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The.Sandman.S01E06 [Full Movie] [Full Version]Full EP - Full
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00:28You
00:54Sorry, man. Last catch though. Thank you
01:06Thank you. Come on, Franklin. What are you waiting for?
01:22What are you doing? I'm feeding the pigeons.
01:30You do that too much, you know what you get. Fat pigeons.
01:39This from Mary Poppins. Do you ever see it?
01:42No.
01:52Okay, so what's the matter?
01:54What do you mean?
01:55I can tell something's wrong. I mean, look at you. Sitting here, moping, pigeon feeding. It's not like you.
02:06No. Perhaps it isn't. I don't know what's wrong, but you're right. Something is the matter.
02:24When they captured me, I just had one thought.
02:31Vengeance. It wasn't as satisfying as I'd expected.
02:36Meanwhile, my kingdom had fallen apart. My tools long since stolen and scattered.
02:45And so I embarked upon a journey to find them. Which I did. I'm now more powerful than I have
02:57been in eons. And yet...
03:06Here you are feeding the pigeons.
03:08You see, until then... I'd had a true quest. A purpose beyond my function. And then suddenly it was over.
03:21And...
03:24I felt disappointed. Let down. Empty. Does that make sense? I was so sure that once I got everything back,
03:37I'd feel good.
03:40But in some ways I feel worse than when I started. I feel like... nothing.
03:55There. You asked.
04:03You could have called me, you know. I didn't want to worry you.
04:07Oh, I don't believe it. Let me tell you something, Bryn. And I'm only gonna say this once, so you
04:14better pay attention.
04:15You are utterly the stupidest, most self-centered, pathetic excuse for an anthropomorphic personification on this or any other plane.
04:25Feeling sorry for yourself because your little game is over and you haven't got the balls to go out and
04:31find a new one.
04:33You're as bad as desire. No, worse. Did it never occur to you that I would be worried about you?
04:42Well, I didn't think.
04:43Exactly! You didn't think.
04:47Heads up!
04:50Wow. You're as good as your friend, Bryn.
04:56He's not my friend. He's my brother. And he's an idiot.
04:59I'm just feeding the birds.
05:04Look, I can't stay here all day. I've got work to do.
05:08You can come with me if you want. Or you can stay here and sulk.
05:14I'll come with you, I suppose.
05:16Well, don't do me any favours.
05:24Sorry. Before you go, could I maybe see you again?
05:29Sure, Franklin. You'll see me again.
05:33Seriously?
05:34Soon.
05:36Okay, cool.
05:38Yeah, let me just get your number and...
05:41Wait, how did you know my...
05:46Come on, Franklin! Are you playing or not?
05:54Look!
05:56Oh, yum!
05:58Okay, two please.
05:59None for me, thank you.
06:01They're good for you.
06:02I'm not hungry.
06:02Will you just have it later?
06:07Just one. Thanks.
06:10There you go.
06:12It's a gift.
06:13Oh, thank you.
06:16So nice.
06:19Mmm, that is delicious.
06:22What?
06:27You are good with, um...
06:29Apples?
06:31Humans.
06:32Mmm.
06:34Bye?
06:36No, thank you.
06:40Mmm.
06:41Have you seen any of the others?
06:43Since you've been back.
06:46Have you?
06:48Mmm, mmm.
06:50We did have one family dinner when you were away.
06:53The twins were in high spirits.
06:56Desire was, but anyway.
06:58With me gone, I have no doubt.
07:01I don't know.
07:03I think, does I miss having the usual sparring partner across the dinner table?
07:09Any word of the protocol?
07:13No.
07:15Still missing.
07:17You were both missed.
07:26How are you, sis?
07:28How have you been keeping?
07:30Aww.
07:31I'm well, dream.
07:32Thanks for asking.
07:36How are you, my sister?
07:39How have you been keeping?
07:42I'm worried about my brother.
07:46And I'm enjoying this apple.
07:52Can you hear it?
