- 7/23/2025
Category
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TVTranscript
00:00I
00:18attended Mr. Delaney's funeral and a ghost appeared.
00:22A son we all thought dead in Africa.
00:24James Josiah Delaney.
00:26Dear Lord Almighty, is that your brother?
00:28Your father was poisoned.
00:30I would say heavy doses over a short period.
00:33One thing Africa did not cure is that I still love you.
00:37Now he has returned and Delaney's will leaves him everything, including Nootka.
00:42Britain and the United States are currently at war.
00:46Sell this land for a reasonable price.
00:48Nootka Sound is not for sale.
00:50I can give you whatever you like.
00:52Boys? Girls?
00:53You have two hours to get out.
00:55I know things about the dead.
00:57I'd hoped to settle this matter in a modern way, but that's not going to be possible.
01:02It's all yours.
01:03This Nootka Sound is a curse.
01:05It will bring the King of the Empire down upon your head.
01:08The Empire down upon your head.
02:43So, you've no problem with the principle of obeying me, just the execution.
02:48Execution?
02:49Dr. Laney, I told you to take care of it.
02:52It is taking a little longer than I anticipated.
02:55If you open up that ball of paper, you'll see notice of your dismissal from the East India, dated two days hence.
03:08Only Delaney's death will render it obsolete.
03:11I'll wait.
03:12I'll wait.
03:13I'll wait.
03:38This is gonna bring the house down around it.
04:08Damn thing.
04:13Beg your pardon.
04:16So what's this for?
04:19To keep things safe.
04:21What things?
04:25Embrace.
04:30Good hell.
04:32You marched with Tremaine, now you can march with me.
04:34March where?
04:35For what bloody purpose?
04:37For the purpose of staying alive right now.
04:40You may choose to leave my services if you wish, Mr. Brace.
04:43What is it about you bloody mad Delanys?
04:48Hang it in the meat locker.
04:51Just keep the powder out of the steam.
04:54Bloody my toes again.
04:57While we're on the subject of housekeeping, I mean to have a word with you without food.
05:03You're hungry?
05:04No.
05:05Toward the end, you said my father already ate.
05:08I lived on air and honey beer.
05:12From where?
05:13From a man.
05:14In Feather Lane.
05:16Look, it was cheaper than the tavern and your father only gave me coppers.
05:20What man?
05:21A man who's since died and his wife since left.
05:28Why do you ask?
05:31Because I am more generous than my father.
05:34From now on we drink beer only from bottles and wine from flasks.
05:38That's all.
05:39Go.
06:08Gentlemen, Jardine, Matheson and Company would like to commence this candle auction with a published list of twelve items for sale.
06:32Each item on the list will be auctioned for the length of time it takes for its allotted candle.
06:37Burn down one inch.
06:39When the inch is burnt, last bid will win.
06:42First item on the list.
06:44A merchantman brig.
06:46Commandeered from the Spanish fleet by Captain Reeves this last twelve months and one.
06:52Currently the brig is named Feliz Adventurero.
06:59Who will start the bidding?
07:01610.
07:02It's 20.
07:03It's 30.
07:04It's 40.
07:05It's 650.
07:06It's 60.
07:07Do I have 670?
07:08680.
07:09690.
07:10700.
07:11800 pounds.
07:12800 pounds.
07:21Eight hundred pounds.
07:33Lisa Venturetto sold.
07:35Eight hundred pounds to the Delaney Nookka Trading Company.
07:41I spoke to Earl Grady afterwards.
07:42He said Delaney told him he was going to use the ship for trade.
07:45With whom?
07:46He said his company was called Delaney Nookka Trading.
07:49He is planning to reopen up the trading post to assert his ownership.
07:53That fucking man will hang for treason.
08:06Sir, I already have a strategy in my head.
08:15Sir.
08:17Why?
08:19Why wouldn't he even look at our offer?
08:26Why would he defy logic and the king?
08:29I believe he is simply trying to raise the price.
08:31Why did he know so much about the border negotiations?
08:35Hm?
08:37How did he know they were taking place in Ghent?
08:40The location is a state secret.
08:42And where did he get the money?
08:43To buy a ship!
08:47Hm?
08:48Jesus Christ.
08:49Am I the only one in this company with a brain?
08:58They got to him first.
