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00:00I'm keeping my distance, in case I smash his self-righteous face in.
00:04Don't do that.
00:06Esther will be gone soon, then things will change.
00:08Leave her alone from now on.
00:10Or what?
00:10You gonna go run into Esther?
00:12I don't need Esther.
00:13You sure about that?
00:17It's very sad to drink alone, Miriam.
00:20Just one minute.
00:25I have a sweetheart back home, Emily.
00:28I can't walk out with you.
00:29Change your mind, you know where I'll be.
00:31I'll be dancing.
00:33You're not warm into her, are you?
01:10I'm relying on you to get the girls there.
01:12Where?
01:13Cursel Moore, Chartish Rally.
01:19What's this?
01:20What's this?
01:21A shoe maker keeping factory hours.
01:23Next you'll be using your tools to mend our broken furniture.
01:26What's broken?
01:27My bed.
01:28It rolls and shakes.
01:29I'm not one that likes to keep stones still on my back.
01:32Do you think you have the right tool for the job?
01:35I may have.
01:37Come see me tonight, then.
01:40Right.
01:49This rally is our chance to prove that the Charter is the will of the people.
01:54That we are united and can't.
01:57We won't be ignored.
01:58Once we have a vote, we have a voice.
02:01And this is just the beginning.
02:02It's on a Monday.
02:04Who can go to a rally on a Monday?
02:05We'll ask them to close the mill for the day.
02:09It'll never happen.
02:09Other mills are closing for the day.
02:11Goites.
02:12Orals.
02:13There's a march from Oldham.
02:14I vote for all men.
02:15Twenty-one years of age.
02:16It's all men.
02:17We must start with what we can win.
02:21Tonight's the night I finally start on Wilmer's again.
02:24What makes you so sure?
02:26Stinkle new roomie dinner.
02:27It's like eating in a privy.
02:29Is that your parents?
02:32And she poured the pot on me this morning.
02:34She's done it before, too.
02:35You let her.
02:36Well, what can we do?
02:37I wish she was still on the ball.
02:39Get a bucket of office and the washbar.
02:41I'll see how she likes it.
02:42No.
02:43You'll only make it worse.
02:45I said to keep Maud awake.
02:47Maud!
02:48Maud!
02:50Damn!
02:51Here.
02:52It's a two-man job.
02:54Well, then our husbands should do it.
02:57Angela, watch your sister.
03:00I don't know how you managed before.
03:02Job and Will were working by the time I had the younger ones.
03:05The mill was easier.
03:07The walk for Castlemore on Monday will feel like a holiday.
03:11Are you coming?
03:12Don't get involved.
03:14We take care of the men, not the men take care of the world.
03:17You'll find it lonely.
03:19Go home, will they?
03:20The harder they work, the more we must make a home they want to return to.
03:33Oi!
03:34Who was it?
03:35Who's got me clog?
03:35No, it wasn't me.
03:37What?
03:37There!
03:38It's there.
03:40You think this is funny?
03:47What's happening to it?
03:49You leave Marianne alone!
03:52No!
03:53I've got to run.
03:54I'm expecting a visitor.
04:01According to James Windle, they seem unsettled.
04:04Windle understands facts and figures, not flesh and blood.
04:08Our hands are content.
04:09They appreciate what I do for them.
04:11This charter's nonsense.
04:13It won't affect us.
04:16Enter.
04:18Ah, good.
04:20Great news, Peter.
04:22Wonderful news.
04:24Will you fetch me my dress book and the seal on your way out, darling?
04:29Parliament has decided.
04:31From August the first, Negro apprenticeship will be abolished in the colonies.
04:37Can you believe it?
04:39Congratulations.
04:40Long over to you.
04:42Now, as you know, Joseph Sturge has worked tirelessly for this,
04:45so I thought it right to send him a letter of thanks.
04:48Shall I read it out, or do you trust me enough just to sign it?
04:54It is a little overwhelming, I know.
04:58But it's true.
05:00You and your people are finally free.
05:04Sign here.