07:58I know this piece.
08:03I haven't heard it in 200 years.
08:10No.
08:29Don't stop.
08:30Please.
08:33Sorry for the noise.
08:35It's not noise.
08:36It's Schuber.
08:37Keep going.
08:38I can't.
08:40He never finished it.
08:42All we have is a fragment.
08:45Forgive me.
08:46I am Harry.
08:49I know who you are, Harry.
08:58Do you know who I am?
09:06No.
09:08Not yet.
09:09Please.
09:10It's time.
09:17Can I just...
09:19There's something I have to say.
09:22If that's alright.
09:23Of course.
09:34Shema Yisrael.
09:37Adonai Eloheinu.
09:38Adonai Ahad.
09:40Hear, O Israel.
09:42The Lord is our God.
09:44The Lord is one.
10:05I'm glad I said the Shema.
10:07My old man always said.
10:09It would guarantee you a place in heaven.
10:12If you believe in heaven.
10:19I look so old.
10:22So empty.
10:27So.
10:29I'm dead.
10:31Now what?
10:33Now that you find out, Harry.
10:58You're ready.
11:12You're ready.
11:14Michael, he was sweet.
11:16Didn't you?
11:18Sweet.
11:19I don't know.
11:22Perhaps.
11:26My sister.
11:28Yeah.
11:30When I was captured, it wasn't me they were looking for.
11:36It was you.
11:41Yeah.
11:44I know.
11:53What are you doing?
11:54Taking my shoes off.
11:56You should take yours off too.
11:58It's good to touch the earth with your bare feet.
12:00It's grounding.
12:01Maybe a little bit.
12:03Maybe a little bit.
12:03Come on.
12:04I don't want to miss the next one.
12:19Bye, Sam.
12:25I'm sorry.
12:26Do I know you?
12:37No, no, no, I need to talk to my wife for like one second.
12:42Sam.
12:43You don't understand.
12:45All our flight information is on my phone.
12:47I just need to give her the code.
12:49I'm so sorry, Sam.
12:51But we're on a honeymoon.
12:53Your time's up.
12:56Sam?
13:03Sam!
13:05Come along.
13:20Sam!
13:24Sam!
13:32How do you do it?
13:34Do what?
13:35This.
13:36Be there.
13:37For all of them.
13:41I have a job to do.
13:43And I do it.
13:46When the first living thing existed, I was there.
13:50When the last living thing dies, I'll put the chairs on the table, turn out the lights and lock the
13:57universe behind me when I leave.
14:00And I'm not there for all of them.
14:03There are exceptions.
14:06Mad Hetty.
14:07And then there's your ongoing project.
14:10How's he bearing up after all this time?
14:12Who?
14:14Hoggadling.
14:16I don't know. I was forced to miss our last appointment.
14:20Well, I'm sure he'd love to see you.
14:24They're never too keen to see me, though.
14:27Does it not bother you?
14:30I actually used to think I had the hardest job in all our family.
14:34Oh, did you?
14:35They fear the sunless lands, yet they enter your realm every night without fear.
14:40And yet, I am far more terrible than you.
14:46I was fine in the beginning.
14:48Dying and living were new things, and people did them with the enthusiasm they always bring to new things.
14:55And then, after a bit, it just got harder.
15:00But you continued.
15:05I thought about giving up.
15:09And walking out.
15:17This was a long time ago.
15:19Long before this world.
15:21It really started to get to me.
15:23I got kind of hard and brittle inside.
15:26I mean, people feel as pleased to have been born as if they did it themselves.
15:33But they get upset and hurt and shaken when they die.
15:39But eventually, I learned that all they really need is a kind word and a friendly face.
15:48Like they had in the beginning.
15:50Hello.
15:52Hello.
15:53Hello, baby girl.
15:55Are you hungry?
15:57I'd better get you a bottle now.
16:04Hello.
16:04Hello.
16:08Hello.
16:09Hello.
16:15Hello.
16:17I'm afraid so.
