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The Crown S04E08 [Full Movie] [Free Online HD]Full EP - Full
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00:01You
00:16Everybody set
00:19Yes, hurry up, hurry up
00:22Right
00:24Absolute silence
00:25everywhere
00:30Cue this
00:30Right recording
00:31Ready, Your Royal Highness
00:35Five
00:36Four
00:37Three
00:38Two
00:39One
00:41And
00:46On this
00:48the occasion of my 21st birthday
00:51I welcome the opportunity
00:53to speak to all the peoples
00:55of the British Commonwealth and Empire
00:57wherever they live
00:59whatever race they come from
01:02and whatever language
01:03they speak
01:07As I speak to you today
01:09from Cape Town
01:10I am 6,000 miles
01:12from the country
01:14where I was born
01:17But I am certainly not
01:196,000 miles from home
01:23That is the great privilege
01:24of belonging to our place
01:27in the worldwide Commonwealth
01:30There are homes
01:31ready to welcome us
01:33in every continent
01:34in every continent of the earth
01:36Before I am much elder
01:38I hope I shall come to know
01:39many of them
01:41Although there is none of my father's subjects
01:44from the eldest to the youngest
01:46I do not wish to greet
01:48I am thinking especially today
01:51of all the young men and women
01:52who were born about the same time
01:55as myself
01:55and have grown up like me
01:59in the terrible and glorious years
02:01of the Second World War
02:03Will you
02:04the youth of the British family of nations
02:07let me speak on my birthday
02:09as your representative
02:12Now that we are coming to manhood
02:14and womanhood
02:15it is surely a great joy to us all
02:18to think that we shall be able
02:20to take some of the burden
02:21off the shoulders of our elders
02:24who have fought and worked
02:26and suffered to protect our childhood
02:29To that generation I say
02:31we must not be daunted
02:33by the anxieties and hardships
02:34that the war has left behind
02:36for every nation of our Commonwealth
02:39We know these things are the price
02:42we are cheerfully undertook to pay
02:44for the high honour
02:46of standing alone
02:47seven years ago
02:50in defence of the liberty of the world
02:52If we all go forward together
02:55with an unwavering faith
02:57a high courage
02:58and a quiet heart
03:00we shall be able to make
03:02of this ancient Commonwealth
03:03which we all love so dearly
03:05an even grander thing
03:09more free
03:10more prosperous
03:12more happy
03:14and a more powerful influence
03:16for good
03:17in the world
03:18than it has been
03:19in the greatest days
03:20of our forefathers
03:22Please welcome
03:23Margaret Roberts
03:29To accomplish that
03:31we must give nothing less
03:33than what my father
03:34King George
03:35the first head of the Commonwealth
03:37calls
03:38the whole of ourselves
03:40good evening
03:44there is a motto
03:46which has been born
03:48by many of my ancestors
03:50a noble motto
03:51I serve
03:54I should like to make
03:56that dedication now
03:58it's very simple
04:00I declare before you all
04:02that my whole life
04:05whether it be long
04:06or short
04:08shall be devoted
04:09to your service
04:12and the service
04:13of our great imperial family
04:15to which we all belong
04:18God help me
04:19to make good my vow
04:21and God bless all of you
04:23who are willing to share in it
04:34thank you
04:35thank you
04:36thank you
05:09for the friendship
05:10and the people
05:15that I love
05:16even though
05:16is not going
05:16by the Anda
05:16and I'll be
05:16and I'll be
05:24you may
06:05It was the Vulvas of Eurydice, except I was Aristeas, driving her on towards the servant.
06:14Malachi, Malachi.
06:17Twice she called me by the name, and twice she beckoned me with her outstretched back.
06:23I stood in darkness, she in light, and yet here I was, the diurnal, and she the crepuscular,
06:31if such a migratory distinction can pretend.
06:38The aurora was breaking.
06:40The island Seagird was fast stirring.
06:44I looked at her again.
06:46Her fullness pellucid in the lambent sunshine, seemed as if a fish skin pulled taut.
06:52She gave me one last glancing look, and then stepped off, and plunged down into the waxing
06:59viridescence of the Ionian waters below.
07:04Mors tour, Mita Mayer.
07:10The end.
07:23Golly, your very own war and peace.
07:26Ulysses, please.
07:29Uh, I shall set aside a year of my life.
07:36What?
07:36Just kidding.
07:37I'll have it read by the end of next week.
07:39You're very kind.
07:40And Michael, bravo.
07:42Uh-uh.
