THE LIFE AND DEATH
                                      OF SUGAR CANDY

                                       Retitled to:

                                    THE LIFE AND DEATH
                                     OF COLONEL BLIMP

                                  Screenplay written by
                            Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger

                             Based on the cartoon character
                                  created by David Lowe























                                                   Pre & Production Draft
                                                   June 1942
                                                   Contains Revisions using
                                                square brackets [[ ]] & [ ] 

               Copyright (c) 1994
               The Estates of
               Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger
               All rights reserved

  


               THE RESURRECTION OF 'BLIMP'

               A NOTE ON THE SCRIPT AND FILM

               Michael Powell believed that 'Emeric's screenplay for Colonel 
               Blimp should be in every film archive, in every film 
               library.'* The question is, however, in what form? The text 
               printed here attempts something that is still rare in the 
               publication of screenplays and scripts. Usually these are 
               transcripts of what finally appeared on screen, based either 
               on the approved release script or simply on a description of 
               the dialogue and action. Occasionally an 'original' script 
               is published, although this is more common in cases where 
               that script has not been filmed and is therefore offered as 
               'literature'. The inevitable differences between script and 
               finished film are due to many factors, some creative, others 
               practical and circumstantial. A comparison of the original 
               and the result would therefore often be of little interest, 
               without a lengthy commentary on the production itself. In a 
               few cases, however, script and film remain relatively close 
               and the reasons for variation are interesting and 
               comprehensible. The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp is one 
               such case. There is only one known 'full script' version, 
               entitled The Life and Death of Sugar Candy' (clearly dating 
               from some time in June 1942. when it was hoped this concession 
               would win War Office approval). Subsequent memos identifying 
               scenes that were to be cut, changed and added indicate that 
               this remained

               * A Life in Movies, p. 409.

               The basis of the film's production (and its indications of 
               sequences already cut have been retained). What makes it 
               specially valuable is that it goes well beyond mere dialogue 
               and action, often describing location, character and 
               atmosphere in a highly suggestive way. Hence the decision to 
               present this script as written, together with a notation of 
               the film as it appears today. The system used is similar to 
               that devised by Bambi Ballard for her edition of Abel Gance's 
               script of Napoleon. This involves using double square brackets 
               [[ ]] to enclose original script material which does not 
               appear in the final film, and single square brackets [ ] for 
               material added during production. This means that in some 
               cases two variants of essentially the same speech appear 
               consecutively, which is not ideal, but hopefully the chance 
               to compare versions and trace shifts will compensate for any 
               local irritation. Names and titles which were changed in 
               production (such as Mullins to Murdoch, Colonel to General, 
               Die Walkure to Mignon) are given in their final form after 
               the first indication of a change.

               What of the film 'text' itself? This was originally released 
               in July 1943, running for 163 minutes. By the early 70s, the 
               only known versions of comparable length were two original 
               nitrate copies held by the British Film Institute Deposit 
               Print Collection and screened occasionally at the National 
               Film Theatre.* All other copies appeared to be, at most, 
               between 130 and 140 minutes. The Radio Times, billing the 
               first UK television transmission on Boxing Day 1972, quoted 
               BBC sources: 'this is the longest version we could find. But 
               rumour hath it the original ran over three hours!' The slot 
               allocated indicates an anticipated length of about 130 
               minutes.

               * One of these was donated by Powell and the other by Rank, 
               apparently in the late 50s.  I am grateful for this and other 
               information about versions to David Meeker, Keeper of Feature 
               Films at the National Film and Television Archive.

               When, how often, and by how much was Blimp cut? These are 
               the questions which still lack definitive answers, but some 
               reliable evidence and explanation can now be given. The US 
               Motion Picture Almanac lists Blimp for three consecutive 
               years, from 1944-45 to 1946-47, as belonging to 'Archers-
               General' and at its original length of 163 minutes.* 
               Correspondence in the Powell papers indicates that there was 
               considerable speculation about how to release it in the United 
               States; but despite the pleas of specialist independent dis-
               tributors, it was eventually assigned to United Artists under 
               Rank's overall deal with that company, and released by it in 
               May 1945. The running time listed in the Motion Picture Herald 
               review of 24 March 1945 was 148 minutes and the title is 
               given as Colonel Blimp. Four years later, Blimp resurfaced 
               in the trade press with a report that Rank had initiated 
               action by the Federal Trade Commission to restrain UA from 
               showing a version of 91 minutes, cut from the 'original' of 
               143 minutes. + The outcome, it was stressed, was academic, 
               since the film 'had been out of circulation for over a year'. 
               By the early 50s, it appears that either the US version had 
               become the only one available in Britain, or that the film 
               had been further shortened - possibly in order to fit into a 
               double-bill. Running times of 140 and 120 minutes have been 
               quoted by various sources. All of these shortened versions 
               (if there was more than one) seem to have had the Prologue 
               removed, so that the action started in 1902 and moved forward 
               to the Turkish Bath in 1942-43.  This, at any rate, was the 
               version that I first saw in a nitrate print in 1971, but 
               unfortunately did not time.

               In 1976, the BFI Deposit Collection was handed over to the 
               National Film Archive, which took the opportunity to 
               'cannibalize' the three prints it now held, making a nitrate 
               viewing copy of some 160 minutes. This was first seen publicly 
               in 1978 at the FIAF Congress in Brighton and at the National 
               Film Theatre's Powell-Pressburger retrospective in October-
               November 1978. A first phase of restoration then started, 
               with support from the BBC, to make a printable safety 
               negative, based on the original Technicolor separations. The 
               result was unsatisfactory technically, but capable of being 
               enhanced electronically for a TV transmission on 11 October 
               1980, billed as allowing the film to be 'seen tonight on 
               television for the first time in its full original version'.

               Work continued at the NFA, supervised by Paul de Burgh and 
               with help from the Rank Film Laboratories and a grant from 
               the Sainsbury Charitable Trust, which resulted in a new safety 
               negative. This provided the basis of a reissue of the film 
               by BFI Distribution in 1985, after a Gala Screening at the 
               Screen on the Hill on 18 July, attended by Powell and 
               Pressburger. It has been used as the basis for annotating 
               the original script.

               * Rank's original distributor, General, still existed in the 
               US; and The Archers seem also to have been active in trying 
               to place their film. Hence this 'holding' designation.

               + Motion Picture Herald, 15 January 1949; Kinematograph 
               Weekly, 13 January 1949, p. 22. Geoffrey Macnab refers to 
               these reports, but claims in his J. Arthur Rank and the 
               British Film Industry (London, 1933) that the film was reduced 
               'to only a little over a tidy hour', thereby adding further 
               confusion to an already tangled tale.

                
.

               FADE IN FIELD MESSAGE:

               [[FROM: CORPS COMMANDER

               TO:     ALL UNITS

               16:00 HOURS

               MESSAGE BEGINS

               EXERCISE BEER-MUG

               TIME CAFE DE PARIS

               MESSAGE ENDS

               10 JUNE

               (Added in pencil at the bottom: 'Make it like the real thing' 
               and initialled by the C.O.]] 

               [4BDE BMI DATE:

               BEER MUG STOP BUTTERFLY 

               23.59 HOURS]

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                        SEQUENCE 1

               A series of shots, composed and edited, to produce the maximum 
               effect of speed, efficiency and modern equipment. Locations 
               must be chosen roughly between Staines and Elstree, along 
               line of the Green Belt and the arterial roads, giving 
               composite impression of the approaches to West London. Some 
               air-shots will be necessary.  The intention is to create, as 
               simply as possible, an impression of the mechanization and 
               resources of the modern British Army.

               EXTERIORS: DESPATCH RIDERS

               A small army of motorcycle despatch riders, several hundred 
               of them, are tearing along an arterial road at full speed.

               At a roundabout they divide into three columns, one going 
               right, another left, the third straight on. We follow the 
               third column.

               The by-pass ends at a T-road. The column divides again, one 
               column west, the other east. 'We follow the eastbound column.  
               The eastbound column divides again, one half going south. We 
               plunge, with the southbound column, into a country road. The 
               riders are now about twenty in number.

               The column dashes through a water-splash and divides again 
               into two parties. We follow the smaller group of riders.  
               Three are left as they race into a picturesque village 
               occupied by troops. One of the riders stops at a strong-point 
               where an eager officer grabs the message.  

               Now there are only two riders.  

               At a farm, one of the two riders turns off the lane through 
               a farmyard.

               [[We follow him, through the farm and down a bumpy cart-track 
               which leads to the headquarters in the field of 'B' Company, 
               the 2nd Battalion, the 4th Brigade, the 2nd Division of the 
               6th Army Corps.]] 

                                        SEQUENCE 2

                               Exteriors: H.Q. 'B' Company

               'B' Company is a rifle company. [[Headquarters is a field, 
               well situated strategically but damnably uncomfortable.  The 
               Company has been dug in by itself for four days.  It is in 
               touch by runner with Battalion H.Q.

               It is a fine evening now but for the past three days it has 
               rained, which has made enthusiasm difficult, and living, 
               cooking and sleeping impossible.  They have done all the 
               proper things, camouflaged their vehicles, and taken advantage 
               of the surrounding terrain, what there is of it.]] 

               [They have made their headquarters in a farm.]  The men are 
               half-starved, trained to a hair, ready for. anything and 
               bored stiff. That goes for the officers too.

               COMMANDING OFFICER'S BILLET

               LIEUTENANT 'SPUD' WILSON is shaving under difficulties [[and 
               a hawthorn hedge]] [in a barn].  He is a very large, tough, 
               rude, young officer. But he has a manner. He gets away with 
               murder.  He is popular with his Company and stands well with 
               his Colonel.  

               He has one creed in war: he believes in winning the FIRST 
               BATTLE.

               The DESPATCH RIDER rides up and [[starts to open his wallet]] 
               [is toppled from his motorcycle by a rope stretched across 
               the yard].

               ['STUFFY' GRAVES, a platoon commander, is keeping watch from 
               high in the barn.

                                     [[D.R.
                         Message from the Corps, sir.]] 

                                     STUFFY
                         Message has just arrived, Spud.

               The ambushed DESPATCH RIDER picks himself up.

                                     RIDER
                         What's the ruddy idea?

                                     SOLDIER
                         It's total war, isn't it? What do 
                         you want?

                                     RIDER
                         Message from H.Q. Where's the C.O.?

                                     SOLDIER
                         In the barn. Follow me.

               The DESPATCH RIDER continues on his bike through the farm.

               Inside the barn, SPUD is still shaving. The SERGEANT-MAJOR 
               enters.

                                     S.M
                         Message from H.Q., sir.]

                                     SPUD
                         Read it, [Sgt. Hawkins].

                                     S.M.
                         [It's in code, sir.]
                              (He reads.)
                         'Message begins: Exercise Invasion 
                         of London Area by Regular Army, Home 
                         Guard defending. War starts at 
                         midnight. Message ends.'  The C.O.'s 
                         put in pencil [here], sir, 'Make it 
                         like the real thing.'

                                     SPUD
                         [[Platoon Commanders]][Oh, he has, 
                         has he? Section commanders!]

               SERGEANT-MAJOR puts fingers in mouth and gives special 
               whistle.  Sound of men coming from different directions. 
               SPUD continues shaving, communing with himself.

               By now the platoon commanders are before him: 'STUFFY' GRAVES, 
               'ROBIN' HOOD, 'TOMMY' TUCKER and the SERGEANT-MAJOR.

               SPUD addresses them sardonically.

                                     SPUD
                         [[Gentlemen!]]  [Message from H.Q.] 
                         War starts at midnight. You have 
                         your orders. Tell the men!

                                     TOMMY
                         Ay, ay, sir.

                                     SPUD
                         And tell them to make it like the 
                         real thing.

                                     STUFFY
                         What do they mean by 'like the real 
                         thing', Spud? 

                                     SPUD
                              (Savagely)
                         [Well,] obviously [[prisoners must 
                         be bayoneted to death, women must be 
                         raped,]]our losses divided by ten 
                         and the enemy's multiplied by twenty!

                                     [[STUFFY
                         Yessir.]] 

                                     [S.M.
                         Anything else for me, sir? 

                                     SPUD
                         No.]

               He and the others see that SPUD is in no good humour and 
               they turn to go. SPUD goes on shaving, still communing:

                                     SPUD:
                         'War starts at midnight'. We know.

                                     [STUFFY
                              (Joining in the chorus 
                              rhythm)
                         They know.]

                                     SPUD
                         We attack.

                                     STUFFY
                         They counter-attack.

                                     SPUD
                         Like the real thing - my Aunt Fanny! 
                         Like the real thing--

               Suddenly a great idea strikes him, his voice changes, he 
               rises from his seat transfigured.

                                     SPUD
                         LIKE THE REAL THING! Sergeant 
                         Hawkins![[Stuffy, Robin, Tommy]]  
                         [Section commanders!]

               By this time they are all around him again. He starts to 
               wipe the soap off his face as he speaks.

                                     SPUD
                         So War starts at midnight, does it? 
                         [[Sergeant-Major!]]

                                     S.M.
                         Sir!

                                     SPUD:
                         We attack at six!  [[We'll]] take 
                         all the [tommy-guns and][[Brens and 
                         three - no]] four [no, three] trucks. 
                         Section leaders with tommy-guns. Arm 
                         the men with [bombs,] rifles, 
                         bayonets.[[fifty rounds of spare, 
                         pick handles.  I'll need all the 
                         officers]].

                                     S.M.
                         Yessir.

                                     SPUD
                         Tommy, [from your section] - Rice, 
                         Unsworth, [yes] the Owens, Nobby, 
                         Toots and Cochrane?

                                     [TOMMY
                         Not Cochrane, sir.

                                     SPUD
                         All right, I leave it to you.] Stuffy, 
                         who are the biggest toughs in your 
                         lot?

                                     STUFFY
                         Bill Wall, Wimpey, Popeye, Wizard...

                                     SPUD
                         Yours Robin?

                                     ROBIN
                         Frank, Skeets and Duggie Stuart 
                         [Taffy, Geordie and Dai Evans.]

                                     SPUD
                              ([In mock Welsh accent)
                         We must have him, look you.  All 
                         right. Get going!][[We'll make it 
                         real for them.]]

                                     [S.M.
                         Excuse me, sir.

                                     SPUD
                         Yes.

                                     S.M.
                         Did you say that we attack before 
                         war is declared? 

                                     SPUD
                         Yes, like Pearl Harbour. Now get 
                         going. Oh, by the way, there's just 
                         one stop, at the Bull. I've got a 
                         date there with Mata Hari.

                                     STUFFY
                         Careless talk...

                                     SPUD
                         Yeah. Now scram.]

                                      SEQUENCE 3 OUT

                                   SEQUENCES 4, 5, 6, 7

                        Exteriors and Interiors of Spud's Commando 

               Dashing down Western Avenue towards London and passing through 
               a barricade.  

               [The Trucks pull in at the Bull. SPUD goes towards the 
               building alone.

                                     SPUD
                         Five minutes easy, Sergeant.
                              (Calls to another 
                              truck.)
                         Five minutes easy, Stuffy.

                                                      RAPID FADE TO BLACK: 

               Soldier swatting outside as before.

                                     TOMMY
                         I wonder what's keeping Spud?

               ANGELA CANNON (JOHNNY') appears at the door, unnoticed by 
               the soldiers, and moves stealthily towards her car. They see 
               her.

                                     JOHNNY
                         Afternoon, Sergeant.

                                     S.M.
                              (Puzzled)
                         Afternoon, miss.
                              (Realization dawns.)
                         Hey!

               JOHNNY quickly drives off as the soldiers rush towards her.

                                     S.M.
                         Back in the trucks!]

               INTERIOR: SECOND TRUCK

               SPUD points ahead.

                                     SPUD
                         See that barricade, my [[hearties]] 
                         [boys.  Well] at midnight it's going 
                         to be closed.

                                     STUFFY
                         And [[none of the wicked enemy can 
                         pass]] [of course the enemy can't 
                         get] through before because - [why?] 

                                     WHOLE TRUCK
                              (With relish)
                         WAR STARTS AT MIDNIGHT!

               SPUD grins and waves to the Home Guard on the barricade.

               EXTERIOR: BARRICADE: WESTERN AVENUE 

               The Home Guard waves to SPUD'S commando, who all wave back.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

               EXTERIOR: WESTERN AVENUE

               The commando dashes by. Three Bren Carriers form a screen; 
               then the four 15-cwt trucks at careful intervals of about 
               100 yards, all travelling at full speed.

               INTERIOR: FIRST TRUCK

               TOMMY TUCKER sits by the DRIVER as Officer-Navigator to the 
               raid. He has maps of London but he knows the streets by heart.  
               The men crowded in the truck behind him with their weapons 
               all ready are as keen as mustard.  

                                     DRIVER
                         What's the objective, sir?  

                                     TOMMY
                         [[Boodles Club, 28 St James's Street]] 
                         [Royal Bathers' Club, Piccadilly.] 
                         You all know your stuff?  

                                     CHORUS
                         Yessir!  

                                     VOICE #1
                         What about Mata Hari?  

                                     VOICE #2
                         We'll beat her to it.

                                     VOICE #3
                         I know a couple of short cuts after 
                         Marble Arch.

                                     [[TOMMY
                         Are the other trucks O.K.?

                                     VOICE
                         Right behind us, sir.]] 

               [[INTERIOR: SECOND TRUCK

               SPUD, the SERGEANT-MAJOR and STUFFY.  His runner, his driver 
               and his batman, three other men armed with rifles.  All look 
               grim and full of suppressed excitement.  SPUD has a bandage 
               round his head and looks very cross.

                                     S.M.
                         Barricade ahead, sir.
                              (Tense pause)
                         It's open! 

               EXTERIOR: BARRICADE: WESTERN AVENUE

               It is manned and defended but not yet closed as it is only 
               six o'clock.  SPUD'S commando is approaching.  The Bren 
               Carriers rattle, their crews waving.  Thedefending forces 
               wave back, innocently.]] 

                                   SEQUENCES 8 & 9 OUT 

               [INTERIOR: TRUCK

               They see ANGELA'S car ahead in the London traffic.

                                     VOICE
                         There she is! Get the other truck to 
                         close up. See if you can pass her.

               A taxi cuts in between the truck and the car.

                                     VOICE
                         Blast that taxi! Steady, keep right 
                         on his tail. Second left.  We've got 
                         her!

               EXTERIOR: SANDBAGGED ENTRANCE OF ROYAL BATHERS' CLUB

               ANGELA pauses for an instant at the club entrance, then rushes 
               in.]
.

                                    SEQUENCES  10 & 11

                       Exterior and Interiors: Royal Bathers' Club

               [[EXTERIOR: STREET SIGN

               Impressive building.  Street sign on frontage: 'St James's 
               Street.  S.W.1.

               Sound of violently applied brakes, off, as SPUD'S commando 
               arrives.]] 

               [SPUD stands at the club entrance, directing his men.  

                                     SPUD
                         Come on, Section No.2. 

                                     CHORUS
                         Yessir! 

                                     SPUD
                         No.3.

                                     CHORUS
                         Yessir! 

                                     SPUD
                         You have your orders.]

               INTERIOR: CLUB

               The HALL PORTER glances up.  [ANGELA is with him, on the 
               telephone. She dives beneath his desk when - ]

               SPUD enters from the street, followed by STUFFY GRAVES, who 
               stays in the door where he can command exterior and interior.  
               SPUD comes up to PORTER with the urgent manner of one who 
               carries an important message.

                                     SPUD
                              (To PORTER)
                         Is [[Major-]]General Wynne-Candy in 
                         the Club?  

                                     PORTER
                         No, sir. The General left an hour 
                         ago with Brigadier-General Caldicott 
                         and Air Vice-Marshal Lloyd-Hughes.

                                     SPUD
                         Did he say where he was going?  

                                     PORTER
                         Excuse me, sir, what is your business 
                         with the General?  

                                     SPU
                         I have a message for him - an urgent 
                         message.

                                     PORTER
                         If you will give me the message, 
                         sir, I will see that the General 
                         gets it.

                                     SPUD
                         But dammit all, man - !
                              (Suddenly changes 
                              tone.)
                         Are you in the Home Guard?

                                     PORTER
                         [[Are you]][Why], sir?  

                                     SPUD
                              (Low voice)
                         The password is 'Veuve Cliquot 1911'! 

                                     PORTER
                              (Salutes)
                         The General and his staff [[have 
                         gone to]][are in] the Turkish Baths, 
                         sir.

               [[SPUD signs to STUFFY, who signals to street]] 

                                     [SPUD
                              (Blows whistle)
                         Right!]

               [[EXTERIOR: ST JAMES'S STREET

               From STUFFY'S angle we see two of the trucks and the men all 
               ready for action.  STUFFY holds up two fingers.  Two men 
               jump down and come running up.]] 

               INTERIOR: CLUB

               The [[two]] men come in, carrying rifles and bayonets and go 
               up to SPUD and the PORTER.

                                     SPUD
                              ([To SERGEANT)
                         You're in charge up here.] Stay with 
                         him.
                              (To PORTER)
                         Don't leave your [[cubby-hole]][desk] 
                         or [[answer]][use] the phone. You're 
                         a prisoner of war.

                                     [PORTER
                         But war starts at midnight.

                                     SPUD
                         Ah ha, that's what you think. 
                         Sergeant, that girl under the desk: 
                         she's a prisoner too.

                                     SGT.
                         Sir!  

                                     SPUD
                         Corporal, follow me. Brute force and 
                         ruddy ignorance. 

                                     CPL.
                              (To men)
                         Come on, after him — and double up.

                                                              DISSOLVE TO:]

                                      [[SEQUENCE 12

                             Exterior: His Majesty's Theatre

               SPUD'S commando dashes up and passes the Theatre.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 13

                                 Exterior: Turkish Baths

               A GIRL in A.T.S. uniform is telephoning from a public box 
               near the entrance.

               SPUD'S commando sweeps up.  This is the final objective.  
               They attack in strength, the trucks emptying like magic, the 
               Bren Carriers facing three ways along the street, their crews 
               ready.  SPUD is the first out.  His quick eye spots the girl.

                                     SPUD
                         Sergeant-Major!

                                     S.M.
                         Sir?

                                     SPUD
                         See that girl in the phone-box?

                                     S.M.
                         Yessire.

                                     SPUD
                         Nail her in!

                                     S.M.
                         Yessir.  Owen!

               SPUD without waiting to see his orders carried out, runs up 
               the steps of the Turkish Baths, where he stops and turns.

                                     SPUD
                         Rice!  Wimpey!  Stand guard!

                         RICE
                         Sir.

                                                      WIMPEY
                                              Sir.

                                    SEQUENCES 14 & 15

                                 Interior: Turkish Baths

               THE HOTTEST ROOM

               Through clouds of steam, half a dozen nude pink figures 
               scantily draped in towels, sit or recline at ease.]] 

               ATTENDANT'S DESK (OUTSIDE)

               SPUD and his men crowd the entrance. The ATTENDANT stares 
               horrified at them. The telephone bell is ringing like mad. 

                                     SPUD
                              (To ATTENDANT)
                         [[You're a prisoner of war!]]  [Don't 
                         argue!]  Wizard! Guard this man.
                              (He moves off.)
                         And answer that dam' phone!

               WIZARD takes the receiver off, grimly covering the ATTENDANT 
               with his tommy-gun meanwhile. Over the receiver we hear an 
               excited GIRL'S voice. WIZARD plays up.

                                     WIZARD
                         [Yes, miss.] Warn who, miss?  General 
                         Wynne-Candy, miss?  Can't do that, 
                         miss.
                              (Holds receiver away 
                              from his ear as girl's 
                              voice screams.)

               [[GIRL'S VOICE What do you mean?  I must speak to him!

               Camera tracks swiftly into close shot of receiver.  We can 
               hear plainly the Girl's voice and sound of hammering.

                                     GIRL'S VOICE
                              (Evidently to SERGEANT-
                              MAJOR)
                         What are you doing?  Stop it!  How 
                         dare you!
                              (She evidently kicks 
                              the door of the booth)
                         Help!  Police!
                              (Then back to the 
                              telephone)
                         Porter!  Hullo!  Hullo! 

                                     WIZARD
                         Yes, miss.
                              (He listens)
                         Sorry, miss,]] the General's a 
                         prisoner of war.
                              (Listens.)
                         [[Yes, miss.  You're a prisoner of 
                         war too.]] [And so are you.]
                              (Listens, then suddenly 
                              gets impatient.)
                         You're NUTS! The War's over!
                              (He rings off.)

               THE HOTTEST ROOM

               SPUD and his merry men invade the room, guns and other weapons 
               in their hands.

               They look strange and alarming in their battledress in the 
               incongruous setting.  

               SPUD peers through the steam.  [[He sees his Final Objective,

                                     SPUD
                         All right, boys!  Surround 'em!]] 

               The commando at once invests the whole room. Some cover the 
               waking figures. Others guard the approaches, their backs to 
               the scene. Still others are seen through the glass partition 
               rounding up the attendants and some other bathers.

                                     [SPUD
                         Qu-i-e-t!  Quiet, please. You're all 
                         prisoners. Now stay where you are.
                              (To ATTENDANT)
                         Where's General Wynne-Candy?

                                     ATTENDANT
                         Who, sir?

                                     SPUD
                         You heard. Now show me the way. Come 
                         on.]

               SPUD, almost frightened now that he has reached his objective, 
               advances with an obvious effort on the Final Objective: MAJOR-
               GENERAL SIR CLIVE WYNNE-CANDY, v.c., D.S.O. 

               GENERAL WYNNE-CANDY is so like Colonel Blimp in appearance 
               that he must certainly have been the model who inspired David 
               Low. 

               He IS Blimp.

               Here is the great face, the sweeping moustaches, the ivory-
               domed head, the noble belly, even the little crease on his 
               fat chest. 

               In BLACK AND WHITE, Colonel Blimp is an awe-inspiring figure; 
               but in TECHNICOLOR!  No wonder SPUD hesitates. He is sweating, 
               not only from the heat.

               He stands a moment looking down at his sleeping prize. Then 
               he gently taps him on the shoulder.

                                     SPUD
                              ([To himself)
                         This is it.] Sir!
                              (Pause.)
                         SIR!

                                     [GENERAL
                              (Eyes still closed)
                         Go away.

                                     SPUD
                         General Wynne-Candy!]

               Do you remember in Kipling's 'The White Seal', when the 
               diminutive Kotick by his barking, wakes Sea-Catch, the great 
               Walrus; how Sea-Catch starts awake, banging his neighbour 
               with his flipper and coughing and spluttering 'Eh? How? What?'  

               Even so wakes General Clive Wynne-Candy.)

                                     GENERAL
                         Hm - What — Who is it?  

                                     SPUD
                         Lieutenant Wilson, sir.  2nd 
                         Battalion, the [[Devonshires]] 
                         [Loamshires], sir.

                                     GENERAL
                         Hm!
                              (He is still half 
                              asleep.)
                         What['s the matter]][do you want], 
                         eh?

                                     SPUD
                         Well, sir ... I'm afraid, sir ...
                              ('After all, he is a 
                              General.')

                                     GENERAL
                         Well? - Say it, man! I've no time to 
                         waste!

                                     SPUD
                              (Relaxes and although 
                              very hot begins at 
                              last to enjoy himself)
                         Oh, yes, you have, sir!

                                     GENERAL
                         I beg your pardon, sir?

                                     SPUD
                         You've got all night, sir.

               All round them the other members of the staff are waking. 
               They see the armed, clothed figures. The GENERAL stares at 
               SPUD as if he were a dangerous lunatic. He looks around for 
               help.

                                     GENERAL
                         Attendant!  

                                     SPUD
                         I'm afraid he can't come.

                                     GENERAL
                              (Pause.)
                         [[Can't come!  Can't - attendant!]]  
                         Why?

                                     SPUD
                         He's a prisoner of war.

                                     GENERAL
                              (Slowly)
                         What's going on here?  

                                     SPUD
                         Invasion[, sir.]

                                     [[GENERAL
                         Do - you - know - who - you - are - 
                         talking to, sir?

                                     SPUD
                         Yes, sir.  I am addressing Major-
                         General Clive Wynne-Candy, General 
                         Officer Commanding the Home Guard, 
                         exercise Beer-Mug, sir.  You and 
                         your staff are my prisoners.

                                     ANOTHER GENERAL
                              (To CANDY)
                         I say, Suggie, this is a devil of a 
                         mess!]] 

                                     GENERAL
                              (To SPUD)
                         But you damned young idiot, war starts 
                         at midnight! Haven't you been told!

                                     SPUD
                              (Inwardly trembling, 
                              outwardly brazen)
                         Yes, sir. That's why we're here.

                                     GENERAL
                         And may I ask [[again]], on-what-
                         authority?  

                                     SPUD
                         On the authority of these guns and 
                         these men[, sir].  

               The GENERAL looks around him and takes in the whole outrageous 
               scene suddenly. He nearly has a fit. He gasps: 

                                     GENERAL
                         Authority — authority — how dare 
                         you, sir — how dare you - [[I'll 
                         have you for this - I'll - ]] GET 
                         OUT OF HERE SIR YOU AND YOUR GANG OF 
                         AWFUL MILITIA GANGSTERS [[I'LL HAVE 
                         YOU]][GET OUT!]-
                              (He suddenly stops a 
                              little helplessly.)

                                     SPUD
                              (He gets things moving)
                         [[STUFFY!]][Popeye, guard these Men.]

                                     [[STUFFY
                         YESSIR!]]

                                     [POPEYE
                         YESSIR!]

                                     SPUD
                         Stuffy. Go to the cubicles. Find 
                         which is General Wynne-Candy's.  
                         [[Threr'll be]][You'll find] a brown 
                         pigskin case there. Bring it.

                                     STUFFY
                         Yessir.
                              (Goes.)

                                     GENERAL
                         But you can't do that!  The code is 
                         in that case! The whole Exercise 
                         will be a farce if you have that 
                         code! 

                                     SPUD
                              ([[Furious; his men 
                              have been insulted)
                         It's a farce already!]][Oh no, sir. 
                         This is going to be the real thing, 
                         sir.

                                     GENERAL
                         But war starts at midnight.

                                     SPUD
                         Oh yes].  You say, 'War starts at 
                         midnight' - how do you know the enemy 
                         says so too?  

                                     GENERAL
                              (Stares; then quite 
                              mildly)
                         But my dear fellow, that was agreed, 
                         wasn't it?  

                                     SPUD
                              (By now the sweat is 
                              streaming off him 
                              from heat and fury)
                         Agreed, my - foot! [[What's agreement 
                         got to do with it?]]  How many 
                         agreements have been kept by the 
                         enemy since this War started?  [[Why 
                         do we believe again and again what 
                         they are telling us?  Why have we 
                         always waited for him at the front 
                         of the house while he steals in 
                         through the back door and kicks us 
                         in the pants?  Tell me why, sir.

               SPUD reckless now, his uniform a sponge, dashes a bucketful 
               of sweat off his face and sweeps on. 

                                     SPUD
                         I'll tell you, sir!  Because]]we 
                         agree to keep the Rules of the Game, 
                         [[that's why]] [and they keep kicking 
                         us in the seat of the pants!][[Don't 
                         forget another agreement]]  When 
                         [[we]] [I] joined the Army, [[we 
                         agreed to defend our country by every 
                         means at our disposal!]] [the only 
                         agreement I entered into was to defend 
                         my country by any means at my 
                         disposal], not only by National 
                         Sporting Club Rules but by every 
                         means that has existed since Cain 
                         slugged Abel!

                                     [GENERAL
                         Stop ...]

                                     SPUD
                         Don't we know they're counting on us 
                         to keep to the Rules. Don't we know 
                         it's a standing joke with them, that 
                         they boast about it, that they -

                                     GENERAL
                         STOP [IT]!

               His parade voice has so much authority that he actually brings 
               SPUD to a dead stop.

                                     GENERAL
                         Lieutenant Watson - or whatever your 
                         name is — you are not [[on a 
                         platform]]in Hyde Park with an 
                         audience of [[tarts and]]loafers. 
                         [[This is General Wyndham Cook.]] I 
                         am Major-General Wynne-Candy. These 
                         other gentlemen have all seen service, 
                         distinguished service, with the 
                         British Army!

                                     SPUD
                              (Undaunted)
                         Well, all I can say is, sir, that 
                         when Napoleon said an army marches 
                         on its stomach [he must have been 
                         thinking of old gentlemen like]] - 
                         I'd better stop, sir!

                                     GENERAL
                              (He is very angry, 
                              but he sees that the 
                              grand manner won't 
                              help him)
                         You're an extremely impudent young 
                         officer, sir. But let me tell you 
                         that in forty years [time] you'll be 
                         an old gentleman, too. And if your 
                         belly keeps pace with your head, 
                         you'll have a bigger one than any of 
                         us!

                                     SPUD
                         Maybe I shall. In forty years. But I 
                         [[I'll bet that you were the same in 
                         the last war.  And forty years ago!]] 
                         [I Doubt it. And I doubt if I'll 
                         have time to grow a moustache like 
                         yours, sir. But at least in 1983 
                         I'll be able to say I was a fellow 
                         of enterprise.]

               This is too much for the GENERAL who drops forty years of 
               authority and experience like a cloak and goes for his 
               impudent young antagonist with his bare fists.

               SPUD, devastated by heat, emotion and a wild desire to laugh, 
               weakly defends himself, moving hastily backwards before the 
               windmill attack of the GENERAL, who all the time is bellowing:

                                     GENERAL
                         I'll punch your head for that, young 
                         fellow! I'll punch your head!  Put 
                         'em up! D'you hear me?
                              (Grunt.)
                         Think you can say what you like to 
                         an old 'un, do you? [[I'll teach 
                         you!]]  Do you know how many wars — 
                         I've been in?  I was fighting for my 
                         country when your father was still 
                         in bum-freezers!
                              (Smack — thud—grunt.)
                         [[You set up to teach me what a 
                         soldier should or shouldn't do - 
                              (he gets a bit tangled 
                              up from the foam 
                              like Venus)
                         - Pah!]]  Puppy!  Gangster![[I repeat!  
                         Gangster!]]

               At this point, SPUD'S retreating feet find air beneath them 
               and he falls backwards into the plunge-bath. Without 
               hesitation the GENERAL leaps in on top of him. The battle 
               continues in three and a half feet of cold water.

               Clouds of steam ascend, hiding the combatants as it thickens. 
               Through the gathering clouds the voice of the GENERAL 
               continues to boom, but as the clouds thicken, the voice gets 
               fainter.

                                     GENERAL
                              (Booming through the 
                              steam)
                         [[What do you know about me?]]  You 
                         laugh at my big belly, but you don't 
                         know how I got it - !  You laugh at 
                         my moustache, but you don't know why 
                         I grew it! -
                              (His voice grows 
                              fainter.)
                         How do you know what sort of man I 
                         was - when I was as young as you are 
                         — forty years ago — forty years ago—

               Blimp's — beg pardon — CANDY'S last words sound hollow and 
               faint. Already they are no longer real. The words hang in 
               the air, like the thick clouds of steam.

               [[For a moment there is silence.

               Then a full orchestra plays the opening chords of Brünhilde's 
               great and difficult soprano solo in Wagner's 'Walkury [sic].

               The music breaks off.

               Then a very real, ordinary young man's voice starts to sing 
               (very flat) the Aria, from somewhere nearby.

               This voice belongs to 2ND LIEUTENANT HOPWELL.

               Then another young man's voice with a familiar note in it 
               joins in the Aria from the plunge-bath.]] The clouds of steam 
               thin and clear away.

               YOUNG CLIVE CANDY emerges from the pool.

                                    SEQUENCES l6 & 17 

                              Interior: Turkish Baths (1902)

               THE HOTTEST ROOM

               YOUNG CLIVE CANDY heaves himself out of the pool in one 
               movement. He is 26, very fit, full of impatience and 
               enthusiasm.

                                     [ATTENDANT
                         Everything you want, Mr Candy, sir?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes, thank you.]

               He knows every twist and turn in the [[Brünhilde]] [Mignon] 
               Aria which he declaims with Great vigour.

               [An answering voice takes up the Aria. The curtains of a 
               cubicle part to reveal 2ND LIEUTENANT HOPWELL, in a turban, 
               singing at the top of his voice. They strike a pose together.]

               A BLIMP OF THE PERIOD wakes up furious.

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                         Quiet! People are trying to sleep!

               [[2ND LIEUTENANT HOPWELL stops singing and sits bolt upright 
               on the slab where he was being pummelled by the attendant.

                                     HOPPY
                         Suggie?

               CLIVE CANDY breaks off the Aria abruptly.]] 

                                     CLIVE
                         Hoppy! My old horse [[my antique 
                         stallion]]!  Since when are you in 
                         London?

               By this time they have met.

                                     HOPPY
                         Got back yesterday. Sick leave. I've 
                         been chasing you all over town.
                              (Awkwardly.)
                         I say, old chap, I was awfully sorry 
                         to hear about your leg -

               He has been avoiding looking down but now he does. His 
               sympathetic expression changes.

                                     HOPPY
                         Jumping Jehosaphat! They're both 
                         there!

                                     CLIVE
                         What the hell did you think I was 
                         standing on?

                                     HOPPY
                         I thought you had a wooden leg.

                                     CLIVE
                         Why should I have a wooden leg?

                                     HOPPY
                         They told me in Bloemfontein that 
                         they cut off your left leg.

               They both examine attentively Clive's left leg.  CLIVE shakes 
               his head.

                                     CLIVE
                         Can't have, old boy. I'd have known 
                         about it.

               They both roar with laughter.

               [[The two young men lower their voices but soon forget again.

                                     CLIVE
                         I got it in the shoulder.

                                     HOPPY
                              (Peers)
                         Can't see a thing.  Now whose leg do 
                         you suppose they really cut off?

                                     CLIVE
                         It's the other one
                              (He means the shoulder)

                                     HOPPY
                              (Looking at the leg)
                         What do you mean?

                                     CLIVE
                         (Turning, showing angry scar) Here.

                                     HOPPY
                         Oh, I see.  So it is.
                              (Professionally)
                         Stop you playing polo?

                                     CLIVE
                         Not much. Where are you putting up?

               They have both raised their voices again.

                                     HOPPY
                         Stayed at Horsey Loudon's last night - 
                         you know he married little Nancy 
                         Thingumabob?

                                     CLIVE
                         No! 

                                     HOPPY
                         Fact! But I found out this morning 
                         that they sport a phonograph. So I 
                         said to Horsey - by the way, the old 
                         boy's putting on weight - 'Sorry, 
                         old man, thanks for the doss down 
                         but phonographs are barred!'

                                     CLIVE
                              (Nods solemnly)
                         Don't blame you. Serious matter - 
                         phonographs.

                                     HOPPY
                              (Grins)
                         I'd hate it to burst out one morning 
                         with - 

               He sweeps once more into the Mignon Aria, at the top of his 
               lungs which are good. CLIVE joins in enthusiastically. His 
               lungs are also not negligible.

                                     HOPPY
                              (During bar rest)
                         Mouldy pipes, you've got.

                                     CLIVE
                         Mouldy? My pipes?
                              (He pulls out all the 
                              stops.)

               INTERIOR: CUBICLES

               PERIOD BLIMP tears open his curtain.

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                              (Yells)
                         Attendant!  Attendant! Confound it!  
                         I'll never get to sleep again. Stop 
                         that confounded Covent Garden 
                         CATERWAULING!!

                                     CLIVE
                              (Very pleased)
                         See! My pipes!

                                     PERIOD BLIMP'S VOICE
                         My shoes!

                                     CLIVE
                              (Shouts)
                         Don't go, sir! We're evacuating!
                              (Breaks into song.)
                         'Cherries so red!  Strawberries ripe!
                              (HOPPY joins in.)
                         At home of course they'll be storming.
                              (Linking arms.)
                         Never mind the abuse!
                              (Marching off.)
                         You've had the excuse! You've BEEN 
                         TO COVENT GARDEN IN THE MORNING!'

                                     PERIOD BLIMP'S VOICE
                         My shoes!

                                     2ND BLIMP
                         Quiet!

                                     3RD BLIMP
                         Stop that noise! Attendant!

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                         MY SHOES!!]]

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 18

                               Interior: Royal Bathers Club 

               ENTRANCE HALL

               The inner doors open and the two friends come marching out 
               in the same tempo, very pleased with themselves, in colourful 
               smart uniforms, their great-coats over their shoulders, their 
               caps and swords at a dashing angle, looking as if they had 
               just stepped out of a bandbox. They adjust their gloves.

                                     CLIVE
                         Call a cabby, porter!

                                     PORTER
                         Yes, sir.
                              ([Signals to DOORMAN.])

                                     HOPPY
                         Hansom, mind! Growlers barred.

                                     PORTER
                         [[Of course]] [He knows], sir.

               [[PORTER]] [DOORMAN] runs out and we hear him blow his 
               whistle. There is a blast of cold wind as the door swings.  
               It is a wintry day in January.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Yawns)
                         Could have done with a nap myself.

                                     HOPPY
                         You've got all night, haven't you?

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Must go]] [Going] to the theatre 
                         tonight.

                                     HOPPY
                         Can't you sleep there?

                                     CLIVE
                         Invited. Two ladies.

                                     HOPPY
                         Can I come along?

                                     CLIVE
                         One is the mother.

               HOPPY understands.

               Meanwhile sound of clop-clopping, 'Whoa!'etc.  The [[PORTER]] 
               [DOORMAN] reappears, shivering and blowing on his hands to 
               warm them.

                                     [[PORTER
                         Hansom, gentlemen.]] 

                                     [DOORMAN
                         Your cab, sir.]

               But before they can move, the inner doors are flung open 
               again and out storms the PERIOD BLIMP, in the uniform of a 
               Major-General, which at that time was even more gorgeous 
               than at present. The two young officers click heels, and 
               give him a terrific salute. He acknowledges and is about to 
               pass when he recognizes them. They remain stiffly at 
               attention. He has them on toast.

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                         Ha! The opera-singers, eh?  No wonder 
                         civilians are grumbling about the 
                         Army!  Ought to be ashamed of 
                         yourselves - yelling and screaming 
                         like some damned foreigner!  A nice 
                         state of things!  Officers and men 
                         losing their lives in South Africa 
                         while young officers are roaring 
                         about public places like drunkards -
                              (A sudden idea strikes 
                              him.)
                         Perhaps you are drunk.
                              (Goes closer, sniffing.)
                         [[Let me smell your breath!
                              (sniffs)

               As he speaks, someone comes in from outside.  The wind blows 
               CLIVE'S coat aside, where it hangs over his chest.]] 

               [CLIVE adjusts his helmet, causing his cloak to fall back,] 
               revealing a scarlet ribbon, ornamented with a Maltese Cross.

               The MAJOR-GENERAL [i.e. PERIOD BLIMP] stares. The young 
               officers stand like ramrods.

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                         Eh? What's this?

                                     CLIVE
                         V[[ictoria]] C[[ross]], sir.

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                         Where d'you get it, eh?  

                                     CLIVE
                         South Africa - [Jordaan Siding], 
                         sir. [[Windhoek.]]

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                         You're Candy, 'Sugar' Candy?

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes, sir.

