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The Crown S02E03 [Full Movie] [Ranked]Full EP - Full
Transcript
00:07Now, Anne, what's this?
00:09A penguin.
00:10Very good.
00:11And Charles, who do you suppose is surrounded by penguins at the moment?
00:15Daddy.
00:15Yes, that's right.
00:17That's because he's in the Antarctic.
00:18And from there, he goes to the South Shetland Islands,
00:21and then he goes on to the Falkland Islands,
00:24and then goes all the way up here to Ascension Island.
00:28Now, all these are British overseas territories,
00:30and they have to be visited every once in a while,
00:32so they don't feel neglected or forgotten.
00:34They don't get any silly ideas like becoming independent.
00:37Right, you brush your teeth?
00:38Yes.
00:39Good.
00:39Have you said your prayers?
00:40Yes.
00:40Dolly good.
00:41Right.
00:41Night-night.
00:42Night-night, Mummy.
00:45Oh, we might put a picture of the Duke of Edinburgh by the children's bed,
00:49so they recognise him when he gets back.
00:51Five months is a long time at that age.
00:58Oh, what's that?
01:00From his Royal Highness, ma'am.
01:02Footage from the Royal Tour.
01:04How nice.
01:07We might watch that instead of our next film.
01:36We might watch that instead of our next film.
01:50Hansington, 3742.
01:53Tommy.
01:56An
01:56Down
01:56To
01:57To
01:57M
02:24To
02:24To
03:41It's wonderful to be back amongst you.
03:45As you know, I went away to concentrate on my health.
03:51I'm now fully fit to resume my duties.
03:56Thanks.
04:02Quiet, everyone.
04:02Sit down.
04:03Come on.
04:04Come on.
04:05He's sent some notes to accompany the footage.
04:08So, I'll read aloud.
04:15Hello, all of you.
04:17Hello.
04:18Hello.
04:18Hello, Daddy.
04:19Hello, Daddy.
04:19I can picture you all perfectly sitting there, wishing it was Creature from the Black Lagoon.
04:27But instead, this is just boring old me arriving...
04:33Look, Henry.
04:34...at King George Island.
04:35Look!
04:37...a hundred miles off the coast of Antarctica.
04:40There's your Daddy.
04:41Is that Daddy?
04:43...and nestled between the white bones of ancient whales.
04:47Here we've made some new friends, and Mike was rather smitten.
04:51How tame they are.
04:52He's got a beard.
04:53Yes, yes, they're all grown beards.
04:55It makes them look a bit shifty.
04:57Oh, no, don't say that.
04:58It makes them look like an explorer.
05:05What's that?
05:06Oh, yes, this is very funny, Monty.
05:07Um, we've even installed some signage, so we can find our way home.
05:12Oh, Buckingham Palace.
05:14Oh, that's good.
05:15I like that.
05:16It's a bit of a commute to the office, though.
05:31Luckily, we found some friends for company,
05:33the British Hunting Aerosurvey teams,
05:36who make excellent tennis companions.
05:39Oh, look!
05:40They're all playing tennis.
05:41Isn't that silly?
05:43What does that mean?
05:44Some things about huskies that you never knew.
05:47They have eyes of different colours.
05:49Oh, like the Kaiser.
05:51Mummy.
05:53But most of all, they really, really like tennis balls.
05:58Yes, we can see that.
05:59And they have claws to ensure they don't slip on the ice.
06:01Oh, look!
06:02Now, Philip's on.
06:03Come on.
06:11Joining our family of animals are the penguins and seals,
06:16who send their love to you all.
06:18As do I.
06:19I.
06:21Your loving papa and husband.
06:26Philip.
06:48Good morning.
06:53Tommy.
06:55Your Majesty.
06:57Good morning.
06:57I thought you were supposed to be in happy retirement.
07:00I am, ma'am.
07:01Well, then what on earth are you doing here?
07:03Oh, dear.
07:05Either you miss the place more than you could bear,
07:06which would be...
07:07Tragic.
07:08Yes.
07:09Or there's a serious problem,
07:11and you've been called in to help.
07:12Just a routine matter with Colonel Nadine.
07:15It's hardly routine if you sent one of the royal cars.
07:19Well, in actual fact, that's my car.
07:21We gave you a car?
07:23You did, ma'am.
07:24As part of the farewell package.
07:26Well, not the driver too, surely.
07:27The driver too?
07:30Was that me?
07:31I believe so.