07:42No congratulations till you've read it.
07:44You deserve congratulations for being able to carry it up the stairs.
07:48Kidding again.
07:52Well, I look forward to hearing from you.
08:02Yeah, taxi.
08:09Buckingham Palace, please.
08:11What it was?
08:30Good work, keep it on my desk.
08:32Good morning, James.
08:33Good morning, sir.
08:35Good morning, Michael.
08:37Sarah.
08:37Sorry to ambush you, but I've got the Today newspaper asking for confirmation of an apparently
08:42open secret in Commonwealth government circles, that the Queen is deeply frustrated by Thatcher's
08:48refusal to back sanctions against the apartheid regime in South Africa, a frustration which
08:53threatens to strain her relationship with the Prime Minister, who the Queen holds personally
08:58responsible, and they'd like you, as Palace Press Secretary, to comment.
09:03You should know better than to come to me with nonsense like that, sir.
09:07In the 33 years she's been on the throne, the Queen has never once expressed a point of
09:11view about her Prime Ministers, positive or negative, and never will.
09:15Well, political impartiality and support of her Prime Minister is an article of faith
09:19to her.
09:21And we all know how the Queen is about her faith.
09:33It's been nearly four decades since the system of racial segregation termed apartheid became
09:39the official policy of South Africa.
09:41The current violent oppression of black protesters by government forces is creating increased international
09:55outrage.
09:58The situation is getting worse and worse, ma'am.
10:01Countless instances of brutality by the South African police against members of the public.
10:06As you know, we believe the only way to stop these atrocities is through sustained economic
10:10pressure.
10:11Forty-eight of the Commonwealth countries are committed to imposing a policy of sanctions
10:15on Pretoria to try and bring down the apartheid regime.
10:19But as Her Majesty knows, in order to implement those sanctions, total unanimity is required, and
10:27one country remains against.
10:29United Kingdom.
10:29Mrs. Thatcher remains opposed.
10:34I will have an opportunity to speak to Mrs. Thatcher about all this in private, at the forthcoming
10:39Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting in the Bahamas.
10:43The Commonwealth.
10:45Ridiculous waste of time.
10:48Ridiculous organization.
10:50Worse.
10:51Morally offensive.
10:54Why we allow our queen to fraternize with countries like Uganda, Malawi, Nigeria, Swaziland.
11:07Unstable countries.
11:08Unstable despotisms with appalling human rights records and calling them family.
11:16Yes.
11:17Anyway, she's requested a private audience on board the Royal Yacht.
11:21For what the palace is calling a frank conversation about the way forward in South Africa.
11:26Spare me.
11:28I'll give her a frank conversation about not wasting my time.
11:34Oh, excuse the eggs, boys.
11:36Oh.
11:37Right.
11:38Who wants Kedgeri?
11:41It's not my best, I'm afraid.
11:45For the dinner, this sunshine chiffon.
11:48To pick out the yellow in the flag of the Commonwealth.
11:52Yummy.
11:52Oh, and a brooch given to you by King Autumn Fuo of Boko Wari.
11:57Is that a porcupine?
11:58A symbol of courage and strength in Ashanti culture.
12:02Oh, you might need some of that.
12:06What's all this?
12:07Choggle.
12:08Eh, of course.
12:09To what do I owe the honour?
12:14I came to tell you that I've decided to ask Edward to be my best man.
12:18Not Charles?
12:20No.
12:20Oh, that will raise some eyebrows.
12:22Good.
12:23And him see what it feels like to be sidelined in a slimmed down row.
12:29Since I gather that's what he now thinks the future of the monarchy should be.
12:33You.
12:34Him in his own precious bloodline to hell with the rest of us.
12:39Insecure, jealous fool.
12:40What's he jealous of?
12:43Me.
12:44Always has been.
12:45Oh, Andrew.
12:46Of me and you.
12:48Of our...
12:50Of our closeness.
12:53Of the fact that I fought in a real war.
12:56Won real medals.
12:58Of the fact that I'm happier in love.
13:00More popular.
13:02And...
13:03You know, like other second sons I could mention.
13:05So obviously be better at it than him.
13:08At what?
13:10Being the heir.
13:13I just want to see you all happy.
13:15There are two families I care about.
13:17My own family and the Commonwealth Family of Nations.
13:20And keeping them all together is my life's work.
13:22Now I must get on.
13:24Mummy.
13:29For the state breakfast.
13:31A dress of the painless blue and gold brocade.
13:34Sarah!
