If We Only Knew
If We Only Knew is a 1913 American drama film directed by D. W. Griffith and starring Blanche Sweet.[1]
If We Only Knew | |
---|---|
Directed by | D. W. Griffith |
Written by | George Hennessy |
Starring | Henry B. Walthall Blanche Sweet |
Distributed by | Biograph Company |
Release date |
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Country | United States |
Language | Silent English intertitles |
Plot
A wealthy couple leave their young child with a nanny while they attend a social event. While under the care of the nanny, the child wanders off into the yard and strolls down to the beach with her doll and gets into a boat. The boat drifts away out to sea and the girl is rescued by nearby fishermen who take her to their humble shack. Meanwhile, the nanny who was reading a book realizes the child’s disappearance and alerts the parents. When the parents arrive they find only the child’s bonnet and the doll’s stroller near the beach and assume the child had drowned.
Cast
- Henry B. Walthall - The Father
- Blanche Sweet - The Mother
- Harry Carey - The Sailor
- William Courtright - The Minister
gollark: Spirit brightening everyone's day as always!
gollark: It does not imply what you're implying it implies.
gollark: Like "well if the equations work similarly in some contexts that obviously means they're the same thing and very related!"
gollark: I'm sure you're going to say something stupid now.
gollark: It is, apparently, "a set of formal analogies between the equations for electromagnetism and relativistic gravitation; specifically: between Maxwell's field equations and an approximation, valid under certain conditions, to the Einstein field equations for general relativity."
References
- "Silent Era: If We Only Knew". silentera. Retrieved July 13, 2008.
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