05:34If you need furniture fixing, pay a carpenter.
05:52All done.
05:59You may go now, Peter.
06:01Thank you, Mum.
06:18My aunt was on me leave.
06:21Demanded, and I was going, and I asked...
06:22And you couldn't say the alehouse?
06:24Or the shop?
06:26Or Helena Hancock?
06:27He asked.
06:29I heard myself tell the truth.
06:31I could have cut out my tongue.
06:33What use would you be there?
06:34I could come tonight.
06:36Just better to sort of shake.
06:37It's all yours.
06:39Morning, Mr Howley.
06:44You'd better go first.
06:52Much work on next week, Will.
06:54No.
06:56That'd be a good time to go and see Emily.
07:00And it'd be good to hear if there's been any news of Doug's regiment.
07:04Well, that's a great idea, John.
07:05Emily wouldn't want me just to turn up with no warning.
07:08She'd want nothing better.
07:10Someone will have heard something by now.
07:12The four lads from the village joined up together.
07:15One of them will have sent a letter or some kind of message.
07:18I don't know.
07:19You made a promise to that girl.
07:21And she's from a good family.
07:24And when I've saved enough, I'll bring her up here.
07:27She'll be all cobwebs and no tea.
07:32And the journey.
07:34Ask her to come back with you, if you like.
07:37I'll do you some food to take.
07:57All the workers are behind it.
07:59All the workers are behind it.
08:01Mills are closing right across the north.
08:02A march from Macclesfield who pass here on the way.
08:05How will that look?
08:07Macclesfield masters supporting the call for democracy
08:09while the Gregg family, who pride themselves on listening to the workers,
08:12turn a deaf ear.
08:14What do you think, Wyndall?
08:16He speaks for himself.
08:18He can afford to lose a day's pay.
08:20Most people will give up a day for such a cause.
08:22Most now.
08:23A moment ago it was all.
08:25But I respect and have no reason to fear the honest opinion of my workforce.
08:35May I ask you something?
08:38If you want.
08:40Will you teach me to read?
08:43To read?
08:45If you want to read, I'm sure Mrs Gregg will teach you.
08:48I want you to teach me.
08:51Oh, but...
08:52I don't know when we'll find the time.
08:56An early finish.
08:58Sorry, Mr Bate tells me that sacrificing a few hours' pay
09:02for some greater cause is acceptable.
09:04Desirable, even.
09:06What greater cause, sir?
09:07This rally.
09:08Monday.
09:10I'm informed that attending is worth a day's pay to you.
09:13Do you feel it your duty to walk to this meeting,
09:15or is this rabble-rousing by a noisy few?
09:17An honest day's work for me.
09:20If I want to be preached at, I'll go to church.
09:22And the minister would tell you to know right from wrong?
09:26The system needs reforming.
09:28No reform will ever be enough for the likes of you.
09:32What did the last great reform give us?
09:34Greg and sons employ 2,000 people.
09:38How many of us were granted the right to vote in the last election?
09:41Barely more than Samuel Gregg and his five sons.
09:44And now Robert Gregg is an MP, and that's reform.
09:48Why should only money have a voice in Parliament?
09:50I want to work Monday. Where's my voice?
09:53We're listening to it now, aren't we?
09:56Every man has the right to be heard,
09:58and Curse or More is the next big step on the road to universal suffrage.
10:02I'll see a show of hands.
10:04Who'd have me close the mill on Monday?
10:13That's the price.
10:15It's not a vote, it's a question.
10:17Who'd put their hands up and risk the knacker's yard?
10:19Are you suggesting I hold this vote against you?
10:21I'm suggesting who'd risk it.
10:23So what would you have me do?
10:25Not to you vote what?
10:27A secret ballot.
10:28There you go, one of them.
10:29It's in the charter.
10:30How many men have got into Parliament because the voters work and live on their land
10:33and have to raise their hands in front of them?
10:36Stones in a sack.
10:37Two different sacks.
10:38We'll hide them somewhere.
