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The Crown S02E06 [Full Movie] [Vertical Drama]Full EP - Full
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00:00:28Transcription by CastingWords
00:00:46How much further, Luce?
00:00:49Hurry, Lord.
00:01:01Pull over, private.
00:01:06Grab those shovels.
00:01:10Show us, Luce.
00:01:15Spread out.
00:01:49Here.
00:01:53Start digging.
00:02:16We got something.
00:02:24What did you see?
00:02:24I don't know if anybody can.
00:02:24Let us know.
00:02:26Let us know.
00:02:34Let us know if you have anything.
00:02:35Let us know.
00:02:35Let us know.
00:02:39Let us know.
00:02:39I don't know.
00:03:29I don't know.
00:03:43What's he asking for?
00:03:46Freedom in a country of his choice and a generous pension to last the rest of his lifetime.
00:03:55Well, let's see how good it is first.
00:04:02Get it translated.
00:04:21Let's see what it is.
00:04:25Let's see what it is.
00:04:53Let's see what it is.
00:05:08Let's see what it is.
00:05:10Let's see what it is.
00:05:16Let's see what it is.
00:05:22Let's see what it is.
00:05:38Let's see what it is.
00:05:41Let's see what it is.
00:05:44Let's see what it is.
00:05:52Let's see what it is.
00:06:00I'm going to need to speak to the Prime Minister.
00:06:11Let's see what it is.
00:06:27Let's see what it is.
00:06:37Let's see what it is.
00:06:42What it is written here brings the greatest shame upon this family.
00:06:50Our people would rightfully never forgive us.
00:06:57Let's see what it is.
00:07:21Let's see what it is.
00:07:25Let's see what it is.
00:07:28Let's see what it is.
00:07:51Let's see what it is.
00:08:12The mighty Haringey Arena in London draws a capacity crowd of over 11,000
00:08:18for the first meeting in Britain of the American evangelist team headed by Billy Graham.
00:08:23Graham, who wears a slate-gray suit and a modest tie, makes his address from a purple-draped platform.
00:08:30The Bible teaches that all of us are wrong.
00:08:35We have all got a strength.
00:08:38With everyone turned to his own way, and when you turn to your own way...
00:08:48He's not young. He's my age. Precisely. He's a child.
00:08:53I think moral authority and spiritual guidance should come from someone with a little knife experience.
00:08:59Not from someone who learnt their trade selling brushes door-to-door in North Carolina.
00:09:04There's a humility to that, which I like.
00:09:07Are those people crying?
00:09:08Billy Graham has spoken to more than one and a half million people...
00:09:11What's happening to this country?
00:09:12Now he sums up his crusade.
00:09:14The people of Great Britain never cried during the war.
00:09:17Now they're weeping like children.
00:09:19I'm calling for a revival that will cause every man and woman to return to their offices and shops
00:09:25and live out the teachings of Christ in their daily relationships.
00:09:29I'm going to preach a gospel, not of despair, but of hope.
00:09:33Hope for the individual.
00:09:35Hope for society. Hope for the world.
00:09:38Turning out in droves for an American zealot.
00:09:42He's not a zealot.
00:09:44He's shouting, darling, any zealot shout.
00:09:46When you close your eyes, close your ears to God's way,
00:09:51you will soon prefer your own ideas to the ideas of God.
00:09:55You come to a stage where your own evil seems to you good,
00:10:01and God's good seems to be evil.
00:10:10Happy birthday to you, happy birthday to you, happy birthday dear Trooper, happy birthday to you.
00:10:26Happy birthday to you.
00:10:27Good.
00:10:32Good shot.
00:10:34Good shot.
00:10:37Well done.
00:10:42Help! Help!
00:10:46Ah! No!
00:10:51Natalie, I knew the same thing.
00:10:53It's me! It's me!
00:10:55No, I don't know.
00:10:58Where's your cap?
00:11:12You look very dashing.
00:11:19Alors, qu'est-ce que vous pensez?
00:11:21Magnifique!
00:11:22Buffet!
00:11:23I don't like it.
00:11:42Oh, no, no, no. I cannot go like this.
00:11:45Why not?
00:11:46At least that way I get to be queen once.
00:11:48...
00:12:02...
00:12:04...
00:13:35I need a job, a purpose.
00:13:38Not this again.