07:33Well, you've always held a very special place in all of our hearts, Tommy.
07:37Anyway, I must go.
07:39Windsor, ma'am?
07:40In Osandrium.
07:42Michael's rearranged a few things to give me a couple of days off.
07:45Quite right.
07:57You did well to bring this to me, Michael.
08:01I've served three generations of the royal family,
08:05four monarchs,
08:07and a good many things to protect them.
08:11mostly from themselves.
08:12But this is the first time,
08:15Iceland ever,
08:16to save someone else's marriage
08:18in order to safeguard the crown.
08:21Not that we give a fig about the Parkers
08:23or their happiness, you understand?
08:25Not a fig, Tommy.
08:26here we go.
08:56Dear Philip, I cannot tell you how much we enjoyed watching the film you sent.
09:02It was lovely to set eyes on you again.
09:06And the children were very impressed by the whales and penguins.
09:11You looked very handsome, I thought, in your wailing outfit.
09:16And a suit, too.
09:20And I could never forget what my grandmother said to me about being married to a man with this.
09:29She goes on, but actually, no, I'm not going to repeat that.
09:32Oh, come on, come on, come on.
09:40I think we can safely say a very, very warm welcome awaited royal hands of the day.
10:10Good morning.
10:13Good morning, sir.
10:17First of all, I must thank you for the way in which you've all carried on with us.
10:24And for the manner in which Rab has very competently stood in for me in my absence.
10:30You've kept me informed of all the major decisions that had to be taken.
10:35In all these months, we have been a united government.
10:40And we shall remain a united government.
10:44But we're not a united government, are we, Anthony?
10:48The war you insisted on has left us as divided as Caesar and Pompey and the country in chaos.
10:54There is no petrol in the pumps.
10:57There are no tins on the shelves.
10:59Our allies are aligned against us.
11:01Our international reputation is in tatters.
11:04How adroitly your weathervane spins, Harold.
11:10You were for the war, as I remember.
11:15Only as long as it was legal.
11:19You...
11:21You...
11:22Liar!
11:27Liar!
11:30You wanted it every bit as much as I did!
11:37Torn-off NASA's scalp with your own fingernails, given the chance.
11:42Taking the oil from that canal and set the Middle East ablaze!
11:46You've lost the trust of the people and of the party.
11:49It's the end of the road.
11:52The road?
11:53Would you willingly let me down?
12:01And would you abandon me?
12:05Here.
12:10Hmm?
12:12Hmm?
12:27Come now, Antony.
12:30You know as well as I.
12:35There is no justice in politics.
12:41Mr. Walker!
12:42Ahead!
12:44Ahead!
12:45Ahead!
12:49Ahead!
12:56Ahead!
12:59Captain Lassells?
13:02Mrs. Parker.
13:04What brings you here?
13:06Oh, a retired man must make friends with all the good reading spots in London.
13:13What are you reading, may I ask?
13:15Tell me that it's romantic poetry.
13:17Yeah, military history.
13:19The campaigns of Napoleon.
13:23Your son?
13:24Yes.
13:25Lieutenant Commander Parker must be very proud.
13:27He might be, if he knew what the children looked like.
13:31He's away again, on tour.
13:33You have my sympathy.
13:35I know from my own wife how difficult that can be, being left alone with the children for days, sometimes
13:41weeks on end.
13:43Well, I'm sure that strong marriages find a way through it.
13:47I'm afraid it's broken, Ars.
13:50I am sad to hear that.
13:53But, might I ask you to hold off on any instruction or public announcement just a little while longer?
14:00As we both know, the Duke of Edinburgh is performing important royal duties on this tour,
14:05and we wouldn't want any story breaking in the newspapers that might undermine his efforts.
14:13Or impugn the royal marriage.
14:17That's what you came here for, isn't it?
14:20This wasn't a coincidence at all.
14:22You came here because you knew it's where I'd be,
14:25and you wanted to put in a word on their behalf.
14:28It's pathetic.
14:30Still there round-the-clock, Lackey, even in retirement.
14:55Sorry to disturb you, ma'am.
14:56I've just had a call from Dining Street.
14:59The Prime Minister has requested an audience as a matter of urgency.
15:03He's on the train.
15:05He will be with us by 3 p.m.
15:08He's on the train.
15:23He's on the train.
15:24He's on the train.
15:25He's on the train.
15:27He's on the train.
15:28He's on the train.
15:30He's on the train.
