- 7 hours ago
The Crown S03E10 [Full Movie] [English Subs]Full EP - Full
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00:28Transcription by CastingWords
00:38Transcription by CastingWords
01:06Transcription by CastingWords
01:08Oh Margaret
01:10I forget what about
01:12There are so many
01:14Exchanges of views these days
01:21I thought things had moved on
01:24They've moved on alright
01:25He's moved on
01:28On to the next one
01:36He can't help himself
01:39My bright epic little snapper
01:47She goes
01:47And we're going to see
01:50She goes
01:51Let's go.
02:20Let's go.
02:50You've never told me about the wallpaper.
02:52The rogues' gallery. Isn't it fun?
02:56I did it to remind Princess Margaret that her family has as many skeletons in the cupboard as anyone else's.
03:03House of Windsor. House of Horrors, my leg.
03:07I hope she saw the funny side.
03:10God, no.
03:11She said as long as that wallpaper was there, she'd never come to the house.
03:14Not that she needed an excuse.
03:17She always hated it here.
03:19She considers it as ugly, misshapen, and common as me.
03:24The failure of our marriage could not be better encapsulated by the two houses, the two dwellings, in which she
03:32and I are most comfortable.
03:35Hers is some insect-infested gin palace given to her by fawning sycophants.
03:44And this is mine.
03:49Oh, you too.
03:51I know.
03:53And poor you to get caught up in it.
03:57My advice would be to escape while you still can.
04:01I'll never be able to give you what you want.
04:04She'll never divorce me.
04:07She might if she falls in love with someone else.
04:12What makes you think that'll happen?
04:15Me, you did.
04:18Didn't you?
04:24You're right.
04:28I did.
04:30I did.
05:00You're right.
05:03I did.
05:05You're right.
05:18I don't know.
05:20I don't know.
05:21I don't know.
05:23Oh, my God.
05:55The MPs from smaller parties holding the bounty power, both Nova and the Tories look unable to reach the magic
06:02number of 318.
06:05I'm sure it was her.
06:09The Thing.
06:10She has a name, you know.
06:13Yes.
06:14And, um, I haven't told it, but I can never remember how I call her The Thing.
06:21Lucy Lindsay Hall.
06:22Mm-hmm.
06:24The Thing.
06:25The car she climbed into outside looked very much like Tony's.
06:32I suppose they're in Sussex now.
06:35Ugly little house.
06:38Dredge would look ashamed.
06:44And he thinks I'll take the humiliation lying down, does he?
06:49Well, he's got another thing coming.
06:53May I speak frankly now, as a friend?
06:58I can think of several couples of whom it could be observed that having not found the contentment they desired
07:05within matrimony, have chosen to live apart.
07:08It appeared happier.
07:10Tony and I will never let go of one another.
07:13And it's not just because divorce is incompatible with my faith, because this is just how we like it.
07:30I don't know.
07:45I don't know.
07:47I don't know.
08:03I don't know.
08:14I don't know.
08:16You look at the newspapers and you realize they've done it again.
08:19Margaret's birthday's coming up.
08:21I mean, right now, the United Kingdom is the equivalent of a patient dying on the operating table and the
08:26surgeons, no, the butchers, no, sorry, the murderers responsible for causing that death are seeking re-election.
08:32Instead of throwing them in jail, there are people like lemmings queuing up to extend their bloody contracts.
08:38She called me late last night, said she had something important to discuss.
08:43Who?
08:44Margaret.
08:45She's run out of tonic?
08:47No.
08:48She's been knocked up by one of the footmen?
08:50Philip.
08:51You wouldn't put it past her.
08:53I worry it's Tony.
08:59Eddie?
09:03Mr. Heath came to tell me that he was unable to form a correlation with the Ulster Unionists, all the
09:08liberals, which left him with no alternative but to resign.
09:11At which point, I don't mind admitting, I let out an unconstitutional cheer.
09:15Huzzah.
09:16Privately, I hope.
09:17Well, it's not his politics I object to, so much as his company.
09:20And now, Mr. Wilson, who I must say looks very tired, not at all well, is back again as Prime
09:26Minister of a minority government.
09:27And the best we can hope for is that he can survive until the next election in the auction.
09:32You really do have the most wicked stories.
09:37Really?
09:38Yes, that?
09:39Yes.
09:47I have asked you all here, my family, on the occasion of my birthday.
09:56Happy birthday, Margot.
09:57I have noticed that my dear husband is not at my side on this joyous occasion.