00:13:40Yes, this.
00:13:40Well, where do you intend to find one?
00:13:43I will simply have to go to London to set things in motion.
00:13:48Shall I tell you what else is deeply rooted within your family?
00:13:51Delusion.
00:13:52They won't let you in the country, let alone give you a job.
00:13:55That's not what my lawyer says.
00:13:56You've spoken to George?
00:13:58Why didn't you tell me?
00:13:59Well, I'm telling you now.
00:14:01I still have allies, you know, important allies.
00:14:05Disciples of the truth, advocates of justice, who could mobilize opinion, start a campaign,
00:14:15to have a former king be forgiven.
00:14:30Finally, there's a request, ma'am, from the government, for you to open the new airport at Gatwick.
00:14:36They've offered some dates.
00:14:38The start of June was best for us, I think.
00:14:39Yes, all right.
00:14:41And that is it from me.
00:14:43Thank you, Michael.
00:14:47Oh, there was something.
00:14:50Ma'am.
00:14:52If I wished to meet Reverend Graham, do you think that could be arranged?
00:14:58The evangelist, ma'am.
00:15:01Yes.
00:15:04Well, I should need to give it some thought.
00:15:10One might imagine an invitation being extended to preach at All Saints Chapel at Windsor and private lunch to follow.
00:15:22We should have to be careful, though, ma'am, that any invitation to or association with Reverend Graham
00:15:31would not be perceived as an endorsement of his crusades,
00:15:38which would not be compatible with your role as the head of the church.
00:15:42I'm sure you'll handle it all perfectly, Michael.
00:15:44You had something.
00:15:47Yes.
00:15:47It's, um, His Royal Highness, the Duke of Windsor, has written with a request.
00:15:53Oh.
00:15:54What for?
00:15:56To be allowed to enter the country.
00:15:58Denied.
00:15:59To research a book which he's planning to write.
00:16:02On what subject?
00:16:03How do you truly great king?
00:16:05A guidebook.
00:16:07Hmm.
00:16:09He didn't say that.
00:16:11I suppose we could let him stay at Kensington Palace.
00:16:13Actually, he's intending to stay with his friend, Major Metcalfe.
00:16:16Fruity?
00:16:17But doesn't he live in Surrey?
00:16:18Sussex, I believe.
00:16:20Oh, that's quite good.
00:16:21Out of the public eye.
00:16:22The further the better, if you ask me.
00:16:26So, that is a yes.
00:16:28No.
00:16:29Yes.
00:16:29No.
00:16:30Yes.
00:16:33Yes.
00:16:34Let him come.
00:16:36Ma'am.
00:16:53Morning.
00:16:53Morning, sir.
00:16:56Uh, did you finish that paper?
00:16:58Yes, sir.
00:16:59This one's for Mr. Sweet.
00:17:01This one for...
00:17:02Morning, Margaret.
00:17:03Morning, sir.
00:17:05Monsieur...
00:17:05Albert?
00:17:07Yes, ma'am.
00:17:29Take a look at this.
00:17:32It's practically an injunction.
00:17:35Sir.
00:17:38Are you aware of this?
00:17:45I am.
00:17:46As historians, we have a duty to publish the truth.
00:17:50No exceptions.
00:17:52Otherwise, what are we all doing?
00:17:55Protecting Nazis?
00:17:57Protecting something else.
00:17:59My hands are tied.
00:18:01But his are not.
00:18:02That's right.
00:18:04I have access to the U.S. State Department duplicate files.
00:18:07Including this.
00:18:09There's nothing to stop the American government publishing if the British government won't.
00:18:25My dearest darling Peaches, let us hope the rest of the trip is not as miserable as the journey.
00:18:31It was a most disagreeable crossing due to bad weather.
00:18:36The company on the boat was dreadful too.
00:18:39Common and uninteresting people pestering me to join them for drinks or play cards.
00:18:47On arrival in London, my mood was lifted slightly by a large group of welcoming supporters who cheered my name
00:18:55and removed their hats.
00:18:58And my niece, the Queen, sent me one of the hearses.
00:19:07Later in the evening, I feared things would go from bad to worse.
00:19:11As we arrived at Fruity's rather drab little house, somewhere in Sussex.
00:19:21Rosie.
00:19:22Your Royal Highness.