10:40I'll take this.
10:41This one means close the mill.
10:43This, keep it running.
10:45One man, one vote.
10:47Behind the car.
10:48The final decision rests with me.
10:51Oversee proceedings, Wendell.
10:54You give the vote to every drunken dallard in the country.
10:57What next?
10:59Women?
11:00Negras?
11:19Hey.
11:21Boats are closed, for your will's sake.
11:23The shoes that'll wear out marching to Castlemore, they'll pick you outside your dog.
11:27There'll have to be a long one.
11:29We'll be halfway to Bledlow by now.
11:31Want to be with his sweetheart.
11:36Boats!
11:37Able for the day off!
11:38Yeah!
11:39Come on!
11:53The final decision rests with you.
11:55But I know you respect the honest opinion of your workforce.
12:00Ensure the Stokers are an hour early on Tuesday.
12:05Boiler will need some work left unattended for two whole days.
12:10Is this wise, Master?
12:12It could be the thin end of the wedge.
12:14No one but Bate will actually go.
12:17Save us a day's wages, and the good will shall serve me well.
12:25A day off Monday!
12:27Yay!
12:29Don't waste it!
12:36So that's when we can start your lessons?
12:39If you still want to.
12:40I want to, very much.
12:44If Will couldn't see what he had.
12:45He didn't have me.
12:47I've sooner dock a pig.
12:49I'll skip tea tonight.
12:50Come over.
12:52You owe me some if you've got me there.
12:54I know how to look after you.
12:56Oh, Wendell will catch her after you're waking over town.
13:00Oh!
13:02That'll cook something.
13:02I haven't practiced.
13:04I haven't practiced.
13:07Patience will get me.
13:09Oh, if she was going to do something, she'd have done it last night.
13:12Said she was thinking.
13:13Thinking.
13:14And thinking.
13:15And now she's thought.
13:17Just stay out of her way.
13:26Hang on, Lucy.
13:31What are you doing here?
13:53I've spent all day in cold, damp clothes.
13:58That's what I thought.
13:59Have the tea.
14:00I could dunk you and Lucy in the trough.
14:02And then I'll do it every night.
14:04Until you drown.
14:39In a few weeks.
14:40It's you.
14:50I can't spend a lot of time.
14:51Yeah, I see it coming.
14:51You're dead.
14:51It's gonna be a nightmare.
14:52You're dead.
14:52We're dead.
14:55After you.
14:56How has power?
14:56You're dead.
14:56You're dead.
14:59In a cave.
15:05I was right. She's in there now, and she's about to keep away from her.
15:29Get out of here!
15:41Get out of here later. See you at Kersel Mall. You can be at Kersel Mall.
15:49If everyone thinks like that, there'll be no one there.
15:51If people are going from all over, they're not gonna miss me. I might follow you on.
16:05Miriam can't come. The windows are making the apprentices do chores about the house.
16:10You ready, Boone? One walk with my feet.
16:14You can lead a horse to water. You can't make it drink.
16:19Why the horse?
16:21No. No, we're going on a big walk with your dad.
16:24A big walk with lots and lots of people.
16:27There'll be horses there.
16:30I'll be your horse. Come on.
16:47Walk on.
16:50We should get out. We've been here all weekend.
16:53Someone could see us. He could see us.
16:57What are you so scared of? He's not your dad.
17:00No.
17:01My dad died at Oraloo.
17:05Still was in my mother's belly.
17:07She died a few weeks after I was born.
17:09A broken heart.
17:11John took me in.
17:13Didn't have to, but he did.
17:17At home a lot.
17:18Doesn't mean you have to live by his rules.
17:21Just live your own life well, not the one he wants you to have.
17:24I'm here all night.
17:25Yeah, as long as we're in Hardin, you're happy.
17:28Aren't you happy?
17:30Like this?
17:33Ongoing.
17:34Come with me or I might just find someone more exciting.
17:37A chartist meeting.
17:39It's not all speeches, you know.
17:41No.
17:42They have nude racers there too.
