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Rome, AD 9. Three Roman legions have been massacred in Germania at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest. Tiberius and Germanicus are dispatched to exact revenge. While Claudius is in the library researching his family's history, he is advised by the historian Pollio to play up his infirmities to enhance his place in his family as a harmless fool and thus no threat to anyone. Augustus has determined that Postumus will succeed him as Emperor, but Livia overhears this. She tells Livilla that she knows of her affair with Postumus and that a single ruler is needed to avoid a civil war caused by a disputed succession. With Livilla's help, Postumus is framed for rape. Postumus tells Augustus that Livia has been killing those who could prevent Tiberius succeeding, but he is not believed. Before he is banished, Postumus tells Claudius his (correct) suspicions of all the people whom Livia has killed and reiterates the advice that Claudius should continue to play the fool. The episode ends with Claudius' marriage to Plautia Urgulanilla, who is so much taller than him that he becomes the butt of his family's uproarious, mocking laughter at their wedding.

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00:00The Lone Ranger
01:15Myself, when young, not a pretty sight.
01:19Then back to wintertide again, where nothing stirs.
01:26But oh, whate'er the sky-led seasons mar, moon upon moon rebuilds it with her beams.
01:33Posthumus, Agrippa's sole surviving son, and my best friend.
01:38His mother, Julia, was banished, you may remember, and his two elder brothers died mysteriously.
01:45If the gods in heaven should add the morrow to the day...
01:52The golden-haired Apollo is Germanicus, my brother, already a great soldier.
01:57And if you wait a moment, you will see a creature of a different kind.
02:12Livilla, my sister.
02:15Yes, there she is, tormenting posthumous as usual, when her husband is away.
02:22Shall friend thee more.
02:32Oh, beautiful.
02:34Beautiful.
02:35Horace, my dear fellow, such language.
02:38Wonderful, wonderful.
02:40Well, weren't they lovely poems?
02:43Exquisite.
02:44Now that's what I call poetry.
02:46Of it.
02:47I mean, there's no comparison.
02:48It's better than of it.
02:49I don't care what they say.
02:51I've never liked that man.
02:52All right, his poetry is very beautiful, but it's also very smutty.
02:56A lot of it's downright indecent.
02:58Frankly, I wouldn't have him in the house.
03:01People say that he has a lovely voice.
03:03But I say, what does he do with his lovely voice?
03:05Talks a lot of smut.
03:06That's what he does.
03:10Ah, write poetry, yes.
03:14But, you know, write about nice things.
03:16Things that you'd like your children to hear.
03:19Now, I want a copy of the book when you publish.
03:21But, of course, Caesar.
03:22And before you go, I've got a little present for you.
03:24Oh, Caesar.
03:25It's nothing.
03:26It's a little gold statue.
03:27I found Etruscan, I think.
03:29It's solid gold.
03:30But you'll appreciate it more than anyone.
03:32No, no, no, no.
03:34Praxis?
03:35Praxis, where are you?
03:36Here, Caesar.
03:37He knows where it is.
03:38Now wait till you see it.
03:40Really?
03:42Yes, you must come again sometime.
03:49I was wondering how long it would take you to knock that over.
03:53Claudius, how can you be so clumsy?
03:55Leave this alone for heaven's sake.
03:57If you want to do the clearing up, we'll find you some work in the kitchens.
04:00Claudius!
04:01Hina, wake up.
04:06It's time to go home.
04:07It's time we all went home.
04:08What?
04:09Are you leaving?
04:10It's late.
04:11It's two hours after dark already.
04:12Yes, yes, you're right.
04:13And there's a lot of work to do tomorrow.
04:16As sleepy heads, a foolish one.
04:20What a poet that Horace is, eh?
04:22Well, Levilla, the whole family was here tonight except your husband.
04:27It won't do, you know.
04:28What can I do?
04:29Castor hates family dinners.
04:31Oh, I don't understand that.
04:32Tiberius, you must talk to that son of yours.
04:35You talk to him.
04:36He doesn't listen to me.
04:37Good night, uncle.
04:39Good night, my dear.