10:02It is because he is now betraying me, not just in private, but openly in public too.
10:08And I don't think we should take this lying down.
10:11Oui.
10:11Yes, oui, Mummy.
10:13If Tony insults me by implication, he is insulting the whole of the family too.
10:17I'm not sure I followed that logic.
10:19What would you like us to do?
10:20Send a clear signal to the world whose side you're on and impose sanctions.
10:27What?
10:27What kind of sanctions?
10:29No more invitations to royal events.
10:32No more royal photographs.
10:33No more access to crown property.
10:36It's him where it hurts.
10:38Punish him.
10:39Draw blood.
10:40Where is he now?
10:41He left the country this morning to make one of his films.
10:46Oh, Ghana, or did you say Guinea?
10:49Gabon.
10:49Ah.
10:50With the thing.
10:51The what?
10:52I'll explain later.
10:53I rather liked his last film.
10:55Is it the one about dwarves?
10:56I'll tell you what I liked about it.
10:57Yes, it's short.
10:58It had compassion.
11:00It had kindness.
11:01In fact, I think that's the thing I most like about Tony.
11:04And his wit.
11:05Yes.
11:06And the fact that he's generous enough to flirt with his mother-in-law.
11:09He's gonna throw up.
11:12He cares.
11:13All right, Mummy.
11:14He has a heart.
11:15Yeah, not that his wife or children have noticed.
11:17And his charity work for the disabled.
11:19And the way he was at Aberfan.
11:21Yes.
11:22Yes.
11:23Yes.
11:24Get out!
11:26Get out!
11:32Why do you do this, Mummy?
11:35Why do you all do this?
11:37Why do you always, always take a side?
11:41This is my birthday party.
11:45And when I tell you that my husband is out of the country betraying me with another woman,
11:52instead of supporting me and condemning him, you just sit here praising him to the sky.
12:04Nice family.
12:06My own flesh and blood.
12:08My birthday.
12:15Perhaps we'll just stick to the back teeth of you and have sympathy for him.
12:19Philip!
12:19Well...
12:21Am I wrong?
12:23Like, hands up anyone who thinks I'm wrong.
12:26Anne.
12:33We should eat these before they get cold, shouldn't we?
12:35Mrs. Jordan.
12:36She'll be all right.
12:37I hate them.
12:38I hate them.
12:39I hate them.
12:40I hate them.
12:40I hate them.
12:40I hate them.
12:41I hate them.
12:41Why don't you come up here, ma'am?
12:43Come to Glen.
12:43We've invited a few guests for the weekend.
12:48Come here.
12:50You might even enjoy it.
13:17We've all around these activities.
13:43I hate them.
13:43Come here.
13:43I need an opportunity forêts to come to the malls,
17:42He's quite the virtuoso.
17:50Where's him?
17:52The one with all his clothes on.
17:54Well, that's Roddy.
17:57You must know his brother, Dye.
18:00Or his father, Harry Llewellyn, the Olympic show jumper.
18:05Roddy.
18:07Roddy.
18:11Hello.
18:12Hello.
18:15Your royal highness, your royal highness, how do you do?
18:18You're perspiring.
18:49True.
18:50It was essential.
18:52I mean, everyone else coming along too.
18:56Hmm?
18:56They're not coming with us.
18:58I wouldn't let them.
19:00No, they're going for lunch while we go shopping.
19:05So, apart from owning a woefully inadequate wardrobe,
19:10what is it that you do?
19:12A research assistant at the College of Arms,
19:16which involves genealogical research and boning up on heraldry.
19:21I also have a mobile disco company called Vibrations,
19:26and I clean the floors in a gallery on the Fulham Road at night.
19:29But all of this is just to fund my real passion.
19:32Have we got to the end of the answer yet?
19:34I'm rather regretting asking.
19:36What nice hands you've got?
19:40Have I?
19:41Hmm.
19:42Hmm.
19:43How nice you not notice.
19:46So nice when a man is unaware of his best features.
19:51So sad when a lady hides hers.
19:55Did you mean ladies?
19:59No.
20:00What then?
20:03Your smile.
20:09I forgot now.
20:22Where are we?
20:24People's, ma'am.
20:27Where?
20:32This is the hotel.
20:34We'll be in the bar waiting for you.
20:36The department store's just over there on the right.
20:38You can't miss it.
20:40Would you?
20:51Thank God.
20:55We've stumbled upon an experiment in...
20:57In breeding.
