- 8 hours ago
The Crown S04E03 [Full Movie] [New Drama]Full EP - Full
Category
š„
Short filmTranscript
00:28You
00:30Oh, my God.
01:01Oh, my God.
01:35His Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales, Your Majesty.
01:39It's done.
01:40I did it.
01:42Where?
01:43In the nursery.
01:45A nursery?
01:46Hardly the most romantic setting.
01:48Did you get on one knee?
01:50No, I didn't.
01:51I'm surprised by the question.
01:53Why?
01:55I thought in terms of rank, the Prince of Wales only ever knelt before the Sovereign.
01:59He didn't say that.
02:00What did you say?
02:02I said it's a proposal of marriage, dear, not a show of strength.
02:07After all that, she'll at least accept.
02:14Yes.
02:15Yes?
02:16What did she say?
02:18Yes.
02:20Please.
02:21That it was the happiest moment of her life.
02:24Oh.
02:26Oh.
02:27Oh.
02:29Congratulations.
02:30Then what?
02:31I sent her back to London.
02:39Where does she live?
02:41In Earl's Court, in a flat she shares with prostitutes and Australians.
02:45What?
02:46Isn't that who lives in Earl's Court?
02:48In a flat she shares with friends.
02:50Miss Carla!
02:51Carla, over here!
02:53Have you just been to Buckingham Palace?
02:56Did you see the Prince of Wales?
02:58From one moment or another, is he a romantic at heart?
03:00What are you going to be in the world?
03:03One more question, please!
03:19And?
03:43Oh, my God.
03:49Oh, my God.
04:46Oh, my God.
04:49Oh, my God.
05:19Oh, my God.
05:54Oh, my God.
05:58Oh, my gosh.
06:00Um, this one's lovely.
06:03That's one of ours?
06:05Yes, ma'am.
06:05From the Magok Valley.
06:07Any idea where that is?
06:10Well, I'm rather thick at geography.
06:12Burma.
06:13There's a legend, ma'am, that long, long ago, the northern part of Burma was inhabited only by wild animals
06:21and poisonous snakes.
06:23I think I prefer this one.
06:25Yes, a lovely choice, ma'am.
06:28Yes, a lovely choice, ma'am.
06:28Yes, that's one of yours.
06:30What can you tell us about that apart from the price?
06:32It's a 12-carat oval salon sapphire, your majesty, surrounded by 14 diamonds set in 18-carat white gold.
06:42And you like that one because...
06:44It's the most expensive.
06:45No.
06:47No.
06:48Because it reminds me of my mother's engagement ring.
06:50And it's the same color as my eyes.
06:54She is lovely.
06:56Yes.
06:57But so young.
06:58Yes.
06:59Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, suggested moving Lady Diana into Buckingham Palace before the announcement of the engagement to protect
07:05her from the media.
07:06Oh, that is sensible.
07:07She also thought some tutorials might be useful for what would be a very drastic transition from teenager to royal
07:16princess.
07:18And, well, the feeling was, if your majesty were agreeable...
07:24That I should be her teacher?
07:26Well, one queen to the next, mother-in-law, daughter-in-law, might be nice.
07:29Oh, no.
07:30There's a lot to learn, a lot to get right.
07:33And you know me, I'm far too much for a softie.
07:35Hmm.
07:41Diana's grandmother.
07:42Lady from Oye can do it.
07:43No.
07:47Straight in at the deep end.
07:49Dinner with the family at Clarence's house.
07:51So fucking grand.
07:53So not Earl's court.
07:55A toast.
07:56Two.
07:57No more worries.
07:59No more flatmates.
08:00No more rent collection.
08:02No more kindergarten.
08:03No more cleaning your sister's flat.
08:05Oh, God.
08:05Oh, God.
08:06Off to your palaces and castles and frocks.
08:09And jewels.
08:10And to one day, not too far away, being the fucking queen.
08:14Oh, God.
08:16Oh, God.
08:17Oh, God.
08:18Oh, God.
08:20You will call, won't you?
08:22And write on palace writing paper.
08:24So that we can show everyone.
08:26I'll be on the phone morning and night.
08:28No, you won't.
08:29You'll be too busy trying on tiaras and having tea brought to you.
08:33Bye.
08:34Bye.
08:35Bye.
08:36Bye, God.
08:38Bye-bye.
08:39Bye, princess.
08:39Yes.
09:12Yes.