16:20So there is, little one.
16:22That's all you get.
16:37All right, sweetie, lunchtime.
16:41We can go.
16:43We can go.
16:44We can do some eating, and maybe a nap for Mummy's sake, and maybe a park.
16:53Not me.
16:54I find myself wondering about humanity, their attitude towards your gift is so strange.
17:05Why do they fear the Sunless Lands?
17:10It is as natural to die as it is to be born.
17:17People may not be ready for my gift, but they get it anyway.
17:24No matter what the circumstance.
17:52No matter what the person is, their Sioux Falls comes.
17:57At the end, each of us stands alone.
18:02The sunless lands are far away and the journey is hard.
18:09Most of us will be glad for the company of a friend.
18:18It's funny looking back now.
18:21I used to think I had to do this all by myself.
18:26But you do.
18:29No.
18:32At the end, I'm there with them.
18:35I'm holding their hand and they're holding mine.
18:39I'm not alone when I'm doing my job.
18:44Neither are you.
18:45Think about it.
18:47The only reason we even exist.
18:51You and I and desire and despair.
18:56The whole family.
18:59We're here to serve them.
19:03It isn't about quests or finding purpose outside our function.
19:11Our purpose is our function.
19:17We're here for them.
19:21Since I figured that out, I realized I need them as much as they need me.
19:34I've seen so many cool things and people and worlds.
19:43I've learned so much.
19:48Lots of people don't have a job they love doing, do they?
19:53So, I think I'm really very lucky.
19:58Listen, I've got to head back soon.
20:06You've told me something I had forgotten.
20:09I thank you, my sister.
20:14No.
20:17That's what family's about.
20:19Not a problem.
20:20To me, man!
20:20Over here!
20:23One last appointment.
20:25Then I have to go.
20:27I, too, am late for an appointment.
20:29Tell him I said hello.
20:33Franklyn!
20:33I have to go.
20:38Hey!
20:40Did you see that?
20:41That car came like this close to hitting me.
20:43This close, huh?
20:45Yeah.
20:46Come with me, Franklin.
20:47I need to show you something.
20:50Okay.
20:51See you, Dream.
20:54Don't be a stranger, okay?
20:59Oh my hell!
21:00What?
21:00Oh my!
21:00Oh my!
21:08Oh my God!
21:11Oh my God!
21:13Oh my God!
21:25Oh my God!
21:26Oh my God!
21:27Oh my God!
21:28Oh my God!
21:41Oh my God!
21:57Come on, then.
22:01What are you waiting for?
22:04Very well.
22:05But I do not see what purpose this will serve.
22:08At least I get out and meet them.
22:12I just think maybe it would be good for you to see them on their terms,
22:16instead of yours.
22:19Sir, penny L for me and another for my brother in it, please you?
22:22Certainly, lady.
22:24That's all.
22:25Yeah?
22:33Ugh.
22:37This is terrible.
22:38It was His Majesty's third poll tax in three years.
22:42What else do you think, eh?
22:44When Ball and Tyler were killed, the spirit of the Wackenman died with them.
22:48The King of Parliament reached the streets.
22:49We've got war, plague, and two bloody popes fighting.
22:54The end of the world is soon.
22:56You mark me.
22:57The delegation of fairies came to see me last night.
23:00They're talking about abandoning this plane forever.
23:03Dream.
23:04Listen to the people.
23:05No, no, no, no.
23:07Tricky drink.
23:08We need to return to law and order.
23:10He goes over and sees his wife then putting something in the oven.
23:14So he puts his hand up her dress.
23:16And she says, are you hunting for rabbits again, friar?
23:19Ha ha ha ha ha!
23:21William Diamond, you shall be a son of you.
23:24He is Cameron, that's what people want, Geoffrey.
23:27Not filthy tales in rhyme about pilgrims.
23:30But, Edmund, I enjoy rhyming.
23:32And I enjoy tavern tales told of an evening.