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                         Hm! [[Heard of you!]]
                              (Pause.)
                         Good show, Candy.

               He holds out his hand. They shake hands.

                                     CLIVE
                         Thank you, sir.

               He looks at HOPPY.

                                     HOPPY
                         [[2nd Lieutenant]] Hopwell, sir. 

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                         Hopwell-Hopwell!  [What,] Son of 
                         Barney Hopwell of the 66th? 

                                     HOPPY
                         Yes, sir.

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                              (Shakes hands)
                         Glad to know you, my boy.
                              (Surveys them.)
                         You're very musical[[, you two]]?

                                     HOPPY
                         No, sir.

                                     [PERIOD BLIMP
                              (To CLIVE)
                         And so are you.]

                                     CLIVE
                         [[You mean the Brünhilde Aria, Sir?]]  
                         [D'you mean Mignon, sir, 'I am 
                         Titania'?]

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                         [[Whathlde]][You're what?]

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Brünhilde]][Titania], sir. We two 
                         were shut up with her in a blockhouse 
                         for seven months near Jordaan Siding—

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                              (Fogged)
                         [[With Matilda?]] [I beg your pardon?]

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Brühilde, sir.  Character in opera 
                         by Wagner.]] [It's an aria, sir.] We 
                         had a phonograph and we broke every 
                         record but this one. We know it by 
                         heart.

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                         Hahahaha! [[Dashed good.]]
                              (Moves to the door.)
                         Well, are you boys going to the
                              (inaudible word)

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes, sir.

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                         That's where I'm lying.

               EXTERIOR: CLUB STEPS

                                     [PERIOD BLIMP
                         Can I give you a lift?

               CLIVE opens the hansom door for him.

                                     CLIVE
                         No thank you, sir. We have a cab.

               The GENERAL gets into their cab.

                                     GENERAL
                              (To CAB DRIVER)
                         St James's Palace.

                                     CAB DRIVER
                         Right, sir.]

                                     PERIOD BLIMP
                         Well, I hope you two [[lads]][boys] 
                         enjoy your leave: you've earned it.

                                     CLIVE
                         Thank you, sir. [Mind yourself on 
                         the door, sir.]

               [[They give another terrific salute as the GENERAL rolls 
               out.  They prepare to follow.  Sound of cab driving away.]]  
               They [[look out]][look at one another]. 

                                     HOPPY
                         The old horse thief! 

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Porter]] [Boy]!  Another hansom!

               [[Outside, the PORTER]] [The DOORMAN] blows his whistle.

                                       SEQUENCE 19

               [[Interior: Hansom Cab.]]  [Exterior: In Front of Club]

               [[The complete change of atmosphere and period is conveyed 
               by the leisurely progress and the absence of the internal 
               combustion engine. All around one hears only the clop-clopping 
               of innumerable hoofs, with occasional snatches of sound, 
               such as a barrel-organ playing 'You are my Honey, 
               Honeysuckle'.  CLIVE sits, muffled up, contentedly looking 
               at the pageant of the town. HOPPY is apparently looking for 
               something in his pockets.]]

               [CLIVE and HOPPY cross the road to a HOT POTATO SELLER'S 
               cart.

                                     HOT POT SELLER
                         Hot potatoes, sir?

                                     HOPPY
                         No, we've just come over for a warm.
                              (An early automobile 
                              passes.)

                                     CLIVE
                              (To HOPPY)
                         You ever ridden in one?

                                     HOPPY
                         Rather. All the way to Epsom.

                                     CLIVE
                         Lovely lines, hasn't she?

                                     HOPPY
                         Topping.]

                                     CLIVE
                              (Deep breath)
                         Same beastly [[raw]] drizzle!  Same 
                         [[old slush]] [fog] and soot! Good 
                         old London!

                                     HOPPY
                              ([Looks for something 
                              in his pockets])
                         Now listen, Suggie! Remember that 
                         interview you gave The Times'?

                                     CLIVE
                         You don't mean to say you read it?

                                     HOPPY
                         Me? No! But I have a niece[[.She]] -
                         [who] has a governess [[and the 
                         governess]] [who] has a sister.

                                     CLIVE
                         Pretty?  

                                     HOPPY
                         [[I don't know her from Adam.]] Never 
                         laid eyes on her. But she read it.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Frowns)
                         Who?

                                     HOPPY
                         My niece's governess's sister. In 
                         Berlin. So she wrote to her sister 
                         here, who gave the letter to my niece 
                         to give to me to give to you. [See?]]

                                     CLIVE
                              (Concentrates)
                         Who do I give it to?

                                     HOPPY
                         Nobody. It's for you. Here it is.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Takes it gingerly)
                         Why [[me]]?

                                     HOPPY
                         [Well,] read it[, you big ape].  
                         You'll [[see]] [find out].  It's 
                         interesting.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

               [TEXT OF EDITH'S LETTER:

               '... tales of atrocities by our soldiers against the Boers 
               are being printed by these odious newspapers and encouraged 
               by certain high personages who are determined to foment 
               trouble between Germany and England. There is one agent, in 
               particular, named KAUNITZ who is a LIAR and SCOUNDREL!  Now 
               this Lieut. Candy sounds a splendid fellow and he is just 
               returned from South Africa. If only he would come to Berlin 
               and TELL THE TRUTH! That would do more good than a hundred 
               interviews!  Do you not think, my dear Martha, that Mr. 
               Hopwell would be likely to know this young officer. I seem 
               to remember that he noted the same name in one of his...']

                                      [[SEQUENCE 20

                         Exterior: Hansom, Her Majesty's Theatre

               Effect shot of the facade of Her Majesty's Theatre.  The 
               Hansom bowls by with the two young officers in it.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                   SEQUENCES 21, 22, 23

               The War Office The War Office has been finished the year 
               before and, besides being brand new, was regarded as the 
               tops in official architecture.

               STAIRCASE

               One of the great staircases surrounding the cage where the 
               latest thing in lifts had just been installed. CLIVE and 
               HOPPY run up the staircase, three steps at a time.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:
.

               CORRIDOR

               One of the interminable corridors. CLIVE and HOPPY arrive at 
               the door of an office. HOPPY gives CLIVE an encouraging 
               gesture. CLIVE knocks and goes in.

                                                             DISSOLVE TO:]]

               COLONEL BETTERIDGE'S OFFICE [HIS NAME ON THE DOOR]

               The COLONEL is about fifty, pleasant but very uncompromising 
               on questions of army etiquette. He detests pauses in 
               conversation. [Another officer, MAJOR PLUMLEY, shares his 
               office and says little.] 

               CLIVE stands before his desk.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         Sit down!

                                     CLIVE
                              (Sits)
                         Thank you, sir.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         Fire away!

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, sir, I have a friend--

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         Good. Not everybody can say that. 
                         Continue!

                                     CLIVE
                         This friend of mine, sir, has a niece-- 

                                     BETTERIDGE
                              (Examines CLIVE'S 
                              application for 
                              appointment)
                         Cut it short, my boy, you say here 
                         it's about a letter. One, who wrote 
                         it? Two, what's in it? Three, what's 
                         the War Office got to do with it? 
                         Four, I'll tell you. Five, Out!
                              (He gestures towards 
                              door, fixes CLIVE, 
                              barks:)
                         One! 

                                     CLIVE
                              (Hurriedly)
                         A girl wrote it from Berlin, sir. 
                         Her name is Edith Hunter. She's a 
                         governess there.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         [Rather an] Uncomfortable billet 
                         just now.

                                     CLIVE
                         That's just it, sir. They hate us in 
                         Germany. They are spreading propaganda 
                         all over Europe that we are killing 
                         women and children in South Africa, 
                         that we are starving them in 
                         concentration camps, shooting mothers, 
                         burning babies - you wouldn't believe 
                         the things they have invented!  I 
                         spoke this afternoon to Conan Doyle. 
                         He thinks something ought to be done 
                         about it too.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         About what? [[Where does this letter 
                         of yours come in?]] [What's all this 
                         about a letter?] And who's Conan 
                         Doyle?

                                     CLIVE
                         The author chap, sir-writes the 
                         Sherlock Holmes  , stories in the 
                         Strand Magazine.

               The COLONEL at last shows some animation and interest.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         This Doyle fellow writes the Sherlock 
                         Holmes stories?

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes, sir. Conan Doyle. You must have 
                         seen his name.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         Never heard of him. But I've read 
                         every Sherlock Holmes story since 
                         they started in July '91.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Eagerly; he also is 
                              a fan)
                         Are you reading The Hound of the 
                         Baskervilles, sir?  

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         Am I not!  What did you think of the 
                         end of the last instalment?

                                     CLIVE
                         Bit of a facer for poor old Watson, 
                         sir.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                              (Laughs and recites:)
                         'A lovely evening, my dear Watson. I 
                         really think you will be more 
                         comfortable outside than in.'
                              (Laughs.)
                         Sarcastic devil, that [fellow] Holmes. 
                         I once had a C.O. just like him. 
                         [[This Conan Doyle]] [He] must be 
                         [[a sound sort of]] [rather a good] 
                         fellow, as authors go.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Encouraged)
                         Well, sir, Mr Conan Doyle is 
                         collecting material about our campaign 
                         in South Africa to counter German 
                         propaganda. The Times printed an 
                         interview with me about seven weeks 
                         ago -

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         That's bad. Good rule to keep out of 
                         the papers. Still The Times is a bit 
                         different.

                                     [MAJOR PLUMLEY
                              (Murmurs agreement)
                         Mmm, yes.]

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes, sir. I mentioned in the interview 
                         the name of a place called Jordaan 
                         Siding. I spent seven months there.  
                         Now this girl writes from Berlin 
                         that the worst stories of all are 
                         being put about by a fellow called 
                         Kaunitz who says he saw with his own 
                         eyes British soldiers kill two hundred 
                         and fifty women and children at 
                         Jordaan Siding in order to save 
                         feeding them!  

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         Do you know this fellow Kaunitz?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Of course, sir. He's the most awful 
                         little [[skunk]] [rat]!  He was spying 
                         for us, he was spying for the Boers, 
                         he made South Africa too hot for 
                         himself and skipped. Both sides would 
                         have shot him if they'd caught him.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         I see. Now what do you want me to 
                         do?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Enthusiastically)
                         My leave isn't up for four weeks, 
                         sir. Why shouldn't I go to Berlin 
                         and confront this little rat? I'll 
                         soon-

                                     BETTERIDGE
                              (Shocked)
                         My dear boy - first of all, it's not 
                         done. This isn't Army business, it's 
                         Embassy. Leave politics to the 
                         politicians. You wouldn't like a 
                         diplomat to come charging into the 
                         front line with your company, would 
                         you? 

                                     CLIVE
                         It might do him a lot of good!  

                                     BETTERIDGE
                              (Standing up)
                         Juvenile nonsense, my lad!

                                     CLIVE
                              (At once standing 
                              also)
                         Sorry, sir!

                                     [[BETTERIDGE
                         That's right Candy.  Never go off at 
                         half-cock, my boy.  Keep cool.  Keep 
                         your mouth shut.  Avoid politicians, 
                         like the plague.  That's the way to 
                         get on in the army.

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes, sir.]] 

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         You were [[given leave]] [sent home] 
                         in order to recuperate. Your country 
                         needs you. Play golf?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes, sir.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         What's your form? 

                                     CLIVE
                         About ten, sir.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                              (Satisfied)
                         Care for a game?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Sorry, sir. I'm invited by Lady Gilpin 
                         to Leicestershire. Start tomorrow.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         Well, enjoy yourself.

               Telephone rings. MAJOR PLUMLEY answers, but soon  : loses 
               interest in the call while he listens to the following 
               exchange.  They move towards the door.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         By-the-way, [[this fellow]] - this 
                         author chap.

                                     [CLIVE
                         Author chap?  

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         This fellow] who wrote The Hound of 
                         the Baskervilles -

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Yes, sir?]] Conan Doyle.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         [Yes.] You didn't happen to ask him, 
                         by any chance, what happens in the 
                         next instalment?

                                     [MAJOR PLUMLEY
                              (To his caller)
                         Just a moment.]

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes, sir. There's another murder!  

                                     BETTERIDGE
                              (Very concerned)
                         Not the Baronet?  

                                     CLIVE
                         No, sir. The Baronet is safe.  

                                     BETTERIDGE
                              (Relieved)
                         [Good,] I'm glad -

               He opens the door [[and CLIVE goes]]. [MAJOR PLUMLEY is 
               equally relieved.]

               CORRIDOR

                                     [FIRST PASSER-BY
                         Warm for January.

                                     SECOND PASSER-BY
                         Damn cold I call it.

               BETTERIDGE closes the door, then opens it again to give CLIVE 
               parting advice.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         Take my tip, my boy. You've got a 
                         damn good V.C., now keep quiet for a 
                         bit, eh?

               He closes the door. CLIVE whistles 'Titania' as he joins 
               HOPPY.] HOPPY is very curious. CLIVE jerks his head and they 
               walk down the corridor as they talk.

                                     HOPPY
                         Well?  What did he say?

                                     [[CLIVE
                              (Sardonically)
                         'Lovely evening, my dear Watson!'

                                     HOPPY
                         What?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Same tone)
                         'You'll be more comfortable outside 
                         than in'

                                     HOPPY
                         You're cracked.  Did he say you could 
                         go?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Scornfully)
                         'Leave politics to the politicians!'

                                     HOPPY
                              (Exasperated)
                         Are you going or aren't you?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Stops)
                         Yes!

                                     HOPPY
                         With or without approval?

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, he didn't say I couldn't.

               They look at each other.

                                     CLIVE
                         If I ask somebody else, they may 
                         forbid me to go.
                              (Pause]])
                         Look here, do you want to go to the 
                         Theatre tonight?  

                                     HOPPY
                         Well I like that you said -

                                     CLIVE
                         Never mind what I said.
                              (He shows ticket.)
                         Here!  Box A, Her Majesty's Theatre. 
                         'The Last of the Dandies'. Introduce 
                         yourself to Lady Gilpin - tell them 
                         I had to go on [[Secret Service]] 
                         [some secret mission] - make me out 
                         a mysterious romantic figure. The 
                         girl's [[nice]] [pretty], the mother's 
                         a Gorgon.

               CLIVE starts off again at a great pace, HOPPY, dazed but 
               obedient, panting after him.

                                     HOPPY
                         [[You mean you're going straight 
                         away?]] Are you going on a secret 
                         mission? 

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Of course.]] [Yes, to Berlin.

                                     HOPPY
                         Did he send you? 

                                     CLIVE
                         No, it's a secret from him too.]

                                     [[HOPPY
                         But - how will you go?

                                     CLIVE
                         Cab, Boat-train, boat, another train - 
                         they must have trains in Germany as 
                         well as here.  Fitzroy is some sort 
                         of Secretary at the Berlin Embassy.  
                         I'll wire him I'm coming and I'll 
                         wire the girl from my hotel.

                                     HOPPY
                         Hotel...?

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, they must have hotels in Berlin, 
                         too.]]

                                      [[SEQUENCE  24

                                 Kaiserhof Hotel, Berlin

               INSERT: a primitive coloured postcard of the Wilhelmplatz. 
               CLIVE'S pen makes an X where the Kaiserhof Hotel stands on 
               the corner of the Mohrenstrasse.

               CLIVE'S ROOM

               It is not the best room in the hotel but it is all right. 
               The window looks out over the railway station, from below 
               comes the sound of locomotives, etc. It is snowing outside. 

               The room is cold and CLIVE has his overcoat over his shoulders 
               and a rug round his legs. He is, of course, in mufti. The 
               time is 9.30 in the morning.

               CLIVE is writing picture postcards. Several are lying on the 
               table beside him. He is whistling: 'You are my Honey, 
               Honeysuckle, I am the Bee!' 

               INSERT: postcard. CLIVE writes: 'Dear Hoppy, Have outspanned 
               at the Kaiserhof Hotel. Berlin is bigger than I thought. 
               Have not seen Miss You-Know-Who yet but -'

               A knock at the door 

                                     CLIVE
                              (Calls)
                         Come in!

               Nothing happens.

               CLIVE frowns and hunts on the table. He picks up a slip of 
               paper on which he has written the most necessary phrases for 
               everyday use during his stay in Germany. The German is written 
               phonetically with the English translation opposite. 

               INSERT: CLIVE'S emergency list.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Reading from list, 
                              in awful German, 
                              very loud)
                         Cumman zee hairin!

               The door opens. A PAGE comes in with a salver and a card. 

                                     PAGE
                         Das Fräulein wartet im kleinen Salon.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Understands not one 
                              word but reads card)
                         Fraulein - Edith Hunter - here?  

                                     PAGE
                         Jawohl - im kleinen Salon - klein!
                              (Gestures with hand 
                              to show 'klein' means 
                              'little'.)
                         Klein - Salon!

                                                                  CUT TO:]]

                                       [SEQUENCE 24

                                   Royal Bathers' Club

               HOPPY enters as the PORTER is putting a Berlin postcard on 
               the letter board.

                                     HOPPY
                         Morning, Preedy. Did you send those 
                         flowers?  

                                     PREEDY
                         Yes, sir. Oh, Mr Hopwell, there's a 
                         postcard for you, sir.

                                     HOPPY
                         From Mr Candy, ha.

                                     PREEDY
                         How is Mr Candy?  

                                     HOPPY
                         Read it for yourself,
                              (He rushes off.)

               PREEDY Reads.

               INSERT: 'My dear Watson, Have outspanned at Kaiserhof Hotel. 
               Sherlock Holmes.']

                                    SEQUENCES 25 & 26

                                 Kaiserhof Hotel, Berlin

               LITTLE SALON

               It is a pleasant little room, decorated and furnished in 
               rococo style.

               EDITH HUNTER is [[seated composedly on a sofa in the centre 
               of the room]] [pacing impatiently].  She is very neat; and 
               well, though not extravagantly dressed. She is what was known 
               in 1902 as a 'New Woman': which meant that she intended to 
               live her own life and knew her own mind. She has character 
               to back it up; and brains. The sedateness of her appearance 
               is mitigated by little crystals of snow, melting and 
               glistening in her hair and on her furs.

               STAIRCASE

               At the bottom of the main staircase, outside the Little Salon. 
               [[CLIVE comes down at breakneck speed, halts abruptly at the 
               foot of the stairs, glances sharply but with secret approval 
               at his manly figure in a full-length mirror and continues 
               with equal impetuosity into the Little Salon.]]

                                     PAGE
                              (To CLIVE)
                         Das 1st die Dame in demkleinen Salon.

               LITTLE SALON

               CLIVE enters and stops. EDITH standing inclines her head. 
               CLIVE bows.

                                     EDITH
                         [[You are Lieutenant Candy]] [Mr 
                         Candy], I believe.  

                                     CLIVE
                         [[In England.  Here I'm plain Mister.  
                         You are Miss Hunter?]]  [Miss Hunter?]

                                     EDITH
                         Yes. Thank you for your telegram. It 
                         came as a great surprise to me. I 
                         had no idea you were in Berlin.

                                     CLIVE
                         Nor had I until now.

                                     EDITH
                         I beg your pardon.

                                     CLIVE
                         I only arrived yesterday.

                                     EDITH
                              (Stares)
                         Do you — can you possibly mean that 
                         you have come solely on account of 
                         my letter?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Well - naturally.

                                     EDITH
                              (She is rather 
                              overwhelmed.)
                         Oh!

                                     CLIVE
                              (Concerned)
                         You don't mind - do you?  

                                     EDITH
                              (Recovering)
                         No. Of course not.

                                     CLIVE
                         Well...
                              (She still stares, 
                              forgetting her 
                              manners.)
                         Shall we sit down?

               They sit.  He waits for her to speak. Neither is a great 
               conversationalist.

                                     EDITH
                         Did you have a good journey? 

                                     CLIVE
                         Excellent.
                              (Pause.)
                         I'm sorry to bring you out in such 
                         weather. I was about to call on you.

                                     EDITH
                         I have changed my address.

                                     CLIVE
                         Indeed?  

                                     EDITH
                         Yes. My position became intolerable. 
                         I have had to leave.

                                     CLIVE
                         No.

                                     EDITH
                              (Nods)
                         English people are not very popular 
                         in Berlin at the moment you know.

                                     CLIVE
                         Do you mean that you had to give up 
                         your job because you are English?

                                     EDITH
                         Yes.

                                     CLIVE
                         Can you get another job?  

                                     EDITH
                         Perhaps. In a few months' time. Not 
                         now. 

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, what are you going to do now...

                                     EDITH
                         Go back.

                                     CLIVE
                         To England?  

                                     EDITH
                              (Nods again, very 
                              dejected)
                         I'm afraid so.

                                     CLIVE
                         Cheer up!  England isn't as bad as 
                         all that.

                                     EDITH
                              (Her eyes flash)
                         That is what we both want to prove, 
                         isn't it, Mr Candy?  

                                     CLIVE
                              (Stirred)
                         Yes, Miss Hunter.

                                     EDITH
                         How shall we begin?

               There is a pause. Both frown in concentration.

                                     CLIVE
                         You mentioned in your letter a man 
                         called Kaunitz. Do you know what he 
                         looks like?

                                     EDITH
                         I've never seen him.

                                     [[CLIVE
                         Because if he's the same fellow I 
                         hope he is, I'd like a word with 
                         him.]] 

                                     EDITH
                         I know a cafe where he and his friends 
                         have their Stammtisch - it means 
                         they have a table regularly reserved 
                         for them there... a kind of... 

                                     CLIVE
                              (Not interested in 
                              the niceties of 
                              translation, cuts in)
                         Do you know any of his friends, Miss 
                         Hunter?

                                     EDITH
                              (A little put out)
                         Yes, one. A student, the brother of 
                         my employer -
                              (She smiles ruefully)
                         My ex-employer. He is a 
                         Burschenschafter. Do you know what 
                         'Burschenschafts' are?

                                     CLIVE
                              ('This girl is a bit 
                              of a blue-stocking. 
                              Pity. She's pretty.')
                         No, Miss Hunter.

                                     EDITH
                         They are Associations of Students 
                         professing Political Principles. 
                         They assert them by drinking beer 
                         and fighting duels.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[I see.]] Duelling is very popular 
                         here, I believe?

                                     EDITH
                         Oh, yes. It's a proud father that 
                         has a scarred son, and vice-versa. 
                         German girls find scars very 
                         attractive.

               CLIVE is a little shocked by this open reference to sex-
               attraction. EDITH is quite detached.

                                     EDITH
                         A book was published recently on the 
                         German colonies in which it was 
                         specifically stated that one of the 
                         advantages of possessing duelling-
                         scars was that the natives of Africa 
                         look with more respect upon white 
                         men who bear them than upon those 
                         who do not.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Gapes)
                         I feel like Stanley and Livingstone.

                                     EDITH
                         Surely not both, Mr Candy.

                                     CLIVE
                         No, of course not. You are Miss 
                         Livingstone.
                              (Laughs.)
                         I'm the missionary!

                                     EDITH
                         Coldly Livingstone was the missionary, 
                         Mr Candy. 

                                     CLIVE
                              (Rather dashed; he 
                              begins to think EDITH 
                              a horrid girl)
                         Ah - yes — of course he was.
                              (Pause.)
                         Well, what about this cafe? Can you 
                         take me there tonight?

                                     EDITH
                         Do you wish me to accompany you?

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, of course.

                                     EDITH
                              (Rises)
                         Very well.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Flounders)
                         I mean - it's awfully kind of you - 
                         I'd obviously be absolutely lost 
                         without you.

                                     EDITH
                              (Having asserted 
                              herself is now 
                              disposed to be nice 
                              to this good-looking 
                              but over-assertive 
                              young man. She smiles 
                              charmingly)
                         [[Then you are Livingstone after 
                         all, Mr Candy.]] [Then, Mr Candy, 
                         you are Livingstone, I presume.]
                              (She frankly holds 
                              out her hand. He 
                              shakes it firmly.)

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                      [[SEQUENCE 27

                            Exterior: British Embassy, Berlin

               A brass plate covered with snow. A gloved band wipes it clean 
               revealing the inscription.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:
.

                                       SEQUENCE 28

                            Interior: British Embassy, Berlin

               OFFICE OF 'BABY-FACE' FITZROY

               It is the smallest and most inconvenient office in the 
               Embassy. It is a very odd shape. It connects by a multitude 
               of doors with the offices of other Secretaries, still minor, 
               but far more important than MR FITZROY.

               This statement of fact and opinion is, needless to say, not 
               shared by MR FITZROY, who has a very great idea of his own 
               importance.

               As the scene opens, he is seated at his desk, impeccably and 
               officially dressed (above-desk) in black coat, starched collar 
               and cuffs, grey tie, etc. from which we can deduce the neat 
               striped trousers and patent leather shoes (below desk. 

               A pile of letters lies before him which he is hastily reading 
               and then stamping with the Embassy stamp (but not, of course, 
               signing or initialling. He contrives to make the simple action 
               look portentous and when he pauses and scrutinizes one of 
               the letters and puts it aside for consideration, one feels 
               that the unfortunate Subject involved has practically 
               forfeited his national status.

               CLIVE sits, patiently waiting, opposite BABY-FACE, who had 
               been a very junior contemporary of his at Harrow. He is 
               impressed, as was intended, by his host's show of importance. 
               The door to the waiting room opens and YENNING, an old clerk, 
               puts his head in, evidently not for the first time.

                                     YENNING
                              (Pleading)
                         Mr Fitzroy!

                                     BABY-FACE
                         All right, Yenning, I'm coming...

               YENNING fades away. CLIVE stands up.

                                     CLIVE
                         Look here, old man, I'll come back 
                         another time. I didn't know you were 
                         as busy as all this.

                                     BABY-FACE
                         Always on Tuesdays...

                                     CLIVE
                         When can we get together?  

                                     BABY-FACE
                         What about Saturday? We could have a 
                         drink or something...

                                     CLIVE
                         I'll be on my way back by then. Well, 
                         Baby-Face,
                              (MR FITZROY winces)
                         Pity you're so busy. I wanted to 
                         have a talk with you.

               He looks round as a Secretary crosses from one door to the 
               other, stepping over MR FITZROY en route.

                                     CLIVE
                         You must feel like Baden-Powell in 
                         Mafeking ...

                                     BABY-FACE
                         Eh?

                                     CLIVE
                         ... besieged on all sides.

                                     BABY-FACE
                         Oh! You mean that crowd in the waiting 
                         room? 

                                     VENNING:
                              (Fading in)
                         Five past, Mr Fitzroy.
                              (Fading out.)

                                     BABY-FACE:
                         All right, Yenning.
                              (To CLIVE)
                         Well, they'll have to wait that's 
                         all. I'll tell Yenning to take you 
                         out the back way so that you won't 
                         be bothered by them.

                                     CLIVE
                         They don't bother me. They prove I 
                         was right to come here.

                                     BABY-FACE
                         Why? Are you working for Thomas Cook?  

                                     CLIVE
                         What the deuce d'you mean?  

                                     BABY-FACE
                         Well, they all want to go back to 
                         England, they? How do I know what 
                         you mean?  

                                     CLIVE
                              (Patiently)
                         If you'll listen I'll tell you. They 
                         want to go back because they've lost 
                         their jobs. Why have they lost their 
                         jobs? Because of anti-British 
                         propaganda. Because of liars like 
                         Kaunitz.

                                     BABY-FACE:
                              (Pauses, stamp in air)
                         Kaunitz? Who's he?

                                     CLIVE
                         Don't you ever read the papers, man?

                                     BABY-FACE
                         We have a Press Attache who ...

                                     CLIVE
                              (Getting warm)
                         But you ought to know about him 
                         yourself. It's his lies that are 
                         filling your waiting room. Don't you 
                         know that he's accusing us of 
                         murdering women and children in South 
                         Africa?

                                     BABY-FACE
                         What do you mean 'us'? I haven't 
                         murdered anybody.

                                     CLIVE
                         US! you silly ass! US, the British 
                         Army!

                                     BABY-FACE
                              (Surprised)
                         Are you in the Army?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Furious)
                         Yes, I am!  And I've been in South 
                         Africa!  And I know Kaunitz, if nobody 
                         else does in this place that calls 
                         itself an Embassy!  

                                     BABY-FACE
                         My dear Suggie, don't get so 
                         excited...

                                     CLIVE
                              (Parade voice)
                         Shut up! And STAND UP when I speak 
                         to you!

               CLIVE has not been through a Subaltern's War for nothing.  

               Bray-Face shoots to his feet as if he'd been kicked from 
               below, revealing that, below desk, he is wearing a pair of 
               heavy tweed knickerbockers. CLIVE stares then deliberately 
               walks round and inspects him. It is further revealed that he 
               has thick stockings and heavy boots with skates attached to 
               them, which makes it difficult to be impressive when standing.

                                     CLIVE
                         Ye Gods and Little Fishes! Skates! 
                         What is this! The British Embassy or 
                         a Winter Sports' Club?  

                                     BABY-FACE
                              (Caught bending)
                         I was just trying them on when you 
                         came in. (He tries to regain his 
                         important tone.) I have to go skating 
                         with the daughter of the Second 
                         Secretary. I'm late already...

               He sits down again. But CANDY is still furious. He leans 
               over the desk to within a few inches of the startled young 
               man's face.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Ferociously)
                         I hope you break your silly neck!  
                         And the silly neck of the silly Second 
                         Secretary's silly pudding-faced 
                         daughter! And now I'm going to find 
                         Kaunitz and pull his nose for him - 
                         HARD! Goodbye.

               CLIVE whirls round and the slam of the door almost rocks the 
               building. BABY-FACE stares after CLIVE, stunned. VENNING re-
               opens the door.

                                     VENNING
                         Ten past, Mr Fitzroy.

                                     BABY-FACE
                              (Blankly)
                         He's mad! Absolutely mad!  We were 
                         at Harrow together, Yenning. All 
                         this nonsense about Kaunitz.

               Suddenly his expression changes. He has just realized the 
               implications of CLIVE'S remarks about Kaunitz.

                                     BABY-FACE
                         KAUNITZ! But I say! He must be 
                         stopped!  He's going to make an awful 
                         scandal! Just now, too! Stop him, 
                         Yenning! Stop him!

               BABY-FACE rushes forward himself, forgetting his skates, 
               which promptly catch in the carpet and trip him up. He falls.

                                     BABY-FACE
                              (Wails)
                         Oh, damn these skates!

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 29

                            Interior: British Embassy, Berlin

               OFFICE OF SECOND SECRETARY

               The time is about half an hour later. The SECOND SECRETARY 
               is a diplomat de carriere, cool, reasonable, about forty-
               five.

               BABY-FACE FITZROY sits to one side. CLIVE faces the SECRETARY 
               who is making a note.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                              (Looking up and laying 
                              down his quill pen)
                         Yes - my dear Candy - I think I 
                         understand. It's not a bad idea. 
                         Unfortunately there are complications.

                                     CLIVE
                         It seemed clear enough to me.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                              (Smiles)
                         Yet there are one or two things you 
                         may not know.
                              (It is a charming 
                              smile.)
                         First there is the 'Alldeutscher 
                         Verband'.

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes, sir. I've heard about them.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         Indeed? From whom?

                                     CLIVE
                         From a young lady who lost her job 
                         because of anti-British propaganda.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         Ah, yes, I see. Then she will have 
                         told you that the whole propaganda 
                         against us is party-politics - a 
                         slogan for the banner of this 
                         Alldeutscher Verband. The German 
                         Government has officially condemned 
                         it.

                                     CLIVE
                         But how about all these mass-meetings, 
                         sir - in Cologne and Dresden - how 
                         do we know how the German People --

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         Let us leave the German People out 
                         of it, shall we? In Germany there is 
                         only one man who counts: the Kaiser; 
                         and the Kaiser desires only the 
                         friendliest relations with England.

                                     CLIVE
                         He's got a funny way of showing it.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         I assure you it is true. But let me 
                         come to my second point. I propose 
                         to make you a present of a piece of 
                         highly confidential information.
                              (Impressively.)
                         The Prince of Wales is coming to 
                         Berlin.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Surprised)
                         No! When?  

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         On the 27th of January. I repeat 
                         this is strictly in confidence.  The 
                         official reason is the Kaiser's 
                         birthday party. But it has been 
                         arranged that both His Royal Highness 
                         and His Imperial Majesty will make a 
                         speech; and their speeches will put 
                         the seal on the agreements of 
                         friendship between the two countries.
                              (He smiles winningly.)
                         So you see what harm your solitary 
                         exploit might do, Candy. Not that I 
                         don't admire your pluck - especially, 
                         may I say, as a soldier on active 
                         service, who certainly needs a permit 
                         to cross the Channel...

                                     CLIVE
                         I am not on active service, sir. I 
                         am on sick leave.

                                     2ND SECRETARY:
                         Oh, we know all about you. There are 
                         not many Candys with the V.C. 

               CLIVE is silent.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         You see, a soldier who has won the 
                         V.C. is not an ordinary soldier. His 
                         views, like his deeds, receive more 
                         attention than those of the average 
                         man. So, should trouble result from 
                         your actions here, it would be more 
                         than average trouble.
                              (Pause.)
                         Well?  

                                     CLIVE
                              (Slowly)
                         Of course, sir, if His Royal Highness 
                         the Prince of Wales is... 

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         Exactly. That is the correct attitude 
                         and, after all, you could hardly 
                         have known about it, could you?
                              (He has looked at his 
                              watch.)
                         You have missed the afternoon train. 
                         Pity. It's an excellent train. But 
                         you can take it tomorrow.
                              (To BABY-FACE)
                         Why don't you show Candy the town 
                         tonight, Fitzroy ? You could take 
                         him to the Opera!

                                     CLIVE
                         Thank you, sir, but I have an 
                         appointment tonight.

               MR FITZROY'S face is an undiplomatic mirror. He is extremely 
               relieved at CLIVE'S refusal. The SECOND SECRETARY stands, 
               bringing the two young men to their feet. He shakes hands 
               with CLIVE.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         It was an idea of yours, Candy.  
                         Don't run away with the idea that I 
                         think it isn't. But, next time, do 
                         ask the advice of some older man.
                              (He smiles.)
                         Experientia docet, you know. Take 
                         advantage of the experience of age. 
                         Goodbye, my boy! A pleasant crossing!

                                     CLIVE
                         Thank you, sir.

               He starts for the door.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                              (To BABY-FACE)
                         Show Candy the way out, Fitzroy, and 
                         then come back. I want a word with 
                         you.

                                     BABY-FACE
                         Yes, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         Thank you I know the way out.

               He is gone, without a glance at BABY-FACE.

                                       SEQUENCE 30

                            Interior: British Embassy, Berlin

               WAITING ROOM

               CLIVE comes out of the SECOND SECRETARY'S office, shutting 
               the door behind him. He pauses at what he sees.

               There are three rows of benches, all crowded with people, 
               mostly professional classes, business men, schoolteachers, 
               governesses, people who have been compelled to give up their 
               jobs because of the anti-British feeling.  They are a lost-
               looking ' bunch of people. They look up as CLIVE comes out.

               After a second's pause, CLIVE crosses the room. He gives the 
               impression that he does not dare to look these people in the 
               face. Fade out.]]

                                    SEQUENCES 31 & 32

                                Cafe Hohenzollern, Berlin

               It is a typical big Berlin musical cafe.  It has two floors, 
               an upper and a lower, connected by a wide shallow staircase 
               covered with red carpet. The time is about 9 p.m. and people 
               are crowding in through the wide doors from the wintry street 
               outside. It is still snowing. The Porter outside carries a 
               huge, open umbrella.

               The Patrons of the Cafe are mostly from the middle class and 
               upwards. Students are there in their coloured caps (each 
               student organization has a different cap), artists, officers, 
               one or two parties of society people, ordinary townspeople 
               with their families — all sorts. They eat and drink; glasses 
               of hot punch and mugs of beer are the favourites and there 
               is a great bustle everywhere.

               On the upper floor, where the landing makes a big bay, there 
               is an orchestra. Their standard of playing is quite high. 
               The orchestra consists of a piano, a drum, a double-bass, a 
               cello, a flute, a clarinet, two violas and four violins; 
               and, of course, a conductor. But the more unusual feature is 
               a wooden frame on a pole into which numbers can be inserted.  
               Before each new piece, its number is put up, corresponding 
               with the number in a little booklet placed on every table 
               giving the name of the piece and its composer. There is 
               consequently a great turning-over of leaves at every table 
               when a new number is put up, for the cafe habitues are music-
               lovers; in fact many of the regulars know their favourite 
               numbers by heart and applaud as soon as they are put up.

               At the start of the scene, a number is just finishing. There 
               is some applause. Then a new number is hoisted and we see 
               the various reactions of the crowded, noisy colourful cafe. 
               At a table for two, close to the orchestra on the upper floor, 
               sit EDITH and CLIVE.They are drinking punch and eating cakes. 
               The cake-holder is like a little silver tower with different 
               cakes on each landing and is to be seen on many of the tables.

               EDITH is looking up the number in her book.

                                     EDITH
                         [[773]] [93]...It is a song-all the 
                         rage just now: 'Die Mull...', The 
                         Mill Went Round and Round', Mr Candy.

               The orchestra starts to play. EDITH hums it.  CLIVE, who is 
               looking very uncomfortable, takes the plunge.

                                     CLIVE
                         Miss Hunter. I am afraid I have met 
                         you here under false pretences.

                                     EDITH
                         Indeed! Why?  

                                     CLIVE
                         There are — political complications.  
                         [The Prince of Wales is coming to 
                         Berlin. He's invited to the Kaiser's 
                         birthday party. A goodwill visit, 
                         all that sort of thing, you know.

                                     EDITH
                         Yes, I know. It is in the papers.

                                     CLIVE
                         You see, Miss Hunter, I know a chap 
                         in our Embassy here. We were at school 
                         together. His name's Fitzroy, only 
                         we used to call him 'Baby-Face'.

                                     EDITH
                         But how are the Prince of Wales and 
                         your friend Baby-Face connected?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, you see, he nearly had a fit 
                         when he knew why I'd come - Baby-
                         Face, I mean. He dragged me in to 
                         see the First Secretary, and he nearly 
                         had a fit too. A possible scandal, 
                         you know.

                                     EDITH
                         Are you coming to a point, Mr Candy?  

                                     CLIVE
                         The point is that] I had to promise 
                         to do nothing. [And I went bail for 
                         you too.] Apparently it's a matter 
                         for careful diplomacy. You can see 
                         what they mean.

                                     EDITH
                              (Flatly)
                         Yes, of course.

                                     CLIVE
                         I know nothing about politics.[[I 
                         rather flew off the handle, I'm 
                         affraid... sticking my nose in where 
                         I'm not wanted...] [I stuck my head 
                         in where I wasn't wanted] and I could 
                         get [[in all kinds of]] [into the 
                         most awful] trouble.

                                     EDITH
                              (Brightly)
                         Trouble, Mr Candy?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Well - I am a soldier - you know 
                         that, Miss Hunter. 

                                     EDITH
                         I thought you were a soldier this 
                         morning, Mr Candy.  Or have you joined 
                         the Army since luncheon.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Dazed)
                         [[I beg your pordon.]]
                              ([Purses his lips.])

                                     EDITH
                              (With sudden animated 
                              interest)
                         [[Look!  That is their table]] 
                         [Table's filling up].

               Below we see a big round table, reserved for its usual 
               regulars, the first of whom, two students in their caps, are 
               just arriving.  CLIVE stares.

                                     CLIVE
                         Whose table?  

                                     EDITH
                         Don't you remember the Stammtisch? 
                         That is where Kaunitz will sit.

                                     CLIVE
                         You know, it's a bit staggering to 
                         see a girl take such an interest in 
                         politics.

                                     EDITH
                         Politics?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, what else would you call it?  
                         German propaganda against England — 
                         counter-propaganda - the Alldeutscher 
                         Verband — that's politics, isn't it?  

                                     EDITH
                         Not for me-nor for a lot of people. 
                         You see, when our Embassy in Berlin 
                         reports to the Foreign Office in 
                         London that 'a slight change is 
                         visible in the attitude of the German 
                         nationals towards the Boer question', 
                         I have to report in my letter home 
                         that I have lost my position and am 
                         returning to the bosom of my family.

                                     CLIVE
                         I suppose they will be rather sick 
                         about it.

                                     EDITH
                         On the contrary, they will welcome 
                         me with open arms.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Quite at sea)
                         [[Oh.]] [I don't blame them either.] 

                                     EDITH
                         You see, Mr Candy, my family was 
                         opposed to my going to Berlin.  They 
                         said that the best place for a young 
                         girl is Home.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Sententious)
                         Quite so!  

                                     EDITH
                              (Sparkle in her eye)
                         Why?  

                                     A CLIVE
                              (Flustered)
                         What do you mean - 'Why?' 

                                     EDITH
                         How do you know what is the best 
                         place for a girl? Are you a girl?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Embarrassed)
                         Well, really, Miss Hunter ...

                                     EDITH
                              (Remorselessly)
                         Have you any daughters?

                                     CLIVE
                         I say-really ...

                                     EDITH
                              (Suddenly relents and 
                              smiles])
                         [[I know I'm not being fair on you.  
                         But]] [You see,] while you've been 
                         fighting, we women have been thinking.  
                         Think [for] yourself, Mr Candy. What 
                         careers are [there] open to a woman?

               CLIVE fumbles.

                                     EDITH
                              (Answering herself)
                         She can get married.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Relieved)
                         I was just going to -

                                     EDITH
                         But suppose she doesn't want to 'get 
                         married'?
                              (She pronounces the 
                              two words with 
                              delicate scorn.)
                         She can go and be a governess. But 
                         what does a governess know, Mr Candy?  
                         Nothing I assure you. So what can 
                         she teach the children in her charge?  
                         Very little except good manners - if 
                         she herself has good manners.

                                     CLIVE
                         Still - good manners are important.

                                     EDITH
                         Did you [[discover]] [learn] that in 
                         South Africa, Mr Candy?  My brothers 
                         say good manners cost us Magerfontein, 
                         Stormberg and Colenso, six thousand 
                         men killed, twenty thousand wounded 
                         and two years of war when, with a 
                         little commonsense and bad manners, 
                         there would have been no war at all!

               At the table below there are by now several German officers 
               present as well as the students and a couple of ordinary 
               citizens. A waiter has just brought beer. The students have 
               a special gesture, making silly-looking circles with their 
               beer-mugs before drinking.

               CLIVE continues his conversation with this astonishing young 
               woman who thinks marriage and good manners over-rated.

                                     CLIVE
                         One thing I don't understand, Miss 
                         Hunter, is why you have to teach 
                         German children manners. I should 
                         have thought there were plenty of 
                         English kids who -

                                     EDITH
                         I will tell you, if you promise not 
                         to laugh.

                                     CLIVE
                         Promise!  

                                     EDITH
                         My only asset is a fluent command of 
                         English.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Greatly daring)
                         Hear! Hear!  

                                     EDITH
                              (Frowns)
                         Obviously to teach English in England 
                         is to carry coals to Newcastle — and 
                         correspondingly ill-paid.  I therefore 
                         decided to obtain a post in Germany, 
                         where [my] English would command a 
                         premium; and, having learnt German, 
                         to return to England where my German 
                         [[would]]--

               She stops short, seeing CLIVE is not listening. His eyes are 
               on the entrance-door.

