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Claire Lodge:
You see, Charlie hadn't a penny when [...]
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D
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Mrs. Kensington-Bly:
Why didn't the old lady pick [...]
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Margit Agnew:
I warn you. My patience is not inexh [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Oh, you're the most revolting, cheap [...]
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Charles Lodge:
I remember men in our regiment who' [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Waldo's a sort of distant relative o [...]
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Mr. Keough:
I, Miss Agnew, was the first G-man - l [...]
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Charles Lodge:
Miss Agnew, abuse me if you will, b [...]
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Charles Lodge:
I met her in Bangkok. It was the ra [...]
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Charles Lodge:
You may think it very strange, but [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Yes, I've known your type before. Yo [...]
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Charles Lodge:
Well, don't think. You're an actor. [...]
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Charles Lodge:
Women don't like noble, self-sacrif [...]
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Judge Blynn:
Would the bride and gloom please join [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Keough, how do you know all this?
M [...]
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Mrs. Kensington-Bly:
I don't come here to look at [...]
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Margit Agnew:
In addition to being the most unheal [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Mr. Lodge, in January, 1931, you wer [...]
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Mrs. Kensington-Bly:
How many children are they go [...]
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Waldo Beaver:
Why do Bohemians have to stay up all [...]
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Charles Lodge:
Who rang that gong?
Margit Agnew:
[...]
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Charles Lodge:
Now see hear, Miss Margit of Margit [...]
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Margit Agnew:
You were the best on the force, Keou [...]
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Mrs. Kensington-Bly:
It begins to look more and mo [...]
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Charles Lodge:
[on the phone]
Hello, Claire? How a [...]
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Margit Agnew:
You children must be very tired. Go [...]
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Charles Lodge:
I give you my personal guarantee th [...]
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Waldo Beaver:
To know Charlie is to love him. He's [...]
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Judge Blynn:
When you make up your minds as to who [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Mr. Lodge, I appeal to you as a gent [...]
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Charles Lodge:
Stonewall!
Mrs. Kensington-Bly:
Ch [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Check the lunatic asylums. He's prob [...]
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Margit Agnew:
You're the lowest, most contemptible [...]
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Charles Lodge:
People often say what they mean whe [...]
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Charles Lodge:
You must have some of this spaghett [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Angelo?
Angelo - Margit's Gardener: [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Well, it was nice of you to come to [...]
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Charles Lodge:
We're waiting for Waldo.
Irene Agn [...]
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Mrs. Kensington-Bly:
[to Margit]
Oh why show me re [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Oh, you big bigamist!
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Margit Agnew:
[speaking of her sister]
I'm very pr [...]
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Mrs. Kensington-Bly:
[to Margit about her dress sh [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Waldo, did you know about this?
Wal [...]
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Charles Lodge:
Oh well, don't you... don't you wan [...]
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Margit Agnew:
You've made my life miserable from t [...]
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Charles Lodge:
I was a professional guide in Paris [...]
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Charles Lodge:
Don't think, you're an actor.
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Margit Agnew:
One should know everything in advanc [...]
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Shrank:
She's right. I'm for ya, lady. I love my w [...]
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Charles Lodge:
[on the phone to Claire]
It made me [...]
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Waldo Beaver:
He thinks everybody ought to live in [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Making fun of respectability is the [...]
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Charles Lodge:
Well, you see I've always had an id [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Keough?
Mr. Keough:
Yes, Miss Agnew [...]
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Margit Agnew:
You swore to me you'd never see Iren [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Do you take dope?
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Margit Agnew:
Adolescent bohemianism! Sleeping all [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Oh, it wasn't your fault. You were o [...]
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Mrs. Kensington-Bly:
[after Charles open a door an [...]
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Irene Agnew:
You just don't understand her. She's [...]
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Charles Lodge:
You're supposed to be an Arabian, o [...]
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Mrs. Kensington-Bly:
A liar and a horse thief. And [...]
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Waldo Beaver:
Gangway, I've got yump!
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Charles Lodge:
Now you look at a woman as if she h [...]
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Charles Lodge:
Why don't you stay and join our lit [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Why should the very simple process o [...]
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Mr. Keough:
Don't worry. A detective is like a doc [...]
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Margit Agnew:
I used to dream about knights in arm [...]
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Margit Agnew:
Oh, if you were only a man.
Charles [...]
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Claire Lodge:
If you want to keep Charlie in love [...]
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