13:34You do very well with the diamond necklace given to you by the people of South Africa on your 21st
13:40birthday.
13:43Excuse me, my minute.
13:44How do it is?
13:45How do you do?
13:46Right. Let's go.
13:47Let's go.
13:49Let's go.
16:58Yes.
16:59The Commonwealth.
17:02Yes, the Commonwealth.
17:06I recognize that for your family, the transition of this nation from empire to comparative
17:13supplicancy on the world stage must have come as a greater shock than to the rest of us.
17:19But I would argue that the Commonwealth is not the way to fill that gap.
17:25There are ways of Britain being great again, and that is through a revitalized economy,
17:31not through association with unreliable tribal leaders in eccentric costumes.
17:38But isn't that all I am, Prime Minister?
17:40A tribal leader in eccentric costumes.
17:43Certainly not.
17:45You are head of an evolved constitutional monarchy that stretches back to William the Conquerites,
17:51not comparing like with like.
17:54Ah, now that's where we differ.
17:55You see, I consider myself to be exactly like them.
17:58To me, Ghana, Zambia, Malawi are all great sovereign nations with great histories.
18:04I am aware you probably don't share that view.
18:07To you, the Commonwealth is something of a distraction, a waste of time.
18:13But in many ways, I have given my life to it.
18:16It was the pledge I made 40 years ago.
18:19On the wireless to our great imperial family.
18:23I remember listening to it as a student at Oxford.
18:27But we cannot let the values of the past distract us from the realities of the present,
18:35particularly where Britain's economic interests are concerned.
18:40Forty-eight countries of the Commonwealth are now preparing a statement
18:44condemning the South African regime and recommending tougher sanctions.
18:47What they, what I would like you to do is sign that statement.
18:54If I didn't know better, that sounded very much like a directive.
19:02Think of it as a question.
19:08The jolly atmosphere at the opening of the Commonwealth Conference in Nassau, nicknamed the Chogham, fooled nobody.
19:14Within an hour, South Africa came up with the Indian Prime Minister making his position crystal clear.
19:20How was it?
19:21I'm meeting with the Queen.
19:23It was a little testy.
19:26Although I must say, I do like the boat.
19:29Yacht.
19:30It isn't a yacht.
19:32It's a great big ship.
19:34And when the Sovereign sails in it, historically, it's called a yacht.
19:37Don't be a know-all.
19:38It's unbecoming.
19:41And why was it frosty?
19:43I didn't say frosty, I said testy.
19:45Although I wish it had been frosty.
19:47It's far too hot here.
19:50Because my fellow heads of government are now coming up with a statement condemning the South African government they want
19:57me to sign.
19:58I told them they won't accept anything with the word sanction.
20:01And they've started...
20:03Getting their knickers in a twist.
20:07Insisting they won't accept anything less.
20:11So now we need to come up with a word that works for everyone.
20:16Well, good luck with that.
20:18Thank you, DT.
20:30No, no, no, no.
20:32No.
20:40She rejected any mention of proposals.
20:46I'm determined to win this battle, Sunny.
20:48I don't often get into a fight.
20:50But when I do, I want to win.
20:52You will, ma'am.
20:53Remember, you are not alone.
20:55It is 48 against one.
20:57We are going back with another word.
21:01Measures.
21:03No, no, no.
21:06No.
21:10I'm sorry.
21:13A no to measures.
21:15Yes.
21:16So we are going back with actions.
21:19And should that fail?
21:20We still have controls.
21:22Yes, I'm beginning to see this is all about control.
21:24Let's...
21:27No, no.
21:31No, no.
21:42No, no.
21:45Oh, no.
21:51I must be out of the mind.
21:54No.
21:55No.
21:55No.
21:58Definitely not.
22:00No.
22:04Ridiculous.
22:14What we need here is not useless politicians.
22:16Sorry, Sunny.
22:17But a writer.
22:18Where might we find one?
22:25Such as...
22:29...respecial...
22:30...cultural...
22:31...measurants...
22:33...posing...
22:35...curses...
22:36...gestures...
22:37...experience...
22:39...sale...
22:40...
22:59...sale...
23:02...sale...
23:29...sale...
23:30...
23:31...sale...