               At the entrance, KAUNITZ has just come in and is shaking and 
               brushing the snow from his clothes. He crosses the crowded 
               cafe to the big table immediately below CLIVE and EDITH, 
               where he is noisily greeted by name and introduced to two of 
               the officers who are newcomers.

               CLIVE is still astonished at seeing KAUNITZ actually here in 
               the flesh.

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, I'll be sugared!

                                     EDITH
                         That is he?

                                     CLIVE
                         It's him all right, the little skunk!

                                     EDITH
                         Well, shall we go?
                              (Gathering together 
                              her things.)

                                     CLIVE
                         Go? Oh, yes I suppose so.
                              (He hates to go.)

                                     EDITH
                              (Rises)
                         History will remember this as the 
                         great Retreat from the Cafe 
                         Hohenzollern.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Pleading)
                         Just a second. Please.

               EDITH sits again. CLIVE is rapidly turning the pages of the 
               music catalogue. He finds what he wants.

                                     CLIVE
                         Here we are! Can we ask the orchestra 
                         to play [[139]] [141]?

                                     EDITH
                         Why - yes. Call a waiter. Herr Ober!

                                     CLIVE
                              (Commanding voice)
                         Herr Ober!

               A waiter comes. Meanwhile, EDITH reaches for the catalogue 
               and looks in it.

                                     EDITH
                         Why it's [[Wagner The Brünhilde Aria]] 
                         [Mignon, 'I am Titania'.] Do you 
                         really like —

                                     CLIVE
                         Please! Ask him!  I'll explain later. 
                         [[One-three-nine]] [One-four-one].  
                         And please ask for the bill.

               The orchestra is just finishing a piece. The waiter comes up 
               to the conductor and asks him to play [[139]] [141], 
               indicating where the request comes from.

               The leader looks across, smiles and bows.

               We see CLIVE and EDITH across the cafe. They smile.  Below, 
               two waiters bring a fresh load of beer to the big table. 
               Some people around are looking up at the orchestra.  They 
               clap as they see the new number. Others consult their books.  

               Up at the orchestra, we see [[139]] [141] going up on the 
               pole.  At the table above, CLIVE explains to EDITH, while 
               watching KAUNITZ.

                                     CLIVE
                         Kaunitz was a prisoner in our 
                         blockhouse for seven weeks. This was 
                         the only record we had on our 
                         phonograph. I want to see if he 
                         remembers it.

               At this moment the orchestra plunges into the opening chords 
               of the Aria.  KAUNITZ, sitting with his friends, looks round 
               with a frown.

               CLIVE, above, is delighted.

                                     CLIVE
                         Touched him on the raw all right!

               KAUNITZ beckons his waiter.

                                     EDITH
                              (Excited)
                         He's calling the waiter!

               CLIVE is already waving a twenty-mark note to attract his 
               waiter.

                                     CLIVE
                         Herr Ober!
                              (To EDITH)
                         Is it done to bribe the orchestra?

                                     EDITH
                              (Her blood is up too)
                         Not with money! [Beer!]
                              (To the waiter)
                         Bier fur das Orchester!

               KAUNITZ, with vigorous gestures, has told his waiter to tell 
               the conductor to change the piece of music. The waiter goes 
               across and up the stairs to deliver the message.

                                     EDITH
                              (Thrilled)
                         He's going to stop it.

               They watch in tense excitement.

               KAUNITZ sits frowning impatiently. His friends kid him a 
               little.

               Above, the waiter crosses from the top of the stairs to the 
               orchestra, who are in the middle of the piece. The 
               waiterwhispers in the ear of the conductor, who looks puzzled.  
               The waiter persists and points down to KAUNITZ'S table.

               The conductor looks down at KAUNITZ.

               Below, from his angle, we see KAUNITZ and his friends.  The 
               conductor smiles at these important customers, nods and turns 
               to his orchestra. He prepares to bring the piece to an abrupt 
               close.

               KAUNITZ smiles, gratified.

               EDITH takes this to heart. CLIVE is watching for his own 
               waiter.

                                     EDITH
                         Oh dear! He's going to stop!  

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Cheer up!]] [Round one to Kaunitz.] 
                         Reinforcements are coming!

               From CLIVE'S angle, we see his waiter, carrying a huge tray 
               piled with a dozen beer-mugs, bearing down on the beaming 
               orchestra. The waiter evidently explains to the conductor 
               that the beer has come from the [[Wagner]] [Mignon] fans. 
               The conductor, who was skilfully about to bring the piece to 
               a close, turns and bows in the direction of CLIVE and EDITH, 
               turns back and changing tempo continues to conduct the 
               orchestra in the Aria with greater fire than ever.

               KAUNITZ, who has turned his back on the orchestra, satisfied 
               that he has buried Titania, chokes in his beer, and starts 
               coughing. His friends pat him on the back. He turns round, 
               furious, and glares up at the orchestra.

               His waiter arrives back and explains with apologies what 
               happened. Some of his friends start to share his annoyance.  
               They all look up at the table over their heads.

               CLIVE and EDITH, who have been looking down, hastily draw 
               back just in time.  

               CLIVE and EDITH exchange grins, safely out of sight above.

                                     [[EDITH
                         Now what?]] 

               CLIVE shrugs, but there is a gleam in his eye that would 
               alarm the First Secretary.

               KAUNITZ, with a face of thunder, pushes back his chair, 
               crosses the cafe and runs up the stairs to stop it himself. 

               His table applaud him vigorously.)

                                     [CLIVE
                         He's coming up!  

                                     EDITH
                         Let's go, Mr Candy.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Shrugs)
                         Bit late now.]

                                     EDITH
                         I hope he doesn't see you!

                                     CLIVE
                              (Alas for diplomacy!)
                         I hope he does!

               (KAUNITZ arrives at the top of the stairs. He pauses, throws 
               a glance towards his impudent rivals, invisible until now, 
               then is about to cross to the orchestra. A chord of memory 
               vibrates. He stops, looks again.

               CLIVE returns his look. KAUNITZ can hardly believe his eyes. 
               Then he comes towards CLIVE, who rises pleasantly and with 
               great nonchalance.)

                                     CLIVE
                         Hullo, Kaunitz!

               KAUNITZ approaches slowly. He has had quite a shock but he 
               controls himself. He makes no attempt at formal greeting and 
               he ignores the girl. He stops at the table and looks at CLIVE 
               with a grin.

               People around sense that something is in the air.

               Down below the friends of KAUNITZ all stand up and step back 
               to see what is going on, which makes other people look up.

                                     KAUNITZ
                         [[Das ist ja gut um wahr zu!  
                              ('This is too good to 
                              be true.']])
                         [Das ist ja eine schöne Uberraschung, 
                         Herr Candy.
                              ('This is a pleasant 
                              surprise, Mr Candy.'])

                                     CLIVE
                         Come on, Kaunitz, you speak English!

                                     KAUNITZ
                         I do. But I prefer German!

               He suddenly steps to the balcony rail and at the full pressure 
               of his lungs addresses the crowded café:

                                     KAUNITZ
                         Meine Damen und Herren!

               The orchestra stops abruptly. There is a commotion as people 
               turn round, jump to their feet or ask each other who the 
               speaker is.

               KAUNITZ, still grinning like a fox, looks down, waiting for 
               silence.

               This is more than EDITH has bargained for. She begins to see 
               the possible dangers.

                                     [[EDITH
                         Let's us go, Mr Candy!

                                     CLIVE
                         (Shrugs)
                         Bit late now!]]

               He steps over to KAUNITZ. 

                                     CLIVE
                              (Persuasively)
                         Stop it, Kaunitz, I'm with a lady. 

                                     KAUNITZ
                         You should have thought of that before 
                         you started your little joke!  

                                     CLIVE
                              (Taking his arm)
                         Stop it, Kaunitz!  

                                     KAUNITZ
                              (Furiously)
                         Take off your hands!

               He tries to strike down CLIVE'S hand from his arm. But the 
               Englishman's grip at once tightens and the blow only hurts 
               his own hand. This makes him livid with anger. Never ceasing 
               to struggle in CLIVE'S iron grip CLIVE now holds him helpless 
               by both arms he shouts for help.

                                     KAUNITZ
                         Kameraden!

               His friends below, joined by others, are already surging 
               towards the stairs.

                                     SHOUTS
                         Durchlassen!
                              ('Gangway.')
                         Platzmachen.  Zurzück!

               KAUNITZ, still held powerless by CLIVE who, for obvious 
               reasons, is not anxious to let go, is still struggling madly 
               on the verge of a fit.

                                     KAUNITZ
                              (Screaming)
                         Lass mich los, du Schwein!
                              ('Let go, you swine.')
                         Kameraden!  — You English swine! - 
                         You English murderer! -
                              (He spits in CLIVE'S 
                              face.)

               This is too much for CLIVE. He suddenly lets go of KAUNITZ. 
               The man staggers, then recovers.

               CLIVE hits him - once. It is enough. Up till now his actions 
               have been purely defensive but he has been longing to hit 
               KAUNITZ for days. All that longing is behind the punch which 
               knocks KAUNITZ cold. He falls on the table and showers of 
               little cakes descend upon the upturned faces below.

               CLIVE turns to EDITH, who takes his arm and they start to 
               go.

               Four friends of KAUNITZ, panting and indignant, bar their 
               way: an Ulna officer, two students, an ordinary citizen.  
               The latter crosses to KAUNITZ and, with help, get's the 
               unconscious man on to a chair.

                                     CIVILIAN
                              (to STUDENT)
                         Rasch!  Hilf mir, Hans!
                              ('Quick! Give me a 
                              hand Hans')
.

                                     ULAN
                              (to CLIVE)
                         Sie werden dafür Rechemschaft geben, 
                         sie Flegal!
                              ('You will have to 
                              give satisfaction 
                              for this, you loafer!')

                                     CLIVE
                              (Getting the tone all 
                              right. To EDITH)
                         Please tell him that it's his fault--
                              (hepoints to KAUNITZ)
                         —-he started it!

                                     1ST STUDENT
                              (Surprised)
                         Englanderl.

                                     ULAN
                              (Shocked)
                         Unerhdrt!
                              ('Unheard of!')

               The CAFE MANAGER tries to force his way through the crowd.

                                     MANAGER
                         Meine Herren! Bitte keinen Skandal! 
                         Bitte, nehmen Sie Ihre Platze ein!
                              ('Gentlemen! Please, 
                              no scandal! Please 
                              return to your 
                              tables!')

                                     2ND STUDENT
                              (To MANAGER))
                         Eine Schande!  Sie dulden englische 
                         Schweine in Ihrem Lokal!
                              ('Scandal yourself!  
                              Allowing English 
                              pigs into your cafe!')

                                     EDITH
                              (Getting warm))
                         Wir haben gar nichts gemacht!
                              ('We haven't done 
                              anything!')

                                     1ST STUDENT
                              (Rudely)
                         Wir haben nichts mit Ihnen zu tun, 
                         Fraulein!
                              (' We have nothing to 
                              do with you, miss.')

                                     CLIVE
                              (Treads hard on 
                              STUDENT'S toes)
                         Manners!

                                     CIVILIAN
                         Ich spreche Englisch!
                              ('I speak English!') 
                              (To CLIVE)
                         You shall get into great trouble, my 
                         man! You are not now in England.

                                     CLIVE
                         You saw very well that he asked for 
                         it!

                         2ND STUDENT
                 Was sagt er?
                    (What's he say?)

                                                      ULAN
                                              Was sagt er?
                                                 (What's he say?)

                                     CIVILIAN
                              (Ignoring them, shaking 
                              his finger at CLIVE)
                         Herr Kaunitz is the friend of us!  
                         You [[shall]] [will] satisfaction 
                         give!

                                     EDITH
                         Please stop shouting!  You don't  
                         [[know who this gentleman is]] 
                         [understand]!  He--
                              (Points to CLIVE)
                         --and Herr Kaunitz are old friends!

                                     CHORUS
                         Was sagt er?

               CIVILIAN translates hurriedly.

                                     CLIVE
                              (To EDITH)
                         It's going a bit far to call that 
                         skunk a friend of mine!

                                     CIVILIAN
                              (Shocked)
                         Herr Kaunitz is a member of der 
                         Alldeutsche Verband!

                                     CLIVE
                         Then the Alldeutscher Verband ought 
                         to be ashamed of itself.

                                     CHORUS
                         Was sagter?

                                     CIVILIAN
                              (Translates, then to 
                              CLIVE, very excitedly)
                         Mein Herr!  Officers of the Imperial 
                         German Army are members of der 
                         Alldeutsche Verband!

                                     CLIVE
                         Then the officers of the Imperial 
                         German Army ought to be ashamed of 
                         themselves too!

                                     CHORUS
                         Was sagt er?

               [German anger continues, untranslated.]

                                                         QUICK DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 33

                            Interior: British Embassy, Berlin

               CORRIDOR

               Two pairs of jackboots, wonderfully polished, snugly fitting, 
               beautifully in step, marching firmly down the corridor of 
               the Embassy.

               They come to a door, halt, stand rigid.

               A pair of dark trousers and elastic-sided boots, which have 
               evidently preceded the two pairs of jackboots, vanish through 
               the door, preceded by an agitated knock.

               The owners of the jackboots are two very smart officers in 
               the uniform of the 2nd Regiment of Ulans of the Guard. Both 
               are Oberleutnants.

               The owner of the elastic-sided boots reappears. It is VENNING.  
               He leaves the door wide open and motions towards it.

                                     VENNING
                              (In bad German)
                         Bitte sehr!

               Without a word, the two officers march in. 

               VENNING closes the door.

                                       SEQUENCE 34

                            Interior: British Embassy, Berlin

               OFFICE OF BABY-FACE FITZROY

               BABY-FACE is standing, startled, behind his desk.  

               The two officers click their heels, bow, shake hands. 

                                     1ST ULAN
                         von Ritter! 

                                     2ND ULAN
                         von Schonborn!  

                                     BABY-FACE
                              (Mutters)
                         - er - Fitzroy -

               VON RITTER is the elder of the two officers. He has charm.

                                     VON SCHÖNBORN
                         Kann ich mit Ihnen Deutsch sprechen?

                                     BABY-FACE
                              ([[Haltingly)
                         Ich kann nicht - very sorry - no!]]  
                         [Natürlich.]

                                     VON RITTER
                              (Smiles)
                         [[I speak a very little English.]] 
                         [Being on British territory, shall 
                         we speak English?]

                                     BABY-FACE
                         [[Oh, good!]] [Right ho.] How can I 
                         help you, gentlemen? Won't you sit 
                         down?

                                     VON RITTER
                         Thank you.

               The two officers sit.

                                     VON RITTER
                         We wish some information about a 
                         compatriot of yours in Berlin -
                         [[called]][a certain]--
                              (He consults a note)
                         --Candy.

                                     BABY-FACE
                              (Spontaneously)
                         Clive Candy?  

                                     VON RITTER
                              (Referring again to 
                              note)
                         Yes. Clive Candy. 

                                     BABY-FACE
                              (Happily)
                         You've come to the right man! I know 
                         him well, we were at [[school]] 
                         [Harrow] together.

                                     VON RITTER
                         Indeed?  

                                     BABY-FACE
                         Of course we lost touch a bit since 
                         the War. He's Army, you know.

                                     VON RITTER
                         He is an officer of the British Army?  

                                     BABY-FACE
                         Yes. He's just come back from South 
                         Africa.

                                     VON RITTER
                              (Very pleased)
                         This is excellent news.
                              (To VON SCHÖNBORN)
                         Ausgezeichnet! Er ist ein Offizier!

                                     VON SCHÖNBORN
                              (Equally pleased)
                         Grossartig!

                                     VON RITTER
                              (To FITZROY)
                         You have relieved us from great 
                         doubts.

                                     BABY-FACE
                         I don't quite understand... 

                                     VON RITTER
                         We were worried that your friend 
                         might not be able to give 
                         satisfaction.

                                     BABY-FACE
                         Satisfaction?

                                     VON RITTER
                         It is understood that an officer of 
                         the Imperial German Army cannot demand 
                         satisfaction from an opponent who is 
                         not his equal in position and honour. 
                         But since this Clive Candy is a 
                         British officer, he can be challenged.

                                     BABY-FACE
                              (Faintly)
                         Challenged to what?

                                     VON RITTER
                         To duel, Mr Fitzroy!

                                     BABY-FACE
                         Duel!

                                     SEQUENCE 35
                         Interior: British Embassy, Berlin

               CORRIDOR

               It is empty except for VENNING ambling down with a dispatch-
               box.

               BABY-FACE shoots out of his office across the corridor into 
               the office opposite. At once he reappears almost dragging 
               MAJOR GOODHEAD, the Military Attache, whom he propels into 
               his own office to meet the two Ulans.

               He himself pounces on VENNING, who is now near at hand. 

                                     BABY-FACE
                         Yenning!  Hurry over to the Kaiserhof!  
                         Bring Mr Clive Candy here at once! 
                         Don't come back without him!  Now 
                         hurry!  

                                     VENNING
                         Ye-yes, Mr Fitzroy.

               BABY-FACE at once turns and vanishes into the office of the 
               THIRD SECRETARY.

               VENNING stands dithering about uncertain what to do with the 
               dispatch-box, finally knocks at a new door, the office of 
               the SECOND SECRETARY, and goes in to deliver it. 

               MR FITZROY and three new gentlemen rush out of the THIRD 
               SECRETARY'S office and cross to the office of the SECOND 
               SECRETARY, They all crowd in.

               A moment later, YENNING shoots out followed by MR FITZROY 
               very annoyed and hectoring. 

                                     BABY-FACE
                         I told you to HURRY, Yenning! Now 
                         don't argue, GO AT ONCE!

               MAJOR GOODHEAD, with a face of thunder, hurtles out of MR 
               FITZROY'S office and up the corridor.

               YENNING really gets under way.

               Behind him the party, reinforced to the number of seven, 
               comes sweeping out of the SECOND SECRETARY'S office and up 
               the corridor to the large and important door of the FIRST 
               SECRETARY. On the way they are overtaken by MAJOR GOODHEAD.  
               All arrive at the door together. There is a pause. The SECOND 
               SECRETARY knocks. Then he and the MILITARY ATTACHÉ go in, 
               beckoning to MR FITZROY, who meekly follows.

                                     SEQUENCE 36
                         Interior: British Embassy, Berlin

               OFFICE OF THE FIRST SECRETARY

               It is a very large and splendid room with a high ceiling. A 
               blazing fire is burning under the elaborate mantelpiece. The 
               two gentlemen and the gallant officer enter. They stop, seeing 
               that the FIRST SECRETARY is engaged with a visitor.  The 
               FIRST SECRETARY is a very wise, very courteous elderly 
               gentleman. His visitor is seated with his back to the door.

                                     [[1ST SECRETARY
                         Come in, gentlemen.  This is Clive 
                         Candy recently arrived from England.  
                         I gather from your expressions that 
                         you are anxious to meet him.

               CLIVE has meanwhile stood up.

               The MILITARY ATTACHE advances, bristling.]] 

                                     GOODHEAD
                              (Glares at CLIVE.)
                         [[The Second regiment of Ulans of 
                         the Guard are also anxious to have 
                         that privilege, sir.]] Mr Candy has 
                         insulted the whole German Army!

                                     CLIVE
                              (Respectfully, to 
                              MAJOR GOODHEAD)
                         I didn't insult anybody, sir. I only 
                         said that if Army officers were in 
                         the Alldeutscher Verband with Kaunitz--

                                     GOODHEAD
                         --then the German Army ought to be 
                         ashamed of itself! Exactly!
                              (To FIRST SECRETARY)
                         Eighty-two Ulan officers want to 
                         challenge him.

                                     1ST SECRETARY
                              (Quietly)
                         Lieutenant Candy has told me the 
                         whole story.
                              (To CLIVE)
                         By the way, the girl you mentioned, 
                         is she trustworthy?

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Unquestionably]] [Undoubtedly], 
                         sir.

                                     1ST SECRETARY
                              (Nods, then to MAJOR 
                              GOODHEAD)
                         Major Goodhead, surely it's not 
                         suggested that Lieutenant Candy should 
                         fight the whole Officers Corps?

                                     GOODHEAD
                              (Stiffly)
                         They are drawing lots, sir, to decide 
                         who is to have the honour of fighting 
                         this gentleman--
                              (Pointedly)
                         --who has not insulted anybody!

                                     1ST SECRETARY
                         I see. Have you any suggestions, 
                         Major? 

                                     GOODHEAD
                              (Pacifically)
                         Militarily speaking, Mr Candy has no 
                         option. He cannot fight a duel. He 
                         must run away!

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                              (Belligerently)
                         And politically speaking, such an 
                         action would be disastrous. Mr Candy 
                         must fight!

                                     1ST SECRETARY
                         Gentlemen! One moment!  Surely you 
                         are leaving Lieutenant Candy out of 
                         your calculations?

                                     CLIVE
                         I'll fight if necessary, sir.

                                     1ST SECRETARY
                         My dear boy, I know that.
                              (Pause)
                         You had better go to your hotel now 
                         and stay there. Oh, and can you get 
                         in touch with Miss - ?

                                     CLIVE
                         Hunter, sir? [[I think I can.]][I 
                         believe I could.]

                                     1ST SECRETARY
                         Explain to her that it is necessary 
                         to give the impression that your 
                         reason for coming to Berlin was to 
                         see her. You are probably in love 
                         with her, or something of the sort.

                                     CLIVE
                         Oh, but I say, sir, I'm not!

                                     1ST SECRETARY
                         My dear Lieutenant, you have caused 
                         enough trouble already. Do what I 
                         ask. Meanwhile I and these gentlemen 
                         will discuss the best way to get you 
                         out of this.  And us! 

                                     [BABY-FACE
                              (Sotto voice to CLIVE)
                         Well. You are a...]

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                     SEQUENCE 37
                         Interior: British Embassy, Berlin

               OFFICE OF SECOND SECRETARY

               INSERT: a thin brown booklet (usually known as 'The Brown 
               Codex'). It is the famous:

                                       EHREN-CODEX

                                    ('Code of Honour')

                                      L. BARBASETTI

                        ÜBERSETZT UND UNSEREN GEBRAUCHEN ANGEPASST

                                           VON

                    ('Translated and for our own purpose adapted by')

                                      GUSTAV RISTOW

               The time is later on, the afternoon of the same day. It is a 
               Conference of Seconds. Those of the Englishman are: The SECOND 
               SECRETARY and the MILITARY ATTACHE. Those of the German: VON 
               RITTER and VON REUMANN. (The latter, who is a Rittmeister 
               (Captain), is an older officer in the same Regiment of Ulans, 
               he speaks English even better than von Ritter.) All four are 
               seated around a big round table. It is a very serious 
               Conference.  The Englishmen are naturally ill-at-ease; the 
               Germans are not, having done this sort of thing before: VON 
               REUMANN is lofty, VON RITTER is affable.

               [[The Codex lies on the polished table.  VON RITTER pushes 
               it across to MAJOR GOODHEAD.]] 

                                     VON RITTER
                              ([To VON REUMANN)
                         May I have the Codex, Herr 
                         Rittmeister?] This is our famous 
                         'Brown Codex', Major Goodhead, the 
                         'Code of Honour' observed by all 
                         duellists. We thought you might not 
                         be familiar with it.

                                     GOODHEAD
                              (Drily)
                         Thank you. I shall study it with 
                         attention.  

                                     VON RITTER
                         We have permission to offer for the 
                         site of the duel the gymnasium at 
                         the barracks of our Regiment.

               The MAJOR and the SECRETARY exchange glances. The SECRETARY 
               nods firmly.

                                     GOODHEAD
                              (Gloomily)
                         We agree.

                                     VON RITTER
                         We are now in a position to announce 
                         the name of our fellow officer, who 
                         will fight Lieutenant Candy: 
                         Oberleutnant Theodor Kretschmar-
                         Schuldorff.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         May I make a note of that?  

                                     VON RITTER
                         With the greatest pleasure.

                                     VON REUMANN
                         Here is his card.
                              (He passes it across.)

                                     VON RITTER
                         Have you gentlemen any suggestions 
                         regarding choice of Leader for the 
                         Duel?  

                                     GOODHEAD
                              (Still gloomily)
                         We suggest the Military Attaché [[of]] 
                         [to] the Swedish [[Embassy]] 
                         [legation].

               The two Germans confer solemnly in a whisper.

                                     VON REUMANN
                         We agree. His name?  

                                     GOODHEAD
                         Colonel Borg.

                                     VON REUMANN
                              (Writing)
                         Colonel Borg.

                                     VON RITTER
                         Regarding sabres, we shall, of course, 
                         supply a number to choose from.

                                     GOODHEAD
                         With your permission, we shall supply 
                         a number as well.

                                     VON RITTER
                         Certainly. The choice of sabres will 
                         be determined by lot...             

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                              (Nods)
                         Good.

               VON REUMANN reaches for the 'Brown Codex' and, opening it at 
               para. 13 7, points to it.

                                     VON REUMANN
                         You know, of course, that the sabre 
                         must not exceed the maximum weight 
                         of 60 Dekagrammes!

               VON REUMANN passes the book to the SECOND SECRETARY, who 
               reads it gravely.

                                     GOODHEAD
                              (Reading also)
                         We shall make a note of it.
                              (He does so.)

                                     VON RITTER
                         You will bring your own doctor, of 
                         course -

               The two Englishmen nod

                                     VON RITTER
                         And we shall bring ours.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                              (Swallowing slightly)
                         We agree.

               His imagination is beginning to work.

                                     VON RITTER
                         Do you prefer to strip the upper 
                         part of the body of the combatants 
                         or do you prefer them in shirt 
                         sleeves?

               SECOND SECRETARY swallows again.

                                     GOODHEAD
                              (Curtly)
                         Shirtsleeves.
                              (He points to passage 
                              in book.)
                         I see here that Paragraph 133 says: 
                         'It is advisable a few hours previous 
                         to the duel, to take a bath!' 

                                     VON RITTER
                         Only the principals. Not the seconds.
                              (He laughs.)

               The others smile, even the sensitive SECRETARY. The ice is 
               slightly broken.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         It is a very strange sensation to be 
                         preparing a duel between two people 
                         who have never even seen each other.

                                     VON RITTER
                              (Carelessly)
                         It happens sometimes. Marriages also!
                              (He laughs again.)
                         By the way, has your man ever fought 
                         a duel?  

                                     GOODHEAD
                         No. Has yours?

               VON RITTER stands, exchanging a glance with VON REUMANN.

                                     VON RITTER
                         Between ourselves, Theo does not 
                         really approve of duels.

                                     SECRETARY
                              (Hopefully)
                         Then gentlemen - is this fight really 
                         necessary?

                                     VON RITTER
                              (Very seriously and 
                              choosing his words)
                         Sir. There are in a soldier's life 
                         moments when his personal feelings 
                         do not count. Oberleutnant Kretschmar-
                         Schuldorff knows his duty very well.

               All the gentlemen stand up.

                                     GOODHEAD
                         We have not agreed the time, 
                         gentlemen.

                                     VON REUMANN
                         [[Is]] [Will] seven o'clock in the 
                         morning [be] agreeable to you?

               The two Englishmen confer.

                                     GOODHEAD
                         Get it over early.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         (Nods)
                         [We agree] Seven o'clock.

                                     VON RITTER
                         It would be advisable to meet half 
                         an hour earlier.

                                     GOODHEAD
                         At 6.30 a.m. in the gymnasium, at 
                         the barracks of the Second Ulans.

               [[Far away a town clock starts to strike the hour.

               VON RITTER picks up the 'Brown Codex'.

                                     VON RITTER
                         The 'Code of Honour' prescribes that 
                         the watches of the Seconds should be 
                         synchronized by the town clock.  It 
                         is now three o'clock precisely!

               All four gentlemen set their watches.]] 

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 38

                             Interior: The Gymnasium, Berlin

               [[The clock, high on the wall, stands at 6.50.  Outside the 
               glass roof it is still black night.]] 

               The CAMERA MOVES to show the vast, bare, brilliantly-lit 
               place. The limits of the combat area have been marked out on 
               the floor by the Seconds: VON REUMANN is still supervising 
               it with  COLONEL BORG.

               CLIVE CANDY enters, accompanied by the FIRST SECRETARY. Their 
               clothes are powdered with snow. CLIVE'S two Seconds cross at 
               once to meet him and his companion. -

                                     [2ND SECRETARY
                         Here comes our man.]

                                     GOODHEAD
                         Morning!
                              (To CLIVE only)
                         Slept well?  

                                     CLIVE
                              (Cheerfully)
                         Very.

                                     1ST SECRETARY
                         He was still sleeping when I called 
                         for him at the hotel.

                                     CLIVE
                         They forgot to wake me.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         Your nerves are all right, my boy.

               While talking, they cross to their end of the hall, where 
               there are two chairs and a bench. A similar arrangement exists 
               at the opposite end for the Germans. The English DOCTOR is 
               waiting and is introduced. He is an elderly man, an ex-Army 
               surgeon, Lancashire-born.

                                     GOODHEAD
                         Dr Crowther - [[Lieutenant]] [Mr] 
                         Candy.

                                     CROWTHER
                         How d'ye do?

               Shakes hands and shifts hand to CLIVE'S wrist without relaxing 
               his hold. He feels the pulse, meanwhile scrutinizing CLIVE, 
               who smiles back good-humouredly.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Surveying his party 
                              with humour)
                         Why wasn't I allowed any breakfast?

                                     GOODHEAD
                              (Producing the 'Codex')
                         Because the book says not.

                                     CLIVE
                         It would.

               The DOCTOR shuts his watch with a snap, restores it to his 
               pocket and grunts:

                                     CROWTHER
                         All right! You'll do.

               He starts to take off his jacket.

                                     GOODHEAD
                         I hope you have read it?

                                     CLIVE
                         Miss Hunter read it. She says it's a 
                         joke good enough for Punch!
                              (Looks around.)
                         Where is Theo Kretschmar-Schuldorff?  

                                     GOODHEAD
                         He hasn't shown up yet.

                                     1ST SECRETARY
                         I congratulate you on your 
                         pronunciation of his name.

                                     CLIVE
                         I learnt it by heart. So that when 
                         my grandchildren ask: 'Grandpa! Have 
                         you ever cut anybody's ear off?' I 
                         shall be able to answer: 'Yes - Theo 
                         Kretschmar-Schuldorff's.' Nobody 
                         could invent a name like that. Who's 
                         this?

               A tall OFFICER in a different uniform approaches.

                                     GOODHEAD
                         Colonel Borg, the Swedish Military 
                         Attaché. He is going to lead the 
                         combat.
                              (Introduces.)
                         Colonel Borg - [[Lieutenant]] [Mr] 
                         Candy.

                                     COL. BORG
                              (Bows)
                         I must of course use German 
                         expressions. I shall say 'Los!'  for 
                         starting and 'Halt' for stop. Can 
                         you memorize these two words?  

                                     CLIVE
                         I'll try, sir. Anyway at the beginning 
                         I'll be pretty sure you mean 'Start'!  
                         And, during the combat you're not 
                         likely to say 'Start' again!

                                     COL. BORG
                              (Stolidly)
                         That is true. Excuse me.
                              (He bows again and 
                              goes.)

               [[CLIVE looks up at the clock on the wall.]] 

                                     CLIVE
                         Seven o'clock.
                              (Looks towards 
                              entrance.)
                         Theo Kretschmar-Schuldorff will 
                         forfeit his entrance fee if he isn't--
                              (He breaks off.)

               At the entrance, at the other end of the hall, three German 
               officers of the ^nd Ulans have entered.  The officer slightly 
               in the lead of the other two is THEO KRETSCHMAR-SCHULDORFF. 
               He walks swiftly, looking neither to the right nor to the 
               left, followed closely by the others, the only noise their 
               boots on the hard floor of the gymnasium and the swish of 
               their heavy greatcoats, flecked with snow.  They reach the 
               'German' end of the hall and are greeted by the little group 
               of their people.

               THEO salutes smartly, clicking his heels each time before he 
               shakes hands with his fellow officers VON RITTER and VON 
               REUMANN with the German Army Surgeon and with COLONEL BORG. 
               He looks a tall, ominous figure in his slightly fantastic 
               uniform, he has, as yet, no personality beyond being the 
               chosen representative of eighty-two serious-minded indignant 
               Ulan officers.

               Formalities done, THEO at once starts to remove greatcoat, 
               jacket and trappings. As yet we only see these actions through 
               CLIVE'S eyes, at the full length of the hall. No clear 
               conversation can be heard, only a distant sharp mutter, 
               sounding hollow in the rafters of the empty gymnasium. COLONEL 
               BORG leaves the German group and crosses towards the British.

               CLIVE is in his shirtsleeves. He looks wistfully at the other 
               group.

                                     CLIVE
                         I wish I'd brought my uniform!  

                                     GOODHEAD
                              (Reacts, then remarks)
                         How are you with a sabre? 

                                     CLIVE
                         [Oh, I don't know.] I know which end 
                         to hold.

                                     GOODHEAD
                         We drew lots for each weapon.

                                     CLIVE
                         I hope mine is a nice light one.

                                     GOODHEAD
                         All sabres weigh the same.

               COLONEL BORG joins them.

                                     COL. BORG
                         Excuse me, please. [Would you undo 
                         your shirt?]

               He unbuttons CLIVE'S shirt and peers inside. CLIVE reacts. 

                                     COL. BORG
                         Right!
                              (He points to Clive's 
                              right arm.)
                         Do you want to roll up your sleeve 
                         or rip it off?  

                                     CLIVE
                         What's better?

                                     COL. BORG
                         I am not permitted to give advice.

                                     CLIVE
                         I think I'll rip it.

                                     COL. BORG
                              (Nods)
                         It is definitely better. 

                                     CLIVE
                         Doctor! Your scissors, please!

               The DOCTOR steps forward with a fearsome pair of scissors. 
               He cuts the sleeve, then rips it off. While he is doing this, 
               CLIVE speaks to him.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Low voice)
                         What did he hope to find there?
                              (He means inside his 
                              shirt.)

                                     CROWTHER
                              (Same tone)
                         Protective bandages.

               CLIVE nods.

                                     COL. BORG
                              (To CLIVE)
                         Now you, alone, will come with me, 
                         please.

                                     1ST SECRETARY
                         Good luck.

               The SECOND SECRETARY and MAJOR GOODHEAD keep their fingers 
               crossed. CLIVE and COLONEL BORG march solemnly together until 
               he stops CLIVE with a gesture in his half of the chalked 
               arena. The German is already standing in his place.  The two 
               sabres are on a bench, equidistant from both combatants.

               Both men secretly eye each other with curiosity.  The German 
               is a tall broad-shouldered man, about 3 o, with a fine 
               thoughtful face.

               The Ritual of German Duelling now follows: First the Protocol.

               COLONEL BORG takes a sheet of paper from his pocket and, 
               standing between the opponents, reads aloud, first German, 
               then English.

                                     COL. BORG
                              (Reads)
                         Ich werde jetzt das Protokol vorlesen - 
                         I shall read now the Protocol.
                              (Pause)
                         A)  Sie dürfen den Kampf nur auf das 
                         Commando 'Los' beginnen  You will 
                         start only at the command 'Los!'
                              (Pause)
                         B) Sie müssen den Kampf auf das von 
                         wem immer gegeben Commando 'Halt' 
                         unterbrechen - You must stop the 
                         combat if you hear the command 'Halt' 
                         whoever may say it.
                              (Pause)
                         C)  Sobald Sie sich verwundet fühlen, 
                         Sie haben den Kampf sofort 
                         einzustellen und durch zuriickspringen 
                         die Distanz anzunehmen, auch wenn 
                         nicht 'Halt' commandiert wird - If 
                         you feel to be wounded you must stop 
                         the combat and by leaping back you 
                         must regain position at the original 
                         distance even if no 'Halt' has been 
                         commanded.
                              (Pause)
                         D) Es ist verboten, die Waffe des 
                         Gegners mit der freien Hand zu 
                         ergreifen - It is forbidden to seize 
                         the weapon of the opponent with the 
                         bare hand.

               The COLONEL looks interrogatively at both opponents. They 
               nod. They have understood. The COLONEL raises his voice.

                                     COL. BORG
                         Secundanten, bitte! 

               They step forward, VON RITTER crosses to the bench by the 
               wall, takes the sabres, offers one to THEO, hands the other 
               to MAJOR GOODHEAD, who offers it to CLIVE.   

               The four Seconds take up position. Each combatant has one 
               Second on either side, remaining at such a distance that 
               they do not interfere with the free movements of the 
               principals.

               All Seconds have sabres too.

               COLONEL BORG sees that all is correct, then addresses the 
               principals.

                                     COL. BORG
                         Fechtstellung einnehmen! - 'Into 
                         fighting-position, please!

               In the 'Fighting-Position'the sabres are extended towards 
               the opponent at the full stretch of the arm.

               COLONEL BORG steps forward and, standing between them, takes 
               hold of the two sharp points, bringing them together until 
               they are a little less then two feet apart.

               For a moment, he holds them thus with the tips of his fingers. 
               Then suddenly he steps back, snatching his hands from the 
               blades, and gives the command to start.

                                     COL. BORG
                         Los!

               The fight starts. They are both strong swordsmen.

               The CAMERA BEGINS TO MOVE AWAY, further and further, HIGHER 
               and HIGHER. 

               We see CLIVE'S two Seconds. They stand with the points of 
               their two sabres towards the floor, ready to intervene and 
               strike up the fighters' blades if necessary.

               The clash of steel and the stamp and quick movements of the 
               fighters' feet go steadily on.

               Then we see the German Seconds, also standing motionless and 
               watchful, with downward pointing swords.

               The movement of the CAMERA QUICKENS. It SWEEPS AWAY from the 
               fighters and HIGH ABOVE them. They and their Seconds are 
               small figures in the middle of the vast brightly-lit hall. 
               The clash of steel becomes fainter.

               Above the hissing gas-chandeliers the cross-trees of the 
               roof are in semi-darkness.

               Then - without a break - the CAMERA slips through the huge 
               windows and we are out in the street.

                                       SEQUENCE 39

                                Exterior: Barracks, Berlin

               Snow is softly falling between the camera and the brightly-
               lit windows of the gymnasium. There are streaks of light in 
               the sky but the street is still dark except where the lamps 
               throw pools of light.

               The CAMERA has TRAVELLED BACK so far now that WE SEE the 
               walls of the barracks and the sentry-box at the gates. 

               In the foreground appears a waiting carriage, the horses and 
               coachmen wrapped in their blankets, both half asleep. But 
               the two occupants of the carriage are not asleep: they are 
               EDITH HUNTER and BABY-FACE FITZROY. Both are watching the 
               lighted windows across the street, muffled in fur coats and 
               heavy robes. It is a hard winter, the winter of Berlin. 

               In the carriage they watch the distant windows in silence. 

               EDITH is very anxious.

                                     EDITH
                              (Low voice)
                         They must have started by now.

                                     BABY-FACE
                              (Tactfully)
                         You never know. I heard of one chap 
                         whose nerve broke - absolutely went 
                         all to pieces -

                                     EDITH:
                              (Same tone)
                         Poor fellow.

                                     BABY-FACE:
                              (Running on)
                         He was in such a funk - this chap -
                         that he couldn't even lift his arm. 
                         His Seconds tried to lift it for him 
                         but as soon as they let go down it 
                         dropped like a railroad signal. Rum!
                              (He ruminates for a 
                              moment: EDITH glances 
                              at him with distaste.)
                         I say, I hope our chap doesn't get 
                         killed, it'll create an awful stink 
                         if he does.

                                     EDITH
                              (Very angry)
                         Mr Fitzroy! [I think] you are the 
                         most odious man I have ever met!  
                         And if anything happens to him I - I 
                         will blow up [[the]] [your] Embassy!  

                                     BABY-FACE
                         I say!
                              (Stares.)
                         [[D'you know, I really believe you 
                         would!]] Are you [[an anarachist 
                         (sic)] [a suffragette] Miss Hunter?

                                     EDITH
                         [[Not yet!]] [Never mind!] But if 
                         anything should happen to Mr Candy -

                                     BABY-FACE
                              (Comprehending)
                         Oh! You mean Suggie!  I was talking 
                         about the German fellow. Why, Sugar 
                         Candy won the Shield at school two 
                         years running. Nothing can happen to 
                         him. Old Suggie's never -
                              (He suddenly stops 
                              speaking.)

               EDITH is not listening. She is staring towards the gate of 
               the barracks, horrorstruck.

                                     EDITH:
                              (Almost inaudibly)
                         ... Oh! [Look]...

               MR FITZROY turns sharply and follows her glance. 

               The gate has just been opened. An ambulance-wagon comes 
               rumbling out of the barracks, turns sharply and is off down 
               the street, the Army driver lashing the two horses to make 
               them gallop.

               Through the frozen snow on the sides of the wagon we see the 
               great Red Crosses.

               The lights go out in the gymnasium.

               The duel is over.

                                                                  FADE OUT:

                                       SEQUENCE 40

                                  Interior: Nursing Home

               The Nursing Home, a very exclusive and expensive one, almost 
               a private hotel, is on the Stolpchensee, one of the lovely 
               inland lakes in the forests to the south-west of the city, 
               covered with skaters in winter and with boats and bathers in 
               summer.

               THE VESTIBULE

               The vestibule, which is large and handsome, has long windows 
               looking out over the forest and lake. As this is only one 
               day after the duel, the landscape is covered with snow.

               On Visitors' Day the vestibule is crowded with people going 
               and coming, chatting to convalescents and each other. But 
               today is not Visitors' Day and there is only one visitor 
               visible: EDITH HUNTER. She wears the same outfit as in the 
               carriage. Several nurses are bustling about. EDITH is 
               preoccupied but no longer violently anxious as she was in 
               the carriage. 

               From the corridor at one side, MAJOR GOODHEAD and the SECOND 
               SECRETARY appear and come towards her, their faces relieved.

                                     GOODHEAD
                         You can go in now, Miss Hunter.

                                     EDITH
                         How is he?

                                     GOODHEAD
                         The doctor says six to eight weeks, 
                         not more.

                                     EDITH
                         I'm so glad.

                                     GOODHEAD
                         Permission has been granted for you 
                         to stay here in the building.

                                     EDITH
                              (Surprised)
                         Oh, but I am not staying in Germany, 
                         [[Major]] [Colonel] Goodhead. I go 
                         home tomorrow. I have already 
                         telegraphed my father.

                                     GOODHEAD
                              (To SECOND SECRETARY)
                         Haven't you told her?  

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                              (Embarrassed)
                         ... No...

               EDITH turns slowly and looks with large eyes at the SECRETARY.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         Now you must be sensible, Miss Hunter. 
                         We are very fortunate that everything 
                         has [[turned out as it has]] [gone 
                         off so well]. Do you want to spoil 
                         everything?  The duel was generally 
                         supposed to be about you. What would 
                         people think if you left him now, 
                         wounded and alone in a Nursing Home?  
                         [Naturally] I thought that you 
                         understood all this, otherwise why 
                         have you come here?