09:39Yes.
10:09Yes.
10:36Sir, there we are, in Manila.
10:38in the middle of a state banquet
10:40when who barges into the room?
10:42None other than Imelda Marcos.
10:45She makes a beeline straight to me,
10:47saying she's desperate to show me her...
10:50Wait for it.
10:51Shoe collection.
10:52Mm-mm.
10:53Shell collection.
10:55Are you sure?
10:56She was probably trying to say shoe,
10:59and you misunderstood her.
11:00Does she have something in her teeth?
11:02Sue.
11:03Shell.
11:06No, I can assure you it was seashells.
11:11So now, hold your body decants
11:14into a convoy of limousines
11:17and will rush through the streets of Manila.
11:19Lady Diana Spencer, Your Majesty.
11:20I was speaking.
11:29Look.
11:30Oh, dear.
11:31Sorry.
11:34Your Majesty.
11:37Um, Your Majesty.
11:41Royal Highness, I didn't see you there.
11:42Evidently not.
11:43I was the one telling the story.
11:45You ruined with your entrance.
11:48Sorry.
11:50Uh, uh, this one next.
11:53Honestly.
11:54Sir.
11:55Your Royal Highness, if it's the first greeting,
11:58then, sir.
11:59Now me.
12:04Ma'am.
12:05Oh.
12:06You're doing curtsy to her.
12:07She's not royal.
12:09Just grand.
12:10Poor student.
12:12So sorry.
12:13Thank goodness.
12:14We've got your grandmother to sort all this out.
12:16She's like a regimental sergeant major,
12:19aren't you?
12:19When required.
12:21Urgently required, I'd say,
12:23on tonight's showing.
12:24Your landlord's out in no time.
12:26Ma'am.
12:27Anyway, where was I?
12:29Being rushed through the streets of Manila.
12:32Yes.
12:33In Madame Marcos's private aquarium.
12:35Where she keeps a vast portrait of herself.
12:40Wearing.
12:44It is with the greatest pleasure
12:47that the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh
12:50announce the betrothal of their beloved son,
12:54the Prince of Wales,
12:55to the Lady Diana Spencer,
12:58daughter of the Earl Spencer
13:01and the Honourable Mrs. Shand Kidd.
13:30Well, many congratulations.
13:32I wonder if you both remember when you first met?
13:34It was a few years ago now.
13:37I was visiting her sister.
13:39Diana was still quite young then.
13:42What was it about her
13:44that made the biggest impression on you?
13:46She was very original
13:48and lots of fun.
13:52And for you?
13:53No, he was simply marvellous.
13:56What can you tell us about the actual wedding?
13:59We're not that far on yet,
14:01but for now we're delighted, really.
14:06I see you're going to bring a deep and lasting joy to the nation.
14:09And if I may say,
14:11you both look very much in love.
14:14Oh, yes.
14:15Absolutely.
14:19Whatever in love means.
14:43I have to go back to Gloucestershire to pick up a few things for this foreign tour.
14:49and do look like this.
14:51Like what?
14:54I'll see you at the airport tomorrow.
15:03Why you said please?
15:05I think she's just the right person for you.
15:08It's great, isn't it?
15:09Cheers everybody out, you know, to something like this.
15:12Are you calling from inside the palace?
15:13I am.
15:15What's it like?
15:16I have my own little apartment
15:18with a maid and a dresser
15:21and a sitting room.
15:22Does the phone have a little crown on you?
15:25Is the ringing tone God save the Queen?
15:27Have you had a tele supper with the boss yet?
15:28No.
15:29Haven't spent any time with her yet.
15:31Even though we're in the same building.
15:33We saw one of your interviews on television.
15:36Oh, yes, Di.
15:37They played it on the six o'clock news.
15:39Did you hear how he answered
15:41when they asked if we were in love?
15:42He said...
15:43I know, we heard.
15:44But don't worry.
15:45He was probably just a bit embarrassed.
15:50Fire now!
15:51Fire!
16:20I'm sorry, this tour hasn't come at a good time.
16:24Oh, I'll be fine.
16:25Locked up in the palace on my own.
16:28It's not for long.
16:29Six weeks.
16:30No, it'll fly by.
16:32I doubt it.
16:35Anyway, I'll see you at the altar.
16:40I've asked Mrs. Parker Bowles
16:43to get in touch with you.
16:44Your ex?
16:45Why would you do that?
