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The Crown S01E05 [Full Movie] [Recommended]Full EP - Full
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00:00You
00:34Ah, there you are. Come in. I'm practicing for the big day tomorrow and, um, I need an archbishop.
00:51Will you do me the honor from here?
01:00Is your majesty willing to take the oath?
01:05I am... willing.
01:11Will you maintain and preserve in... invi...
01:22Ah, inviolably. It means to make a promise you can... you can never break. A very sacred promise indeed.
01:37Yes!
01:40We're ready for you, sir.
01:42Oh, not yet, Tommy.
01:45We haven't even reached the anointing.
01:49You have to anoint me.
01:51Otherwise, I can't...
01:56Be king.
01:59Do you understand?
02:03When the holy oil touches me,
02:07I am...
02:09I am transformed.
02:13Brought into direct contact with the divine.
02:22Forever changed.
02:27Bound to God.
02:30It is the most important part of the entire ceremony.
02:36So we had better practice, hadn't we, Archbishop?
02:45Be thy hands anointed with holy oil.
02:55Be thy breast anointed with holy oil.
03:11As kings, priests, and prophets were anointed.
03:12Be thy head anointed with holy oil.
03:17As kings, priests, and prophets were anointed.
03:26Oh, goodness.
03:35That's very heavy indeed.
03:37Five pounds, sir.
03:39Not to mention the, uh, symbolic weight.
03:43Hmm?
03:45Mm-hm.
03:47Mm-hm.
03:48Mm-hm.
03:51Mm-hm.
03:52Mm-hm.
03:52Mm-hm.
03:52Mm-hm.
03:57As a sight I heard, I never see.
04:03Mm-hm.
04:10Mm-hm.
04:11Mm-hm.
04:43It's not as easy as it looks.
04:47It's exactly what the king said.
04:51I remember.
04:56Do you suppose I could borrow it for a couple of days?
05:00Just to practice?
05:03Borrow it, ma'am?
05:05From whom?
05:07If it's not yours, whose is it?
05:22Good night.
06:54Close your eyes, and don't open them until I say so.
07:06Oh, any idea where the Duke is?
07:08His Royal Highness went flying, ma'am.
07:10Howdy!
07:11Again.
07:18So when's the big day?
07:21Pilot's exam.
07:23Two weeks.
07:25And you still on track for the record?
07:26I am.
07:27Just.
07:28If I do nothing else.
07:30Oh.
07:31Then you'll hate me.
07:33Why?
07:34There is something I wanted you to help me with.
07:36It would have to be jolly important to distract me from getting my wings faster than anyone in British aviation
07:40history.
07:41It is.
07:42I'd like you to come aboard my coronation committee.
07:48In which capacity?
07:50As chairman.
07:52But you already have one.
07:54Bernard.
07:56I'd ask the Duke of Norfolk to make room for you.
07:59I want to make a public declaration of my trust in you.
08:02There's no need to matronize me.
08:04I'm not matronizing you.
08:06Yes, you are.
08:06You're taking pity on me and giving me a job for appearance's sake.
08:10No, it's not that.
08:11I was just thinking how I'd like us to spend more time together.
08:14What are you talking about?
08:15We spend all our time together.
08:17No, we don't.
08:18You're always off flying or lunching with strange men.
08:21A few hours a week, darling.
08:23Anyway, what else am I supposed to do?
08:24Sit around and wait for you while you're queening?
08:27Queening?
08:27Yes, queening.
08:29Maybe I'd like your help with the queening.
08:31Oh, in the same flattering way you asked me to redecorate Clarence's house.
08:35Well, you did that jolly well.
08:36I felt like a sissy fussing about curtain fabrics and paint, Charles.
08:41Honestly, it's just queening of another sort.
08:53What would it entail?
08:56Well, the Duke of Norfolk will run the show from an organizational perspective.
09:02Look after the seating, the route of the procession.
09:04But as chairman of the committee, you'd have name but my ideas.
09:08Inspire everyone.
09:09Lead them.
09:10They won't listen to me.
09:12The grey old men, the men with moustaches.
09:14They hate me.
09:20They do not hate you.
09:21They do.
09:23They treat me as an outsider.
09:26In irrelevance.
09:28Everyone does.
09:46Total control or nothing at all.
09:49Those are my turns.
