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The Crown S03E06 [Full Movie] [Full Story]Full EP - Full
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00:09Around the ragged rocks, the ragged rascal ran.
00:17A proper cup of coffee in a proper proper copper pot.
00:48The royal crown runs through all the temples of a King.
01:06In my capacity as Earl Marshal, I've always abided by one guiding principle, which has served me extremely well until
01:14now.
01:15Which is?
01:16Wherever possible, change absolutely nothing.
01:20Do things exactly the same way as they were done before.
01:24In the case of Prince Charles' investiture as Prince of Wales, I can see no reason not to repeat in
01:33every detail the investiture of the previous Prince of Wales in 1911.
01:39And to those of us who have not had the opportunity...
01:42Oh, the interest, frankly.
01:44...to familiarize ourselves with the details of the earlier investiture.
01:49A deployment of 15,000 troops.
01:52A Devontae-class cruiser positioned off the coast of Holyhead.
01:5621 guns lutes.
01:58A battery of Royal Field Artillery.
02:00A landing party supplied by the Blue Jackets and the Royal Marines.
02:04Two squadrons of the camera in the line.
02:07A catchment.
02:07It went on and on.
02:10And what he described was less an investiture and more like an invasion.
02:19And the feeling is we have a golden opportunity here to be more sensitive, inclusive, for the ceremony to feel
02:30less like a feudal imposition and more like the confirmation of a true native son of Wales.
02:39But my son isn't Welsh, so gestures are all we have.
02:43But gestures can be powerful.
02:45What if he went there, studied there, learnt enough Welsh to address the country in their native tongue?
02:54Prince Charles is currently at Cambridge and content there, finally, in his studies and his personal life.
03:02He likes acting.
03:05Acting?
03:07Yes.
03:10It's how he can express himself.
03:14It's a very delicate stage in his development.
03:17I appreciate that.
03:18But we're in a very delicate stage for the Union, too.
03:23The Security Service has been picking up some murmurs, ma'am.
03:27Oh, more than murmurs, actually.
03:31Growls.
03:32Separatist stirrings.
03:34Nationalist stirrings.
03:35In a region that has long felt grieved, overlooked, undervalued.
03:42And the government's thinking was, why not pull him out of Cambridge and send him to Wales?
03:49For a term.
03:52We think it could be enormously helpful.
04:01The government proposed, and we agree, that you should spend a term at the university there, to learn the language.
04:07But...
04:07No buts.
04:09But I'm really rather happy at Cambridge.
04:12Not to mention, I've just been cast in a wonderful role.
04:15I know, but...
04:16I thought no buts.
04:19But, sometimes, duty requires one to put personal feelings...
04:22And frivolity.
04:23...aside.
04:32Good.
04:33That's settled, then.
04:35Come.
04:36Foxy.
04:37Come here.
04:37Look.
04:40Why is she never like that with you?
04:45Vile and cold like that.
04:50Because I'm irrelevant.
04:53I rather wish she would be like that with me.
04:55It would suggest I have significance.
04:57Trust me.
04:58You wouldn't like it in reality.
05:00I would.
05:02I'd bully her right back.
05:05You fancy swapping, then?
05:07Fancy being the ear?
05:09Not if it means going to Wales.
05:27Okay.
05:39Come here.
05:41No.
05:43No.
05:49No.
05:50No.
05:51No.
05:53No.
08:25What is that, Teddy?
08:26Good luck.
08:27Good luck.
08:28Gaty Weld.
08:33Ah, Teddy.
08:35You know the president of the university, Mr. Ben Boyntonis.
08:41Mr. Millwood.
08:42Morning.
08:43And this gentleman...
08:45Michael Dean.
08:46...is from the royal household.
08:50Teddy, we have a special visitor coming to Abyssalith this term to learn Welsh.
08:59His Royal Highness Prince Charles.
09:03And we'd like you to be his tutor.
09:09You're joking.
09:12Uh, in case you've forgotten, I'm the vice president of Plaid Cymru.
09:17I'm a Republican nationalist.
09:20You know my feelings about the office of the Prince of Wales.
09:23That it's a princehood illegitimately imposed upon us by an oppressive imperial conquest.
09:33Aberystwyth is the University of Wales.
09:38Our Welsh language department is the finest in the land, and you its best and brightest teacher.
09:45Now, you claimed it was possible to learn a considerable amount of Welsh in a relatively short period of time.
09:52That was for Welsh citizens.
