唐顿庄园第二季第八集_7(在线收听

   唐顿庄园第二季第八集_7

  [INT. SERVANTS' HALL - DAY]
  [One of the serving bells rings. Bates turns to one of the extra servants.]
  MR BATES
  Take care of that, thank you.
  [The servant leaves as Anna enters.]
  MR BATES
  How're you doing?
  ANNA
  I'm not sure. Her Ladyship's worse.
  MR BATES
  I'm sorry.
  ANNA
  Jane said you wanted to see me.
  MR BATES
  It's only to say that I've done it. I've booked the registrar. [Anna beams.]
  ANNA
  When for?
  MR BATES
  He's had a cancellation, so it's...it's Friday afternoon.
  ANNA
  This Friday?
  [Ethel enters with Charlie.]
  ANNA
  Ethel? What are you doing here?
  [Anna greats Charlie as Jane enters.]
  JANE
  Those Bryants have turned up agai--
  ETHEL
  That's what.
  ANNA
  I'll find Mrs Hughes and come back for you.
  [Anna smiles at Bates on her way out.]
  [INT. PARLOUR - DAY]
  MRS HUGHES
  I hope I haven't kept you waiting.
  MRS BRYANT
  No, no.
  MRS HUGHES
  I'm afraid we have illness in the house, so I hope you can excuse Lord and Lady Grantham.
  MR BRYANT
  It's not them we've come to see, is it? Is she here?
  MRS HUGHES
  She's just coming now.
  [Anna opens the door for Ethel and Charlie.]
  MRS BRYANT
  May I meet him properly?
  ETHEL
  Come along, Charlie.
  [She carries him to Mrs Bryant, both of them smiling.]
  ETHEL
  This nice lady is your grandmother.
  MRS BRYANT
  Perhaps you could call me Gran.
  MRS HUGHES
  He's a stout little chap, isn't he?
  MRS BRYANT
  And so like Charles. I thought it when we were last here. I know what was said at the time and Mr Bryant's sorry for it now, but I could see he was just like Charles.
  MR BRYANT
  Never mind all that. Let's get down to business.
  ETHEL
  Business?
  MRS HUGHES MR BRYANT
  That's what you want from us, isn't it? Find out what we mean to do for little Charlie in the future.
  [INT. KITCHENS - DAY]
  DAISY MASON
  What do you mean, "she might die"?
  O'BRIEN
  What do you think happens with a fatal illness? The fairy's come?
  MRS PATMORE
  By heaven, if anything happens to her, it won't be your fault, Miss O'Brien. I've never seen such care.
  O'BRIEN
  I wish I could talk to her, that's all, but she doesn't know me.
  MRS PATMORE
  I'm sure she knows how hard you've worked for her.
  O'BRIEN
  It's not that. There's something I need...Never mind. Either I will or I won't.
  [O'Brien takes the tray and exits.]
  MRS PATMORE
  You never know people, do you? You can work with them for twenty years and you don't know them at all.
  [INT. PARLOUR - DAY]
  ETHEL
  What? You mean, give him up? Never see him again?
  MR BRYANT
  Those are my terms.
  MRS HUGHES
  But...would it hurt if Ethel were to care for him in your own house? She could be his nurse.
  MRS BRYANT
  That might be possible.
  ETHEL
  MRS HUGHES MR BRYANT
  Of course she can't be his nurse. Just think for a minute. We mean to bring him up as a gentleman, send him to [Harrowsay?] and Oxford, and all the while his mother's down in the servants' hall? How does that work?
  ETHEL
  Well, I-- I could.
  MR BRYANT
  No, no, no. Don't you see? We want to raise him as our grandson, not as a housemaid's bastard.
  MRS BRYANT
  Well, he has to know the truth sometime.
  MR BRYANT
  Maybe. But not for a long time. Till then, his father had a wartime marriage until he died, and his mother succumbed to Spanish flu.
  MRS BRYANT
  A lot of people have.
  MRS HUGHES
  We've quite a few upstairs.
  MR BRYANT
  And that, for many years at least, is all that Charlie will be told.
  ETHEL
  So, I'm just to be written out? Painted over, buried?
  MR BRYANT
  What matters is what's good for Charlie.
  ETHEL
  No. What's good for Charlie, and what's good for you?
  [Ethel stands up angry. She walks over to Mrs Bryant.]
  ETHEL
  You've got a heart, I know you have. You see what he's asking?
  [Mr Bryant stands.]
  MR BRYANT
  Ethel, consider this: in the world as it is, compare the two futures. The first as my heir, educated, privileged, rich, able to do what he wants, to marry whom he likes. The second as the bastard son--
  [Mrs Hughes stands up.]
  MRS HUGHES
  I think we've heard enough of that word for one day.
  MR BRYANT
  Very well. As the...nameless offshoot of drudge. You're his mother. Which would you choose for him?
  ETHEL
  Suppose I could be his nurse and never tell him who I am? Suppose I promised that?
  [Mrs Bryant stands.]
  MRS BRYANT
  Surely--
  MR BRYANT
  Come on, we all know that's a promise you could never keep.
  [Anna enters.]
  ANNA
  I'm sorry, Mrs Hughes. We must send for the doctor to come at once. Her Ladyship's much worse.
  MRS BRYANT
  I--I'm afraid--
  MR BRYANT
  Go where you're needed, we've has our say, and you know how to reach us when you've made your decision.
  [Mrs Bryant and Ethel exchange a look.]
  MR BRYANT
  Come along Daphne.
  [INT. LADY GRANTHAM'S BEDROOM - DAY]
  [O'Brien continues to nurse Cora alone.]
  CORA
  O'Brien? Is that you, O'Brien?
  [O'Brien smiles.]
  O'BRIEN
  Yes, milady. It's me, milady.
  CORA
  You're so good to me. You've always been so good to me.
  O'BRIEN
  Not always, milady.
  CORA
  So good.
  O'BRIEN
  No. And the fact is, I want to ask so much for your forgiveness, because I did something once which I bitterly regret. Bitterly. And if you could only know how much--
  CORA
  So very good.
  [Cora is clearly still delirious. Robert enters.]
  ROBERT
  How is she?
  O'BRIEN
  She slept and she seemed better, then suddenly the fever came back.
  ROBERT
  O'Brien, thank you for the way you've looked after her. I mean it, I'm very grateful, whatever comes.
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