16:47Because she's great fun.
16:50I just thought,
16:50if ever you wanted company,
16:52she's the best company.
16:59No!
17:02Good style!
17:03Good style!
17:03Right.
17:04That's fine.
17:06Good style!
17:21I should warn you,
17:22this won't be one session.
17:23This won't be two sessions.
17:25What any new entry into the royal family needs to learn
17:28could barely be covered in 20 sessions.
17:30But we will do it,
17:31and I will work you hard,
17:33because you cannot be allowed to fail.
17:36I propose we divide our lessons together
17:38into three areas.
17:40History.
17:41The history of the royal family,
17:42the court of St. James's,
17:43the palaces and houses,
17:44and the household.
17:47Deportment.
17:47What to wear.
17:48How and where to sit.
17:50When to open your mouth.
17:52And more importantly,
17:52what to say.
17:55But based on the horrors
17:56we saw the other night,
17:57I think we need to start
17:59with the all-important
18:00sink or swim rules.
18:02Rules which,
18:03if you get a single one of these wrong,
18:05you're not just in trouble.
18:06You're dead.
18:07Right.
18:08Beginning with rank and precedence,
18:10and identifying which members
18:12of the royal family
18:13you must curtsy to,
18:14how and in which order.
18:16Obviously,
18:16in your current position,
18:17you're curtsy to everyone,
18:18but after you become
18:19Princess of Wales,
18:20things get a little more complicated,
18:23because certain members of the family
18:24will have to curtsy to you.
18:26That in itself changes,
18:28depending on whether
18:28you're with the Prince of Wales or not.
18:30You know the one thing
18:31I really hate?
18:32Is when I go to a restaurant,
18:34and the waiter comes to the table,
18:35and attempts to memorise the order,
18:37without writing it down.
18:39You just know
18:40it's going to go wrong.
18:47Right.
18:48When you are unaccompanied
18:50as Princess of Wales...
19:19Good morning.
19:21Good morning, Mum.
19:22What's all this?
19:23It's your post, Mum.
19:26Right.
19:35Dear Lady Diana,
19:37I don't suppose
19:38you'll ever get to read this,
19:39but I wanted to tell you
19:40how much I enjoyed
19:41seeing the interview
19:42you gave with the Prince of Wales
19:44on television the other day.
19:46You look so...
19:47that it really must be love.
19:48To see a young couple...
19:49The radio has a poster of you
19:51and Prince Charles
19:52in a bedroom wall at home.
19:53It isn't it a special day
19:54I'm to read you with my mother.
19:55I have sent you
19:56a traditional marriage blanket.
19:58It's because you love people
19:59no matter where they're from.
20:00That you were someone
20:01I could talk to.
20:02That you...
20:03And how you have a smile
20:04for everyone.
20:05Can I be your flower?
20:06It's also romantic.
20:06Because I have never been one
20:08that my sister has.
20:09For young, age seven.
20:26One, two, three, four and one, two, three, four and point, point, point and point.
20:36Now finish.
20:37Finish.
20:38All your arms come down.
20:40And you present.
20:42Yes, you start low.
20:44The first one.
20:45And then the next one higher.
20:46Then the next one higher.
20:48And then the next...
20:48Primary schools all over the land
20:50grateful teachers have seized upon the wedding
20:52as their end of term project.
20:54The key idea
20:54to send a wedding card
20:56from their class
20:56to Prince Charles and Lady Diana.
20:58This one was done at a school in Southport
21:00and it was a pretty imaginative affair.
21:02Everyone joined in
21:03but it was thought safer
21:04to let the teacher
21:05address the envelope.
21:35And then the next one was done.
21:43The next one was done.
22:17There are three Aquarius
22:19to Her Majesty
22:20within the palace
22:21one of them also
22:22performing the role
22:23of Deputy Master
22:23of the Household.
22:25In addition
22:26to the Queen's page
22:27Her Majesty's
22:28most senior
22:29personal servant
22:30there are also
22:31three categories
22:32of page
22:32pages of the chambers
22:34pages of the presents
22:35and pages
22:37of the back stairs.
22:39Now
22:39shall we move on
22:40to ladies
22:41of the bedchamber?
22:42If the weather's fine
22:43Prince Charles
22:44will make his way
22:44to the altar
22:45and leave later
22:46with Lady Diana
22:47in the 1902
22:48state Landau.
