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01:00The whole idea is to have a complementary, convalescent home.
01:02Of course, but I don't know if we can make that an absolute rule.
01:06If the world were logical, I would rather agree with you.
01:09Which comes as no surprise.
01:11You would not, I imagine.
01:13You imagine right.
01:14What these men will need is rest and relaxation.
01:18Will that be achieved by mixing ranks and putting everyone on edge?
01:28Granny.
01:28What?
01:29Different ranks can relax together.
01:31It has been known.
01:32Well, don't look at me.
01:33I'm very good at mixing.
01:35We always danced the first waltz at the Servants' Ball, didn't we, Carson?
01:39It was an honor, my lady.
01:40But it's a lot to ask when people aren't at their best.
01:45I'm searching for Lady Mary Carson.
01:47Will you tell her I'm in the library?
01:51Don't loiter, Edith.
01:52There's plenty to be done.
01:53Of course, but I'm not quite sure what's civil.
01:56I wanted to.
02:02I'm going down to the village this afternoon, if anyone wants anything.
02:05Some stamps would be kind.
02:07I'll get you the money.
02:08I'd like to thank you all for your work this morning.
02:11It's so strange to see the rooms converted into dormitories.
02:15But good.
02:16It was wrong for our life to chug along as if the war were only happening to other people.
02:19How will it be, though?
02:21Are we all working for Mrs Crowley now?
02:23We are not.
02:23I'm sure the chain of command will be sorted out soon.
02:27Well, there'll be blood on the stairs.
02:30Thank you, Miss O'Brien.
02:36But what do you think it meant?
02:38Really, Granny, Lavinia Swire knows Richard Carlyle.
02:41So what?
02:42One knows lots of people in London.
02:44I don't know many people who'd threaten me behind the laurels.
02:47Aunt Rosamund said herself she didn't know what to make of it.
02:51I still think it's a peculiar way for a gentleman to speak to a lady.
02:55At least you think him a gentleman.
02:57The point is, do you think he's a gentleman?
03:01I'm not sure it matters much to me.
03:05Well, I'm going up to London to stay with Rothman for a day or two.
03:08I think we'll have Lavinia for tea.
03:10You sound as if you're going to gobble her up.
03:13If only we could.
03:17But where are they going to eat?
03:19I understand from Mrs Crawley that they'll share the dining room with the officers who are almost well.
03:25So, am I running a canteen now?
03:28William says he's got time off between the end of his training and going overseas.
03:32He'll be with his father, surely.
03:34He's going home first, but he wants to come here for his last night.
03:38You wouldn't mind that, would you, Mr Carson?
03:40Certainly not.
03:41I'd be glad to wish him well on his way.
03:44Oh, do you, Mr Branson.
03:50Why do you think he's coming here?
03:52To see us all and say goodbye. What's wrong with that?
03:55I suppose it's something more.
03:57I suppose he's got plans.
03:59Well, you have to deal with that when it happens.
04:01And mind you, deal fair.
04:03Now, go and grate that suet before I grow old and die.
04:44Who'll be in charge?
04:45Kaz and Isabel thinks it'll be her.
04:48All I know is that she'll drive us mad before the end.
04:51I'm going to have to change.
04:53I just want to finish this.
04:56Aren't you going to the hospital?
04:58Not yet.
04:59I'm on a night shift.
05:00I'll walk down after dinner.
05:03You please don't start lecturing me.
05:05I won't.
05:07The truth is I envy you.
05:11Do you ever miss helping out on the Drake's farm?
05:13That's a funny question.
05:16Why?
05:17No reason.
05:18It's just you seem to have such a purpose there.
05:21It suited you.
05:23It did suit me.
05:25I enjoyed it.
05:27But now I feel like a spare part.
05:29Trust me.
05:31You have a talent that none of the rest of us have.
05:34Just find out what it is and use it.
05:37It's doing nothing that's the enemy.
05:45The truth is, milady, Mrs. Crawley has forgotten this is your house.
05:49And we need a friend in charge of the day-to-day management.
05:53Because if Mrs. Crawley gets one of her toadies in to run things,
05:56she'll have her nose in every pie before you can say Jack Robinson.
05:59But who?
06:02What about Thomas, milady?
06:05He's hospital trained and he's always had a soft spot for Downton.
06:08Thomas?
06:10The footman?
06:12Managing Downton Abbey?
06:13But he's not a footman now, is he?
06:15He's a corporal with real battle experience as a medic.
06:20Could Dr. Clarkson spare him?
06:22Well, I suppose he'll have to spare somebody.
06:33Are you all right?
06:35You seem a bit preoccupied.
06:38I had a...
06:39Oh, never mind.
06:41What?
06:46It was this afternoon in the village.
06:50I thought I saw Mr. Bates.
06:52Bates?
06:53Isn't he in London?
06:55I might have been wrong.
06:57I walked over to where he was standing and there was no sign of him, but...
07:00Do you know his address in London?
07:02As long as he's still there, why?
07:04I'll telephone Sir Richard and ask him to look into it.
