Breaking the Code Page #8
- Year:
- 1996
- 75 min
- 721 Views
Mom! ... I was never engaged to her.
But you love her.
He was fond, yes. I loved her as a friend.
What is going to happen?
There will be a trial.
- Do you wear to court? - If.
- Will you go to prison? - Possibly.
Did you get caught? Have you found that man?
I told him.
Why? ... Why!
Excuse me.
Oh, Alan!
How you could touch a man like that? How could you do such a thing?
- Will that affect your career? - Can be.
- How? - I do not know!
What can I do to help you?
Well ... nothing.
But there must be something I can do.
Leave me please. You look so helpless.
This is how I feel.
Do you remember when you were in Hazelhurst?
You had to have ten or eleven years.
We had all been in Scotland for the summer holidays. You had to have ten or eleven years.
We had all been in Scotland for the summer holidays.
You remember?
Lochinver.
Dad went fishing for trout.
I draw. We drank tea picnics on the grass.
And then we had to return to India, and you had to go back to school,
- Back to Hazelhurst. - If.
- You remember? - Yes ... I remember. - Back to Hazelhurst. - If.
- You remember? - Yes ... I remember.
We took a taxi to school, and when we turn away
You ran down the road behind the cab.
Your arms were wide;
Your mouth was open; You were saying something,
shouting something; but I could not hear what it was.
There were some bushes at the school gates; rhododendrons, I think. shouting something; but I could not hear what it was.
There were some bushes at the school gates; rhododendrons, I think.
They were like a big green curtain that was running in front of my eyes.
Bushes you reached for my hand. He could not see.
I remember I was almost breathless panic. Bushes you reached for my hand. He could not see.
I remember I was almost breathless panic.
I wanted to jump out of the cab, running back and hold you in my arms forever.
I had no idea you felt that way.
At 9 pm, Mr. Turing,
He left the room to make a phone call.
He left his jacket on the chair arm and sustraje eight pounds of her.
After a while, she came into the kitchen again.
I was bent over me, she puts her head on my shoulder
and he took my hand between her legs.
I made another straw, but he never touched me.
No I did for my own sexual benefit,
but because I heard you paid for it.
I'll never do, even if I have chance. I know it's wrong.
Okay, Miller. Sign here.
- Only tea, tea with pastries. - Thank you.
Glad to see you, prof.
Glad to see you, too.
Thanks for coming to see me.
Well, I wanted you to know what happened
and I wanted to hear it from me, and ... you know, second-hand.
Thank you.
Oh, it's in the Sunday papers.
One headline read: "The defendant had a big brain."
So it could not be worse, I guess.
Although I used the last time, so I'm not worried.
I thought of you, very much. It must have been horrible.
No, actually it was not as bad as I feared.
I was put in the cells during the trial.
Being behind bars was not in any way unpleasant.
It was a wonderful lack of responsibility, Being in jail was by no means unpleasant.
It was a wonderful lack of responsibility,
as if I were to be in school.
Did you think you were going to put in prison?
No, not really.
No. It was an offender with no history, after all.
It is laughable ... offender with no history.
No, I thought the chances were that I put on probation.
- They're giving drugs. - Which?
They're giving estrogen.
female sex hormones. It is supposed to eliminate male sexual desire.
But it's only for a year. Then everything returns to normal, hopefully.
That's horrible. Can not you refuse?
I have not, no, no, requested to do so.
I got paroled always to accept drug treatment.
- They're growing breasts. - Oh, Alan!
And no one seems to know whether or not disappear when you stop taking drugs.
- All right. We'll have to wait and see. - Horrible.
I keep wondering if I should wear a bra.
Your mother did you know?
Yes, I was afraid to tell her.
We will certainly be feared!
In this case, it was wonderful.
Extraordinary.
This seems we could have together more.
I'm glad.
Yes me too.
What happened to the boy?
The boy? Oh! They have given probation.
Works in London, I think. You know, I never see.
Here you go sir.
- So you married! - If.
- Jobless? - Only housewife.
- You are happy? - If.
Well, I guess so. I do not think much about it.
That means that you are.
I hope you're not too unhappy.
No I'm unhappy at all!
I have very good friends.
I had a very lively holiday.
- Norway. - Norway? I had a very lively holiday.
- Norway. - Norway?
There are no legal problems in Norway.
I was told that there are places where they have dances for men.
Not true, unfortunately.
But I met a charming young man named Kjell.
By the way, he has written me want to come stay ...
a few days, maybe for a while.
Obviously I caused a good impression.
What kind of work are you doing?
- I'm at the University of Manchester. - Yes I already know that.
We have built a digital computer.
Remember my theories about a universal machine? Well, we have done.
We have built one, and it is all thanks to the work we did in Bletchley.
How exiting! It must have been very exciting.
And I'm using the computer to simulate
growth patterns of plants and animals.
As the Fibonacci pattern in a pineapple.
- Remember when I told you about that? - If.
One summer evening, when you thought you were in love with me.
I went to church with your mother and I cried throughout the sermon. One summer evening, when you thought you were in love with me.
I went to church with your mother and I cried throughout the sermon.
You have not changed one iota in Ireland.
- It is very kind of you to say that. - Is not true!
Oh, it seems to have been long since Bletchley. - It is very kind of you to say that. - Is not true!
Oh, it seems to have been long since Bletchley.
- It is not true. - A lifetime!
I wonder if your cup of tea is still chained to the radiator.
No ... you know, I was scolded for it.
- Who? - Well, Dilly Knox.
Poor Mr. Knox.
I went to see him when he was ill, near the end.
- It was good of you. - Oh, I was fond of him.
I was so sick, I was praying for him in the Church.
Mr. Knox had his theories.
"Christianity is a scam two thousand years," he said.
"It makes you fear, nothing to fear, and wait, with nothing to expect."
Oh! It was an extraordinary man.
I guess you knew he was gay.
What?
With a homosexual inclination.
He had a kind of romance with Maynard Keynes.
Knox? He had a kind of romance with Maynard Keynes.
Knox?
When he was young.
Are you sure?
My uncle went to school with him.
Holy God.
With Lytton Strachey, too, but that was in Cambridge, not Eton.
- Was ... was Lytton Strachey lover? - Apparently ... I thought you knew.
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"Breaking the Code" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Nov. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/breaking_the_code_4647>.
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