23:33melted
23:55well played margaret victory for common sense whatever are you talking about i'm sure the
24:01heads of government will appreciate your willingness to seek compromise there's a reason the top job
24:09has always alluded to jeffrey the absence of the killer instinct and our family once more united
24:19along the common consensus uh but ladies and gentlemen first prime minister margaret hatcher
24:26prime minister yes you have been forced to make significant concessions not that i noticed
24:33you signed a document prepared by 48 countries who were in conflict with you i did but the question
24:41is did one person move to the 48 or did 48 move to one yes i agreed to signals
24:53but as you know with one simple turn a signal can soon point in an entirely different direction
25:04thank you
25:14that's what she said yes ma'am before walking off
25:29ready here we go please we're ready position perfect look at me three two one
25:53so
25:54Cause they ain't got nothing to do
25:57Someone can say, they're my nigga later
26:02Someone can say, they're my sister
26:07Someone can say, they're my sister
26:11Someone can say, they're my sister
26:14Someone can say, they're my sister
26:19Everyone's reading. Some early reactions have come in, and so far,
26:23very encouraging
26:26Right, but no offers yet
26:30Oh, well, not yet
26:32But, regardless of whether we get this one published
26:36What is undeniable is that you write vividly, catchily
26:41Dare I say it, even commercially
26:45Well, it's not a dirty word, Michael
26:47You could really tell a story
26:49I am wondering, have you ever considered a political thriller?
26:53What?
26:54The inner workings of Whitehall Westminster, the palace
26:57No one could write it better than you
27:00No
27:01No, if this magnum opus doesn't work, I'll call it a day
27:05You could expose it all under an assumed name
27:07I could
27:10But sadly, I'm old fashioned
27:12And would never betray those confidences
27:15Or the people I'm proud to serve
27:19Had to try
27:20Was that very grubby of me?
27:23Not grubby
27:25Not grubby
27:28Just quietly heart-breaking
27:34With violence escalating in South Africa
27:37Tensions between the United Kingdom and other nations of the Commonwealth are at breaking point
27:42This is Thatcher's refusal to act on sanctions
27:45Good meeting?
27:49Great
27:49Thank you
27:50Hate to dampen the mood, but the Today newspaper has let us know they are now running a front page
27:55story
27:56About the increasingly sour relations between Buckingham Palace and Downing Street
28:00Following the recent crisis at the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting
28:05What is it with these people?
28:07And that relations between the two women are in danger of completely breaking down
28:14The good news is it's today, as so can expect it, to have little impact
28:20The bad news is it won't be long before bigger, more influential newspapers realise this warrants further scrutiny
28:29So I think the time might have come for your majesty to make some kind of pre-emptive statement
28:35What kind of statement?
28:36One of support
28:39Even, dare I say, personal affection for the Prime Minister
28:45About the job she's doing
28:47Something that would kill gossip stone dead
28:50But what if I'm not happy with the job she's been doing?
28:54What if on this occasion I'd be happy for people to know the displeasure was actually real?
28:58That I am personally concerned about her lack of compassion
29:01You know how seriously I take my constitutional responsibility to remain silent
29:05But each of us has our line in the sand
29:09And if it were to become public knowledge that there had been an unprecedented rift
29:13Between Sovereign and Prime Minister, would that really be so bad?
29:26Well, if... if that really were your intention...
29:32And for the record, ma'am, I must say, I think that would be a misjudgment
29:38And risk doing serious and irreparable harm to the relationship between Buckingham Palace and Downing Street
29:50Then today would not be the newspaper I would go to
29:56I'd go somewhere with more heft
29:59Somewhere that also had a clear sense of the unprecedented nature of this
30:07Where they understood the rules of the game
30:08Right, well, can I leave that with you then, Michael? You are the expert
30:13Ma'am, ma'am
30:22It's reckless
30:25It's reckless, Martin, and irresponsible
30:27I'm as surprised as you are
30:30It goes against my professional advice
30:33And I want my objection noted
30:36Noted?
30:38Noted, Martin
30:40It's noted
30:44It's noted
30:59Simon Freeman at the Sunday Times is on the line
31:02He's run three times
31:05Following up on rumours about a deep and irreconcilable rift between the Queen and Mrs Thatcher
31:14All right
31:15All right
31:15Put him through
31:28Call an item
31:29Oh, boy
31:30I don't know
31:31I'm just going to get up
31:34I don't know
31:35Can I just go and send you a phone?
31:39I don't know
31:39Why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why
32:03Evening, Prime Minister.
32:04Evening, Bernard.
32:05I've just had a phone call from the Sunday Times
32:07letting us know that there will be a difficult piece
32:09in the paper tomorrow.
32:11About what?
32:12The fault lines that have developed in the relationship
32:14between Sovereign and Prime Minister.
32:16Oh, my God.