23:34Look, I've seen death.
23:38I lost half my village to the Black Death.
23:41I fought under Buckingham in Burgundy.
23:42It's not like I don't know what death is.
23:44Death is...
23:48Stupid.
23:50You're a fool, Hob.
23:51Nobody has to die.
23:53The only reason people die is because everyone does it.
23:57You all just go along with it.
23:58But not me.
24:01I've made up my mind.
24:04I'm not going to die.
24:07Hobbs, death comes for every man.
24:09You don't know that. I might get lucky.
24:11It's always the first time.
24:12There's so much to do. There's so many things to see.
24:16Women to swive. Ale to drink.
24:18People to drink with.
24:22Why would any sensible creature crave an eternity of this?
24:28You could find out.
24:30How?
24:31I could grant him his wish.
24:34Do that, and he will be begging for death within a century, I assure you.
24:40This could prove very interesting.
24:42And what will you do with all that life?
24:44I'll find better friends than you.
24:45I'll tell you that.
24:47Are you going to tell him or shall I?
24:50Aye, Cheryl.
24:52Very well, little brother.
24:55Very well.
24:56Very well.
24:57Knock the door back into your feet.
24:59Take some work.
25:01Don't.
25:02No, no, no, no.
25:04Did I hear you say you have no intention of ever dying?
25:10Uh, yeah.
25:11Yeah, yeah, that's right.
25:12Then you must tell me what it's like.
25:15Let us meet here again, Robert Gatling, in this tavern of the white horse in 100 years.
25:23Yeah.
25:24Ha, ha, ha, ha.
25:25Yeah.
25:27Ha, ha, ha, ha!
25:28100 years, and I'm Paul Bourbon.
25:29Yeah, I'm Paul Bourbon.
25:30Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
25:31Don't mind them.
25:34100 years time, on this day.
25:40I will see you in the year of our Lord, 1489, then.
25:56Who was that then, Obsie?
25:58Having a clue?
26:00But I'll tell you what, I'll ask him in a hundred years' time.
26:16How did you know, that I'd still be here?
26:23Who are you?
26:26A wizard? A saint?
26:29A demon?
26:36Have I made a bargain with the devil?
26:38No.
26:39Then why aren't I dead?
26:41Long since.
26:43Is this kind of game?
26:46No game.
26:47But why?
26:52Who are you?
26:55Why are you here?
26:58I'm here because I'm interested.
27:02In me?
27:03In your experience.
27:07And what do I have to do?
27:08Nothing.
27:09You live your life as you choose, then on this day, every 100 years, we will meet.
27:16Because you want to know what it's like?
27:23All right.
27:25I'll tell you what it's like.
27:32It's fucking brilliant.
27:36It's all changing.
27:38In what way?
27:40I mean, chimneys.
27:42Not having your eyes watering all the time from the smoke.
27:46And now we have these little cloth pieces for your nose.
27:50In the old days, we just used our sleeves.
27:52Ah, yeah.
27:54Playing cards.
27:55What will you people think of next?
27:59With any luck, something to get rid of fleas.
28:01But what have you been doing for the last hundred years?
28:06Um...
28:07The same as before.
28:08Soldiering, mainly.
28:09A little banditry here and there if I couldn't find a war.
28:12But now, I've started in a new trade.
28:16It's called printing.
28:18Don't need to be a guild member.
28:19Not yet.
28:20There'll never be a real demand for it.
28:22And it's hard work, but...
28:24It beats the hell out of rotting the maggots in the ground, eh?
28:30So you still want to live?
28:33Oh, yes.
28:38A hundred years, then.
28:40Oh, yes.
28:44You never told me who you are.
28:55Well, kid, your theme, as I saw it, is this.
28:59For one's art and for one's dreams,
29:02one may consort and bargain with the darkest power.
29:06Tis so.
29:07My friend!
29:09Sit down.
29:11Got in a couple of bottles of good wine for us.
29:15Already made a start on them.
29:16Hello, Hob.