22:49It was first used
22:50by King Edward VII
22:51and is now favoured
22:52by the Queen
22:53to meet foreign heads
22:54of state.
22:55Its wet weather
22:56replacement
22:56will be the Scottish
22:57state coat.
23:01Yes ma'am?
23:02Could I speak to
23:03the Prince of Wales
23:04as private secretary
23:05please?
23:06One moment please.
23:13I'm afraid
23:13there's no answer
23:14but I will certainly
23:15let Mr. Adin
23:16know you call.
23:27Yes ma'am?
23:29I was wondering
23:29which number to call
23:30to speak to the Queen.
23:32One moment please.
23:40Her Majesty
23:41is at a reception
23:41ma'am
23:42but I shall inform
23:43her of your call.
29:39One of the same.
29:41You sure?
29:43Very happy to go with the flow.
29:46Well, he'll love that.
29:48He's so fussy and set in his ways.
29:50He'll love it if you adapt to him.
30:00Trio of chocolate mousses with vanilla cream and candy orange.
30:17You know, I took the Prince of Wales here once.
30:20Thinking he might like to try something new.
30:22He loathed it.
30:23Oh?
30:24Loathed.
30:25Not just the concept or the decor or the people, but...
30:29They made the cardinal mistake of refusing to put a softball deck on top.
30:34What?
30:36He has a softball deck with everything.
30:39You must know that.
30:41And he never eats garlic.
30:42Because of this bizarre new rule.
30:44Come supper time, he's always ravenous.
30:49Which new rule?
30:50The lunch rule.
30:54Darling, I would have thought it would have been one of the first things you'd have noticed about him.
30:58The Prince of Wales doesn't eat lunch.
31:00Well, never.
31:02Not if he can help it.
31:03And if he's forced to because of some engagement, it puts him in a terrible mood.
31:07And he drones on and on about gas and bloating and wasted energy due to needless digestion.
31:14I try to cheer him up, but when his tummy goes, so does his sense of humor, I'm afraid.
31:20One of his awful gurus put him onto a...
31:23Well, not gurus, but you know how he loves to surround himself with dreary old men and daddy substitutes.
31:32Do you need a proper Fred tutorial?
31:42Ah, sĆ. Capisco.
31:54Who's Fred?
31:58It's my nickname for the Prince of Wales.
32:00And he calls me Gladys.
32:02It's harmless nonsense, really.
32:05Right.
32:07Anyway, one of his boring friends, probably Lawrence Vanderpost,
32:11good luck with that, by the way.
32:13Snooze.
32:14Got into his head and said that it was only healthy to eat two meals a day.
32:18And since Fred says that breakfast is too delicious to give up and dinner's too important,
32:22it had to be lunch.
32:30Now that you mention it,
32:33we've hardly been with one another at lunchtime,
32:35so I haven't really noticed.
32:36The fact is, we've hardly been with one another at all.
32:39That's not true.
32:41It is.
32:45You met at Babington Horse Trials?
32:46Yes.
32:47Then, Verdi's Requiem at the Albert Hall, with a chaperone.
32:50Branny, yes.
32:50Who didn't let you out of her sight for a second.
32:52What a second?
32:53Then, the weekend at Balmoral, where you were a complete triumph.
32:57It'll go down in history as one of the great Balmoral debuts,
33:00the perfect ten.
33:03And then...
33:04Highgrove?
33:07Golly.
33:08He obviously tells you everything.
33:11Well, we talk most days.
33:15What did you think of it?
33:16His new house?
33:18Highgrove?
33:19Hmm.
33:21It's, um...
33:22It's lovely.
33:23Isn't it?
33:24Hmm.
33:24Hmm.
33:27He asked me what I would do with it,
33:29if I was decorating.
33:32Did he?
33:34Hmm.
33:34Yes.
33:35I'm rather good at all that.
33:38And what did you say?
33:39I said I'd like to shoot it up a bit.
33:42Make it a bit less stuffy.
33:43Give it a bit of colour, some yellows and peaches.
33:48And don't forget green, his favourite.
33:50And green.
33:51Do you garden?
33:53Not really.
33:53He's obsessed by gardening.
33:55Yes, I know.
33:56He was already talking about either a wild garden or a walled garden.
34:00Both.
34:02Both.
34:03Hmm.
34:03And a kitchen garden and a sundial garden.
34:05Do you fish?
34:06No, not really.
34:07What about hunting?