04:41And father.
04:42Good night, Germanicus.
04:43Good night, Germanicus.
04:46Good night, Peter.
04:53Good night, grandmother.
04:55That's my foot you're treading on.
04:57Are we going here?
04:58Sorry.
05:00Claudius, do come on.
05:05Ah, posthumous sire.
05:06Come and see those troops of yours tomorrow.
05:08How are they shaping up?
05:09Very well.
05:10There's some good material there.
05:11Good.
05:12Good night.
05:13Good night.
05:14Good night, everyone.
05:15Good night to me, dear.
05:16Good night, grandfather.
05:17Good night, little.
05:21Now you tell that husband of yours.
05:23You know what to tell him.
05:24Grandmother.
05:25Good night, my dear.
05:27You looked very lovely tonight.
05:30Good night, uncle.
05:33Good night, grandfather.
05:35Oh, good night, Claudius.
05:39Ah.
05:41What a wonderful evening.
05:43They're such good children.
05:47I, I think they like their little presents, eh?
05:49What are we going to do about Claudius?
05:52Oh, Claudius, what?
05:53What in the matter of what?
05:54In the matter of the games to be held in his father's honour.
05:57oh I don't know. I mean must we think about it now? well how much longer can we
06:02leave it? is he to sit in your box at the games or is he not? he might look a
06:06little odd if he doesn't. he might look even odder if he does. do you want to sit
06:10next to a twitching idiot all day? oh let's think about it tomorrow. good
06:14night my dear. now don't you worry about Claudius. I'll have him to dinner a few
06:18times and I'll see how he gets on. if we could just stop that twitching. Caesar
06:25forgive me but a courier has just arrived from Germany. are you mad? do you
06:31expect me to read dispatchers this time of night? but it's urgent Caesar. urgent.
06:34there's been a terrible disaster. send him in. come in. come in.
06:44is this the way you present yourself? couldn't you take the bath first? forgive me Caesar. I have
07:00ridden for four days I would not have presumed. which Legion are you with? I was
07:05with the 19th. was? have you been transferred? no Caesar. the 19th Legion
07:10does not exist anymore. nor is the 17th nor the 18th. the whole army of Quinctilius
07:17Varus was massacred in the Teutoburg forest. nothing stands between the
07:21German tribes and our provinces in Gaul. massacred? what are you saying to me? there
07:30there's no army in across the Rhine Germany. troops and orderlies auxiliaries and general
07:39staff massacred to a man. those who survived the battle were hunted down and killed. where is Varus?
07:47dead. when he saw that all was lost he killed himself three legions three legions Caesar there's nothing left
08:17they caught us here and here. we were on a punitive expedition because we'd had news
08:40that a tax collector and his staff had all been murdered. he sent three legions on a
08:46punitive expedition? not at first Caesar no. but we'd suffered some early defeats in
08:54raids so he sent back for the rest of the army. and what happened to the loyal
08:57Germans? they betrayed us sir. they led us into the forest and then vanished. but
09:03weren't you warned? many times Caesar. go on. we'd had a massive intelligence warning us that
09:18things were happening in the villages. go on. the commander ignored it sir.
09:25oh that stiff neck fall. i should never have appointed him. oh go on. we were advancing along
09:32our forest track. we didn't even put out advance guards or flank guards. our progress
09:37was slow because we were constantly felling trees and this gave the tribes time to gather.
09:40then it started to rain. the archers couldn't keep their bows dry and their leather shields
09:45became soaked and too heavy to carry. then our carts got stuck in the mud. when the Germans attacked
09:50we were in a hopeless position. what's happened? the armies of the Rhine has been destroyed. all of it.
10:04nothing stands between the Germans and our provinces in Gaul.
10:08how did you get out? only one officer kept his head. Cassius Caeria. he formed up about 120 of us and we
10:23cut our way out and back to the fort. the others are still there. all right. did the Germans take any prisoners?
10:30yes. they put them in wicker cages and burned them alive.
10:46lady i can't find posthumous agrippa. he's not in his room.