08:59Either in Africa or on the journey back to London, one of the agents approached him, briefed him, gave him money and secured his services.
09:15Who-who did, sir?
09:16Who did, sir?
09:17The fucking Americans!
09:21The fucking Americans!
09:22The fucking Americans!
09:23The fucking Americans!
09:27The fucking Americans!
09:28The fucking Americans!
09:34The fucking Americans!
09:35The fucking Americans!
09:41The fucking Americans!
09:58The fucking Americans!
10:06The fucking Americans!
10:07Cars!
10:18James Delaney.
10:21Well, look at you.
10:27Sit down.
10:38Give me back my horse.
10:41What's the biggest thing you saw?
10:43A moth horse?
10:44My book about the world, what's the biggest thing you saw in Africa?
10:48An elephant.
10:50How tall was it?
10:52Atticus, give me my horse back.
10:56Under a foot high, son of a love, eh?
10:59Atticus, you stole my horse and you left your name.
11:03So, what do you want?
11:11As you may recall, I'm gonna write a book one day about all I know about the world.
11:15I don't care.
11:16I've been to most places.
11:18I know the devil's backyard where you went.
11:21What's the biggest thing you saw?
11:22And it's my honest.
11:26Now I'm so the money your father owed me.
11:29See? There it is.
11:33Nothing changes.
11:35Are you more comfortable with business than with learning, James?
11:39£20 is what, mate?
11:41I know you're gold and you just bought a ship, so pay up.
11:44For what?
11:46Well, you know when someone wants a man killed, they come to Dolphin.
11:49But still.
11:51My directory of knowledge covers every fucking thing from cradle to grave.
11:56Birth, love, death, all goes into the river of my book.
11:59When someone wants a man killed, they come to whack us.
12:04Well, about a year ago, gentleman comes in.
12:07Sit right there where you are now.
12:09Says, how about old Orris Delaney?
12:11The mad bastard lighting fires by the river.
12:15So he falls in.
12:17Current takes him.
12:19How about that?
12:21So I says to the gentleman,
12:22I sailed with old Orris.
12:25All around the world.
12:28See?
12:30So I said, you go, I'll slit your gizzard and drop you in the current.
12:34You're a play at McKet and Delaney.
12:36And who was this gentleman?
12:44What was the smallest thing you saw?
12:46Human kindness.
12:50An ant.
12:56What was your company, man?
12:58I'd say it was in East India.
13:00More from up.
13:02Lead and all.
13:04I could sell by the car of his chip.
13:06So how much would you give me for not killing your father?
13:08Nothing. He's dead.
13:10About 15 pounds.
13:12And the return of your ropes?
13:13I will give you 15 pounds.
13:15Minus the heels on my boots.
13:17And I will need your eyes and ears from now on as well.
13:21Yeah, well, the enemy's yours steering up, James.
13:24You'll be needing them, my boy.
13:37How was he this morning?
13:39Toe and arse this morning, sir.
13:41Oh, God.
13:43I know about his toe.
13:44What happened to his arse?
13:46One can only imagine.
13:51Solomon Coop, your highness.
13:59How is your toe this morning?
14:02My toe is the first item of business.
14:04You evidently don't read the papers.
14:08Oh, you mean the blockade?
14:10Fuck them.
14:12The Red Crosses are the positions of the American ships.
14:16They are attempting to blockade our trading routes to the west.
14:23And the Blue Crosses are the Royal Navy ships preparing to engage.
14:29Why would you make the Americans red?
14:32Why would you make them red?
14:34It was us who should be red.
14:35We were red.
14:36The Admiralty drew up the map.
14:39Oh.
14:41They say that the Irish are supplying the blockade with tack and pork.
14:49But they will soon run short of powder.
14:52Get the Admiralty to draw the map again and make the British red and the Americans green.
15:00Or something.
15:02Since they are so new.
15:05But of course, your highness.
15:12I had a dream last night.
15:14I was lying in the North Sea.
15:17My body was England.
15:19I was an island.
15:20Coop, pay attention!
15:21All these shrimps, like devils, with little bows and arrows, were surrounding me.
15:30Firing into me flesh.
15:32You really must try and drink more from the green bottle and less from the pink.
15:37It wasn't just a dream.
15:39It was a premonition.
15:42The shrimps were the American ships.