15:31He's on the train.
15:32He's on the train.
15:33He's on the train.
15:34He's on the train.
15:35He's on the train.
15:36He's on the train.
15:36He's on the train.
15:36He's on the train.
15:36Enough! Enough! Enough! Enough! Enough!
16:19Enough! Enough! Enough!
16:36Enough! Enough! Enough!
16:44Enough! Enough!
16:48Of course, I asked for second opinions. I asked for third opinions.
16:53I implored them to let me carry on.
16:56But I'm afraid the doctors were of one voice, one mind.
17:01The time has come to put my health above the country.
17:06And to offer you my resignation.
17:19I'm sorry if I disappointed you.
17:26Did I suggest that you had?
17:28No, but I... I think you thought it.
17:39I...
17:44I did think that the decision to go to war was rushed.
17:50And I was sorry to see you lie to the house when you told them that you had no prior
17:55knowledge of the Israeli's intentions.
17:59We both know that to be untrue.
18:02But, wrong though it was, I did have sympathy for you.
18:10To have waited in the wings for so long.
18:13And to have supported a great man like Winston so...
18:18So patiently, so loyally.
18:22And then to finally have your opportunity to measure yourself against him.
18:29To do nothing is often the best course of action.
18:35But I know from personal experience how frustrating it can be.
18:42History was not made by those who did nothing.
18:49So I suppose it's only natural that ambitious men, driven men, want to go down in history.
18:58Or make history by going down.
19:29I do think the time has now come where we have no option but to tell Her Majesty about the
19:34Parker Divorce.
19:35And to warn her that regardless of how blameless the Duke of Edinburgh is or isn't in the matter,
19:42that newspapers will be newspapers and questions will now inevitably be asked about the state of the royal marriage.
19:48Hmm.
19:52I sense trepidation, Michael.
19:55If you'd rather, I can always handle it myself.
19:57No, I'll take care of this.
20:00Try to find a moment on the train to mention Her Majesty.
20:04Good luck, Michael.
20:13Sorry to disturb you, man.
20:15The telegram arrived from Mount Salisbury.
20:18The recommendation is that the surrounding successor should be Mr. McMenham.
20:23Of course.
20:31Yes, what is it, Michael?
20:32Ah, it's just to say, and we could, of course, discuss this on our return to the palace if Her
20:39Majesty prefers.
20:41No, do sit down, Michael.
20:47Well, it seems that Mrs. Parker, who is the wife of Lieutenant Commander Parker...
20:56Yes, I know who Eileen is.
20:59Um, she has decided to sue her husband for divorce.
21:07Goodness.
21:09Is that what you wanted to talk to me about?
21:11Yes.
21:12Um, and that while, of course, there is no suggestion whatsoever of any impropriety on the part of His Royal
21:21Highness the Duke of Edinburgh, we should perhaps be bracing ourselves for one or two irritating headlines.
21:27Why?
21:28Why?
21:29Whatever for?
21:30What is it that she's alleging?
21:33Cruelty, unlawful desertion, and, uh, adultery.
21:42We're just aware of the fact that Lieutenant Commander Parker is His Royal Highness's private secretary, a close friend, and
21:50there is this letter, I believe.
21:53A letter?
21:56Written by Lieutenant Commander Parker to his fellow members of the lunch club, bragging about exploits on the royal tour.
22:06What sort of exploits?
22:16I don't need an answer to that question.
22:18Thank you, Michael.
22:20Thank you, Ma'am.
23:00Mr. McMillan, Your Majesty.
23:10Your Majesty.
23:13I gather soundings have been taken, and that you have been chosen by your colleagues as the man most able
23:20to unite the government and lead this country following St. Anthony's resignation.
23:24Yes, ma'am.
23:27Congratulations.
23:31Although I fear you have inherited something of a poisoned chalice.
23:35It's true.
23:36The storm is now raging against us.
23:40With Eden's War, we've discarded the moral advantage or any goodwill we once held.
23:48Not to mention the dire economic situation.
23:52It would have been quite ruinous.
23:54But it wasn't just Eden's War, was it?
23:59It was a war prosecuted by a government of which you, as Chancellor, were a major constituent part.
24:08I also seem to remember that you were one of the loudest voices in support of the war in the
24:14beginning.
24:17One always has to accept one's own part, I believe.
24:24In any mess.
24:32Prime Minister.
24:34Your Majesty.
24:53Michael.
24:55Could you ask them to send around one of the cars?
