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#Period Drama #Psuchological Horror
#Adventure #Drama #Horror #Thriller
Transcript
00:28Transcribed by ESO, translated by —
00:39I'll trade my salt pork tonight for another watch if we don't see it.
00:43Henry Lloyd sawed by those hummocks at Four Bells.
00:47What told him it was Lieutenant Gorsbehr and not another?
00:50All the Lieutenant's medals.
00:52I plan to ask Lieutenant Leviscon for duty in the hunting blind once it's built.
00:57I'd like another shot at the thing.
00:59Robert Ferrier says you didn't see it at all. Only Mr. Goodsir saw it.
01:03That Marianne doesn't know what he saw.
01:08We thought it was the bear in front of us.
01:14It's the ice, Georgie. It's only the ice.
01:19What's it like to shoot a man?
01:21Shooting a man's more fun when you mean to do it. I'll tell you that.
01:32You've a gift for that.
01:33My man was a dressmaker.
01:35Cage crinoline.
01:37I saw a knickerbocker suit.
01:39But she never taught me to tail her for no...
01:42...headersky muck.
01:54It's all of it, eh?
01:56The girl. She's shoving off.
01:58They want her to take everything with her.
02:00Girl on a boat.
02:02Here.
02:04That's spooky.
02:11Call him back.
02:14There's something more in here.
02:17Slip it out.
02:29Check for more.
02:31I suppose it's ivory.
02:34There's another one here.
02:37Man's got charms falling off him like a plum tree, Mr. Goodsir.
02:44Put them back inside.
02:51How would he fit in his coffin like that?
03:07I have the, um...
03:09...her father's personals, sir.
03:17She'll be happy to be on her way now.
03:28They say she talked up a storm until her father died.
03:35Now she's all silence.
03:38I'm sorry, Dad.
03:41That's...
03:42...all there is.
03:45I did put some supper in there for you, though.
03:56Condolences.
03:58Lady Silence.
04:20Wait him and get on with it.
04:24I don't understand this.
04:26This is something Sir John approved.
04:28Aye, Mr. Goodsir.
04:29Little lad he was.
04:30He shouldn't plug it up.
04:32And I need to suggest, might it be more appropriate to cut the man his own hole?
04:36A more appropriate hole?
04:38With respect to Eskimo's custom.
04:42It's a native belief the body retains sensation even after the soul departs, according to Dr. McDonald's account.
04:52Having yourself handled his corpse, is it your opinion he retains sensation?
04:57Yeah.
05:14Oh.
05:15Oh.
05:18Oh.
05:20Oh.
05:22Oh.
05:22Oh.
05:23Oh.
05:23Oh.
05:24Oh.
05:32I don't know.
05:57I don't know.
06:32I don't know.
06:35I don't know.
06:35You're a prisoner, Edward.
06:36The Eskimo man's tongue was hacked off.
06:39We don't know why.
06:40Say it was punishment.
06:41If that's how they punish one of their own, then what must they do to...
06:44Breakfast is ready.
06:46Drops in my coat.
06:47I'm leaving for Erebus.
06:49No escort is necessary.
06:51You have nothing to fear, Lieutenant.
06:53Girls' people are far too busy staying alive to wage a war.
06:57Let's go.
06:58Let's go.
07:14Let's go.
07:15Let's go.
07:19You're welcome.
07:22Let's go.
07:28You're welcome.
07:34What plans have you made, Sir John?
07:38All kinds of plans, of course.
07:41In case the ships are ice-locked?
07:44Oh, we are amply provisioned for three years and up to five with strict rationing.
07:49Your rescue plan.
07:51What is your rescue plan?
07:52Oh, better John Ross blame an unyielding North than own up to his poor captaining.
08:00If the Arctic bedeviled him, why should it open to you? That's his thinking.
08:06Come over here, darling.
08:09What is it?
08:11Does it sing?
08:13Chatters.
08:14Meet Jacko.
08:16Oh, God.
08:23Darling, that monkey is female.
08:26Oh, is it?
08:28I have followed every Admiralty protocol.
08:32There'll be nothing.
08:34You hear?
08:36Nothing lives there.
