- 7 hours ago
The Crown S01E09 [Full Movie] [Recommended]Full EP - Full
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00:00:11If your sweetheart sends a letter a good-bye,
00:00:26it's no secret.
00:00:29You feel the record.
00:00:33This way, by the way.
00:00:43The end of the bar.
00:00:49Hello.
00:00:50Hello, Porchy.
00:00:54Find the place all right now?
00:00:55Taxi driver, dear?
00:00:57Yes.
00:00:58Of course.
00:01:00Wonderful.
00:01:15Is it just me or is this place faintly ridiculous?
00:01:20Two of my great hates in life, fine dining in central London.
00:01:25I just thought it's the kind of special occasion place one came if one had a special question
00:01:31to ask.
00:01:43This moment I wish I were a poet, not a horse breeder.
00:01:55Will you marry me?
00:02:01Oh, poor G.
00:02:03That sounds like a no.
00:02:05No.
00:02:06No.
00:02:06It's not a no.
00:02:08No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
00:02:12Twelve no's?
00:02:14I would love to.
00:02:16On one condition.
00:02:19That you don't still hold a torch for her.
00:02:22Who?
00:02:25Oh.
00:02:27Her.
00:02:36I know how close you were and how close your families still are.
00:02:40It's true.
00:02:41She and I, we are close.
00:02:43I was close to her father.
00:02:45I am close to her sister.
00:02:46Our families are close.
00:02:48In many ways, and I speak as a breeder myself, it would have been a good match.
00:02:52Perfect match.
00:02:53I won't deny it.
00:02:56Except for the fact it was never on the cards.
00:03:03For her, there was only ever Philip.
00:03:20It was only you.
00:03:34From...
00:04:02I don't know what happened.
00:04:10I need a bit.
00:04:38I need a bit.
00:05:05I need a bit.
00:05:34I need a bit.
00:05:35I need a bit.
00:05:36I need a bit.
00:05:37I need a bit.
00:05:38I need a bit.
00:05:39I need a bit.
00:06:27I need a bit.
00:06:41I need a bit.
00:07:05I need a bit.
00:07:25I need a bit.
00:07:59I need a bit.
00:08:27I need a bit.
00:08:50I need a bit.
00:09:02I need a bit.
00:09:12I need a bit.
00:09:44I need a bit.
00:10:31I need a bit.
00:11:01Good morning.
00:11:08I need a bit.
00:11:21I need a bit.
00:11:54I need a bit.
00:12:31I need a bit.
00:12:37I need a bit.
00:12:48I need a bit.
00:13:03I need a bit.
00:13:05I need a bit.
00:13:14I need a bit.
00:13:30I need a bit.
00:13:38I need a bit.
00:13:47I need a bit.
00:14:01I need a bit.
00:14:03I need a bit.
00:14:04Even the socialists acknowledge you saved the country.
00:14:08Through gritted teeth.
00:14:10I have the protective instincts of a loving wife,
00:14:13and I can tell you this one is not an assassin.
00:14:16Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!
00:14:17The last of the world is like the last of the powers of one,
00:14:20Cathy O'Rourke, the 50th of the game,
00:14:23the first four galleries we go,
00:14:25and let the poor Sorrel one.
00:14:52It's so clever.
00:14:56Oh, I know.
00:15:09What a champion.
00:15:11What a champion.
00:15:12Oh, hello.
00:15:26I remember getting the phone call from your father
00:15:29when he was born.
00:15:31By Hyperion, out of Angelola.
00:15:33Yes, we gave him his first milk, remember?
00:15:38Watching him grow up,
00:15:39everyone thought his elder brother would be the star.
00:15:40Your clever papa always had an instinct for this one.
00:15:44The underdog.
00:15:45And he backed him.
00:15:47And an underdog became a star.
00:15:50Yes, it is his favourite horse.
00:15:53So, what's next, Rajan?
00:15:56Well, we've received an invitation to the Laurel International.
00:16:02America?
00:16:03Yes, next month.
00:16:05Well, he's what, four?
00:16:08Already at the older end of the spectrum.
00:16:10Hmm.