15:45Hear me, Coop.
15:46I am lying in the ocean like a whale and no one in my privy council will raise a musket barrel.
15:53They sail this close to me nose.
15:56A gang of classless rebels and you show me red crosses.
16:01Your highness, they will run out of powder.
16:03I have run out of fucking patience.
16:06Tell the Admiralty, although the gossips say that all Prinny wants is flowers and waltzes,
16:12In truth, Prinny also demands the American ships be sunk.
16:18The survivors hanged.
16:20The bodies of the drowned nailed to the church walls of Ireland to stop their rebels making common cause.
16:27Do you want me to write this down?
16:29Yes!
16:33The fuck is this?
16:34Oh, it's from the East India.
16:36Fuck them as well.
16:38I intend to.
16:42I intend to.
16:43I intend to.
16:48I intend to.
16:54Ooh!
16:57I intend to.
16:59I intend to do it.
17:02I intend to.
17:04Oh, my God.
17:07Yeah.
17:08I mean, thank you.
17:10I'm pregnant.
17:11who are you winter miss winter no just winter just winter i live with a horse but i'm a virgin
17:22why are you following me to save your life
17:27mistress helga gave information to a man with a silver tooth
17:33i spy on her from the conversation he meant to do you harm and the mistress knew it
17:41she wants you dead so she can have her rooms back
17:44how old are you 13
17:50why would she keep you and not rent you too ugly she says one day i'll catch a man and he'll carry me away
17:59someone like you i spy to you too
18:06tell me about this man with a silver tooth
18:09wonder
18:12i can show you where he's moored if you want
18:15he sleeps on this ship alone
18:22he takes a particular girl aboard and does mean things
18:25but there's no one else
18:27are you tricking me
18:32no
18:36they say he was in africa
18:41what is it like
18:44is everybody naked
18:46yeah
18:48i want to go to america
18:51promise to take me to america one day
18:57new york or boston
19:02they're currently headed to gravesend
19:03you know navigation
19:05yes
19:06us larks are what to be sailors
19:08that's his sloop
19:14right
19:21why do you even believe i'm telling the truth
19:23because
19:23because
19:24what are you going to do
19:27well
19:28i shall ask him why he's been sent to kill me
19:31and by who
19:33stay
19:35day
19:51and
20:03I don't know.
20:33I don't know.
21:03I don't know.
21:33I don't know.
22:03I don't know.
22:33I don't know.
22:34I don't know.
22:35I don't know.
22:36I don't know.
22:37I don't know.
22:38I don't know.
22:39I don't know.
22:40I don't know.
22:41I don't know.
22:42I don't know.
22:43I don't know.
22:44I don't know.
22:45I don't know.
22:46I don't know.
22:48I don't know.
22:49I don't know.
22:50I don't know.
22:51I don't know.
22:52I don't know.
22:53I don't know.
22:54I don't know.
22:55I don't know.
22:56I don't know.
22:57I don't know.
22:58I don't know.
22:59I don't know.
23:00I don't know.
23:01I don't know.
23:02I don't know.
23:03I don't know.
23:04I don't know.
23:05I don't know.
23:06I don't know.
23:07I don't know.
23:08I don't know.
23:09I don't know.
23:10You have any idea where I can find my own death warrant?
23:12I may need to prove to a tribunal that the land was acquired by treaty and not by conquest.
23:18Tribunal?
23:19tribunal. Yeah, or the ground may try to seize it, claim it as a spoil of war. Sir, I have
23:28seen nae deerskin treaty, nor have I seen fairies or water sprites. But what I do have are Malay
23:38coins, enough to bury you, prayer beads, no enough to get you to heaven, and hashish, enough
23:48to ease my grieving when the East India Company slit your throat. Which, of course, they will.
23:55You have appointments today. Breakfast will be out in half an hour. And they can contrive
24:02to stay alive that long.
24:11You have appointments today. Breakfast will be out in half an hour. And they can contrive
24:18to stay alive that long.
24:24Yes, please.
24:31Yes, sir.
24:33Yes.
24:40Yes, sir.
24:46Yes.
24:52Oh, my God.
25:22Oh, my God.
25:52Oh, my God.
26:24That's turning out to be a long, drawn-out process.
26:28We benefit from a period of reflection.