                                     EDITH
                         To say goodbye to Mr Candy.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                              (With fatherly patience)
                         Go in now, Miss Hunter. By the way, 
                         don't bother about the bill.  They 
                         have orders to send it to the Embassy. 
                         Good morning.

                                     GOODHEAD
                         Good morning, Miss Hunter.

                                     EDITH
                              (Rather blankly)
                         Good morning.
                              (To herself)
                         Well! (They go off.

               She goes down the corridor to CLIVE'S room.

                                       SEQUENCE 41

                                  Interior: Nursing Home

               CLIVE'S ROOM

               CLIVE is in bed, propped up with pillows. His head is so ban-
               daged that only his nose and eyes are visible.

               NURSE KONIG is putting logs into the big stove.

               EDITH knocks at the door and enters.

                                     [NURSE K
                         Bitte.] 

               For the fraction of a second, she is considerably startled 
               by sight of CLIVE.  Then she recovers and addresses the nurse.

                                     EDITH
                         Guten Tag, Fraulein.

               NURSE KONIG speaks English fluently and incessantly.

                                     NURSE K
                              (Brightly)
                         Good afternoon, miss, you are Miss 
                         Hunter, are you not?  My name is 
                         Erna Konig and I speak really 
                         excellent English.

               (This is true but her English has the excellence of a gleaming 
               set of false teeth.)

                                     EDITH
                         Oh, that's splendid.
                              (Looks at CLIVE.  His 
                              eyes smile and he 
                              waves.  She smiles. 
                              To NURSE)
                         How is he?
                              (In low voice)

                                     NURSE K
                              (In loud cheery voice)
                         He cannot hear or speak. It will be 
                         difficult for a few days until we 
                         remove the bandage. He has a fine 
                         cut, the upper lip is almost severed.  
                         Really it is almost 10 centimetres 
                         in length, a knife could not have 
                         done it better. Do let me take your 
                         coat, Miss Hunter!

                                     EDITH
                              (As she takes off 
                              coat)
                         Is he in pain?  

                                     NURSE K
                         Yes. Certainly. He is a lucky man 
                         that there are no glass splinters in 
                         the wound.

                                     EDITH
                         Glass splinters? Oh! Yes.

                                     NURSE K
                         It is a common accident in our winter.

                                     EDITH
                              (Playing for time)
                         It must be.

                                     NURSE K
                         The snow freezes on the boot, the 
                         warm room melts the ice, the little 
                         piece of slippery ice lies in wait 
                         for the hurrying foot and - PFAFF!

               EDITH nods, breathless.

                                     NURSE K
                         But to fall right through the glass 
                         window of the British Ambassador. 
                         Ah! That is not so common!

                                     EDITH
                              (She now has all the 
                              dope)
                         No. Indeed.

                                     NURSE K
                         And would you believe, there is 
                         another accident in the other wing!  
                         An officer! He has cut himself to 
                         the forehead. Twelve stitches!  

                                     EDITH
                         It is quite a coincidence.

                                     NURSE K
                         I go now to tell the Head Nurse that 
                         you have arrived. I am ordered to 
                         prepare your room.  You are staying 
                         here, don't you?

                                     EDITH
                         Yes, Nurse Konig, I do.

                                     NURSE K
                         If you talk to him, please to shout.
                              (She goes but turns 
                              at the door, beams 
                              reassuringly.)
                         I come back.

               EDITH turns and looks at CLIVE. His eyes are smiling. EDITH 
               crosses and smiles down at him. He looks extremely funny, 
               with his bandaged head as big as a football. She bends close 
               to him.

                                     EDITH
                              (Shouts)
                         I have got you into [[a nice]] [an 
                         awful] mess!
                              ([(Repeats loudly.)
                         Awful mess.]

               CLIVE nods. He agrees.

                                     EDITH
                         [[And you have]] [You've] got me 
                         into a [[nice]] mess too!

               CLIVE nods again.

                                     EDITH
                         [I forgive you.] Do you want me to 
                         write to your people in England?

               CLIVE nods.

                                     EDITH
                         [[To your]] parents?

               CLIVE shakes his head.

                                     EDITH
                         Brother - sister? 

               CLIVE shakes his head.

                                     EDITH
                              (Same tone)
                         Fiancee?

               CLIVE, violent shake of head. He points to a pile of personal 
               belongings on the table near the bed. The only thing helpful 
               is a wallet.

                                     EDITH
                         [Oh, you want] Your wallet?

               CLIVE nods. She goes and gets it. He opens it, takes out 
               letter and shows the signature to Edith.

               INSERT: the letter. On this page there are only a few words 
               in a large, sprawling handwriting:

                                          'Your

                                       Affectionate

                                           Aunt

                                   'Margaret Hamilton'

                                     EDITH (O.S.)
                         [Oh, your Aunt.] What is the address?

               CLIVE'S hand turns back to the first page. This contains the 
               address and the main body of the letter, which is short and 
               to the point: 

               33 Cadogan Place,

               S.W.1 

               January 20th 1902 

               My dear Nephew, You seem to prefer the hospitality of your 
               Club to that of my house. I therefore suggest that in future 
               you send all your peculiar-smelling stuffed animals to your 
               Club as well. 

               P.T.O. 

               EDITH incredulously turns the letter over, unable to believe 
               that this is all. But it is. She can hardly help smiling as 
               she hands it back to CLIVE.

                                     EDITH
                         Your Aunt seems to like short letters. 
                         What shall I [tell her] [[write]]? 
                         The truth?

               CLIVE shakes his head.

                                     EDITH
                         Accident?

               CLIVE nods. 

               INSERT: he takes a snapshot out of the case. It is a very 
               bad one of a South African hunting group with dead animals. 
               One of the group is presumably CLIVE but they all look alike.

                                     EDITH
                              (Nods)
                         Hunting accident?

               CLIVE nods.

                                     EDITH
                         Do you know that Oberleutnant 
                         Kretschmar-Schuldorff is here?

               CLIVE nods.

                                     EDITH
                         He has a [very] bad cut on his 
                         forehead.

               CLIVE by signs indicates he has had eight stitches. How many 
               had the other fellow?

                                     EDITH
                         [He has] Twelve stitches!

               CLIVE, very proud, makes sign of satisfaction. NURSE KONIG 
               comes in with a tray of chocolate and cakes.

                                     NURSE K
                         Here is refreshment, Miss Hunter. 
                         Then you must depart for today.

                                     EDITH
                         When can he have visitors? 

                                     NURSE K
                         Wednesday is Visitors'Day, Miss 
                         Hunter.

                                     EDITH
                         Every Wednesday?  

                                     NURSE K
                         Every Wednesday from 3 till 5 p.m. 
                         At five o'clock a bell is rung for 
                         the end of visiting hours. [[Will Mr 
                         Candy have many visitors besides 
                         yourself, Miss Hunter?

                                     EDITH
                         I suspect, quite a number.
                              (She smiles.)

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 42

                                  Interior: Nursing Home

               THE VESTIBULE

               The bell, announcing the end of visiting hours, is ringing. 
               The vestibule is full of people: groups talking to patients 
               who are able to move or be wheeled about, visitors leaving, 
               visitors who have met other visitors who are acquaintances. 
               It is an expensive and fashionable Nursing Home, with visitors 
               to match. 

               Suddenly there is quite a stir. There is a sound of marching 
               boots. All heads turn towards a corridor which debouches on 
               the left of the hall: a group of officers of the 2nd Regiment 
               of Ulans of the Guard appears. Conscious of their fine 
               appearance and of the sensation they are causing, they cross 
               the hall in a solid body making a good deal of noise.

               A GIRL, in the foreground, near the camera, says:

                                     GIRL
                         Ulanen! [Wunderbar!]

               A new commotion arises from the corridor which debouches on 
               the right of the hall. All heads turn in that direction. A 
               group of officers of a famous English regiment are emerging, 
               also in full regimentals. They are also conscious of the 
               stir they are creating. Their leader, a colonel, has a 
               magnificent bristling moustache. They cross the hall towards 
               the exit. 

               [[The young GIRL is even more excited by the English. She 
               turns excitedly to her escort, a middle-aged 'Berliner'.

                                     GIRL
                         Das sind ja Auslander!
                              ('They are foreigners.')

                                     ESCORT
                         Wir miissen gehen, Elizabeth!
                              ('We must go, 
                              Elizabeth!')

               At the exit, the two parties of officers have arrived at the 
               same time. Each party politely waves the other on. 

                                     [1ST BRITISH OFFICER
                         After you, sir.

                                     GERMAN OFFICER
                              (Gestures)
                         Bitte sehr, dahin.

                                     1ST BRITISH OFFICER
                         What did he say, Aubrey?  

                                     2ND BRITISH OFFICER
                         I think he meant you should go first.  

                                     1ST BRITISH OFFICER
                         Can't do that, can we?
                              (To GERMAN OFFICER)
                         You and I, you know, together.

                                     GERMAN OFFICER
                         Bitte sehr.]

               Finally the difficulty is solved by the respective senior 
               officers who go out together, followed by the others in pairs - 
               one Englishman and one German.

               EDITH, in a deep easy chair close by, has watched this couple 
               with amusement. She now stands up, her finger in her book to 
               keep the place. 

                                     GIRL
                         Was konnen sie bloss sein?
                              ('What can they be?')

                                     [ESCORT
                         Keine Ahnung.
                              ('No idea.')

                                     EDITH
                         Englander.
                              ('English.')

                                     GIRL
                         Danke [[sehr]] [Fraulein]!

               She smiles. EDITH smiles back. She starts to cross the hall 
               towards the corridor on the right.

                                      [[SEQUENCE 43

                                  Interior: Nursing Home

               CORRIDOR

               EDITH opens the door of CLIVE'S room and goes in.]]

                                       SEQUENCE 44

                                  Interior: Nursing Home

               CLIVE'S ROOM

               NURSE KONIG has collected a number of ash-trays full of cigar-
               butts and pipe-dottels. She does not approve of smoking.

                                     NURSE K
                         I thought nobody can smoke more than 
                         a German officer. Now I see a British 
                         officer can surpass him.

               CLIVE is sitting up, in a chair by the stove. The swathing 
               bandages are off his head, which is now a normal size. He 
               can speak but not move his head. He has a complicated bandage 
               under his nose and fastened to his neck. He has a mirror in 
               front of him and with a pair of toothbrushes, he is trying 
               out the effect of several kinds of moustaches. 

                                     CLIVE
                              (Answering)
                         And not only in smoking, my dear 
                         Nurse Konig!

                                     NURSE K
                              ((Indignant)
                         And in what else also?

                                     CLIVE
                         Eating - drinking - making love - 
                         growing moustaches -
                              ((Sees EDITH.)
                         Miss Hunter! I'm going to grow a 
                         moustache!  What is your opinion?

                                     EDITH
                         Excellent! [[The Colonel]] [Our 
                         dragoons] gave you the idea!

                                     CLIVE
                              (Astonished and 
                              admiring)
                         You always find me out!

                                     EDITH
                         I saw [[him]] [them] cross the 
                         vestibule, preceded by [[his]] [their] 
                         moustaches. [[Your supporters]] [They] 
                         nearly caused a diplomatic incident 
                         at the door, they collided with a 
                         party of Ulans coming from -
                              (She points up the 
                              corridor.)

                                     CLIVE
                              (Glancing at NURSE 
                              KONIG)
                         My dear Miss Hunter, soldiers cause 
                         military incidents, they leave 
                         diplomacy to the diplomats!

                                     EDITH
                         Really?

               (They both enjoy having their private joke and sharing it 
               with each other.}

                                     NURSE K
                         A German man would shave off his 
                         moustache to show he had a scar!

                                     CLIVE
                         That's just one of the points where 
                         we differ, my dear Nurse [[Konig]] 
                         [Erna].

               NURSE KONIG does not mind being teased at all. Her national 
               and native self-esteem is too thick.

                                     CLIVE
                              (To EDITH)
                         Shall you like me with a moustache, 
                         Miss Hunter?

                                     EDITH
                         How do you know you can grow one?

                                     CLIVE
                         Nurse [[Konig]] [Erna]! [[Konig]] 
                         [Erna]!  Is it allowed to insult the 
                         patients?

               NURSE KONIG, her tray full of ash-trays, smiles indulgently.

                                     CLIVE
                         What view, if any, do you take of my 
                         great moustache plan?  

                                     NURSE K
                              (Examines him gravely, 
                              gives judgment)
                         You are of the moustache-type.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Triumphant)
                         Thank you.

               She goes out. EDITH sits down by CLIVE.

                                     EDITH
                         Is the British Army enjoying itself 
                         in Berlin?  

                                     CLIVE
                         On the whole — yes. They had lunch 
                         yesterday in the Regimental Mess of 
                         the First Dragoon Guards. The Kaiser 
                         spoke - and the Prince of Wales spoke—

                                     EDITH
                         [[What did they say?]] [Spoke about 
                         what?]

                                     CLIVE
                         Nobody could remember. 

                                     EDITH
                         When do they return to London?

                                     CLIVE
                         In a week. Would you care to accompany 
                         them?

                                     EDITH
                         They will have a special train, 
                         surely?

                                     CLIVE
                         We could always try.
                              (Carelessly.)
                         Or-you could [[wait]] [stay] another 
                         five weeks and go back with me. Great 
                         care must be taken of me.

                                     EDITH
                         No doubt.

                                     [CLIVE
                         No answer at all. Will you or won't 
                         you?  If you stay on, you may get 
                         another job.

                                     EDITH
                         We'll see.]

               NURSE KONIG returns, bringing a folding card table and 
               twopacks of cards. EDITH looks surprised and turns to CLIVE.

                                     [EDITH
                         Oh, are we going to play cards?]

                                     CLIVE
                         I asked Nurse Erna to fix up a bridge-
                         four. [[I]] [We] don't want [[you]] 
                         to get bored.

                                     NURSE K
                         The Head Nurse is finding a suitable 
                         couple for you to play with [after 
                         dinner]. But you must not sit up 
                         after 10.30 at the very latest.

                                     EDITH
                         I promise you, Nurse Erna.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Shuffling)
                         [[Do you play auction?]] [You do 
                         play?]

                                     EDITH
                         [[I am afraid not.]] Only whist.

                                     CLIVE
                         It's simple.  [[Come on.]] Let's 
                         play a trial game of double-dummy.

                                     [NURSE K
                         I will bring a lamp.]

               CLIVE starts to deal the cards out on the green baize.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 45

                                  Interior: Nursing Home

               CLIVE'S ROOM

               The end of a game in progress. It is now night. An oil-lamp 
               shines down on the table. EDITH'S hand sweeps up the last 
               three tricks.

                                     CLIVE (O.S.)
                         You're a good pupil, Edith.

               There are still only the two of them.  EDITH has changed   
               into a dinner-dress. CLIVE has made himself respectable.  On 
               a little table, near, are drinks and glasses. NURSE KONIG 
               hovers, ready to leave.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Totting up figures])
                         Game - and rubber! (More figures. 
                         That makes £32,000 I owe you. [Toss 
                         you.] Double or quits!  

                                     EDITH
                         Agreed.

               CLIVE tosses coin. It falls on the table. He covers it with 
               his hand. Both their heads come together over it. Very solemn.

                                     CLIVE
                         Well! Which is it?  

                                     EDITH
                         Heads - no, I mean TAILS!  

                                     CLIVE
                              (Uncovering)
                         Heads it is! We're quits!

               EDITH sighs. CLIVE smiles. She smiles back. They have not 
               been so intimate before. Nor so alone.

                                     NURSE K
                         [[There are]] [The] cigarettes [are] 
                         here but please remember that smoking 
                         is bad for you, Mr Candy. 

                                     CLIVE
                              (In excruciating German)
                         Ich liebe Sie, Nurse Erna! 

                                     EDITH
                         You are an angel, Nurse Erna.

                                     NURSE K
                              (Smiles approvingly)
                         Good night.

               A knock comes at the door. There are voices.

                                     EDITH
                         Here come our bridge-players.
                              (To NURSE KONIG)
                         [[Please]] [Would you] let them in.

               NURSE KONIG opens the door.

               A tall YOUNG WOMAN comes in, followed by somebody in a 
               wheelchair, pushed by the HEAD NURSE: somebody in the uniform 
               of the Second Ulans.

               CLIVE stares. It is THEO KRETSCHMAR-SCHULDORFF. EDITH has 
               never seen THEO, but of course she recognizes the uniform 
               and guesses at once who it is. A glance at CLIVE'S face 
               confirms her guess.

               The HEAD NURSE is quite innocent of what she has done in 
               bringing these men together.

               Of course THEO and the WOMAN with him know exactly whom they 
               are going to meet: THEO is smiling and the German WOMAN is 
               charming.

               THEO speaks no English, or at least very little. He is very 
               good-looking and about four years older than Clive.  He is 
               an excellent officer of the more thoughtful type. If he were 
               not a soldier he might have been an artist. In one thing he 
               is very much a German: he is thorough in everything he 
               undertakes. He makes many friends and is a good friend 
               himself. It is his own decision which has led to this meeting 
               with his former opponent. The WOMAN is his girl-friend. Their 
               association is not rooted in deep feelings but on a simple 
               physical basis. If one of them were to say one day: T am 
               leaving you because I have fallen in love with somebody,' 
               there would be no tragedy about it. 

               The WOMAN is about thirty. Extremely clever, of the best 
               Berlin society: 'eine moderne Frau' but in a very different 
               way from EDITH, who believes sincerely in the importance of 
               her beliefs. FRAU VON KALTENECK, on the contrary, would be 
               much happier if she did not have to ride or hunt or be a 
               sportswoman. She speaks good English and from the first moment 
               is interested in CLIVE.

                                     HEAD NURSE
                              (Introducing)
                         Oberleutnant Kretschmar-Schuldorff - 
                         Miss Hunter - Mr Candy - Frau von 
                         Kalteneck. Ich hoffe Sie werden sich 
                         amusieren!
                              ('I hope you will 
                              enjoy yourselves.')

               Everybody shakes hands, the two men very heartily.

                                     FRAU V. K
                         How do you do?

                                     EDITH
                         How do you do?

                                     CLIVE
                         How d'you do?

                                     THEO
                         Kretschmar-Schuldorff!

                                     CLIVE
                              (Grins)
                         Yes, I know!  

                                     HEAD NURSE
                              (To THEO)
                         Ich hoi' Sie ab um zehn.
                              ('I will call for you 
                              at ten.')

               Both nurses go. There is no awkward pause. On the contrary, 
               they all four feel like children when the grown-ups have at 
               last left them alone. CLIVE turns to THEO very cordially and 
               sincerely.

                                     CLIVE
                         I'm very glad you've come.

               THEO smiles.

                                     FRAU V. K
                         I promised Theo to make a little 
                         speech. He would like to have made 
                         it himself.

               She looks at THEO.

                                     THEO
                         Very much.

                                     FRAU V. K
                         Theo knows only two English 
                         expressions: 'very much' and 'not 
                         very much'. Right, Theo?

                                     THEO
                         Very much.

                                     FRAU V. K
                         He [[wanted to]] [would like to have] 
                         come before.

               Looks at THEO.

                                     THEO
                         Very much.

                                     FRAU V. K
                         But he was afraid nobody can translate 
                         to you what he says.

                                     CLIVE
                         Miss Hunter speaks German.
                              (To THEO)
                         She sprecken German! 

                                     THEO
                              (To EDITH)
                         Wirklich?
                              ('Really?')

                                     EDITH
                         Nichtsehr gut.
                              ('Not very well.')

                                     THEO
                              (Politely)
                         Ich finde, ausgezeichnet!
                              ('I find, excellently.')

                                     FRAU V. K
                         Theo has heard that you took part in 
                         the South African campaign and that 
                         you have won a very famous 
                         [[decoration]] [medal].

               She gestures as she speaks, so that THEO can follow.

                                     THEO
                         Viktoria Kreuz.

                                     EDITH
                         Victoria Cross.

                                     FRAU V. K
                         He envies you because a German Officer 
                         knows about war only from the 
                         newspapers -

                                     EDITH
                              (Smiling)
                         And mostly wrongly.

                                     FRAU V. K
                         And mostly wrongly.

                                     CLIVE
                         Let's have a drink!  Sherry? 

                                     FRAU V. K
                         I would love a glass of sherry.

                                     CLIVE
                              (To THEO)
                         Do you like sherry?

                                     THEO
                         Not very much.

                                     CLIVE
                         Port?

                                     THEO
                              (Politely towards 
                              EDITH)
                         Miss Hunter?

                                     CLIVE
                         She and I, we drink Kirchwater.
                              (He means Kirschwasser 
                              and shows the bottle.)

                                     THEO
                              (Corrects him)
                         Kirschwasser.

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes - Kirchwater. Do you like it? 

                                     THEO
                         Very much.

               CLIVE pours drinks.

                                     FRAU V. K
                         Let me help you.
                              (She joins CLIVE.)
                         Do you know Berlin, Mr Candy?  

                                     CLIVE
                         The Hotel Kaiserhof, the British 
                         Embassy, the Cafe Hohenzollern, and 
                         the gymnasium of the barracks of the 
                         Second Ulans! 

                                     FRAU V. K
                         I hope we shall be able to show you 
                         more than that.
                              (She smiles at him.)
                         Do you like the Opera? Concerts?

                                     CLIVE
                         I prefer riding; hunting or polo.

                                     FRAU V. K
                         I love riding and I adore sports.

               EDITH offers cigarettes to THEO. He takes one.

                                     THEO
                         Danke Bestens.
                              ('Thank you very much.')
                         Haben Sie Sport gerne, gnadiges 
                         Fraulein?
                              ('Do you like sports?')

                                     EDITH
                              (Shakes head)
                         Ich bin nicht talented fur Sports. 

                                     THEO
                              (Lifting glass)
                         Prosit!

               They both drink.  CLIVE has dealt out four cards on the table.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Draw]] [Cut] for partners!

               They each turn a card face upwards on the table.

                                     FRAU V. K
                              (To CLIVE)
                         You and I.
                              (She smiles.)

                                     EDITH
                              (To THEO)
                         Sie und ich. THEO: Grossartig!
                              ('Excellent.')
                         Ich hoffe wir spielen jeden Abend.
                              ('I hope we shall 
                              play every night.')

                                     [CLIVE
                         What's he say?

                                     THEO
                         Very much.]                                         

                                                                  FADE OUT:

                                       SEQUENCE 46

                            Interior; British Embassy, Berlin

               OFFICE OF THE SECOND SECRETARY

               FADE IN:

               INSERT: the bill of the ERHOLUNGSHEIM AM STOLPCHENSEE 
               ('Nursing Home at Stolpchensee'). The bill is made out in 
               German, and the SECRETARY'S gold-mounted pencil is ticking 
               off the items. The pencil stops at one particular item, 
               underlines it; the pencil is put down and the SECRETARY'S 
               hand presses a push-button on his desk.

               A distant bell rings.  

               The SECOND SECRETARY is trying to be annoyed.

               Outside the sun is shining, it is early spring and the first 
               leaves are appearing on the trees.

               The door opens and BABY-FACE FITZROY puts his head round it.

                                     BABY-FACE
                         [[Excuse me, sir, I-]] [I say ...]

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         [[Ah, Mr Fitzroy, I was just about 
                         to summon you. Come in.]] [Oh, Baby-
                         Face, I want you a moment.] 

                                     BABY-FACE
                              (Apprehensively)
                         [[Yes, sir.]] [What is it?  Those 
                         nursing home accounts?]

               He comes in, revealing that he is beautifully dressed for 
               tennis and even has his racket in his hand. The SECRETARY 
               has looked at the bill.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         [Yes.] Will you kindly explain [[,Mr 
                         Fitzroy,]] what the deuce this item 
                         means? Forty[[-two]] packs of playing 
                         cards!! It's enough for the Casino 
                         at Monte Carlo!

                                     BABY-FACE
                         [[Yes, sir]] [I know]. I spoke to 
                         Miss Hunter - she says [[the evenings 
                         were so long - ]] there's nothing 
                         [[much]] [else] to do at Stolpchensee 
                         in winter -

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                              (Having made his 
                              protest, subsides)
                         Very well.

               He ticks the item and goes on down the list. He looks up and 
               for the first time sees BABY-FACE in his spotless flannels, 
               college scarf and Harrow blazer.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         [[Well, Fitzroy, what's all this?]] 
                         [Don't you ever do any work?]

                                     BABY-FACE
                         [[Tennis, sir.]] First time this 
                         year- if you can spare me, sir.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         Hm! Well, don't catch cold!
                              (Looks at bill.)
                         These nursing homes are an expensive 
                         business. Is Miss Hunter returning 
                         to England?

                                     BABY-FACE
                         As far as I know, sir.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         But not at our expense, I hope?

                                     BABY-FACE
                         [[Oh,]] [Good heavens] no, sir. She 
                         was going anyway [[you remember]].

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                              (Grunts, then suddenly)
                         Well, so was Candy for that matter! 
                         Eh?

                                     BABY-FACE
                         Yes, sir, he had a return ticket but 
                         it's expired.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                              (Sigh)
                         Very well. Buy him a new one.

               [[(BABY-FACE is going, when the SECOND SECRETARY stops him.

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         Mr Fitzroy!

                                     BABY-FACE
                         Sir?]]

                                     2ND SECRETARY
                         [[Have]] [And get] Candy [to] give 
                         you that [[time-expired]] [old] 
                         ticket. We'll [[try and]] claim a 
                         refund [[from]] [at] Cooks.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 47

                                  Interior: Nursing Home

               CLIVE'S ROOM

               CLIVE and EDITH are packing.

               The window is half open to the garden. The sun is shining, 
               but the stove is still burning for it is cold out of the 
               rays of the sun.  EDITH is very quiet and subdued, noticeably 
               so to anyone but CLIVE, who is whistling noisily. His 
               moustache is coming on nicely although it does not yet hide 
               the scar. Each time he comes within range of the mirror, 
               CLIVE takes an approving look at the new moustache.  

               EDITH is just packing some handkerchiefs when CLIVE stops 
               her and takes them.

                                     CLIVE
                         Half a mo'! Those belong to Theo. 
                         Put them with the alarm-clock.
                              (EDITH does so.)
                         How's your own packing going?
                              (Looks at watch.)

                                     EDITH
                              (She finds it difficult 
                              to speak)
                         Not far.

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, you'd better hurry up then.

                                     EDITH
                              ([Tearful])
                         I'll be all right.

                                     CLIVE
                         Don't be so sure. We've only got 
                         half an hour if we are going to call 
                         at the Embassy first. I can manage 
                         here. Come on, stop mooning about!

                                     EDITH
                              (Tearfully and angrily)
                         I'm not mooning about!

                                     CLIVE
                         Keep your hair on!
                              (He stares.)
                         I say, old girl, what's up?

               She turns away. He revolves round her with a bewildered look, 
               peers in her face.

               She looks back at him. She is crying.

               CLIVE is frightfully taken aback and quite helpless.

                                     CLIVE
                         Edith! I say - Edith! What's the 
                         matter? It's not because I didn't 
                         call for you yesterday, is it? You 
                         know — Frau von Kalteneck left last 
                         night for the South.

                                     EDITH
                              (Sobbing)
                         Did she?

                                     CLIVE
                         But you knew she was going!

                                     EDITH
                         I'd forgotten...

                                     CLIVE
                         I can't help it if you don't like 
                         horses, can I?  We went to see her 
                         racing-stables - she has some fine 
                         [[horses]] [beasts] but they're too 
                         fat. Edith! do stop crying! Suppose 
                         somebody comes in.

                                     EDITH
                              (With feminine logic)
                         Nobody will come in...

                                     CLIVE
                         Look!  I promise to take you out the 
                         first night we're back in London!  
                         [[We'll go to]] 'Her Majesty's' 
                         [Theatre] - 'The Last of the Dandies' - 
                         they say it's [an] awfully good 
                         [show].

                                     EDITH
                              (Still sobbing)
                         - I saw - the paper said -

                                     CLIVE
                         What paper? What do you mean? Is 
                         that what's making you cry? 

                                     EDITH
                              (Shakes her head)
                         - the paper said - there's a new 
                         play at 'Her Majesty's Theatre' - 
                         called 'Ulysses' - !

               The door opens and somebody does come in: NURSE KONIG.  She 
               has an armful of books.  EDITH quickly turns her back.

                                     NURSE K
                              (To CLIVE)
                         Oberleutnant Kretschmar-Schuldorff 
                         returns your books, Mr Candy. He is 
                         on his way to see you. 

                                     EDITH
                              (Moving at once)
                         I must hurry!  

                                     CLIVE
                         You'd better! We'll meet in the hall!

                                     EDITH
                         Yes.
                              (She has gone.)

               CLIVE looks after her with a frown for a moment. Then his 
               face clears. Girls are strange and anyway there will be lots 
               of time to find out what's wrong. He looks ruefully at the 
               books, which are all German editions.

                                     CLIVE
                         What am I going to do with them? I 
                         don't read German.  Miss Hunter got 
                         them for me.

                                     NURSE K
                         You can present them to our library.

                                     CLIVE
                         Clever Nurse Erna.
                              (The [[Brunhilde]] 
                              [Mignon] Aria is 
                              whistled outside.)
                         So Clive Candy's name will always 
                         live in a corner at Stolpchensee!
                              (Changes tone.)
                         But I must write my name in them.
                              (He hears the whistle.)
                         Hullo, Theo!

               THEO appears at the window. During the first part of the 
               scene CLIVE is writing his name in the books.

                                     THEO
                              (He speaks a hybrid 
                              language now, like 
                              CLIVE)
                         Kann ich come in?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Certainly, [come in] my old horse.
                              (As THEO climbs 
                              through.)
                         My old steeplechaser!

               THEO'S scar is visible on his forehead. Otherwise he is all 
               right. THEO looks round.

                                     THEO
                         Wo ist Edith?

                                     CLIVE
                         Packing.

                                     THEO
                              (Surprised)
                         Packing?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, of course! Und Sie? How much 
                         longer Sie?  

                                     THEO
                         Eine week — or two.
                              (Makes sign with 
                              fingers.)
                         Clive!

                                     CLIVE
                         Eh?

                                     THEO
                         Edith come here! Translate for us! 

                                     NURSE K
                         I can translate -

                                     THEO
                              (Shakes his head)
                         Nicht das! Very important.

                                     NURSE K
                         Shall I fetch Miss Hunter? 

                                     CLIVE
                         Now look here, don't disturb her, 
                         she'll never be ready!
                              (To THEO)
                         Ich mussen call at Embassy, old man - 
                         get my ticket nach London.

                                     THEO
                              (Insists, to NURSE 
                              KONIG)
                         [Ja.] Please!

               NURSE KONIG leaves the room.

               CLIVE does not understand at all. He shrugs despairingly and 
               points to the drinks.

                                     CLIVE
                         Drink? 

                                     THEO
                         [Nein.] Not now.

                                     CLIVE
                         All right. What the blazes is up 
                         with everybody?

                                     THEO
                              (Very sincerely)
                         Clive! You and I friends. Yes or no?

                                     CLIVE
                         Of course we're friends! 

                                     THEO
                         [[Very sorry, but you and I]] [We] 
                         must duel again!

                                     CLIVE
                              (Stares)
                         Where's your dictionary, old chap? 
                         You must have got two pages stuck 
                         together!

                                     THEO
                              (Smiling)
                         I — love - your -
                              (He tries to find the 
                              word 'fiancee' but 
                              can't.)
                         Teufel! Your - Miss Hunter —

                                     CLIVE
                              (Can't believe his 
                              ears)
                         Say that again!

                                     THEO
                         I - love - your - Miss Hunter! 

                                     CLIVE
                         You're cuckoo! 

                                     THEO
                              (Still smiling)
                         [[No]] [No, ich nein 'cuckoo'], you 
                         'cuckoo'! Because Miss Hunter love 
                         me!

               CLIVE stares. Gets up. Examines THEO again.  THEO nods. CLIVE 
               suddenly smiles.

                                     CLIVE
                         Congratulations!
                              (He grabs THEO'S hand.)
                         When did it happen? Why don't I know 
                         about it?  

                                     THEO
                              (Still smiling)
                         No duel?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Duel? I-
                              (Thumps chest.)
                         Ich!  Fight anyone who tries, to 
                         stop it! Now will you have a drink?  

                                     THEO
                         Double drink! 

                                     CLIVE
                              (Pouring)
                         But you know, old man, Edith was 
                         never my fiancee.

                                     THEO
                         Fiancee! The word I not find!

                                     CLIVE
                              (Handing drink)
                         Not my fiancee! (
                              (Chinks glasses.)
                         Lovely girl! Sweet girl!
                              (They drink.)
                         But not my fiancee!

                                     THEO
                         [[(Thoughtfully) So?]] [Bottoms up!]

               The door opens. NURSE KONIG comes in. She evidently knows or 
               has guessed the whole situation.

                                     CLIVE
                         Have a drink, Nurse Konig! Where's 
                         the fiancee?

               He bows to THEO, who bows back.

                                     NURSE K
                         She can't come down -

                                     CLIVE
                         Then we go up. Come on, Theo!

               They start for the door. Stop with the same idea. Look at 
               each other, turn, pick up bottles and glasses and hurry out.

                                       SEQUENCE 48

                                  Interior: Nursing Home

               EDITH'S ROOM

               EDITH looks like a young woman waitingto have her mind made 
               up for her. She is not packing.

                                     [CLIVE (O.S.)
                         Edith!  

                                     EDITH
                         Come in.]

               The door flies open and she starts round as THEO and CLIVE 
               invade the room, beaming and carrying bottles and glasses. 

               One glance at their faces shows her that the ice has been 
               broken.

                                     CLIVE
                         Edith, my child! I feel like a proud 
                         father! 

                                     EDITH
                              (Rather faintly)
                         Do you, Clive?  Why? 

                                     CLIVE
                         I have to give you away, don't I? 

                                     EDITH
                         How did you find out? 

                                     CLIVE
                         Theo told me in fluent Double Dutch.

                                     THEO
                              (Proudly)
                         I told.
                              (To EDITH)
                         Das einzige Wott ich konnte nicht 
                         finden war 'fiancee'.

               They all dissolve in laughter.  CLIVE hands round drinks.

                                     CLIVE
                         A toast! This to the happiness of my 
                         fiancee who was never my fiancee and 
                         of the man who tried to kill me before 
                         he was introduced to me.  Prosit!

               They all drink.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Puts down glass)
                         May I kiss the bride?

                                     THEO
                         Why ask? I have [did] not ask!

               EDITH looks at CLIVE. He steps swiftly forward and takes her 
               in his arms for the first and last time.

               They kiss each other. It is an important moment. It is a 
               brotherly and sisterly kiss; but for a fraction of a second 
               both close their eyes.

               When CLIVE'S eyes are open his whole expression has changed. 
               Suddenly he has realized the truth.

                                     EDITH
                              (Low voice)
                         Goodbye, Clive.

                                     CLIVE
                         Goodbye, Edith - old girl. I hope 
                         we'll meet again sometime -

                                     EDITH
                         I'm sure we shall -

               CLIVE turns to THEO and takes his hand. He still holds 
               EDITH'S. He is just a little drunk.

                                     CLIVE
                         Now look here, you son of a gun! You 
                         won't understand a word of what I'm 
                         going to say - but I came to Berlin 
                         to find a rat and found two of the 
                         grandest people I ever met. [[I'm a 
                         little bit drunk.]] I leave to you, 
                         you Prussian stiff-neck, this girl 
                         in trust; and if you don't take care 
                         of her I'll raise the whole of England 
                         against you! The Navy will steam up 
                         your stinking Stolpchensee!  I shall 
                         lead the Army down Unter den Linden! 
                         and we'll -

                                     [[EDITH
                              (Laughing)
                         Stop! Kamerad!]]

               CLIVE stops, stares, finishes his drink and pours out another 
               one for himself and THEO.

               THEO has an inkling of how the land lies. He looks gaily and 
               tenderly at them both before he speaks.

                                     THEO
                              (To CLIVE)
                         [Clive,] my English is not very much. 
                         But my friendship for you is very 
                         much.

                                     [[EDITH
                         And I'm sorry that I have to refuse 
                         your invitation to go to'Her Majesty's 
                         Theatre'.]]

                                                                  FADE OUT:

                                      [SEQUENCE 48A

                    Interior: War Office, Colonel Betteridge's Office

               Door of Betteridge's office as in Sequences 21-23

                                     BETTERIDGE (O.S.)
                         I hope it's taught you a damn good 
                         lesson, Candy.

               Now inside the office.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         Trouble with you young fellows is 
                         you always want to go changing 
                         everything. And what's the result? 
                         You spend all your leave in a nursing 
                         home full of foreigners. You cost 
                         the Treasury a lot of money. You 
                         make the Foreign Office very cross, 
                         yes very cross. And what do you get 
                         for it?  Your beauty's spoilt. You 
                         weren't any fashion plate before. 
                         I'd be surprised if any woman would 
                         look twice at you now.

                                     CLIVE
                         So would I, sir.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         When you were here in January, I 
                         told you very clearly it was not 
                         your concern. It was an Embassy job.

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, sir, I suppose I thought I'd 
                         take a chance.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         A chance? A chance?  You can't afford 
                         to take a chance with your career, 
                         my boy. You are in the Army as a 
                         career, aren't you, not for five 
                         minutes? You were putting up a pretty 
                         good show. You go barging in on this 
                         nonsense and you come pretty near to 
                         getting yourself kicked out. You 
                         don't want to get yourself kicked 
                         out, do you?

                                     CLIVE
                         No, sir.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         Well, let me tell you one thing. 
                         Don't bother your head with things 
                         you don't understand and you won't 
                         go far wrong. Don't go off at half-
                         cock. Keep cool. Keep your mouth 
                         shut. And avoid politicians like the 
                         plague. That's the way to get on in 
                         the Army.

                                     CLIVE
                         Thank you, sir.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                              (Moving round the 
                              desk)
                         Care to dine at my club tonight?

                                     CLIVE
                         Sorry, sir, I'm taking someone to 
                         the theatre.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         Pretty?

                                     CLIVE
                         I haven't met her yet, sir.

                                     BETTERIDGE
                         You're still a bit cracked, my boy. 
                         Well, I hope you improve as you get 
                         older. And cheer up, my boy.

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes, sir.

                                                              DISSOLVE TO:]

                                       SEQUENCE 49

                             Interior: Her Majesty's Theatre

               The new musical play Ulysses by Stephen Phillips is being 
               performed.

               The scene is Olympus, the Council of the Gods. Zeus despatches 
               Hermes to earth with orders to Calypso to free the ship of 
               Ulysses. Background of thunder, etc. The curtain descends 
               with a crashing climax from the orchestra and the effects 
               man.

                                     [ATHENE
                         Father, whose oath in hollow Hell is 
                         heard; Whose act is lightning after 
                         thunder-word; A boon! a boon! - that 
                         I compassion find 
                         For one, the most unhappy of mankind. 

                                     ZEUS
                         How is he named?  

                                     ATHENE
                         Ulysses. He who planned To take the 
                         towered city of Troy-land.

                                     ZEUS
                         What wouldst thou? 

                                     ATHENE
                         This! That he at the last may view 
                         the smoke of his own fire c ruling 
                         blue.

                                     ZEUS
                         Where bides the man? 

                                     ATHENE
                         Calypso this long while Detains him 
                         in her languorous ocean-isle.

                                     POSEIDON
                         Father of gods, this man has stricken 
                         blind my dear son Polyphemus, and 
                         with wind, With roaring waves, by me 
                         let him be hurled From sea to sea 
                         and dashed about the world.

                                     ZEUS
                         Peace, children, and from your shrill 
                         reviling cease!  Hermes, command 
                         Calypso to release Ulysses and to 
                         waft him over seas.  Ulysses shall 
                         return.

                                     POSEIDON
                         Cloud-gatherer, stay! 

                                     ZEUS
                         Yet canst you work in mischief on 
                         the way   , Yet ere he touch at last 
                         his native shore, Ulysses must abide 
                         one labour more.

               HOPPY and SYBIL arrive late in their box at this point.] 

                                     HOPPY
                              (In a box)
                         Where's the bar? 

                                     SYBIL
                         Darling, do control yourself.

                                     HOPPY
                         I say, there's old Suggie.

                                     SYBIL
                         Really, darling?  Where? 

                                     HOPPY
                         Suggie ... Suggie ... Suggie.
                              (Getting louder, until 
                              he attracts a scowl 
                              from one of the 
                              actors.)

               CLIVE, at last, responds.

                                     SYBIL
                              (Whispers)
                         Who is the girl with Clive, darling? 
                         Do you know her?

                                     HOPPY
                              (He seems to be 
                              enjoying a secret 
                              joke)
                         As a matter of fact I do.

                                     SYBIL
                         Well, darling [who is she]?

                                     HOPPY
                              (Still enjoying his 
                              joke)
                         I believe he met her sister in Berlin -

                                     SYBIL
                         Darling, why all this mystery? Who 
                         is she?

                                     HOPPY
                         My niece's governess - a Miss Hunter.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Whispers to his 
                              companion)
                         [[What is the world coming to?]] 
                         [Wonders will never cease.]

                                     [[GIRL
                         What, Lieutenant Candy?]]

                                     CLIVE
                              (Indicating girl with 
                              Hoppy)
                         Sybil Gilpin out without her mother! 
                         [And with Hoppy too.]

                                     GIRL
                         Oh, didn't you know [,Mr Candy]? 
                         They are married! 

                                     CLIVE
                         Hoppy! Sybil!  

                                     GIRL
                         Over a month [ago. The family were 
                         quite taken by surprise. It was very 
                         romantic and sudden. They met here 
                         in this very theatre.]

                                     CLIVE
                         [[And to think that I sent Hoppy to 
                         take my place - ]] [I know,] I seem 
                         to be a born matchmaker.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 50

                                Interior: 33 Cadogan Place

               HALL

               A brisk tattoo with the front door knocker is bringing PEBBLE 
               to the door with dignified haste. PEBBLE is the Head 
               Parlourmaid of Lady Margaret Hamilton's exclusively female 
               establishment.

               PEBBLE opens the door on the chain.

               CLIVE is outside.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Good evening]] [Hello], Pebble! 

                                     PEBBLE
                         Master Clive!

               She half closes the door, slips the chain and opens it wide.  
               CLIVE steps in. They talk in low tones as she closes the 
               door and takes his things.

                                     PEBBLE
                         Your Aunt is asleep.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Never mind, Pebble. Don't wake 
                         her.]] [All right, don't disturb 
                         her.] I didn't feel like going to 
                         the Club tonight.

                                     PEBBLE:
                         You're not sick, Master Clive?

                                     CLIVE
                         I say, Pebble, how did you feel when 
                         you buried Mr Pebble?

                                     PEBBLE
                         It wasn't so bad at the time, Master 
                         Clive, there was so much to do. It 
                         was after that it got bad, if you 
                         understand me.
                              (CLIVE nods gloomily.)
                         I hope you haven't come from a 
                         burying, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         No. From the theatre. But it was the 
                         same thing, in a way.

                                     PEBBLE
                         Was it a sad play?  

                                     CLIVE
                         On the contrary. It was a musical 
                         play. Is the bed in my Den made up?