00:16:10If you were asking my opinion.
00:16:12Well, that is why I asked for you today.
00:16:16My honest advice?
00:16:18I'd consider retiring him now.
00:16:20At the top of his game.
00:16:22The best middle-distance horse in Europe
00:16:24with a sky-high market value.
00:16:27Let him earn you some proper money as a star.
00:16:30Well, I'm surprised to hear you
00:16:32turning down the opportunity of going to America.
00:16:37Why?
00:16:38Well, that's where your girlfriend's from, isn't it?
00:16:42Fiancée.
00:16:44Fiancée?
00:16:45Goodness.
00:16:49Who is she?
00:16:51Money, I hope, so you can keep up the stables.
00:16:53Actually, she's a portsmann.
00:16:55Dear, so no money.
00:16:56Some money.
00:16:57But horse mad.
00:16:59Well, she'd have to be.
00:17:03You'd approve, I think.
00:17:06Well, can I meet her?
00:17:07If you promise you won't scare her.
00:17:09Why would I scare her?
00:17:10You're the queen.
00:17:12Only some of the time.
00:17:13All the time.
00:17:14That makes you terrifying.
00:17:16And she's heard a lot about you.
00:17:19From whom?
00:17:20From me.
00:17:22Some of it nice, too.
00:17:48Good to have you.
00:18:01Oh, the one you let get away.
00:18:06What?
00:18:07He was carried a torch for you.
00:18:09What, she?
00:18:11That's nonsense.
00:18:13He told me himself.
00:18:15One night while in his cups.
00:18:18That doesn't count.
00:18:21When a man's had a drink, that's when the truth comes out.
00:18:24No, that's when the nonsense comes out.
00:18:26Besides, we have interests in common.
00:18:29Roses aren't an interest for you, they're a passion.
00:18:32A passion your husband doesn't share.
00:18:34He has other passions.
00:18:37So I hear.
00:18:39I hear.
00:18:51I hear.
00:18:52I hear.
00:19:12The Foreign Secretary is here, sir.
00:19:14Shall I show him in?
00:19:16No.
00:19:18Not here.
00:19:32Sorry to keep you waking.
00:19:35As apposite as ever.
00:19:38I didn't mean it like that.
00:19:44There's ugliness in the air, Anthony.
00:19:48I have nothing of beauty to say.
00:19:50Then say what you must.
00:19:52Deposite your ugliness and go.
00:19:55I have more important things to do.
00:20:01Very well.
00:20:07At some point, every leader must ask himself whether by staying in office he is giving to the country or
00:20:18taking from it.
00:20:19Helping or harming.
00:20:23And I would suggest that for some time now you have been taking and harming.
00:20:31And therefore I come to you in the name of the party and of the country for the very last
00:20:38time, Winston, to bid you to stand down.
00:20:42I will in good time.
00:20:43At the right time.
00:20:46The right time was nine years ago when you lost us the election.
00:20:49And I have since avenged that defeat by winning us the last election.
00:20:53I won us that, Winston!
00:20:55I won that!
00:21:01People voted conservative in the clear expectation that you would give way to me.
00:21:07That is such rubbish!
00:21:09They voted conservative because they couldn't stomach socialism!
00:21:13Inflation is out of control.
00:21:15And with every misjudgment, with every miscalculation, with every utterance you make, that appetite to return to the left is
00:21:25growing!
00:21:26Be careful, Anthony.
00:21:27Too much excitement is not good for one so soon after an operation.
00:21:31Spoken by a man who only two months ago was effectively dead.
00:21:35Which makes two of us.
00:21:37I have recovered.
00:21:38That's not what I hear.
00:21:40I hear you're a shadow of your former self.
00:21:44That when you walk, the pills rattle around inside of you.
00:21:48I have something that you'll never see again.
00:21:52A clean bill of health.
00:21:55Stalin said the same.
00:21:57He died wrothling on the floor!
00:22:01Mr. Sutherland is here.
00:22:04Hello, Anthony.
00:22:05Anthony was just leaving.
00:22:08Hello, Jimmy.
00:22:11Yes, I was, uh...