26:32You have a girl here called Winter.
26:35You can have any girl you want.
26:37I do not have a girl of that name.
26:39No?
26:41A mulatto?
26:41I would kill for a mulatto.
26:46Danish pay double.
26:49I met her.
26:53People are saying you're mad.
26:55I am.
27:08I'd like to see what lies beneath.
27:10You have goodness in you.
27:21What goodness?
27:22You do.
27:22You do.
27:23You have goodness in you.
27:24You can see it in your eyes.
27:30And you have the same eyes as her.
27:34Winter.
27:36She's your daughter, isn't she?
27:38And that's why you don't rent her.
27:43Am I wrong?
27:48I would rather that you worked with me rather than against me.
27:54Work at what?
27:55Necessary evil.
27:58And all houses are full of secrets.
28:00And secrets to me are weapons.
28:03I would very much like to talk business.
28:07But I would like you inside of me, Mr. Delaney.
28:11It's my first commission.
28:13I need to know where Mr. Silvertooth is hiding.
28:18Your new friend.
28:21Do you know him?
28:25I will ask after the Malay.
28:29The Malay?
28:43Thank you for your help.
28:44Mr. Delaney.
28:56Mr. Venturero, it's all yours now, sir.
29:03Mr. Halley!
29:06I got the man's right here!
29:14I got the man's right here!
29:44He's still here!
29:52He's you!
29:52Let's go.
30:22Let's go.
30:52Let's go.
31:22Let's go.
31:23Let's go.
31:24Let's go.
31:25Let's go.
31:26Let's go.
31:27Let's go.
31:28Let's go.
31:29Let's go.
31:30Let's go.
31:31Let's go.
31:32Let's go.
31:33Let's go.
31:34Let's go.
31:35Let's go.
31:36Let's go.
31:37Let's go.
31:38Let's go.
31:40Let's go.
31:41Let's go.
31:42Let's go.
31:43Let's go.
31:44Let's go.
31:45Let's go.
31:46Let's go.
31:47Let's go.
31:48Let's go.
31:49Let's go.
31:50Let's go.
31:51Let's go.
31:52Let's go.
31:53Let's go.
31:54Let's go.
31:55Let's go.
31:56Let's go.
31:57Let's go.
31:58Let's go.
31:59Let's go.
32:00Let's go.
32:01Let's go.
32:31Let's go.
32:32Let's go.
32:33Let's go.
32:34Let's go.
32:35Let's go.
32:36Let's go.
32:37Let's go.
32:42Holy Christ.
32:44Where the hell have you been?
32:46I made a fire in your room for the mice.
32:50In parliament today, they'll be debating the beating of servants.
32:55The Whigs want to protect you.
32:58I believe that would lead to anarchy.
33:00You're not ever hungry?
33:05I ate in the whole house.
33:07You qualify as food, it needs to be solid.
33:10I made some coffee.
33:12It'll be stone cold.
33:13I'm real.
33:17Where the hell are you going now?
33:19Someone has been brought to London to try and kill me.
33:22I'm going to speak to them and ask them why.
33:25Clean it.
33:30I'm looking for Dr. Dumbart.
33:53Well, leave a smell inside.
34:00I'm off duty.
34:12I have a wound in my left shoulder.
34:19A bullet wound?
34:20A splinter.
34:21From the mast of a ship called the Yankee Prize.
34:28It was struck by a Yankee ball.
34:38So I should call you comrade?
34:41We shall see.
34:42How God makes his colors I know not, but I'm pursuing him through his chemicals.
34:58They said you were a doctor.
35:00You are a merchant.
35:01Sheep is a sheep, but also meat and wool.
35:08This is my pastime, fixing colors and cloth.
35:12The demand for flags is always high in times of war.
35:15So you were three things, yeah?
35:19You are a doctor.
35:22You are a merchant.
35:25And you are a spy.
35:26Unless you tell me who sent you, I will have to ask you to leave at the point of a gun.
35:32A man who called himself Colonnade.
35:35Not yet in hell.
35:39No Ponte del Cado in his orders.
35:43Similar.
35:44You should know the wound in the shoulder is no longer used by us as a signal.
35:47No?
35:49No, we change the codes when we think that perhaps the scum British have overtaken it.
35:54Yet you do not trust the name Colonnade.