08:38Nothing grows.
08:40You'll eat your shoes again.
08:42You'll eat worse.
08:43We've been misunderstood, darling.
08:46John Ross isn't the only one.
08:49Van Diemen's land was a horrible blow.
08:52You know, I won't allow another man to play politics against me ever again.
08:57I was a good governor, Janie.
08:59You were an excellent governor.
09:01It's just that history was given a different story.
09:05Death is slow in the great white nothing.
09:08And 134 starved men will turn devil against you, starting with the ones you hold closest.
09:16But in two years, when you return from the passage, no one will misunderstand us, John.
09:23You will have bested them all.
09:33I'll be giving a divine service tomorrow.
09:36Mandatory for both ships.
09:38Tell the men, will you?
09:41Oh, except for the men of the blind.
09:44They're to keep their focus on hunting the bear.
09:59May I come in, sir?
10:01I would presume to ask if it weren't important.
10:07If you must.
10:33And in Jacob's dream, he saw the invisible world,
10:36so immense, it would have to leave.
10:41Yes?
10:42I have leave from the frame of Canada and live.
10:46And you received to their rank South Wright brother,
10:49Lieutenant Graham Gore.
10:52My condolences, Sir John.
10:54Amongst everything else, I know you more than a friend.
11:01I apologize for the timing of this request,
11:04but its virtue is in its speed.
11:09I'd like permission to send a sledge party out.
11:13South.
11:14Not for leads this time.
11:17For rescue.
11:19Where?
11:21The Hudson Bay Company outpost on Great Slave Lake.
11:25If the party leaves now,
11:27they'll have three full months to get there
11:28before winter comes in force.
11:31That is 800 miles, Rout says.
11:35Oh.
11:37I do not grant permission.
11:45At least, Tony, you understand why I'm suggesting it.
11:51You are suggesting it because you are a man who's happiest with a glass of knock-me-down in one
11:57hand
11:57and an alarm bell in the other.
12:06I'm suggesting it because if this cold continues
12:11and we find ourselves overwintering again in this ice,
12:15help must already be on its way come spring.
12:18If we are to survive,
12:20I'd rather send out eight men now for a long, unnecessary walk
12:24than risk a necessary one for all of us in a year.
12:29I will not allow it.
12:31What signal would that send to the men?
12:34It's not the men I'm concerned about signaling.
12:37No one knows where we are.
12:40That is how you already see us.
12:42In need of saving.
12:44I do.
12:45Yet your prediction last year
12:48about the terrifying winter we'd spend in the pack
12:51did not come true.
12:52Not to the degree I feared,
12:53but that will change
12:54should there again be no thaw.
12:58It is a captain's duty, after all,
13:00to mind for the worst case,
13:02not for the one he hoped to.
13:04Now, I must hear you instruct me
13:07in a captain's duties.
13:12There's only eight men, Sir John,
13:14and there is just enough time.
13:24I have lost six men on this expedition to date.
13:30Six.
13:31And you asked me to risk more than doubling that number,
13:34trekking over distant ground
13:36where you know I have lost men in years past.
13:39Have you known more of this?
13:40I will not lose another man, Francis.
13:43We may lose all our men.
13:46That is what my alarm is ringing now, Sir John.
13:49And I'm at a loss while yours is not.
13:57You are the worst kind of second-fathers.
14:03You abuse your freedoms.
14:05You complain in the safety of speculation.
14:09You claim foresight in disasters that never happen,
14:12and you're weak in your vices
14:14because your rank affords you privacy and deference.
14:19But you've made yourself miserable
14:21and distant and hard to love,
14:23and you blame the world for it.
14:26I'm not the sailor you are, Francis.
14:29Never will be.
14:29But you will never be fit for command.
14:32And as your captain,
14:34I take some responsibility for that,
14:38for the vanity of your outlook.
14:40I should have curbed these tendencies
14:42rather than sympathized with them
14:43because you seem to have confused
14:45my sympathy with tolerance.
14:47But there is a limit to how much I can tolerate.
14:50And that is where we are presently standing.
14:58There are some things
14:59we were never meant to be to one another.
15:02I see that now.
15:04Friends on my side.