00:19:23How are you?
00:19:24Very well.
00:19:25Your Royal Highness.
00:19:26Baba, dear.
00:19:27But George excelled, as ever, and revealed the work he had already done.
00:19:32Of course, the true purpose of the visit can't be known to anybody.
00:19:35Should anyone get wind of any job hunting by His Royal Highness, it might be seen as a violation of
00:19:42the agreement made after the application.
00:19:44And His Royal Highness might find himself not only being asked to leave the country, but also without a pension.
00:19:51So, this trip must be perceived, first and foremost, as a literary one.
00:19:57I trust you came prepared.
00:19:58I brought quill and ink.
00:20:02All that notwithstanding, I've started a campaign, gathering friends and supporters.
00:20:10And the only indications are most encouraging.
00:20:12Walter Monckton has agreed to host a dinner.
00:20:14And we've had yeses from Lord Salisbury, Lord Beaverbrook, Lord Dudley, the American ambassador,
00:20:20and the Foreign Secretary, Selwyn Lloyd.
00:20:23Oh, Cecil Beaton and Noel Coward have agreed to hold a little supper party for you.
00:20:28Oh, dear Cecil.
00:20:31And his inedible food.
00:20:34Just a small hand.
00:20:35Just a small hand.
00:20:59Do we really have to do this?
00:21:01Indulge me.
00:21:03I'm interested.
00:21:06Can you just make up an excuse and say I'm off sinning somewhere?
00:21:09No.
00:21:15Lanky bugger, isn't he?
00:21:17I think he's rather handsome.
00:21:19Door-to-door salesman in a hideous, shiny suit.
00:21:23Where's his box?
00:21:24What box?
00:21:25The one containing his brushes.
00:21:28Oh, no, look.
00:21:28Come on.
00:21:29I'll be late.
00:21:30Hairbrushes.
00:21:31Floorbrushes.
00:21:32Toothbrushes.
00:21:33Do shut up.
00:21:34As I was thinking about what to preach about today, I considered various topics which speak
00:21:41to me personally, but I thought that I would start with a simple question.
00:21:46What is a Christian?
00:21:49The Bible tells us, Colossians 1.27 says, that a Christian is a person in whom Christ dwells.
00:21:59It's Christ in you.
00:22:01The hope of glory.
00:22:02It means that you have a personal relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ.
00:22:08That encounter has taken place.
00:22:11You have received Christ as Savior.
00:22:15And that is what a Christian is.
00:22:26I enjoyed that very much.
00:22:28You do speak with such wonderful clarity and certainty.
00:22:32I find it very reassuring.
00:22:35And it's not only me.
00:22:37The rest of the country, too, I imagine.
00:22:40Yes.
00:22:41We've been surprised ourselves at the turnout.
00:22:44Really?
00:22:45Mm-hmm.
00:22:46Well, you shouldn't be.
00:22:47In an increasingly complex world, we all need certainty.
00:22:51And you provide it.
00:22:52Oh, that's not me.
00:22:54Scriptures provide it.
00:22:56Yes, but you illuminate them so well.
00:23:01The great joy that I felt today was that of being a simple congregant, being taught, being led.
00:23:09You see, as head of the Anglican Church, in terms of rank, even the great archbishops of York and Canterbury
00:23:16are below me.
00:23:18Above me, there is only God.
00:23:20Well, that must be lonely sometimes.
00:23:22Yes, it is.
00:23:26Which is why it's lovely, as queen, to be able to just disappear and be...
00:23:34A simple Christian.
00:23:37Yes.
00:23:40Above all things, I do think of myself as just a simple Christian.
00:23:47It's the values of Christian living that root me, guide me, define me.
00:24:00Have you always been such a good speaker?
00:24:03I was actually a shy child.
00:24:05No.
00:24:06Mm-hmm.
00:24:07Speaking as a shy child myself, I have to say that I find that very hard to believe.
00:24:12No, ma'am.
00:24:13It's true.
00:24:15The first time I've spoken public, I was 12 years old at school.
00:24:21The school principal told my mother he thought I was a natural.
00:24:25That, of all things, I had a gift.
00:24:42The first time I was a child myself, I had a gift.
00:24:59I had a gift of joy.
00:25:29I have no objection to his being here.
00:25:32The word crusades troubles me.