34:08Not if I can help it.
34:09More of a townie, really.
34:12So you see yourself living more in London than in the country?
34:17Why do I ask?
34:19Just curious.
34:20Hmm.
34:22No, I'm sorry.
34:23I can't stay for coffee.
34:25Well, then let me get this.
34:28Absolutely not.
34:29I'm the senior party here.
34:31Oh, please.
34:33Well, let's go Dutch.
34:36Good idea.
34:37I'm all for sharing.
34:42Oh, my God.
34:51Oh, my God.
35:17Oh, my God.
35:20Oh, my God.
35:35The lady Spencer is here to see you.
35:37She asked if she could wait.
35:39Can I help you, ma'am?
35:41I need to speak to the Prince of Wales as soon as possible.
35:46I'm afraid he's unavailable.
35:52Is that what he asked you to tell me?
35:55If my future wife wanted to speak to me, make an excuse?
35:59No, his royal highness is unavailable because he's on an aeroplane, flying home.
36:06I thought he was flying back tomorrow.
36:08He was always flying back today.
36:09me. What are these? Those are drawings. Of what? I believe it's a bracelet which the
36:25Prince of Wales has had made. For who?
37:11Yes, ma'am. I need to speak to the Queen. I need to speak to her.
37:15Ma'am. Don't fog me off. It is absolutely essential that I see the Queen. This wedding
37:20can't go ahead. It'll be a disaster for everyone. Her Majesty is unavailable at the
37:25moment, but I shall...
37:55...
38:00...
38:01...
38:03...
38:06...
38:08...
38:11...
38:13...
38:15...
38:19...
38:23...
38:24...
38:25...
38:28...
38:31...
38:39...
38:41...
38:55...
38:58...
39:24...
39:28...
39:35...
39:36...
39:39...
39:40...
39:41...
39:45...
39:56...
39:58...
40:04...
40:05...
40:08...
40:10...
40:15...
40:16...
40:23...
40:31...
40:32...
40:35...
40:39...
40:43...
40:44...
40:49...
40:50...
40:52...
40:53...
40:53...
40:55...
41:00...
41:02...
41:10...
41:11...
41:11...
41:15...
41:20...
41:21...
41:23...
41:31...
41:32...
41:37...
41:38...
41:39...
41:39...
41:39...
41:39...
41:40...
41:41...
41:50...
41:51...
41:53...
41:54...
41:55...
41:56...
41:57...
41:57...
41:57...
41:57...
41:59...
42:00...
42:00...
42:01...
42:01must have been something very important for you to go straight there from the
42:04airport. As it happens there was. Gladys.
42:12She told you. I saw the bracelet.
42:36I had the bracelet made as a farewell gift. A souvenir. And I went to Gloucestershire for
42:46two reasons. To tell Camilla face-to-face that it's over.
42:52To over. And to collect this. Open it. The Signet Ring. Prince of Wales Insignia.
43:20For the Princess of Wales.
43:45Shall we begin the rehearsal?
43:46The Signet Ring.
43:50The Signet Ring.
43:52The Signet Ring.
43:55The Signet Ring.
44:05The Signet Ring.
44:05The Signet Ring.
44:16The Signet Ring.
44:20The Signet Ring.
44:26Marriage is an honourable estate instituted of God himself and therefore is not by any to
44:33be enterprised nor taken in hand unadvisedly, lightly or wantonly, but reverently, discreetly,
44:40soberly and in the fear of God.
44:45Charles Philip Arthur George.
44:48Wilt thou have this woman to thy wedded wife?
44:51Etcetera.
44:52Yes.
44:53Yes.
44:54Yes.
44:55Yes.
45:13THE END
45:28How were rehearsals?
45:31Mummy and I thought lovely.
45:33Margaret disagrees.
45:35Charles loves someone else.
45:39How many times can this family make the same mistake?
45:45Forbidding marriages that should be allowed.
45:51Forcing others that shouldn't.
45:56Paying the consequences each time.
46:02He's marrying Diana.
46:04But he's still in love with the other one.
46:08Let me say something as a man.
46:11The older Diana gets, the more confident Diana becomes, the more beautiful Diana becomes.
46:20Which she will.
46:22The more Charles will fall in love with her.
46:25And this will all be fine.
46:27In the meantime, he juggles them both.
46:32That's how it works.
46:36That's how it's always worked.
46:39It's madness.