10:50well praxis did it occur to you he may have visited his wife's room? naturally i tried there
10:59but he wasn't there either. i then spoke to one of the palace guards who said he'd seen him earlier
11:04walking along the corridor towards your granddaughter's apartments.
11:09livela? yes. naturally i didn't inquire further because...
11:14because her husband has not yet returned.
11:22the men that posthumous has been trading on mars field it brings the number up to
11:25about a legion. it will do. it all depends then whether the Germans have seized the Rhine bridges.
11:30they won't have taken them yet. they're barbarians. they'll go for plunder and end up fighting each
11:34other. then we'll have to secure the bridges fast. i'll take a company and start tomorrow. i can raise
11:39the rest and bring them on. no germanicus stays here. when news breaks tomorrow there'll be panic here.
11:43i need him to deal with it. well it was here. it was years ago but i saw it. but it's been stolen from him.
11:53ah here is someone.
11:58there's a book we want to look at. it's by a greek called polemocles and it's a commentary on
12:03polyvius military tactics. it's not in the catalogue but it was here. i'll see if i can find it.
12:13why it's young claudius isn't it? yes it is sir. you seem very studious. what are you reading?
12:23romantic and rubbish overbound. that's all the young users library for. what is it that you're reading?
12:31it's your own history of the civil wars. it's rubbish all right. so you know who i am. oh yes sir.
12:39assinius palio. one of our greatest historians. one of them? what do you mean one of them? one of the two greatest.
12:53and who is the other one?
12:59their navy of course. well there can't be two greatest. that's just shilly sherry apart from being
13:05an abduce of the roman tongue. so we will have to choose. which one of us would you rather read?
13:09oh come polio. that's not fair. nonsense the less obviously intelligent. now speak up boy. which of us would you rather read?
13:17well i... depends. oh intelligent but cowardly. no i mean depends on what i'm heated for. for beauty of language i would read
13:29maybe. maybe. for interpretation of fact. i would read polio. now you please neither of us. and that's
13:39always a mistake. i wasn't trying to please. just the truth. he might make an historian after all. the book isn't here.
13:49perhaps you read it in the octavian library. i'm not so old young man that i don't know what library i'm in
13:54when i'm in. when i'm in it. excuse me. um um the book you want. it's on the top shelf. forth from the window. right at the back. i had it out the other day.
14:04only the title is dissertation on tactics. and it's by polemocrates not polemachies. and he was a jew. a lot of greek.
14:18you'd better be right boy. for i don't take kindly to that many corrections in one day.
14:31have i upset it? yes it'll do him good.
14:35do you like history? yes sir. but who the devil are you?
14:40let me call you claudius. i'm iberius claudius.
14:45closest near a manicus. oh that claudius.
14:49they told me you're a half-wit.
14:52well my fam is ashamed of me because i
15:00stammer and i'm lame and my head twitches.
15:04yes i i've noticed that. can't you stop it? no. the doctor said i'm...
15:11oh out of it.
15:14why were you reading my history of the civil wars?
15:17oh i'm gathering material for life of my father and father.
15:23oh i i remember them.
15:25they both believed in the republic.
15:28i know they did. that's why they died.
15:31i beg your pardon?
15:33i mean that's why they were poisoned.
15:39poison?
15:40shhh not so loud.
15:45i won't mention any names but i'll tell you this.
15:49if you say you're right in the life of your father.
15:53they won't let you finish it.
15:55no won't.
15:57never mind.
15:59look here claudius i'll give you some good advice.
16:02do you want to live a long and useful life?
16:05in that case exaggerate your stutter and your limp.
16:09let your wits wander and play the fool as much as you like.
16:14do you understand me?
16:16it's a pleasure to talk to you my boy. i must find living.
16:22poison.
16:24hmm.
16:25you know there's nothing quite like a piece of food picked fresh from a tree.
16:29or a field.
16:31or a stalk.
16:32it's very nice but you didn't ask me how to test the pigs.
16:38did you ever think how fortunate we are?
16:41i mean if we weren't born in a wattle hut on the banks of the Rhine
16:44or in a grubby little tent in Syria.