07:08But what would he know?
07:09He works in newspapers.
07:11A world of spies, tip-offs and private investigators.
07:15I promise you, he can find out whatever he likes.
07:19All right, then.
07:20If you think he can help.
07:22Good.
07:24I'll ring him tonight.
07:26Not bad.
07:28Try to fit in a bit of practice.
07:30We've plenty of time to get it right before there's anyone to see me who matters.
07:38I only know Sir Richard because he is, or was, a friend of my father's and of my uncle, Jonathan
07:45Swire.
07:46The Liberal Minister?
07:48That's it.
07:50But I'm afraid they've fallen out.
07:52Oh.
07:57This room is so pretty.
07:59Has the house always been the Painswicks' London home?
08:01There's no always about the Painswicks, my dear.
08:03They were invented from scratch by my son-in-law's grandfather.
08:07We bought the house when we were married.
08:10You make Mr Painswicks sound rather a rough diamond, Lady Grantham.
08:13Marmaduke wasn't a rough diamond, was he, Mama?
08:16No, he was just cut and polished comparatively recently.
08:25Carson's told Papa you've been called up.
08:28There's no need to look so serious.
08:30You'd think me rather heartless if I didn't.
08:33I'm not going to fight.
08:35You'll have to.
08:36I will not.
08:38I'm going to be a conscientious objector.
08:40They'll put you in prison.
08:42I'd rather prison than the Dardanelles.
08:45When will you tell them?
08:46In my own good time.
08:50I don't understand.
08:53I'll go to the medical.
08:54I'll report for duty.
08:56Then when I'm paraded, I'll march out front and I'll shout it loud and clear.
09:00And if that doesn't make the newspapers, then I'm a monkey's uncle.
09:05But you'll have a record for the rest of your life.
09:08At least I'll have a life.
09:15I know the popular fantasy is that you can feed city strong and any single seed cake.
09:22But you and I know better.
09:24Have we got the file for any more?
09:25Go and check now.
09:31Cheer up.
09:33It's not as bad as that.
09:36What's the matter, Mr Lang?
09:39Tell me I won't bite.
09:43I sometimes feel I'm the only one who knows what's going on over there.
09:48And you all wander around, ironing clothes and cleaning boots and choosing what's for dinner,
09:53while over the channel, men are killed and maimed and blown to pieces.
10:00We know more than you think.
10:03The war hasn't left us alone.
10:04It hasn't left me alone, however it may look.
10:07Have you any idea how scared they are?
10:13How scared they all are?
10:18I lost my nephew, my sister's boy.
10:23He was shot for cowardice.
10:30That's what they said.
10:32But I knew him, and he'd never have done such a thing if he hadn't have been half out of
10:39his mind with fear.
10:41Don't blame him.
10:43Don't blame him.
10:44It was him, but it could have been me.
10:50It could have been any of us.
10:57I suppose I don't want to come back.
10:58To be in charge?
11:00Telling Mr Carson what to do.
11:03Why?
11:04What's in it for you?
11:06All right, it's to stop Mrs Crawley bossing her ladyship about.
11:10She behaves as if she owns the place.
11:12You've changed your tune.
11:14When I was last here, you'd have given money to see her ladyship eat dirt.
11:17Well, like you say, I've changed my tune.
11:20People do.
11:21Not without reason.
11:24I've got me reasons.
11:25You've also got her ladyship wrapped round your little finger.
11:29Maybe that's my business.
11:31But I'll not hurt her.
11:33And I'll not let anyone else hurt her neither.
11:36That's all I've got to say.
11:39You're a queer one, I know mistake.
11:43So will you come if I can fix it?
11:47Why not?
11:49I like the idea of giving honours to old Carson.
11:55I go away for five minutes and everything's settled.
11:59Nothing's settled.
12:01For a start, which rooms will we live in?
12:04The small library and the boudoir.
12:07If Cousin Isabel can find somewhere else for the intermediaries.
12:11There's always the boot room.
12:12I'm sure you'll have views of that.
12:14And where are we supposed to eat?
12:16You can share the dining room with those officers?
12:19No.
12:20We all have to make sacrifices.
12:22No!
12:23Then we'll have tables set up in the Great Hall for the mobile officers and for the nurses.
12:28And Lady Grantham, I know you'll be happy about one decision.
12:32Lady Grantham asked that the house management might be put into the hands of Corporal Barrow.
12:38Your former footman, Thomas.
12:41Thomas?
12:42In charge of Downton?
12:43No, that's what I thought at first.
12:45But he isn't a footman now.
12:46He's a soldier.
12:47He's worked in medicine.
12:49The point is, someone has to run the place who's had medical training.
12:52But I really feel...
12:53The men won't accept the authority of a corporal.
12:56I've thought of that.
12:56I told my commanding officer that Lady Grantham had asked for Corporal Barrow.
13:01And he's prepared to have him raised to the rank of acting sergeant.
13:04But can you spare him?
13:05We can.
13:07I've gone to some trouble to do so.