09:54We were told you had a certain technique.
09:57Where else would he go?
09:58Well, he could go to Fred Jarman in Cardiff.
10:01No.
10:01He can go to Cairwyn Williams in Bangor.
10:05You can't make me do this.
10:09It would violate every belief in my body.
10:22A lle ddim dy ddeall di.
10:24Mae'r mudiad cenedlaethol yn rhan o'r weiad di.
10:29Fent mae'n rhan o'r gweiad ni.
10:31Mae'n sylfaen i'n briodas ni'n yn o'r tad.
10:35A dyma ti yn dewis.
10:38Gwasanaethu.
10:38Yr union beth yni wedi bod yn brwydro yn i erbyn.
10:41Dyna'n ymateb cyntaf i hefyd o'n meddyliad yn y peth.
10:44Mae'r Llywodraeth Lladdur wedi perswadu'r fewnhyniad i wneud yr araith yma yn y Gymraeg.
10:51Yn gyntaf unrhyw syniad faint o'r pobl fydd yn gwylio'r darllediad.
10:55Mae'n meddyliau faint o'r leis allan i wneud yr achos.
11:31Yn gyntaf unrhyw syniad.
12:06Hello.
12:07Thank you for coming.
12:09Good.
12:09Hello, Highness.
12:10Hello.
12:10Lovely to meet you.
12:13This way, sir.
12:14Welcome here, Highness.
12:16Your Highness.
12:18Hello.
12:19Hello.
12:20Thanks for coming.
12:22Thanks.
12:28Sir.
12:29This way, sir.
12:39Your Royal Highness, Mr. Edward Millwood.
12:50How do you do?
12:52Charles?
12:55Your, uh, Miss Royal Highness.
12:58Hmm.
12:58If you don't mind.
13:00I'd rather be set out on the same terms as all my students.
13:03Hmm.
13:06I believe I'm also expected to bow my head, but I hope this will suffice.
13:16Please.
13:26Hmm.
13:28Hmm.
13:29Hmm.
13:29Well, I'll leave you to it then.
13:32Hmm.
13:34Hmm.
13:36Hmm.
13:36I'm very grateful for all this.
13:40I hope you'll be able to put your feelings to one side.
13:43I gather you're a Welsh nationalist.
13:45Hmm.
13:47Hmm.
13:47I'm an educator.
13:48Do you leave your politics at the door?
13:50No.
13:51My politics are the reason why I walk through the door every day.
13:56And if I believe, and I do, that anyone deserves a university education, then it would be hypocritical of me
14:03not to extend that privilege to those at the very top as well as the bottom.
14:07But you don't approve of me.
14:10I have nothing against you personally.
14:13But you wish my role didn't exist.
14:15My family's.
14:16I don't think of myself as against things.
14:18I'm for things.
14:20For my country.
14:22My culture.
14:23And my language, most of all.
14:26And you think that the Crown exists in opposition to that?
14:31I think it imposes a kind of uniformity that by default, yes, suppresses Welsh identity with a ubiquitous Britishness.
14:40But, well, Wales is Britain.
14:42Britain.
14:43Britain is Wales.
14:44Historically, we always fought together.
14:47Henry V at Agincourt.
14:49Yes.
14:51Welsh men have historically bled for the conquests of your Crown.
14:55And why?
14:57One might ask.
15:00For what?
15:09Look, I really didn't intend to joust with you.
15:12It isn't fair.
15:14You're here to learn Welsh.
15:19Here are you.
15:21There are you.
15:26There.
15:27There.
15:31Put down.
15:39We learn through imitation.
15:42Like anything in life, if we pretend we're something long enough, we may just become
15:48it.
15:54Good morning.
15:58What is your name?
16:04What is your name?
16:08Do you speak Welsh?
16:13Do you speak Welsh?
16:15Welsh.
16:24How are you?
16:26How are you?
16:27How are you?
16:28So far.
17:07Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia.
17:29I miss Cambridge already, and this place is a bit gloomy.
17:35It's Wales, what do you expect?
17:37Hold on.
17:39Hold on.
17:42Hold on, Charles.
17:46How are the other students?
17:49Short, hairy and angry?
17:51What?
17:52Isn't that what the Celts are like?
17:54Furry and furious. Big eyebrows, red faces.
17:58Stooped under the weight of an ancestral grudge.
18:01I'm not very friendly for sure.
18:03I passed a sign on the way in.
18:06Welcome to Wales.