21:02Your royal highness.
21:04Gentlemen's bathing trunks, please.
21:07What size are you?
21:09Uh, small.
21:10Sincerely hope not.
21:12He means slim.
21:24No.
21:24Did we ever get to the bit where you told me your passion in life?
21:27No.
21:30Then what is it?
21:32Gardening.
21:33Yeah.
21:36Ah.
21:38These, please.
21:41No.
21:42These.
21:42I'm paying.
21:44I choose.
21:45Try them all.
21:51And the music's all right.
21:56Oh.
22:07No.
22:09Not a garden.
22:10It means doing.
22:12Do you?
22:13I imagine you must have an army of gardens.
22:14Hmm, don't believe everything you hear.
22:18You know, my garden is quite neglected.
22:21Especially the one in Mustique.
22:23Where?
22:25It's a small private island in the Caribbean.
22:31I love it.
22:32Hmm.
22:33My husband hates it.
22:35Since I hate my husband, what he thinks is irrelevant.
22:38You know, in the Caribbean, I have one of my favorite trees.
22:43There's a silk cotton tree.
22:46The challenge, for any gardener, is to judge the right amount of pruning.
22:50That's so.
22:52Well, you need very nimble fingers.
23:03And do you have nimble, as well as pretty fingers?
23:09I do.
23:15Perfect.
23:16She goes.
23:17She goes.
23:17She's hanging out, hanging out, hanging out, hanging out, hanging out, hanging out.
23:23Gosh, she's playing all night.
23:26Yes.
23:27And the music's all right.
23:31Mama's got to squeeze, but Daddy never sleeps at night.
23:37Come on.
23:38So, now what do you have?
23:39Do it.
23:50I'm just a girl, a wonderful girl.
23:53I'm the sweetest one in town.
23:55You could touch some miles around.
23:58But not one like me, kind of all.
24:01You've got a smile, a wonderful smile, and a certain little way.
24:05And every time the boys get near me, they look at me and say.
24:13Red hot mama, red hot mama, you're the one we need.
24:19Red hot mama, sunshama, yes indeed.
24:24They say that I should be in the fallies, but tomorrow's.
24:29I have a pair of boys, just like old Svengali's.
24:36I confess that you possess the sweetest charms in town.
24:41And unless I miss my guests, the boys all follow you around.
24:46Make a music master drop his fears.
24:49We'll make a bald-handed man start the air in the middle.
24:52Red hot mama, red hot mama.
24:54I have to tell my dad, Mom.
24:56Hey, red hot mama, red hot mama.
24:59You're the one we need.
25:02Red hot mama, sunshama, yes indeed.
25:22When she went to bed, did you notice?
25:24Of course I noticed.
25:25Everyone noticed.
25:26The top of the stairs, instead of turning right.
25:29He turned left.
25:30What have we done?
25:32This could come back to haunt us.
25:35Why?
25:35It would look like we've encouraged the Queen's sister to betray her husband.
25:40She's not betraying Tony.
25:42She's with Tony.
25:44Can't you see?
25:45Slim, Welsh, reddish hair.
25:48The two men are virtually identical.
25:50Roddy's a carbon copy of Tony.
25:53Just Junker.
25:55I hadn't thought of that.
26:18Lord Snowden, ma'am.
26:27Your Majesty.
26:28Dear Tony.
26:32So kind of you to come.
26:33I know how busy you are.
26:42Before we start, just look what I found in my studio the other day.
26:51How young we were.
26:53How pretty you were.
26:54Oh, stop it.
26:55Like Vivian Leigh.
26:58I've always loved this picture.
27:01Yes.
27:02Gosh.
27:03Philip.
27:04Not looking cross for once.
27:05Miraculous.
27:07All yours, ma'am.
27:08For me?
27:09With my compliments.
27:10Oh.
27:10And now, to the main business.
27:19Voila.
27:21A mug.
27:25And?
27:30A teapot.
27:32Yes!
27:35And?
27:40Oh.
27:41A commemorative plate.
27:46And a tea towel, with the dates 1952 to 1977.
27:54The powers that be thought it might be nice if someone from inside the firm were to design
27:59some of the memorabilia.
28:01Oh, Tony, you are clever.
28:02Always happy to help my family.
28:05Are you?
28:07Let's talk about that for a minute.
28:09May I keep these as well?
28:11Yes.
28:11Yes, of course.
28:13Now, I don't want to pry or lecture anyone about what goes on in a marriage.