16:47did you ever think what Rome means?
16:50do you understand the effort that has gone into making this little place master the world?
16:56do you understand the work and dedication needed to maintain it?
16:59are you displeased with me grandfather?
17:03sit down.
17:05listen posthumous.
17:07we can't afford to sleep you know.
17:10other people they think only of their bread and their circuses but us now we have to provide them.
17:15i hear nothing but complaints about you.
17:19what sort of complaints?
17:20well all sorts.
17:22you threw a palace guard into the fountain the other day.
17:24he was laughing at claudius.
17:26well everyone laughs at claudius.
17:28what are you going to do throw them all in the fountain?
17:31and then people say that you're rude and bad-tempered.
17:33who says?
17:34well Livia for instance.
17:35i mean she complains about you all the time.
17:37what does she say about me?
17:39well she says for example and i've heard it from others that you're a bit of a rake.
17:43is it true?
17:45you know the night that the courier brought news from Germany i sent for you.
17:50yes.
17:52you weren't in your room.
17:55your wife complains that you don't sleep with her enough.
17:57i never wanted that marriage.
17:59you could sleep with her couldn't you?
18:01she's made the same as any other woman.
18:02it's for us to set an example.
18:04now without proper family life where we find the people to carry on.
18:10why has my inheritance from my father been withheld?
18:14that's what's bothering you.
18:17you get your inheritance when i think you're mature enough to use it.
18:20do i have to sit an examination?
18:22now don't be cheeky with me.
18:25now you listen.
18:27your father was my greatest friend.
18:28if anything had happened to me he would have taken over here.
18:31and that's what i look for in his sons.
18:34well both your brothers are dead.
18:36and you're you're all i've left of him.
18:38and it's my intention that you should follow me.
18:46my stepfather may not agree with you.
18:47oh you let me worry about Tiberius.
18:49you made him your adopted son as well as me.
18:51what am i to think?
18:52i need it out of respect for his mother.
18:53i mean she deserved it.
18:54she's an amazing woman.
18:55but for Tiberius i mean that's something else.
18:57we just don't get on.
18:58i've never liked him.
18:59in any way he's not right to succeed me.
19:01whatever Livia thinks.
19:02now i say succeed.
19:04but we are not kings.
19:06we have no divine right to rule.
19:08still after all my years of service to the state
19:11i think the senate will accept my recommendation.
19:14but you must earn it to understand.
19:16you must keep me confident.
19:24come.
19:32grandmother.
19:33you sent for me.
19:35grandmother.
19:36why do you deceive your husband every time either way?
19:50deceive?
19:51i don't understand.
19:53why do you allow posthumous agrippa into your room at night?
19:57but i don't.
19:58who said such a thing?
20:00come here.
20:08you're not gonna lie to me are you?
20:11you're not gonna treat me like a fool.
20:14do you think that i who know everything that happens in Rome
20:18wouldn't know what happens under my own roof?
20:20i've had you watched child.
20:23and posthumous agrippa.
20:26as i had his mother watched.
20:29your aunt julia.
20:31do you remember her?
20:34she was sent to an island called pandateria.
20:37it's a few minutes walk from end to end.
20:41but i shouldn't think she walks it much anymore.
20:45she's been on it for seven years.
20:47oh god.
20:50i didn't mean it.
20:52i didn't mean it.
20:53i won't ever do it again.
20:58don't send me away.
21:00please.
21:02please i won't ever see him again.
21:04i swear it.
21:17you're always a naughty little girl.
21:27you know that don't you?
21:30your mother never punished you enough.
21:32you won't tell agastus will you?
21:34he'll send me away if you don't.
21:36i couldn't bear it.
21:38perhaps that won't be necessary.
21:42oh come on dry your tears.
21:46come on.
21:52that's better.
21:55such a beautiful girl.
21:58i was beautiful too once you know.
22:02they say that you were the most beautiful woman in the world.
22:06there was one other.
22:09that she was in Egypt.
22:12and besides she didn't last as long as i did.
22:16that she was in Egypt.
22:19now.
22:21about posthumous a grip.
