In this short scene, we get a glimpse of what it's like to be a young woman in her mid-thirties. We learn that she's a bit of a rebel, and that she doesn't want to be associated with her father's "bard hill" anymore. She's also a little worried about what's going to happen to her sister, Alice, when she gets back to the house. Alice's worried that her brother-in-law, William Clinton, is still talking about her novel, and she wants to know what he's up to. She asks him what he wants to do, and he tells her that he wants her to marry him. He also tells her not to worry about what her father thinks of her, because he'll make sure that she gets what she wants.
In this short scene, we get a glimpse of what it's like to be a young woman in her mid-thirties. We learn that she's a bit of a rebel, and that she doesn't want to be associated with her father's "bard hill" anymore. She's also a little worried about what's going to happen to her sister, Alice, when she gets back to the house. Alice's worried that her brother-in-law, William Clinton, is still talking about her novel, and she wants to know what he's up to. She asks him what he wants to do, and he tells her that he wants her to marry him. He also tells her not to worry about what her father thinks of her, because he'll make sure that she gets what she wants.