Joyce Barbour credited as playing...
Harriet
- Mary: Just because hundreds of years ago somebody knocked somebody else off a horse, George Bucket isn't good enough to speak to us. Well, he's good enough to fight for us. And when he comes back, if he still wants me to, I intend to marry him. And no-one's going to stop me!
- Lord Chaunduyt: I think she really means it.
- Harriet: There was a time when age entitled one to a little respect.
- Lord Chaunduyt: I think the young people are beginning to see through that one.
- Lord Chaunduyt: Besides, he's in the Army now.
- Harriet: You say that as if the Army were a monastery. From what I hear, it's not at all the same thing.
- Lord Chaunduyt: My dear Harriet, for a Tenant's Ball, one needs two things - money and tenants. We've none of one and very few off the other.
- Harriet: Of course there'll be a ball. No "Bouquet" ever became of age without one.
- Lord Chaunduyt: No "Bouquet" ever came of age in the middle of a world war.
- Harriet: That is not our fault.
- Lord Chaunduyt: I wonder.
- Lord Chaunduyt: The telephone!
- Harriet: Yes. I paid your account. I was tired of never being able to ring you.
- Harriet: As a member of a titled family...
- Mary: Oh, nuts!
- Harriet: I beg your pardon.
- Mary: All right, only don't let it happen again.
- Harriet: This is intolerable. Charles, you sit there stuffing yourself with toast while your child insults me.
- Lord Chaunduyt: Now, Harriet. I don't think Mary really meant to...
- Mary: Oh, yes I did.
- Harriet: Charles, tell me at once. Who am I? Or what am I?
- Lord Chaunduyt: Well, my dear Harriet, for the moment you're one of the old "Bouquets." But it rather looks as though very shortly, you'll be just an old "Bucket."