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18th-century England and Ireland viewed through the eyes of four beautiful high-born sisters - Caroline, Emily, Louisa, and Sarah Lennox, great-granddaughters of a king, daughters of a cabinet minister, and wives of politicians and peers.


#perioddrama #costumedrama #tobyjones #geraldinesomerville #bendaniels #alunarmstrong #serenagordon #Anne-Marieduff

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00:00A new age has been born, out of rebellion and bloodshed.
00:21I am of another time.
00:25I was raised in a different world.
00:27We were aristocrats.
00:32My lord?
00:34That is the most beautiful foot I have seen in my life.
00:38I will hear you contemplate marriage.
00:41Yes, your majesty.
00:47Marriage agrees with you?
00:49I wandered at first, but it's not at all alarming.
00:53I've outlived 12 of my children.
00:59At times, I feel I've lived too long.
01:02What do we have, Monsieur Rizzo?
01:07It is a considerable pleasure, Your Grace, to admire the fruits of one's own labour.
01:10And you consider this part of their schooling?
01:23Edward!
01:24Did you make it all yourself?
01:25Mr. Ogilvie helped me.
01:27Do you think I favour Eddie?
01:29He loves you so much, it's hard to avoid it.
01:32Will you come up and see me asleep, Mr. Papa?
01:36The world was beginning to turn, but we did not know it.
01:40And we clung blindly to notions of family honour and reputation.
01:45I am going to marry him.
01:48Oh, Emily.
01:50The scandal!
01:52What will people say?
01:54They will talk me over and say what they please.
01:58But it will not matter, because I shall be in France.
02:01With my children.
02:03And Mr. Ogilvie.
02:05He has left the army, Captain Napier.
02:08Really?
02:09Why?
02:09Not for any cowardly reasons, I'm sure of that.
02:12His heart will always rule his head.
02:15But you have never feared danger, Edward.
02:18If the cause is just, Mr. Papa, I welcome it.
02:20Nothing worthwhile is one without a price.
02:37Edward had found himself a wife in France,
02:39and I now had a grandson, also called Edward.
02:43They had returned to Ireland,
02:45to the house that my favourite son had loved as a child.
02:55Mama, may I play off the boat?
02:57Yes, of course, Eddie.
03:01But you'll have to be very careful with it.
03:05All right?
03:05The drawing rooms of Dublin
03:10were becoming increasingly unwelcoming towards my husband.
03:15I hold you fast, Your Grace.
03:16I hear you have yet to set up a stable, Mr. Ogilvie.
03:20I have no need for one, as I don't ride.
03:23My husband has not lacked the ability to ride,
03:26merely the inclination.
03:28There is inclination, Your Grace,
03:30and there is four.
03:33It is hard to imagine a gentleman who does not ride.
03:37Excuse me, Your Grace.
03:40My son William, now Duke of Leinster,
03:43remained as aloof as anyone.
03:50William.
03:51William.
03:51They will not accept me for what I am.
03:59And I will not change for them.
04:02The opinions of mediocre people.
04:05As long as we remain here,
04:07we are in the company of such people.
04:15You're leaving so early, Mother?
04:17You know your stepfather finds these evenings a trial.
04:20He makes little effort.
04:23Neither do you with him, William.
04:28We'll go to London, introduce him there.
04:31You think you will fare better in London?
04:33He'll be better respected for his abilities there, William.
04:37And perhaps less despised for his birth
04:39than he is here.
04:43Good night.
04:44Good night.
04:50Good night.
05:04Edgar.
05:05Come here to me.
05:05Edward.
05:06Your hair.
05:07You don't like it?
05:09What have you done to it?
05:12He looks like the Democrat he is.
05:14Mr. Papa.
05:15Oh, no, no, it doesn't matter.
05:27We've come to say goodbye.
05:29We're leaving for London tomorrow.
05:33Under the tutelage of my husband,
05:36Edward had learned to be open to new ideas.
05:39His travels in America and France
05:41had made him a firm believer in democracy.
05:44A new painting?
05:46It's Tom Paine.
05:48I, too, espouse the rights of man.
05:52Aye, I know.
05:55You're as defiant as ever, my dear.
05:59Edward?
06:03There's something we want to ask you.
06:06We've been thinking
06:07perhaps you could take little Eddie with you.