10:00But don't go mad what does that means just don't go mad
10:10Coronation a service which goes back a thousand years
10:14Some things can't be changed. Yes. Yes. Yes. All right
10:33When did you move in the city of Paris owns property, you know, and
10:39Happily the city very kindly let us take the house for a small amount of rent
10:45So we moved in by summer's end
10:48You must have been thrilled your highness
10:50Not your highness. Oh
10:52So point just a duchess not age or age
10:58So man
11:01Ma'am or your grace
11:07What made you choose this particular house it has a two-acre park which gives us privacy and
11:13Its size means the Duke and I can finally entertain properly and we very much enjoy entertaining
11:18The duchess is so very good at it
11:20I believe our editor agreed as part of the deal that you would give our readers some tips for entertaining
11:27Did we agree that
11:28Did we agree that?
11:28We did darling, yes. We paid extra
11:33Yeah
11:33Big smiles
11:38Having had a naval background I don't much care for fussy things or smells but I do like a good
11:48well-milled soap
11:53what sartorial tips would you give the young men of today no matter what the fashion a well-cut
11:59suit in a in a beautiful fabric will take you anywhere is that the sort of thing you're looking
12:07for you're very fortunate he lets no one in here it's his private room full of secrets not secrets
12:20darling memories precious memories I come in here for a few moments every day to meditate and
12:32remember goodness bagpipes too yes I play when he gets homesick at my favorite armchair and the
12:48briefcase box as monarch one receives a daily red box from the government state papers business of
13:01the day matters requiring royal assent that was the final box I received as king it contain my
13:11education papers and all these photographs of you as king there are not with the crown why is that
13:18well I never made it that far I never had a coronation
13:35oh I forgot to mention I had a call today from sir john weir who my mother's doctor
13:47telling me that in his opinion she was in her final days now that my sister and I should make
13:55our way
13:55over with me probably best without
14:09even if she dies
14:13so she does
14:17bear to go over twice
14:20I shall have to be brave
14:25my darling one
14:32go without you
14:34go without you
14:35to cold London
14:39brutal London
14:43hellish London
14:58shall we fuck
15:00shall we fuck
15:17The Lord Greater Chamberlain, the Lord Chamberlain, the Marshal of the Diplomatic Corps, and the Comptroller, Your Majesty.
15:25I've asked you to join me, because I've made a decision regarding the Coronation Committee.
15:31Which is that I would like my husband to be the chairman of that committee.
15:41That's impossible, ma'am.
15:42Well, there can only be one chairman.
15:45As far as I'm aware, I only have one husband.
15:49And the Duke of Norfolk will be expecting it to be him. He is the Earl Marshal.
15:54That may be.
15:55And the Chief Butler of England. He would be the 16th Duke of Norfolk to do it.
16:01He ran your father's coronation. His father ran your grandfather's.
16:07And running the coronation, that's what the Norfolks do.
16:13Couldn't you give Philip some other job?
16:16Like what?
16:20Arrange the photographer?
16:27The chairmanship is what he wants. With full autonomy.
16:32Therefore, it is what I want.
16:35Norfolk can be vice-chair.
16:36Why don't you think about it?
16:39I have.
16:40And my decision stands.
16:50Well, of course, the Duke of Norfolk will be furious.
16:53Yes.
16:55And Bernard does fury so well.
16:57What would your majesty suggest?
17:01I will throw my hat in that Bernard and sanity will prevail.
17:06The Queen is young.
17:08And has to learn what any young general has to learn.
17:12Namely?
17:14Which battles to fight and which to leave.
17:19Well, let me know what you want me to do.
17:22Same as always, Tommy.
17:25Exactly as I tell you.
17:28Now, I've spoken to the Archbishop of Canterbury,
17:32who's agreed to help us with our other delicate matter,
17:36the Duke of Windsor.
17:39When does he arrive?
17:41It's afternoon, I believe.
17:42God helps.
17:44And when will you meet him?
17:46We thought tomorrow.
17:49Good.
17:51Sooner the better.
17:53Be sure to be firm, Tommy.
17:55Yes, ma'am.
17:56That one's like mercury.
17:58He'll slip through the tiniest crack.
18:06Good afternoon.
18:08Uh, I've returned to London
18:10to visit my mother, Queen Mary,
18:14who I'm delighted to say
18:16has made such good improvement
18:18in recent days.