13:09Sergeant Barrow will manage the daily running of Downton.
13:12And I shall be in overall charge.
13:14But you have the hospital.
13:15Aren't we missing it here?
13:17Surely there should be someone here permanently who is under you, but over Thomas.
13:20That's correct.
13:20And I will make a decision before long.
13:23Until then, I do assure you, Corporal Barrow is very efficient.
13:28I say good.
13:30If someone's to manage things, let it be our creature.
13:34Why?
13:34Are you planning to divide his loyalties?
13:37I wouldn't say I was planning it.
13:42William has asked to stay here, my lord, just for a night.
13:45On his way to active duty in France.
13:47Good.
13:47I should like to see him.
13:48I don't suppose there's any way we can keep him from harm, him being an only child and all.
13:56We'd hate for anything to happen.
13:58Thank you, Lang.
13:59I can do the rest.
14:02Very sorry, my lord.
14:09To get back to the notion of Thomas as the manager of Downton.
14:13He won't be a manager in that sense.
14:15But her ladyship fixed it all with Clarkson, and she was so pleased, I didn't know what to say.
14:20I cannot have him working here because he is a thief.
14:24You know she's ignorant of Thomas' crimes.
14:27We agreed at the time that would be best.
14:29And anyway, is it honourable in us to hold Thomas' sins against him when he has been wounded in the
14:36service of the king?
14:37And who is to be in charge over Thomas?
14:41You mean under Dr Clarkson?
14:43Well, we asked today, but he hasn't decided.
14:46Shall we just make it up as we go along?
14:49Unless you've got a better idea.
14:56Are you still here, Mr Branson?
14:58Well, just stay and have something to eat.
15:00Mr Branson's been telling us the news from Russia.
15:02What news is that?
15:04Kerensky's been made prime minister, but he won't go far enough from me.
15:08Lenin denounces the bourgeoisie along with the Tsar.
15:11He wants a people's revolution.
15:13That's what I'm waiting for.
15:15Won't be long now.
15:16And what's happened to the Tsar?
15:18Imprisoned in the Alexander Palace with all his family.
15:22What a dreadful thing.
15:24They won't hurt them.
15:25Why would they?
15:26To make an example.
15:28Give them some credit.
15:30This is a new dawn.
15:32A new age of government.
15:34No one wants to start it with the murder of a bunch of young girls.
15:37You don't know that.
15:39Nobody knows who will get killed when these things start.
15:42Look at her nephew.
15:43Shot for cowardice.
15:45You would have guessed that when he was saying hello to the neighbours.
15:48Or kissing his mother goodnight.
15:51Can you look at the crumble?
15:52I think it should come out ways five minutes early, Vanessa.
16:02I'm sorry.
16:03I never thought.
16:05You should think, Mr Lang.
16:07You're not the only member of the walking wounded in this house.
16:36Why are you coming in this way?
16:37I'm the manager here now, Mr Carson.
16:41Or had you forgotten?
16:42No, I had not forgotten.
16:45And will you be moving into your old room, or should we prepare a guest bedroom?
16:50I'll sleep in my old room, thanks.
16:55So, are we ready for the big invasion?
16:59Because they'll be here at tea time.
17:00We'll have to be ready, won't we, Thomas?
17:03We will, Mr Carson.
17:05And it's Sergeant Barrow now.
17:08Acting Sergeant, I believe.
17:10I'll be the next guest.
17:12Now, I'll be there at the middouge.
17:14I'll be here at the middouge.
17:16After that, Mr Carson.
17:25I'll be there at the middouge.
17:25I'll be there at the middouge.
17:26I'll be there at the middouge.
17:27And the посмотреть.
17:28I'll be there at the middouge.
17:32I'll be there at the middouge.
17:33I'll be there at the middouge.
17:37That's if he's here at the middouge.
18:03Let's go.
18:10All right, go.
18:11We'll get back to you.
18:12Quick as you can, gentlemen.
18:16This is uploading here.
18:20Go straight back to the hospital.
18:21This way, please, gentlemen.
18:23This is suffering from mustard gas.
18:24It must be to the mustard gas.
18:31Don't worry.
18:32Please.
18:40Major Bryan, you're in the Armada bedroom.
18:43Do you mind the stairs?
18:44Depends what I find at the top.
19:00He's handsome.
19:02Handsome and off limits.
19:03It'll be nice to have the house full of men.
19:05Full of officers.
19:07Officers aren't men.
19:08Not where we're concerned.
19:09Of course.
19:10Speak for yourself.
19:11Speak for you, too, if you know what's good for you.
19:17I'm very sorry, but I...
19:20Matthew!
19:21What in the world are you doing here?
19:23Well, we'll start our tour of Yorkshire and Lancashire tomorrow,
19:26and General Strutt knew you lived up here,
19:27so he's given me a few hours off.
19:29What a lovely, lovely surprise.
19:33Mrs Crawley, how can we separate the hospital's linen from our own?
19:37You go.
19:38We'll talk later.
19:40As soon as I've done this, I'll take your orders for books.