22:24you're not in love with him are you?
22:25no.
22:27he pestered you i suppose and you gave him.
22:30oh what frail creatures we women.
22:32he always wanted me.
22:34yes and you always enjoyed teasing him didn't you?
22:36oh yes you did. i've seen it.
22:39i swear to you i won't do it again.
22:41yes well let's not be in too much of a hurry to swear anything shall we?
22:47my dear i must talk to you like a grown woman now.
22:56can i talk to you?
22:59can i open my heart to you?
23:01oh yes grandmother yes.
23:04many years ago you know.
23:06before you were born.
23:08we all went through the terrible agony of civil war.
23:12rome tottered and shook.
23:15and nearly fell.
23:17i'm afraid that may happen again.
23:21and will it?
23:23i'm sure of one thing.
23:24only a single hand at the helm will keep this ship on course.
23:29now the question is whose hand will it be?
23:32if there is any doubt
23:33the rivalry will plunge us into civil war again.
23:37is there a doubt then?
23:40not in my mind.
23:42but there is in someone else's.
23:45augustus?
23:48yes.
23:50and it's my duty to remove that doubt.
23:54through everything i've ever done that has been my only object.
24:00and now it must become yours.
24:05how grandmother?
24:07you want your husband to become emperor of Rome?
24:12yes.
24:14then his father must become emperor before him.
24:18tiberius must succeed augustus.
24:21if castor is to succeed tiberius.
24:25only then will the line become established.
24:28it'll seem easier to accept it than reject it.
24:33and posthumous?
24:34bravo my dear you put your finger on it.
24:39yes.
24:41posthumous.
24:43as always
24:45we come back to posthumous.
24:53nothing.
24:55that's what it amounts to. he's done nothing.
24:57he holds bridges but he doesn't crush them.
25:00he's playing some game of his own. that's what he's doing.
25:04oh come in.
25:10what's that son of yours playing at?
25:11six months he's been out there and all he's got are the bridges over the Rhine.
25:14he just sits on his arse all day.
25:16what does he say?
25:17he says nothing. that's what he says. oh that's what he did at a mountain store.
25:21those damn barbarians have got my eagles.
25:23he's got my eagles.
25:24quictillius virus. where are my eagles?
25:27he's cautious naturally.
25:36damn his caution. i sent him out there to get my eagles back. not to sit on the banks of the Rhine for six months.
25:40he has an army of raw recruits. would you have him risk another ambush?
25:44well if he doesn't risk something he may as well have stayed here.
25:46he's playing some game of his own. that's what he's doing.
25:50that's a very childish thing to say.
25:52is it? then why doesn't he send my eagles back?
25:54he'll move when he judges the army ready to move.
25:57he'll move now.
25:58and i'll send posthumous a gripper with an army to make sure.
26:01i think that wouldn't be wise.
26:03i make the military decisions not you!
26:07there's no need to lose your temple.
26:10i would dream of advising you on such matters.
26:14i'm sure my son would welcome reinforcements.
26:17i question only the wisdom of sending posthumous.
26:19why?
26:20he's unproved and untried.
26:22why would you always say that?
26:24what if i always say that? it's because it's always true.
26:28he's the obvious person to send.
26:30he's been training recruits on mars field for months.
26:32training recruits and leading men into battle are not the same thing.
26:35how will he ever learn if he never does anything?
26:39his brother was governor of syria at 19.
26:42gaius was different. you had confidence in him.
26:45and so did the senate.
26:47gaius was reliable. he was a statesman.
26:49we all loved him.
26:51posthumous is totally unpredictable.
26:53besides, if you send posthumous,
26:56tiberius will naturally regard it as a criticism.
26:59god, that's what it's meant to be.
27:01i'm not sending him a new army to inquire after his health.
27:04but there's a history of mistrust and antagonism between posthumous and tiberius.
27:08i mean if posthumous arrives,
27:10tiberius will regard him as more of a spy than a support.
27:13he'll think you don't trust him.
27:15that's ridiculous.
27:18well haven't you already said you think he's playing some game of his own?