18:21Thank you very much.
18:41My dearest darling one,
18:44London is as awful and hellish
18:47and as full of my smug,
18:49stinking relations as ever.
18:52Each day, I call on Mama in the afternoon.
18:55And although she doesn't look quite as bad
18:58as the doctors warn me,
19:00she'll never again be able to leave her rooms,
19:03far less go out in public.
19:07Oh, that's all.
19:32I'm going anywhere, Mommy.
19:34I'm going anywhere, Mommy.
19:39It's one of the hardest things
19:41I've ever had to endure.
19:43And spending so much time
19:44with a woman who has been so vicious
19:46and inhumane to you,
19:49my beloved,
19:50is wearing me down.
19:52Amen.
19:59Sorry to disturb you,
20:00Your Royal Highness.
20:02What is it?
20:03The Archbishop of Canterbury's
20:04private secretary called, sir,
20:06requesting a meeting
20:07between you and His Grace.
20:09Oh, what about?
20:10It didn't say, sir.
20:13He hoped you could make tomorrow.
20:15Fine, I have a few errands, Pram,
20:18but the Archbishop can come to lunch.
20:21As a matter of fact,
20:22they suggested 4 p.m.
20:25All right.
20:26We'll give him tea.
20:28At Lambeth Palace.
20:32Of course.
20:35I'm no longer king.
20:37I go to them.
20:44Good night, Your Royal Highness.
21:00I'm very happy.
21:22His Royal Highness the Duke of Windsor, Your Grace.
21:27Goodness, what is this?
21:29An ambush?
21:30Not at all, sir.
21:32No, no, just a gathering of old friends who come together to...
21:37appeal to you, in person, in the hope that you will do what we all think...
21:44would be...
21:47the right thing.
21:51Regarding what?
21:53The coronation.
21:57What about the coronation?
22:03We acknowledge...
22:06as a...
22:08as a member of the Queen's close family, you are entitled to attend.
22:14But I also feel that the attendance at this sacred ceremony, by one who, however good his reasons, did not
22:26feel capable of undertaking the obligations himself.
22:34Well, it could strike a wrong note, and would be deeply upsetting.
22:42To whom?
22:44To everyone concerned.
22:45I didn't ask you, Tommy.
22:48This is Cookies' work, isn't it?
22:50The Queen Mother's.
22:52It's got her pudgy little fingers all over it.
22:56She asked you to do her dirty work for her, and you agreed, Archbishop, shame on you.
23:01I will attend if I want, and I do want, and so does my wife.
23:05Alas, no, sir.
23:08Of course, the Royal Family is obliged to extend an invitation to you, as a Royal Duke,
23:14but that obligation does not extend to the Duchess of Windsor.
23:17And it is my duty to inform you, on behalf of the Royal Family, and the government with whom we
23:23have worked in close consultation,
23:26that she will not be offered an invitation.
23:30Oh, it's madness.
23:34The...
23:36pusillanimity and vindictiveness knows no limits.
23:40Seventeen years have elapsed since the abdication.
23:47Shouldn't bygones be bygones?
23:49Some things can never be forgotten.
23:51Which of us, for example, has forgotten the song?
23:54You would compare the love and public commitment I made to my wife to slaughter in a world war?
24:20Why not use a celebration such as this?
24:27The investiture of a new sovereign, a beautiful young child, symbol of maternity, change and progress, to turn a page.
24:38Surely the sophistication of a society can be measured by its tolerance and ability to forgive.
24:44Its weakness, too.
24:46Sometimes lines just need to be drawn.
24:50You know, Tommy, you're an embarrassment to the institution you serve, and to the country that institution serves in turn.
24:57And I will take a lecture on national embarrassment from many people, sir, but not from you.
25:04Let's face it.
25:06This whole thing is a charade.
25:08You knew already the answer to the choice you have given me.
25:11It is simply the same as the choice that caused all this offence in the first place.
25:15Namely, would I do anything that excludes or disrespects the woman I love?
25:20No, never. I will therefore not be attending the coronation of my own niece, whose favorite uncle I have always
25:29been.
25:29Hers, you should know, was one of the strongest voices involved.
25:33Oh, was it indeed? Well, we know from where she gets that ice in her veins.
25:37And it wasn't from my own dear weak brother.