32:50Hello, Michael.
32:52Hello, Michael.
33:01Hello, Michael.
33:04Hello, Michael.
33:17Hello, Michael.
33:36Hello, Michael.
33:40Hello, Michael.
33:48Oh, my God.
33:58Nice.
34:26Oh, my God.
34:30Oh, my God.
34:58Oh, my God.
35:02Oh, my God.
35:03That's what it says.
35:08I'm feeling something for the very first time.
35:12Something which I never imagined feeling.
35:15What is that?
35:18Impatience for our next audience.
35:28Buckingham Palace has continued to deny accusations published in the Sunday Times regarding the
35:34rift between the Queen and Downing Street. Government sources claim that the sacrosanct
35:39relationship between sovereign and first minister was in danger, being blown apart.
35:45Prime Minister's here.
35:57Prime Minister's here.
36:32Prime Minister's here.
36:32I don't know.
37:11Your Majesty.
37:12Prime Minister.
37:20Before coming today, I checked with the Cabinet Secretary,
37:25and it turns out that in the seven years I have been Prime Minister,
37:29we have had 164 audiences.
37:32Always the model of cordiality, productivity, and mutual respect.
37:37So it is perhaps not unreasonable to expect an isolated hiccup.
37:43What hiccup?
37:44I was under the impression that Her Majesty
37:46never expressed her political views in public.
37:52I don't.
37:53That there was an unbreakable code of silence between Sovereign and First Minister.
37:58If you're referring to the Sunday Times, I've always advised my Prime Ministers against reading the newspapers.
38:03I don't, ma'am.
38:05If you misunderstand, misquote, and misrepresent, then everybody gets into a fluster.
38:09But my Press Secretary does.
38:11And he has working relationships with all of the editors.
38:14And the editor, in this case, assured him that the sources were unimpeachable.
38:19Close to the Queen.
38:24Well, I'm sure a clarification will soon be forthcoming.
38:32In the meantime, should we not make a star from the Business of the Week, only I am mindful of
38:36the time.
38:38This is the business, ma'am.
38:41The only business.
38:43I think we have enough respect for one another personally to ask ourselves some of the bigger questions.
38:51Woman to woman.
38:53We are the same age, after all.
38:56Really?
38:57Just six months between us.
38:59Oh?
38:59And who is the senior?
39:02I am, ma'am.
39:13Uncaring, confrontational, and socially divisive.
39:16That's how these sources so close to the Queen describe me.
39:20Prime Minister.
39:20That I lack compassion.
39:22And that my government has done irretrievable damage to the country's social fabric.
39:35My responsibility for the time I have in office is to put sentimentality to one side and look after these
39:45countries' interests with the perspective of a cold balance sheet.
39:50And while I greatly admire your sense of fairness and compassion for those less fortunate than us...
39:56Do you? Really?
39:57Let us not forget that of the two of us, I am the one from a small street in an
40:06irrelevant town with a father who could not bequeath me a title or a commonwealth, but only grit, good sense,
40:15and determination.
40:16And I don't want people's pity, or charity, or compassion.
40:22Nothing would insult me more.
40:25My goal is to change this country from being dependent to self-reliant.
40:33And I think in that I am succeeding.
40:36I have had to learn many difficult lessons as sovereigns.
40:38Britons are learning to look after number one, to get ahead, and only then, if they choose, to look after
40:48their neighbour.
40:50Of those...
40:50No one would remember the good Samaritan if he only had good intentions.
40:58You see, he had money as well.
41:03Perhaps the hardest is that I am obliged to support my prime ministers on any position they take, even yours,
41:11regarding sanctions against South Africa.
41:16My question is, given the lack of impact it has on your day-to-day political fortunes, yet how important
41:23it is to me, could you not have supported me just once?
41:28My fellow commonwealth leaders, many of whom I consider to be friends, now feel that I have betrayed them on
41:36an issue most important to them.
41:38Well, they need only read the Sunday Times.
41:41It will give them no doubt as to your position.
41:53Oh, look, our time is up.
41:55How it flies.
41:59You must be very much looking forward to the wedding tomorrow, of Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson.
42:05Yes, we are.
42:07They seem like a good match.
42:09Yes, we think so.
42:10My own son, Mark, recently announced that he would be getting married.
42:15Your favourite, the explorer.
42:17Not an explorer, ma'am.
42:19That was just the once.
42:21He's a businessman now, in the Middle East, mostly, and South Africa.
42:27Of course.
42:31Your Majesty.