06:10Take him to London?
06:13It might be safer.
06:15I should like it of all things.
06:23If Pamela does not mind.
06:25Each time we part, I wonder if I shall...
06:30You must not worry.
06:33My weak, anxious mind.
06:35I shall write frequently.
06:37Be sure to tell us how the garden is doing.
06:40Oh, please do.
06:41I shall so miss the garden.
06:44And I shall have my dear aunts to keep an eye on me.
06:46I left for England with my husband.
06:59I was sure that with the support of my brother, the Duke of Richmond,
07:03he would find himself easily admitted into London society.
07:07Her grace, the Dowager Duchess of Leinster and Mr William Ogilvie.
07:12Perhaps playing Mrs Ogilvie would be more fitting these days.
07:18Sister.
07:19Brother.
07:23Mr Ogilvie?
07:24Your grace.
07:25I hear Edward continues to spread treason and rebellion.
07:29He only writes to me of his family, Charles.
07:32His wife is a raving Democrat.
07:34Her mother was once exceedingly refined.
07:37Now I hear she dines with a botanist and chemist,
07:40all mixed up, no regard to rank.
07:42It's a fashion in France.
07:43And Edward values character more than rank.
07:46Such is the power of example.
07:48Can he not remember we are at war with that country?
07:51The King's war, not ours.
07:54I do.
07:55Charles James.
07:58You are decidedly fat.
08:01He has so little care for his appearance.
08:04I have never cared for the affectation of appearance.
08:09Mr Ogilvie.
08:11Mr Fox.
08:12You still rail against the King.
08:15You will be declaring next that you admire the French for what they did to theirs.
08:19I do not condone murder.
08:21Do you condemn it?
08:23I have spoken against regicide in the House.
08:27But I do condemn the oppression of a population.
08:30Give the population its head and see what happens.
08:34You would plunge us into the chaos that is France?
08:37I deplore the excesses.
08:40I applaud the aims.
08:41You are a champion of the people, Mr Fox.
08:44You have my unqualified respect.
08:49Mr Ogilvie.
08:50My thanks.
08:55He says the lilies are in bloom.
08:58He is chief gardener and things flourish well.
09:01He crosses the line.
09:13My sisters Sarah and Louisa were aware of the transformations in Ireland.
09:23But as yet, their comfortable lives remained relatively untouched.
09:27You see it is your duty to defend the government.
09:32My duty as a landlord, yes.
09:34That's why I keep a regiment here.
09:35But you oppose the government on so many issues.
09:37Of course I oppose the damn fools.
09:40But there still are government.
09:41A small number of powerful men.
09:44Do you side with the United Irishmen, Lady Sarah?
09:48Do you take their part?
09:49Tom, you know I'm the king's most loyal subject.
09:53But I can see the justice in their cause.
09:57Fire brands, all of them.
09:59They call them croppies, you know, because they cut their hair short.
10:02No hair, no sense.
10:04You agree the country's mismanaged.
10:07The dispossessed suffer.
10:08It gets worse every day.
10:10Their numbers grow, Mr Connolly.
10:12What else can one do but defend oneself, then?
10:14We are loved by our tenants.
10:17We have nothing to fear.
10:25As always, my good sister Louisa thought that benevolence was the key to everything.
10:32It was inconceivable to her that her tenants, whom she cared for so zealously, should be anything but content.
10:45Their readily expressed gratitude when she entertained them appeared only to confirm her opinion.
10:53Your children are well, Richard.
10:55Growing like weeds, my lady.
10:56You enjoyed the supper?
10:57Indeed, my lady.
10:58I thank you.
10:59Would you say you are happy?
11:00On a night like tonight, I'd swear it.
11:03You ever think you want to be Richard?
11:05The body's not born that doesn't think that.
11:15I hear you are to be married.
11:17Yes, my lady.
11:18You have enough for your needs?
11:20As much as my man had before me.
11:22Well, look at the happy faces.
11:41If all landlords did their duty, there would not be this disaffection.
11:44Neglective duty is the root of the matter.
11:46The state of the country is the root of the matter.
11:50There is so much oppression.
11:52People seek redress.
11:54What sort of redress?
11:57No sort that they would speak off to you.
11:58Our nephew dances well.