00:22:15Just leaving.
00:22:17Here we are.
00:22:19Morning.
00:22:21Morning.
00:22:22This is my wife, Kathleen.
00:22:24She'll assist me sometime.
00:22:26I hope you don't mind.
00:22:28Ugh, where are we?
00:22:43Hello...
00:22:45Hi.
00:22:52I don't know.
00:22:53Hot really, if you need to resume, you can try brush.
00:22:54It starts over to Naomi her.
00:22:54Uh...
00:22:56I have what has it done today.
00:22:57It's over here.
00:22:59Over here.
00:23:07What's that you're using?
00:23:09Pencil.
00:23:10But which kind?
00:23:144B or 6B or something.
00:23:16Not sure.
00:23:18It's a 6B.
00:23:21And on what paper?
00:23:23Drawing paper.
00:23:24I gave a heavyweight cotton.
00:23:25A cold-pressed, decal-edged,
00:23:28sized with gelatine.
00:23:36How many paintings has your husband
00:23:38complete in a year, Mrs Sutherland?
00:23:413 or 4.
00:23:44Would you care to guess
00:23:45how many I average?
00:23:4710?
00:23:5015?
00:23:5160!
00:23:53Of course.
00:23:54I'm just a hobbyist.
00:23:56An enthusiast.
00:23:58Not a major artist like your husband.
00:24:03Taking his time.
00:24:05Mm-hmm.
00:24:07Over here.
00:24:12Mm-hmm.
00:24:15Mm-hmm.
00:24:19Mm-hmm.
00:24:19Mm-hmm.
00:24:20Mm-hmm.
00:24:21Mm-hmm.
00:24:21Mm-hmm.
00:24:38I did a little reading about you, Mr Sutherland, after our last session.
00:24:44Did you?
00:24:44Yeah, quite interesting.
00:24:46From what I read, this is all very new to you, this portraiture.
00:24:51I don't think anyone starts out wanting to be a portraitist.
00:24:54Yeah.
00:24:55But in your search for your metier,
00:24:57you've tried a bit of everything.
00:24:59That's true.
00:25:02I came to painting quite late.
00:25:04But now that you've found it,
00:25:05you'll never leave it, yes?
00:25:06Mm-hmm.
00:25:07Yeah.
00:25:07I quite understand.
00:25:16Mm-hmm.
00:25:27How is it, Mrs Sutherland?
00:25:32it has truth
00:25:35am i to be allowed a peek
00:25:37no
00:25:39why not
00:25:40i could give you advice
00:25:42after all i know this face
00:25:44better than you do
00:25:45if you've made the neck too thick
00:25:47or the arms too long i can tell you
00:25:50i find in general people have very little
00:25:52understanding of who they are
00:25:54one has to turn a blind eye
00:25:56to so much of oneself in order to get through life
00:25:58and you see it as your responsibility
00:25:59to bring all that out into the open
00:26:01certainly the good as well as the bad
00:26:03just concentrate on the good
00:26:05and all will be well
00:26:07you're not just painting me
00:26:09you know you're painting the prime minister
00:26:11of the united kingdom of great britain
00:26:14and northern ireland and everything that
00:26:15great office represents
00:26:17democracy freedom the highest ideals
00:26:20of government and leadership
00:26:22just remember that
00:26:34yes
00:26:35lord porchester
00:26:37your majesty
00:26:38thank you
00:26:40plug in
00:26:41porchy
00:26:43what a palaver
00:26:44what is
00:26:45getting through to you
00:26:47i picked up the phone to you
00:26:48just after nine this morning
00:26:50it's now gone midday
00:26:51oh don't exaggerate
00:26:53but yes i know
00:26:54it is infuriating
00:26:55fire away
00:26:56you asked me to come to some figures for you
00:26:58with regard to aureole
00:26:59although i'm numerically dyslexic
00:27:01runs in the family i'm afraid
00:27:03like the high forehead
00:27:04i have done the sums
00:27:06see if this helps you with your decision
00:27:07in the course of his lifetime as a racehorse
00:27:10aureole has made you just over forty thousand pounds
00:27:13goodness
00:27:15but if you were to put him out to stud he could make you far more
00:27:18he's a recognized champion with a top-notch pedigree