18:08Might as well have read, bugger off back home.
18:10It's not for long.
18:13An eternity. Three months.
18:15It'll fly by.
18:17I'm all like, hands and knees.
18:19You really are the most terrible Eeyore.
18:23What are we going to do with you?
18:25Getting me out of Wales might be a start.
18:27I'll come visit.
18:28No, you won't.
18:31Yeah, probably right, I won't.
18:35Chin up. Nobody likes a misery guts.
18:45And though he be but another student in the eyes of the faculty, I'm sure he'll forgive us this more
18:53bespoke welcome to our university.
18:56And we hope this is the beginning of a long and happy partnership.
19:02And perhaps in time, even his patronage as king.
19:07The Prince of Wales.
19:09The Prince of Wales.
19:20So, what do you think of our facilities here, sir?
19:23It's quite the archive we have in our library, don't you think?
19:28I confess I haven't actually made it to the library yet.
19:32Not been to the library?
19:36I thought Mr. Millward was giving you a full rounded Welsh education.
19:40He is.
19:41I mean, I am.
19:43And like all students, they're encouraged to conduct extra reading off their own bats.
19:52How is the speech going?
19:55You'll be channelling Llewellyn up Griffith himself before long.
20:00No doubts.
20:02I'm sorry, who?
20:04Llewellyn?
20:06Is he an alumnus or...?
20:12We'll be covering him up this week.
20:26What did that offer?
20:32I've translated the opening of your speech that the palace sent me.
20:38And?
20:38What did you think?
20:40I'm not here to pass judgement on the content.
20:42You say whatever you like or whatever they tell you to.
20:54The hardest pronunciation for you would be the word atmosphere.
20:59Awergylch.
21:02It's like a verbal assault course of all your worst sounds.
21:06Scattered one after another like traps.
21:08Break them up.
21:11So.
21:12Aw.
21:15Aw.
21:17Aw.
21:19Aw.
21:20Oo.
21:21Ooh.
21:21Glide into the aw.
21:22Ow.
21:26Fine.
21:28Let's begin at the end.
21:31Kh.
21:35Kh.
21:36Kh.
21:38Kh.
21:40Back of the throat.
21:41Kh.
21:42Better.
21:43I see, it's like the fricatives.
21:45V.
21:45F.
21:46Sh.
21:46I know what frecassives are.
21:48We do them as warm-up exercises before we go on stage.
21:51Ha, hey, he, hey, ha, ho, hoo, ho, ha, la, le, le, le, la, lo, lo, lo.
21:59Or in Welsh.
22:00Lla, le, le, le, la, lo.
22:03Do you get it?
22:05And the tongue twisters are my favourite.
22:08To sit in solemn silence in a dull dark dock,
22:11in a pestilential prison with a lifelong lock,
22:14awaiting the sensation of a short sharp shock
22:16from a cheap and chippy chopper on a big black block.
22:20A tutor who tooted the flute tried to teach two young tutors to toot.
22:23Said the two to the tutor,
22:25is it harder to toot or to teach two young tutors to toot?
22:28What are to do to die today at a minute or two to two?
22:30A thing distinctly hard to say but a harder thing to do.
22:33For they'll beat it at two at two today, a rat-a-tat-tat at two,
22:36and the dragon will come when he hears the drum
22:37at a minute or two at two today, at a minute or two today.
22:57I understand it's all a bit of fun for you.
23:01That was clear last night.
23:03Where is the library? Who is Llewellyn?
23:08Do you have any idea how embarrassing that was for the rest of us?
23:14How humiliating?
23:17The fact you didn't know.
23:26As your tutor, I'm going to ask you a favour.
23:33Pay us the respect.
23:36And give us just the slightest impression that you care about any of this.
23:43before you turn around again and never show up like the last Prince of Wales
23:47and the one before him.
24:15Rachael trabajna chants.
24:20That's the point.
24:29I'm sorry, John.
24:34I've just taken away theладium each stage and I came with her.
24:37Howďż˝.
24:40Can the city manage that's the visibility of which no one lasts?
24:41Who is your companion?
24:41Now, I wouldxch do this for charity and to print to two.
25:16What are you reading?
25:18The investiture speech for Charles.
25:21The Prime Minister thinks it may be too dry, too rigid.
25:24And given that it is effectively his introduction to the world,
25:27it might be an idea to let Charles work on the speech himself.
25:30That it reflect him more.
25:32Do you think that's wise?