28:22In my experience, people find a way to do what they need to do to remain happy or sane.
28:27I often think turning a blind eye is the best approach.
28:32Things work themselves out in the end.
28:35But recently, Margaret has been so wretched.
28:40And so lost.
28:44And she's so in love with you.
28:46I wouldn't be a responsible elder sister or head of the family if I didn't say how happy
28:52it would make us all, but particularly Margaret, if you two were to patch things up again.
28:57Even if just for the children.
29:01I quite agree.
29:04And had been giving the matter serious thought.
29:07Had you really?
29:08Yes.
29:09But then, I heard the latest developments.
29:15Who she's met.
29:17What she's doing.
29:19How she's...
29:21Conducting herself.
29:25What latest developments?
29:27How she's doing.
29:36How she's doing.
29:51How she's doing.
29:53How she's doing.
29:55How she's doing.
29:56How she's doing.
29:57How she's doing.
29:57How she's doing.
29:57How she's doing.
30:08welcome your royal highness
30:10no i don't think you see
30:11no quite right
30:12hot and sweaty
30:13yes isn't it unbearable
30:15what are you talking about
30:16well it's lovely
30:17oh you're right heavenly
30:19it's the aeroplane that was hot
30:20hello
30:21is this us
30:22yes ma'am
30:23yes i think straight to the house
30:24don't want any of that
30:26right
30:28hello ann
30:29hello
30:29where's the boy
30:30look do keep up now
30:32come on
30:33i'm sorry darling
30:33don't call me that in public
30:35ever
30:36i'm glad you didn't call me boy
30:37you are one
30:38you're a little boy
30:40steady
30:40who needs to be taught everything
30:43ma'am
31:08there it is
31:13i was given it as a wedding present
31:18the irony is one person i never share it with is my husband
31:25drink ma'am
31:30yes one little idea shall we
31:36well no one told me about her what could i do
31:43well no one told me about her
31:47no they all knew
31:49but it's too late to say you're sorry
31:53not what i knew
31:55why should i care
31:57please don't bother trying to find her
32:01she's not bad
32:04well let me tell you about the way she looked
32:06the way she acted
32:08the color of her hair
32:09her voice was soft and cool
32:12her eyes were clear and bright
32:14but she's not bad
32:27well let me tell you about the way she felt
32:45well let me tell you about the way she felt
32:54well let me tell you about the way she felt
33:16The way she acted the color of her hair
33:19Her voice was something new
33:21I smell blossom and the trees of earth
33:29All day long I seem to walk on earth
33:34I wonder why
33:39You join in, you two?
33:41No, I don't say. I don't say.
33:43Oh, turn it up.
33:46Turn it up. I love this song.
33:47A little bit louder.
33:48All the way.
33:49Sing, Taylor.
33:51Sing, let's go.
33:54Go on, you're going to dodge.
33:58Go on.
34:00Go on.
34:04Call it a wild cracker.
34:08Call it a wild fire.
34:21Happiness is a fickle creature.
34:24Constant companion to some.
34:26Hides herself completely from others.
34:30She's being an elusive creature to me.
34:35But here she is, finally, sitting among us.
34:39And I say, welcome.
34:43I won't mention how late her arrival is.
34:48Who?
34:49Hmm?
34:52Happiness, dear.
34:55Oh, never mind.
34:57Yes, sir.
34:58No problem.
34:59Right.
35:00Right there.
35:01Cream.
35:02I'm not burning, am I?
35:04Not yet.
35:06Better safe than sorry.
35:11Sorry.
35:16Sorry.
35:37How could she be so stupid?
35:41Who?
35:43Who?
35:44Who?
36:10Your majesty.
36:12This isn't heavy.
36:16The floozy and the scrounger.
36:18Lady and the trep.
36:19It's not entirely Margaret's fault.
36:21She had gone a long way to be private.
36:23Spending 12 hours on an airplane doesn't give you a license to behave like a whore.
36:27You must bring her back straight away.
36:29That won't be easy.
36:30She doesn't take well to my orders.
36:32Fine.
36:33Then she can take mine.
36:34See to it, please, Martin.
36:38Are you still here?
36:52We don't know all the facts yet.
36:53What is this?
36:54If it's not a fact, that is a fact.
36:56That's a fact.
36:56That's a fact.
36:57And that's a fact.
36:59What is this?
37:18ORGAN PLAYS
37:42You've seen the papers?
37:44I have.
37:47What's the matter?
37:48I thought you'd be happy.