29:18Hob?
29:19Hey, that takes me back some few years.
29:22It's Sir Robert Gadlin now, old stranger.
29:26You've had good fortune, I take it.
29:27The gods have smiled on me as they smile on all England
29:31when no man is slave or bondsman.
29:33Venison pasty?
29:36Huh?
29:37They're good.
29:39Mmm.
29:41Let's see.
29:42Last we spoke, I was working with Billy Caxton.
29:45Made some gold from that.
29:46Put it to work in Henry Tudor's shipyards.
29:48I made a small pile.
29:49Then I went north for a year or so,
29:51came back as my son.
29:52Done that twice now.
29:54Dope, more wine.
29:56When Fat Henry dumped for the monasteries,
29:57I bought my estates.
29:58And a healthy gift of gold to the crown
30:01saw too...
30:03a knighthood.
30:07And that's not all.
30:08And that's not all.
30:12My fair Eleanor.
30:14And little Robin.
30:16My first son born in over 200 years on this earth.
30:20That I know of.
30:23It's funny.
30:25This is what I always dreamed heaven would be like.
30:29Way back.
30:31It's safe to walk the streets,
30:34enough food,
30:35good wine.
30:36Life is so rich.
30:39God's wounds.
30:41If only I could write like you.
30:43In Faustus, when you wrote,
30:46To God,
30:47he loves thee not.
30:49Will sit down.
30:50For God thou serst
30:51is thine own appetite.
30:54Wherein is fixed the love
30:56of Beelzebub.
30:57To him,
30:58I'll build an altar in the church
31:00and offer up lukewarm blood
31:03of new hornbeth.
31:10I would give anything to have your gifts.
31:12To give men dreams
31:14that would live on long after I'm dead.
31:16I would bargain
31:18like your house-ness
31:19for that boon.
31:21Who is he?
31:23His name's Will Shaksbird.
31:25Acts a bit, wrote a play.
31:27Is he good?
31:28No, it's crap.
31:30That chap next to him
31:31with the broken leg,
31:33he's a good playwright.
31:37Anyway,
31:39I've saved the best bit for last.
31:41The Queen herself
31:42slept at my house this summer.
31:45That was expensive.
32:01Are you Will Shaksbird?
32:03Uh, are you, sir?
32:05Have we met?
32:07We have.
32:09But men forget in waking hours.
32:11I heard you talk, Will.
32:14Would you write great plays?
32:16Create new dreams
32:17to spur the minds of men.
32:21Is that your will?
32:29It is.
32:30Then let us talk.
32:39Sir, do you still want the lamp, sir?
32:48All right.
32:49Bring on the lamp.
32:52Everything to live for.
32:54And nowhere to go but up.
32:59Do you not be so free in assigning
33:01claves, fires, floods
33:03to the judgment of the Lord
33:04for our sin.
33:06They make more from the dull
33:08than they would from an honest day's work.
33:09I don't recommend that at all.
33:12You sure I can't help you, sir?
33:15No, thank you.
33:15I'm...
33:16Touch me!
33:17Wait!
33:17Don't wait!
33:18Oi!
33:19Get out of here!
33:19Get out of the stews
33:20with the rest of the filth!
33:22Let him be.
33:24He is my guest.
33:32Do you be here?
33:38Do you know
33:39how hungry a man can get
33:43if he doesn't die
33:44but he doesn't eat?
33:51I lost it all.
33:53My land.
33:55My gold.
33:58My Eleanor.
34:02She died in childbirth.
34:05The baby, too.
34:07My boy, Robin,
34:10died in a tavern brawl
34:11when he was 20.
34:12I didn't go out much after that.
34:17They tried to drown me as a witch.
34:18I lived there 40 years
34:21overconfident.
34:22I got out with my skin
34:23a little more.
34:25And then it got worse.
34:28And worse.
34:30And...
34:31worse.
34:36I've hated
34:37every second
34:38of the last 80 years.