25:35That speech has been composed by diplomatic and constitutional experts.
25:41Do you really want Charles messing with that?
25:51I adapted my own maiden speech to the Commonwealth, age 21, you remember?
25:56I do.
25:59You were in Cape Town after they separated us.
26:03Yes.
26:04For endless months.
26:07Hoping you'd fall out of love with me.
26:09Fair chance.
26:14Anyway.
26:17That was you.
26:19This is Charles.
26:22A horse of a very different colour.
26:28Yes.
26:57I've finally made it to the library.
27:06And now I know who Llewellyn Ap Griffith was, the first and true Prince of Wales, given
27:15his title by the English King Henry III, merged a few years later by Henry's son Edward, Edward
27:22I, took the title, promised to Llewellyn and converted on his own son at the gates of Caernarfon
27:28Castle.
27:30Hmm.
27:31A great betrayal.
27:35But the ancient hope still remains.
27:38A prophecy.
27:40That one day a prince will be presented from Eleanor's gate atop Caernarfon and that he
27:46will be a true Welsh-speaking son of Wales.
27:52I can't ever be a son of Wales, but I am working on the Welsh-speaking part.
27:58Hmm.
28:00Good.
28:04Well, I should let you get on with whatever it is a young prince, footloose and fancy-free,
28:11does of an evening away from home.
28:13Oh yeah, so I have, er, I'll most likely just go back to my room, eat there.
28:19Let alone.
28:21Have you not, er, you know, made any...
28:26No, it's fine, really.
28:28I'm incredibly used to it.
28:39I'm incredibly used to it.
28:47There.
28:48Oh yeah.
28:50Yes, I'm too.
28:52Yes.
28:53Yes, I'm too.
28:54Yes.
28:58Mrs. Millwood?
29:00Hello.
29:02Yes?
29:02Hurry up.
29:28The teeny didn't give you a winner.
29:31See a little bit, slowly.
29:33It's not a bit of a friend than any ordinary.
29:36Or a tea.
29:38I tell you.
29:40Back again to you, Sylvia.
29:43Oh, my wife.
29:45You've been here for another thing.
29:47You've been here for another thing.
29:51I've been here for another thing.
29:51I can't see you.
29:52The tree.
29:55The tree?
29:55The padward.
29:57The tree?
29:57It's all right in here. We're nearly up to ten.
30:00It's a very good teacher.
30:02Nearly his bedtime.
30:06Do we miss you?
30:09Do we miss you?
30:20One of the best you come and I give up there.
30:22Two, three, four.
30:24Dye, tree, padwa.
30:26Well, a nasty job in that.
30:29But Vanessa.
30:30I'll do this here, but I should give you a cant.
30:32Go ahead.
30:33Oh.
30:35Good, no star.
30:36No star.
30:40Good night.
30:42Do you think you can get through the window?
30:45No.
30:45Do you think you're in?
30:46No.
30:48Do you think you're in?
30:49Do you think you're in?
30:49Do you think you're in the edge?
30:59Is that how you met?
31:01On a march?
31:04Something like that.
31:06A little town called Capuchelli.
31:10You have so many places to visit.
31:13You wouldn't be able to visit anymore.
31:15It's underwater.
31:19I don't know.
31:23There.
31:31The government drowned it.
31:37A new reservoir to provide drinking water for Liverpool, England.
31:47And so one of the last fully Welsh speaking villages in the land now rests quietly at the bottom of
31:52a lake.
31:57And no wonder you feel so strongly.
32:00And no wonder so many people want to stop me.
32:08Revenge.
32:08I don't think it's revenge.
32:10I don't think it's revenge.
32:11At least it shouldn't be.
32:13What people really want is self-determination.
32:17Not being spoken down to.
32:19Dominated.
32:21Governed by those so remote they don't even know you.
32:25Know who you are or what you think or need.
32:28You too.
32:32Yes.
32:33I know how that feels.
32:34Thank you very much.
32:57the room but it's going to be a little bit bigger than it is.
33:02Do you know what I mean?
33:06I really don't know.
33:08You know what I mean?
33:13I just want to make this room for you.
33:22I don't know.
33:26I don't know what I mean.
33:29How do I go?
33:33Do you think about it?
33:38Do you think about it?
33:38I don't think about it.
33:41But not only do you think about it.
34:43A workilh.
34:44A workilh.
34:45A workilh.
34:47They kindly sent me an invitation to attend the Investiture.