00:27:21you could stand him at warfelton's stud for top dollar
00:27:26well
00:27:28that's the decision then
00:27:30good
00:27:31and in the meantime
00:27:33i'll ask if i can get you a direct line
00:27:35to you
00:27:36yes to me
00:27:38why
00:27:38or is there anyone else you wanted to speak to here
00:27:42no
00:27:43good
00:27:47what is it
00:27:48top dollar
00:27:50i need numbers
00:27:52four hundred
00:27:53a pot
00:27:53a shot
00:27:56sorry i'm trying to find a less onomatopoeic express
00:27:58for what is ultimately
00:27:59i know what it is
00:28:00a shag
00:28:01a cover
00:28:02a cover
00:28:03yes that's the correct term
00:28:05for
00:28:07a horse hump
00:28:08yes
00:28:11so what might you earn then over the course of the year
00:28:14well
00:28:15in one year alone oriel might cover
00:28:17forty mares
00:28:20making about sixteen thousand pounds
00:28:22good for him
00:28:24in the course of his lifetime at the stud he might sire
00:28:26five hundred six hundred foals
00:28:29making me over two hundred thousand pounds
00:28:31creating an entire generation of offspring
00:28:34yes
00:28:36father to all the foals in our stables and any other stable that could afford him
00:28:40yes
00:28:42oh i see so in time
00:28:43every horse out there
00:28:45could somehow
00:28:46be related
00:28:48to oriel
00:28:49yes i suppose so
00:28:53like old man carnarvon
00:28:56who
00:28:58your friend porchy's father
00:29:00porchy
00:29:01no
00:29:02like i said
00:29:03his father
00:29:04yes they're both called porchy
00:29:06wasn't that the rumor
00:29:08what rumor
00:29:09oh
00:29:10that he'd had so many affairs
00:29:12an entire generation of british aristocrats was related to him
00:29:16an illegitimate porchy
00:29:19in every great house in the land
00:29:22high foreheads everywhere
00:29:25a numerical dyslexia
00:29:28what
00:29:29nothing
00:29:31what
00:29:32nothing
00:29:33nothing
00:29:37michael
00:29:38dear boy
00:29:44good night
00:29:46good night
00:29:50let me have a look here
00:29:53marvellous
00:29:53shall we
00:29:54come on
00:29:54you look beautiful
00:29:55mmhmm
00:29:58uh
00:30:11mm
00:31:46Good morning.
00:31:47Morning.
00:32:00Your wife this time?
00:32:03You know, I asked her not to come.
00:32:11Since this is to be our final session,
00:32:15I wanted us to be all alone.
00:32:21In silence, preferably.
00:32:23Yes, yes.
00:32:25I'll be a good boy.
00:32:33I quite understand the need for concentration.
00:32:37Painting the picture is like fighting a battle, a bloody battle.
00:32:43In the gladiatorial fight to the death, the artist either wins or loses.
00:32:51Are you winning?
00:32:53I hope so.
00:32:56Do you think I'll like it?
00:32:58I think that's possibly too much to ask for.
00:33:02But I do take comfort from the fact that your own work is so honest and revealing.
00:33:08Oh, thank you for the compliment.
00:33:16Are there any works that you're referring to in particular?
00:33:21I was thinking especially of the goldfish pond here at Chartma.
00:33:27The pond?
00:33:28Why the pond?
00:33:29It's just a pond.
00:33:31It's very much more than that, as borne out by the fact that you've returned to it again and again,
00:33:36more than 20 times.
00:33:37Well, yes, because it's such a technical challenge.
00:33:40It eludes me.
00:33:43Well, perhaps you elude yourself, sir.
00:33:45That's why it's more revealing than a self-portrait.
00:33:48Oh, that's nonsense.
00:33:50It's the water.
00:33:53The play of light.
00:33:55The trickery.
00:33:56The fish down below.
00:33:59I think all our work is unintentionally revealing, and I found it especially so with your pond.
00:34:04Beneath the tranquility and the elegance and the light playing on the surface, I saw honesty and pain.