35:56What do you want?
36:01I want a line of conference with the president of the 15 states of America.
36:06My name is James Delaney.
36:09That name means nothing.
36:11But it will to the president and his representatives who are traveling to the negotiations in Ghent.
36:15The border between the United States and Canada is being drawn up in a very quiet, closed room.
36:23No?
36:26You see, I have something of great value to your nation.
36:31Something the British are trying to kill me for.
36:33And what?
36:41You seek protection?
36:43I have demands.
36:45Demand?
36:46You tell Carlsbad my name.
36:49And who's Carlsbad?
36:51Carlsbad is the head of the American Society of Secret Correspondents in London.
36:56I know that name because Colonnade told me it.
37:02He was drunk.
37:03He was trying to push his jelly up a hole.
37:06Carlsbad will know my name and know my business.
37:10I'm afraid you've used the wrong words.
37:17Get out.
37:23Do you treat sickness of the mind, Doctor?
37:26Just keep walking.
37:30You're mad to have even come here.
37:35We are an angry nation.
37:38Yeah.
37:38I'm counting on that.
37:45Good day.
38:05Post for you, madam.
38:08ost for you, no longer.
38:13Oh, God.
38:19I love you.
38:24I love you.
38:25I intend to begin by reading your father's last will and testament, and then I shall
38:52try to reason with his creditors.
38:56Have you decided yet what you will do with Lutka?
38:59Yes, I will use it for trade.
39:01With whom?
39:02Are there any savages at Lutka?
39:05And I will trade with them.
39:07I hear you bought a ship.
39:10I did.
39:11Then I discovered that it was formally used for carrying slaves.
39:14I checked the vessel's log, and before it was taken by the Spanish, it was once owned by
39:18the Honourable East India Company.
39:20The shackles wall cast in London.
39:24The East India don't deal slaves.
39:26No.
39:27No, they don't.
39:29But they do run cloth and trade beads to Tangier through the Scarf family, and then slaves
39:34to Trinidad, from Bunce Island, to Spanish privateers.
39:41But one with such close connections, I am surprised that you don't know.
39:51And what connections are they?
39:54Mr. Thoyt, you have been my father's lawyer for the past 40 years.
40:01And in all that time, you reported every detail of his most intimate business to his enemies
40:07at the East India Company.
40:13But they're whore.
40:14The same as almost everyone else in this city, apart from those who are actually labelled
40:21whore.
40:22James.
40:23When you left London, the East India was a trading company.
40:34Now it is God Almighty.
40:38The Prince Regent fears it.
40:40Now governing the world, dare stand up to it.
40:43It owns the land, the ocean, the fucking sky above our heads.
40:48It has more men and weapons and ships than all the Christian nations combined.
40:56You think all who submit are evil?
40:59No.
41:01We are submitting to the way the world has become.
41:12All the good men in London who fight them are washed up at Tilbury.
41:17They could, er, hold a congress.
41:22Or perhaps they could simply board a ship and sail to Boston where the company dare not
41:28go.
41:29So, you're gonna add treason to the list, the king and company after your head.
41:44It's all rabble, pitchmakers, carpenters.
41:50Your father did many build for four years.
41:53They feel deeply aggrieved and talk of seizures.
41:56I don't think at all fanciful when I ask if you are armed.
42:00I am armed.
42:01I am armed.
42:02I am armed.
42:07I am armed.
42:24Gentlemen, you'll hear subsequent or written notice of Horace Delaney's death.
42:31I'll deal first with the beneficiaries and then with the divisions straight after.
42:36I said, right after!
42:39I'm not going to get on with it.
42:41You've waited long enough.
42:47Mr Delaney died a widower.
42:50He is survived by two children, both present at this division.
42:55Of his daughter, Zilpha Annabel Delaney, now Zilpha Annabel Geary.
43:01There is no mention in this last will and testament.
43:09To his son, James Keziah Delaney, is left the only existing assets of the Delaney estate,
43:16including the Notka Trading Post and Landing Ground,
43:20on the Pacific Northwest Coast of the Americas,
43:23in what was formerly Spanish America.
43:27Whatever you have, you will sell it to me!
43:30Ask the order for me to continue!
43:32We can leave now.
43:33No.
43:35We will haunt this nigger to justice.
43:37He's already wounded.