12:26My tenants love him.
12:28You know he visits them in the fields, and his wife seems well-liked.
12:34I'm disposed to like her, too, but she has everything that is engaged for me.
12:47All early, early, all in the spring.
12:52The boards did whistle and the larks did sing.
12:56Spreading their doors from tree to tree.
13:00And the song they sang was of Ireland free.
13:04Well done, son.
13:06Not now.
13:08Not here.
13:10Music!
13:12I knew something of what was happening in Ireland, but too little of my son's true role in the imminent turmoil.
13:26He was being drawn ever deeper into the rebellion and consorting with its leaders.
13:32I must go in.
13:34Arthur?
13:35Edward?
13:36We can do it on our own.
13:38We cannot rely on the French anymore.
13:42Recruitment here goes well, strong, keen men with no experience of battle.
13:48But we hear nothing from Paris.
13:49Patience, Arthur.
13:50You and I have open eyes.
13:51Wives, lovers, family.
13:52We choose to risk them.
13:53But we draw on others.
13:54Poor devils with nothing but a life to lose.
13:55200,000 of them.
13:56Possibly more.
13:57All over the country.
13:58Waiting, training.
13:59Yes.
14:00We fed them hope.
14:01But a lot of people are not going to be able to do it.
14:02We can do it on our own.
14:03We cannot rely on the French anymore.
14:04Recruitment here goes well, strong, keen men with no experience of battle.
14:06You and I have open eyes.
14:08Wives, lovers, family.
14:10We choose to risk them.
14:12But we draw on others.
14:13Poor devils with nothing but a life to lose.
14:15200,000 of them.
14:17Possibly more.
14:18All over the country.
14:19Waiting, training.
14:20Yes.
14:21We fed them hope.
14:22But if we lose, they suffer.
14:24A school teacher's head sits at the end of a pike in Nace
14:27because someone said he was one of us.
14:29Now the sights like this bring patience.
14:31Don't let our enemy dictate our actions.
14:33It never promised to be easy.
14:36We'll renew our requests.
14:37We need the French.
14:41You should lead us, Edward.
14:46I'm relieved I do not.
14:50If the people are armed, does anyone save?
14:53It is so wicked to arm them.
14:55The government is oppressive.
14:57If the people rise up, it will not be surprising.
15:01Does the prospect of rebellion make you nerds?
15:04You forget I'm a soldier's wife.
15:06Train myself not to have nerves.
15:09Deuces.
15:11Do you not shiver like some ladies of our acquaintance?
15:15I regard the prospect with equanimity.
15:17Such a comfort to be calm.
15:20I believe I have always done what I should.
15:22I have an impression.
15:23I'm sorry.
15:24I have no idea.
15:25I do not know anything.
15:26You have no idea.
15:27I will have to worry.
15:28Yes, you are a stranger.
15:29Okay.
15:30All right.
15:32Did you receive the creel of turf I sent you last week?
15:36Yes, I did, milady. Thank you.
15:47One should be charitable. Is that not true?
15:51Even to the sacrifice of one's own amusements.
15:54I make no difference between class or creed.
15:58I count many of our tenants as friends.
16:00I think myself as Irish as they are.
16:02I just hope they agree with you.
16:22It's happening everywhere, Louisa.
16:24They deserve everything they get.
16:27There's been another burning at Wexford.
16:29The rebels stabbed a magistrate 24 times,
16:32left his wife for dead,
16:34poor wretch, threw her down the stairs.
16:35What sort of people could do such a thing?
16:37Your nephew's precious comrades.
16:41Edward is sympathetic to the cause, but...
16:43It goes further than that.
16:45It is rumoured he is a united Irishman himself.
16:48What makes him suppose he should change the world?
16:50I will not permit him to come here anymore.
16:52I doubt that he would care to.
16:54He is in danger.
16:55It is still only a rumour.
17:00Shall I lay the fire, my lady?
17:01No, not now.
17:15Perhaps it will be best for you not to come here anymore,
17:16aren't, Louisa?
17:17I must speak to you.
17:22Speak.
17:22You must give up this foolish, selfish...
17:35You think that what I'm doing is selfish?
17:38I have committed myself...
17:43You have committed yourself to Pamela, to your child.
17:46What will become of them if you are condemned as a traitor?