19:50I hadn't cast you as Florence Nightingale.
19:53We can't leave all the moral high ground to Sybil.
19:56She might get lonely there.
20:00How are you?
20:02I know I mustn't ask you what you're doing.
20:04You can ask what I'm doing in Downton.
20:06We've finished in the Midlands,
20:08and tomorrow we start on the camps in the Northern Counties.
20:10Oh.
20:11Will we see something of you?
20:12I think my general to come here
20:14is exactly the sort of thing people like to read about.
20:16Sybil?
20:18Come.
20:18Edith can do that.
20:20Dear Mother,
20:21she does love a bit of authority.
20:23I suppose she's driving Cousin Cora mad.
20:26No names, no pack drill.
20:30Breathe in.
20:33And out.
20:37I'm surprised they didn't get you before now.
20:40Some people have all the luck, sir.
20:42You can get dressed.
20:46Shall I report for duty in Richmond?
20:48You'll be told what to do.
20:54But I must supervise the medical staff.
20:57Overseen by me.
20:59And Carson, I'm relying on you to make sure that that is so.
21:01What's going on?
21:03I was arranging the household duties.
21:06Where they overlap with the duties of the nursing staff.
21:09Shall we continue this upstairs?
21:11Well, I've made some charts and...
21:15Of course.
21:23Did you say you were the manager?
21:24Or the referee?
21:26You see what we're up against.
21:27Don't worry.
21:28We'll find a solution.
21:35You take over every room in the house.
21:36You bark at me like a sergeant major.
21:38And you give orders to my service.
21:40Cora, I'm sure cousin...
21:41I'm sorry.
21:41Are you in the middle of something?
21:43We're discussing the arrangements.
21:45Oh, good.
21:46Because we've had a letter from Evelyn Napier.
21:48He's in a hospital in Middlesbrough.
21:50And he's heard that we're a convalescent home now.
21:53And wonders if he can come here once he's released.
21:55Of course he can come here.
21:57Well, now, just a minute.
21:58There's no question of him coming here.
22:00What?
22:00The Middlesbrough General will have their own arrangements
22:02for where their patients convalesce.
22:04I'm afraid Mrs Crawley is right.
22:06Downton must function as part of the official system,
22:08or it cannot function at all.
22:10Now, I think perhaps I should make one thing clear.
22:13Downton is our house and our home,
22:15and we will welcome in it any friends or relations we choose.
22:19And if you do not care to accept that condition,
22:21then I suggest you give orders for the nurses
22:23and the patients and the beds and the rest of it
22:25to be packed up and shipped out at once.
22:30Thank you, Lord Grantham,
22:32for making your position so clear.
22:37Oh, just one more thing.
22:38The dog.
22:39What should we do to stop Isis
22:41getting into the patient's rooms?
22:43I can answer that.
22:46Absolutely nothing.
22:53Anna, there you are.
22:55Ethel, could you leave us for a moment?
23:03That was Sir Richard on the telephone.
23:05It might have been Bates you saw in the village.
23:08Really?
23:09He's working up here at a pub.
23:11The Red Line in Kirby Moorside.
23:14That's odd.
23:17Mr Bates in a pub?
23:18The question's what'll you do with the information
23:20now you've got it.
23:28The question's what'll you do with the information
23:33that's all about.
23:48Could you just take this into the hall for me?
23:49That's a cross.
23:51Are you waiting for Papa?
23:53You want me to go and find him?
23:55It turned me down.
23:58The army.
24:01Why?
24:03Apparently I have a heart murmur.
24:05Or, to be more precise, a mitral valve prolapse is causing a pansystolic murmur.
24:16I don't know what to say. Is it dangerous?
24:20Only if you're planning to humiliate the British army.
24:24I suppose you're glad.
24:26You're not going to be killed and you're not going to go to prison.
24:28Of course I'm glad.
24:30Don't count your chickens.
24:32If I don't get them one way, I'll get them another.
24:34Why do you have to be so angry all the time?
24:37I know we weren't exactly at our best, Nyland.
24:39Not at your best.
24:42Not at your best.
24:45I lost a cousin in the Easter Rising last year.
24:49You never said.
24:51That's why I'm saying it now.
24:52He was walking down North King Street one day and an English soldier saw him and shot him dead.
24:57When they asked why he was killed, the officer said,
25:00because he was probably a rebel.
25:04So don't say you were not at your best.
25:06Sorry to keep you waiting, but we're going to have to step on it.
25:33I'm not sure about Marriott.
25:35I'm not so worried.
25:36I know we've got lots of G.A. hen tea.
25:37Thank you very much.
25:38That's very nice.
25:39And I haven't forgotten about your tobacco, Captain Ames.
25:41Just as soon as I can get into the village.
25:54Is that better?
25:56Much.
25:57But I may need some more tucking very soon.
26:00Well, no one looks better than I do.
26:03Ethel.
26:04Go back inside, please.
26:06There are still more bedrooms to be done.
26:22Rosamund's going to find out.