27:24if you want to avoid friction between the commanders,
27:28then i suggest you send germanicus.
27:34all right i'll send germanicus.
27:37but i want my damned eagles back!
27:43what's this?
27:44it's a biography if you please.
27:46well it's the beginning of one anyway.
27:47a biography of whom?
27:48by whom is more to the point.
27:50it's by my idiot grandson claudius.
27:52antonio found it in his study and brought it to me.
27:55you don't expect me to read it do you?
27:57no i'm gonna have it destroyed. it's subversive.
27:59i've told him on no account is he to continue with it.
28:02how is it subversive?
28:03he praises his father's only fault.
28:06his attachment to the republic.
28:11he's harmless enough.
28:13you don't want me to punish him do you?
28:14no.
28:16but i do want a decision on whether or not he's to sit in your box at the games.
28:21the games?
28:22and in honor of his father.
28:24if we send germanicus off to the rhine,
28:26neither of his sons will be in the box.
28:28i think he should be there but at the back.
28:30incidentally i hope you don't think i'm going to pay for these games.
28:32i've had a very expensive year.
28:34if you feel like that about the games we didn't have them at all.
28:36i don't feel like that about the games.
28:38i just feel like that about paying for them.
28:40well nobody's asking you to pay for them.
28:43yes well as long as that's understood.
28:45well was it ever in doubt?
28:47antonio and i will pay for the games.
28:51and germanicus and claudius.
28:53claudius?
28:54well that's even more reason why i should be in the box.
28:56it'll be a very expensive seat by the time he's finished.
28:58why we're on the subject of claudius?
29:00now when is he going to get married?
29:01he'll be married at the end of the year.
29:03oh you said that last year?
29:04yes well he seemed to get worse last year so i put it off.
29:07you sure this girl will marry him?
29:09what's it got to do with her?
29:11they were betrothed six years ago and that's that.
29:14well to be honest with you i feel sorry for her.
29:17what's she like?
29:18i don't know.
29:19i haven't seen her since she was 13.
29:21does she know what she's getting?
29:22do any of us?
29:23look.
29:24you've left these matters to me for the last 30 years.
29:28are you going to start interfering in them now?
29:31i was asking a question that's all.
29:33can't i ask a question anymore?
29:34what's the matter with you today?
29:36why are you so bad tempered?
29:37it's you the bad tempered.
29:39it's you the bad tempered.
29:40your temper gets worse by the day.
29:42everybody notices it.
29:44i think you could do with a rest.
29:47a long one.
29:52quintilius varus.
29:53where are my eagles?
30:07we are looking forward to getting a second.
30:08i have a question.
30:09one more time.
30:11i can't wait longer to get on here.
30:13and we are sorry to hear what's going on.
30:15we are thinking about a bit of a race before us.
30:17but there are no people.
30:18who are thinking about that not good job ever?
30:19who are thinking about that?
30:20i know not bad luck.
30:21i know not bad luck.
30:22but there's no people we are going on.
30:23i can't wait.
30:24you can see.
30:25i know i was going to be a little bit of a race.
30:28because you got to be a little bit of a race.
30:30but i can't wait for five years.
30:31i can't wait for a race.
30:33i can't wait until i can see pool.
30:34Tordius, not there.
30:43Those are the imperial seats.
30:48You sit behind.
30:51Here, with Herod.
31:04Your nose has run.
31:20Just look at them all.
31:22They can't wait to see the blood start flowing.
31:25I've never seen a sword fight before.
31:28I wish Humanicus was here.
31:31Look at them.
31:32Stuffing themselves with cakes.
31:34Well, down below, their fellow men are preparing to die for their enjoyment.
31:37Oh, Herod.
31:38I hope you're not going to spoil it all.
31:40My dear Claudius, I'm fascinated.
31:43I never cease to wonder at these spectacles.
31:46Its origin is religious.
31:49It's a religious right.
31:54It's not really.
32:00It's an honour.
32:01The end of the spirits of the dead.
32:04They're rendering more people dead.
32:06How noble.
32:07Shut up, Herod.
32:09You're a...
32:09You.