25:40Nothing weak about the late king, sir.
25:43I'm sure I speak for everyone present when I call him a hero.
25:47Hear, hear.
25:51My lord archbishop, what a scold you are.
25:56And when your man is down, how very bold you are.
26:00Of Christian charity, how very scant you are, you old, lang swine.
26:08How full of cant you are.
26:11A rhyme composed for your perfidious predecessor at the time of my abdication.
26:18I find the sentiment oddly applicable to you, too.
26:37If I were to release a statement, could you have a look over it?
26:43Of course, sir.
26:48I'm aware that it's normal for no reigning monarchs to be present.
26:53But a coronation, perhaps we could extend that to include former kings, too.
27:00To spare my blushes. Might just throw some of the vultures off the scent.
27:10It's an elegant solution, sir.
27:12And I'm quite sure cabinet will support it.
27:16Tommy?
27:18I'll speak to their magisters and get back to you.
27:29We've just had a call from Molgrath.
27:33Regarding Her Majesty Queen Mary.
27:42My own darling sweetheart.
27:46Well, at last it's all over.
27:50Mama took ill in the afternoon, then began hemorrhaging in the early hours.
27:56Doctors plied her with tranquilizers and morphine to ensure there was no suffering.
28:01In the end, she passed in her sleep.
28:05I was sad, of course, but let's not forget how she clung to such hatred for me.
28:12Her eldest till the last.
28:15I'm afraid her blood ran as icy cold when she was alive as it does now she's dead.
28:24Later in the day, all the members of the family assembled to identify which of her personal possessions they were
28:31most liked.
28:32I told Shirley Temple what I had my eye on.
28:37But as I shan't be there when the jackals descend, I don't suppose it would do much good.
28:42What a vile, tawdry rabble my relatives are.
28:47And what a sad, desiccated bunch of hyenas most of them have become.
28:55But I'm tired of talking about it.
28:59I yearn for our perfect life together.
29:02Away from the snarling and the sniping of the court.
29:07I adore you, my sweetheart.
29:10More deeply than you will ever realize.
29:13And I am furiously mad that you aren't here with me as you ought by right to be.
29:23While Queen Mary lived, something of the great reigns of Queen Victoria and George V seemed to live on with
29:34her.
29:35Proving that character is, as it will remain, the essential strength of British monarchy.
29:45Now, wherever she went, she was assured of an applause which sprang from some deep-seated affection.
29:56You noticed, identical to the funeral of your father, nothing different, not one detail.
30:03But one guest.
30:04Like you.
30:07And she always regarded herself as a servant of our country, which she served, to the end.
30:17No sooner does someone in the family pop their clogs, they ask themselves,
30:21Right, how's it done last time, and it's done exactly the same way again?
30:24I mean, the people who have come to share in it are locked outside.
30:33Well, I'm not going to let your coronation be like this.
30:36You're a young woman, simply of a new era.
30:39In a fast-changing, modern world.
30:46And I think your coronation should reflect that.
30:50For as much as it have pleased almighty God of his great mercy.
31:06Earth to earth, ashes to ashes.
31:10Dust to earth.
31:13Make sure that certain current will put the resurrection of the eternal life.
31:19Through our Lord Jesus Christ.
31:22Change our own fire in the body, if they invite them all to his soul.
31:28Good morning and morning.
31:34That's what?
31:36Asian gentlemen.
31:38You know what?
31:39I mean, this is the language.
31:40I mean, this is the language.
31:41I want to bring this to these gentlemen.
32:02We should go.
32:19Good morning.
32:25What is the collective noun for a group of stuffy old Etonians?
32:32I heard back at school.
33:07Gentlemen, I'd like to start by saying how very honored I feel to be working with all
33:13the great minds and talents here in this room today as we come together to organize the very
33:19best coronation for my wife, Queen.
33:24We all know the scale of the challenge that faces us.
33:28The eyes of the world will be on us, Britain will be on show, and we must put our best
33:34foot forward.
33:37In such circumstances, the temptation is to roll out the red carpet and follow the precedent
33:43set by the grand and successful coronations of the past.
33:48But looking to the past for our inspiration would be a mistake in my view.
33:56Britain today is not the Britain of past coronations.
33:59Assumptions made at the time of my father-in-law's coronation 17 years ago cannot be made anymore.