24:58Yes, it's very close.
24:59The right question, shall we please?
25:00Neal escrever with me.
25:03No, no, no, no.
25:16Some people are seeing their interface during a trade.
25:27Right.
25:27All right.
25:28See you in the morning.
25:29Come on, go ahead.
25:53Yeah, Mehmet.
26:03What were you thinking?
26:06You know the rules.
26:08No letters to anyone.
26:12I told Baron to be discreet.
26:17But somehow the letter got back to Eileen.
26:20And now she has ridden to the palace.
26:22Yes.
26:26You've noticed her intention to sue me, Footforce.
26:33Which means you've got that you-know-who.
26:38Yes.
26:40Well, I think we have to assume so.
26:53Please be like that.
26:55Oh, sorry.
27:03Good morning.
27:04Oh, sorry.
27:05Good morning.
27:05Go ahead.
27:08Oh, sorry.
27:10Oh, no.
27:11Oh, no.
27:11Oh, no.
27:16Oh, no.
27:18Oh, no.
27:18Oh, no.
27:20Oh, no.
27:34in Malta. Go grocery shopping together. Feels like a long time ago. The reason I came here today is
27:54because I heard with great sadness that there are difficulties in your marriage
28:02and I would like to know if there's anything that I or anyone else can do to help. My marriage
28:07to Mike is
28:08beyond help. I see. Our separation has been inevitable for some time. I had intended to
28:17divorce Mike years ago but because of the attention surrounding group Captain Townsend and
28:21Princess Margaret, I decided to hold back. Thank you. But that was then. This is now.
28:32What's changed? Nothing has changed. That's the problem. It just got worse. And while some women
28:42may elect to put up with this sort of humiliation, I simply have too much respect for myself and
28:47to my children to bear it. I'm afraid I don't know what you're talking about.
29:09Then read this.
29:36Don't bury it, ma'am.
29:40Or sweep it away.
29:42It's there. In black and white.
29:54Might I ask you a favor?
29:58Would you hold off your announcement just while we work out what to do in light of this?
30:03I've had enough of favors to you people.
30:07My entire adult life has been favors to you.
30:11You people aren't even remotely aware of the cost of the damage to families and marriages in your service.
30:18I've instructed a solicitor. That's my decision.
30:28Gentlemen.
30:30I would like to make a brief statement on behalf of my client, Mrs. Eileen Parker.
30:39Having endured an unhappy marriage for some years now, I have come to the sad conclusion that a formal separation
30:47is the best option for us both.
30:49My husband has shown no inclination or enthusiasm for the responsibilities of parenthood or marriage, and divorce remains the only
31:01solution.
31:11Read all about it.
31:13Read all about it.
31:14Read all about it.
31:18Read all about it.
31:24Read all about it.
31:37Let's go.
32:07Let's go.
32:39You and I both know that's wishful thinking.
32:43I've had my own telegram from London.
32:51I hope you're not going to make this next step difficult for me.
33:08You'll have my resignation first thing.
33:10You'll need it now.
33:28I hereby offer my resignation.
33:34As principal private secretary to the duke of Edinburgh, active immediately.
33:40Accepted.
33:45You've worked for me for long enough.
33:46You know the rules.
33:48We are how it works.
33:51There is no room for mistakes.
33:54There is no room for scandal.
33:56There is no room for humanity.
34:01I think you should probably leave us in Gibraltar.
34:05Might I suggest a policy of no comment on all counts and especially no letters?
34:13Yes, of course.
34:25There is no room for us.
34:41Mother Parker!
34:43You are you, sir!
34:47Fire!
34:49I'm not scared about that, Mike.
34:53I'm not scared about this.
34:55I'm not scared about that.
35:09Following the resignation of Lieutenant Commander Parker, the British press have fallen into line and been overwhelmingly supportive.
35:17But?
35:18I'm afraid the foreign newspapers have not been so kind.
35:24Yesterday, a story broke in the Baltimore Sun.
35:28Where? Baltimore, Mummy.
35:30Claiming that the capital was awash with rumour that the Duke of Edinburgh was romantically involved with an unnamed woman
35:37whom he met on a regular basis in the West End apartment of a society photographer, Baron Nahum.
35:43Nahum is also president of the Thursday Club in Soho, of which the Duke of Edinburgh is a founder member.
35:51Anyway, that story has rather lit the touch paper.