37:51Why would I be happy?
37:54Because now we have what we've been waiting for.
37:57Margaret in love with someone else.
37:59Legitimate grounds for separation
38:01in a way that will still protect your name.
38:04Your reputation.
38:07Our future.
38:08And?
38:10You expect me to jump up and down with Jai?
38:15She's my wife.
38:18Mother of my children.
38:30Was there anything else?
38:48Mother of my children.
38:50Mother of my children.
38:54I don't know.
38:55Look what happened.
38:56I got real.
38:58I got real.
38:59I got real.
39:01I got real.
39:04Oh, my God.
39:35Oh, my God.
40:00Oh, my God.
40:30Used to be your home.
40:32It's still my home.
40:35What is he doing in it?
40:37Hello, sir.
40:42I would ask where you got the nerve to come here if I thought you had nerve.
40:46But looking at you, I can tell you've no nerve at all.
40:49You're just stupid.
40:50Come on, get out.
40:51Don't you dare talk to him like that.
40:53I'll speak to him whichever way I like in my house.
40:56My house.
40:57Our house, ducky.
40:59No, not ours anymore.
41:06Please leave.
41:08I won't leave.
41:10You don't want me to leave.
41:12I'm desperate for you to leave.
41:14Desperate.
41:15Like a patient.
41:17Desperate to cut out cancer.
41:19Think very carefully about what you're saying.
41:22Every game has its limits.
41:24It's not a game anymore.
41:29He's a child.
41:31He's no idea how to make him happy.
41:34You made me happy.
41:35Couldn't make me any more wretched than you have.
41:38You were wretched when I found you.
41:42Your little love notes.
41:44You leave me everywhere.
41:45How do I loathe thee?
41:47Let me count the ways.
41:49You look like a Jewish manicurist.
41:51You look like a Maltese landlady.
41:53A little rich, I think, coming from a misshapen cripple.
41:55Oh, yes.
41:56Holy boy.
41:57Hoppity hop, hoppity hop.
41:59Overlooked by his mother because he wasn't strong enough.
42:02Or, well, born enough.
42:04An embarrassment.
42:05Not able-bodied enough.
42:06If we're talking about overlooked,
42:09you know what this is all about.
42:10Overlooked Margaret with no role, no purpose, no real friends.
42:14Of whom it must have finally been asked.
42:16What is a princess for?
42:20You go after him and I'll divorce you.
42:22Oh, you wouldn't dare.
42:25You go after him and I'll bring you to your knees.
42:28Mommy!
42:30Mommy!
42:32Mommy!
42:33Mommy!
42:35Mommy!
42:36Mommy!
42:38Mommy!
42:52Mommy!
43:01it's age it happens to us all no ma'am it's not just age
43:07it's been diagnosed it has a name
43:13Alzheimer's
43:24I first noticed symptoms two years ago I always speak in public without notes
43:32I've something of a photographic memory but then one day I dried and in the months
43:41that followed I noticed more forgetfulness agitation
43:52delusion
43:55paranoia I shouldn't worry too much
43:58several of your predecessors had far more serious afflictions
44:01and they continued to govern without the public being any the wiser
44:06no ma'am it's a mental health issue now
44:08I shall put myself in the hands of the doctors
44:15Prime Minister I am sorry
44:17this will come as a terrible shock
44:19well maybe
44:21no shock lasts longer than 48 hours
44:25there's too much appetite for the next shock
44:31I'll miss our sessions terribly
44:34I don't mind admitting I let out an unconstitutional cheer
44:37when you beat Mr. Heath this time
44:40I always said deep down you're a lefty at heart
44:44nothing to do with the politics or just a better companion
44:47although I wouldn't have said that first time you met
44:50no
44:51you thought I was gonna rough you lot up
44:54and look what a sentimental old royalist I turned out to be
45:15your majesty
45:31prime minister
45:35if you saw fit to invite your queen to supper at Downing Street before you left
45:40she would be honoured
45:41she would be honoured
45:43but that's an honour previously only given to Churchill
45:48the Duke of Edinburgh and I would like that very much
45:54so would Mrs. Wilson and I
46:12Martin?
46:26the amount of nitrazepam the princess took was quite critical
46:34a sedative used in short periods for the relief of anxiety and insomnia
46:48based on the numbers of empty packets we found
46:54you would say more indicative of a cry for attention
46:58than a genuine suicide attempt
47:02a cri de coeur rather than a coup de grace
47:45hello you
47:46hello you
47:48hello you
48:07am I going to get her ticking off?