32:10You don't understand these things.
32:12Besides, Mother will hear you.
32:14I have two words to say to you before these games begin.
32:31I have two words to say to you before these games are being held in honour of my son, Drusus Nero, who is worth the whole lot of you put together.
32:52It's my intention that these games shall be remembered long after you're all dead and forgotten, even by our nearest and dearest.
33:02You're all scum and you know it, but you've a chance here, some of you, to prove that you're a bit more than that.
33:09And for those whom death doesn't liberate, there'll be plenty of freedoms handed out afterwards, to say nothing of gold, plate and coin.
33:19But, I want a good show.
33:27I want my money's worth.
33:29I don't want any kiss-in-the-ring stuff.
33:34And I don't want my family watching two grown men pussyfooting round each other for half an hour before one of them aims a real blow.
33:40There's been too much of that in the past.
33:43And don't think you can fool me either, because I know every trick in the book, including the pig's blood in the bladder, to make it look as if one of you's dead.
33:51There's been too much of that too lately.
33:52Anyway, these games are being degraded by the increasing use of professional tricks to stay alive.
34:02And I won't have it.
34:05So put on a good show, and there'll be plenty of money for the living and a decent burial for the dead.
34:12And if not, I'll break this guild up.
34:17And I'll send the lot of you to the mines in Numidia.
34:22Let's go live, Pastor Sage.
34:52this is not a comedy theater that happened to me once do you remember Lydia no I don't did you
35:10know which games was it at I don't remember what was it at the races the gladiators are saluting
35:17hey
35:47calm down for heaven's sake. I'm crying. it's one of them who's about to die and they look more relaxed than you do.
35:56Drusus would have loved this. yes. I was thinking of him. I'm sure he's watching my dear.
36:04poor Drusus. I'm sure the fat one's going to win.
36:08how about a little bed Heroday? I'll take the fat man for 20 gold pieces.
36:13Caesar would be against my religion to bet on the life of a man. oh really? I wouldn't have thought it was against your religion to bet on anything.
36:20Caesar it's true. the jews love gambling. but they fear their god more. which one? we have only one Caesar.
36:27I've never understood that. it's quite insufficient. you could have some of ours you know. lots of people do.
36:33believe me Caesar. the one we have is hard enough to live with. but on second thoughts. I'll take the bet.
36:41good man. finish him! finish him!
37:11it's all right. I'll see him home.
37:15it's all right. I'll see him home.
37:18probably let's keep on doing that later for a few minutes.
37:22I love you governor of America only
37:27but I'll be with him prepared to
37:30for the first round. the difference I told the name of countries.
37:34I know however this has been part of
38:23Posthumous.
38:27Where's your husband?
38:32He's gone out in one of his usual jaunts.
38:36I don't know.
38:38That's all I could do to stop touching you at the games today.
38:42And then he went mad.
38:44Oh, poor darling.
38:46Oh, poor darling.
38:56I'm doing a lot.
39:06I'm dying.
39:08I'm dying.
39:10I'm dying.
39:12I'm dying.
39:14I'm dying.
39:16Murder! Murder! Stop it!
39:43Stop it! Help me! Stop it! Help me!
39:48No, please! Oh, no! No!
39:53Help! No, don't! Don't help!
39:58He tried to rape me! Give him away!
40:02You bitch! You filthy bitch!
40:06What are you? Some kind of animal?
40:14It's a lie. Can't you see? The whole thing's a lie!
40:17Beast! Look at her! She's terrified!
40:19She invited me into her room!
40:21I didn't! He climbed over my balcony and attacked me!
40:24Don't you expect me to believe she'd invited you to her room with her husband a few doors away?
40:28She told me he'd be out!
40:30You filthy pig! Stop it! Stop it!
40:35Wait outside!
40:37I suppose you'll tell me that this isn't your dagger!
40:40Yes, it's mine, but she could have got at any time.
40:42She and Caster dine with us often enough.
40:44What would you take me for?
40:45Would you expect me to believe that she tricked you into coming into her room
40:48so she could falsely accuse you of rape?
40:50And for what reason?