00:34:10Terrible pain.
00:34:12The framing itself indicated to me that you wanted us to see something beneath all the muted colors deep down
00:34:22in the water.
00:34:25Terrible despair.
00:34:27Hiding like a leviathan, like a sea monster.
00:34:31You saw all that?
00:34:34Yes, I did.
00:34:37Perhaps that says more about you than me.
00:34:39Mm-hmm.
00:34:42Perhaps.
00:34:46May I ask you a question, Mr. Sutherland?
00:34:49Hmm.
00:34:50It's about one of your paintings.
00:34:53The one you call pastoral.
00:34:55With all that gnarled and twisted wood, those great ugly dabs of black, I found something malevolent in it.
00:35:10Where did that come from?
00:35:13Well, it's very perceptive.
00:35:15That was, uh, it was a very dark time.
00:35:18My, uh, my son, John, passed away.
00:35:24Eight to two months.
00:35:30Oh, my.
00:35:32I am sorry.
00:35:39Yes, thank you.
00:35:58You have five, yes?
00:36:00Four.
00:36:04Marigold was the fifth.
00:36:07She left us at age two years, nine months.
00:36:12Septicemia.
00:36:13I'm so sorry.
00:36:14I had no idea.
00:36:18We settled on the name Marigold on account of her wonderful golden curls, the most extraordinary color.
00:36:32Regretfully, though perhaps mercifully, I was not present when she died.
00:36:39When I came home, Clemmie roared like a wounded animal.
00:36:54We bought chart, well, a year after Marigold died.
00:37:03That was when I put in the pond.
00:37:39Oh, thank you.
00:37:55Oh, thank you.
00:37:59It's a pleasure.
00:38:07I look forward to seeing it.
00:38:27Let me, let me, let me, let me free, please.
00:38:36Please, forget the death of death.
00:38:44Oh, death of death.
00:38:50Hello.
00:38:51Hello.
00:38:53Shall we?
00:38:55Yes.
00:39:00Given this is Oriel's debut, we want to leave nothing to chance, I've called up three different
00:39:05mayors.
00:39:06Very rarely does a forced tryst make a fruitful tryst.
00:39:10One wants the perfect foe, one needs to be prepared to wait for the perfect peril.
00:39:14Shall we?
00:39:16Meet Neocracy.
00:39:17Oh, the Aga Khan.
00:39:18Indeed.
00:39:19Yes.
00:39:19Recently retired, with a good record as a winner.
00:39:22Lovely temperament.
00:39:24My only concern would be, is she perhaps a little too...
00:39:28Special.
00:39:29I worry that if we were pleased through to it, nothing would ever happen.
00:39:33Which is why I've also called up Turkish blood.
00:39:36As you can see, an altogether different proposition.
00:39:39Indeed.
00:39:40Strong, willful, with a terrific track record herself.
00:39:43I really would be breeding the best with the best.
00:39:46I'm sensing a barge.
00:39:47Through memory, your Oriel is something of a sensitive soul.
00:39:52I hate him to be intimidated or come unstuck when faced a fiery warrior like this.
00:39:56That's very considerate of your portrait.
00:39:58Which is why I have a good feeling about our third candidate.
00:40:01Feast your eyes on Temple Bar.
00:40:03A hot thoroughbred with the winning streak herself.
00:40:06There's a little on the young side, perhaps.
00:40:09Just three.
00:40:10We don't mind that, do we?
00:40:17Immediate engagement.
00:40:18Yes.
00:40:19I must say, I do like this one.
00:40:21Mm.
00:40:23Would appear the feeling is mutual.
00:40:24He-he-he.
00:40:29Telegrams have been pouring into Dining Street today to wish Sir Winston Churchill a happy 80th birthday on this, the
00:40:3730th of November.
00:40:39They come from all parts of the globe.
00:40:42Oh, happy birthday.
00:40:46Oh darling, old pug.
00:41:12Come on, come on.
00:41:17Come on, come on.
00:41:51Come on, come on.
00:41:53Bruce it down, Michael.
00:41:54Thank you, Bob.