                                     PEBBLE
                         No, sir, but it won't take a minute 
                         if you don't mind sleeping in 
                         blankets. There isn't time to air 
                         the sheets. Lady Margaret has made 
                         some changes, Master Clive, you'll 
                         see when —

                                     AUNT M. (O.S.)
                         Pebble! What is going on there?

               [[CLIVE signs to PEBBLE not to give him away.

                                     PEBBLE
                         Nothing, Lady Margaret.

                                     AUNT M.
                         You're a liar, Pebble!

               LADY MARGARET HAMILTON appears on the landing, carrying a 
               small brass oil-lamp. She is in her night attire.  She is as 
               brusque in conversation as in letter-writing.  She sees CLIVE.

                                     AUNT M.
                         Clive!  How dare you come waking up 
                         the whole neighbourhood at this hour 
                         of the night. Go to your club!

               CLIVE smiles and comes running up the stairs to her.

                                     CLIVE
                         All right. I'm going.

               He scoops his aunt up in his arms before she realizes his 
               intention. PEBBLE passes up the stairs smiling.

                                     AUNT M.
                         Did you hear me, nephew? Go to your 
                         club!

                                     CLIVE
                         Very well. Let's go!

               He starts down stairs at a great rate, carrying her as if 
               she were a feather.

                                     AUNT M.
                              (Highly enjoying it)
                         Put me down, you fool!  

                                     CLIVE
                         And I can stay?

                                     AUNT M.
                         I suppose so, since there's no man 
                         here to throw you out.

               CLIVE at once runs upstairs and puts his aunt down on the 
               landing again.

                                     CLIVE
                         How are you, Aunt Margaret?  

                                     AUNT M.
                         You may give me a kiss.

               She offers her cheek. He gives her a big hug.

               She is not displeased. She examines him.]

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 51

                                Interior: 33 Cadogan Place

               CLIVE'S DEN

               It contains all the personal belongings which he really 
               cherishes.  It's a sportsman's room. He is a keen fisherman 
               and there is a gun-cupboard in one corner. There are a number 
               of athletic cups and shields.

               Prominent on the wall are half a dozen or so heads of animals 
               which Clive has shot in South Africa. 

               CLIVE and AUNT MARGARET enter the Den.

                                     [CLIVE
                         Am I staying?

                                     AUNT M.
                         I suppose so, since there's no man 
                         here to throw you out.]

                                     CLIVE
                         I say? Who put up my South African 
                         heads?

                                     AUNT M.
                         I've no idea.

                                     CLIVE
                         They don't look half bad, do they?

                                     AUNT M.
                         No. [Pebble, do stop fussing like an 
                         old hen and go to your bed.

                                     PEBBLE
                         Good night, Master Clive.

                                     CLIVE
                         Good night.

               PEBBLE leaves.]

                                     AUNT M.
                         [Now,] Even money that some 
                         catastrophe has brought you here!

                                     CLIVE
                         You're on.

                                     AUNT M.
                         Debts?  

                                     CLIVE
                         No.

                                     AUNT M.
                         A woman?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Not exactly.

                                     AUNT M.
                         Explain!  

                                     CLIVE
                         I went to the theatre tonight.

                                     AUNT M.
                         Alone?

                                     CLIVE
                         With a girl.

                                     AUNT M.
                         And pray why is she 'not exactly'?

                                     CLIVE
                         Oh, it's nothing to do with her.

                                     AUNT M.
                         Perhaps. [[Who was there?]] See anyone 
                         you know?]

                                     CLIVE
                         I saw Hoppy with Sybil Gilpin. They're 
                         married!

                                     AUNT M.
                         Certainly. A very suitable match. He 
                         has money, she has land. [And neither 
                         of them has any brains.] You weren't 
                         in love with her, surely?

                                     CLIVE
                         With Sybil? Oh, no.

                                     AUNT M.
                         I am glad [of that]. She has muscles 
                         like a prizefighter and she[['s bound 
                         to]] ['11] hit Hoppy one day. [[Come 
                         along! I want to show you your Den.]]

                                     CLIVE
                              (Judicially)
                         Hoppy could give her a couple of 
                         stone.

                                     AUNT M.
                         She will soon make that up, I assure 
                         you! Who is this girl you took to 
                         the theatre?

                                     CLIVE
                         A Miss Hunter. I met her sister in 
                         Berlin.

                                     AUNT M.
                         Is she nice?

                                     CLIVE
                         Very. I mean the sister.

                                     AUNT M.
                         Which sister?

                                     CLIVE
                         The one that stayed in Berlin.

                                     AUNT M.
                              (After a pause, during 
                              which she surveys 
                              him)
                         [Then] the one in London is not so 
                         nice, I take it?

                                     CLIVE
                              ([Pauses])
                         No.

               AUNT MARGARET now knows the whole story.

                                     AUNT M.
                              (Suddenly she changes 
                              her tone)
                         Now [[look here]] [listen], Clive. I 
                         have eighteen rooms here, a bone-
                         idle staff eating their heads off, 
                         and when you come home from South 
                         Africa, you go straight to your Club.

                                     CLIVE
                         I know. It's awful.

                                     AUNT M.
                         [[I had the walls cleared for your 
                         heads. Now,]] I want you to remember: 
                         wherever you go - whatever you do — 
                         you've [always] got a home here! And - 
                         whatever you shoot — there's [always] 
                         room here for them. Look how much 
                         room there is!

               CLIVE looks around the big cosy room. He looks gratefully at 
               his aunt [[and puts his arm round her shoulders]].

               Both of them look up at the heads on the wall.

               [Clive casts a growing shadow on the wall.]

               We see the heads, each with its plate, bearing the date and 
               place where the late owner came face to face with the British 
               acquisitive instinct.

               Music starts to play.  The walls become covered with trophies 
               from all parts of the British Empire: Trophies: Rhinoceros, 
               Onyx, Lion, Tiger, Indian Elephant, Sambhur, Tarpon, Mahseer, 
               Crocodile; Places: British East Africa, Sudan, Rhodesia, 
               Mysore, Upper Burma, United Provinces, St Helena, Kashmir, 
               Ganges Delta; 

               Dates: 1903, 1905, 1906, 1907, 1910, 1912,1914.  After 1914 
               the wall is blank.

               The camera shows the bare wall, then swings to show a new 
               trophy. A German spiked helmet, covered in khaki cloth, of 
               the type used in the Great War.

               The inevitable plate says simply: 'HUN.  FLANDERS, 1918.

                                   THE KHAKI SEQUENCES

               The principal reason up to this point for making the picture 
               in colour is because colour is more successful in evoking i 
               period which, although some time ago, is still fresh in the 
               memories of many people. We can claim, of course, the pink 
               >odies of the General's Staff in the Turkish Baths and the 
               General's Red Tabs, but these, however attractive, are 
               decorations. Sights, sounds, but above all, colours, make up 
               the memories of a generation: more so in the case of the 
               period with which we have dealt. 1902 was the commencement 
               of the Edwardian era, full of charm, prosperity, spaciousness 
               and leisure, to which it seemed there could never be an end. 
               Our next use of colour is in the first part of the 1918—1919 
               Sequence which we call for convenience, the 'Khaki Sequence'. 
               After four years of senseless trench warfare, all the colour 
               and variety of Europe and its peoples had been reduced to a 
               uniform dull colour by day and to blackness by night. Khaki 
               was the colour of clothes, faces, official forms, everything: 
               while the battle zone itself had been reduced to a consistency 
               as featureless and as sticky as porridge. By this deliberate 
               elimination of all colours except Khaki, we hope to point 
               this contrast.

                                       SEQUENCE 52.

                             Exterior: Somewhere in Flanders

               A CROSS-ROAD

               It is dusk. It is not raining but it has been and it will 
               again.  An Army staff car, 1918 vintage, is approaching along 
               the road, once a pleasant avenue, now a dreary, cratered 
               embankment lined with splintered stumps.

               The continuous thunder of heavy guns sounds in the far 
               distance.  The car bumps to a stop at the cross-roads.  On 
               the back seat sits COLONEL (Acting Brigadier} CLIVE CANDY. 
               He is now a man of forty-two, many ribbons on his chest. His 
               moustache is heavy but well cared for, he looks tired but 
               full of energy and devotion to serve his country. He has a 
               map spread out on the seat beside him.

               His driver, [[MULLINS]] [MURDOCH], is also his batman. He is 
               about the GENERAL'S age; out since Mons.

               The landscape, the sky, the car, the men and their mud-
               plastered uniforms are all one pervasive scheme of khaki. 
               The only Spots, of colour are the GENERAL'S Red Tabs. 

                                     MURDOCH
                         This is Dead Cow Cross-roads, sir.

               GENERAL CANDY stands up on the back seat of the car and, 
               through his glasses, examines the landscape.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Mutters)
                         The question is: whether that is the 
                         Church with the double tower, or the 
                         'Estaminet du Pont'?

               Through his powerful glasses we see the featureless mass of 
               rubble at which he is looking. God knows what it is.  MURDOCH 
               sits fatalistically. 

                                     CLIVE
                         Damn it, Murdoch, you're supposed to 
                         know the road!

                                     MURDOCH
                         I know it at night, sir. In the 
                         daytime it looks different.

               CANDY snorts. MURDOCH suddenly sniffs.

                                     CLIVE
                         Eh? Got a scent?  

                                     MURDOCH:
                         Yes, sir.
                              (Sniffs again.)
                         That's our road. I can smell the two 
                         Jerries the Sappers planted.

                                     CLIVE
                         For'ard then!  

                                     MURDOCH
                         Harkaway, sir!

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 53

                                  Somewhere in Flanders

               EXTERIOR: ESTAMINET DU PONT

               We see it in the last dull light of the fading day. The rain 
               has started again, a persistent drizzle. All distinguishing 
               features of the Estaminet have either fallen down or fallen 
               in long ago. It is gradually vanishing into the mud and nobody 
               cares. 

               MAJOR VAN ZIJL is waiting outside in the yard as GENERAL 
               CANDY'S car drives up. He has a lady's brown silk umbrella 
               against the rain. He is a tough, lively South African of 
               thirty-four, a veteran of the Boer War.

               He squelches over the duckboards to the car.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Glad to see you, sir. I've got another 
                         umbrella for you.

               He produces. The GENERAL accepts it gratefully.

                                     CLIVE
                         You've a marvellous eye for loot, 
                         Van Zijl.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Learnt from the English in the Boer 
                         War, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Chuckles)
                         Where d'you get 'em?

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Off Jerries—eleven of them-brought 
                         in an hour ago.  Lord knows where 
                         they stole them, they were using 
                         them for camouflage against aircraft.

               While talking they have left the car, crossed the duckboard 
               and gone into the Estaminet.

                                       SEQUENCE 54

                               Interior: Estaminet du Pont

               BAR

               The room is now the Outer Office of Battalion H.Q. MAJOR VAN 
               ZIJL is in command.

               Can see vaguely that once this was a pleasant little cafe, 
               just as with some filthy old tramp it is not beyond conjecture 
               that he was once a young, attractive man. The contrast is as 
               great.

               The room is crowded. Clerks are working and there is a 
               telephone exchange. Several officers around.

               As GENERAL CANDY and MAJOR VAN ZIJL enter, everybody stands 
               to attention.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Saluting)
                         Good evening.

               He glances round, starts towards the Inner Office, then stops 
               and speaks to VAN ZIJL.

                                     CLIVE
                         Can we get through to the R.T.O. in 
                         Dupuis-sur-something?

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Dupuis-sur-Crois. The Yanks are down 
                         there. How about it, Paddy?

                                     PADDY
                         'Fraid the lines broke between us 
                         and 'Mile 14', sir. We can send a 
                         runner.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         What message, sir?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Tell him to hold a place on the leave-
                         train. When can I leave here?  

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Not before dark. They're plastering 
                         the road between 17 and 19 with 
                         shrapnel.

                                     CLIVE
                         Right. Will someone look after 
                         Murdoch?

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Nobby! Paddy, get that runner away!  

                                     PADDY
                         Yes, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         If any of you have got an important 
                         letter or message home, I'll take 
                         it.

                                     CHORUS
                         Thank you, sir!

               CLIVE goes across. VAN ZIJL follows, calling over his 
               shoulder:

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Paddy! I'll [[tackle]] [see] the 
                         prisoners again presently.

                                       SEQUENCE 55

                               Interior: Estaminet du Pont

               KITCHEN

               This was once the large kitchen and chief living room of the 
               cafe's owner. You would scarcely guess it now. Its present 
               function is office of the Battalion Commander.  

               The GENERAL has heard VAN ZIJL'S last remark. He goes to the 
               fire and stands in front of it.

                                     CLIVE
                         What are these prisoners?  

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Ulans. The Second Regiment. That's 
                         all I've got out of them so far.

                                     CLIVE
                         The Second Regiment of Ulans? I'd 
                         like to question them.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                              (Secretly unwilling)
                         Certainly, sir.
                              (Goes to passage, 
                              yells.)
                         Paddy!  Bring in the prisoners.

                                     PADDY
                         Yes, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         Any officer with them?

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         No such luck.

                                     CLIVE
                         Where did you nab them?

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Floating down the river early this 
                         morning. I had a boom across and 
                         netted them like salmon. They had a 
                         hundred pounds of dynamite with 'em.  
                         My guess is they were after the new 
                         pontoon-bridge below St Mangy.

                                     CLIVE
                         How the blazes did they get to know 
                         about that?

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         They took one of our patrols prisoner 
                         day before yesterday.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Stares)
                         Are you suggesting our fellows talked?

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         The Germans know how to make them 
                         talk.

               A little pause follows.  CLIVE is thinking, a fact betrayed 
               by a heavy frown and an occasional 'Hm!'

               He shakes his head as if unwilling to believe something. VAN 
               ZIJL watches him, half affectionately. The slim, dark South 
               African is a contrast to the solid Englishman. He produces a 
               paper from his pocket.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Finally speaking)
                         [Well if they are,] They're cracking, 
                         my dear chap. It's a sure sign. Nobody 
                         starts to fight foul until he sees 
                         he can't win any other way. I quite 
                         believe Hindenburg, who I hear said 
                         the other day that until now ' Germany 
                         has used her arms with honour -
                              (After a slight pause.)
                         I admit he said nothing about her 
                         legs.

               VAN ZIJL has unfolded the paper, which is printed in German.

                                     [[VAN ZIJL:
                         This bears you out, sir.

                                     CLIVE:
                         What?

                                     VAN ZIJL:
                         It was on one of the prisoners.

                                     CLIVE
                         Let me see it.

                                     VAN ZIJL:
                         It's in German.

                                     CLIVE
                         Oh! Well, read it.]]

               The door opens and the eleven German prisoners march down 
               the passage and into the room under an escort with fixed 
               bayonets. The prisoners have none of the colourful appearance 
               of the Ulans of 1902. All the same they are defiant although 
               not arrogant, as Nazi prisoners would be. They remain grave 
               and serious all through the scene. Outside it is almost dark 
               and the rain has got heavier. The wind has got up. [[When 
               the prisoners come in an Orderly brings in three or four 
               candles stuck in bottles and one oil-lamp with a cracked and 
               smoky chimney and no shade. Another Orderly blacks out the 
               windows. The escort lines the prisoners up against the wall. 
               During all this action, VAN ZIJL reads aloud from the German 
               paper to the GENERAL.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         It's an appeal from the 'Erster 
                         General Quartier-Meister', from old 
                         man Ludendorff himself, to his loyal 
                         troops. It starts: 'Soldiers, stand 
                         fast or Germany will lie in the dust. 
                         Should the enemy discover that our 
                         Mannzucht -
                              (He searches for the 
                              word)
                         Our morale is broken, all is lost, 
                         you will have fought and suffered in 
                         vain and the Homeland will hear the 
                         tramp of the invader.' What do you 
                         think of that, sir?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Grim smile)
                         What else?

               He is watching the prisoners as he listens.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                              (Reads)
                         'Have you heard the British say that 
                         Germany has fallen? Is this to be? 
                         Nein und abermals nein!
                              (He mocks the style.)
                         Thus far they have seen only German 
                         faces, shall they now see only our 
                         backs? Stand, or the Fatherland is 
                         doomed and you with her!'

                                     CLIVE
                              (Thoughtfully)
                         There's a rumour that the Kaiser 
                         abdicated yesterday.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Again, sir?

               CLIVE smiles and walks over to the line of prisoners. They 
               have heard VAN ZIJL reading Ludendorff's appeal but they 
               have given no sign of having understood.]

               GENERAL CANDY walks down the line, examining each prisoner 
               closely. He stops and walks back to a commanding position in 
               front of them.

                                     CLIVE
                         Do any of you know Oberst Kretschmar-
                         Schuldorff?

               No answer.

                                     CLIVE
                         Don't play deaf! He was an Oberst in 
                         your Regiment the last time I heard 
                         of him - Oberst Kretschmar-Schuldorff, 
                         Second Regiment of Ulans!

               No answer.

                                     CLIVE
                         Which of you can speak English?

               No answer.

               VAN ZIJL bursts out, addressing one of them:

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         You! You spoke English an hour ago! 
                         Answer the General!

                                     PRISONER
                         I do speak.

                                     CLIVE
                         Ah! Now [[I want to tell you 
                         something]] [listen to me].
                         We don't use the same methods that I 
                         hear you use on your prisoners. But 
                         I assure you that we have means to 
                         get what we want.
                              (Pause.)
                         What was this explosive found on you 
                         intended for?

                                     PRISONER
                         I don't know.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Blusters)
                         Don't lie!  

                                     PRISONER
                         I don't know.

               VAN ZIJL'S face as he listens is a study.

                                     CLIVE
                         You took three of our men prisoner 
                         two days ago.

                                     PRISONER:
                         No.

                                     CLIVE
                         Then how did you know about the 
                         bridge?

                                     PRISONER:
                         I know nothing about a bridge...

                                     CLIVE
                              (Bellows)
                         Then why were you carrying dynamite?

               No answer. GENERAL CANDY draws a long breath.  Fortunately 
               PADDY comes in.

                                     PADDY
                         All right to go now, sir. Your car's 
                         waiting.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Won't you stay for dinner, sir?

                                     CLIVE
                         What have you got?

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Macaroni. We found it in the cellar.

                                     CLIVE
                         Beastly stuff!

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         And the usual corned-horse.

                                     CLIVE
                         Thanks. I'll take my chance in Dupuis. 
                         Pity I've got to go. I'd like another 
                         [[try]] [shot] at those prisoners.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                              (Shepherding him)
                         I've got the idea, sir. I'll tackle 
                         them for you.

                                     CLIVE
                         Right! Make your report to Brigade.

                                     [VAN ZIJL
                         Very good, sir.]

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 56

                                  Somewhere in Flanders

               EXTERIOR: ESTAMINET DU PONT

               [[Very dark,]] wind and rain. The officers are seeing GENERAL 
               CANDY off. [[All hold ladies' umbrellas over their heads and 
               carry electric torches.]]

                                     CLIVE
                         Dirty night! I prefer Natal to 
                         Flanders! Don't you, Van Zijl?

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         I have seen nights like this on 
                         Commando, General, even in Natal.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Laughs)
                         Good luck with your new enemy!

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Goodbye, sir. Let's hope the show's 
                         over by the time you're back.

                                     CLIVE
                         Not much chance of that.

                                     PADDY
                         Do you know the road, driver?

                                     MURDOCH
                         Blindfold, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         He only lost his way three times 
                         coming here!  Carry on, Murdoch.

               The car drives away.

               [[The others look after him, smiling.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Good old Sugar Candy!  

                                     PADDY
                         Did he get anything out of the 
                         prisoners?  

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Not a sausage.

                                     PADDY
                         Shall I lock 'em up again?  

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Oh, no. Now we put the screws on!  

                                     PADDY
                         Didn't you this afternoon, sir.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         No, my lad. Not with Sugar Candy 
                         coming. He has a tender heart. Now, 
                         listen! Take four men ...]]

                                       SEQUENCE 57

                               Interior: Estaminet du font

               KITCHEN

               [[The prisoners stolidly wait the return of the officers. 
               Their guards survey them impartially.

                                     TOMMY
                         When's the war going to end, Jerry?

                                     PRISONER
                         Who knows?

                                     TOMMY
                              (Your Kaiser has a 
                              rough idea.]])

               MAJOR VAN ZIJL [[comes in.  He]] goes straight up to the 
               English-speaking prisoner who looks at him in a very different 
               way than he looked at GENERAL CANDY.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                              (Crisply])
                         [Now] Listen! I am in command here 
                         now and I know how to deal with you 
                         scum. I am not a simple English 
                         gentleman but a simple South African 
                         and I assure you that I have means 
                         to get what I want. (
                              (His paraphrase is 
                              deliberate and he is 
                              obviously thinking 
                              in the 'taal'.)
                         What was the dynamite for? How many 
                         of you got away? What happened to 
                         the three men you took prisoners? 
                         Thirty seconds to reply! [[
                              (Pause.)
                         If you do not understand the questions 
                         I have a squad of interpreters 
                         outside, whom you will understand.

               Outside in the yard we hear the tramp of men.  PADDY'S voice 
               shouts: 'Squad! Halt! Order-Arms!' There is a crash as they 
               ground arms on the stones.

               VAN ZIJL sits down at his desk. He looks at the men in front 
               of him, playing with a sjambok which lies on the desk.  He 
               glances at his watch.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Right!  Cooper!

                                     COOPER
                         Sir!

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         The three men nearest the door. Take 
                         them out and shoot them! Lieutenant 
                         Casey is in command of the firing 
                         squad!

               PRIVATE COOPER stares.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Jump to it!

                                     COOPER
                         Yes, sir!
                              (To the prisoners)
                         Come on! You three!

               They go out. The two remaining Tommies exchange uneasy looks. 
               So do the prisoners.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                              (To the PRISONER who 
                              speaks English)
                         Shall I repeat the questions?

               PRISONER makes no answer: he is listening.  A command rings 
               out: 'Fire!'  There is a volley, other ominous sounds. 
               Footsteps are heard leaving the yard and coming back to the 
               kitchen.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                              (Looks again at his 
                              watch, then says to 
                              the prisoners)
                         Thirty seconds! Shall I repeat the 
                         questions?  

                                     2ND PRISONER
                         You cannot shoot us - there is an 
                         international convention about 
                         prisoners!

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Oh, you can speak English, too?

               PRIVATE COOPER enters and grounds arms. He looks very grim. 
               Pause.]

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Right! The next three, Cooper! 

                                     COOPER
                         Come on you!  

                                     VAN ZIJL
                              (Indicating the first 
                              English-speaking 
                              PRISONER)
                         You can take the tall one. I've found 
                         another interpreter.

                                     COOPER
                         You there!  

                                     PRISONER
                         I protest!  

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Protest rejected.

               The second three are hustled out.

               The five remaining men are really frightened.

               VAN ZIJL addresses them ruthlessly:

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         International conventions! You think 
                         they are useful on this side of the 
                         line, don't you?

                                     2ND PRISONER
                         Please - Herr Kommandant - I want to 
                         speak to the others in German.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Go ahead. You have--
                              (Glances at watch.)
                         thirty seconds.

                                       SEQUENCE 58

                               Interior: Estaminet du Pont

               BAR

               The whole room is grinning at the first three prisoners who 
               are standing by the porch. The door opens and PRIVATE COOPER 
               ushers in the next bunch, just condemned to 'death'. At the 
               sight of their comrades they are so surprised for a moment 
               they can't even speak.

                                       SEQUENCE 59

                                  Somewhere in Flanders

               EXTERIOR: ESTAMINET DU PONT

               The front door opens and a torch flashes a signal.

                                     EAGER VOICE (O.S.)
                         There's the signal, sir.

                                     PADDY (O.S.)
                         Right and for God's sake don't point 
                         at me. Ready?

                                     VOICES
                              (Suppressed laughs)
                         Yes, sir.

                                     PADDY (O.S.)
                              (Yells)
                         FIRE!

               A volley crashes out.

                                       SEQUENCE 60

                               Interior: Estaminet du Pont

               BAR

               COOPER grins cheerfully at the FIST PRISONER

                                     COOPER
                         I'll bet your pals are talking 
                         nineteen to the dozen! 

                                     PRISONER
                         This is against international Law...

                                     COOPER
                         Do you want to stand outside in the 
                         rain?

                                     PRISONER
                         No!

                                     COOPER
                         Then shut up!

                                                                  FADE OUT:

                                       SEQUENCE 61

                             Exterior: Somewhere in Flanders

               RAILROAD CROSSING

               FADE IN: 

               It is pitch dark. The rain has stopped for a moment. The 
               signal, which is at 'green', swings up to 'red'. We hear the 
               train receding in the distance.

               GENERAL CANDY'S car is waiting for the barriers to open. The 
               light of the headlamps shines on the mud-stained barriers. 
               They rise into the air.

               MURDOCH puts in the clutch but the delay has been fatal. 
               They are stuck in the deep mud. The wheels turn madly but 
               get no grip. The GENERAL, a darker mass in the darkness, 
               shines his torch down on the wheels.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Shouts)
                         Sentry!

               No answer.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Shouts)
                         SENTRY!
                              (To MURDOCH)
                         There must be somebody there! Who 
                         opened the gate? SENTRY!!  

                                     SENTRY
                              (Weary American voice)
                         Every perishing car sticks in the 
                         perishing mud, I'm not a perishing 
                         service station! 

                                     MURDOCH
                              (Shouts)
                         This is General Candy's car!

               Silence.

               Then feet squelch towards them. CANDY flashes his torch on 
               his wrist-watch.

                                     CLIVE
                         11.15. How far are we from Dupuis?  

                                     SENTRY
                         Two kilometres, General

                                     CLIVE
                              (Jumping out into the 
                              mud)
                         Now then, Murdoch!
                              (To SENTRY)
                         Come on, man, come on! Give us a 
                         hand! I don't want to spend the night 
                         here!

               They heave and get covered in mud.

                                     SENTRY
                         Taint a bit of use, General. You 
                         need a truck to get you out of this -

                                     CLIVE
                         Don't waste stamina talking nonsense, 
                         my boy. Push!

               They try again. Useless.

                                     SENTRY
                              (Breathing calmly and 
                              dispassionately)
                         The ornery son of a gun!

                                     MURDOCH
                         We'd better give up, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Indomitable)
                         I shall walk to the village. Murdoch, 
                         wait here for a truck and then follow 
                         me.

               MURDOCH sighs.

                                     CLIVE
                              (To SENTRY)
                         Which way, sentry?  

                                     SENTRY
                         Steer by your nose, General!  Follow 
                         the telephone poles until you come 
                         to a dead horse. You can't miss it. 
                         The road forks, you take the left. 
                         Left again at the farm. The Jerries 
                         killed all the pigs before they 
                         retreated. You won't miss them either. 
                         They're ripe as Roquefort. The village 
                         lies dead ahead. When you smell 
                         chloride of lime, you're there!  

                                     CLIVE
                         Hm!

               He trudges off.

                                     MURDOCH
                         How shall I find you, sir?  

                                     CLIVE
                              (Calls)
                         Ask at the R.T.O.'s office!]] 

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 62

                                  Somewhere in Flanders

               EXTERIOR: OFFICE OF THE R.T.O.

               The railway station has been shelled so many times there is 
               nothing left of it at all except mounds of shapeless rubble. 
               The rails have always been replaced and that has been all 
               that mattered. Dimly one is conscious of railway lines, ready 
               to trip you up all over the place. Signals, near and distant, 
               are marked by their coloured lamps hanging in the air. But 
               the only trace of any building, let alone organization, is a 
               small hut right on the edge of the network of rails.

               CLIVE stumbles over the rails to the hut.

               His torch flashes on and illuminates a sign: 'R.T.O.'

               He opens the door, showing a glimpse of a smoky interior, 
               and goes in, shutting the door.

                                       SEQUENCE 63

                                  Somewhere in Flanders

               INTERIOR: OFFICE OF THE R.T.O.

               [[A young AMERICAN OFFICER is writing at the desk. On a bench 
               are sitting two English soldiers, patiently waiting. One is 
               very young, the other about forty. It is some moments before 
               the R.T.O. (Railway Transport Officer) realizes that CLIVE 
               is a General, he is so covered in mud.]]

               [A young AMERICAN RADIO OPERATOR is trying repeatedly to 
               make contact, on behalf of the AMERICAN R.T.O., who is also 
               on the radio telephone throughout most of his dialogue with 
               CLIVE; while another YOUNG AMERICAN SERGEANT sits nearby 
               waiting for news.]

                                     OPERATOR
                         8.35, 8.35 ... Hello, hello... Dammit.
                              (To R.T.O.)
                         Lousy line is dead, sir. I can't get 
                         Beechwood.

               Continues to try in background

                                     R.T.O.
                         Keep trying.
                              (To CLIVE, not 
                              recognizing his rank])
                         Yeah, and what do you want?

                                     CLIVE
                         I am Brigadier-General Candy.

                                     [R.T.O.
                         I'm sorry, sir. Sit down, take a 
                         load off your feet. I couldn't see 
                         your brass for the mud. What can I 
                         do for you?

                                     CLIVE
                         Are you a Railway Transport Officer?

                                     R.T.O.
                         I run trains, if that's what you 
                         mean. That is when there are any 
                         trains to run.]

                                     CLIVE
                         Did you get my chit?

                                     R.T.O.
                         [[Chit, sir?]]
                              ([To OPERATOR)
                         Jake, will you for the Lord's sake 
                         get me through to Beechwood. The 
                         General's having kittens. Try the 
                         other circuit. You said chit?

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes.

                                     R.T.O
                         What's a chit?]

                                     CLIVE
                         [A] message, man, [a] message! [I 
                         want transport to London. It's 
                         urgent.]

                                     [[R.T.O.
                         Sit down, sir?

                                     CLIVE
                         Thanks. (He shows his papers.]]

                                     R.T.O.
                         [[I've been on duty since eleven. No 
                         chit came in, General.]] [Hasn't 
                         been any message through here since 
                         I've been on duty. See what we can 
                         do for you.]

                                     [[CLIVE
                         Well - never mind. I've got a spot 
                         of leave. Going to London. Want to 
                         touch Paris.]]

                                     [R.T.O.
                         Jake, get R.T.O. at Ami-le-Bon, will 
                         you?

                                     JAKE
                         OK, sir.]

                                     R.T.O.
                              (Into telephone)
                         [[This is R.T.O. Dupuis-sur-Crois. 
                         Get me R.T.O. at Ami-le-Bon.]] [Yes, 
                         yes, we're trying to get through, 
                         sir. We're trying the other circuit 
                         right now. Yes, I'll let you know.
                              (To CLIVE)
                         A merry little madhouse we've got 
                         here, isn't it?]

                                     CLIVE
                         [Yes, very.] When does my train leave? 
                         [[When do I get to Paris?]] Where do 
                         I change? And where can I get some 
                         food?

                                     R.T.O.
                              ([Into telephone)
                         I thought so. Thanks very much.] 
                         [[Just hang on ... I'm getting]] 
                         [Yeah, it's just what I thought, 
                         sir, you'll have to get] through to 
                         Ami-le-Bon.

                                     CLIVE:
                              (Explosively)
                         [[Ami-le-Bon!

                                     R.T.O.
                         The highway's OK, sir. Let me show 
                         you the route. You turn right at 
                         Dead Pigs Farm - (To telephone What? 
                         Well, check it!  The line is broken 
                         between 'Mile 14' and the Estaminet 
                         du Pont.

                                     CLIVE
                         Thank you, I know that. Now look 
                         here, my boy - I've been to that 
                         blasted Estaminet- ]] I've come from 
                         Ami-le-Bon to catch a train here!  
                         [My motorcar is stuck ...] 

                                     R.T.O.
                              (Ringing off)
                         [[Well, General, that's rich.]]
                              ([Cuts in.)
                         What's that? What General? The hell 
                         you say? Well, that's that.]

                                     [[CLIVE
                         I'm glad you think so.]]

                                     R.T.O.
                         We're in the same boat, General. 
                         I've come four thousand miles from 
                         Pittsburgh to Dupuis-sur-Crois. I 
                         checked in yesterday and the war 
                         finishes tomorrow.

                                     CLIVE
                         What do you mean?

                                     R.T.O.
                         Haven't you heard the news?]]

                                     CLIVE
                         [[What news?]] [What's what?]

                                     R.T.O.
                         A German delegation is on the way to 
                         see Foch. [They're going] To sue for 
                         an Armistice.

                                     [AMERICAN SERGEANT
                         YIPEE!]

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Old trick]] [Nonsense]. German 
                         propaganda. [Old trick to] Put us 
                         off our guard.

                                     [[R.T.O.
                         Maybe. But I came here 'Express' and 
                         I have a hunch I'm going back 'Slow 
                         Delivery'.]]

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Well, what about trains?]] [What 
                         about my train?]

                                     R.T.O.
                         [There's] Not a train, a truck, an 
                         engine or a driver, General.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Stands up)
                         In this war I've seen ammunition 
                         dumps without ammunition, field-
                         kitchens without cooks and railway 
                         stations without rails, so I suppose 
                         I shouldn't be surprised at anything.
                              (Raises his voice.)
                         But let me tell you, young man, that 
                         in the Boer War or in Somaliland 
                         this sort of inefficiency would not 
                         have been tolerated for a second! 
                         Not for a second!
                              (He changes his tone.)
                         Now where can I get some grub?  

                                     [[R.T.O.
                              (Has listened without 
                              awe but active 
                              interest to the 
                              General's outburst, 
                              as if at a play)
                         Grub, sir?

                                     CLIVE
                         Food, man, food.]]

                                     R.T.O.
                         The 'Crown of Thorns' is [[always]] 
                         good for a hand-out at [almost] any 
                         hour, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         What is it? A pub?

                                     R.T.O.
                         A - ?
                              (Hehesitates.)

                                     CLIVE
                         A-a-dash it, I don't speak your 
                         language, sir - a cafe?

                                     R.T.O.
                         [No, sir.] It's a convent[[, sir]]. 
                         [It's on the way to Ami-le-Bon.]

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Good. Well,]] show me the way, 
                         will you [[- what's your name - er - 
                         Lieutenant]]?

                                     [[R.T.O.
                         Schmidt. Ensign Schmidt, sir.

               CLIVE: Schmidt, eh. German name?  

                                     R.T.O.
                              (Grinning)
                         Yes, sir. I've got cousins in 
                         Westphalia. My father told me to 
                         give 'em hell if I met up with them. 
                         This way, sir.]]

                                     [R.T.O.
                         : I think I hear Armstrong coming 
                         with the bathtub now.] (The two men 
                         step out into the darkness. [[(The 
                         two waiting soldiers are left alone.

                                     OLD SOLDIER
                         The General's right - I was in the 
                         Boer War and in Somaliland. I remember -

                                     YOUNG SOLDIER
                         Garn!  Them wasn't wars - them was 
                         fatigues!]]

               [ARMSTRONG, a black American soldier, rides up on motorcycle 
               with sidecar.

                                     R.T.O.
                         Armstrong, I want you to take the 
                         General over to the Crown of Thorns.

                                     ARMSTRONG
                         Yes sir. Yes sir, General. I sure 
                         will do that. It's kind of damp 
                         underfoot, but I'll get you there, 
                         General.

                                     R.T.O.
                         Climb aboard, sir. You're off.

                                     CLIVE
                         Poor show I couldn't get a train 
                         tonight.

                                     R.T.O.
                         You can step on it, Armstrong. The 
                         General's in a hurry.

                                     ARMSTRONG
                         Sure will do that.

               They roar off into the darkness.

                                     R.T.O.
                              (Calls)
                         Goodbye, General.

                                     SERGEANT
                         What were those other wars the General 
                         was talking about, Captain?  The 
                         Boer War, the Somy something. I never 
                         heard of them.

                                     R.T.O.
                         Those weren't wars. Those were just 
                         summer manoeuvres.]

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 64

                        Exterior: Convent of the 'Crown of Thorns'

                                     ARMSTRONG
                         Here we are, General, the Convent of 
                         the Crown of Thorns.
                              (Offers to help him 
                              out of sidecar.)

                                     CLIVE
                         I can manage, thank you.

               ARMSTRONG rings the Convent bell.

               [[CLOISTER

               The Cloister connects the Refectory with the Main Entrance. 
               Somebody is using the big knocker to great effect on the 
               outer door. A NUN is hurrying down to answer it. The night 
               has cleared and there is moonlight. The NUN opens the grille 
               and looks out.

                                     ARMSTRONG
                         Bonsoir, Sister Josephine.

                                     SISTER
                         Bonsoir, Napoleon.

                                     ARMSTRONG
                         I've brought you a real live English 
                         General.

                                     [[NUN
                         Monsieur.

                                     CLIVE (O.S.)
                         Ici le Convent, Madame?

                                     NUN
                         Oui, Monsieur. Vous desirez?]]

                                     CLIVE
                         Je suis [[une Colonel]] [un General] 
                         anglais.

                                     NUN
                         Mais entrez, Monsieur!

               She opens the gate and the General comes in.

                                     ARMSTRONG
                         Goodnight, General. Bonsoir, Sister 
                         Josephine. 

                                     SISTER
                         Bonsoir, Napoleon.

                                     CLIVE
                         Merci, madame, [[je suis - je suis 
                         mange - ]][... les Americains ... 
                         j'ai mange ...]

               He points to his stomach.

                                     NUN
                              (With concern)
                         Monsieur le General a mange quelque 
                         chose qui lui aurait fait mal?

                                     CLIVE
                         Oui-mange -

                                     NUN
                         Mais venez done, mon General.

               She leads the way down the cloister, the GENERAL following.

                                       SEQUENCE 65

                             Convent of the 'Crown of Thorns'

               REFECTORY

               The NUN and GENERAL CANDY arrive at the door. She opens it 
               and they go in.

               The GENERAL stands astonished at what he sees. Part of the 
               Refectory has been hit by a shell but it is still a noble 
               hall. Long tables run down the huge room and nuns are waiting 
               at table. At the table are sitting nearly a hundred young 
               nurses fresh from England, their bright uniforms and bright 
               faces making the first patch of colour since the Khaki 
               sequence started.

               Most of the nurses look up as the GENERAL enters, then stare 
               at him, muddy and stained, as he stands at the top of the 
               steps. He stares at their eager young faces. He feels suddenly 
               drained of energy. 

               Meanwhile the NUN has fetched two women: the MOTHER SUPERIOR 
               of the Convent and the MATRON who is Transport Officer for 
               the nurses. [[The MATRON is Scottish.]]

                                     [CLIVE
                         Bonsoir, Madame.]

                                     [[MOTHER SUPERIOR
                         Bonsoir, mon General, on va vous 
                         soigner.]]

                                     MATRON
                         [Good evening,] General, you have 
                         fallen on your feet.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Smiles)
                         I was beginning to think so.

                                     MATRON
                         I have sixty-eight young, freshly-
                         trained nurses straight from England 
                         all dying to nurse someone. What's 
                         the trouble?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Startled)
                         Trouble, Matron?  

                                     MATRON
                         The nun said you had eaten something -

                                     CLIVE
                         She got it wrong - I want to eat. 
                         I'm hungry!  

                                     MATRON
                         Oh!
                              (To MOTHER SUPERIOR 
                              and NUN)
                         C'estqu'il veut manger!

               Everyone smiles. The NUN titters. The MOTHER SUPERIOR and 
               the MATRON have a hurried conference out of which the MATRON 
               emerges with an invitation. While they have talked, GENERAL 
               CANDY looks down the crowded tables. He sees a girl.

               She is seated about halfway down the table. She has eaten 
               and, like several of the nurses, has fallen asleep.

               CLIVE stares and stares. He knows that face and we know it 
               too. The girl wears her hair differently, she is much younger 
               than Edith Hunter - but her face is very like Edith's. CLIVE 
               longs to see the colour of her eyes.

               [[The MATRON turns to him.

                                     MATRON
                         It's all right, General, won't you 
                         join us? We shall all be delighted.

                                     CLIVE
                         Thank you.
                              (To MOTHER SUPERIOR)
                         Merci, ma mere.]]

                                     MOTHER SUPERIOR
                              (Smiles)
                         Sois bienvenu, [[monfils]]
                         [General.
                              (To the NUN)
                         II va rester avec nous.]

               The MATRON leads the way down the table. CLIVE will pass 
               quite close to the girl.

                                     MATRON
                         [That's settled then. We should be 
                         delighted to have you join us.] Have 
                         you been in the front line?  I suppose 
                         you have?  Before I got this job I 
                         was with the Italians. I was lucky. 
                         I came through Caporetto without a 
                         scratch.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Absently)
                         Good heavens! What insect powder do 
                         you use, Ma'am?

               MATRON laughs heartily.

               As they pass the sleeping girl, CLIVE CANDY stops 
               involuntarily. Yes, the girl is strangely like Edith Hunter. 
               The MATRON is now at the head of the table.

                                     MATRON
                              (To the nurse next to 
                              her)
                         Move a bit, my dear - Sit down, 
                         General.
                              (To a NUN)
                         Une assiette, s'il vous plait.
                              (To CLIVE, who sits 
                              down)
                         We have macaroni.

                                     CLIVE
                         Splendid!
                              (He still can't take 
                              his eyes off the 
                              girl.)

               He addresses the MATRON.

                                     CLIVE
                         Matron! Have you ever seen the Indian 
                         Rope trick?  

                                     MATRON
                              (Surprised)
                         No, General. Have you?

               CLIVE nods.

                                     NUN
                         Pardon, Monsieur.

               A plate is put before CLIVE loaded with macaroni.

               We see with CLIVE'S eyes the girl start to wake up. She smiles 
               sleepily.

                                     MATRON
                         It must be an incredible sight.

                                     CLIVE
                         (Slowly) But I never [[met]] [heard 
                         of] anybody who saw it unless he 
                         [[first]] heard [[that]] he was going 
                         to see it [first].

                                     MATRON
                         I beg your pardon! I don't quite -

                                     CLIVE
                         You hear about the thing. You hope 
                         to see it - and you - see it.

               He eats his macaroni, never taking his eyes off the girl.

               The MATRON puts CLIVE'S vague way of talking down to 
               tiredness. The nurses around are all starting to get up and 
               a general exodus starts towards the door. The girl stands up 
               with the others as the bench is pushed back. 

                                     MATRON
                              (To CLIVE)
                         [Yes, General,] Will you excuse me? 
                         [[I have to put my girls to bed.
                              (She rises.]])

                                     CLIVE
                              (Trying to see his 
                              girl in a sudden 
                              panic)
                         [[Can you - who is that girl, please, 
                         Matron? - The one who just got UP - 
                         ]] [One moment, Matron, do you know 
                         that girl over there?]

                                     MATRON
                         [[Do you think you know her?]] I'm 
                         afraid [[I can't tell you]] [I don't]. 
                         I only met them here at the station. 
                         [[I must go, please excuse me.]]
                              ([She rises.)
                         Come along, everybody, come along.

                                     NURSE
                              (To her exhausted 
                              neighbour)
                         Come on, Wynne.]

               CLIVE is standing now, [[his fork still in his hand. He is 
               strangely near panic. He turns to his neighbours who are 
               also going. He just manages to stop one of them. Already all 
               the others are streaming towards the door. The NURSE he has 
               stopped looks at him with frank interest.

                                     CLIVE
                         Tell me, who was that girl who was 
                         sitting there?]] 