34:07That is why I think we should adapt this ceremony.
34:14Make it less ostentatious, more egalitarian, show more respect and sensitivity to the real
34:20world.
34:20We have a new sovereign, young and a woman.
34:24Let us give her a coronation that is befitting of the wind of change that she represents, modern
34:33and forward-looking at a moment in time where exciting technological developments are making
34:38things possible we never dreamt of.
34:41Which brings me to my next point.
34:56It's an unconscionable vulgarization.
35:05How close are you proposing that these cameras get?
35:08They will be kept at a very discreet distance.
35:11No, no, close-up, sir.
35:16Zoom.
35:17Lenses.
35:18Oh, no.
35:18It will all be done with the greatest sensitivity and respect for the occasion.
35:34But I have had one or two broader thoughts about the service itself.
35:43What?
35:45What?
35:59We can both see what's going on here.
36:01A young couple are playing marital games with the most cherished parts of our history and
36:06pageantry.
36:08Our queen wouldn't agree with a single one of these radical proposals.
36:13Television being just the tip of the iceberg.
36:19She's simply trying to keep peace in her own bedchamber.
36:22By promoting her husband, keeping him happy and occupied and virile.
36:27Well, that's what's going on here, Winston.
36:33Why?
36:34What else has he proposed?
36:39Prime Minister.
36:41Prime Minister.
36:42Your Majesty.
36:51Prime Minister.
36:58Your Majesty.
37:02Prime Minister.
37:02Please tell me this has nothing to do with my husband.
37:06I told him not to go mad.
37:10No one is questioning the Duke of Edinburgh's motives or the sincerity of his beliefs.
37:17I see.
37:18He went mad.
37:20The changes he is proposing to an ancient, sacred, never previously changed liturgy and
37:29text.
37:32If it went from top to toe, and if it were just a business, it would be applauded.
37:40But this isn't a business.
37:41It's the crown.
37:45And one has to ask oneself, what is the purpose of the crown?
37:50What is the purpose of the monarchy?
37:54Does the crown bend to the will of the people to be audited and accountable?
37:59Or should it remain above temporal matters?
38:08What say you?
38:13No, ma'am.
38:16What say you?
38:19The decision is yours to make.
38:23We will take our lead from you.
38:39Your sister.
38:44Here.
38:51How do you?
39:01We will take your lead from you.
39:05Yeah.
39:27What is this, hide and seek?
39:29I told you not to overstep the mark.
39:31And I made it clear, can't blanch you, nothing at all.
39:33Trade unionists and businessmen in the Abbey.
39:36If you want to stay on the throne, yes.
39:38In a trim-down televised coronation.
39:40If you want to avoid a revolution, yes, you forget.
39:43I have seen firsthand what it is like for a royal family to be overthrown because they're out of step
39:48with the people.
39:49I left Greece in an orange crate. My father would have been killed.
39:52My grandfather was. I'm just trying to protect you.
39:55From whom? The British people? You have no idea who they are or what they want.
40:00Oh, oh, I'm just Johnny Foreigner again, who doesn't understand. Fine, fine.
40:04You want a big overblown ceremony costing a fortune while the rest of the country is on rations? Have it.
40:10But don't come bleating to me when your head and the heads of our children are on spikes.
40:15If the people are hungry, they want something that lifts them up.
40:18And how do you propose lifting them if they cannot see it?
40:23The people look to the monarchy for something bigger than themselves, an inspiration, a higher ideal.
40:28If you put it in their homes, allow them to watch it with their dinner on their lips.
40:31If not, democratize it. Make them feel that they share in it. Understand it.
40:37All right.
40:39All right. I'll support you in the terror rising.
40:46You won't regret it.
40:48On one condition.
40:52That you kneel.
40:55That you kneel.
41:07Who told you?
41:09My Prime Minister.
41:12He said you intended to refuge.
41:14No, I merely asked the question whether it was right in this day and age that the Queen's consort, her
41:18husband, should kneel to her rather than stand beside her.
41:23You won't be kneeling to me.
41:25That's not how it will look. That's not how it will feel.
41:27It will feel like a eunuch. An amoeba is kneeling before his wife.
41:31You'll be kneeling before God and the Crown, as we all do.
41:34I don't see you kneeling before anyone.
41:35I'm not kneeling because I'm already flattened under the weight of this thing.