48:09that hadn't been my intention
48:11maybe perhaps I should
48:14why?
48:15because for a while there it was touch and go
48:17hello
48:21so I hear
48:25did you mean it?
48:28don't know
48:31possibly
48:36how do you feel now?
48:38tight
48:43it's sore
48:45there were tubes
48:49a little bit foolish
48:54where's Roddy?
48:56gone
48:58where?
48:59run for the hills
49:01I hear Moroccan hills
49:04and Tony?
49:06back for the thing
49:09future Lady Snowden
49:10I would wager
49:11future Lady Snowden
49:16I'm not very good at it
49:22what?
49:25the men
49:27seem to drive them all mad
49:33Tony and I are going to separate
49:36yes I think that's probably wise
49:38which I'm afraid to say
49:40will lead
49:41to divorce
49:42yes
49:44the first royal divorce since Henry VIII
49:47and Anne of Cleves
49:49I have a little bit of good news in that department
49:52which is?
49:53if we time it right
49:55the announcement of your separation
49:57might get lost in the Prime Minister's resignation
50:00I thought you just got re-elected
50:01or did I really miss something?
50:04due to ill health
50:06Alzheimer's
50:08sorry?
50:15how many does that make it?
50:17Prime Minister's
50:18hmm
50:19whoever replaces him will be my seventh
50:23the rest of us drop like flies
50:26but she goes on
50:28and on
50:53for the record I think there are many things you're good at
50:56name one that's actually meaningful
50:59being a sister
51:01no need to humour me
51:03I'm not
51:05of all the people everywhere
51:07you are the closest and most important to me
51:11and if by doing this
51:14you wanted to let me imagine for one minute
51:16what life would be like without you
51:19you succeeded
51:24it would be unbearable
51:32then we must both carry on
51:33great
51:35thank you
51:46you
51:59morning
52:01morning Your Majesty
52:21Good morning, Your Majesty.
52:33Well, usually when I drive into Broadcasting House just after 5 in the morning, the most I'm likely to see
52:38is a bread delivery van or an office cleaner on the way to work.
52:41But this morning, despite the dark skies, there was a feeling of activity.
52:44A string of horses clashing through the streets and knots of people wearing red, white and blue gear drifting down
52:50towards the Trouder Square.
52:52But one of those have been up all night to make sure of getting a good view of the procession.
52:56And the price is with them outside Buckingham Palace.
52:59I'm standing in front of Buckingham Palace, and I expect the Queen's teesmaid has just rung her back to consciousness.
53:05I expect she's lying there, just coming to and remembering that this is Jubilee Day.
53:09This is a day as gruelling as her coronation 25 years ago, certainly in ceremonial terms.
53:15But she was a bit of a thing in those days.
53:17I expect today she's wondering if the shoes she's going to wear are quite as comfortable as they might be.
53:22Now, the weather looks as though, as I say, as though it's certainly going to hold for the journey out.
53:29What's your view of the Jubilee?
53:35You must do it.
53:38You don't think it might all backfire on me?
53:43Ask yourself, in the time I've been on the throne, what have I actually achieved?
53:47You've been calm.
53:50Stable and useless and unhelpful.
53:54This country was still great when I came to the throne, and now look.
53:57So much for the second Elizabethan age, which Winston talked about.
54:03All that's happened on my watch is the place has fallen apart.
54:06It's only fallen apart if we say it has.
54:10That's the thing about the monarchy.
54:14We paper over the cracks.
54:17And if what we do is loud, grand, confident enough,
54:23no one will notice that all around us it's fallen apart.
54:27That's the point of us.
54:31Not us.
54:33You.
54:36You cannot flinch.
54:40Because if you show a single crack,
54:44we'll see it isn't a crack,
54:46but a chasm.
54:48And we'll all fall in.
54:52So you must hold it all together.
54:58Must I do that alone?
55:01There is only one queen.
55:09And now, the poet laureate, Sir John Badgeman.
55:13God save the queen.
55:17In days of disillusion, however low we've been to fire us and inspire us,
55:24God gave to us our queen.
55:27She exceeded young and beautiful to a much-loved father's throne, serene and kind and beautiful.
55:37She holds us as her own.
55:40And 25 years later, so sure her reign has been that our great events are greater for the presence of
55:51our queen.
55:54For our monarch and her people, united yet and free, let the bells from every steeple ring out loud the
56:04jubilee.
56:05Let's see.
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