00:25:38If the Reverend Graham is the crusader,
00:25:41the implication is that we're heathen.
00:25:44I'm sure I go wrong with it.
00:25:46Mr. Wheeler-Bennett, sir.
00:25:50Excuse me?
00:25:55Prime Minister, thank you for seeing you.
00:25:57You didn't give me much choice.
00:25:59Matter of the greatest urgency.
00:26:03Your team of troublesome historians.
00:26:05Committed historians.
00:26:07Principled historians.
00:26:10Is that the file in question?
00:26:13Yes.
00:26:15Let's make a start.
00:26:21Ah, there you are. Plot is all.
00:26:25Your royal highness.
00:26:26Are the curtains drawn as treason abound?
00:26:29George, thank you so much.
00:26:31Sir.
00:26:33Dear Bob.
00:26:34Hello, sir.
00:26:35I'm very well.
00:26:36Thank you, sir.
00:26:37We all know why we're here tonight.
00:26:41To see if we can help our dear friend, his royal highness, in his quest to find a final act
00:26:51to this sad drama.
00:26:53And to turn it into a great history play.
00:26:55He seeks a job.
00:26:57He seeks a job.
00:26:58A purpose.
00:26:59A purpose.
00:27:00Well, that's why I'm here.
00:27:01To ask you all my council of war, my brains trust of politicians, artists and philosophers.
00:27:11Something in the military, perhaps?
00:27:12Well, why not?
00:27:13I was made a major general attached to the British military mission in France at the beginning of the war,
00:27:19in a liaising role between us and the French.
00:27:21And I much enjoyed it.
00:27:22Or a position within the Board of Trade.
00:27:25Well, what kind of position?
00:27:27Helping promote Britain's economic interests abroad.
00:27:32Yes.
00:27:33The right man in the right position could contribute so much to Britain's economy.
00:27:38Helping boost our much needed dollar reserves.
00:27:41A man with charm, contacts, influence and the magic of being a former king.
00:27:49Doesn't it all feel a little grubby, Walter?
00:27:52All those grasping international businessmen.
00:27:55The whiff of profit and self-interest.
00:27:58Now, I like the direction we were heading earlier.
00:28:00The idea of a liaison post.
00:28:02Then what about the diplomatic service?
00:28:04Oh, I like that idea.
00:28:06Don't the Americans have these unofficial roving ambassadors nowadays?
00:28:12Yes.
00:28:13They're two in London at the moment.
00:28:15Oh, well, something like that would be ideal.
00:28:18Well, I think we have...
00:28:19My dearest darling Peaches, what a wait is off my mind.
00:28:26Moncton really did come up with the goods and his friends really do seem to want to help me.
00:28:32Now all I must do is wait while they discreetly make representations on my behalf.
00:28:39I would say wait and pray.
00:28:42But all taste for prayer has left me as I survey the madness involving the American evangelist here.
00:28:49What has happened to the people of this country?
00:28:53Turning like lemmings to this crusading showman from Charlotte for their inspiration.
00:29:00Rumour reached me that Shirley Temple even invited the fool to preach at Windsor Chapel.
00:29:06Can you imagine the banality of those exchanges?
00:29:11The smugness, self-congratulation and hypocrisy.
00:29:14What a grotesque occasion that must have been.
00:29:19Well, now bed calls and for once, as my head hits the pillow without yours beside me,
00:29:26I can truthfully say all is well.
00:29:30Today was a day worth living.
00:29:32Your loving husband, David.
00:29:40Good morning, sir.
00:29:42You're right to have been?
00:29:43Ready for your hour, sir.
00:29:49I received a visit yesterday afternoon from John Wheeler Bennett,
00:29:54the senior historian in charge of publishing the German war files,
00:29:59who informed me that this government was now left with no choice but to publish certain material,
00:30:07which both my predecessor, Winston Churchill, and yours, your late father, tried to suppress.
00:30:13What material?
00:30:15The Marburg files, ma'am.
00:30:34The Marburg
00:30:36The Marburg On
00:30:57This was always going to come back to haunt us.
00:31:06Shortly after the war ended,
00:31:10some British troops...
00:31:13American.
00:31:17American troops arrested a German soldier
00:31:21as he was retreating from...
00:31:25...Treyfurt.
00:31:27Near Eisenach.
00:31:28In central Germany.