17:44They do?
17:45Well, used to.
17:47It was a tradition at Castlemore Fair.
17:49Single men looking for a wife would strip off and run a race to impress the local maids.
17:54You're making it up.
17:55He had nothing to hide.
17:58I'm going.
17:59See if I can find a man who's not ashamed to be seen, Mummy.
18:17Not joining us, brother.
18:22They don't care.
18:24They do.
18:25Not enough to prize him from the beds or from the inns.
18:30Look.
18:32This is not the only way to care some more.
18:35Have faith.
18:57If anyone asks, I'm delivering coal.
19:04There's more than one door.
19:10There's more than one door.
19:12Wet floor.
19:13Do not enter.
19:21Which is Africa?
19:25Erm...
19:28All of this?
19:31And Dominica?
19:33Erm...
19:34Well, that is somewhere...
19:38There.
19:40And...
19:41where are we now?
19:45Here.
19:53We'd better get started.
19:55Can we start with names?
19:58I think we should do letters first.
20:01Letters in names.
20:02The important people.
20:04Like...
20:05Miriam.
20:11Hm.
20:23It's a horse.
20:25It's a tired horse.
20:26Do you want to get down and walk for a bit?
20:31No, it's a horse.
20:32Don't wait.
20:36Oh boy!
20:40Oh boy!
20:42Oh man!
20:44No!
20:45Oh boy!
20:48Over here!
20:48Oh boy!
20:52No!
20:58Go!
21:00Oh boy!
21:05I don't do.
21:08Have faith.
21:10We are unstoppable.
21:16Come on.
21:42Good. Very good.
21:45Any more?
21:47Vernon.
21:51B, E, R, N, O, and R.
22:01And then another N.
22:03Vernon.
22:09It's an unusual name.
22:12Is that your father?
22:13No.
22:15My father was Peter.
22:19Then who's Vernon?
22:24Who's Vernon?
22:30What's going on?
22:32I've nearly finished, Mr. Window.
22:34Peter's just delivering a call.
22:38Do you know where Mary-Anne and Lucy are?
22:40They've been missing since this morning.
22:42No.
22:43Do you know why Lucy's face is like it is?
22:48No.
22:58I should go.
23:07What will they do to us when we get back?
23:09What will patients do?
23:10But she looked at her life to spare, and she cried out in the air.
23:15My father time is weak and grey, with waiting for a better day.
23:20Rise like lions after slumber, in unvanquishable numbers.
23:25Shake your chains to earth like dew, which in sleep had fallen on you.
23:31Ye are many, they are few.
23:34Ye are many, they are few.
23:36Esther the half is no ship.
23:38When we get back?
23:40We are many, they are few.
23:42Don't worry.
23:44It's going to be all right.
23:46We are many, they are few.
23:48We are many, they are few.
23:51We are many, we are many, we are many, we are many, we are many, we are many, we are
24:00many,
24:00we are many, we are many, we are many, we are many, we are many, we are many.
24:02I need to go back to the edge where there's room to have our picnic.
24:06I'm sure that's fair to sell, Connery.
24:08A hundred yards in here who could hear what he's saying.
24:10Daniel, we are stoppable.
24:12We can't get any nearer, there's too many people.
24:28And every year since on that anniversary, she blew the black petticoat she was wearing that day from her flagpole.
24:34But this year, this year, the troops raided her home and seized them.
24:40Is this why our boys joined the army, to attack innocent protesters and seize our petticoats?
24:47Winging too can help in the struggle.
24:56Hello? And what's this?
24:59Are you here for the race?
25:00What race?
25:01Oh, now you've seen the competition, you're backing out.
25:03I'll put your clothes back on, Will.
25:04Backing out of what?
25:07A naked race. The boys showed the girls what they got, and the winner bags of bread.
25:11I thought that was just a story. Does it really happen?
25:13Not this year. Doesn't look like your boys are men enough.
25:17I'll show you he's man enough. And where's the finishing line?
25:20Erm, this will need us beer carton. Back again.