34:40Every
34:40bloody second.
34:42You know that?
34:45So do you still wish to live?
34:53Are you crazy?
34:56Death is a mugs game.
34:58I've got so much to live for.
35:06Look at me all.
35:07It's not about to eat the fucking table.
35:32I heard something funny the other week.
35:35The bloke said to me, he said,
35:36if only the French nobles
35:38had played cricket with their men
35:39the way we do,
35:40they'd never have had this trouble.
35:44First the colonies,
35:45now France.
35:47You ask me,
35:48this country will be next for a revolution.
35:51I've been salting money away
35:52all over the world.
35:54First sign of trouble,
35:55I'll be out of here like that.
35:59But in the meantime,
36:03I'm in the shipping business.
36:06There's a new system
36:07where they take
36:08English cotton goods
36:09to Africa,
36:11get a cargo of Negroes,
36:13pack them in like sardines,
36:14same ship takes them
36:15across the Atlantic,
36:16then comes back here
36:17with raw cotton,
36:18tobacco and sugar.
36:22What?
36:24It's a poor thing
36:25for one man to enslave another.
36:28It's just how it's done.
36:30I suggest you find yourself
36:31a different line of business,
36:33Robert Badling.
36:35You're giving me advice.
36:37After 400 years,
36:39what happened to live your life
36:41as you choose?
36:42The choice is yours.
36:45Would you take that choice
36:46away from others?
36:55I will consider your advice.
37:02I saw a production
37:04of King Lear yesterday.
37:06Mrs. Siddons has gone on.
37:07The idiots have given it
37:08a happy ending.
37:10That will not last.
37:11The great stories
37:12will always return
37:13to their original forms.
37:17That lad.
37:19Will Shakespeare.
37:22He turned out to be
37:23a half-decent playwright
37:24after all.
37:28You made some kind of deal
37:29with him, didn't you?
37:30Perhaps.
37:31What kind of deal?
37:32His soul?
37:33Nothing so crude.
37:37400 years now
37:39I've been meeting you here
37:40and there is so much
37:41I still don't know.
37:44Who are you, truly?
37:46What's your name?
37:50I might ask both of you
37:52that same question,
37:53gentlemen.
37:55Please, please.
37:56Do not trouble yourselves
37:58to rise.
37:59These are Michael and Tobias.
38:01Smugglers by trade,
38:02although they're only too glad
38:04to augment their earnings
38:05by slitting throats.
38:06If you move,
38:07they'll slit yours.
38:08They tell of a tale
38:10in these London parts
38:11that the devil
38:13and the wandering Jew
38:14meet once every century
38:16in a tavern.
38:18Two years passed,
38:19sewn into the shirt
38:20of a dead man.
38:21I found
38:23this.
38:25Is that meant to be me?
38:27I look terrible.
38:28You look worse.
38:29You return to this pub
38:30every hundred years,
38:32striking bargains
38:33with men,
38:34sharing gifts,
38:36immortality,
38:38which you will now
38:39share with me.
38:43Well,
38:45have you nothing to say?
38:46I am no devil
38:47and I'm not Jewish.
38:50Fine.
38:52What manner of creatures
38:54are you then?
38:54Who wants to know?
38:56I'm Lady Joanna Constantine.
38:58You will both follow me, sir,
39:00as my coaches without.
39:03I can see there is
39:04so much you can tell me.
39:06So much I can learn.
39:10No.
39:13No, I think not.
39:22Get up.
39:36Wait.
39:50No.
39:53No, no, Jim.
39:56I'm sorry.
39:59What did you do to her?
40:00She has old ghosts that I've shown to her.
40:11You need not have come to my defense.
40:15Clearly.
40:18Still, I didn't want to be drinking alone here in a hundred years' time.
40:26I don't suppose you care to find another pub tonight?
40:28She may have told others about our meeting.
40:31It will not be safe for you.
40:32I'm perfectly safe.
40:35I can't die, remember?
40:37Aye.