00:31:30I don't remember the soldier's name.
00:31:34Leugnant von Loesch.
00:31:37Turns out, this soldier was Hitler's personal translator.
00:31:44The assistant to Hitler's personal translator, ma'am.
00:31:47Hitler's personal translator was Dr. Schmidt.
00:31:50Dr. Paul Schmidt.
00:31:51All right, you tell the story, Michael.
00:31:53Please.
00:31:56Thank you, ma'am.
00:32:03When his offices were being evacuated...
00:32:09Dr. Schmidt asked his assistant, Von Loesch, to dispose of all the top secret papers which he had placed in
00:32:19archives.
00:32:21And Von Loesch duly burned.
00:32:24The vast majority.
00:32:29But...
00:32:30He secretly kept the most valuable material.
00:32:34Hoping to use it to negotiate his freedom and to escape trial.
00:33:05Among the papers which Von Loesch kept back, there was one file...
00:33:09pertaining to Anglo-German relations.
00:33:12In particular, the relationship of Nazi High Command with His Royal Highness, the Duke of Windsor.
00:33:21I think it's fair to say the reality exceeded even our worst fears.
00:33:28We did everything we could to contain this.
00:33:30That's your lot?
00:33:31Unaware that a copy had been sent to the Americans.
00:33:39Who are now insisting that this volume of Marburg files...
00:33:44be published.
00:33:48And this is the man you inexplicably let back into the country.
00:33:58I hope you have a strong stomach.
00:33:59...
00:34:03...
00:34:15...
00:37:15We're counting down the minutes until I am back in your arms again.
00:37:19Your loving husband, David.
00:37:50The Duke of Windsor, your majesty.
00:37:59Your majesty.
00:38:06Oh, yes, your first time, yes, your first time, yes, your first time back in this room, yes.
00:38:12That colour was me, that colour was me, that colour was me.
00:38:43You had a chance, you had a chance, you had a chance, yes, you had the same way, yes, you
00:39:06had a chance.
00:39:11coming here and bothering you i made sure the support would be given by government and i've
00:39:17been short of that support support for what jobs well three possibilities came up the first is the
00:39:24ambassadorship to france the pm and foreign secretary aren't keen on the incumbent that
00:39:30win jeb and the second option oh as a special liaison to the board of trade the third
00:39:41as a high commissioner working with the commonwealth relations office to protect and promote british
00:39:48interests throughout the world this would suit me i think as it specializes in the practical side
00:39:53of diplomatic work entertaining
00:40:01well i'm sure that you do all three jobs very well indeed
00:40:09but in light of what i've recently learned about about what about events that took place
00:40:17while you were in lisbon during the war from whom from state papers which state papers german state
00:40:27papers which american historians supported by the french and the british are now threatening to
00:40:36publish and what exactly is in these papers letters and telegrams communications detailing your
00:40:47relationship with nazi high command well it's utter nonsense in one telegram from 1940 it states that
00:40:57you were considering publicly going against the government and pledging your support for peace
00:41:02with germany thereby breaking with my father the king in another it says that in return for your
00:41:07support the german government offered you a home in spain where you could wait out the rest of the war
00:41:13in
00:41:13peace and safety while your countrymen gave their lives i went to the bahamas as the british government
00:41:20instructed yes you were instructed to go to the bahamas because of your views
00:41:27in these papers you're quoted as saying that the furor's desire for peace was in complete agreement
00:41:35with your own point of view
00:41:45you were too young to remember i alas not
00:41:52hitler and his henchmen were once our friends
00:41:56as king i was committed to the idea passionately committed
00:42:02that england and germany should never be enemies again after the horrors of the great war
00:42:08people forget there was no indication of who hitler would become you could argue that we were the
00:42:16ones that made a monster of him by refusing to be his allies this is the point people make stands
00:42:24they grandstands pat themselves on the back for their great virtue and what is the consequence another
00:42:30grotesque war millions more dead when peace was all that mattered to me
00:42:39in that spirit i am asking you to make peace with me today
00:42:49elizabeth the british are a sensible people they will never believe these claims against me
00:42:55they will dismiss these papers for what they are baseless rumors and german propaganda
00:43:05they will never believe these papers for what they are baseless rumors and they will never
00:43:05they will never believe these papers for what they are baseless rumors and they will never
00:43:37forgiveness what have I done now no not you uncle David I think it's time that
00:43:47he'd be forgiven are you mad you can't forgive that man why not what he did to
00:43:52this country those are different times he's explained all that to me I bet he
00:43:59did Philip forgiveness is very important to me it's not often I say this so perhaps if I do
00:44:10you will take it seriously ask ask Tommy Lassels to come and see you what and tell him of your
00:44:25proposed course of action I can't keep summoning him like that why not well he's retired for one
00:44:32thing go and see him in an unofficial capacity for sherry or tea or human blood whatever that
00:44:39monster drinks and ask him about your uncle he was his private secretary while he was king
00:44:45he knows everything there is to know
00:45:04so
00:45:09so
00:45:09so
00:45:09so
00:45:09so
00:45:09so
00:45:09so
00:45:26Your Majesty.