35:54The British press has caught on, with the Manchester Guardian reporting,
36:00not since the first rumours of a romance between the former King Edward VIII and Mrs. Ernest Simpson have Americans
36:08gobbled up the London dispatches so avidly.
36:12Who on?
36:13The Sunday Pictorial, on its front page, reminds its readers that the royal family is loved and envied throughout the
36:21world because it is a family.
36:23Time magazine has a headline, too much Thursday-ing.
36:28It goes on to say, not since Wallace Simpson stalked the corridors of Buckingham Palace have the eyes of the
36:34world been turned so beadily towards those chintz drapes.
36:53I say we fly the Duke of Edinburgh back straight away.
36:57That's one thought, Your Majesty, and it's a good one.
37:01The devil's advocate might argue, and I'd be interested to hear Michael's thoughts on this,
37:07that the Duke's early return, obviously stage-managed by the palace,
37:12might appear too much of a concession to the newspapers and pour even more petrol on the flames.
37:20I would agree.
37:23And we don't want that.
37:26No.
37:33So what, then?
37:44What?
37:49Yes.
37:52The Admiral would like a word, sir.
37:55It's fine.
37:56Tell him he can come.
37:58As a matter of fact, he suggested you go to see him, sir.
38:26Thanks, sir.
38:27Thanks, sir.
38:27Thanks, sir.
38:39Admiral.
38:41Could you come in?
38:43Come on.
38:45Buckingham Palace has been in touch regarding your reunion photo call with her Majesty the Queen.
38:51With you, not me.
38:53I'm in command of this ship.
38:55I am her husband.
38:58It's been agreed that her Majesty will fly out to Lisbon a day ahead of schedule.
39:03As I see it, your instructions...
39:04Instructions?
39:06...are to meet her at the airfield.
39:07I've been quite specific for how the reunion is to be managed.
39:20Thank you, sir.
39:22Thank you, sir.
39:23Thank you, sir.
39:23Thank you, sir.
39:24Thank you, sir.
39:24Thank you, sir.
39:25Thank you, sir.
39:42Thank you, sir.
39:51Thank you, sir.
40:08Thank you, sir.
40:12Not that one.
40:12One that's fit for an adult.
40:14Those were the instructions.
40:16For God's sake, it has hearts on it.
40:20And the hat, too.
40:21Yes, sir.
40:22I hate hats.
40:23I believe its value on this occasion is not in its being worn, but in its being removed.
40:28Ah.
40:30In a gesture of chivalry and deference.
40:33Before I enter the aircraft.
40:35Before you reach the stairs of the aircraft.
40:59Michael, you want a hat, sir?
41:40We'll talk later.
41:43Shall we?
42:13How are you?
42:15How have you been for?
42:17I can't be a man, sir.
42:18And it's very exciting.
42:19For the world, it's going to level to quell rumors of a risk.
42:23Go on, sir.
42:41Come on, am I here?
42:44Black.
42:45We'll be back in here.
42:46Fire! Fire! Fire!
42:49Fire! Fire!
42:49Fire! Fire!
42:53Unprecedented scenes here as
42:55photographers from all over the world
42:57of the Queen and the Jew of Edinburgh
42:58tied to the world's eyes on
43:00North of Great and Contemporary.
43:02Now the eyes of the world
43:03turn towards the royal yacht on which
43:06they have sought shelter.
43:09No, Fleur.
43:10No, I see.
43:20That was the Palace Press Secretary.
43:25In his view, the steps that we've taken...
43:27The show he put on.
43:31The steps that we've taken
43:33haven't quite done the trick.
43:37The rumours still haven't gone away.
43:49I think we both agree it can't go on like this.
43:59No.
44:15So I...
44:17thought we might take this opportunity
44:19without children, without...
44:22distraction.
44:25To lay our cards on the table.
44:29And talk frankly, for once.
44:32About what needs to change
44:34to make this marriage work.
44:37All right.
44:38Who goes first?
44:40Stupid question.
44:41I've learned one thing by now, it's that I go second.
44:45If I am to go first,
44:47that's where I'd start.
44:52You're complaining.
44:53My complaining?
44:54It's incessant.
44:55Whining and whinging like a child.
44:57Are you surprised?
44:59The way those god-awful moustaches
45:00that run the palace continue to infantilize me.
45:03Perhaps if you weren't behaving like an infant.
45:04Giving me lists, sending me instructions.
45:06Do this, don't do that.
45:07Wear this, don't wear that.
45:08Say this, don't say that.