34:51I must tell you there are certain things I draw away that.
34:55I still have my beliefs.
34:57Of course.
35:05There is just one other thing.
35:09My speech.
35:11It was written for me by people who don't know me so of course it doesn't reflect who I actually
35:16am or what I think.
35:18Or indeed what I have come to learn having been here in Wales.
35:21And there are one or two tiny editions I'd like to make in my own voice which actually come from
35:26me.
35:27Like what?
35:29I've written them in English.
35:32They need translating.
35:35Here.
35:36I'll take a look.
35:41I'll take a look.
35:44I'll take a look.
35:52I'll take a look.
36:06I'll take a look.
36:07I'll take a look.
36:09I'll take a look.
36:25I'll take a look.
36:26Come on.
36:56Come on.
37:01Good afternoon.
37:03This is the BBC.
37:05We welcome you here to this royal principality of Wales
37:08where eager crowds awake the investiture
37:11of Prince Charles as Prince of Wales
37:15on this historic day.
37:18Yes.
37:29Come on then.
37:30Don't keep your audience waiting.
37:35Good morning to you and Boradar from inside Caernarvon Castle
37:39where the preparations are now complete for the arrival of Her Majesty.
37:43And, of course, the young man who will one day succeed her.
37:53It's a large turnout for the Prince today
37:55of the mood among the gathering crowds
37:57as one of anticipation, excitement,
38:00and, some might say, palpable tension.
38:06You're gonna be fine.
38:34Come on.
38:38Come on.
38:50A good response from the onbutters.
38:53Only a few boos could be heard,
38:56and otherwise the Welsh people showing enormous support.
39:15Two minutes you want on us.
39:41I don't know.
40:15I, Charles, Prince of Wales,
40:20do become your liege man of life and limb,
40:24and of earthly worship.
40:30And faith and truth I will bear unto thee,
40:36to live and die against all manner of folks.
40:40. . . .
40:40. . . .
40:51To be continued...
41:10pass, in wir, in maer, our gilch. Our emotion, be gone, Gloria.
41:43Raint o'r mwyaf oedd Caer, y byng broesawu i Gymru, a chael y Goriad Llygad o'r ran y
41:55Bedolwg Cymru, mae gan Gymru hanes i fod yn fach ohono, ac wrth reswm, mae'r Cymru'n domino dal
42:06gafael ar eu treftadaeth,
42:08ei dewilliant cynhenid, ei hunaniaeth, ei hanian, a'u personoliaeth fel cynnydd.
42:20Mae'n bwysig a'n bod yn parchi hynny.
42:27Mae gan Gymru, ei hunaniaeth ei hun, ei hanian ei hun,
42:35ei chwydlus ei hun,
42:37ei llais ei hun.
42:43Os i'w'r undeb hon e o'r roesi, yn y dylen barc i'r gwahaniaetau sy'n rhynger,
42:51ac y bo'r rygyn.
42:52Mae'n bwysig a'n bwysig,
42:53ac y bwysig a'n bwysig a'r groen.
42:58O'r amrywiaeth sy'n rwy'n dod i'w un bit yw unig.
43:00O'r amrywiaeth sy'n rwy'n elygu.
43:07O'r hwnbysig,
43:09o'r rygyn charactera'n gansodol,
43:11o'r rywbysig a'r rhysgofwrdd e'r rym.
43:46THE END
43:50Oh, hello
43:52Before I left, I just wanted to say thank you
43:55For everything
43:56Oh, pleasure
43:58Andres, to get with you
44:00And to give you this
44:02Oh, thank you
44:04The toy tea, Andres
44:06Very good
44:09What now?
44:11Straight back to England?
44:13No, four-day tour of Wales
44:15To visit every town, shake every hand
44:19And listen
44:22Good for you
44:27You've done well
44:32I had a good teacher
44:47Alice, ma'am
44:51Charles?
44:56I'm curious
44:58How did the changes you made to the speech go down with your family?
45:04Well, that's the beauty of having done it in Welsh
45:08They wouldn't have understood a word of what I actually said
45:15Move out
45:18Move out
45:19Move out
45:22Move out, Andres
45:23Move out
45:24Move out
45:54Well, I believe congratulations are in order, sir.
45:57Thank you, Stephen.
45:58I saw it on the television.
45:59Very, very dapper.
46:00It was grand, wasn't it?
46:01Yes.
46:02Now, sir, would you like a spot of supper?
46:05I...
46:11Where's the Queen?