               [As the nurses leave, CLIVE speaks to a NUN.

                                     CLIVE
                         Ou est le matron?

                                     NUN
                         La Matrone? A qui vous avez parle? 
                         Restez. Je vais la chercher.

                                     CLIVE
                              (To one of the nurses)
                         Nurse, do you know the name of the 
                         girl who was sitting at the end of 
                         that table?]

                                     [[YORKSHIRE NURSE
                         Whereabouts, General?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Moving down to the 
                              place)
                         Here. She was sitting here asleep.]]

                                     YORKSHIRE NURSE
                         Darker fair?

                                     CLIVE
                         Fair.

                                     YORKSHIRE NURSE
                         I don't remember.
                              (Pause.)
                         Can you describe her better?

                                     CLIVE
                         She's - fair. I couldn't see the 
                         colour of her eyes. [Slim.]

                                     YORKSHIRE NURSE
                         Sorry. It might be anyone. [[I was 
                         asleep myself.]] Excuse me, General.

                                     CLIVE
                              (A last attempt)
                         Where do you come from tonight?  
                         What detachment are you?

                                     YORKSHIRE NURSE
                         Yorkshire. West Riding, most of us. 
                         Good night, General.

               She hurries away.

                                                                  FADE OUT:

                                      [[SEQUENCE 66

                               Interior: Estaminet du Pont

               KITCHEN

               FADE IN: 

               The door is opened from inside by MAJOR VAN ZIJL. GENERAL 
               CANDY comes out under full steam, with a face of fury. In 
               his hand he holds a typewritten report. He needs a shave and 
               a wash.

                                     VAN ZIJL
                         Good morning, General Candy.

                                       SEQUENCE 67

                               Interior: Estaminet du Pont

               BAR

               The door is opened from inside by LIEUTENANT PADDY.

               GENERAL CANDY comes out as in previous scene.

                                     PADDY
                         Nice day, sir.

                                       SEQUENCE 68

                                  Somewhere in Flanders

               EXTERIOR: ESTAMINET DU PONT

               It is a fine morning. The GENERAL'S car is waiting. It looks 
               like a heap of mud after the night's adventures. 

               MURDOCH is talking to the sentry.

               As the GENERAL appears, MURDOCH jumps to the rear door of 
               the car and opens it. The sentry salutes.

               GENERAL CANDY snaps an acknowledgement at the sentry, ignores 
               MURDOCH,, opens the front door of the car, hurls himself 
               into the seat beside the driver and slams the door. MURDOCH, 
               seeing his mood, shuts the rear door and runs round to the 
               driver's seat.

                                     CLIVE
                         Come on, Murdoch, come on!

                                     MURDOCH
                         Yes, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         Am-Ile-Bon!

                                     MURDOCH
                         Yes, sir.

               The car drives off.]]
.

                                       SEQUENCE 69

                             Exterior: Somewhere in Flanders

               CROSS-ROAD

               The car is immobilized. The GENERAL is pacing impatiently up 
               and down.  MURDOCH, in an ostrich-like position, cleans the 
               plugs. Finally the GENERAL stops and speaks.

                                     CLIVE
                              ((For the tenth time)
                         How long now?  

                                     MURDOCH
                              (For the tenth time)
                         Not long, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         You've said that ten separate times.

                                     MURDOCH
                         I know, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, hurry! The train leaves at 
                         10.30.

                                     MURDOCH
                         I know, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[It's 9.30 now.]] I need extra time 
                         in Ami-le-Bon. I'm going to G.H.Q.

                                     MURDOCH
                         I know, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Don't talk]] [Stop talking] like 
                         an infernal parrot, Murdoch. How do 
                         you know?

                                     MURDOCH
                         I was told, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         Who told you?

                                     MURDOCH
                         Major van Zijl's batman, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         What did he say?

                                     MURDOCH
                         That you were up in the air, sir, 
                         because the Major had got valuable 
                         information from the Jerries - the 
                         prisoners, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Controlling himself)
                         Your misinformation, Murdoch, is 
                         typical.

                                     MURDOCH
                         Thank you, sir.

                                     [[CLIVE
                         The reason I am 'up in the air', as 
                         your informant grotesquely describes 
                         a very natural emotion, is because 
                         this information was obtained by 
                         intimidation!  By mental torture! By 
                         firing squads!  By the same methods 
                         that the Boches use!  If we are 
                         fighting gangsters that is no reason 
                         why we should behave like gangsters, 
                         too.

               MURDOCH remains silent.]

                                     CLIVE
                              (Reads report)
                         Bah! Four pages of 'confessions'! 
                         Not worth the -

               He breaks off. Something in the report has caught his eye. 
               He reads it with interest. MURDOCH straightens up and wipes 
               his hands. He has finished. He watches his officer.

               INSERT: Item in the official report [(only the name is 
               visible). [['On being questioned about their senior officers, 
               the prisoners admitted that, among others, Oberst]] Kretschmar-
               Schuldorff [[had been taken prisoner by the British, and was 
               believed now to be a prisoner of war in England...'

               CLIVE is so interested in this news that he quite forgets 
               how it was obtained.

                                     CLIVE
                         Hm! Kretschmar-Schuldorff! There 
                         can't be two of them with a name 
                         like that, eh, Murdoch?

                                     MURDOCH
                         No, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         You have no idea what I'm talking 
                         about.

                                     MURDOCH
                         No, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         Haven't I told you about that time I 
                         was in Berlin in 1902.?

                                     MURDOCH
                         Oh, yes, sir. When you grew your 
                         moustache.

                                     CLIVE
                         And yet you[['ve never heard]] [can't 
                         remember the name] of Kretschmar-
                         Schuldorff. You know, [[Murdoch,]] 
                         you should bequeath your brain to 
                         Guy's Hospital, [Murdoch]. 

                                     MURDOCH
                         I remember, sir. He married the girl.

               CLIVE suddenly remembers the girl of the previous night. He 
               is silent for a moment. Then he speaks in an entirely 
               different tone, which very few people have heard.

                                     CLIVE
                         Last night, Murdoch, I saw a girl - 
                         a nurse straight from England... 
                         I've never seen a more striking 
                         resemblance...

                                     MURDOCH
                         She must have been a very common 
                         type of girl, sir - the young lady 
                         in Berlin, I mean.

                                     CLIVE
                         She was a most uncommon - what the 
                         devil d'you mean, Murdoch? 

                                     MURDOCH
                              (Stolidly)
                         There was that girl in the film, 
                         sir. You remember, you went nine 
                         times. And there was that girl in 
                         the group out of the Bystander! We 
                         lost it in the big Push.
                         And there's -
                              (Without changing 
                              tone)
                         A despatch rider coming, sir!

               A DESPATCH RIDER roars up and salutes.

                                     D.R.
                         General Candy? 

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes.
                              (Signs pad.)

                                     D.R.
                         Urgent message from Major van Zijl, 
                         sir. Came over the wire from 'Mile 
                         14'; they mended the line, sir.

               CLIVE reads it.

                                     D.R.
                         Any answer, sir?

                                     CLIVE
                         No. No answer.

               The DESPATCH RIDER wheels and thunders away. MURDOCH looks 
               queerly at the GENERAL.

                                     MURDOCH
                         Anything wrong, sir?

               CLIVE shakes his head. They are alone in the immense 
               landscape, battered and trampled by four years of senseless, 
               stalemate war. CLIVE takes a flask from his pocket, unscrews 
               the little cup and fills it with brandy. He hands this to 
               MURDOCH. CLIVE stands holding the flask.

                                     CLIVE
                         Murdoch - the war is over.

                                     MURDOCH
                         Is it, sir?  

                                     CLIVE
                         The Germans have accepted the terms 
                         of the Armistice.  Hostilities cease 
                         at ten o'clock.
                              (He looks at his watch.)
                         [[It is now a quarter to ten.]] [It's 
                         nearly that now.] 

                                     [[MURDOCH
                              (Struggles with words, 
                              then gives up. They 
                              drink.)
                         God bless us, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes, Murdoch, may God bless us in 
                         peace as He has in Victory.

               He turns full of emotion and walks a step or two. 

               He turns and listens.

               Far away, born on the wind, there comes the sound of a mighty 
               cheering, louder and louder as every moment passes. 

               CLIVE turns to MURDOCH. He is exultant.]] 

                                     CLIVE
                         Murdoch! do you know what this means? 

                                     MURDOCH
                         I do, sir. Peace. We can go home. 
                         Everybody can go home! 

                                     CLIVE
                         For me, Murdoch, it means more than 
                         that. It means that Right is Might 
                         after all. The Germans have shelled 
                         hospitals, bombed open towns, sunk 
                         neutral ships, used poison-gas - and 
                         we won! Clean fighting, honest 
                         soldiering have won! God bless you, 
                         Murdoch.

                                     [MURDOCH
                         Sir!]

               They both drink.

               [Sound of birdsong. Both look up to the sky.

                                                            FADE TO BLACK:]

                                       SEQUENCE 70

                              Interior: Yorkshire Cloth Mill

               A large and busy mill. Going closer to the machines, we see 
               the last lengths of khaki cloth vanishing off the looms: 
               cloth, wool, cotton materials, all finishing.  In the dyeing 
               vats the khaki dyes are emptied away: new beautiful dyes 
               appear: the looms are busy again. Gay patterns, bright tweeds 
               are appearing. The first length of cloth off the looms is 
               for a bridal gown.

                                  END OF KHAKI SEQUENCES

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

               INSERT: The Yorkshire Telegraph and Argus, June 6 1919. 
               Bradford.

                                 'NO MORE KHAKI FOR LOOMS

                                 FIRST PEACETIME CLOTH A

                                       BRIDAL GOWN'

               After an interval of four years the first piece of white 
               brocade has come off the looms in the famous Mills of Mr. 
               Christopher Wynne, head of the well-known West Riding family. 
               The cloth is destined for the bridal gown of Miss Barbara 
               Wynne, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wynne, whose marriage 
               to Brigadier-General Clive Candy, V.C., D.S.O. will shortly 
               take place. General Candy is staying at The Hall.'

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 71

                                    Exterior: The Hall

               A beautiful, large garden. The great pile of 'The Hall' in 
               the distance. The tiny figure of the HOUSEKEEPER on the 
               terrace. Faintly her voice is heard calling: 'Barbaraa!  - 
               [Lunch is ready.] Miss Barbaraaaaaaaa!!'  

               In another part of the grounds, BARBARA WYNNEand CLIVE CANDY 
               are talking together. A great sweep of country is visible 
               beyond a great yew hedge.

               They have the copy of the Yorkshire Telegraph and Argus with 
               them.

               BARBARA is, of course, the same girl whom we have seen in 
               nurse's uniform in the Convent of the 'Crown of Thorns'. She 
               is dressed in what, in 1919, was considered a ravishing 
               creation: rather like a badly tied sack.

               CLIVE is in uniform. He is a full Brigadier now. He looks 
               very strong and fit, far less than his forty-three years. 
               Distantly we hear 'Barbaraaaa!'  

                                     CLIVE
                         Oh dear.

                                     BARBARA
                              (Laughing])
                         Don't listen [to her]!
                              (Accusingly.)
                         Now!  [You listen to me.] There I 
                         was asleep! You never saw me before - 
                         you never [even] spoke to me then - 
                         how could you be so sure?

                                     CLIVE
                         Can I ask you a question first? 

                                     BARBARA
                         You're wriggling! All right, fire 
                         away! 

                                     CLIVE
                         How can you be so sure?  I'm twenty 
                         years older than you - and I'm a 
                         soldier. When other people are 
                         thanking God the war is over, I am 
                         going to the War Office to ask: Where 
                         is another war where you can use me?

                                     BARBARA
                              (Seriously)
                         You asked me that once [before] and 
                         I told you [[why]].

                                     CLIVE
                         I'm asking you again because I want 
                         to hear it again [and again].

               He says this so charmingly that she has to answer. 

                                     BARBARA
                         I'm marrying you because I want to 
                         join the Army and see the world. I'm 
                         marrying you because I [[like seeing]] 
                         [love watching] you play polo. I'm 
                         marrying you for fifty reasons that 
                         all mean that's how I imagined my 
                         future husband!

               CLIVE looks at her.

                                     CLIVE
                         Same here! That's how I imagined my 
                         future wife!

               BARBARA looks at him. It is one of the moments that come 
               seldom in life and extend indefinitely until some outside 
               influence breaks them. 

               The beating of a big gong comes from the house. BARBARA sighs.

                                     BARBARA
                         The gong is the final appeal. We 
                         must go, darling. We have the Bishop 
                         for lunch.

                                     CLIVE
                         I hope he's tender.

               They start up the garden, hand in hand.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:
.

                                       SEQUENCE 72

                                    Interior: The Hall

               DINING ROOM

               A very fine room, full of good, solid stuff and good, solid 
               people.  The BISHOP is making a little speech.

               MR and MRS WYNNE, BARBARA and CLIVE are listening.

                                     BISHOP
                         ... and now [[let me]] [in conclusion, 
                         I should like to] say a few words to 
                         Brigadier-General Andy. We in the 
                         Church Militant can admire the heroes 
                         of the war. But in our hearts we are 
                         men of peace. Therefore, I am glad 
                         to have met you as I did for the 
                         first time on a simple and heart-
                         warming occasion [[and not]] [rather 
                         than] at some military celebration. 
                         When I first heard that a Brigadier-
                         General of the British Army was 
                         arranging a ball for the benefit of 
                         those nurses from the West Riding 
                         who took part in the four years' 
                         struggle, I said [to myself]: There 
                         is a man whose heart is in the right 
                         place.
                              (He refers to slip of 
                              paper.)
                         And I am glad to announce that one 
                         result is that a total of £131.2.6 
                         will be handed over to the War Nurses' 
                         Benevolent Fund.

               During the BISHOP'S speech, CLIVE and BARBARA have glanced 
               at each other several times. CLIVE is guiltily rolling bread 
               pills. At the finish, after a little hesitation, he gets up 
               and stumbles into a speech replying. He starts to tell his 
               story as a good joke but as he sees it is falling flat, he 
               gets more and more self-conscious, while as he speaks the 
               faces of his listeners get more and more embarrassed. Only 
               BARBARA is unperturbed.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Your Grace]] [My Lord Bishop], I 
                         want to make a confession. You see, 
                         I first saw Barbara in Flanders on 
                         the last night of the war.
                              ((He glances at MRS 
                              WYNNE.)
                         She was a nurse among seventy other 
                         nurses - I never knew her name -but 
                         I found out that most of the nurses 
                         came from Yorkshire - the West Riding - 
                         and of course she was a nurse - 
                         [[well]] [so], I thought - Yorkshire's 
                         a big place - [[Your Grace]] [My 
                         Lord Bishop] - so, I thought, how 
                         can I find a nurse in Yorkshire? You - 
                         understand who I'm driving at - I 
                         suppose - what I mean? -

               There is a painful silence. The BISHOP does not rise to the 
               occasion. But BARBARA does. She reaches for CLIVE'S hand and 
               holds it, smiling up at him.

                                     BARBARA
                         I understand exactly what you mean, 
                         darling!

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 73

                                Exterior: 33 Cadogan Place

               A car of the period drives up and stops outside. It is an 
               piled with luggage and dogs.  BARBARA is driving. CLIVE sits 
               beside her. They both look radiantly happy. She wears a 
               wedding ring. They both look up at the house; she

               Critically, he affectionately. It is the first time she sees 
               it.

                                     BARBARA
                         That window is the Den!

                                     CLIVE
                         Wrong. Next floor is the Den. That's 
                         the bathroom. 

               The window in question opens and a large Union Jack on the 
               end of a pole is poked out of the window and socketed into 
               its place. MURDOCH'S head appears behind it. He sees them 
               below, ejaculates: 'It's them!' and disappears. 

                                     BARBARA
                         Is yon grey head Murdoch?

                                     CLIVE
                              ((Nods)
                         His idea of greeting the conquering 
                         hero, I suppose.

                                     BARBARA
                         I shall like Murdoch - and I [[feel]] 
                         [know] I shall like this house. Clive, 
                         let [[it]] [the whole house] be our 
                         Den, into which we can always crawl, 
                         whether we return with rich spoils 
                         or badly mauled from our rovings! Or 
                         just to change our spots! [[Do 
                         promise!]]

                                     CLIVE
                         [[(Looks at her I do.]]
                              (He kisses her.)
                         Aunt Margaret would have loved you 
                         for that!
                              (They go on talking 
                              as idiotic lovers 
                              do.)

                                     BARBARA
                         It is a fine solid-looking property-
                              (Mischievously)
                         Like you. Clive, [[please don't ever]] 
                         [you mustn't] change and don't ever 
                         [[give up]] [leave] this house.

                                     CLIVE
                         No fear. Even if there is a second 
                         Flood, this house shall stand on its 
                         solid foundations and we'll have a 
                         private lake in the basement.

                                     BARBARA
                         That's a promise. You stay just as 
                         you are... till the floods come...

                                     CLIVE
                              (Raising his hand, 
                              repeats)
                         ... till the floods come...

                                     BARBARA
                              (Pointing into the 
                              area)
                         ... and this is a lake... 

                                     CLIVE
                              (Repeats solemnly)
                         ... and this is a lake!

               MURDOCH appears at the entrance and stares in surprise at 
               CLIVE standing there with his hand raised. He runs smartly 
               down the steps. His manner, like his costume, is an Armistice 
               one: half-military, half-civil.

                                     MURDOCH
                         Sorry, Ma'am! - Mrs Candy - I was 
                         [[up]] [at] the top [of the house] - 
                         I wasn't expecting you so early, 
                         sir.

                                     BARBARA
                         So you are Murdoch!

                                     MURDOCH
                         Yes, Madam.

                                     CLIVE
                         The first time I've ever heard him 
                         answer anything but: 'Yes, sir!' 
                         Well, Murdoch, this is [[my]] [the] 
                         wife.

               They shake hands. MURDOCH has his own ideas of what a wife 
               will want to know and he has his report all ready for her as 
               they all go into the house, carrying luggage, etc.) 

                                     MURDOCH
                         Everything is under control, Ma'am. 
                         I've had the telephone installed, 
                         sir.
                              (To BARBARA.)
                         The agency has got a lot of cooks 
                         for you to see, Ma'am, but I bought 
                         plenty of vegetables and flour and 
                         potatoes.
                              ([They go in.])
                         And all the tradespeople have called 
                         and will call again for [your orders] -

               [By this time they have entered the house.]

                                       SEQUENCE 74

                                Interior: 33 Cadogan Place

               HALL

               BARBARA listens to MURDOCH with grave attention but CLIVE 
               has no tender regard for his feelings. He interrupts him.  

                                     CLIVE
                         That's all right, Murdoch, but we're 
                         not staying this time. Off tonight.

                                     MURDOCH
                              (Very disappointed)
                         Yes, sir?

                                     CLIVE
                         Paris for eight weeks. When we get 
                         back we'll give a big party and put 
                         our feet up for a bit.

                                     MURDOCH
                         Yes, sir.

                                     BARBARA
                         I'm [so] sorry, Murdoch.
                              (She makes a friend.)

                                     MURDOCH
                              (Grins ruefully)
                         [[I'm]] [We're] used to it [[Ma'am]].
                              ([[To CLIVE)
                         I got your letters from the Club, 
                         sir - they're on the little tray.]]

               CLIVE crosses to the table. MURDOCH continues to BARBARA: 

                                     MURDOCH
                         I told the porter that the Brigadier 
                         wouldn't be using the Club so much 
                         in future, Ma'am.

                                     BARBARA
                         And what did he say?

               MURDOCH hesitates.

                                     BARBARA
                         [Go on, Murdoch,] I can bear it, 
                         [[Murdoch]].

                                     MURDOCH
                         [[Yes, Ma'am.]] He said: They all 
                         say that at first!' - Ma'am.

               BARBARA laughs. MURDOCH smiles respectfully and withdraws 
               with the dogs.

                                     CLIVE
                         I say, Barbara - !
                              (She crosses to him.)
                         Here's an answer from the Prisoners 
                         of War Committee -

                                     BARBARA
                         Have they found him? 

                                     CLIVE
                              (Very excited and 
                              pleased)
                         Yes. Theodor Kretschmar- Schuldorff, 
                         Oberst, 2nd Regiment of Ulans of the 
                         Guard.  That's him! Camp VII Hardwick 
                         Hall, Derbyshire. Poor old Theo!

               He stares at the paper, pulling at his moustache.

               BARBARA knows what is going on in his mind.

                                     BARBARA
                         Darling!

               CLIVE looks up, worried. His face lights up as he sees her 
               expression.

                                     BARBARA
                         Let's postpone Paris... I'd love to 
                         meet him -

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 75

                             Exterior: Prisoners of War Camp

               [Pan down from blue sky to barbed wire and on to:

               A notice, roughly printed by hand on a sheet of cardboard, 
               is nailed to a tree:

                                     107-TES KONZERT

                               DES PHILHARMONIE-ORCHESTERS

                                 DES GEFANGENENLAGERS IV

                                  FÜR DEUTSCHE OFFIZIER

                                        IN ENGLAND 

                                         PROGRAMM

                         FRANZ SCHUBERT:   UNVOLLENDETE SYMPHONIE

                        [[LUDWIG v. BEETHOVEN:  FÜNFTE SYMPHONIE]]

                                MENDELSSOHN: FINGALS HÖHLE

                         DIRIGENT:  OBERLEUT. JOS. V. SCHONTHAAL

                                ANFANG:   3 UHR NACHMITTAG

                               EINTRITT:   6 ENGL. PENNIES

               While the notice is being read, we hear the tragically sweet 
               melody of the Second Movement of Schubert's 'Unfinished 
               Symphony'.

               The camera moves off the notice [[to the tree above. It has 
               wide-spreading branches, all loaded with German officers, 
               listening to the music. We see some of their faces. We see, 
               from their angle in the tree,]]

               [to a sentry on guard duty, and on to] the main audience and 
               the orchestra itself. All are German officers. The orchestra 
               plays on a raised bank, a natural rostrum. The audience covers 
               the smooth lawns that run down to the river, which is crossed 
               by two bridges, with an island in the middle. There is a 
               Guard House on the island and the bridge is heavily wired 
               with barbed wire above and below and English sentries are 
               stationed on the bridge.

               The prisoners sit on benches or on the grass, many are 
               standing, all are listening intently to the music. There 
               must be 400 or 500 of them. The orchestra has about forty 
               pieces.

               We see an ORDERLY coming towards the concert from the main 
               building. This is a fine old country house which has been 
               taken over. It is now surrounded by huts and all kinds of 
               administrative buildings. The main offices are in the house 
               itself. The ORDERLY carries a message-pad. He comes amongst 
               the audience as discreetly as possible. [[He is obviously 
               looking for someone and, as obviously, cannot spot him. He 
               decides to ask one of the officers, who is leaning against a 
               tree. The officer questioned looks around, then shakes his 
               head and taps the leg of another officer in the tree above 
               him. He whispers to him. The officer in the tree has a bird's-
               eye view. He spots the wanted man and the information is 
               passed on in whispers to the ORDERLY. The ORDERLY gingerly 
               crosses through the audience. Nobody looks at him.]]

               He finds his man- OBERST KRETSCHMAR-SCHULDORFF - and touches 
               him on the shoulder. 

                                     [ORDERLY:
                         Message, sir, from the Commandant's 
                         office.]

               THEO turns to the ORDERLY. Of course, he, too, is seventeen 
               years older. He still bears the scar which he got in the 
               duel. The ORDERLY gives him the message-pad. THEO reads the 
               message. He is surprised at its contents but, without any 
               hesitation, he shakes his head very firmly.

                                     [THEO
                         No answer.]

               He gives the message-pad back to the ORDERLY and turns once 
               more to listen to the music.

               The ORDERLY is rather at a loss. After a moment's hesitation, 
               he starts all over again, emphasizing the importance of the 
               message.

               THEO loses patience with him. He answers almost savagely.

                                     THEO
                              (Louder than he had 
                              meant to)
                         No [answer]!!  

               Heads turn. Voices go: 'Sh-sh-sh!'

               The ORDERLY beats a retreat.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 76

                             Interior: Prisoners of War Camp

               OFFICE OF COMMANDANT

               The tall french windows are open and the music can be heard 
               in the distance.

               The Commandant, MAJOR DAVIES, is an elderly man and a bit of 
               a philosopher.

               CLIVE is in a new suit of tweeds with a regimental tie. 
               BARBARA wears a summer dress and hat which, in 1919 and in 
               1919 alone, was considered lovely.

               The ORDERLY knocks and enters - alone.

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                              (Drily)
                         Well?

                                     CLIVE
                         He said 'No [answer]'? 
                              (He frowns 
                              incredulously)
                         What else? 

                                     ORDERLY
                         Nothing, sir.

                                     BARBARA
                         He refused to come?

                                     ORDERLY
                         If that was the message, Ma'am.
                              (He hands the pad TO 
                              CLIVE.)
                         (BARBARA reads it, passes it to the 
                         Major. 

               INSERT: message.  'Dear Theo, I am in the Commandant's Office. 
               I want to see you, "very much ". Clive Candy.'

                                     BARBARA
                         Why is 'very much' [[in quotes]] 
                         [printed like that]?

                                     CLIVE
                         It was a joke we had...

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                              (To ORDERLY)
                         Where was the Oberst?

                                     ORDERLY
                         Listening to the [[orchestra]] [band], 
                         sir.

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                         All right, Higgins.

               ORDERLY goes.

                                     BARBARA
                         I [[thought, suddenly]] [was 
                         thinking], how odd they are!  How 
                         queer!  For years and years they are 
                         writing and dreaming wonderful music 
                         and [[wonderful]] [beautiful] poetry 
                         and then [[suddenly]] [all of a 
                         sudden] they start a war, shoot 
                         innocent hostages, sink undefended 
                         ships, bomb and destroy whole streets 
                         in London, killing little children - 
                         and then, dressed in the same 
                         butcher's uniform, they sit down and 
                         [[play]] [listen to] [[Beethoven]] 
                         [Mendelssohn] and Schubert.  There's 
                         something horrible about that, don't 
                         you think so Clive?

               Such abstractions are caviare to the GENERAL but he is 
               impressed by BARBARA'S speech.  He nods and grunts agreement.

                                     CLIVE
                         Hm - mm - [[something in that - good 
                         deal in fact - ]] 

               It is the first time there is something 'blimpish' in his 
               manner.

                                     [[CLIVE
                         Perhaps I should have written in 
                         German.

                                     MAJOR DAVIS
                         He understands English.  They have 
                         all learnt English while they were 
                         here.]]

               The symphony ends.  Distant and prolonged applause.  CLIVE 
               stands up.

                                     CLIVE
                         Major Davies, would you mind if I 
                         went down and had a try?  Perhaps it 
                         was because of the music - there's 
                         an interval now.

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                         [[Certainly, you may]] [By all means] 
                         try (Apologetically) but Mrs Candy 
                         had better [[stay]] 
                         [remain].

               BARBARA, who has risen, sits again.  She and MAJOR DAVIES 
               understand each other.  CLIVE nods and moves to the windows.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Half to himself)
                         Can't understand it.  I've written 
                         to him before the war and he has 
                         written to me...

               He vanishes out on the terrace.

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                         They stopped English lessons on the 
                         11th of November.

                                     BARBARA
                         On Armistice Day?

               MAJOR DAVIES nods.

                                       SEQUENCE 77

                              Exterior: Prisoner of War Camp

               In the interval of the concert, the audience has broken up 
               into groups, individuals are pacing up and down, some are 
               smoking and talking.

               There is no loud chatter or laughter. The general effect is 
               serious, even solemn. Depression bangs over the stiff-necked 
               assembly. CLIVE comes down from the house, walking quickly, 
               looking about him for THEO.

               He comes among the groups of officers. Nobody takes direct 
               notice of him.

               The orchestra starts to tune up. People start to move back 
               to their places.

               CLIVE stops one group and addresses a senior officer.

                                     CLIVE
                         Oberst Kretschmar-Schuldorff?

                                     OFFICER
                              (After a sharp stare)
                         [[Behind you.]] [Over there.]

               He moves off. CLIVE whirls round. 

               He stands directly in between THEO and his place. THEO is 
               advancing straight towards him, separated by two or three 
               groups, also moving to their places.

               Seeing CLIVE, THEO stops. Not a muscle of his face or light   
               in his eyes betrays his thoughts.

               CLIVE, on the contrary, advances with a broad smile that 
               overflows his whole being. He is coming to his friend. He 
               puts out his hand...

                                     CLIVE
                         Theo!

               THEO turns and walks away. 

               It is the greatest shock CLIVE has ever had. He stands 
               petrified, staring after his friend.

               THEO throws away his cigarette, treads on it and returns to 
               his place in the audience. Nearly everyone has settled 
               himself. CLIVE is left standing alone.

               [[The Conductor takes his place amid polite applause.]]

               [The music starts again.]

               CLIVE shakes his head as if he still can't believe what has 
               happened to him. He looks ten years older.

               He turns and slowly walks away.

               THEO never looks after him.

               The orchestra plays the opening chords of [[Beethoven's Fifth 
               Symphony]] [Mendelssohn's Hebrides Overture].  CLIVE goes on 
               towards the house. He again shakes his head. For the second 
               time, there is something 'blimpish' in his behaviour.

               He stops and looks back, almost as if he is expected to see 
               the figure of his friend, hastening after him.  But the lawn 
               between him and the distant audience is empty.

                                      [[SEQUENCE 78

                              Interior: Prisoner of War Camp

               OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT

               Distantly we hear the [[Fifth Symphony] Hebrides Overture, 
               which continues without a break.

               Since CLIVE left, tea has been served.

                                     BARBARA
                         Do you find something rather 
                         disturbing about these concerts - or 
                         don't you mind?

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                         I'm not musical but I get used to 
                         them. This is the 107th.

                                     BARBARA
                              (Smiles)
                         You misunderstand me, Major - or do 
                         you?
                              (The MAJOR looks at 
                              her.)
                         What I mean is that we know that the 
                         Germans in peacetime are a tidy law-
                         loving people of poets, philosophers 
                         and composers; and then -

               CLIVE appears at the window. He has recovered himself a 
               little. He comes in.

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, it's true. I saw him and he 
                         wouldn't speak to me.
                              (He looks at BARBARA 
                              and sits down.)
                         I wouldn't have believed it possible. 
                         He was as close as I am to you and 
                         he turned away without saying a word. 
                         You could have knocked me down with 
                         a feather! 
                              (BARBARA gives him 
                              his tea. He stirs 
                              it.)
                         I kept on looking back, you know. I 
                         couldn't believe he wasn't joking.
                              (To MAJOR DAVIES)
                         What on earth is wrong with him?

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                         The same thing as all the others. 
                         They call it 'Ehre'. The literal 
                         translation is 'Honour' but actually 
                         I suppose it means 'Dignity'.

                                     CLIVE
                         What 'Dignity', what 'Honour'?  Who 
                         has hurt his 'Ehre'? They lost, we 
                         won. What of it. We've been defeated 
                         too sometimes. Fortune of war!  

                                     BARBARA
                              (Smiles)
                         Good old sporting spirit. Always 
                         time for a return match.

                                     CLIVE
                         I was taught to be a good loser.
                              (He stirs his tea.)
                         When are they going to be repatriated?

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                         In six to eight weeks.

                                     BARBARA
                         What will you do then, Major Davies?

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                         Take a holiday, Mrs Candy - where 
                         they don't speak German!

                                     CLIVE
                         If you're passing through London, 
                         drop in!

                                     BARBARA
                         When we're back from Paris, I'm making 
                         Clive give a party for his friends. 
                         If you can, do come.

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                         Thank you. I'll try. I'd like to 
                         talk to you about Germans, both of 
                         you. You were going to say something 
                         rather interesting just now - 
                         something about peacetime and war?]]

                                       SEQUENCE 79

                                Interior: 33 Cadogan Place

               HALL

               FADE IN:

               An invitation card falls on a tray which already contains a 
               score of similar cards.

               INSERT: the card reads:

                              'Brigadier-General Clive Candy 

                                         Requests

                               the pleasure of the company

                              of Major John E. Davies, M.C.

                 to a Bachelor Dinner Party on Tuesday, 26th August 1919 

                                        at 8 p.m.

               33 Cadogan Place,

               SW1.

               R.S.V.P.'

               MAJOR DAVIES is just being helped out of his coat by MURDOCH. 
               [[Behind him the hall clock is striking nine o'clock. He is 
               no longer in uniform, he wears a tweed suit and looks what 
               he is, a distinguished, wise and cultured elderly gentleman.]] 
               [He is in uniform.]

               CLIVE comes eagerly out of the dining room to meet him. From 
               beyond we hear the unrestrained conviviality of an exclusively 
               male dinnerparty. CLIVE wears a dinner-jacket.  

                                     [CLIVE
                         Ah, Davies.

                                     DAVIES
                         Hello, Candy. I hope your wife will 
                         forgive me.]

                                     CLIVE
                              (Smiling)
                         [[Awfully sorry, old man.]] [I'm 
                         afraid] You haven't read the 
                         invitation properly.

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                              (Vaguely: glancing at 
                              card)
                         Ah, [[so it is,]] a Bachelor Party. 
                         If I'd realized that your charming 
                         wife wouldn't be here, [[I'd never 
                         have hurried as I did]] [I shouldn't 
                         have been in such a hurry].

                                     CLIVE
                         We'll find you something.

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                         Thanks, I had dinner on the train. 
                         I've come straight from Victoria.

                                     CLIVE
                         On leave?

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                         No.  Duty...

                                     CLIVE
                         Come and have a glass of port.

               While talking, they have walked towards the dining room where 
               the hum of conversation has got louder. As they go in, the 
               telephone in the hall rings. MURDOCH answers it. He has a 
               special voice for answering the telephone, full of old-world 
               courtesy.

                                     MURDOCH
                         This is Brigadier-General Candy's 
                         residence ... 

                                     [VOICE
                         May I speak to the General?]

                                     MURDOCH
                         And who, may I ask, is speaking?...

                                     [VOICE:
                         This is Oberst Kretschmar-Schuldorff, 
                         speaking from Victoria Station. And 
                         tell him I'm leaving tonight.]

                                     MURDOCH
                         Would you mind repeating the name, 
                         sir...

                                     [VOICE
                              (Slowly)
                         Theo Kretschmar-Schuldorff.]

               He obviously hasn't got the name but is too polite to say 
               so. He puts down the receiver and goes to get his master.

               We go close to the receiver. The man at the other end of the 
               wire is whistling - the Mignon Aria. CLIVE and MURDOCH come 
               from the dining room.

                                     CLIVE
                         Couldn't he 'phone tomorrow? Where's 
                         he speaking from?

                                     MURDOCH
                         Victoria Station, sir. He's leaving 
                         tonight he said.

                                     CLIVE
                         What name? 

                                     MURDOCH
                         It sounded like Wretch-Bar Something, 
                         sir -

                                     CLIVE
                         Kretschmar-Schuldorff!  Murdoch, 
                         that brain of yours ought to be in a 
                         bottle! 

               He snatches up the receiver and mouthpiece, he listens, grins, 
               whistles in reply, laughs. He has quite forgotten the 
               impression he had been given at the prison camp, he is so 
               pleased to be friendly to his friend again.

                                     CLIVE
                         Theo! [[You old son-of-a-gun! Where 
                         are you?...  Victoria? What are you 
                         doing there?]]

                                       SEQUENCE 80

                                     Victoria Station

               FIRST CLASS REFRESHMENT ROOM

               THEO is using the telephone behind the counter of the 
               refreshment bar.  [[Beyond him we see the busy bar and the 
               whole big room, crammed with talkative and excited German 
               officers.] THEO himself is in a very different humour than 
               when we have last seen him. He is going home. His uniform 
               coat hangs over his shoulders. He talks good English now, 
               with an accent. [[By him is LIEUTENANT CARTWRIGHT, the officer-
               in-charge.]]

                                     THEO
                         [Yes, it's me, Theo. How are you my 
                         friend? Yes,] I'm going home - if 
                         there is such a thing left in Germany.  
                         [[How are you, my friend?... Good...]] 
                         Oh, there are scores of us here. 
                         [Can't you hear them?] We have an 
                         extra train, it leaves at 11.3 o.... 
                         Yes, we are under guard, Clive! May 
                         I still call you Clive, now you are 
                         a General?...

                                     [CLIVE
                         Cut the cackle. What have you to say 
                         for yourself?]

                                     THEO
                              (He listens and laughs)
                         Listen! I am sorry! [I'm terribly 
                         sorry.] That is what I wanted to 
                         tell you. About our meeting at the 
                         Camp. I was a silly fool. [I had to 
                         tell you before I left.] And now I 
                         must ring off...

                                       SEQUENCE 8l

                                Interior: 33 Cadogan Place

               HALL

               CLIVE, at the other end of the wire, glances at the clock.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Wait a minute! Don't hang up!  
                         It's only a quarter past nine, now, 
                         I want to see you... Who says I can't? 
                         I've got the G.S.O.I. in charge of 
                         all military transport here to dinner, 
                         as well as your Camp Commander.]] 
                         [Major Davies. Come here a minute, 
                         will you?]
                              (To THEO)
                         I'll send you back to Derbyshire if 
                         you're not careful! - Now you just 
                         sit tight and we'll come and get 
                         you.

                                     [THEO
                         All right, all right, I won't run 
                         away.]

                                     [[CLIVE
                         You've got to come and have a glass 
                         of port! You can't leave England 
                         without having a glass of my port. 
                         Where did you learn that perfect 
                         English of yours?]]

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                      [[SEQUENCE 82

                                     Victoria Station

               FIRST CLASS REFRESHMENT ROOM

               THEO is overwhelmed by CLIVE'S open delight and flood of 
               talk. He answers his last question.

                                     THEO
                         Where do you think I learnt it? I 
                         had plenty of time ...  Well, all 
                         right. I shall not run away.

               He glances through the smoke and over the heads at the clock. 
               The time is 9.15.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

               The clock. The time is 9.25.
.

                                       SEQUENCE 83

                                     Victoria Station

               FIRST CLASS REFRESHMENT ROOM

               A SENTRY is standing on guard at the door, to keep people 
               away. On the door is a sign, such as: 'O.H.M.S.'

               The SENTRY sees someone approaching across the station. He 
               springs to attention, shoulders arms, salutes.

               It is MAJOR DAVIES, MAJOR-GENERAL BLOMFIELD and BRIGADIER-
               GENERAL CANDY who are bearing down on him, all smoking cigars 
               and all unmistakable senior officers, although in dinner-
               jackets (except MAJOR DAVIES).

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                         Lieutenant Cartwright inside?

                                     SENTRY
                         Yes, sir.

                                     BLOMFIELD
                         Ask him to step outside, sentry!

               The SENTRY smartly grounds arms, turns, goes and opens the 
               door. We see a glimpse of the crowded room, thick with smoke.

                                     SENTRY
                              (Calls)
                         Lieutenant Cartwright, sir!

               He sees him coming, returns to his post, snaps to attention, 
               reports:

                                     SENTRY
                         He's coming, sir.

                                     BLOMFIELD
                              (Testily)
                         At ease, man, at ease!

               The SENTRY stands at ease.

                                     CLIVE
                         Sorry to have dragged you out like 
                         this, Piggy. 

                                     BLOMFIELD
                         From an excellent glass of port, 
                         too!

               LIEUTENANT CARTWRIGHT appears. He is quite shaken by the 
               senior officers.

                                     MAJOR DAVIES
                         Ah, Cartwright - this is Major-General 
                         Blomfield - Brigadier-General Candy -
                              (They shake hands.)
                         We want one of your prisoners, 
                         Cartwright. Oberst Kretschmar-
                         Schuldorff is an old friend of the 
                         Brigadier's.  Where's Smollett?

                                     CARTWRIGHT
                         Went to get some dinner, sir.

                                     BLOMFIELD
                         Call the Oberst out. I'll be 
                         responsible. You can have me and the 
                         Major as hostages.

                                     CARTWRIGHT
                         That will be all right, sir.

               He vanishes into the room.

                                     CLIVE
                         Now look here - I can't leave you 
                         two.

                                     BLOMFIELD
                         Don't worry - you can't finish the 
                         port by 11.30.

               The door is opened by CARTWRIGHT and THEO appears, a doubtful 
               smile on his face. He carries his suitcase and greatcoat. 
               CLIVE goes to him and this time THEO doesn't turn away.

                                       SEQUENCE 84

                                      Interior: Taxi

               [[They are travelling through brightly-lit London streets. 
               CLIVE sits opposite THEO to see him better. [They are sitting 
               side by side. Both are friendly, but THEO is more reserved.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Theo!]] You Prussian stiff-neck! 
                         The only way is to kidnap you!

                                     [[THEO
                              (Gesture)
                         What can I do?  

                                     CLIVE
                              (Introducing)
                         OberstKretschmar-Schuldorff-Major- 
                         General Blomfield - Major Davies, 
                         you know.

                                     THEO
                              (Smiles)
                         Intimately.]]

                                     CLIVE
                              (Examining him)
                         [Now, let's have a look at you.] 
                         You've worn well, old chap. Still 
                         got my mark on you, I see.

               He touches the old scar.

                                     THEO
                         And you still need a moustache!

                                     [[MAJOR DAVIES
                         Well, if you two are going -

                                     THEO
                         Going where?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Home. Come on! I've a taxi waiting.

                                                             DISSOLVE TO:]]

                                     CLIVE
                         When were you captured?  

                                     THEO
                         July '16. [[Nearly three years in 
                         prison.]]

                                     CLIVE
                         You were lucky. You missed the worst 
                         of it.

                                     THEO
                         [[Nevertheless]] I would prefer to 
                         have been unlucky.

                                     CLIVE
                         [That's what you think.]
                              (Changing subject.)
                         Have you heard from home?  Have you 
                         any children? How is Edith?  

                                     THEO
                         Which shall I answer first?  Edith 
                         is [[well]] [all right], as far as I 
                         can tell.

               He passes across one of a bundle of [[Red Cross postcards]] 
               [photographs] he has in his pocket.

               CLIVE looks at them.

               [[INSERT: typical Red Cross postcard from Germany filled in 
               and signed by Edith in German.]) 

                                     [CLIVE
                         Boys, eh? Now that one's exactly 
                         like Edith.

                                     THEO
                         Karl?  Yes, he is, isn't he?] [[We 
                         have]] [I almost wish we had] no 
                         children. [[It's better we haven't.]] 
                         What future can children have in a 
                         beaten country?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Tolerantly)
                         [Oh] You Germans are all a bit 
                         [[mad.]] [crazy. You wait till you 
                         meet] Barbara [[will]] [ - she'll] 
                         tell you what's what.

                                     [THEO
                         Who's Barbara?]

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Did I tell you I was married? By 
                         the way, old man, you're going to 
                         get a bit of a shock when you see 
                         Barbara - ]] [My wife. Oh, of course, 
                         you don't know I'm married. You'll 
                         get a bit of a shock when you see 
                         her.]

                                     THEO
                              (Politely puzzled)
                         [Shock?] I am sure she is charming.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Chuckles)
                         [[She's more than that!  You'll see!  
                         She's out now - taken her mother to 
                         the theatre. But she'll be back in 
                         time.]] [I don't mean that. You wait 
                         and see. Of course, you won't see 
                         her. She's gone out to the theatre 
                         with her mother. Never mind.]