25:34We stand together as one, brothers and sisters. Shoulder to shoulder, to shake the very foundations of Parliament.
25:43And if anyone asks me what I mean by universal suffrage, I would answer that every working man in the
25:52land had a right to a good coat to his back.
26:05That's a scandal! Every working man has a right to a good coat.
26:11No more work than was necessary for keeping him in health. And as much wages as would afford him all
26:18the blessings and enjoyment of life.
26:21And the means to achieve all that. The best means is to get a voice in Parliament. Sign the petition.
26:28Add your name to the demand for democracy and justice.
26:31And the thousands are coming. The members of Parliament. Musicians of Parliament.
26:40Onward, they stay up to the thousandth century.
26:44And the thousands are coming. The members of Parliament.
26:48The members of Parliament.
26:52The members of Parliament.
27:05Thousands of names. Hundreds of thousands. 800, 000 people signed a total petition. We got them back from Australia. This
27:13will be even bigger.
27:13I'll make a banner with some of the women from the village.
27:16Look who it is. Esther.
27:18Hi.
27:18You came.
27:19I did.
27:21Do you know how it now?
27:22You will do.
27:24Wasn't it unbelievable?
27:27We're on our way.
28:00Hey.
28:01I'm trying to come in with you.
28:05Hey, you should hear it from me first.
28:14Well, good luck.
28:21Who's up?
28:22Will.
28:23All right.
28:25Any news of Job?
28:26His regimen?
28:27Let the leg get through the door first.
28:30Sorry, yes.
28:31Did you hear anything?
28:33No, sorry.
28:35Did you see Betty Carter?
28:36She must have heard something.
28:38Or Sarah Cooper?
28:39Has she heard from her Ben?
28:40Someone must have heard something.
28:42No news is good news, Beck.
28:45How was young Emily?
28:49Um, Emily's...
28:53Well, she's...
28:54She's with another man.
28:57I will.
28:58I'm so sorry, you poor boy.
29:01That's why you're back so soon.
29:03It's OK.
29:04I mean, I'm fine.
29:05It smells like you've been drowning your sorrows.
29:09We should never have come here.
29:11No, we should.
29:13Emily's a pass now.
29:15Just be sure Esther Price, isn't your future?
29:18She had a man in her rooms all weekend.
29:20It's fine.
29:20It's fine.
29:59You're a liar, Will Whittaker.
30:07Mr. Wendell tells me you were missing without permission.
30:12I'm guessing you got that, that damn pool meeting.
30:16You'll make it up in overtime.
30:18Go on.
30:21Wind it up.
30:22What's happened?
30:24We threw wash over patients.
30:26Why didn't you come to see me?
30:27Were you a busy ducking a pig?
30:32Is there a problem, Mr. Howlett?
30:34Yes.
30:35Why aren't you started yet?
30:45Anything we want, we can achieve.
30:51We just have to stand together.
30:53Work together.
31:00We are many.
31:02But she is few.
31:19You didn't vote.
31:20I didn't see the point.
31:23We closed the mill.
31:24So my vote didn't matter?
31:26But you had one.
31:28You had one.
31:29I gave it to you.
31:31You think I couldn't pick that up for myself?
31:34Don't you understand that?
31:36Or don't you care?
31:37You had your day out.
31:38Nice walk in the country.
31:40What's changed?
31:40I'm still a nigger with a shovel.
31:45Why should I care about you at Parliament?
31:47Every decision they make affects every one of us.
31:50Every day of our lives.
31:51Not me.
31:52They abolished slavery.
31:53I became an apprentice.
31:54So it affected you.
31:55It was worse.
31:56Worse than slavery.
32:00Show me the difference.
32:03Which is a slave's tribe, which is an apprentice.
32:06Can you tell?
32:08Can you?
32:15Well, now that's over, too.
32:17So my vote didn't matter.
32:21There were 300,000 people there yesterday.
32:25We're going to create the biggest petition the world has ever seen.
32:28You can shrug or you can sign.
32:41Sign.