15:08Relations on yours.
15:11So let us turn our energies back to being
15:13what the Admiralty and life have seen fit to make us.
15:17We should give that our best.
15:19There can be no argument between us there.
15:24Now you must excuse me.
15:26I have a service to finish writing for tomorrow.
15:29It will have to act as the only eulogy
15:31our boy Graham will be given out here.
15:35And I intend it to sing.
15:44I don't know.
16:22Put together a list, our eight most able men.
16:26Sir John had reason, then.
16:29I'll make certain the blame falls on no one's shoulders but my own.
16:33Proceeding with this won't be considered...
16:36Weeks to engineer some way to change his mind.
16:40We don't have weeks. We may not even have days.
16:43Lieutenant Livell will never agree to it.
16:45He won't have to.
16:46I'll lead the party myself.
16:49With my presence, the other members of the team can say they were coerced.
16:53I'll tell them it's a hunting party at first.
16:56The act won't impugn them.
16:58And if we were to meet Eskimo along the way, I can converse our needs and gain help in that
17:03manner.
17:04And send me in your place.
17:06I can speak native as well as you.
17:08You must stay.
17:09To read the ice.
17:11If leads open up.
17:12And as for Dr. MacDonald...
17:15I'll not take a doctor from the men.
17:17But you're the captain.
17:21There's a spare captain on Erebus.
17:25You'll be despised.
17:27So John will have you ahead.
17:29And if he doesn't call for it, the Admiralty certainly will.
17:33They can have it.
17:35After I build us a road out of here.
17:38And what of the terror?
17:42Make me that list, Thomas.
17:44I plan to leave instead of last watch.
18:00Write it down this time, Mr. Diggle.
18:03In order to heat your soup, you must first heat your stove.
18:06Thank you for sharing the extent of your knowledge as a cook, Mr. Wall.
18:10But I'd never hazard the wreck of your kitchen unless pressed by a dire consequence.
18:15Dire consequence?
18:16There's much here for you to marvel at.
18:19Just look how happy my men are.
18:20Oh, I marvel.
18:22But about something more intriguing than you.
18:24What on earth are you up to?
18:28I'm concerned about the number of terrors can provisions turning up spoilt.
18:33And I'm here to inquire if Erebus is seeing the same.
18:36I've discovered bad seals, grey meat, and odors that curl my hair.
18:41Now, in the event you've already developed a method for handling a problem,
18:45I hope you can set aside your envy and share it.
18:48Otherwise, I thought we might together invent a solution.
18:55Add salt.
19:12Man approaching.
19:14Man approaching.
19:22Addies.
19:43Addies.
19:44Egon out of a job.
19:45Although, that layabout couldn't catch a rat if it fell asleep in its mouth.
19:51It's meant to be a lap dog, not a cat.
19:54Or maybe a small pillow.
20:12Tell Irving.
20:14I was hoping we'd meet.
20:16Might agree, sir, sir.
20:19I wanted to thank you for your help.
20:22For your discretion, I mean.
20:25Call it anything but help, Mr Hickey.
20:27Please.
20:30I exercise clemency for a man abused by a devious seducer.
20:35That it also benefited you is a sin in itself, I'm sure.
20:38A devious seducer?
20:40Yes, Mr Hickey.
20:42Mr Gibson told me everything.
20:45Are you pressed him into service?
20:48Threatened to expose him should he ever refuse you?
20:50I pressed him.
20:53You laugh.
20:56Turn your wolf here to me now and here.
20:59Or the next piece of counsel you'll be given on the subject may come from the end of a cat
21:03and nines.
21:06We are separated here from the temptations of the world.
21:13I'd see a man can find spiritual benefit in the collective.
21:20It's no accident the world was reborn clean out of an ark, Mr Hickey.
21:24Man's worst urges can be satisfied through Christian pleasures and graces.
21:28Singing with friends.
21:31Watercolours.
21:31Study.
21:32Climbing exercises.
21:34Climbing, sir.
21:35Your crisis is an opportunity for you to repair yourself.
21:39You are in the world's best place for it.
21:43Do you think so?
21:46God sees you, Mr Hickey.