17:50You don't understand Pamela's courage.
17:53Do you understand what you ask of her, Edward?
17:57I didn't tell anyone I was coming here.
18:03Does your mother know anything of what...
18:05Do you think that this is easy?
18:07Easier for you than for those who love you.
18:09You put your cause before your duty to them.
18:12You don't believe in my cause.
18:15You are right.
18:16I can't believe in this better world you speak of.
18:20But I beg you, think of those nearest you.
18:24I can't explain.
18:26You choose not to.
18:28Whatever the price, I must pay it!
18:31I wish you could pay it alone!
18:38You hurt us all.
18:39Catty, run and tell your father.
19:04I wish to see him.
19:06Dad! Dad!
19:07Dad!
19:09You must pay the greatest attention.
19:17It is known to the authorities that pikes are being made.
19:22I will not ask you if you make them.
19:23I will not ask you if you store them.
19:25I warn you.
19:27I beg you to give them up.
19:30Who will feed your children if you are arrested?
19:33Don't reply!
19:35These pikes will be your ruin.
19:37The army grow near us daily.
19:39Give them up before it is too late.
19:44I am persuaded your father will see sense.
19:56Nine more.
19:57Promise me you'll come back safely.
20:08Okay.
20:09Edward was seeking support for the uprising from the French.
20:13Arthur O'Connor agreed to be his envoy.
20:18Be careful, Arthur.
20:20Be careful yourself.
20:21Mr. O'Connor never reached France.
20:26The rebellion was now beginning to encroach more dangerously on all our lives.
20:33Stand aside!
20:34What do you want?
20:34The house must be searched for arms.
20:36By whose permission?
20:37This gives us permission.
20:38Please, don't frighten us.
20:41Where's your husband?
20:41He's not here.
20:43You will find nobody here but defenceless women and children.
20:46Let us through!
20:47I cannot prevent you.
20:49Unarmed as I am.
20:50Stand aside.
20:52Nobody here has done you harm.
20:53And you must believe me when I tell you you have no enemies in this house.
20:57Where do your loyalties lie?
21:00With my husband, as I hope your wife is loyal to you.
21:04But tonight, my loyalty must lie with my children and I will not have them terrified out of their wits.
21:11My youngest has a fever and I have been nursing him all night.
21:14Now please, leave us alone.
21:20Tonight we shall.
21:22But we will return.
21:24Yes.
21:27I wish you good fortune.
21:32Come on.
21:57I wish you good fortune.
22:08Let's go.
22:38Oh, my lady, I thought you'd gone to bed.
22:54Did they know that Mr Connolly was away?
22:57My lady?
22:57Did they know that I was here alone?
23:00Who, my lady?
23:06Do you wish to go to bed, my lady?
23:08I can't go to bed.
23:11I can't.
23:14I can't sleep.
23:21Pamela, it's time for me to go.
23:25Now?
23:25Arthur's been arrested in London.
23:30I've been betrayed.
23:33I must go to the safe house.
23:37You may have to leave the country.
23:39I'll send word.
23:45Learning of Arthur O'Connor's arrest, I became even more concerned for my son's safety.
24:14I sought the assistance of my nephew, Charles James Fox.
24:25Charles James, how good of you to come.
24:29I took the liberty of visiting Arthur O'Connor in prison.
24:34Did he speak of Edward?
24:37He's gone into hiding.
24:39He's known to be a rebel.
24:42Will there be a rebellion?
24:44It's certain.
24:44Is there a chance there will win?
24:46Oh, it's remote.
24:49If only he were here and I could speak to him.
24:54I'll go to Ireland.
24:56I'll bring him back.
24:58Can you arrange a safe passage?
25:00You must give Mr. Ogrevy letters to Lord Clare, Lord Camden, all of them.
25:05We must ensure his safety.
25:06I'll ask my brother to write.
25:09My hopes and my heart go with you.
26:20Leave her here. Why are you taking them?
26:25Oh, my God, Lady Luisa.
26:27Don't shut up.
26:28Don't hurt me.
26:30Did you know about this?
26:35They showed the steward a list. I approved it.
26:38But I took care of them. I trusted them.
26:41Arrest in itself is not proof of guilt.
26:43They're servants, Luisa. Did you think they were friends?
26:45I looked after them. Inside my house and out.