00:41:55Westminster Hall, silent witness of nearly a thousand years of history, was the scene of the birthday presentations to Sir
00:42:02Winston.
00:42:02Thank you, Bob.
00:42:55I am deeply honored to be here today.
00:43:01No politician has ever received such an honor before, and I am deeply grateful.
00:43:10I am aware, however, that after having served my country for 54 of my 80 years, resignation is a word
00:43:28that hangs in the air.
00:43:32And indeed, this is the perfect occasion for it.
00:43:36The stage is set, and the audience is assembled all ready for a grand valediction.
00:43:46There's only one problem.
00:43:48The lead actor has forgotten his life.
00:43:53And instead of standing down, he is taking an encore.
00:43:59My dear, he's playing with them all.
00:44:03When your political colleagues are kind enough to present you with a portrait by an ambitious modernist,
00:44:14one has to ask oneself, is it a gift or is it a curse?
00:44:27Mr. Sutherland, the artist and I spoke a great deal during my sittings.
00:44:35I reminded him of the stakes involved, that his portrait was not just of me, but of the office I
00:44:46represent, indeed, of our entire system of government.
00:44:50So, at long last, I look forward to unveiling this painting.
00:45:30The divine patriotic piece of modern art.
00:46:10Why are you here?
00:46:12I understand you've rejected the painting.
00:46:15I have.
00:46:16On what grounds?
00:46:17That is not a painting.
00:46:19It's a humiliation.
00:46:22How shall I paint him today?
00:46:25Ah!
00:46:26Sitting on a chair, producing a stool.
00:46:30A broken, sagging, pitiful creature.
00:46:34Squeezing and squeezing.
00:46:36That's not how it's being seen.
00:46:37That is how it is.
00:46:39And I will not accept it.
00:46:41I don't think it's wise to reject it.
00:46:43It was commissioned by the members of the Joint Houses of Parliament as a sign of respect.
00:46:47But then they should have commissioned an artist who is respectful instead of a Judas wielding his murderous brush.
00:46:55Look at it!
00:46:56It is a betrayal of friendship and an unpatriotic, treacherous, cowardly assault by the individualistic left.
00:47:06As regards to the friendship?
00:47:07Clearly, there is none.
00:47:11I accepted this commission because I admired you, and I came through the experience of admiring you even more.
00:47:16You make monsters of everyone you admire?
00:47:20It's not vindictive.
00:47:22No.
00:47:22It's art.
00:47:23It's not personal.
00:47:24Well, you are a lost soul.
00:47:29A narcissist without direction or certainty.
00:47:32Please, sir.
00:47:34Don't overreact.
00:47:35Give it time.
00:47:36I showed the sketches to your wife throughout the process.
00:47:39She remarked on how accurate they were.
00:47:40That is the whole point.
00:47:42It is not a reasonably truthful image of me.
00:47:46It is, sir.
00:47:47It is not.
00:47:47It is cruel.
00:47:49Age is cruel.
00:47:57If you see decay, it's because there's decay.
00:47:59If you see frailty, it's because there's frailty.
00:48:03I can't be blamed for what is.
00:48:07And I refuse to hide and disguise what I see.
00:48:14If you're engaged in a fight with something, then it's not with me.
00:48:24It's with your own blindness.
00:48:37I think you should go.
00:48:54I think you should go.
00:48:54I don't know.
00:48:55I don't know.
00:49:07I don't know.
00:49:22he's right what i am that man in the painting
00:49:31and wretched and decaying and i cannot go on you've said that before
00:49:43and this time i mean it i'm tired
00:49:49you've had enough
00:49:52i have my love
00:49:59this time i really have good
00:50:47of course i knew it was coming
00:50:50if i'm being frank there were one or two moments when i might have even hoped for it too
00:50:56prayed no doubt
00:51:06you really have been the most remarkable servant to your country thank you ma'am no winston
00:51:12on behalf of us all thank you
00:51:20and you wish for mr eden to take over i do well that will make him happy for a day
00:51:27or two
00:51:29he might even stop cursing me then he will be overwhelmed by a job in which no man can ever
00:51:35succeed and curse me again for leaving it to him
00:51:41it might be an idea not to tell him that before he starts no ma'am
00:51:48so
00:51:51this is our last audience
00:52:02yes
00:52:08however will i cope without you
00:52:11you will be fine ma'am
00:52:15i have nothing more to teach you which is why it's time for me to leave
00:52:31your majesty
00:52:50is
00:52:55is
00:53:12Oh, my God.