               The taxi stops outside the house.

                                      [[SEQUENCE 85

                                Exterior: 33 Cadogan Place

               They get out, THEO clinging to his bag and coat. MURDOCH 
               appears. THEO looks up at the house as CLIVE pays the taxi.

                                     THEO
                         Very respectable, your house! Your 
                         streets and houses have so much 
                         dignity - but even more draughts.

                                     MURDOCH
                              (Wresting his bag and 
                              coat politely but 
                              firmly from him)
                         Good evening, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         You're right about the draughts, my 
                         boy. That's what blows us English 
                         out of our houses and all over the 
                         world - eh? - he?
                              (Roars with laughter.)
                         I must tell that to Barbara!

               They go in.

                                       SEQUENCE 86

                                Interior: 33 Cadogan Place

               HALL

               They enter. THEO looks round.

                                     CLIVE
                         D'you like it?  It was left me by my 
                         Aunt. Murdoch: leave the Oberst's 
                         things there and have a taxi at 
                         eleven. Come on, Theo!

                                     THEO
                         Won't that be too late?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Now leave everything to me. I want 
                         you to meet some of the men you've 
                         been fighting with!

               They vanish into the dining room.]]

                                       SEQUENCE 87

                                Interior: 33 Cadogan Place

               DINING ROOM

               The room is thick with cigar-smoke. Over a dozen gentlemen, 
               who are sitting around the polished table, rise politely as 
               CLIVE comes proudly in with his guest. They wait, without 
               any appearance of curiosity, to be introduced.

                                     CLIVE
                         Gentlemen, this is [my friend] Oberst 
                         Kretschmar-Schuldorff.
                              (There is a murmur of 
                              acknowledgement.)
                         [Sir Archibald Blair, shining light 
                         of the Foreign Office. General 
                         Beveridge...

                                     BEVERIDGE
                         How d'you do. I've heard about you, 
                         Oberst.] 

                                     CLIVE
                         Major-General Taylor-Grant - General 
                         Keen - Major Michael Cornish and his 
                         brother Major John Cornish -[[Rear]] 
                         Admiral Sir Merton Barrow of the so-
                         called Senior Service - Commodore 
                         Brandon-Crester, ditto - [Major Davies 
                         you know. 

                                     THEO
                         Intimately.]

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Sir Terence Blair, from the Colonial 
                         Office - Lord Clement-Selby, 
                         Lieutenant Governor of Gibraltar]] 
                         [Colonel Hopper, aide to the Governor 
                         of Gibraltar] - Sir William Rendall, 
                         [[First Secretary to the Viceroy]] 
                         [on the Viceroy's staff] - George 
                         Metcalf of Uganda - Sir John 
                         Bembridge, just back from Jamaica -
                         Colonel Mannering, [known to the 
                         press as] the uncrowned king of 
                         Southern Arabia - Mr Christopher 
                         Wynne, of Bradford, England, my father-
                         in-law. [Embodiment of all the solid 
                         virtues.]

               Like a hailstorm this collection of names, ranks and titles, 
               representative of an Empire upon which the sun never sets, 
               descends upon THEO. A chair is pulled forward. Everyone sits. 
               Everyone is anxious to make the German feel at ease. 

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Drink, Theo?]] [Sit down, Theo. 
                         What will you have to drink?]

                                     THEO
                              (Seeing it there)
                         Port [please].

               More than one hand reaches out to pass the decanter round to 
               him. As the decanter was only three feet to his left, it has 
               to go right round the table.

                                     [VOICE
                         It has to go round the clock.]

               CLIVE pushes boxes towards him.

                                     CLIVE
                         Cigar? Cigarette?  [They're both on 
                         the table - thousands of them.]

                                     THEO
                         Cigarette, please.

                                     [[CLIVE
                         Turkish! Virginian!]]

                                     [BLAIR
                         I don't suppose you remember me, but 
                         we met in Berlin in '02.

               He is the former Second Secretary.

                                     THEO
                         Oh, did we?

               Another guest appears behind them.

                                     CLIVE
                         Ah, Barstow.
                              (To THEO)
                         Colonel Barstow of the Royal Air 
                         Force.

                                     BARSTOW
                         Don't get up.]

                                     TAYLOR-GRANT
                         I'm glad you're on your way home at 
                         last, Oberst.

                                     THEO
                         Thank you, sir.

                                     TAYLOR-GRANT
                         Can't imagine anything more awful 
                         than to be a prisoner of war in 
                         England.

                                     THEO
                         I don't think it can be much good 
                         anywhere, General.

                                     TAYLOR-GRANT
                         [[But]] [Oh], my dear [[Oberst]] 
                         [fellow], in this country people are 
                         always poking their noses into 
                         everything. Did you get any letters 
                         from spinsters?

                                     THEO
                              (Smiles)
                         [[No.]] [Yes, we did.]

                                     TAYLOR-GRANT
                         [[Shows you had a sensible Commandant. 
                         Lots of Camps were pestered by them.]] 
                         [I thought so.] They started a 
                         campaign to write to prisoners of 
                         war - not our chaps, mind you!

                                     THEO
                         [[We were spared.]] It was not so 
                         bad - we had books, [[camp-]]concerts, 
                         lectures...

                                     SIR TERENCE BLAIR
                         I am sure your Camp [[had perfect 
                         administration]] [was well run]. 
                         German organization is [[the best in 
                         the world]] [very thorough].

                                     CLIVE
                         [[We nearly had a lot! Ha! Ha!]] 
                         [Bit too thorough for us!]

                                     WYNNE
                         Was the [[food]] [cooking] good?

                                     THEO
                         [[Quite good.]] [It was English 
                         cooking.
                              (Laughter.])

                                     [VOICE
                         A sense of humour!]

                                     TAYLOR-GRANT
                         My daughter, Joyce, started a campaign 
                         to better the food for German 
                         prisoners in England.

                                     WYNNE
                         I remember the Government was also 
                         [[accused of]] [charged with] over-
                         feeding them.

                                     [[CLEMENT-SELBY
                         I was taken to one of those Food 
                         Economy meetings during the shortage. 
                         The Ministry of Food speaker asked 
                         her audience point-blank if there 
                         was anyone present who wanted the 
                         prisoners' ration reduced. Nobody 
                         answered.  Then a woman stood up and 
                         said that only when we ourselves 
                         were starving, which was very far 
                         from being the case, should we be 
                         justified in starving prisoners of 
                         war. Then the speaker asked whether, 
                         if any of the audience saw a starving 
                         German prisoner, he would not at 
                         once share his food with him? They 
                         laughed, and then they cheered.]]

                                     CLIVE
                         Oh, we're not too bad. [Drink up, 
                         gentlemen.

                                     THEO
                              (Proposes toast)
                         Your health.]

                                     TAYLOR-GRANT
                         [[Where did you leave Davies and 
                         Blomfield?]] [What have you done 
                         with old Tiger Blomfield?]

                                     CLIVE
                         At [Victoria, in the bar of] the 
                         Grosvenor. [[They're]] [He's] 
                         hostage[[s]] [for the Oberst].

                                     BEMBRIDGE
                         Now where is the sense in guarding 
                         officer-prisoners nearly a year after 
                         the fighting is over?

                                     THEO
                         I imagine it is more to [[defend]] 
                         [protect] us.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Defend]] [Protect]? Against what?

                                     THEO
                         People.

                                     [[CLIVE
                              (What people?]])

                                     HOPPY
                         How do you mean?

                                     THEO
                         Your people. They cannot be adjusted 
                         from war to peace as easily as you 
                         [can], gentlemen.

                                     [VOICE (O.S.)
                         I think you'll find that's not true.]

                                     CLIVE
                         Do you [[think]] [mean to say] our 
                         people would attack you in that 
                         uniform?

                                     THEO
                         [[It is only natural.]] I tried to 
                         Englishmen [in this uniform]. [[I'm 
                         an enemy.]]

                                     TAYLOR-GRANT
                         [[Oberst, you're quite wrong.]] [My 
                         dear fellow, that's rather a gloomy 
                         point of view, isn't it?]

                                     CLIVE
                         You've got the wrong end of the stick, 
                         old man. The war's over. There's 
                         nothing to bear malice about. You're 
                         a decent fellow and so are we!

                                     THEO
                         I'm not a decent fellow! I'm a beggar, 
                         like the [[other 800 officers in our 
                         camp]] [rest of all the professional 
                         soldiers in our army]. A beaten 
                         country can't have an army. What are 
                         we going to do?

                                     [METCALF
                         I imagine there'll be a lotto do.

                                     THEO
                         But not for us.] We know a [[little]] 
                         [bit] about horses, we can be stable-
                         boys.

                                     [CLIVE
                         You'll feel different when you're 
                         home again.

                                     THEO
                         Home! But what will home be like? 
                         Another prison camp?

                                     CLIVE
                         Who says so?

                                     THEO
                         Aren't we] [[We are]] going to have 
                         foreign troops occupying our cities 
                         [for years?]. [[You set us prisoners 
                         free but we shan't be free because 
                         our whole country is going to be a 
                         prison camp.]]

                                     BEMBRIDGE
                         I've never heard a man more wrong 
                         than you are!  We don't want to make 
                         beggars out of you!

                                     WYNNE
                         We are a trading nation, we must 
                         have countries to trade with.

                                     BLAIR
                         [[We don't want you out of it. It 
                         simply can't be done.] ] [Surely you 
                         realize that the reconstruction of 
                         Germany is essential to the peace of 
                         Europe?]

                                     TAYLOR-GRANT
                         [[And where do you get this idea 
                         that we are going to keep millions 
                         of men under arms to occupy your 
                         country?]] [I can't see our tax-payers 
                         keeping an army in your country. Can 
                         you, Candy?]

                                     CLIVE
                         Of course not.] Read the papers, 
                         man! The English papers!  [[I]] [We] 
                         can't ask you to be [[my]] [our] 
                         friend, if [[I]] [we] rob you and 
                         humiliate you first. That's how we 
                         all feel. We want to be friends!

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                      [[SEQUENCE 88

                                     Victoria Station

               PLATFORM

               It is 11.27.

               A special train is at the platform, crowded with German 
               officers, every window is full of typical faces.  A large 
               crowd has invaded the platform. They are pressing newspapers, 
               books, magazines, boxes of chocolates on the officers, shaking 
               hands and waving.

               Voices shout: 'Cheerio!' 'Goodbye, Jerry!'  'We don't want 
               to lose you/But we think you ought to go!'  'Cheer up, Jerry, 
               you couldn't help losing the ruddy war!'

               THEO and his escort move with difficulty along the train. 
               They have all come to see him off — the Major-Generals, the 
               diplomats, the famous sportsmen ...

               PLATFORM

               People give THEO a cheer. They are quick to recognize the 
               type of men who are seeing him off. It looks like an occasion. 
               Some of the crowd slap him on the back. Complete strangers 
               push packages of cigarettes into his pockets.

               CLIVE, who has him by the arm, looks proudly at him.

                                     CLIVE
                         How is the old German scepticism?

                                     THEO
                              (Shakes his head)
                         Fabelhaft!
                              (He has no English 
                              words for it.)

               Some officers hail THEO. He stops at their coach.

                                     THEO
                         Here I am!

                                     CLIVE
                         Give my love to Edith!  Tell her - 
                         no, don't tell her anything! Come 
                         and see us sometime in London, or 
                         wherever we are!

               A whistle blows. THEO'S luggage is passed in. CLIVE shakes 
               him warmly by the hand.  THEO looks out at the smiling faces. 
               He shakes his head in amazement.)

                                     THEO
                         Just like when we went to war...!

               The train starts moving. THEO waves. Everyone waves.  CLIVE 
               is beaming. He turns to the nearest of his friends, which 
               happens to be MAJOR DAVIES.)

                                     CLIVE
                         Well, I think we made an impression 
                         on him!

               MAJOR DAVIES reserves judgment.
.

                                       SEQUENCE 89

                          Railway Compartment. L.C.& D. Railway

               THEO is speaking to seven of his brother officers who listen 
               with great attention.

                                     THEO
                         [[Es ist unglaublich!  I have to say 
                         it in English, the German language 
                         has no words for it.]] 'We want to 
                         trade with Germany,' said one!  A 
                         General said: 'We don't want to keep 
                         an army just to occupy your country!' 
                         A General!  They are children] Boys!  
                         playing cricket! They win the shirts 
                         off our backs and now they want to 
                         give them back, because the game is 
                         over!  War is the most unpopular 
                         thing in England!  They are already 
                         organizing pacifist societies, their 
                         newspapers are anti-militarist — 
                         Here can we get to something! [[This 
                         is our chance!  Their]] [This child-
                         like] stupidity is a raft for us in 
                         a sea of despair!  Do you know what 
                         my friend, [[Brigadier-]]General 
                         Candy said? He said — [We'll soon 
                         have Germany on her feet again.] 

               ([[He breaks off as the door to the corridor slides open and 
               the friendly face of LIEUTENANT CARTWRIGHT appears.]] [Close-
               up of railway lines-trains passing fast.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 90

                                Interior: 33 Cadogan Place

               CLIVE'S DEN

               CLIVE and BARBARA are having a drink before going to bed. It 
               is quite late. She is still in evening dress. He is wearing 
               a smoking jacket.

               CLIVE has just come to the end of the story of the evening's 
               events.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[... so I told]] [The last thing I 
                         said to] him: 'My dear old chap, 
                         [don't you worry,] we'll soon have 
                         Germany on her feet again!'

                                     BARBARA
                              (Major Davies would 
                              understand her 
                              expression)
                         And he believed it?

                                     CLIVE
                         Theo? I believe so. I hope so. [[Don't 
                         you?]]

               [[BARBARA stands up. She bends down and kisses him.]] [BARBARA 
               leans back reflectively.

                                     BARBARA
                         Darling, don't hum.

                                     CLIVE
                         Was I humming?

                                     BARBARA
                         Yes, it's a little habit you've got.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Pauses)
                         What'll I do if I don't hum?

               They laugh and hold hands in front of the fire. He kisses 
               her hand.

               An album of snapshots, Embassy invitations, mementos.

               INSERT: Times death notice, 'Clive Candy wishes to thank all 
               kind friends who have written o sympathize with him in his 
               irreparable loss.  He hopes to answer them all personally in 
               due course'

               The album's pages are all blank after this.]

               The camera moves up to the trophies on the wall.

               [New ones start to appear, dated up to 1938.  A map of 
               Germany, focusing on Munich.]

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 91

               INSERT: [[A mimeographed letter, with handwritten dates, 
               saying roughly the following (wording to be checked): 'Sir 
               (or Madam), You are requested under the Enemy Aliens Order 
               1920 to appear before Tribunal 132. (In Pelham School, Pelham 
               Close, N.W.?.) on Monday Nov. 6th 1939 between 11—12 a.m. 
               Aliens' Registration Book and National Identity Card have to 
               be produced.']] 

               [BCU typewriter typing letter, dated November 1939, summoning 
               THEODOR KRETSCHMAR-SCHULDORFF to a Tribunal hearing.]

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                      [[SEQUENCE 92.

                                         Tribunal

               WAITING ROOM

               The Tribunal sits in a requisitioned school. This room was a 
               classroom, but has been transformed into a waiting room.  
               Benches and chairs line the walls. The room is full of 
               nervous, gloomy people of all ages and sexes, waiting to be 
               called.  In the next room, their fates are being decided. 
               The door to it opens and a uniformed policeman comes out 
               with the papers of two men.

                                     POLICEMAN:
                              (Calls)
                         Mr H. Bruck and Mr S. Bruck.

               The two brothers hold up their hands and answer: 'Here!' 
               They stand up as the POLICEMAN comes to them and hands back 
               their books and Identity Cards.

                                     POLICEMAN
                         You can go.

                         S. BRUCK
                 Thank you. 

                                                      H. BRUCK
                                              Thank you.

                                     POLICEMAN
                              (Turns and calls)
                         Mr Theodor Kretchmar-Shuldorff!

               THEO stands up.  He is an old man now, about sixty-five.  
               But he still carries himself like an officer.  He goes into 
               the tribunal.]]

                                       SEQUENCE 93

                                         Tribunal

               This was also a classroom. It is smaller than the other but 
               there is plenty of room. Behind a desk are seated two men: 
               one is the JUDGE, the other an inspector from Scotland Yard 
               (in mufti). Beside the desk sits a middle-aged Englishwoman 
               from the Refugee Committee. She also interprets, if necessary. 
               In a corner, near the door, is a plain wood table, where a 
               uniformed policeman sits. He has lists and rubber stamps, 
               comes from the 'Local' Police Station and stamps the papers 
               after the interrogation.

               The tone of the inquiry is impersonal at first, but later 
               becomes more sympathetic. The JUDGE has the Home Office file 
               of the person interviewed in front of him; it is pretty fully 
               documented but he prefers to use it only as a check on their 
               own stories. The inspector does not speak unless asked.

               THEO enters, comes to his place, clicks his heels together 
               (such customs die hard with a German), bows very gently and 
               waits to be questioned.  When he speaks he is unafraid, like 
               a man who has nothing to lose by the truth.

                                     JUDGE
                         Mr Theodor Kretschmar-Schuldorff?

                                     THEO
                         [[Yes.]] [Here.]

                                     JUDGE
                         Sit down.

                                     THEO
                         Thank you.

                                     JUDGE
                         Your Registration Book and Identity 
                         Card, please. 

                                     THEO
                         Please!

               He has them in his hand and passes them over.

                                     JUDGE
                         [Sit down.] When did you arrive in 
                         this country? 

                                     THEO
                         On the 6th of June [[19]]35.

                                     JUDGE
                         From?

                                     THEO
                         Paris, France. I [[came to]] [arrived 
                         in] Paris on the 15th January 1934.

                                     JUDGE
                         From Germany?  

                                     THEO
                         Yes.

                                     JUDGE
                         Why did you leave Germany?

                                     THEO
                         My outlook of life is against 
                         [[Nazism]] [the Nazis].

                                     JUDGE
                         Most refugees left Germany early in 
                         1933, when Hitler came to power...

                                     THEO
                         I had nothing to fear from Hitler. 
                         At least I thought so. It took me 
                         eight months to find out I was wrong.

                                     JUDGE
                         Rather a long time.

               THEO is silent.

                                     JUDGE
                         Don't you think so?  

                                     THEO
                         Please, I mean no offence - but you 
                         in England took five years.

               The policeman in the corner looks up, but no fire descends 
               from heaven. The JUDGE merely remarks.

                                     JUDGE
                              (Drily)
                         Quite right.
                              (Pause.)
                         Have you been in England before?

                                     THEO
                         Yes. I was a prisoner of war in the 
                         last war.

                                     JUDGE
                              (Looking in file)
                         I see you were an officer. When did 
                         you leave the army?

                                     THEO
                         In 1920 — eight out of ten officers 
                         had to retire when the German Army 
                         ceased to exist — I mean as a large 
                         army...

                                     JUDGE
                         You prefer the existence of a large 
                         army?  

                                     THEO
                         [[No]] [Not any more]. In 1920 I 
                         chose a new profession — Military 
                         Chemist — I worked for thirteen years 
                         in a factory at Mannheim.

                                     JUDGE
                         Are you married?

                                     THEO
                         My wife is dead.
                              ([[Pause.)
                         In 1933.]]

                                     JUDGE
                         Children?  

                                     THEO
                         Two. I have no connection with them. 
                         They are good Nazis - as far as any 
                         Nazi can be called good.

               THEO'S frankness has made an impression on the JUDGE; but, 
               at the same time, he has decided to intern him. The 
               presentation of the facts has been too unvarnished. THEO, of 
               course, senses this.

                                     JUDGE
                         [[Well,]] I'm afraid, Mr Kretschmar-
                         Schuldorff, that doesn't sound very 
                         much in your favour.

                                     THEO
                              (Wryly)
                         I have tried to answer correctly.

                                     JUDGE
                              (Sympathetically)
                         [[No doubt, but-]] [Personally, I 
                         don't doubt your good faith. But I 
                         am here to safeguard my country's 
                         interests. You may be an anti-Nazi. 
                         You may not be. In times like these, 
                         one enemy in our midst can do more 
                         harm then ten across the Channel. If 
                         you were here to work for the enemy, 
                         what would you tell me now?  Exactly 
                         the same - and that our enemy was 
                         your enemy. I know this is hard on 
                         those who are really with us. But it 
                         should be their best assurance that 
                         this time we mean business. If you 
                         are a friend, our precautions are 
                         your precautions and our interests 
                         are your interests.  Because our 
                         victory will be your victory.] Is 
                         there anything you would like to 
                         add?  

                                     THEO
                              (Sees that the JUDGE 
                              wants to help him)
                         If you won't mind, sir?

                                     [[JUDGE
                         Go ahead.

                                     THEO
                         Since I have lived in foreign 
                         countries, I am very cautious.]] In 
                         earlier years the most important 
                         principle of my life used to be: 
                         Never lie, always speak the truth.

                                     JUDGE
                         [[An excellent]] [A very good] 
                         principle. I hope you still keep to 
                         it.

                                     THEO
                         I have not told a lie. But I also 
                         have not told the truth. A refugee 
                         soon learns that there is a great 
                         difference between the two.

               He pauses. The JUDGE nods.

                                     THEO
                         The truth about me is that I am a 
                         tired old man who [[has come]] [came] 
                         to this country because he is 
                         homesick.
                              (He smiles.)
                         Don't stare at me, sir, I am all 
                         right in the head. You [[see]] [know 
                         that], after the war, we had very 
                         bad years in Germany. We got poorer 
                         and poorer. Every day retired officers 
                         or schoolteachers were caught 
                         shoplifting. Money lost its value, 
                         the price of everything rose except 
                         of human beings. We read in the 
                         newspapers that the after-war years 
                         were bad everywhere, that crime was 
                         increasing and that honest citizens 
                         were having a hard job to put the 
                         gangsters in jail [[where they 
                         belonged]]. Well, [I need hardly 
                         tell you that] in Germany, the 
                         gangsters [[started to put]] [finally 
                         succeeded in putting] the honest 
                         citizens in jail. [[Do you know, 
                         sir, who were the first pillars of 
                         the Nazi Party? The dirt of the 
                         people, the lazy ones, the drunkards, 
                         the scum of the country. Ask, sir, 
                         all these people who come here before 
                         you. They will remember them. In 
                         every business there was one who had 
                         no talent and no desire to work or 
                         to learn; and one morning he appeared 
                         with a brown shirt on and a revolver 
                         in his holster. Then they were joined 
                         by the huge army of easy-going people 
                         who always say: 'I am an engineer 
                         and I understand engines: that's 
                         enough forme!']] My wife was English. 
                         She would have loved to [[return]] 
                         [come back] to England, but it seemed 
                         to me that I would have been letting 
                         down my country in its greatest need, 
                         and [so] she stayed at my side. [[When 
                         at last she would have come]] [When 
                         in summer '33, we found that we had 
                         lost both our children to the Nazi 
                         Party, and I was willing to come], 
                         she died. Neither of my sons came to 
                         her funeral [Heil Hitler]... and 
                         then in January [[1934]] [1935],!  
                         [[came up alone]] [had to go] to 
                         Berlin on a mission for my firm. I 
                         drove up in my car. I lost my way on 
                         the outskirts of the city, and 
                         suddenly [[I recognized] I the 
                         landscape [seemed familiar to me. 
                         Slowly I recognized] the road, the 
                         lake and a nursing home, where I 
                         spent some weeks recovering [[many]] 
                         [almost forty] years ago. I stopped 
                         the car and sat still remembering. 
                         [You see, sir,] in this very nursing 
                         home, I met my wife for the first 
                         time ... and I met an Englishman who 
                         became my [[best]] [greatest] friend 
                         [[all those years, although we have 
                         only met twice since then — in 1919]]. 
                         [And I remembered] the people at the 
                         station [in '19], when we [prisoners] 
                         were sent home, cheering us, [treating 
                         us like friends] ... and the faces 
                         [[round a polished table]] of a party 
                         of distinguished men who were kind 
                         and [[did their best]] [tried their 
                         utmost] to comfort me when the defeat 
                         of my country seemed to me 
                         unbearable... And very foolishly I 
                         remembered the [[English]] 
                         countryside, [the gardens,] the green lawns [[where I spent the long months of captivity]], the weedy rivers and the trees she loved so much. [And] a great desire came over me to come back [[here]] to my wife's country. [[At first I couldn't get a permit. But I tried - and tried again.]] [And this, sir, is the truth.

               Silence in the schoolroom after THEO'S long speech. The JUDGE 
               rises and walks round the table.

                                     JUDGE
                         Haven't you got anyone in this country 
                         who knows you well, a British citizen?  

                                     THEO
                         The doorman at the chemical works 
                         where I offered my services. The 
                         police officers at the Aliens 
                         Department at Bow Street.

                                     JUDGE
                              (To policeman)
                         Sentry!
                              (To THEO)
                         Don't you know Major-General Clive 
                         Wynne-Candy?

                                     THEO
                         Yes, I used to know him.

                                     JUDGE
                         Did you ask him to come here and 
                         testify on your behalf?  

                                     THEO
                         Yes, I did send him a letter, but I 
                         suppose he... 

               The door opens and CLIVE appears. 

               [[During his last words a disturbance has started outside 
               and has gradually grown in intensity, doors are slamming, 
               voices are raised and, as everyone looks around at the door, 
               it bursts open and, flanked by awed policemen, MAJOR-GENERAL 
               WYNNE-CANDY enters the room]].

               He is, of course, three years younger than when we met him 
               in the Turkish Bath at the beginning of our story, but he is 
               physically much the same and he is much more self-assured 
               and pompous now, before the disappointments of the next three 
               years have deflated him. He talks very loudly and goes 
               straight to the JUDGE as the only person worthy of his 
               attention, beside THEO.

                                     [[CLIVE
                         By gad, sir, Lord Prendergast was 
                         right!  He told me I'd never find 
                         this blasted school!  My card, sir!

               He flings his card down on the table.

               INSERT: visiting card. 'Major-General Clive Wynne-Candy, 
               V.C., D.S.O. 33 Cadogan Place, s.w.i. Boodles Club.']] 
               

               CLIVE has grabbed THEO, pleased and bewildered[[, turned him 
               to the light and slaps him on the back]].

                                     CLIVE
                         [Theo, my dear chap,] Let me have a 
                         good look at you, [[old bean - my 
                         old German bean - eh? - dashed good!]]
                              (Roars with laughter.)
                         By gad, you've kept your figure better 
                         than I have!
                              (He slaps his tummy.)
                         Bit of a bay window, eh? [[But there's 
                         life in the old dog yet!
                              (He turns to the JUDGE.)
                         Sorry, sir, to butt into your court-
                         martial, unpardonable intrusion and 
                         all that sort of thing, but I only 
                         got down from the North yesterday 
                         and I'm off to France - well, mustn't 
                         say when, but damn soon!  — Found 
                         this idiot's letter waiting for me, 
                         put Sherlock Holmes on his track, 
                         got his address -
                              (To THEO)
                         Don't think much of your choice in 
                         digs, old chap - they said you had 
                         to come here — the war, I suppose - 
                         so I dropped Buggy Prendergast at 
                         the Club - he'd had enough - and 
                         came along myself to take you home 
                         with me -
                              (To JUDGE)
                         If it's all right with you, sir.

               CLIVE obviously takes it for granted that it is.

                                     THEO
                         I'm afraid, Clive, that I can't come 
                         with you.

                                     CLIVE
                         Why not? 

                                     THEO
                         They are going to intern me.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Explodes)
                         Pooh! Ridiculous!

               He turns on the poor JUDGE, who starts to assert himself.

                                     JUDGE
                         My dear General, the law is the law. 
                         This is a civil court and you have 
                         already disturbed it. I have the 
                         greatest respect for your -

                                     CLIVE
                              (With great charm)
                         Gad, sir, I'm awfully sorry. I come 
                         bursting in like a bull in a china 
                         shop! You're absolutely right, sir, 
                         you're absolutely right! I apologize!

               He extends his hand, the JUDGE has to take it. CLIVE shakes 
               it vigorously and points to THEO, who is looking admiringly 
               at his friend's easy authority.

                                     CLIVE
                         I know him well, sir, and I'd go 
                         bail for him anywhere.  You can have 
                         all the credentials you want. I know 
                         everybody in London who is anybody! 
                         Is this a Home Office or a Foreign 
                         Office do? Can I use your telephone? 
                         Hullo! Hullo! Operator!
                              (Jerking at THEO.)
                         He's just exactly the opposite of 
                         the men we ought to be interning!  
                         Hullo!  Operator!]] [You see, sir, I 
                         wouldn't be surprised if this fellow 
                         really dislikes us. He comes to 
                         England twice in his life: the first 
                         time he's a prisoner and the second 
                         time he's about to be one.  May I 
                         talk to him, sir? I haven't seen him 
                         for nineteen... er...

                                     THEO
                         Twenty.

                                     CLIVE
                         Twenty years and a bit.

                                     JUDGE
                         Afraid not here, General. We have 
                         many Kretschmar-Schuldorffs waiting.

                                     CLIVE
                         You mean to say that I've travelled 
                         eleven miles from — mustn't say where - 
                         and you won't allow me to have a 
                         word with a condemned man? 

                                     JUDGE
                         Well, you don't have to go back this 
                         minute, do you?

                                     CLIVE
                         Tomorrow morning, sir, and infernally 
                         early too. 

                                     JUDGE
                         Well, you can talk to him all day 
                         and all night till midnight — Aliens' 
                         Curfew, you know.

                                     CLIVE
                         And can I take him with me?

                                     JUDGE
                         If you say you know him.

                                     CLIVE
                         Do I know him? 

                                     JUDGE
                         And will stand surety for him.

                                     CLIVE
                         With everything I have, sir.]

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 94

                                Interior: 33 Cadogan Place

               DINING ROOM

               CLIVE and THEO are sitting on after dinner, smoking in 
               companionable silence. There is an enormous difference between 
               the two men. For CLIVE very little has changed; for THEO 
               everything: he has seen less than CLIVE during the years but 
               he has experienced more. He is a wise man now. He speaks 
               with a little smile about the most important things. His 
               attitude is that of a man very little concerned with life's 
               troubles. He has nothing to lose because he has lost 
               everything.

               Outside it is quite late. It is winter. The windows are 
               shuttered.

               [[After a moment THEO looks at his watch.]] [Clock chimes.]

                                     THEO
                         It's time I was going. [[I must be 
                         home by midnight.]] 

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Why midnight?]] [The night is young 
                         yet.]

                                     THEO
                         [Don't you remember?] Curfew for 
                         aliens.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Blimpish nod)
                         Ah-yes...

                                     [THEO
                         I have to be home by midnight.

               MURDOCH comes in. He is about the same age as his master and 
               has become, over the years, the perfect butler.

                                     MURDOCH
                         Don't forget, sir. You have to be up 
                         for 6.30. 

                                     CLIVE
                         Early parade, eh?  

                                     MURDOCH
                         Yes.

               He leaves.

                                     THEO
                         How lucky you are.

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes, they put me on the retired list 
                         in '35. But I knew they'd want me 
                         again. Back I went on the active 
                         list like a shot.
                              (Changes the subject.])
                         I mean, why don't you stay here? 
                         I've eighteen rooms.
                              (Bellows.)
                         Murdoch!

                                     THEO
                         Thanks, Clive, but I don't think I 
                         had better. I would need a special 
                         permit anyway.

               MURDOCH comes in.

                                     MURDOCH
                         You called, sir? 

                                     CLIVE
                         All right, Murdoch, it was nothing—no!  
                         [[As you were!]]
                              (To THEO)
                         Stay a little longer, I'll send you 
                         back by car. Murdoch, tell Miss Cannon 
                         to be here at quarter to twelve.

                                     MURDOCH
                         Yes, sir.

               He goes.

                                     THEO
                         Who's Miss Cannon?

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Johnny]] [Miss] Cannon, my driver. 
                         [[A.T.S.]] [M.T.C.]

                                     THEO
                         [Do you] Remember, Clive, we used to 
                         say: 'Our army is fighting for our 
                         homes, our women and our children'?  
                         Now the women are fighting beside 
                         the men. [[In Germany,]] the children 
                         are trained to shoot. [[Only remains]] 
                         [What's left is]: the 'home'. But 
                         what is 'home' without women and 
                         children?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Nods, then says 
                              suddenly)
                         You never met my wife. Do you want 
                         to see [a picture of] her?

                                     THEO
                         Very much...
                              (They both laugh as 
                              they stand up.)
                         ... do you remember when that was 
                         all I could say in English?

                                     CLIVE
                         You got further with it [then] than 
                         I ever got.

                                     THEO
                         In what respect? 

                                     CLIVE
                         My dear fellow, don't tell me you 
                         [[never knew]] [didn't know]...

                                     THEO
                         What? 

                                     CLIVE
                         [[That I - dash it, don't]] [you] 
                         make me blush!

                                     THEO
                         But I don't know what you are talking 
                         about.

                                     CLIVE
                         Well - I thought it was written all 
                         over my face when I left Berlin in 
                         [[19]]02.

                                     THEO
                         Don't forget, I never saw [[you]] 
                         [your face] after you left.

                                     CLIVE
                              (It is a great secret)
                         I was in love with [her - ] your 
                         wife.

                                     THEO
                              (Slowly)
                         She never told me...

                                     CLIVE
                         She never knew.

                                     THEO
                         But [[when I told you]] [I seem to 
                         remember] - that last day [in Berlin] - 
                         [[that I loved her]] - you seemed 
                         genuinely happy...

                                     CLIVE
                         Dash it - I didn't know then. But on 
                         the train I started to miss her - it 
                         was worse on the boat - and by the 
                         time I was back in London -well, I'd 
                         got it properly. My Aunt Margaret 
                         got on the scent [[right]] [straight] 
                         away, women have a nose for these 
                         things. Besides I did a stupid thing!  
                         First night back I took out her 
                         sister... 

                                     THEO
                         Aunt Margaret's?

                                     CLIVE
                         Edith's.

                                     THEO
                              (More puzzled)
                         Martha?

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes. Martha.

                                     THEO
                         But what was stupid about that? 

                                     CLIVE
                              (Gruffly)
                         Thinking her sister would be like 
                         she was.

                                     THEO
                         [Like] Edith?

               CLIVE nods.

                                     [CLIVE
                         Yes.] 

                                     THEO
                              (Tenderly)
                         [[Anyway]] [Well], you got over it.

                                     CLIVE
                         That's just it, I [[didn't]] [never 
                         did get over it]. Theo, this may 
                         sound a damn silly thing to say to 
                         you but I never got over it. [[I 
                         suppose you could]] [You may] say 
                         she was my ideal - if you were some 
                         [sort of] sickening long-haired poet 
                         — all my life I've been looking for 
                         a girl like her—so now you know —

                                     THEO
                              (Quite thunderstruck)
                         I never thought it possible that an 
                         Englishman could be so romantic...
                              (Pause.)
                         And your wife you don't mind my 
                         asking? You loved her...?

                                     CLIVE
                         Yes... dreadfully. She was exactly 
                         like Edith. I'll show her to you...

               He takes THEO'S arm and leads him out of the room.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 95

                                Interior: 33 Cadogan Place

               CLIVE'S DEN

               The walls are completely crowded with trophies except in one 
               spot which, until now, we have not seen. A painting hangs 
               there, covered by a curtain.

               CLIVE pulls a cord and the curtain slides aside. It is a 
               painting of Barbara at the time of her marriage and very 
               much like her.  THEO looks at the painting for quite a little 
               time before he speaks.

                                     THEO
                              (Quietly)
                         She's very lovely.

                                     CLIVE
                         Isn't she like Edith? Eh? See the 
                         resemblance?

               Now actually it is quite hard for THEO to see any resemblance 
               at all. CLIVE'S memory of Edith is different from THEO'S. 
               She has always stayed young to him as he last saw her. THEO 
               continues to stare at the picture.

                                     THEO
                              (Answering CLIVE)
                         Yes... there is something very 
                         striking... But you mustn't forget, 
                         I saw Edith thirty-one years later 
                         than you. We grew old together - you 
                         understand?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Blimpish agreement)
                         Hm! -yes— [[suppose so]] [of course] 
                         — but she was [[very]] [exactly] 
                         like her -

                                     THEO
                              (Looking round)
                         It's a strange place to hang such a 
                         lovely picture.

                                     CLIVE
                         She wanted it. I call this my Den, 
                         you know. She knew I always used to 
                         come back here, we had a joke about 
                         it - all my stuff is here. It would 
                         be an awful gap without her ... 

               [[He pulls the curtain back over the painting.]] Goes to the 
               side-table.

                                     CLIVE
                         Have a peg - what?  

                                     THEO
                              (Looks at his back)
                         It must be terrible to lose someone 
                         very dear to you in a foreign country.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Pouring out drinks)
                         It wasn't a foreign country. It was 
                         Jamaica.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 96

                                Exterior: 33 Cadogan Place

               CLIVE stands in the half-open door, a bright light streams 
               from the hall. THEO is beside him in an overcoat of obvious 
               Continental cut.

               MURDOCH stands half-way with a torch.  The car, JOHNNY CANNON 
               at the wheel, is waiting.

               CLIVE shakes hands warmly with THEO.

                                     THEO
                         [[God bless you. Come back safely, 
                         Clive.]] [Bye, Clive.  Have a nice 
                         journey.]

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Nothing to worry about!]] [Don't 
                         worry about anything.] Everything 
                         under control.

                                     [[THEO
                         I hope it is as you say.

               He goes to the car.]]

                                     MURDOCH
                         Will you close the door, sir, please.

                                     CLIVE
                         Oh, shut up, Murdoch.

               [[But he closes it all the same and looks around.]]

               THEO gets in beside the driver. He opens the window as MURDOCH 
               fusses around.

                                     THEO
                         Good luck, Murdoch.

                                     MURDOCH
                         Thank you, sir, but the General isn't 
                         taking me. I stay [[here and do 
                         A.R.P.]] [to look after things here.] 

                                     CLIVE
                              (Bellows)
                         You know the way, [[Miss Cannon]] 
                         [Angela]?  

                                     JOHNNY
                         Yes, sir.

                                     [[THEO
                              (As the car moves)
                         Good hunting. There's just room in 
                         the Den for Hitler's moustache!]] 

                                     [MURDOCH
                         The door, sir, please.]

                                     CLIVE
                         Did you see the Warden? 

                                     MURDOCH
                         I am the Warden of this District, 
                         sir.

                                       SEQUENCE 97

                                 Interior: General's Car

               JOHNNY CANNON seems to be a very efficient, matter-of-fact 
               girl, judging by her voice. Neither can see the other in the 
               black-out.

                                     [[THEO
                         You don't mind my sitting beside 
                         you?  

                                     JOHNNY
                         No, sir.]]

                                     THEO
                         It must be difficult driving in the 
                         black-out. 

                                     JOHNNY
                         [[It looks more than it is.]] [It's 
                         not as bad as it looks, sir.]

               After a pause THEO goes on talking.

                                     THEO
                         I suppose you've done a lot of night-
                         driving? 

                                     JOHNNY
                         No, sir.
                              (She realizes she 
                              must explain this.)
                         I never drove before the war.

                                     THEO
                         What made you learn? 

                                     JOHNNY
                         My boy-friend taught me. But not at 
                         night.
                              ([[She laughs.]])

                                     THEO
                         Is he a good driver? 

                                     JOHNNY
                         First-rate. He's one of the Bentley 
                         boys. [[But]] just now he walks [on 
                         his two flat feet]. He's a private. 
                         In training.

               Pause.

                                     THEO
                         What was your job before the war, 
                         Miss Cannon?  

                                     JOHNNY
                         Photographic model.

                                     THEO
                         Interesting work.

                                     JOHNNY
                         [[It was all right]] [Not bad]. A 
                         bit hard on the feet.  How did you 
                         know my name, sir?

                                     THEO
                         [[I heard]] the General [told me 
                         about you].

                                     JOHNNY
                         Oh, [[of course.]] [Did he? Mind if 
                         we try to beat the lights, sir?
                              (Brakes sharply.)
                         Sorry, sir, couldn't make it.

                                     THEO
                         Do you like being [[his]] [the 
                         General's] driver?

                                     JOHNNY
                         Who wouldn't?  He's an old darling. 
                         I could have done a hand-stand when 
                         he chose me. [[It was at an 
                         inspection.]] [D'you know] He picked 
                         me out of seven hundred girls to be 
                         his driver.  Some odds [[700 to 1]] 
                         [wasn't it?]

               A car is approaching with a badly fitted mask, the light 
               points higher than it should.

                                     JOHNNY
                         Look at that headlight. He ought to 
                         be reported.

               The headlight flashes for a moment on her face. Only for a 
               moment. THEO stares, startled, at the girl by his side.  He 
               knows now why the General chose her out of seven hundred 
               girls. It is the same face.

               Edith — Barbara — and now this girl.

               The other car has passed.

                                     JOHNNY
                              (Grumbles)
                         That's what causes accidents.
                              (To THEO)
                         Long odds, weren't they, sir?

                                     THEO
                              (In a reverie)
                         I beg your pardon?  

                                     JOHNNY
                         Seven hundred to one! Makes me a bit 
                         of an outsider.
                              (She chuckles.)

                                     THEO
                         What is your first name, Miss Cannon?

                                     JOHNNY
                         Angela.

                                     THEO
                         Lovely name. It comes from 'angel' 
                         [doesn't it?].

                                     JOHNNY
                         I think it stinks. My friends call 
                         me 'Johnny'.
                              (She peers out.)
                         Is it this crossing or the next 
                         [,sir]?

                                     THEO
                         [[I'll get out here]] [Oh, this will 
                         do]. [[Many thanks.]]

               He opens the door and gets out. They have stopped by a traffic 
               light. THEO holds out his hand. She shakes it firmly.

                                     THEO
                         Goodnight, Angela.

                                     JOHNNY
                         Goodnight, sir.

                                     THEO
                         I'd like to see your boy-friend one 
                         of these days.

                                     JOHNNY
                         Me too! [Goodnight, sir.]

               She laughs.  THEO vanishes into the darkness.

                                                                  FADE OUT:

                                       SEQUENCE 98

                             British Broadcasting Corporation

               FADE IN:

               Insert: the usual contract form of the British Broadcasting 
               Corporation. The details: 'Major-General Clive Wynne-Candy, 
               V.C., D.S.O., will give the Sunday night Postscript on June 
               16 1940. Title: Dunkirk —Before and After'.

               A DIRECTOR'S OFFICE

               The contract (or a copy) is lying on the desk of one of the 
               Directors of the B.B.C.

               [[Beside the contract is a telephone, which is buzzing 
               discreetly. Behind the desk sits]] the DIRECTOR [sits on a 
               low chair, nervously]. He is a charming diplomatic man, doing 
               his best in a very awkward and responsible job. He is about 
               forty-five. [With him is a SECRETARY.]

               The office is underground. The light is crude and glaring.

               [The telephone buzzes.]

                                     [[DIRECTOR
                              (Yes?]])

               [The SECRETARY answers it.]