41:38Oh, spare me the false humility. Doesn't look like that to me.
41:41How does it look to you?
41:42Looks to me like you're enjoying it.
41:43It's released an unattractive sense of authority and entitlement that I have never seen before.
41:48And in you it's released a weakness, an insecurity I've never seen before.
41:51Are you my wife or my Queen?
41:53I'm both.
41:54I want to be married to my wife.
41:56I am both and a strong man will be able to kneel to both.
41:59I will not kneel before my wife.
42:00But your wife is not asking you to.
42:02But my Queen commands me.
42:03Yes.
42:03I beg you make an exception for me.
42:11No.
42:34No.
42:35No.
42:49No.
42:52No.
42:54No.
43:00You're not supposed to .
43:01No.
43:02No.
43:03And they'll be here soon.
43:09David, you're our host, darling.
43:15You're right there.
43:36All right, everyone.
43:38She's arriving.
43:41The dreaded gold stake coach.
43:44Made in the 1760s,
43:46and the most uncomfortable ride known to man.
43:56Final checks, please, gentlemen.
43:59West door.
44:00West door, sir.
44:02Triforium.
44:02Triforium, standing by, sir.
44:05South transept.
44:06South transept, standing by, sir.
44:08Orban screen.
44:09Orban screen, standing by, sir.
44:10Triforium two.
44:12Triforium two, standing by, sir.
44:14Gentlemen.
44:16Three, two, one.
44:42Who's that?
44:44One.
44:45Oh.
44:46Uh...
44:49Oh, it's Lord Mountbatten.
44:51The Duke of Edinburgh's uncle.
44:53The man that gave away India.
44:56Oh.
44:57And his own wife.
44:58Yes.
44:59Cancels the pain narrow.
45:01If you please.
45:02Oh, no.
45:04Oh, no.
45:06Oh, no.
45:08Oh, no.
45:11Oh, no.
45:13Oh, no.
45:15Oh, no.
45:32Praise forth, tell, come ye before him and rejoice.
45:54Moving forwards now, four Knights of the Garter, the Dukes of Wellington and Portland, the Earl Fortescue and the Micount
46:02Allendale, bringing with them a golden canopy to shield Her Majesty from view during the most sacred of the coronation
46:09rituals, the Anointing.
46:11In three, two, one...
46:23Where'd she go?
46:26And now we come to the Anointing.
46:31The single most holy, most solemn, most sacred moment.
46:38The entire service.
46:43So how come we don't get to see it?
46:47Because we are mortals.
46:48The one we are the most sacred moment.
46:56The tomb of anointing.
47:00The tomb of anointing.
47:06The tomb of anointing.
47:08The tomb of anointing.
47:18Is your majesty willing to take the oath?
47:24I am willing.
47:28Will you maintain and preserve this?
47:41Invariably.
47:46I will.
47:48I will.
48:12Is your hands anointed with holy oil?
48:17I will.
48:35I will.
48:38I will.
48:39I will.
49:07I will.
49:40I have given thee to rule and govern in the name of the Father and of the Son and of
49:52the Holy Ghost.
49:57Amen.
49:59Amen.
50:02Amen.
50:02Amen.
50:19Amen.
50:29Amen.
50:41Amen.
50:46Amen.
50:59Amen.
51:02Amen.
51:16Amen.
51:17Amen.
51:18Amen.
51:22Amen.
51:31Amen.
51:34Amen.
51:42Amen.
51:44Amen.
51:45Amen.
51:49Amen.
51:50Amen.
51:50Amen.
51:50Amen.
51:51Amen.
51:53God save the weep, God save the weep
51:58God save the weep, God save the weep
52:14To think you turned all that down
52:19A chance to be a god.
52:26I turned it down for something greater still.
52:39For love.
52:54For love.
53:18For love.
53:34I've Philip.
53:36Duke of Edinburgh.
53:38To become your liege man of life and limb and of earthly worship.
53:43Faith and truth I will bear unto you.
53:45To live and die against all manner of folks, so help me God.
54:18To live and die against all manner of folks, so help me God.
54:54To live and die against all manner of folks, so help me God.
55:31To live and die against all manner of folks, so help me God.
56:08To live and die against all manner of folks, so help me God.
56:31To live and die against all manner of folks, so help me God.
56:54You
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