00:53:28Oh, my God.
00:54:19Oh, my God.
00:54:28Oh, my God.
00:54:29I'll ask Philip.
00:54:30No, you'll tell Philip money.
00:54:33Dino Downing Street, oh God.
00:54:36Why not?
00:54:39Is she a look anything?
00:54:42I mean, if I were a stallion, would I fancy her?
00:54:46Attraction isn't so much about looks as smell.
00:54:50Oh, I see.
00:54:51Well, does she smell good?
00:54:52Well, we'll see.
00:54:53Maybe.
00:54:55Come on.
00:54:56Come on, have a look.
00:55:03Rather like us, darling, when we were courting.
00:55:05Shh.
00:55:06Will you please?
00:55:08Be quiet.
00:55:10Yeah, look.
00:55:11Here we go.
00:55:12All right.
00:55:14You all right?
00:55:15Yeah.
00:55:17Hold her steady.
00:55:19Ready?
00:55:22All right.
00:55:25All right.
00:55:25I say.
00:55:30Back off.
00:55:37Good boy.
00:55:41Is that it?
00:55:44Two thousand guineas for that.
00:55:46As long as he's done what he needs to do and it bears fruit, I don't mind.
00:55:50Well done, Portchey.
00:55:54Yes, indeed.
00:55:56Well done, Portchey.
00:55:58I hear he's been given a direct line.
00:56:01Who?
00:56:02Portchey, so he can call straight in.
00:56:04I know only because I tried to get one for Mike and was refused.
00:56:08Yes.
00:56:09On account of him not being a family member.
00:56:12Portchey is like family.
00:56:13Is he?
00:56:15Yes.
00:56:16Part of the furniture.
00:56:19Well, as long as you don't sit on him many times too.
00:56:34Well, that all seemed to go well.
00:56:35Yes, it did, isn't it?
00:56:39You all right?
00:56:43Mm.
00:57:08Can you leave us now, please?
00:57:11Yes, ma'am.
00:57:28I have nothing to hide from you.
00:57:30Nothing.
00:57:34Portchey is a friend.
00:57:39And yes, there are those who would have preferred me to marry him.
00:57:43Indeed, marriage with him might have been easier.
00:57:48Might have even worked better than ours.
00:57:53But to everyone's regret and frustration, the only person I have ever loved is you.
00:58:03And can you honestly look me in the eye and say the same?
00:58:17Can you?
00:58:32Pray silence for Her Majesty the Queen.
00:58:44My Lords, ladies and gentlemen, dear Winston and Lady Churchill.
00:58:56My confidence in Sir Anthony is complete.
00:59:01And I know he will lead the country on to great achievements.
00:59:06But it would be useless to pretend that either he or any of those successors who may one day follow
00:59:13him in office
00:59:15will ever, for me, be able to hold the place of my first Prime Minister.
00:59:20To whom my husband and I owe so much.
00:59:26And for whose wise guidance during the early years of my reign.
00:59:30I shall always be so profoundly grateful.
00:59:41I will remember you always, your magnanimity, your courage at all times.
00:59:55And for your unfailing humour, founded in your unrivalled mastery of the English language.
01:00:04I take comfort from the fact that in losing my constitutional advisor,
01:00:13I gain a wise counsellor to whom I shall look for help and support in the days which lie ahead.
01:00:33May there be many of them.
01:00:34May there be many of them.
01:00:36May there be many of them.
01:00:36May there be many of them.
01:00:38May there be many of them or may there you H
01:00:48May the sea gild!
01:00:50May there be many are...
01:00:56Will there be many of them?
01:00:57May there be many of them.
01:01:00May there be many of them such a found out there.
01:01:02May there be many of them,
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