40:52Well, tell me!
40:54Ask her.
40:59Perhaps she knows.
41:00I'm asking you!
41:01He'll incriminate us all before he's done.
41:03She hates me and you're so blind you can't see it!
41:06Hate you? What do you mean, hate you?
41:08She hates me as she hated my brothers and my mother.
41:10She hates anyone who might come between you and her precious son!
41:14What is going on here?
41:16What is he saying?
41:17Oh, grandfather, open your eyes!
41:19Throw off the blinkers!
41:21For years everyone around you has either died or disappeared!
41:23Do you think it was all an accident?
41:26My father Agrippa, and before him Marcellus,
41:29my brothers Gaius and Lucius,
41:31my mother Julia, now me!
41:33Oh, can't you see?
41:34She's clearing a path for herself!
41:36And that other son of her, Drusus,
41:38whose revered memory she honours in those games of hers.
41:40Ask her how he died!
41:42There was nothing wrong with him till she sent her personal physician to treat him!
41:47No sense.
41:48A grepher?
41:49What does he say?
41:50What is he?
41:51Some kind of raving lunatic?
41:52What does she think?
41:53That they were all murdered?
41:54Are you insane?
41:55Oh!
41:56Or is it just that you want me to think you are?
41:57Yes!
41:58Oh, you're very clever!
41:59Oh!
42:00You think that by pretending to be mad, that I'll be lenient with you?
42:02You think a show of insanity will move me?
42:03And I'll put you away somewhere in the care of a doctor!
42:04You're disgusting!
42:05Do you know something!
42:06I don't care.
42:07Vomit off the street and talk to you!
42:08Oh!
42:09Vomit off the street, and talk to you!
42:12Oh, what?
42:13You think that they were all murdered?
42:15Do you think that they were all murdered?
42:16Are you insane?
42:17Oh!
42:18Or is it just that you want me to think you are?
42:19Yes!
42:20Oh, you're very clever!
42:21You think that by pretending to be mad, that I'll be lenient with you?
42:25You think a show of insanity will move me!
42:27And I'll put you away somewhere in the care of a doctor!
42:30You're disgusting!
42:31it's incredible isn't it it's too horrific even to think about it I have to
42:39be mad even to mention it what a joke what a pathetic joke well can't you see
42:51it's not me that's mad it's her look at it she's a mad woman she'll destroy us
42:57or before she's finished you include it I could kill you now spill your guts on the
43:11floor and give you no more thought than I would a dog killed on the road but that's
43:14too easy for you you're gonna suffer like your mother suffers here living out your
43:22life on a rock somewhere with nothing but birds for company and it won't be on any
43:26that you'll find a map because they're all too big for you but I'll find one don't
43:31worry just your size and you'll stay there till you rot God take him away and keep
43:42him under arrest are you all right I feel unclean no my dear it's him that's unclean not you
44:04tomorrow you you and I'll go to the temple make a sacrifice together you'll feel better
44:14I'll go to the temple make a
44:33they're searching for me in the grounds they'll find me soon
44:49I have much time just listen well he slipped the guards they're searching
45:01the palace for him if he runs to the ends of the earth you'll find a Roman or a
45:07friend of Rome ready to give him up don't take your wife to bed
45:15and cast to be nice to her get in beside her that's your place if you've been
45:20there more often instead of carousing around town none of this might have
45:23happened
45:33and you really think my grandmother put Livia up to it I'm certain of it
45:40I'll go now if Livia knows I've been here your life won't be worth much
45:45but I wanted you to know I wanted you above all to know the truth and I want
45:49your monarchers to know when you return I don't like to tell you but listen stay alive
45:53don't give them any excuse to kill you
45:57I'm sorry I won't be at your wedding
46:03oh don't worry it'll be a very small affair
46:06I haven't asked them all far too much
46:09good go on embarrassing them
46:11go on playing the idiot it's safer that way
46:24do you know somebody else said that to me a while ago
46:27as in yes
46:28then we're not the only ones who know what's going on here
46:32goodbye old friend
46:37goodbye old friend
47:07David, David, David!
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