45:09Can you imagine anything more humiliating?
45:11Yes.
45:12As a matter of fact, I can.
45:16I've learned more about humiliation
45:18in the past few weeks
45:19than I hoped I would in a lifetime.
45:28I've never felt more alone
45:30than I have in the past five months.
45:33And why do you think that was?
45:36Because of your behavior.
45:38Because you sent me away.
45:40Yes, and why do you think that was?
45:41I don't know.
45:42You tell me.
45:43Because you're lost.
45:45You're lost in your role,
45:46and you're lost in yourself.
45:49Christ.
45:51Look.
45:54I realize
45:56that this marriage has turned out
45:58to be something quite different
45:59to what we both imagined.
46:00Understatement.
46:01And that we both find ourselves in a...
46:05Prison.
46:09In a situation
46:12that is unique.
46:15Our marriage is different
46:16to any other in the country
46:17because the exit route,
46:19which is open to everyone else...
46:21A divorce?
46:22Yes.
46:23A divorce.
46:26It's not an option for us.
46:31Ever.
46:44No.
46:55This...
46:56This restlessness of yours, it has to be a thing of the past.
47:02It's what I need.
47:04It's what I need.
47:05And it's what our family needs.
47:10The monarchy's too fragile.
47:11You keep telling me yourself.
47:13One more scandal,
47:15one more national embarrassment,
47:16and it would all be over.
47:25So what would make it easier on you?
47:28To be in,
47:30not out.
47:35What will it take?
47:36What will it take?
47:40You're asking my price.
47:44I'm asking...
47:47what it will take.
48:02All right.
48:05To make it work.
48:09To make it bearable.
48:11I'll need the respect and acknowledgement of the dreaded moustaches.
48:15Please stop calling them that.
48:17I'll stop calling them that when they don't all have one.
48:20An end to their snobbery and prejudice.
48:22No more being sniffed at for being a foreigner with a background.
48:25Nobody understands.
48:26Will you earn their respect with your behaviour?
48:28No. No.
48:30I will earn their respect with the only thing those creatures understand.
48:34A gesture, a statement, something irrefutable
48:36that shuts them up and commands their respect.
48:39Right now, I am currently outranked by my eight-year-old son.
48:42Yes, of course. He's the heir to the throne.
48:53I am his father, Elizabeth.
49:05I am his father, Elizabeth.
49:13Well, fucking I can tell you, Feyeroenn,
49:13and you have a relationship here.
49:13Well, that part was a preservation of your一點ín.
49:14And certainly not one at the sunrise.
49:14For your lapse, it'll be the open, fifty-seven blue folk,
49:18one of the people in-ì–¼ confines,
49:22one of the people and the people fighting thekinian.
49:32And we shall be the most bitter.
49:42With royal hands, the Prince Philip. Duke of Edelman.
50:13The Prince Philip. Duke of Edelman.
50:50The Prince Philip. Duke of Edelman.
51:16Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of
51:29Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke
51:31of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman.
51:31Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of
51:32Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke
51:36of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke of Edelman. Duke
51:57Oh, famous son of England, this is he, great by man, great by sea.
52:04Thine island loves thee well, thy greatest sailor since our world began.
52:10Quite marvelous, sir, thank you.
52:14Now to the roll of muffled drums, to thee the greatest soldier comes.
52:19For this is he who give him welcome.
52:22This is he, England's greatest son.
52:26He that gained a hundred fights, nor ever lost an English gun.
52:34Quite magnificent, sir.
52:40Michael, do you have a moment?
52:42Of course, ma'am.
52:43I'm not going to be so big, sir.
52:44No, it's not.
52:47Get ready for that.
52:54Let's go.
52:57Let's go.
52:58Let's go.
52:58Let's go.
52:59Let's go.
52:59Let's go.
53:56Let's go.
54:04Let's go.
54:22Let's go.
54:22Let's go.
54:42Let's go.
54:43Let's go.
54:48Let's go.
54:56Let's go.
55:11Let's go.
55:20Let's go.
55:24Let's go.
55:27Let's go.
55:29Let's go.
55:30Let's go.
55:35Let's go.
55:37Let's go.
55:42Let's go.
55:45Let's go.
55:58Let's go.
56:01Let's go.
56:27Let's go.
56:37Let's go.
56:37Let's go.
56:59Let's go.
57:00Let's go.
57:28Transcription by CastingWords
57:58Transcription by CastingWords
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