- After his daughter weds, a middle-aged widower with a profitable farm decides to remarry, but he has problems choosing a suitable mate.
- Farmer Samuel Sweetland is a lonely old widower, especially after his daughter gets married and moves away. He is determined to marry again ,and he enlists the help of his housekeeper Araminta to pick a wife from the local single women. Is he destined to find true love again?—Col Needham <col@imdb.com>
- Samuel Sweetland, a wealthy widower farmer, decides to remarry. He hasn't got any particular woman in mind and asks his housekeeper, Minta, to recommend suitable women from the village. He courts the women on the list but nothing seems to work out.—grantss
- With the exceptions of his longtime live-in housekeeper Arminta Dench and his handyman Churdles Ash, middle-aged farmer Samuel Sweetland is ostensibly all alone in the world upon the passing of his wife Tibby Sweetland and the marriage of their only offspring, Sibley Sweetland. While Ash doesn't want another woman in the house, Samuel does wish to remarry; it was also Tibby's dying wish for him to do so. With Minta's help, Samuel puts together a shortlist of four widows or spinsters who would be potential wives, Samuel only fleetingly picturing them seated in Tibby's chair across the kitchen table from him. But just because they are on the list doesn't mean that they are suitable matches. If he opens his eyes, he could well find that wife a little closer to home in a person he truly loves, who would want to occupy that chair across from him.—Huggo
- After the death of his beloved wife Tibby, the prosperous farmer Samuel "Sammy" Sweetland marries his beloved daughter with the support of his loyal housekeeper Minta and his handyman Ash. Before dying, Tibby asks Sammy to marry again, and now he prepares a list of possible of names of single women to be his wife with Minta. However, he is successively rejected by the women he chooses, until he finds who really loves him.—Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- Tibby, the wife of Samuel Sweetland (Jameson Thomas) dies, and shortly afterwards his daughter marries and leaves home, leaving him on his own with his two servants. His wife had told him that he should remarry after her death, so he pursues some local spinsters who were at his daughter's wedding after he and his housekeeper Minta (Lillian Hall-Davis) make out a list of possibilities.
First is Widow Louisa Windeatt, but Sweetland is shocked and mad when she rejects his advances and says she is too independent for him. Next, he attempts to court Thirza Tapper, a nervous wreck who almost collapses when Sweetland proposes to her. She, too, rejects him because she says she has no need for a man, and he is furious yet again. He wanders outside as other guests arrive for her party. His bolshie servant Ash is helping at the party, wearing an ill-fitting coat and trying to keep his trousers up while doing his work at the party.
While the others are outside listening to some singers, Sweetland proposes to Mary Hearn, but she rejects him as too old, and then bursts into hysterical laughter when he angrily tells her that she is "full blown and a bit over."
Later Sweetland tells Minta that he is not going to finish the list of women because he is so dejected. He leaves the room and Ash returns and tells Minta what an embarrassment to men that Sweetland is by going around and practically begging any woman to be his wife. Sweetland overhears this and orders Ash to saddle his horse because he is going to try number four on the list, Mercy Bassett, a barmaid at a local inn. After he leaves, it is revealed that Minta is in love with him. Bassett rejects him too and he comes home dejectedly. Meanwhile postmistress Hearn and Tapper compare notes and Hearn decides she should marry him after all and she goes to his house with Tapper.
Having run through the women who have turned him down, Samuel sees Minta for the first time as more than a housekeeper and decides that she is the woman for him, if she'll have him. He tells her he has got used to being rejected and will not be angry if she rejects him, too. She accepts him and he tells her to put on the dress Tibby gave her. As she goes to the room, Hearn and Tapper arrive. Hearn says she is now willing to be his wife. Samuel says all should drink a toast to his wife to be and Hearn is sure it is her, until Minta comes down the stairs in an attractive dress. Hearn lapses into hysterics as Sweetland reveals that Minta will be his bride.
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Oberste Lücke
By what name was Die Frau des Farmers (1928) officially released in India in English?
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