26:24She knows some of those feeble-minded idiots on the liberal front bench.
26:28Poor Lavinia.
26:29I feel sorry for her.
26:31She's an obstacle to your happiness, dear, and must be removed.
26:35When it's done, you can feel as sorry as you wish.
26:39But even if Matthew does break it off with her, why should he propose to me again?
26:43With your permission, dear, I'll take my fences one at a time.
26:51Any plans for your afternoon off?
26:58Major Bright wants me to go to the pictures in York with him when he's allowed out.
27:02But you'll say that's stupid.
27:05Not stupid.
27:07Insane.
27:08Oh, he really likes me, though.
27:11He says he wants to get to know me better.
27:14Has he told you I was planning to achieve it?
27:17Spoil sport.
27:20What are you up to?
27:22Just practising with ease for Lady Mary.
27:25I'm sure I would.
27:43Little real quick.
27:54Little real quick.
28:03Little real quick.
28:11It's one and eight, sort of.
28:13There you go.
28:14Matt, I have a glass of cider.
28:29I don't know if I've dreaded this moment or longed for it.
28:35Well, either way, it's happened.
28:43I'm glad I'm in time for tomorrow's state visit.
28:46I gather Lavinia will be there.
28:48We must seize the opportunity to challenge her.
28:50I don't really see on what basis.
28:53She stole secrets from her uncle, Jonathan Swire,
28:56and gave them to Carlyle to publish, Swire told me.
28:58And the paper showed that half the Cabinet were trying to get rich
29:01by buying shares before a government contract was announced.
29:04Would you rather we were kept in ignorance?
29:06It wasn't Lavinia's business to make it public.
29:09Without her, the Marconi scandal would never have happened.
29:12The politicians broke the law.
29:14Lavinia did nothing wrong.
29:16She drags the Chancellor of the Exchequer's on her through the mud
29:19and you say it's nothing.
29:21It was only Lloyd George.
29:22But why did she betray her uncle to Sir Richard in the first place?
29:26Because.
29:27Because.
29:27Ooh.
29:27They were lovers.
29:30Exactly.
29:31And now it's down to you to save Matthew from the clutches of a scheming harlot.
29:36Really, Rossman, there's no need to be so gleeful.
29:40You sound like Robespierre lopping off the head of Marie Antoinette.
29:48It was me.
29:50I knew you used to go into the village on Wednesday.
29:54I so longed for a glimpse of you.
29:58But why are you up here at all?
30:01And why didn't you tell me?
30:03Because I want to get things settled first.
30:05You see, I've discovered that Vera has been unfaithful to me.
30:09I've got proof.
30:11I can't criticise her for that.
30:13No, but it means I can divorce her.
30:15I've had to leave the house to prove that it has broken the marriage.
30:20So I came up here to be nearer you.
30:22But what if she fights it?
30:24She can't.
30:26For her to divorce me, she needs something beyond adultery.
30:30Cruelty or such like.
30:32For a husband, adultery is enough.
30:34It's not very fair to women.
30:36I don't care about fairness.
30:37I care about you.
30:40The point is, I can get rid of her.
30:44If she goes quietly, I will give her money and plenty of it.
30:47If not, she leaves empty handed.
30:49And when will this be?
30:51I need to get her to accept it first.
30:55She's made threats about selling stuff to the papers.
30:59What stuff?
31:01Don't worry.
31:02They won't offer what I will.
31:06You've changed your hand.
31:09I was trying out Lady Mary's new curling iron.
31:15What do you think?
31:18I think I would love you however, whatever, whenever.
31:25We don't have to wait, you know.
31:28If you want me to throw up everything and come with you, I will.
31:32Gladly.
31:33I can't marry you yet, not legally.
31:36And I won't break the law.
31:39It's not against the law to take a mistress, Mr. Bates.
31:51I know you, Hannah Smith, and I love you, and that is not the right path for you.
31:57It won't be long now.
31:58It won't be long now.
32:14Apparently not.
32:18Is it true about Mr. Crawley bringing a famous general here?
32:21Captain Crawley.
32:23But yes, why?
32:26No reason.
32:29If they arrive at five, we'll walk him round the wards, then show him the recovering men at play.
32:35And after that, a fairly grand dinner. I'll tell them to bring Meskitt.
32:38That is my challenge, my lord, how to make the dinner sufficiently grand with no footman in the house.
32:44Plenty of people give dinners without footman.
32:46Not people who entertain Sir Herbert Strutt, hero of the song.
32:52I'm sure he'll have seen worse things at the front than a dinner with no footman.
32:56Carson only wants to show the general proper respect. We will not criticise him for that.
33:00Indeed we will not.
33:02But I think Lord Grantham's plan is a good one, with or without footman.
33:06Matthew Wright's Miss Swire is coming down from London for it.
33:11Really? He never said so to me. Does he need your permission?
33:17I think I should go round with him.
33:20You and Lady Grantham will both come with us.
33:23But won't he want to talk about treatments?
33:26The treatments, and the house.
33:47It's Captain Smiley, isn't it?