00:45:28Tommy, it's terribly inconvenient.
00:45:34Ah, you're mid-battle.
00:45:37Yes, ma'am.
00:45:39Now, don't say anything.
00:45:42Ah.
00:45:43Yes, those uniforms.
00:45:45Nineteenth century?
00:45:47Yes.
00:45:48And that standard is the Duke of Wellington.
00:45:51Very good, ma'am.
00:45:53So is Waterloo.
00:45:55Salamanca.
00:45:56Ah.
00:45:59Oh.
00:46:00And these?
00:46:01Troops of Sir Edward Pakenham's 3rd Infantry Division.
00:46:05Very lovely.
00:46:06Did you have them made?
00:46:08A gift, ma'am.
00:46:09From your grandfather when I was in his service.
00:46:13Hmm.
00:46:15Shall we, ma'am?
00:46:16Yes.
00:46:25I'm proposing to let the Duke of Windsor back into public life, and as an example of a Christian in
00:46:33a Christian country, to forgive.
00:46:38Your Majesty, that would, in my view, be a mistake.
00:46:48Why?
00:46:51Before you make your decision, ma'am, I believe you should be in full possession of the facts.
00:46:56I've read the Marburg files.
00:46:58So have I.
00:47:00I said full possession.
00:47:04You mean there's more?
00:47:05Yes, ma'am.
00:47:09The Duke of Windsor.
00:47:10The Duke of Windsor made his loyalties clear as soon as he became king.
00:47:14Surrounded himself with a new breed of courtier.
00:47:18Men such as Karl, the Duke of Saxe-Coburg, a renowned Nazi.
00:47:23He also shared classified allied documents with the Duchess of Windsor, who was herself, we believe, sharing a bed, forgive
00:47:32me, ma'am, with the German ambassador, Herr Ribbentrop.
00:47:54It became so bad that the government had to stop putting secret and sensitive papers in his red box.
00:48:00But we needn't have worried, because then we had the application.
00:48:09The Duke of Windsor.
00:48:10Having promised to retire from public life, we now know that he had no such intention.
00:48:15Why else would the pair of them decide to visit Hitler in Germany?
00:48:29The Fuhrer had labelled the trip an unofficial state visit.
00:48:32So it is unsurprising that it was on that same trip, at the home of Herr Hess, that the plan
00:48:40was hatched.
00:48:43A plan to reinstate the Duke of Windsor as King of England.
00:48:50Effectively betraying and dethroning your dear late father, in return for German forces being given free reign across Europe.
00:49:00German troops were even promised to quell a colonial rebellion, if necessary.
00:49:06And there were visits to SS training schools and early versions of the concentration camps.
00:49:13And of course, the full horrors were yet to come.
00:49:17Nonetheless, he visited.
00:49:19The Duke of Windsor did.
00:49:27Shall I continue, ma'am?
00:49:34When a German aircraft crashed in Belgium carrying Hitler's entire military plan for the invasion of France,
00:49:41the Duke wasted no time in letting his Nazi friends know that Allied forces had indeed recovered this priceless information.
00:49:50Which gave Germany time to change its plans.
00:49:54And in less than a month, Paris fell to German occupation.
00:50:00But perhaps worst of all, the Duke told the German government that resolve in the United Kingdom in the face
00:50:08of the German aerial bombardment was weakening.
00:50:11And that continued bombing, that is, the continued slaughter of his fellow countrymen and former subjects,
00:50:18would, I quote,
00:50:20soon make Britain ready for peace.