40:38But you can be hurt.
40:39Or captured.
40:41You must be cautious.
40:44Always.
40:48A hundred years, then.
40:50A hundred years.
40:58For the first time I met a corner in a regiment of brigues,
41:04I gave him what he didn't like,
41:08and stole his silver spoons...
41:11Oh.
41:13You gave us a start, sir.
41:16For a second, I thought you was bloody jack yourself.
41:20No.
41:21No, I know that, sir.
41:22Just joshing you.
41:25So, how do you like to buy a girl a drainer pail?
41:31And maybe a quick bum dance?
41:33Give us an hard ride with your cream stick.
41:38I think not.
41:39I bet you ain't got it in you anyway, you skinny chickleary.
41:41Lou.
41:45Get yourself a drink.
41:47Maybe just a one.
41:52Sorry about Lushing Lou.
41:56Lushing Lou.
41:58Is that what they call her?
41:59Well, in here they call her the hospital.
42:02Why?
42:03Because she's in him a great deal.
42:05And because she's sent so many men into him.
42:08No idea what her real name is.
42:10Louise Baldwin.
42:11Her father was in the British Army.
42:14Her cousin raped, impregnated, and deserted her when she was just a child.
42:24How do you know all that?
42:28Your cup is empty.
42:29You need more wine.
42:31You knew Lady Joanna.
42:33You know Lushing Lou.
42:34You know everyone, don't you?
42:37I saw her again, you know.
42:40Who?
42:42Lady Joanna.
42:43She undertook a task for me and succeeded admirably on my dad.
42:49That might be the only thing I've learned after five hundred years.
42:57People are almost always better than you think they are.
43:05I think perhaps you've changed.
43:10Well, I may have learned a bit from my mistakes, but it doesn't seem to stop me from making them.
43:21I think it's you that's changed.
43:25How so?
43:28I think I know why we still meet here century after century.
43:34It's not because you want to see whether or not I'm ready to seek death.
43:38I don't think I'll ever seek death.
43:41By now you know that about me.
43:45So, I think you're here for something else.
43:48And what might that be?
43:53Friendship?
43:56I think you're lonely.
44:00You dare.
44:02No, look, I'm not saying...
44:05You dare suggest one such as I might need your companionship?
44:14Yes.
44:17Yes, I do.
44:23Then I shall take my leave of you and prove you wrong.
44:35Tell you what!
44:37I'll be here in a hundred years, Sian.
44:39If you're here then too, it'll be because we're friends.
44:42No other reason.
44:44Right?
44:47Fuck!
45:11That's just a bloody protest.
45:13There's going to be a revolution.
45:15She says, get dressed to get the job when they can meet more adults.
45:18It's great work.
45:19Sorry, man.
45:20She's going to ask her.
45:22And she says, are you hunting for rabbits again, Vicka?
45:25Mind if I...
45:26I'm actually waiting for someone.
45:28I'm just...
45:29Oh!
45:38And I'm going...
45:59whiskey please you'll have to be more specific we've got a menu now what's the oldest you've
46:06got well i've got a glenn grant old enough to be your father i'm older than i look
46:29you're waiting for someone i think i've been stood up
46:39we had a fight last time we were here
46:42it was my fault
46:48wish i could say i was drunk at the time but i was just an idiot i've seen plenty of
46:55friends
46:55get in fights in pubs even more of them laugh about it together later
47:01maybe in another hundred years you'll have to have found a new pub by then this place has been sold
47:07to make room for new flats the borough council are trying to stop them but if you've got enough
47:12money in this country you can do whatever you bloody want
47:20pour you another one why do you wait
47:25please
47:26please
48:34You're late.
48:36It seems I owe you an apology.
48:39I've always had it impolite to keep one's friends waiting.
49:09I stand in my gallery and I hold your sigil.
49:16A brother has found a way out of his cage.
49:19A plan has failed.
49:23But don't worry.
49:25I have a new one.
50:12I have a new one.
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