42:44Listen to me carefully
42:46There is no story here
42:48There's not a shred of truth to these rumors
42:49The Queen continues to have an extremely cordial
42:52And productive working relationship
42:53With the Prime Minister
42:54Sunday Times maintains that the story came from a highly placed source
42:58Within the palace
42:59And that's the line we're running with
43:01And we will deny it and you will look like fools
43:03Prepare me the indignation
43:04I understand you have to say it
43:06But we both know that it's true
43:07And your continual denial is making you lot look like fools
43:15Hello
43:16Can I take your details?
43:20What's all this?
43:22Don't tell me the groom's having last minute doubts
43:24No
43:25Andrew's asked us all to come together
43:26Because he wants someone to explain why
43:28God's name is going on with our mother
43:31The wedding of the Duke of York should be a landmark event
43:35At home and abroad
43:36Instead
43:38Thanks to the Queen's inexplicable lapse of judgment
43:41The newspapers are full
43:43Not of Sarah and me
43:45The mummy's rift with the Prime Minister
43:50Ah yes
43:50Sunday Times
43:52You have to admit she has made a god awful mess of it
43:54What was she thinking?
43:55She did what she spent her life telling me I cannot do
43:59She opened her mouth and expressed an opinion
44:03And is being slaughtered for it
44:06Bloody thoughtless of her if you ask me
44:08Oh come on
44:08You can hardly blame the newspapers for wanting to write about something other than the wedding of a fringe member
44:12of the family who'll never be king
44:14Ouch
44:16Well it's true isn't it
44:19Fourth in line now
44:20And by the time Williams had children his children have had children
44:25Fringe
44:29Jo
44:38You really just say that
44:40Or my wedding day
44:42That was impressively cunty
44:55It would be hard to imagine there'd be anything that could knock a royal wedding into second place on the
45:00news
45:01But the continuing escalation of the row between the Queen and Mrs Thatcher threatens to overshadow the nuptials
45:08The Queen has made a very serious error of judgment
45:12And this Sunday Times article has lit a touch paper to what could very quickly become a major constitutional crisis
45:19What the palace was hoping to achieve by this is hard to say
45:23But the fact is they've stirred up a hornet's nest
45:25And so far seem to lack the wind to avoid getting stung
45:30This story
45:31If I might interrupt ma'am
45:35One unfortunate consequence of our denial of the story is that the editor of the Sunday Times has now come
45:41out all guns blazing
45:42And whilst we could continue to deny it
45:46My own view is that it's no longer to our advantage
45:50And I think we're now going to have to give them something
45:54What?
45:54A culprit
45:57To deflect blame from you and to put these flames out ASAP
46:02We need to let them have a name
46:16Martin
46:17Michael
46:23This escalating situation between Buckingham Palace and Downing Street
46:27You can't say I didn't warn you
46:30I think you know how seriously the Queen takes her responsibility
46:34And how much she values the close relationship between the two houses
46:37Of course
46:38And to see it compromise like this
46:45As a consequence of your actions
46:51What?
46:53The fact is that the steps you took were completely unprofessional
46:57Martin, stop it
46:59Impugning the integrity of the palace and of the Queen herself
47:02We know one another too well
47:04This is madness
47:08I hope we can rely on you
47:11To do the right thing
47:27Of course
47:51Michael
48:21Michael
48:23I don't know.
49:11I don't know.
49:23Whether it be long or short, shall be devoted to your service, and the service of our great
49:30imperial family, to which we all belong.
49:35God help me to make good my vow, and God bless all of you who are willing to share in
49:42it.
49:42Amen.
49:44Amen.
49:56Amen.
50:02Amen.
50:10Amen.
50:10Amen.
50:13Amen.
50:21Amen.
50:26Amen.
50:33Amen.
50:36Amen.
50:40England is a bit
50:47England is a bit
50:53When me just come to London town
50:56I used to work on the underground
51:00But working on the underground
51:04You don't get finnow your way around
51:08England is a bit
51:11There's no escaping it
51:14England is a bit
51:18There's no running away from it
51:21Me get a little job in a big hotel
51:25And after a while me was doing quite well
51:28Them start me off as a dishwasher
51:32But when me take a stock
51:33Me not turn clock watcha
51:35England is a bit
51:38There's no escaping it
51:42England is a bit
51:46Nobody try to hide from it
51:49When them go, they look weird pocket
51:52First them rabbit did them big dogs
51:55Rock it
51:55And now back
52:08Should have done lot time
52:25Back
52:25Little
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