33:50We haven't met yet, but I'm Edith Crawley, and tomorrow I can show you where everything is.
33:56It's just that I'd like to write a letter to my parents.
33:59Of course. There's paper and envelopes in the library.
34:03No, you see, I've not written before because I didn't want to worry my mother with the different handwriting.
34:16I'm left-handed. How's that for luck?
34:21I'm surprised your school didn't force you to use the right.
34:24My mother wouldn't let them. But no, I wish they had.
34:30I've asked the others, and they say you're the one to help me.
34:33Of course I will. I'd be happy to.
34:36That's what they said.
34:40If you can just find a way to tell her.
34:45We'll both find a way. Together. I promise.
34:55Mr. Carson, might I have a word?
34:57I'm busy with this dinner for tomorrow night.
35:00Well, that's just it.
35:02I don't expect you'd be using Mr. Lang none after last time.
35:05I will not.
35:07So I wondered if I might be any help.
35:09I've waited a table before.
35:11Do you mean it? I know I've no right to ask it of a chauffeur.
35:16We have to keep up the honour of Downton, don't we?
35:19I'm very grateful, Mr. Branson. I'll not hide it. Very grateful indeed.
35:23You know where to find delivery.
35:25I do.
35:26And I gather you won't be leaving us after all.
35:31Who knows what the future will bring.
35:45What's going on? It's Mr. Lang.
35:49What in heaven's name's happening?
35:53No! No, I can't do it!
35:55Mr. Lang!
35:56I can't do it!
35:57Mr. Lang, wake up!
35:58You're having a bad dream, Mr. Lang!
36:00You're having a dream!
36:01So does Mr. Cudd!
36:02It's as soon as my can!
36:04I can't go back!
36:05No matter what the...
36:06No-one's asking you to go back, Mr. Lang.
36:08No, just to put a sock in it.
36:09Don't worry, Mr. Lang.
36:10You've had a bad dream.
36:11That's all!
36:15Is it a dream?
36:20Thank God!
36:25Thank God!
36:28Thank God!
36:29You're all right.
36:30Let's get you back into bed.
36:33You're all right.
36:37I'm sorry!
36:38It's all right, Mr. Lang.
36:40I'm sorry.
36:41You're all right.
36:44Is it any wonder when he's been to hell and back?
36:57Ah!
37:00Ah!
37:19My cousin, Lord Grantham.
37:21This is very kind of you, Lord Grantham.
37:22Welcome.
37:23Lady Grantham.
37:25And this is Major Clarkson, who runs our hospital here.
37:29And I am Captain Crawley's mother.
37:30And will accompany you on your tour
37:33and explain the different levels of care we practise here.
37:36Lady Grantham and Mrs. Crawley will both accompany us as we go around, sir.
37:40Well, make some nice change from the craggy-faced warriors I'm usually...
37:44Who's less surrounded by?
37:44I'd like to think that were true.
37:46Please, come this way.
37:48There's a large recreational room.
37:49I don't believe I've ever been to Dandruff.
37:51Poor mother.
37:52She longs to hold all the reins.
37:54Crawley!
37:56I should go, if only to keep our respective mothers apart.
38:01I'm afraid Mrs. Crawley's none too pleased to play second fiddle, sir.
38:05Well, I hope she doesn't spoil things.
38:07Well, that's just what I've been meaning to talk to you about, sir.
38:10You see, I'm trying to untouch...
38:20What's the matter with your aunt?
38:21We should follow them in.
38:23Or Mama will say we're unsupportive.
38:25Tell me what it is, please.
38:28All right.
38:30I know he's going to propose.
38:32Well, then, you're going to accept.
38:34Did you get that picture taken?
38:36I did, yeah, but...
38:37That's it!
38:38Because if you think I'm going to stand by and watch that boy's dream stamped in the dust,
38:42you've got another thing coming.
38:43You can take back your promise when the war's over and not before.
38:48But it's a lie.
38:50Don't make him give up when he's off to face the guns.
38:53You'd never forgive yourself if that happened.
38:58Do you remember when Aunt Rosamond found you and Richard Carlyle together in the garden?
39:02I knew I'd hear more about that.
39:05She thought he was threatening you.
39:07And now she's decided that you were behind the Marconi share scandal in 1912.
39:14The Chancellor and other ministers were involved, including your uncle.
39:17I remember the Marconi scandal.
39:19No, let's forget it.
39:21It's absurd.
39:22But Lady Rosamond is right.
39:25I did steal the evidence for Sir Richard to print.
39:29I did start the scandal.
39:32The trouble is, Aunt Rosamond can't understand why you would do such a thing unless you and Sir Richard were...
39:40...were lovers.
39:41Mary, you must come.
39:47The ground floor rooms are for those men who need the most care, sir.
39:51Yes, of course.
39:53General Stratt, sir.
39:56Oh, right, yes.
39:59Tell me about this, officer.
40:01Who is that man?
40:03I hope he's not complaining.
40:05Oh, no.
40:05That's Captain Smiley.