00:50:51The problems of the world can be summed up in one three-letter word.
00:50:56S-I-N.
00:50:59Sin.
00:51:01From Psalm 58.
00:51:04The wicked are estranged from the womb.
00:51:06They go astray as soon as they be born, speaking lies.
00:51:10God looks deep down inside.
00:51:15God sees how you really are down inside.
00:51:18Now you may be out with Legion T.
00:51:20We're a father, a coach, a church member, a good standing in the community.
00:51:25But it's your heart, a heart of God.
00:51:34I've had a chance to think about your request to serve your country.
00:51:40I was keen to help you, and weighing it all up, the amount of time that has passed, and my
00:51:50affection for you, personally, all spoke in its favour.
00:51:55But?
00:51:59But?
00:52:01But, on balance?
00:52:04I think not.
00:52:08And I'm sure you don't need reminding that under the terms of the agreement reached after the abdication, you are
00:52:13permitted to return to the United Kingdom only at the pleasure and invitation of the Sovereign.
00:52:19Yes?
00:52:22I find myself unable to grant that permission.
00:52:29And who's fed you this poison? Your mother?
00:52:35No.
00:52:37Tommy Lassell's?
00:52:38I came to my own mind.
00:52:40Well, you have no mind of your own. That's why everyone's so thrilled with you.
00:52:45The last royal to have a mind of his own was me, and that's why they threw me out.
00:52:48Fine.
00:52:50I will go.
00:52:53But let me ask you this.
00:52:56Who has done more damage to the monarchy, me with my willfulness, or you lot with your inhumanity?
00:53:08We all closed our eyes, our ears, to what was being said about you.
00:53:15We dismissed it as fabrications, as cruel chatter, in light of your decision to give up the throne.
00:53:22But when the truth finally came out...
00:53:25The truth?
00:53:29It makes a mockery of even the central tenets of Christianity.
00:53:33There is no possibility of my forgiving you.
00:53:36The question is...
00:53:38How on earth can you forgive yourself?
00:53:52Inrealism.
00:54:08Inrealism.
00:54:11Around ADK.
00:54:12on �, Imagine, walking on the tower. While
00:54:14crystals.
00:54:27All right, sir.
00:54:29Morning.
00:54:29Morning.
00:54:30Morning, sir.
00:54:33Morning.
00:54:39You have to go ahead to publish.
00:54:42Thank you, sir.
00:55:26Reverend Graham, your majesty.
00:55:29Your majesty?
00:55:33You're very kind to find time for me again.
00:55:39Oh, do sit down.
00:55:50Reverend Graham, I asked you here today because there's something that I'd very much like to hear your views on.
00:56:01Ma'am?
00:56:04Forgiveness.
00:56:08Are there any circumstances, do you feel, where one can be a good Christian and yet not forgive?
00:56:21Christian teaching is very clear on this.
00:56:23No one is beneath forgiveness.
00:56:27Dying on the cross, Jesus himself asked the Lord to forgive those that killed him.
00:56:33Yes.
00:56:38But we must remember his words.
00:56:41They know not what they do.
00:56:45That forgiveness, it was conditional.
00:56:49True, but he still forgave.
00:56:52God himself forgives us all.
00:56:55Who are we to reject the example of God?
00:56:58Mere mortals.
00:57:01Mere mortals.
00:57:01We are all mortals.
00:57:02That is our fate.
00:57:04But we need not be unchristian ones.
00:57:17The solution for being unable to forgive.
00:57:21One asks for forgiveness oneself, humbly and sincerely.
00:57:28And one prays for those that one cannot forgive.
00:58:00One prays for forgiveness.
00:59:31We all agree to put aside our historical differences to celebrate the one good thing that we all have in
00:59:35common.
00:59:36Which is?
01:00:05It's you.
01:00:08Not to mention successfully banishing Satan from entering the Garden of Eden.
01:00:14That's Christ's business in anyone's books.
01:00:17So it's a gold star from Jesus.
01:00:20No.
01:00:23And a gold star from me.
01:00:27What are you doing?
01:00:30No.
01:00:31Yes.
01:00:31No.
01:00:32Oh, yes, darling.
01:00:33Come on.
01:00:34No!
01:01:02No!
01:01:02That's not it.
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