26:49I wished them no evil.
26:53Why do they hate me?
26:54I want to paint.
27:12Edward.
27:24Edward.
27:29Mr. Baba.
27:29you will have been followed
27:40there's no one
27:40I too care
27:41come
27:45sit down
27:46you must leave Ireland
27:53now
27:54you don't know what that means
28:01please tell Mama
28:04oh for her
28:05it's unendurable
28:07Eddie
28:08they know
28:11yes
28:12they have documents which can execute you
28:15orders
28:18plans
28:19I see they do not catch me
28:20you do not listen
28:22your life is at stake
28:24I'm listening
28:29Mr. Connolly has spoken to the Lord Lieutenant
28:31your cousin Mr. Fox
28:33and your Uncle Richmond
28:34have also written to him
28:34and to the Chancellor
28:35now you may have safe passage
28:37from any port out of this country
28:38you
28:39Pamela
28:40your little girl
28:41all of your household
28:42I see the aristocracy
28:44has been working hard for my benefit
28:46this is your only chance
28:48it's not
28:48no
28:49let me speak
28:50we do not agree on the course you have taken
28:56that does not matter
28:56I care for you
29:01and for your mother
29:04I do not see how I can live with the absence of one
29:10and the sorrow of the other
29:12you taught me to do right
29:15to follow my heart
29:18come home
29:21no
29:23I'm too deeply pledged
29:27I cannot
29:29in honour
29:30desert
29:31walk by
29:44ran
29:46meow
29:48meow
29:54meow
29:56meow
29:57meow
29:58meow
29:59meow
29:59Let's go.
30:29You see, I have permission, but this is not permission.
30:57This is an order.
30:59You are allowed to leave.
31:01Allowed?
31:01I am told I must leave in ten days or I shall be arrested as a spy.
31:06Do you expect me to leave him?
31:08You must think of your child.
31:10And forget her father.
31:12Edward wanted you to go.
31:14He begged me to arrange a passport.
31:16Will you ignore his wishes?
31:20It would suit everyone to get rid of me.
31:23No.
31:25You mustn't think that.
31:30Do you think I should go?
31:33You must.
31:34It's best.
31:36It's best.
32:04It's best.
32:16No, no, no.
32:46No, no, no.
33:16No, no, no.
33:46No, no, no.
34:16No, no, no.
34:46No, no, no.
35:16No, no, no.
35:18No, no, no.
35:20No, no, no.
35:50No, no, no.
36:20No, no, no.
36:27No visits are allowed.
36:28We make no extraordinary demand.
36:31Simply that his grace may visit his brother and I may visit my nephew.
36:35Nothing would give me greater pleasure than to oblige you.
36:38It is in your power.
36:39It is in your power.
36:40It is in your power.
36:41My nephew is ill.
36:42My lady.
36:43Lord, no, no, no, no, no.
36:44Last night, Captain Ryan died of his wounds.
36:51Lord, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
36:52Lord Edward is charged with murder.
36:53Lord Edward is charged with murder.
36:54My orders are clear.
36:58Lord, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
36:59We must go to the Lord Chancellor.
37:04I could help you.
37:34I believe that my favourite son, my Eddie, should be languishing in jail.
37:40I still hope to secure his freedom.
37:43I've been all day at the palace.
37:46You spoke to the Prince.
37:48He sends his deepest sympathy.
37:51Sympathy?
37:54Will sympathy free my son?
37:57If the Prince of Wales were king, then...
38:00You said you would do everything in your power.
38:02And I have.
38:04But as things stand, I'm a clapperless bell.
38:10I shall ask my brother to speak to the king.
38:16My son was a traitor,
38:18and the head of our family would have to plead with the king for clemency,
38:23with no certainty of success.
38:26At least our name still counted for something in Dublin.
38:29God!
38:31God!
38:32God!
38:33God!
38:34God!
38:35God!
38:36God!
38:37God!
38:38God!
38:39God!
38:40God!
38:41God!
38:42God!
38:43God!
38:44God!
38:45God!
38:46God!
38:47God!
38:48God!
38:49My dear sister, you overestimate my influence.
38:52You have the support of the government and the ear of the king.
38:55Because I agree with them.
38:57I abhor and despise rebellion.
39:00I know.