46:12She's just retired for the night, sir.
46:15Stephen, might you ask if she'll see me?
46:18Very good, sir.
46:35Her Majesty hoped it might wait until morning, sir.
46:38But if not, she will see you briefly in her bedroom.
46:47Come in.
47:05Is that it?
47:08Is that the welcoming committee?
47:11What more is to be said?
47:15How about thank you or well done?
47:19If we all had to thank one another every time we did anything in this family, we'd never
47:23get anywhere.
47:32I've just been on a very challenging post-investiture tour of Wales.
47:37It went better than anyone expected.
47:40You were sent to Wales to show respect and heal divisions, not inflict them on your own family.
47:48I did nothing of the sort.
47:51I've had the opportunity now to read the translation of what you actually said, and the inferences
47:55you made.
47:57The similarity between Wales' suffering and yours was clear.
48:00Was it?
48:01I'm mistakable.
48:03I'm mistakable.
48:03Only to you?
48:06To all Wales, apparently.
48:12If this union is to endure, then we must learn to respect each other's differences.
48:18Nobody likes to be ignored, to not be seen, or heard, or listened to.
48:24Well, am I wrong?
48:26Isn't there a similarity between my predicament and the Welsh?
48:31Am I listened to in this family?
48:33Am I seen for who and what I am?
48:35No.
48:36Do I have a voice?
48:38Rather too much of a voice for my liking.
48:41Not having a voice is something all of us have to live with.
48:44We have all made sacrifices and suppressed who we are.
48:47Some portion of our natural selves is always lost.
48:50That is a choice.
48:52It is not a choice.
48:54It is a duty.
48:56I was a similar age to you when your great-grandmother, Queen Mary, told me that to do nothing, to
49:01say nothing, is the hardest job of all.
49:03It requires every ounce of energy that we have.
49:07To be impartial is not natural.
49:09It's not human.
49:11People will always want us to smile or agree or frown or speak.
49:16And the minute that we do, we will have declared a position, a point of view.
49:21And that is the one thing, as the royal family, we are not entitled to do.
49:26Which is why we have to hide those feelings, keep them to ourselves.
49:30Because the less we do, the less we say, or speak, or agree, or think, or breathe, or feel, or
49:41exist.
49:43The better.
49:47Well, doing that is perhaps not as easy for me as it is for you.
49:51Why?
49:52Because I have a beating heart.
49:58A character.
50:01A mind and a will of my own.
50:04I am not just a symbol.
50:07I can lead not just by wearing a uniform or by cutting a ribbon, but by showing people who I
50:12am.
50:19Mommy, I have a voice.
50:24Let me let you into a secret.
50:27No one wants to hear it.
50:33Are you talking about the country?
50:36My own family?
50:39No one.
50:42No one.
51:09For within the hollow crown, rounds the mortal temples of the king, keeps death his court.
51:19And there, the antic sits, scoffing his state and grinning at his pomp.
51:28Allowing him a breath.
51:32A little scene to monarchize.
51:39Be feared and kill with looks.
51:46Confusing him with self and vain conceit.
51:51As if this flesh, which wars about our life, were brass impregnable.
51:58And humored thus, comes at the last and with a little pin, bows through his castle wall and farewell king.
52:16Cover your heads, and mock not flesh and blood with solemn reverence.
52:23Throw away respect, tradition, form and ceremonious duty.
52:33For you have but mistook me all this while.
52:38I live with bread like you.
52:43Feel want.
52:46Taste grief.
52:49Need friends.
52:54Subjected thus, how can you say to me, I am a king?
53:19A gen i fred machenbw, a my king am palas.
53:25A Harlow Windsor
53:30Ewey en uen
53:36Chodwetharesi
53:38Ignoko ar drusai di
53:42Daithaivam ir drus
53:45Amedhe urthai
53:47Oh, Harlow, Harlow
53:51Harlow ar polo e di
53:56Carlo, Carlo, Carlo
53:59Ar rebolo geeta dadi
54:02Dadi
54:04Amino chan y gan
54:07Drigoleon fawr a man
54:12O'r diwedd mae gynnon i byr uns ynglad y gan
54:42O'r diwedd mae gynnon i byr uns ynglad y gan
54:56O'r diwedd mae gynnon i byr uns ynglad y gan
54:59O'r diwedd mae gynnon i byr uns ynglad y gan
55:17O'r diwedd mae gynnon i byr uns ynglad y gan
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