32:42One day we'll have working men like us in Parliament.
32:45Not like me.
32:46Men like us wouldn't have taken hundreds of years to abolish slavery.
32:49And we'd ensure a fair day's wage for a fair day's work.
32:52This matters.
33:01I can't write my name.
33:03Then sign.
33:05Miriam taught me what you are at your meeting.
33:21Oi!
33:22You forgetting something?
33:24No.
33:26No more.
33:28There's stops now.
33:29Who says?
33:30Me.
33:32Me.
33:33Me.
33:34Me.
33:35Me.
33:37Er, what's happening here?
33:39They're picking on me, Mrs. Gregg.
33:41Is that true, all of you?
33:44You ought to be ashamed of yourselves.
33:52Times estimates 30,000 in attendance.
33:55The chartists are saying significantly more.
33:59I fear the genie's out of the bottle.
34:01I'm telling him he can't do that here.
34:07Will this take long?
34:10When you were a boy, don't you remember how exciting it was, getting news from home?
34:15I don't remember our lessons being interrupted for it.
34:19Here he is now.
34:20Come in, Peter.
34:22I have a letter from your mother.
34:24I wonder if she's heard yet.
34:26No.
34:27Thank you, Mrs. Gregg.
34:28A friend will read it to me later.
34:32May I?
34:46It seems he doesn't need you as much as you thought.
34:49Well, I'm glad he's making friends.
34:55Mother, your letters, they meant the world to me.
35:02I know.
35:10Beg your pardon, Mrs. Gregg, but may I speak to her about Patience Dunn?
35:14I'm worried about her.
35:15Why?
35:16I think she may run away.
35:18Or worse.
35:19Do other girls make her life a misery, miss?
35:22They even put a bucket of washing when I do the day.
35:24It's the only way to move her before something terrible happens.
35:28It's never wise to bow to Mub Rule.
35:30She cries herself to sleep every night.
35:32Patience Dunn does.
35:33She was a very melancholy little child when she first came here.
35:36Was she?
35:37She's known more than a fair share of misfortune.
35:41Have a move to the servants' quarters.
35:43We need another pair of hands in the house.
35:49You've got some bruises.
35:50Sustained in defence of Patience, were they?
35:53Nothing gets past you, Mr. Wendell.
36:16What's happened?
36:17Every night I lie in bed worrying about Job.
36:20Don't you worry about him.
36:23Don't you wonder how he is?
36:26He's been like a brother to you since you were a baby.
36:30I told him.
36:32Then when you said Emily had found another,
36:34and all the time it was you.
36:36Down there with her.
36:43They say the market square we have hated with all our hearts will become our playground.
36:49Even old Mary Alice, with legs as bent as palm trees, has promised.
36:54On the day we are free, she will dance there.
36:58Mother, how do folks forget so quickly?
37:07I will not dance.
37:09Not until you stand before me and tell me that our family is truly free.
37:14In blood and spirit, I long for that day, ever yours, Mother.
37:26Mother, she must feel a long way away.
37:31Let me take you for a drink.
37:33Don't thank you for reading.
37:43Rebecca is the only woman I've ever known.
37:47I love her with all my heart.
37:50I'm proud to call her my wife.
37:54I was a boy like you once.
37:57I understand temptation.
38:01Did you two find the time to talk?
38:05Yeah.
38:07And you had things in common?
38:09Lots.
38:12It's not just temptation.
38:15I really do like her.
38:18You both lost your parents when you were young.
38:22Am I right?
38:26You had a family to take you in.
38:28She went to the workhouse.
38:31And that's who she is.
38:32That's not who she is.
38:33Were you her first?
38:37Were you?
38:41You won't be her last.
38:43A woman like that will never be taken.
38:49I just want the best for you, Will.
38:53I'll have that to you, my own pa.
39:09I'm sorry.
39:10I can go.
39:13Good night.
39:15Great.
39:32What's up? You've never seen Miriam Catterall before?
39:36Take a seat.
39:52Miriam, will you sign the petition for the charter?