39:01How can I ask favours for a traitor?
39:04Can you not forget he's a traitor and remember he's your nephew?
39:07What arguments can I use in mitigation?
39:10Our soldiers are being butchered.
39:12In all my sorrows, I've always had my family to support me.
39:19Until now.
39:20Can you not at least ask that this trial be fair?
39:24How important is the trial?
39:26Will he live to stand it?
39:28What?
39:29Why should he not live?
39:43He was shot on the shoulder.
39:46Why was I not told?
39:49What danger is he in?
39:53The wound it does not mend.
39:55Has the surgeon been sent for?
39:57Erghh.
39:59Erghhh!
40:02Erghhh!
40:03Erghhhhhh!
40:04Erghh!
40:05Erghhh!
40:06Erghhh!
40:07Erghhhh!
40:08You're doing more goods.
40:10F-Fif-Fifty surgeons.
40:12...
40:14Erghhh.
40:15Erghhh.
40:17Erghhhh.
40:18Ergghh!
40:19Erghhh!
40:20Ergh!
40:21Erghhh!
40:22Erghhh!
40:23Erg.
40:24Erghhh!
40:25Erghhh!
40:26Erghh!
40:27Can I hear you? Can I hear you from where you are?
40:36Shhh!
40:38Louisa.
40:52I am always in the wrong country.
40:57You need to eat.
41:13We have no time.
41:27The drunken raven shall walk.
41:33I'm just saying what you said.
41:35What can we do?
41:37What can we do?
41:39What can we do?
41:41What can we do?
42:45He kissed me.
42:49He smiled at me.
42:52He and William embraced each other.
42:57He asked after you and Mr. Ogilvie.
43:01He was content.
43:03He died in peace.
43:13I chose to believe my sister when she told me of Edward's peaceful end.
43:25What have they done to Edward's summer house?
43:41It's all broken.
43:43We'll see that it's mended.
43:45Such devastation.
43:49Edward loved this garden.
43:53It was more than a garden to him.
43:58It was a paradise.
44:00It was the world he wanted to create.
44:02I said to him once when he was still little that Mr. Ogilvie was Adam and I was Eve.
44:09And after that Edward always looked on this garden as the Garden of Eden.
44:18And as he dug and planted he was trying to create man's first uncorrupted home.
44:30He said that in the Garden of Eden there was no such animal as a duke or a lord.
44:36Edward was fond of that observation.
44:38He was always repeating it.
44:40Charles James.
44:58Good grace.
45:00Peace has been restored it seems.
45:02Peace?
45:03Well, unhappy quiet.
45:05What news of Aunt Emily?
45:07She writes with courage.
45:09I can't say how she feels.
45:11She thinks Lord Edward a martyr.
45:13We cannot deny his courage.
45:15One must deplore the waste.
45:17A young man throwing his life away.
45:18As you say.
45:19His education was his ruin.
45:21Did his beliefs come only from his education?
45:25I rather think they were part of his instincts for life.
45:29Instincts?
45:30Well, what good did they do?
45:32His intentions were honorable.
45:34He will be remembered.
45:35So will I.
45:37It's literal consolation.
45:39Do you contrive to amuse yourself now you're in retirement?
45:43We have our entertainments.
45:45A private life is not without its charms.
45:49I am quite a master of cricket.
45:51Cricket.
45:52Come and see us some evening.
46:01He's had his though.
46:03Maybe we have too.
46:04You can't be serious you're great.
46:06Aristocrats will always be of first importance.
46:09You go on I'll follow you.
46:23We wished to pay our respects to the mother of Edward Fitzgerald.
46:27His name and cause he fought for will be remembered for all time.
46:31For all time.
46:48You desire to feel old.
46:50I thought when I grow old I shall feel less.
46:57Age does bring peace.
47:01It does not.
47:02I feel things more strongly than ever.
47:05Did it bring you peace?
47:09Not yet.
47:10Don't count on it.
47:11Activity has been my refuge.
47:12You always wanted to improve things.
47:13I try.
47:14Louisa devoted the rest of her life to the education of those less privileged than herself.
47:35Sarah produced a dynasty of courageous soldiers.
47:41I have lived long, loved much, but I've come to rest now with my memories.
48:11I have lived long, loved, and I've come to rest now with my memories.
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