<P> Miss Tidy, a lady who shared the railway carriage with Jasper on his way up to Arcady, and a former paramour of Lord Flamborough, announces that she has in fact been there acting on behalf of the National Trust who want to preserve the house for the nation, meaning that life can go on as it was before in Arcady . It is interesting to note that in the original novel Arcady Hall was destined to become a Nuclear Research Establishment . </P> <P> Eventually, as Belinda and Matilda, the two unmarried daughters of Lord Flamborough, appear to have become bored with Jasper (just like Deirdre was), he meanwhile has come to realise that the woman he is most taken with is the shy spinster Miss Mounsey, the secretary for the department, who very obviously likes him, and admits' I don't find you a bore, far from it' . When it starts to rain, he embraces his true persona by retrieving the umbrella from the flowerbed . The story ends with Jasper and Miss Mounsey embracing on the platform at Arcady station . </P> <P> Much of the outdoor scenes were filmed at Oxburgh Hall in Norfolk . Some internal scenes were filmed at Chawton House in Hampshire, while the railway scenes were filmed on the North Norfolk Railway, in particular using Weybourne station as a substitute for the fictional Arcady station . </P> <P> Each episode is named after a 1920s song, from the Charleston era beloved by Lord Flanborough - "Yes Sir, That's My Baby", "I Wonder Where My Baby Is Tonight", "I Can't Give You Anything But Love, Baby" and "Ain't She Sweet". </P>

Where was love on a branch line filmed