40:07He hasn't an unkind bone in his body.
40:10How do you know?
40:12Matthew, listen to this.
40:14Everything all right, sir?
40:16What a nurse said about...
40:17Don't worry.
40:18Major Holmes can be a little waspish, but he wouldn't want to get us into trouble.
40:23How do you know so much about a pack of strangers?
40:27They're not strangers to me.
40:31This is all very impressive, Lady Grantham.
40:33The nurses and your own staff are to be congratulated.
40:37I believe they are.
40:41I wouldn't say I was scared.
40:43I'm nervous.
40:45Of course I am.
40:46But not scared.
40:49I think I'm ready.
40:51Oh, don't mind me.
40:53Only I'm thinking of what your dear mother would say.
40:57Well, I wish she was here to see me off.
41:00Oh, she'd be so proud.
41:03Why, when we waved off our Archie, I remember.
41:08What do you remember, Mrs Patmore?
41:12I'll tell you.
41:14You remember a fine young man,
41:16who enlisted before he had to,
41:18and who gave his life for his country.
41:21Because he'd be alive and well today if he hadn't chosen to go to war.
41:25She's right.
41:28Up and she is.
41:30Come on, Daisy. Back to the grindstone.
41:33What is it?
41:34I just want a word with Daisy.
41:37I'm needed in the kitchen.
41:39There's plenty of time later on.
41:47Let's see what my aim's like.
41:49And again.
41:51You must be enjoying your respite from the front.
41:53Actually, I'm struggling a bit.
41:55I've just lost my soldier servant,
41:57and I haven't managed to replace him yet.
42:00So, when will you tell Matthew?
42:02Dinner is served, my lady.
42:05Don't waste the opportunity.
42:11Why must she be so savage?
42:13It's my broken heart, and it was her advice that wrecked it in the first place.
42:17Classic Rosamund.
42:18She's never more righteous than when she's in the wrong.
42:21Come on.
42:25Everything all right, Mr Branson?
42:26I think so, Mrs Hughes.
42:33You're back.
42:46I'm sorry.
43:02Let's go.
43:30Where's Mr Branson?
43:31He's just taken up the soup. Why?
43:32Read that.
43:34They'll have arrested me by now, but I'm not sorry.
43:38The bastard had it coming to me.
43:43Oh!
43:49What in God's name?
43:51Read this.
43:55Where is he now?
43:57Oh, my God.
44:11I'm sorry to hear about your servant.
44:14Yes.
44:15Ammonia.
44:16Not a bullet.
44:17No.
44:18Yes.
44:21I don't envy you.
44:23He's uncertain.
44:24He can change the wall.
44:38Downstairs, now!
44:46All right, all right. There's no need to be so rough.
44:49There's every need to stop a murder.
44:52Murder? What do you mean, murder?
44:53You were going to assassinate the general.
44:55Kill the general?
44:57I was not.
44:59I was going to throw that lot all over him.
45:01What is it?
45:02Oil and ink and a bit of a cow pack.
45:05All mixed with sour milk.
45:06He'd have needed a bath right enough, but not a coffin.
45:10I thought you'd taken the soup up.
45:12Well, you left it in the pantry.
45:13We'll use this.
45:15It's not been heated, but the hell with that.
45:17And we'll decide what happens to you later.
45:20Never mind later.
45:20What about now?
45:22How do we keep this dinner going?
45:23Well, I'll serve, Mr Carson.
45:25I don't mind.
45:26Who knows when I'll have the chance again?
45:32What was going on with the soup?
45:34It came, it went, and there's nothing to worry about, my lord.
45:37Branson was taken ill, so William volunteered to be footman one last time.
45:41Don't mind, do you?
45:43Oh, no, I bet.
45:44He's very kind of him.
45:45Our footman, William, is leaving us tomorrow to join his regiment.
45:49That's why he's not in livery.
45:51You're a credit to this house and this country, young man.
45:54There is no livery so becoming as a uniform.
45:58Sir.
46:00Lady Rosamund, Mary, all of you have been so kind to Lavinia.
46:06Well, naturally.
46:07We're all curious to know more of Miss Swire, if she's to reign over Downton as Queen.
46:14Hear me, I hope you haven't unearthed anything too fearful.
46:18You must ask Mary.
46:19Thank you very, very much.
46:21One thing I'm still not quite clear about.
46:24Who precisely is in charge of Downton when you're not here?
46:28I've given it some thought, sir, and it seems to be only fair that Mrs Crawley and Lady Grantham should
46:35share that responsibility.
46:37Capital, well said.
46:39The fact is, I have been more than gratified by my visit here today.
46:44And I thank Captain Crawley for arranging it.
46:47Yes, indeed.
46:48You are all to be praised for your response to our national crisis.
46:53But I've been talking and I've been listening.
46:56And I feel there is one among you whose generosity is in danger of going unremarked.
47:02It seems the daily cares and needs of the patients are being dealt with quietly and efficiently by Lady Edith.
47:15Or that's what the officers tell me.
