:12
    (everybody laughing
    and talking merrily)
  • 234:26 - 234:27
    (loud thudding noise)
  • 234:27 - 234:29
    (screaming and exclamations)
  • 234:29 - 234:32
    What the hell was that?
    What the hell was that?
  • 234:32 - 234:36
    Something fell off
    the fire escape.
  • 234:36 - 234:39
    A mattress,
    I'll bet!
  • 234:39 - 234:43
    Some of these bums have been
    sleepin' on the fire escape!
  • 234:43 - 234:46
    There ain't no...
    They've got to cut it out!
  • 234:46 - 234:50
    Bejees, this, this, this
    ain't no... fresh-air cure.
  • 234:50 - 234:53
    Mattresses
    cost money.
  • 234:53 - 234:58
    Poor devil!
  • 234:58 - 235:02
    God rest his soul
    in peace.
  • 235:02 - 235:08
    (laughing and giggling)
  • 235:15 - 235:20
    I'll never be a success in the
    grandstand or anywhere else.
  • 235:20 - 235:23
    Life is too much for me.
  • 235:23 - 235:26
    I'll be a weak fool,
    looking with pity
  • 235:26 - 235:29
    at the two sides of everything
    'till the day I die,
  • 235:29 - 235:33
    and may that day
    come soon!
  • 235:33 - 235:38
    I'm the only real convert
    to death that Hickey made here.
  • 235:38 - 235:44
    From the bottom of my coward's
    heart, I mean that now.
  • 235:44 - 235:50
    Hey there, Larry! Come on
    over and get paralyzed!
  • 235:50 - 235:53
    What the hell you
    doing, sitting there?
  • 235:53 - 235:57
    Bejees, let's sing,
    let's celebrate!
  • 235:57 - 235:59
    Bejees, it's
    my birthday party!
  • 235:59 - 236:03
    Bejees, I'm oreyeyed!
    I want to sing!
  • 236:03 - 236:09
    * Every Sunday down
    to her home we go *
  • 236:09 - 236:15
    * All the boys and all
    the girls they love her so *
  • 236:15 - 236:20
    (everybody joins in)
    * Always jolly heart that is true I know *
  • 236:20 - 236:30
    * She is the Sunshine
    of Paradise Alley *
  • 236:30 - 236:32
    * By yon bonnie banks
    and by yon bonnie braes *
  • 236:32 - 236:36
    * Where the sun shines
    bright on Loch Lomond *
  • 236:36 - 236:40
    * Where me and my true love
    will never meet again *
  • 236:40 - 236:44
    * On the bonny, bonny
    banks of Loch Lomond *
  • 236:44 - 236:48
    * I will take the high road
    and I'll take the low road *
  • 236:48 - 236:51
    * And I'll be in Scotland
    before ye *
  • 236:51 - 236:56
    * But me and my true love
    will never meet again *
  • 236:56 - 237:00
    (Hugo growling loudly)
    * On the bonny bonny banks of Loch Lomond *
  • 237:00 - 237:02
    * "Dansons la Carmagnole!
    Vive le son des canons! *
  • 237:02 - 237:05
    * "Dansons la Carmagnole! Vive
    le son des canons! *
  • 237:05 - 237:07
    * "Dansons la Carmagnole!
    Vive le son des canons!" *
  • 237:07 - 237:09
    "The days grow hot,
    O Babylon!"
  • 237:09 - 237:13
    (cheering and chanting)
    "'Tis cool beneath thy willow trees!"
  • 237:13 - 237:18
    (laughing and giggling)
  • 237:25 - 237:30
    (old timey piano music)
  • 237:36 - 237:38
    *
Title:
The Iceman Cometh (1973)
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Duration:
03:58:59
ProjecteTransmate edited English subtitles for The Iceman Cometh (1973)
ProjecteTransmate edited English subtitles for The Iceman Cometh (1973)
ProjecteTransmate edited English subtitles for The Iceman Cometh (1973)
ProjecteTransmate edited English subtitles for The Iceman Cometh (1973)
ProjecteTransmate edited English subtitles for The Iceman Cometh (1973)
ProjecteTransmate edited English subtitles for The Iceman Cometh (1973)

English subtitles

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