21:49Here more than anywhere.
22:06I understand you've cleared up our association for Lieutenant Irving.
22:16You spoke to him.
22:18Hmm.
22:19Directly.
22:22Christ Cornelius had reassured him.
22:25Cornelius Hickey is a devious seducer.
22:29That was your, was your reassurance.
22:32You've got some face.
22:34You know that.
22:38We were within an ace of getting called out in front of all the men.
22:42Whipped for it or worse.
22:44You're right if he weren't such an anchor like he would have been.
22:48So just keep your foot out of it now, please.
22:51And let the get the whole thing.
22:52He's so assured he wants to.
22:54To think you were such a good wife to me all these months.
22:57Oh, God to hell.
22:59We've had our beer and skittles, but your tastes are no rule for mine.
23:03Huh.
23:03Oh, no.
23:04Huh.
23:05Is that why I've seen more of your poster than your face this winter, Billy?
23:09Hmm.
23:10Huh?
23:11Do you know what copulates in this ship?
23:15Rats.
23:18Nesting in our rubbish, swimming in our filth.
23:20Devouring each other just to make more rats.
23:22Well, I am not a rat.
23:26I'm a man.
23:30A delightful, God-fearing man.
23:35So I had to choose.
23:37No one is out here for the view, Cornelius.
23:40My standing with command is more valuable than my standing with you.
23:42I know you of all people will understand that.
23:45Now, if this is what I need to say, then I will say it.
23:49It's not personal, but it is finished.
23:53So don't be pettish.
23:56I haven't done you down as you so think.
24:00I've just made it so that we can both keep our skins.
24:06Please.
24:18You've sketched out the ladder.
24:20But...
24:20You've got me on the wrong rung, Mr. Gibson.
24:23What does that mean?
24:26Captain Crozier served me a drink just the other day.
24:31Whiskey.
24:34In one of his...
24:35cut glasses, in fact.
24:39He spoke to me as a friend.
24:43A friend?
24:44Yes.
24:48He sees something in me.
24:52I could lead anywhere.
24:54Cornelius.
24:55Anywhere?
24:56Cornelius, you...
24:59The captain doesn't see you at all.
25:01You can ask Mr. Jopson or Mr. Gensh if they will tell you.
25:05He'll offer anyone a drink.
25:07If he can have one too.
25:35You can ask Mr. Jopson.
25:42Posterity awaits, Mr. Goodsir.
25:47Hold still.
25:49Not a twitch.
26:32Wonderful.
26:43Goodsir.
26:52Goodsir.
26:53Goodsir.
26:56Goodsir.
26:57Goodsir.
27:02Goodsir.
27:15Goodsir.
27:18Goodsir.
27:26Goodsir.
27:31Goodsir.
27:46Goodsir.
27:48Goodsir.
27:49Goodsir.
27:52Goodsir.
27:52Goodsir.
27:52Goodsir.
27:53Goodsir.
27:53Goodsir.
27:53Goodsir.
27:54Goodsir.
27:55Goodsir.
27:55Goodsir.
27:56Goodsir.
27:56Goodsir.
27:57Listen.
28:16Get back!
28:45They must be wafting with that bear after all.
28:58Send our marines!
29:01No!
29:05Help me!
29:14Deval, bring three men and follow me.
29:16You!
29:17Christy, you stay here.
29:18Sir John!
29:22We're out!
29:24Hello, boys!
29:56Let's go!
29:57Ah!
29:58No!
30:30No!
30:45Give me a knife!
30:51Give me a knife!
30:53Give me a knife!
30:58No!
31:14Groups of six carry any wounded back to the ships.
31:17Suit the ice. I want every man accounted for. Go!
31:23No!
31:25No!
31:27No!
31:31No!
31:36No!
31:38No!
31:40No!
31:42No!
31:45Let's go.
32:13How is it now to take our best men?
32:16Lieutenant Gore, and now the captain.
32:18It took Brian.
32:20You weren't no best man.
32:21He was a ranking marine.
32:23He was a sergeant.
32:24You were a red-coated conscript.
32:28That bear don't know us.
32:30It knows one thing, and one thing only.