47:18So let us raise our glasses and drink her health.
47:23Edith.
47:24Darling.
47:24Lady Edith.
47:26Edith.
47:26Edith, dear.
47:31We were never lovers.
47:32Not ever.
47:34You don't have to explain anything.
47:36Not to me.
47:37But I want to.
47:38You see, my father owed Sir Richard Carlisle a lot of money.
47:45Enough to bankrupt him.
47:48And Sir Richard offered to waive the debt if you gave him the evidence of the minister's guilt.
47:54Papa was terrified.
47:56And I knew I could get into my uncle's office and find the proof.
48:03What is it?
48:06He threatened to tell you all about it and now I've told you anyway.
48:12My uncle was guilty.
48:14They all were.
48:16Sir Richard didn't make it up.
48:18I believe you.
48:20But that's not why I did it.
48:22It was entirely to save Papa from ruin.
48:28I'll just go in and check if everything's ready.
48:33Have you got that picture for me?
48:35I might have.
48:45Because you know what I'm going to ask you, so will you?
48:51William, you're not sure.
48:53You can't be sure.
48:54I am, sure.
48:56So is she.
48:58Honey, Daisy, isn't this just what you told me you hoped would happen?
49:01It's like a fairy story.
49:07Is she right?
49:08Daisy, how are we engaged?
49:11Because if we are, I know I can tackle whatever may come.
49:20Go on, then.
49:28William?
49:30Do you want to go up top?
49:32The general's leaving and Mr Carson likes a full compliment.
49:35No, Daisy, not you.
49:37The war has not changed everything.
49:45The general's just about to leave.
49:47I'm afraid he doesn't have time to come in here.
49:49I hope it's all been a success.
49:53Cousin Violet said you had something to say to me about Lavinia.
49:58What is it?
49:59I haven't the slightest idea.
50:02Oh, what a relief.
50:03She was hinting you'd uncovered some horrid stain.
50:08The only evidence I've uncovered is that she's a charming person.
50:12What a testimonial.
50:15The truth is, we're very much alike, so naturally I think she's perfect.
50:20We all do.
50:21Don't we, Aunt Rosamund?
50:24Quite perfect.
50:36Is there any chance you might take our footman, William, for your servant?
50:41I can pull some strings, get him transferred to your lot.
50:44If you'd like me to, of course.
50:45I can't promise to keep him safe.
50:47I know, but he'd have someone looking out for him.
50:52Oh, my God.
50:55Lang, are you all right, old chap?
50:58Come, come, man.
50:59Things can't be as bad as all.
51:00I can't skip, Mr. Lang.
51:02What's happened?
51:04Sir, the generals and all these officers.
51:09I don't have to go back with them, do I?
51:10Because I can't see.
51:12No.
51:13The generals are looking for him alone.
51:15Excuse me, no, dear.
51:16It's been a great pleasure.
51:17If I don't see you again before I have to go back, be safe.
51:21You, too.
51:29Beside.
51:36Yeah.
51:51We've earned it.
51:53Ah.
51:56So what will you do with him?
51:58Branson or Lang?
52:00Not Mr. Lang.
52:02He isn't well, but he's not a bad man.
52:05Not at all.
52:06But he doesn't belong at Downton.
52:10I meant Mr. Branson.
52:13It's a delicate business, Mrs. Hughes.
52:15Would we really be right to tell the police and cause a furore
52:19and bring riot down on our heads?
52:22And all because he wanted to pour a pot of slop over a man's head?
52:28From your freezing, I gather the answer you want from me is no.
52:32Well, would it help, Mrs. Hughes?
52:35That's all I'm asking.
52:36Would it help?
52:38Where's Mr. Branson?
52:39Mr. Carson sent him back to his cottage to stew in his own juice.
52:43Will we see you in the morning, William?
52:45So wish you luck.
52:46Oh, yes.
52:48But I've got something I'd like to say now.
52:50Well, if you don't mind.
52:52Don't.
52:52Not yet.
52:54They must know sooner or later.
52:57Daisy and I are going to be married.
53:02You never are.
53:03When?
53:04After the war.
53:05I'm not sure I can wait that long.
53:20I see.
53:22What I had planned to say is already superfluous, Mr. Lange.
53:26You got there before me.
53:29I've let you down, Mr. Carson.
53:31For that, I'm sorry.
53:33We let you down.
53:35You weren't suited for work, and I should have spotted that.
53:39You'll have two months' wages, and please tell us how you get on.
53:43And when you're ready for work again, you may rely on a good report from me.
53:49That's kind.
54:02It was nice of William to serve tonight.
54:04He didn't have to.
54:06I'm going to arrange for him to be Matthew's servant.
54:09With any luck, it'll keep him out of trouble.
54:12Matthew and Mary look so natural together.
54:15Did you notice?
54:17He's talking and laughing.
54:20But I suppose Lavinia's a nice girl.
54:24We've dreamed a dream, my dear, but now it's over.
54:28The world was in a dream before the war, but now it's woken up and said goodbye to it.
54:34And so must we.