                                     [[LOUDSPEAKER
                         General Wynne-Candy has just passed 
                         through the entrance hall, sir.]]

                                     [SECRETARY
                         He's on his way down now.]

                                     DIRECTOR
                         [[Thank you.]] [For the love of 
                         Gielgud, go and stop him as he gets 
                         out of the lift. If you let him put 
                         one whisker inside the studio, you 
                         are out!

                                     SECRETARY
                              (Echoes)
                         ... out.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 99

                             British Broadcasting Corporation

               UNDERGROUND CORRIDOR Crude functional architecture. Crude 
               glaring lighting. An impression of great depth and strength. 
               Many people are bustling to and fro with papers. The lift 
               has just arrived down. CLIVE comes out with several others. 
               He looks tired and worn, but otherwise all right. He glances 
               at the ultra-modern clock on the wall. It shows 20.45. CLIVE 
               is accompanied by a GUIDE.

                                     GUIDE
                         This way, [[sir]] [General].

               But a girl who has been waiting at the lift now steps forward. 
               She is the DIRECTOR'S SECRETARY.

                                     SECRETARY
                         General Wynne-Candy?  

                                     CLIVE
                              (Turns a terrifying 
                              eye on her)
                         [[Mm!  - ]] [Yes.]

                                     [GUIDE
                         This way to Studio 5, sir.]

                                     SECRETARY
                         Mr Herbert Marsh would like to see 
                         you, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         Never heard of him!

                                     SECRETARY
                         [[One of the directors.]] [Yes, but 
                         he's heard of you sir.]

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Mm! - Mm - Ah, yes!]] [Oh, has he?  
                         Good.
                              (Following her.])

                                     SECRETARY
                         [It's] This way [to Studio 5], sir.
                              ([Pointing in opposite 
                              direction.])

                                     CLIVE
                         Lead on!

               They start walking.

                                     CLIVE
                         When does my [[ - ah!]] broadcast 
                         start precisely?

                                     [GUIDE
                         Well almost at once, sir.]

                                     SECRETARY
                         [[The Postscript, sir?  About]] [At] 
                         21.20. [, sir].

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Lots]] [Plenty] of time [[-good-
                         ]]!

                                     [GUIDE
                         Excuse me, miss.

                                     SECRETARY
                         Oh, shut up.
                              (Steering CLIVE.)

                                     CLIVE
                         Regular rabbit warren, eh?

                                     SECRETARY
                         Yes.
                              (Hurrying him.)

                                     CLIVE
                         Beehive of industry. D'you like 
                         working here? 

                                     SECRETARY
                         Oh, very much. You meet such 
                         interesting people. 

                                     CLIVE
                         You can tell that from the 
                         programmes.]

               They arrive at a door: 'H. Marsh, Acting Director'.  Without 
               knocking, the GIRL opens the door.

               [SECRETARY opening door to MARSH'S office General Wynne-
               Candy.]

               CLIVE walks innocently in. She closes it with relief behind 
               him.

                                       SEQUENCE 100

                             British Broadcasting Corporation

               A DIRECTOR'S OFFICE

               MR MARSH is prepared to be very friendly. He stands up. CLIVE 
               comes in speaking.

                                     CLIVE
                         I don't think I've met you, sir.

                                     DIRECTOR
                         [[I have never had the]] [No, I'm 
                         afraid I've not had that] pleasure. 
                         Won't you sit down?  Cigarette?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Accepting)
                         Very snug quarters here. And deep!

                                     DIRECTOR
                              (Smiles)
                         We need to be these days.

                                     CLIVE
                         Quite agree!  Back to the Stone Age, 
                         what?
                              (He puts down his 
                              cigarette.)
                         Think I'll leave this, if you don't 
                         mind. Bad for speaking. Makes my 
                         throat dry.

                                     DIRECTOR
                         [[There may be some difficulty]] 
                         [General, I'm afraid we've been having 
                         a bit of trouble] about your broadcast 
                         [[,General...]].

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Can't be worse than Dunkirk.]] 
                         [Well, I'm used to trouble. I'm a 
                         soldier.]

                                     DIRECTOR
                         [[We have been advised at the last 
                         moment that your broadcast is 
                         considered]] [Yes, the - um - 
                         authorities think it's a little] ill-
                         timed and [[must be]] [that it might 
                         be better] postponed ...

                                     CLIVE
                              (Stares, goes purple)
                         [[Considered? Considered? Who is 
                         considering? Why?]] ['Think it's a 
                         little ill-timed.' Who has been saying 
                         that? Why?]

                                     DIRECTOR
                         [[I'm afraid]] [Well], General, [you 
                         know] that in time of war [[it is]] 
                         —

                                     CLIVE
                         Don't talk to me about war!
                              (He stands up.)

                                     DIRECTOR
                              (Quietly)
                         No. [Of course,] That would be -
                              ([Pauses])
                         Grotesque.

                                     CLIVE
                         I have been asked to describe in 
                         this broadcast my views of the cause 
                         of the Retreat and its aspects for 
                         the future. There they are!  I have 
                         been serving my country for forty-
                         four years. What was your position 
                         before this one, sir?

                                     THE DIRECTOR
                              (murmurs)
                         Lawyer.

                                     CLIVE
                         What? A lawyer!  Well, I was a 
                         soldier. And before that, I suppose 
                         you were at college. And I was a 
                         soldier. And I was a soldier when 
                         you were a baby, and before you were 
                         born, sir, when you were nothing but 
                         a toss-up between a girl's and a 
                         boy's name - I was a soldier then!
                              (He suddenly stops, 
                              collects himself, 
                              stares at Mr Marsh.)
                         I'm deeply sorry, sir. I know it's 
                         not you.

                                     DIRECTOR
                              (Who has listened 
                              patiently)
                         No. I'm afraid [[not]] [it isn't].

                                     CLIVE
                         I will make the necessary enquiries 
                         through the War Office. I'll have a 
                         light for this cigarette now, if you 
                         please.  [[Thanks. Pity I sent my 
                         car away.]]

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 101

                                Interior: 33 Cadogan Place

               DINING ROOM

               THEO and JOHNNY CANNON are listening to the radio. (June 16 
               was the day Petain came to power.) MURDOCH is making the 
               black-out. The table is laid for two people with a cold 
               supper.  The News finishes. There is a pause.  

               ANNOUNCER: (Rustling paper) [That brings us to the end of 
               the news and] Tonight's Postscript [which] is given by Mr J. 
               B.  Priestley. Mr Priestley ...

               MURDOCH turns sharply. The others react. THEO is not 
               surprised.

                                     JOHNNY
                         What can have happened?

                                     THEO
                         I was expecting it.

                                     JOHNNY
                         Why?

                                     THEO
                         I've read his speech.

               We hear the front door bang. Meanwhile the radio is silent.

                                     MURDOCH
                         The General!

               The GENERAL'S return is a great surprise. JOHNNY leaps to 
               her feet. She has no business to be here. She looks wildly 
               around.

                                     ANNOUNCER
                              (On radio)
                         [[We apologize to listeners for]] 
                         [Sorry about] the short delay. Here 
                         is Mr Priestley.

               Without a qualm, MURDOCH turns Mr Priestley off before he 
               has said a word.

                                     JOHNNY
                         Murdoch! Where can I go? The General 
                         mustn't find me here! Murdoch! 

                                     THEO
                         Let me handle it, Angela...

                                     JOHNNY
                         No fear. Let me out of here!

               The GENERAL comes in. He is not angry; only disappointed. 

                                     CLIVE
                         Hullo, Theo. If supper's ready, you 
                         can serve it, Murdoch.

                                     JOHNNY
                         I'm very sorry, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         Hm? Why?

                                     JOHNNY
                         I shouldn't be here - I -

                                     THEO
                         I asked Miss Cannon to come in. She 
                         was anxious to hear your broadcast.

                                     CLIVE
                         Cancelled! At the last minute. Pity 
                         we hurried like we did, Angela.
                              (To THEO)
                         We didn't leave the War Office until 
                         [[twenty-five]] [five and twenty] to 
                         nine.

                                     MURDOCH
                         There's a War Office letter here, 
                         sir. It came this afternoon.

               (CLIVE holds out his hand. MURDOCH gives him the letter. He 
               op ens it.)

                                     CLIVE
                         Paul Reynaud [has] resigned. Petain 
                         is Prime Minister.

                                     THEO
                         Bad news.

                                     CLIVE
                         What?
                              (He has started reading 
                              the letter.)
                         Oh, yes - bad news.

               MURDOCH: Sherry, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Looking up)
                         Ah - yes!
                              (Goes on reading.)

               [[(MURDOCH pours out drinks, looks enquiringly at JOHNNY. 
               She shakes her head. He pours one for THEO, puts down the 
               decanter and goes out. THEO picks up the decanter and pours 
               a drink for ANGELA. She doesn't think it proper to drink 
               with the GENERAL and shakes her head violently. THEO 
               smiles.}}]

                                     [MURDOCH
                         Sherry, miss?

               (She grimaces to dissuade him. To THEO)

                                     MURDOCH
                         Sherry, Mr -, sir?  

                                     THEO
                         Yes please.]
                              (In a low voice)
                         How is your fiance?  

                                     JOHNNY
                              (Same tone)
                         He's not my fiance.

                                     THEO
                         [Beg your pardon. How is] Your boy-
                         friend?  

                                     JOHNNY
                         He's getting a commission.

                                     THEO
                         Congratulations.

                                     JOHNNY
                         [[I think]] I ought to go [you know].

               She looks towards CLIVE. He is still reading. He turns back 
               to the first page and starts re-reading the whole thing. 
               THEO and JOHNNY continue to talk in low tones.

                                     THEO
                              (Nod towards CLIVE)
                         [[Wait a little longer.]] [No, stay 
                         a bit.]

                                     JOHNNY
                         [[O.K.]] [Down the hatch.
                              (Pause.)
                         Any news about your application ?  

                                     THEO
                         Turned down. Enemy alien.

                                     JOHNNY
                         But you're an expert!  Why didn't 
                         you ask him. He knows everybody.

                                     THEO
                         He was [[in France]] [away].

               MURDOCH brings some soup and bottled beer.

                                     MURDOCH
                         Dinner is served, sir.

               CLIVE mechanically folds the letter. He is only half 
               listening.

                                     CLIVE
                         Ah-yes.

                                     JOHNNY
                              (Stands up)
                         I'm going now, sir. Will you [[need]] 
                         [want] the car [any more]?

                                     MURDOCH
                         I've brought another cover, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Absently)
                         All right. Sit down, Angela. Theo!

               They glance at one another.

                                     CLIVE
                         Sit down, both of you.

                                     JOHNNY
                         Never mind, Murdoch.
                              (To CLIVE)
                         Thank you, sir, but I had dinner.

                                     THEO
                         Have another, Angela. 

                                     JOHNNY
                         No, really - I -

                                     CLIVE
                              (In a normal voice at 
                              last)
                         If you're worried about sitting down 
                         with your General, then stop worrying. 
                         I'm not a General any more.

                                     THEO
                              (He knows better than 
                              anyone what tragedy 
                              this means for his 
                              friend)
                         Clive! What has happened?  

                                     CLIVE
                         Retired [again]. Axed!  They don't 
                         need me any more. 

                                     MURDOCH
                         I'm sorry, sir.
                              (Passing the sherry 
                              glass to CLIVE.)

                                     THEO
                              ([[Holds out his hand 
                              to seize his 
                              friend's]])
                         I know how that feels.

                                     CLIVE
                         No you don't! 

                                     THEO
                         I was barely forty-five when it 
                         happened to me.

                                     CLIVE
                         Different kettle offish!  [[Your 
                         country was]] [You were] made to do 
                         it. [But] We're not finished - nor 
                         am I! Just starting!
                              (Bites moustache.)
                         - I've often thought - somebody like 
                         me dies - special knowledge - awful 
                         waste — Well, am I dead? Is my 
                         knowledge worth nothing?  Skill 
                         experience — eh? You tell me -

                                     THEO
                         It's a different knowledge they need 
                         now, Clive. The enemy is different. 
                         [[The defenders must be]] [So you 
                         have to be] different too.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Have you gone]] [Are you] mad? I 
                         know what war is!

                                     THEO
                         I don't agree. I read your broadcast 
                         up to the point where you describe 
                         the collapse of [[your own sector 
                         in]] France. You commented on Nazi 
                         methods, foul fighting, bombing 
                         refugees, machine-gunning hospitals, 
                         lifeboats, lightships, baled-out 
                         pilots, by saying that you despised 
                         them, that you would be ashamed to 
                         fight on their side and that you 
                         would sooner accept defeat than 
                         victory if it could only be won by 
                         those methods.

                                     CLIVE
                         So I would! 

                                     THEO
                         Clive!  If you let yourself be 
                         defeated by them, [just because you 
                         are too fair to hit back the same 
                         way they hit at you,] there won't be 
                         any methods but Nazi methods! If you 
                         preach the Rules of the Game while 
                         they use every foul and filthy trick 
                         against you, they will laugh at you!  
                         They think you're weak, decadent! I 
                         thought so myself in 1919. 
                         [[Filthiness! That is their secret 
                         weapon!]]

                                     CLIVE
                              (A little shaken)
                         I[['ve]] heard all that in the last 
                         war. They played foul then. And who 
                         won it!

                                     THEO
                         I don't think you won it! We lost 
                         it!  But you lost something, too. 
                         You forgot to learn the moral. 
                         [[Because victory was yours]] you 
                         failed to learn your lesson twenty 
                         years ago, you have to pay the school 
                         fees again! Some of you will learn 
                         quicker than others. Some will never 
                         learn it. [Because] You have been 
                         educated to be a gentleman and a 
                         sportsman - in peace and in war. 
                         But, Clive, [[my dear fellow]] [dear 
                         old Clive], this is not a gentleman's 
                         war. [[This is a life and death 
                         struggle, with your backs to your 
                         cliffs against the hordes of 
                         barbarism.]] [This time you are 
                         fighting for your very existence 
                         against the most devilish idea ever 
                         created by a human brain — Nazism.] 
                         And if you lose there won't be a 
                         return match next year, perhaps not 
                         even for a hundred years!
                              (He pats CLIVE'S 
                              [[hand]] [shoulder].)
                         You mustn't mind me, an alien, saying 
                         all this. But who can describe 
                         hydrophobia better than one who has 
                         been bitten - and is now immune?  

                                     CLIVE
                              (He is defeated. He 
                              knows Theo is right 
                              but cannot say so)
                         Well, you see, Angela - eh?  Even 
                         one's best friend lets one down...

               JOHNNY has been the silent witness of the scene. She is too 
               young to be detached. Her respect for the GENERAL makes it 
               quite painful for her to listen. She, of course, agrees 
               entirely with THEO. She does not know where to look until 
               directly appealed to by CLIVE. She looks miserably up at him 
               and af THEO.

                                     JOHNNY
                         I don't think so, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Grunts)
                         You, too, eh? Kick a fellow when 
                         he's down - what?

                                     JOHNNY
                              (Weak smile)
                         Nobody would ever kick you, sir.  
                         [[You'll have]] [You've just got] to 
                         change over, that's all.

                                     CLIVE
                         Change over? To what?
                              (He already speaks in 
                              a stronger voice.)

                                     JOHNNY
                         Well - [[some other]] [a new] job 
                         [[,sir]]. It's easy enough for a 
                         man.

                                     CLIVE
                         Hm! Think so, do you? Swop horses in 
                         midstream - eh?

                                     JOHNNY
                              (Daring)
                         A lot of people had to in this war, 
                         sir. It's better than drowning.

                                     THEO
                         Bravo, Angela! I shall call you Johnny 
                         in future!  She's hit the nail on 
                         the head! I don't know you. You 
                         shouldn't give up so easily, my boy. 
                         Is this the same man who took Berlin 
                         by storm forty years ago? Look at 
                         me! Nobody wants me but do I give 
                         up?  

                                     CLIVE
                              (Depressed again)
                         Nobody wants you - and you're an 
                         expert. I don't know anything but 
                         soldiering -
                              (Looks at letter.)
                         — not even that, apparently.

                                     JOHNNY
                         What about the Home Guard, sir?  
                         They [[must have]][need] leaders. 
                         They are just becoming an army. If 
                         we are invaded, they're] [[will be]] 
                         our first [[line of]] defence - 
                         [[all]] the papers say so.

                                     THEO
                         There you are! You know everybody, 
                         you could get them arms and 
                         instructors and equipment! [[I wish 
                         I could join.]] What a grand job, 
                         forming a new army.

                                     CLIVE
                              (Looks from one to 
                              the other with great 
                              suspicion)
                         EH? - HOME GUARD-?

                                     MURDOCH
                              (Entering)
                         Yes, sir. I was going to tell you 
                         myself, sir.

               He looks reproach fully at JOHNNY and puts down some cheese 
               and the Cona. CLIVE gapes at him.

                                     CLIVE
                         You're drunk, Murdoch. Tell me what? 

                                     MURDOCH
                         That I'd joined the Home Guard, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         You?

                                     MURDOCH
                         Yes, sir.
                              (He is about to clear 
                              away when he realizes 
                              no food has been 
                              touched.)
                         Anything wrong with the soup, sir?

                                     CLIVE
                              (With gathering 
                              momentum)
                         How should anyone know if nobody's 
                         touched it. Take it away, [[Private]] 
                         [Lance- Corporal] Murdoch!

                                     MURDOCH
                              (Proudly)
                         Sergeant Murdoch, sir.
                              (Gathering up cold 
                              soup.)
                         What have you been doing, sir, all 
                         this time?

                                     CLIVE
                              (Seizing carving knife 
                              and steel, sharpens 
                              it)
                         Nothing, you blockhead, except talk!
                              (Seizing carving fork.)
                         But watch now!

               He starts a murderous assault on the cold chicken.

                                                                  FADE OUT:

               [Explosion and star-burst on screen.]

               FADE IN:

               INSERT:'In Memoriam' column in The Times. 'MURDOCH — In proud 
               and loving memory of John Montgomery Murdoch, my friend and 
               comrade in two great wars, killed by enemy action in an air-
               raid of [[April 20]] [Oct.] 1941.  Clive Wynne-Candy.'

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 102

                                Exterior: 33 Cadogan Place

               The house we know so well has received a direct hit and lies 
               in ruins, although those on either side are hardly touched.  
               The Demolition Squad are working on the ruins, amongst clouds 
               of dust.

               One of them pulls out a frightening object, coated with dust, 
               from the rubbish.

                                     1ST MAN
                         [[Crikey!  This is a bit of all 
                         right!]] [Hello! What's this?]

               He shakes and bangs the hairy object which gradually reveals 
               itself as the pride of Clive's Den: 'Buffalo Head' - 
               'Nigeria''- '1924'.

                                     [[2ND MAN
                         Upsadaisy!
                              (He has hold of a 
                              long curved thing.)
                         Give us a hand, Marmaduke!

               They both pull and, in a cloud of dust and clatter of rubble, 
               a rhinoceros']] [a boar's] head emerges. Both regard it 
               solemnly.

                                     1ST MAN
                         Hi, missus. Two basins, for me and 
                         me old chum.
                              (Scares her with boar's 
                              head.)

                                     [[1ST MAN
                         Who is the bloke that lived here, 
                         Harry? Huxley?]]

               They deposit their finds on a growing pile of dusty trophies 
               on the pavement. On the steps a shooting-stick is stuck in a 
               flowerpot, a large card clipped in it. One of the men reads 
               it out aloud.

                                     2ND MAN
                         [See this?
                              (Reads].)
                         Major-General Clive Wynne-Candy- 
                         [[Boodles Club]] [moved to Royal 
                         Bathers' Club, Piccadilly.

                                     1ST MAN
                         I should think he needed a bath after 
                         this lot. Good luck to the old 
                         bastard.]

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

                                       SEQUENCE 103

                              Interior: Royal Bathers' Club

               HALL CLIVE hurries towards the exit. He is now a General in 
               the Home Guard and wears their insignia. He is full of 
               enthusiasm for his new career. He wears a coat, it is still 
               chilly.

               The PORTER (the same rugged individual whom we have seen 
               confront SPUD at the opening of our story} salutes him. 

                                     CLIVE
                         Still here?

                                     PORTER
                         Just going, General.

                                     CLIVE
                         Don't be late! 

                                     PORTER
                         I won't, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         By gad!  what on earth's that? 

                                     PORTER
                              (Proudly)
                         Gun, sir. [[My]] brother's a 
                         gamekeeper.

               It is an old but serviceable double-barrelled 12-bore shot 
               gun.

                                     CLIVE
                         That's the ticket!  Load with No. 4!  
                         We'll soon have rifles — tommy-guns, 
                         too. Know which end is which — eh?

                                     PORTER
                              (Keen)
                         [Oh] Yes, General.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Hah!]] [That's right.]

               CLIVE bustles out. The PORTER hurriedly takes his Home Guard 
               armband and steel helmet from a hook. He has no proper uniform - 
               these were the early days.

                                       SEQUENCE 104

                              Exterior: Royal Bathers' Club

               The car is waiting. JOHNNY CANNON she's still his driver. 
               [She is talking to another uniformed woman driver.] [[She 
               holds the door for him, then slips into the driver's seat.]]

                                     [CLIVE
                         Break it up, chaps.
                              (To other driver)
                         Good afternoon.

               Gets in.]

                                     [[JOHNNY
                         Where to, sir?

                                     CLIVE
                         War Office.]]

               The car moves off down St James's Street.

                                       SEQUENCE 105

                       Interior: General's Car and London Exteriors

               CLIVE is talkative. He scowls menacingly.

                                     CLIVE
                         By gad, we'll have proper weapons or 
                         I'll know the reason why!  I won't 
                         leave their damn doorstep!  I'll 
                         make a sit-down stroke - or a stay-
                         in strike - or whatever they call 
                         it! I'll show'em! Angela! Eh?

               ANGELA smiles at the volcano. He can't see her.  The car 
               turns down by St James's Palace into the Park.  The sentry 
               salutes.  CLIVE nods.

                                     CLIVE
                         A real army - eh? The men are all 
                         right- keen as mustard! - 
                         Organization, General Staff, Offices, 
                         General Headquarters-that's what we 
                         [[need]] [want] and, by gad, we'll 
                         get 'em! D'you hear, Angela?  

                                     JOHNNY
                         Yes, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         [[One thing at a time.]] Give me 
                         [[a]] [one] year [- six months]! 
                         I'll show 'em!

                                                              [DISSOLVE TO:

               W. H. SMITH NEWSSTAND

               Lined with copies of Picture Post, all featuring CLIVE'S 
               portrait on the cover. The leading article is by CLIVE, 
               entitled 'Home Guard: Britain's First Line of Defence'. 
               Martial music. Another article is credited to Zone Commander 
               Wynne-Candy, dated 19 September 1942.]

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:
.

                                       SEQUENCE 106

                              G.H.Q. Home Guard, Marble Arch

               The Union Jack flies above the building.  It is 1942: a year 
               later.  At the entrance, two [[smart and formidable]] [young] 
               sentries are guarding the door. [[Each has rows of medal 
               ribbons and their combined ages would total about 140 years.]]

               A sign says: G.H.Q. HOME GUARD.

               General Wynne-Candy's car comes out of the park gates. Beyond 
               we see Hyde Park. 

               Camera pans with the car past the Marble Arch.

               The General's car stops outside the Home Guard H.Q. The two 
               [[smart Methusalehs]] [young soldiers] slope arms.  

               JOHNNY jumps out and opens the car door.

               CLIVE wears a lightweight uniform as it is now summer, he is 
               in very good spirits. We are back on the afternoon of the 
               day on which we first saw him.

                                     CLIVE
                              (To JOHNNY)
                         Take the afternoon off.

                                     JOHNNY
                         Thank you, sir.

                                     CLIVE
                         Club - 7.30.

                                     JOHNNY
                         Very good, sir.

               CLIVE goes in. The [[Methusalehs]] [young soldiers} present 
               arms [[like guardsmen — which they were]].

                                     SEQUENCE 107
                         Interior: G.H.Q. Home Guard, Marble 
                         Arch

               STAFF ROOM

               Maps, street plans, Home Guard manifestos cover the walls 
               and tables.  About twenty staff officers of the Home Guard 
               are waiting around a huge table.

               We recognize some faces from the first Turkish Bath sequence.

               The door opens. MAJOR-GENERAL WYNNE-CANDY has arrived.  
               Everyone stands up.

               He proceeds to the armchair on one side of the round table. 
               He waves them to their seats. He himself remains standing.  
               He is full of energy, radiates enthusiasm. He is obviously a 
               born leader and organizer, extremely popular.

                                     CLIVE
                         Gentlemen! This is Der Tag! What!
                              (Laugh.)
                         [[I've been conferring with the G.O.C. 
                         of the 6th Army Corps.]] This is the 
                         most vital and comprehensive exercise 
                         in which the Home Guard have yet 
                         taken part. Defence of London! We've 
                         trained for it. We can tackle it!  
                         We'll put up a good show, eh?  [[I 
                         know you're all as keen as I am.]] 
                         We'll show these youngsters there's 
                         life in the old dog- eh? Gentlemen! 
                         War starts at midnight!

                                  SEQUENCES  108  & 109

                                 Exterior: Western Avenue

               SPUD WILSON'S pocket commando thundering towards London.  

               It is more 'westerly' than when we picked them up at the 
               beginning of the story.

               ROADHOUSE

               SPUD'S commando pulls in off the road.

               A car is drawn up outside the Roadhouse: a military car, 
               which we know well: GENERAL WYNNE-CANDY'S car.

               SPUD jumps from his truck, also STUFFY. SPUD looks at his 
               watch.

                                     SPUD
                         [[Quarter to six! Mark time! I've 
                         got a date with Mata Hari!]] [Five 
                         minutes easy, Sergeant.]

               He goes into the Roadhouse.

                                       SEQUENCE 110

                           Interior: Roadhouse, 'Western Avenue

               LOUNGE

               JOHNNY is [[sitting having tea}} [playing darts].  Nobody 
               else is in the hideous modern lounge [except a bored waitress, 
               watching JOHNNY].

               SPUD [enters, glancing at dartboard ('No. 9 — doctor's 
               favourite') and orders 'Tea for two' as he] goes straight to 
               her and kisses her. They make a good job of it.

                                     SPUD
                         Hullo, Johnny.

                                     JOHNNY
                         Hullo, Spud.

               A WAITRESS comes in and waits for an order.

                                     SPUD
                         [[Tea - and the bill with it. I've 
                         got to go.]] [Got to go in a minute.]

                                     JOHNNY
                              (Disappointed)
                         [[Rightaway?]] [Why?]

                                     SPUD
                         [[Yes.]] Got a job on.

                                     JOHNNY
                         [[Where are you going, you liar?]] 
                         [Oh, you would have.]

                                     SPUD
                              (Taking her arm, 
                              leading her to the 
                              window})
                         Come [[here!]] [along, have a look.]

               He takes her across to the doors. As they go they talk.

                                     [[JOHNNY
                         I feel a criminal.

                                     SPUD
                         So you are. Why?

                                     JOHNNY
                         Using Army petrol.

                                     SPUD
                         : You ought to be shot. Probably 
                         will be.]]

               They have reached the door. He opens it and points.}

                                     [SPUD
                         See that?

                                     JOHNNY
                         What, those trucks?]

                                     SPUD
                         My private army!  

                                     JOHNNY
                         [Well,] What about it?  

                                     SPUD
                         You remember [[when I rang you this 
                         morning]] [what you told me last 
                         night - amongst other things]?

                                     [JOHNNY
                         Yes I do. And I wish I hadn't told 
                         you.

                                     SPUD
                         Why do you think I wanted the [[dope]] 
                         [low-down] on 'Sugar' Candy's 
                         movements?]

                                     JOHNNY
                         [[Of course.]] [Well, why did you?] 
                         What's the mystery?

                                     SPUD
                         We're off to see him! 

                                     JOHNNY
                         Who? 

                                     SPUD
                         The Wizard! 

                                     JOHNNY
                         What for? 

                                     SPUD
                         Because of the wonderful things he 
                         does. We're going to teach him Total 
                         War!

                                     JOHNNY
                         [[How?]] [Shut up, Spud. What do you 
                         mean?]

                                     SPUD
                         Capture him! War starts at midnight! 
                         We're going to bag him hours before 
                         that. Nazi methods. You know.

                                     JOHNNY
                         You're not a Nazi!

                                     SPUD
                         [[The Home Guard isn't]] [We're not] 
                         training to fight Englishmen!

                                     JOHNNY
                         You can't do that, Spud! 

                                     SPUD
                         Can't I? [[Watch me!]]

                                     JOHNNY
                         [[How can you do such a thing to 
                         him?]] [I won't let you do it.] He's 
                         such a dear old man...

                                     SPUD
                         So will I be when I'm over the 
                         hundred!
                              ([Turning.)
                         Ah, tea.

               Goes to table.]

                                     JOHNNY
                         [[I won't let]] [How can] you do it! 
                         I know what this would mean to him!

                                     SPUD
                         You can't stop me, Johnny. [[Inside]] 
                         [Within] an hour the Wizard will be 
                         the captive of my bow and spear — 
                         not to mention three dozen of the 
                         toughest troops between here and 
                         [[Tobruk]] [New Zealand]. [[Now 
                         where's that girl with the tea?]] 
                         [Come on, drink this.]

               [[(While he has been looking lovingly out at his private 
               army, JOHNNY has been looking desperately around. There is 
               no chance of escape. Her eye falls on a heavy ash-tray on 
               the table. She seizes it in her fist. It makes a formidable 
               weapon and is quite concealed in her hand. As SPUD turns, 
               she walks back with him, pleading:]]

                                     JOHNNY
                         Spud!  Don't you see? I gave you the 
                         information. It's mean to take 
                         advantage of it!  

                                     SPUD
                              (Callously])
                         Don't be a sissy! In war anything 
                         goes!   [[You have to use the first 
                         weapon that comes to hand!]] [(They 
                         circle each other, warily.]

                                     [[JOHNNY
                         All right!]]

                                     [WAITRESS
                         Hey, stop that!]

               [[She knocks him cold with the ash-tray. SPUD falls with a 
               crash. She bends over him for a second in great distress.]] 
               [She knocks over a chair deliberately. He trips over it and 
               falls unconscious.]

                                     JOHNNY
                              (To the unconscious 
                              SPUD)
                         Oh, darling! [[You asked for it!]]

               She flashes across the room and out of the door.

               [[A scream rings out: the WAITRESS has returned with the 
               tea.}]

                                     WAITRESS
                         [[Help!  Murder!]] [He's dead!]

                                  SEQUENCES  111  & 112

                                ROADHOUSE, WESTERN AVENUE

               EXTERIOR

               [[JOHNNY nips into the General's car and is off as hard as 
               she can go. She nearly runs over STUFFY GRAVES, who tries to 
               stop her. (This intercuts.) The troops invade the Roadhouse.]}

               LOUNGE

               SPUD'S army invade the lounge. TOMMY is the first to reach 
               SPUD, who is already sitting up groggily.

                                     [STUFFY
                         Spud!]

                                     SPUD
                         She got me!

                                     STUFFY
                         Who?

                                     SPUD
                         Mata Hair! [[Stop her!]] [Come on!] 
                         Quick!

               ROBIN rushes out.

               TOMMY TUCKER examines SPUD'S head.

                                     [[TOMMY
                         You need a field dressing on this. 

                                     SPUD
                         Grimly She'll need a field dressing 
                         somewhere else when I catch up with 
                         her.]]

               ROBIN and STUFFY appear at the door.

                                     STUFFY
                         [[Not a hope!]] [Well, any luck?] 
                         She's half way to London [by now].

               SPUD suddenly bursts into action.

                                     SPUD
                         [[Come on! We've got to get her!  
                         She wants]] [She's gone] to warn the 
                         Wizard!
                              (They all sweep out 
                              like a pack in full 
                              cry.)
                         [Come on, get my tin hat. Get after 
                         her, quick.]

                                     WAITRESS
                              (Cries)
                         Who's going to pay for the tea?

                                     TOMMY
                              ([[Shouts)
                         Charge it to E.P.T.!]] [The Sergeants' 
                         Mess.]

               Kisses her.

                                     WAITRESS
                         Mr Marshall!

               CAR

               ANGELA driving with a smile.

                                  SEQUENCES  113  & 114

                         Interior & Exterior: Royal Bathers' Club

               [CLUB EXTERIOR

               ANGELA enters the club.]

               [[CORRIDOR

               JOHNNY gains the safety of the corridor, stops for a second 
               and e get a suggestion of the scene from her angle.]]

               CLUB INTERIOR: PORTER'S DESK

                                     PORTER
                         Really, miss, it's quite impossible.

                                     ANGELA
                         Get on the phone, then. Go on, man.

                                     PORTER
                         Very good.
                              (Telephones.)
                         Head Porter speaking. His driver 
                         wants to speak to General Wynne-Candy. 
                         Yes, it's...

               ANGELA dives under the PORTER'S desk as SPUD and Co.  enter.

                                     SPUD (O.S.)
                         Is Major-General Wynne-Candy in the 
                         Club?

                                     PORTER (O.S.)
                         No, sir. The General left an hour 
                         ago with Brigadier-General Caldicott 
                         and Air Vice-Marshal Lloyd-Hughes.

               [This is now the same scene as at the beginning of the film.

                                     SPUD
                         Did he say where he was going?

                                     PORTER
                         Excuse me, sir, what is your business 
                         with the General?

                                     SPUD
                         I have a message for him - an urgent 
                         message.

                                     PORTER
                         If you will give me the message, 
                         sir, I will see that the General 
                         gets it.

                                     SPUD
                         But dammit all, man - !
                              (Suddenly changes 
                              tone.)
                         Are you in the Home Guard?

                                     PORTER
                         Why, sir? 

                                     SPUD
                              (Low voice)
                         The password is 'Veuve Cliquot 1911'!

                                     PORTER
                              (Salutes)
                         The General and his staff are in the 
                         Turkish Baths, sir.

                                     SPUD
                              (Blows whistle)
                         Right!

               The men come in, carrying rifles and bayonets, and go up to 
               SPUD and the PORTER.

                                     SPUD
                              (To SERGEANT)
                         You're in charge here. Stay with 
                         him.
                              (To PORTER)
                         Don't leave your desk or use the 
                         'phone.  You're a prisoner of war.

                                     PORTER
                         But war starts at midnight.

                                     SPUD
                         Ah ha, that's what you think. 
                         Sergeant, that girl under the desk: 
                         she's a prisoner too.

                                     SERGEANT
                         Sir! 

                                     SPUD
                         Corporal, follow me. Brute force and 
                         ruddy ignorance.

                                     JOHNNY
                              (Under the desk)
                         Hello, hello. Well warn him then.  
                         Can't you understand? Tell him to 
                         hide...]

               [[EXTERIOR

               JOHNNY pops out of a side entrance. She sees SPUD'S army 
               with the two men going into the club, as in the First 
               Sequence.  Nobody sees her but her own car is surrounded.  
               She stops a taxi, opens the door and looks back, listening.  

                                     SPUD (O.S.)
                         The Turkish Baths, Northumberland 
                         Avenue.  

                                     JOHNNY
                              (Promptly, to her 
                              taxi-driver)
                         The Turkish Baths, Northumberland 
                         Avenue. Quick! Matter of life and 
                         death!

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:
.

                                       SEQUENCE 115

                                 Exterior: Turkish Baths

               JOHNNY in the telephone box.  From her angle we see SPUD'S 
               army arrive.  SPUD and his men pour into the building.  The 
               SERGEANT-MAJOR (as ordered) is coming towards her. She is 
               still trying to get through. She tries to get out but too 
               late. The SERGEANT-MAJOR puts his hand against the door and 
               keeps her in.

                                     JOHNNY
                         What are you doing? Stop it!  How 
                         dare you? Help! Police!
                              (To telephone)
                         Porter! Hullo!  Hullo!

                                       SEQUENCE 116

                                 Interior: Turkish Baths

               CUBICLES

               STUFFY is coming from one of the cubicles. He has the famous 
               brown pigskin case in his hand. He stares towards the end of 
               the corridor.  SPUD has appeared, dripping wet and in a hurry. 
               He comes from his cold plunge with the GENERAL.  

                                     STUFFY
                         Been in? 

                                     SPUD
                              (Nods)
                         Defence in depth. Have you got it?

                                     STUFFY
                         All serene.

                                     SPUD
                         Here are your orders. That's their 
                         secret code!  Get on the blower and 
                         contact their H.Q. Orders have got 
                         to go out to all Posts to let the 
                         Enemy through the barricades. From 
                         midnight on! Spin 'em a yarn. It's a 
                         trick! Grand Strategy! Be Clever!  

                                     STUFFY
                              (His eyes gleam)
                         What a dish!  

                                     SPUD
                         Jump to it. I'll be with you in a 
                         sec.

               He vanishes, STUFFY, exultant, rushes to the PORTER'S booth.]]

                                       SEQUENCE 117

                                 Interior: Turkish Baths

               HOTTEST ROOM

               The naked General Staff guarded by SPUD'S men. The sweat is 
               pouring off them. SPUD is speaking.

                                     SPUD
                         [[I'm sorry,]] Gentlemen — the war 
                         will soon be over.  We agree that 
                         it's nice to win the last battle but 
                         [[we'd sooner]] [we much prefer to] 
                         win the first!

               Nobody says a word. He has the grace to look a bit ashamed 
               of himself".

                                     SPUD
                         You will be kept prisoner in this 
                         building until 6 a.m.

                                                                  FADE OUT:

               [[FADE IN:

               BIG BEN

               The time by Big Ben is 7.00. It is a lovely summer morning.]]

                                       SEQUENCE 118

                                Exterior: 33 Cadogan Place 

               We hear Big Ben continuing to strike in the distance. The 
               railing round the private gardens has been removed some time 
               ago.

               On a bench is seated GENERAL CLIVE WYNNE-CANDY. He is alone. 
               He sits waiting. The birds are singing in the trees.

               A car approaches and stops near the gardens. [[The GENERAL 
               stands up; it is not so simple standing up this morning.]] 
               The car is his own. THEO and JOHNNY are the only occupants.  

               [[CLIVE crosses the grass and steps into the road over the 
               stumps of the former railings.]]

                                     ANGELA
                              (To THEO)
                         It's all right, sir. He's still there.

                                     [[CLIVE
                              (Looking down at the 
                              stumps])
                         You couldn't do that either in my 
                         time.
                              (He means step over 
                              the vanished railings.)
                         Hullo, Theo!]]

                                     THEO
                         Hullo, Clive! 

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Nice of you to come.]] [Hello, 
                         Theo. I'm glad you've come.] I 
                         couldn't have stood anyone else.

                                     THEO
                         That's all right.

                                     CLIVE
                         You heard, I suppose? 

                                     THEO
                         [Yes,] Johnny told me.

                                     CLIVE
                         And? 

                                     THEO
                         [I think] It was a dirty trick but I 
                         can't help finding it a bit funny 
                         too.

                                     CLIVE
                         It is. That's the worst of it.

                                     THEO
                         What [[will happen - officially]] 
                         [do you think is going to happen 
                         now]?

                                     CLIVE
                         [[I suppose]] [Officially] this young 
                         [[officer]] [fellow] will be [[court-
                         martialled]] [brought before a court 
                         of inquiry] and the Exercise [[will 
                         be]] repeated on some other date.
                              ([[With a change of 
                              tone.)
                         They won't find the Home Guard so 
                         easy next time!]]

                                     JOHNNY
                              (Uneasily)
                         Will [[he be court-martialled]] [there 
                         be an inquiry, sir]?  

                                     CLIVE
                         [[Yes.]] [No, there won't. I'll see 
                         to that. Where is he now?]

                                     [[THEO
                         Will you give evidence?

                                     CLIVE
                         Have to.]]

                                     JOHNNY
                         [[What will happen to him?]] [Spud, 
                         sir? He's with his men. They're 
                         marching into London.]

                                     CLIVE
                              (Gruffly)
                         [[He'll be all right.]] [Did you see 
                         them?]

                                     THEO
                         [[When we crossed]] [Yes, we saw 
                         them come across] the Cromwell Road 
                         [[we saw them coming]]. The whole 
                         Army.  With bands.

                                     CLIVE
                              (To ANGELA)
                         Did you see 'em, Angela?

               JOHNNY nods.

                                     CLIVE
                              (To THEO)
                         How [[do]] [did] they look? Eh?

                                     THEO
                         [Well, Clive,] I must say, [[Clive]] 
                         [they]...

                                     JOHNNY
                              (Simultaneously)
                         [Oh,] They looked [[grand]] [OK]!

               From a great distance we hear the sound of military bands 
               approaching nearer and nearer.

               [[CLIVE points towards]] [They go to] where his house once 
               stood.

                                     CLIVE
                         They've cleaned up my place [[quite]] 
                         [rather] nicely.

                                     JOHNNY
                         (Looks) Oh!  They've built an 
                         emergency water [[supply]] [tank] 
                         too!

               They all cross the street. There is the low wall, with 
               'E.W.S.' and the life-belt, so well known to Londoners.  
               They lean on the wall.

                                     [CLIVE
                         I've been thinking this over all 
                         night. I don't want to get this young 
                         fellow into trouble. I think I'll 
                         invite him to dinner instead. Wasn't 
                         I just as much of a young fool as he 
                         is? Of course I was.

                                     THEO
                         Yes, but I wonder if he's going to 
                         be such a grand old man as you are.

                                     CLIVE
                         When I was a young chap, I was all 
                         gas and gaiters with no experience 
                         worth a damn. Now, tons of experience 
                         and nobody thinks I'm any use. I 
                         remember when I got back from Berlin 
                         in '02. Old Betteridge gave me the 
                         worst wigging I ever had. And when 
                         he invited me to dinner, I didn't 
                         accept - often wish I had. Yes, I 
                         think I will invite him to dinner. 
                         And he'd better accept, d'you know!]

               We see the huge tank of deep water where the house once stood. 
               The band sounds very loud and martial: they all listen.

                                     JOHNNY
                         [[They're coming this way.]] [Yes, 
                         sir, here they come.]

               [Sound of marching.]

                                     [[CLIVE
                              (Grunts restlessly)
                         Hm! Better go!

               THEO puts his arm round CLIVE.

                                     THEO
                         Isn't it all the same who's going to 
                         win this war: the old or the new 
                         Army?]]

               A little pause. CLIVE stays where he is. The sound of the 
               band and the rumble of the machines is very close. The morning 
               wind makes little waves on the tank. Suddenly CLIVE smiles.

                                     [BARBARA'S VOICE
                         ... promise to stay just as you are 
                         until the floods come... and this is 
                         a lake...]

                                     CLIVE
                              (Slowly)
                         Now here is the lake - and I still 
                         haven't changed...
                              (He shakes his head, 
                              his smile grows 
                              broader)
                         ... Hopeless!

                                     [JOHNNY
                         Sir?]

               The music blares out.

               Somewhere close by the New Army is passing[[: tanks, guns, 
               trucks, men, fast-moving... hard-hitting]].

               Pan from JOHNNY to THEO and finally CLIVE, who salutes.

                                                               DISSOLVE TO:

               Tapestry of opening credits.]

                                                                  FADE OUT:

               THE END