32:36You don't think it's strange that she'd start killing us right after we took down that esky?
32:42He did have a...
32:44They carved a bear in his robe.
32:47A Eskimo.
32:49A little token or such.
32:53And one other man.
32:54Where are they now?
32:56We put them back.
32:57Ain't no way we were taking them.
33:01The silver swan
33:06The living had no known
33:12When death approached
33:18Unlocked her silent throat
33:25Leaning her breast
33:29Against the reedy shore
33:34Thus sung her first and last
33:41And sung no more
33:48Farewell, all joys
33:53Come on, John.
34:06Farewell, all joys
34:17Farewell, all joys
34:20O death
34:23Come close mine eyes
34:28More geese than swans
34:32Now live
34:33More fools than whites
34:38More geese than swans
34:42Now live
34:43More fools than whites
34:50Come close mine
34:57Continue
34:59Time to stop
35:02Post-3
35:05Step-3
35:05Step-3
35:06Step-3
35:07Step-3
35:07Step-3
35:07Stop-3
35:10Step-3
35:13Step-3
35:13Step-3
35:14Step-3
35:16Step-3
35:17Step-3
35:21I never wanted anything as little as I want this now.
35:28I do have an order.
35:31Mr. Blankey, proceed immediately with the rescue party.
35:36If Lieutenant Fairholme can lead it, let him know.
35:39Sir John forbade this plan.
35:42Swap two Marines into the party
35:45and lighten the load what amount you feel you safely can.
35:48They'll need every advantage.
35:50I implore you, please stop.
35:52We have lost Sir John!
35:56We have lost Sir John.
35:59Do you not feel what has happened?
36:06I feel it.
36:09One day, I am asking one day
36:14to allow our men to grieve.
36:18And then they go.
36:21And then they go.
37:02These words are not mine.
37:05They're Sir John's.
37:08He wanted you to hear them.
37:10And, lacking words of my own,
37:15I give you his.
37:18His last.
37:22In his flight,
37:24Jacob lighted upon a certain place
37:26and tarried there
37:28because the sun was set.
37:33He thought it a terrible place.
37:37No house, no hearth.
37:40But that night he dreamed
37:43a ladder set upon the earth
37:45and the top of it reaching to the heavens.
37:49Behold, the Lord stood above it.
37:52And he said,
37:53I am with thee
37:55and will keep thee in all places
37:57wherever thou goest.
38:00For I will not leave thee.
38:04And in Jacob's dream
38:06he saw the invisible world
38:07companion to the known one
38:10we perceive
38:11with its rocks and moon
38:15its ice fields
38:16and brute animals
38:19and all the people we know
38:23have ever known
38:26and will ever known
38:29so complete
38:30it would seem
38:31to leave no room
38:32for its invisible brother world
38:34I'll be a minute on the seat
38:36which is yet more immense
38:39than the one we see
38:42for in this world
38:43dwell the angels who keep us
38:47the Lord who will not leave us
38:50and the departed
38:52who though cleave from the frame
38:54that carried them
38:55yet live
38:56nearest to their ranks
38:58our bright captain
39:02Sir John
39:05who in the virtue
39:07and strength
39:08of his every gesture
39:09showed himself
39:10the elect of the Lord
39:13destined to reign
39:14with Christ forever
39:18the invisible world
39:20of spirits
39:20though unseen
39:21was present
39:23for Jacob
39:26not future
39:27not distant
39:29but present
39:35and it is now
39:36and it is here
39:38among us
39:40if we open our eyes
39:43and see his truth
39:47amongst us
39:56marines
39:57ready
40:01present
40:06shoulder
40:08shoulder
40:09shoulder
40:09shoulder
40:10shoulder
40:12shoulder
40:12shoulder
40:13shoulder
40:15shoulder
40:16shoulder
40:18shoulder
40:18shoulder
40:19shoulder
40:25shoulder
40:28shoulder
40:29shoulder
40:30shoulder
40:32shoulder
40:32shoulder
40:32shoulder
40:33shoulder
40:35shoulder
40:37shoulder
40:45I don't know.
41:16I don't know.
41:37I don't know.
42:12I don't know.
42:38I don't know.
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