40:00I hear you used the day off to teach Peter how to write his name.
40:04That's right.
40:05Once Parliament represents us all, everyone will have the time to learn to read and write.
40:11And that would be good.
40:28Thank you. You're welcome.
40:32At last?
40:37I'm beginning to think they don't have killed you.
40:42I've made a mistake.
40:45A huge mistake.
40:48I shouldn't have gone with you, innit?
40:50It can't happen again.
40:52Are you serious?
40:54Me and you are no good.
40:59Sorry.
41:02No, I thought I knew who you were, Will Whittaker, but I was wrong.
41:08You're weak.
41:09You're a weak, pathetic little boy and I don't need you anymore.
41:15Go away.
41:24Do you want a dance?
41:26No, thank you.
41:27Your sweetheart doesn't mind, do you?
41:29She's not my sweetheart.
41:31Maybe you should just go home, Esther.
41:34Dance?
41:35Oh, come on!
41:37Dance!
41:38What's the matter?
41:39Dance!
41:40You've never danced before.
41:42Dance!
41:46Well done, Esther.
42:10Esther didn't mean to upset you or anything.
42:13She's just, you know, Esther and drunk.
42:18Back home, when the master wasn't happy with an apprentice,
42:23we were sentenced to the workhouse to dance the treadmill.
42:26Six or eight at a time, we stand along a step on a big wheel,
42:30strapped to a bar overhead by our wrists,
42:33and we keep it turning.
42:36The women was obliged to tie up their clothes and half expose themselves.
42:42There was one woman belong to Mr. Wallace.
42:46She don't tie up her clothes high enough,
42:49so her foot catch and she slip.
42:53She hangs by the wrists and the mill steps keep on batter her legs and knees.
42:58And the driver with the cat keep on flog her.
43:02And all the time, we keep on running and turning the mill.
43:07If we stop so she can't catch the step,
43:11the driver flog her as most dreadful.
43:15And say, dance, boy.
43:19Dance.
43:23No one will tell me when to dance ever again.
43:34I didn't mean to upset you. I'm sorry.
43:37You're sorry.
43:39I told you I'm a good talker.
43:42I make them cry.
43:43I make them laugh.
44:03I shouldn't have done that.
44:07No, I'm glad that you did.
44:09That's not why I'm here.
44:11You should be getting home.
44:14Vernon.
44:16Who is Vernon?
44:17He was close to my grandfather when he died.
44:22Vernon lives in England now.
44:25I hope to meet him one day.
44:33Hey!
44:35Are we getting ready for Dad?
44:37Go away, mister.
44:38No, not until I've sorted patients out.
44:39Well, you're too late.
44:41We've sorted it.
44:42Well, good for you.
44:43Hey, that's great news, Luz.
44:45Well, come with me.
44:46Where to?
44:47You know, for a walk somewhere.
44:50Hey, I know I have to take care of you.
44:51Yeah?
44:52No.
44:55Miriam!
44:58If Black Peter isn't your sweetheart,
44:59it's a lucky escape.
45:01He's a maddy bastard.
45:02What's the matter with him?
45:04I had a lucky escape today.
45:07Earl doesn't want to see me anymore.
45:09Oh, so that's the real reason why you're here?
45:11No.
45:12Well, yeah, I...
45:13Oh, go home, mister.
45:15Just go home.
45:17Fine, I don't need you.
45:19And I don't need you.
45:20No, no.
45:22No, no.
45:37And I'll go home.
45:42And I'll take care of nothing, too.
45:48No, no?
45:49No, no, no.
45:50I'd like to go to Westminster and smash their smug faces in.
45:55I'm going back to the mill.
45:57No, you're not.
45:59It's about your son.
46:01Timothy or Jackson?
46:02The one in the army.
46:03John?
46:04Peter, if you love me, marry me.
46:07You weren't even a virgin.
46:08Neither were you.
46:09What chance of me milking a pigeon, then taking Will Whittaker back?
46:35You weren't even a virgin.
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