46:40We can stop them now.
46:42Before they tie the knot.
46:44Not just for the sake of the monarchy, but for them as human beings.
46:54We have to stop them now.
46:57We have to stop them now.
46:58..
47:42Mummy?
47:48When your great-grandmother, Queen Mary, was a beautiful young princess, she was about
47:56to marry her, Prince Charming, but before they got to the church, he fell ill and died.
48:02But everyone had been so impressed with her that they put her together with his younger
48:05brother.
48:06Only one problem, the younger brother was Prince Charmless.
48:11Dull and shy.
48:13There was no attraction, certainly no love.
48:17But in order to make the marriage work, they were encouraged to focus on the bigger idea.
48:23Duty.
48:27They worked and worked and worked.
48:31And out of that work, a tiny seed grew.
48:34A seed of respect and admiration.
48:36A seed that grew into a flower they could eventually call love.
48:48They were married for 42 years.
48:51They stabilised the country that was at war with itself.
48:54And they left the crown stronger, while all around them, the great monarchies of Europe
48:59fell.
49:06Now, I cannot claim to be the most intuitive mother, but I do think I know when one of
49:10my children is unhappy.
49:14Whatever wretchedness you are feeling now, whatever doubts you harbour, if you could follow the
49:25example of your great-grandmother.
49:29Love and happiness will surely follow.
50:07It's just once you done.
50:08Do it.
50:17Forget your own life in the future.
50:17Let's go.
50:44Well, the big question of the day,
50:46apart from what's the dress going to look like,
50:48is what's the weather going to be.
50:50Your most detailed forecast ever then, Jack.
50:52What's it going to be like from Buckingham Palace to St Paul?
50:56Well, this sunshine says it all, John, really, doesn't it?
50:58With the sun shining down on a crowd
51:00that seems ready to cheer almost anything in the mood.
51:03And it's a crowd that's getting bigger and bigger by the minute
51:06as the overnight trains and buses
51:08bring thousands of more people to the palace
51:11from all over the nation.
51:13Lots of people here went to the fireworks display last night
51:15in Hyde Park and then came straight down
51:17to the palace afterwards to make sure they get a good spot.
51:21We're now getting closer to that point
51:23when Prince Charles and then Lady Dan set off for St Paul's.
51:27A scene that will be quite literally flashed around the globe.
51:31King and Queen of the Belgians, King of Norway,
51:33with the Grand Prince and the Grand Princess,
51:35Queen of Denmark and the Prince of Denmark,
51:37King and Queen of Sweden, the Queen of the Netherlands,
51:39the Prince of the Netherlands,
51:41Grand Duke and Grand Duchess of Luxembourg,
51:42the Prince and Princess of Liechtenstein
51:44and the Princess of Monaco.
51:46Next time we see that coat,
51:48we'll be peering inside these windows
51:49to see if we can get some idea
51:51of what the wedding dress really looks like.
52:25Here is the stuff of which fairy tales are made.
52:31The Prince and Princess on their wedding day.
52:35But fairy tales usually end at this point
52:41with the simple phrase
52:43they lived happily ever after.
52:46This may be because fairy tales
52:49regard marriage as an anticlimax
52:52after the romance of caution.
52:56As husband and wife live out their vows,
52:59loving and cherishing one another,
53:03sharing life's splendors and miseries,
53:07achievements and setbacks,
53:09they will be transformed in the process.
53:13Our faith sees the wedding day
53:16not as the place of arrival,
53:20but the place where the adventure really begins.
53:30Just like the white-winged duff
53:33sings a song that sounds like she's singing,
53:36ooh, ooh, ooh.
53:39Just like the white-winged duff
53:42sings a song that sounds like she's singing,
53:45ooh, baby, ooh, say ooh.
53:48And the days go by
53:51like a strand in the wind
53:53In the web that is my own
53:55I'll begin again
53:57I said to my friend,
53:59Everything's soft
54:01Nothing else matters
54:03So with the slow, graceful flow
54:09Of age
54:11I went forth with an age-old
54:15Desire to please
54:19On the edge of seventeen
54:29Just like the white-winged duff
54:32sings a song that sounds like she's singing,
54:34ooh, baby, ooh, say ooh.
54:37Just like the white-winged duff
54:40sings a song that sounds like she's singing,
54:43ooh, baby, ooh, say ooh.
54:49...
54:54...
54:55...
54:56...
Comments