43:39Come.
43:40Be sure of this, Delaney.
43:41That legacy is your death sentence!
43:43No!
43:44No!
43:45No!
43:46No!
43:47No!
43:48No!
43:49No!
43:50No!
43:51No!
43:52No!
43:53No!
43:54No!
43:55No!
43:56No!
43:57No!
43:58No!
43:59No!
44:00No!
44:01No!
44:02No!
44:03No!
44:04No!
44:05I must have order in order to continue.
44:07I dug new foundations for that old bastard,
44:10and I never got a penny!
44:12The son does not inherit the debts of the father.
44:17James DeLaney has declared a new trading company in his own name.
44:27And my father's debts amounted to a sum total of 215 pounds and 17 shillings.
44:40Behold, 215 pounds and 17 shillings.
44:47Mr. Thoyt will pay each one of you exactly what you are due, but you will form an orderly line.
44:57What I'm noticing in that pile of coins, since I'm not listed on the final division notice.
45:24You see, the old skin friend didn't even pay for his horse.
45:31And what exactly is it that my father owed you?
45:36He owed me a lifetime of care, a lifetime of devotion.
45:43He owed me kisses and love.
45:47He owed me a home and a fire and perhaps children someday. In short, he owed me all that is due from a husband to a wife.
45:59My name is Lorna Delaney. Formerly Lorna Bowe. Two years ago in Dublin, Horace Delaney and I were married. And I have proof that I am his widow.
46:12I will have my clerks divide up the silver. Madam, come to my office.
46:19Calm, pretty, sir. Calm, pretty, sir, and fragrant.
46:26Calm, pretty, sir, and fragrant.
46:32This is an Irish document. May take a little time to validate.
46:42I can wait.
46:44But Mr. Delaney's son knew nothing of any marriage.
46:49How would he? He was in Africa. But he often spoke of you. He was very, very proud.
46:54Why Dublin?
46:55Well, he was on business.
46:57Yes, but your business is here, isn't it?
46:59You're an actress who appeared on stage at the Theatre Royal in Covent Garden.
47:03In a play called The Painted Savage, I found a program with an illustration in an empty drawer.
47:10Well, if my likeness was in there, the drawer wasn't empty.
47:12If the paperwork from Dublin is validated, Miss Bow will have a legal claim against his estate as widow.
47:19Mrs. Delaney is my name. Bow is the name that I use for this stage.
47:23Are you a good actress?
47:24Your father thought so.
47:25And was that before or after he lost his mind?
47:29Well, love is a kind of madness, isn't it, Mr. Thoyte?
47:32Well, have you never experienced it?
47:37My father was a very sick and old man.
47:42And do you have proof of consummation?
47:44I have letters.
47:45Many letters professing his feelings for me.
47:48Their line for memory is...
47:51Oh, Lorna.
47:53It is in a moment that I would leave this cursed house by the river and go to the Americas with you.
47:58And live there, naked and savage, and yet we would have each other and be together.
48:04That kind of thing.
48:07Do you possess any other documents of his?
48:09I have letters.
48:10Other than letters?
48:11Well, what kind of documents?
48:18Well, proof will come from pen and ink.
48:20I will dispatch an inquiry to the Trinity Church in Dublin and request a personal account from the priest.
48:26Until then, I suggest you to refrain from any further contact with each other.
48:32Well, I have no love for the theatre.
48:34And I spend very little time in German brothels.
48:37Was he in there?
48:38The man?
48:39Did you see him in the room?
48:40Yeah.
48:41The gentleman who came to the door for him is indeed in the room.
48:55He was the one who declared your legacy a death sentence.
49:10You, uh...
49:11You, uh...
49:12You want him to fall into the river, James?
49:15No, the river will take him of its own accord.
49:19Yeah.
49:20Yes.
49:21Yes.
49:22Yes.
49:23Yes.
49:25Yes.
49:34Yes.
49:35Yes.
49:36Yes, yes.
49:37Yes, yes.
49:46Oh, so it. Sit down.
49:53So, gentlemen, tell us of this widow.
50:04Can none of you read?
50:07Or are you all too busy trying to catch my eye
50:10and only pretending to read the agenda
50:13before stretching your necks again?
50:16You, what's your name?
50:19Godfrey, sir.
50:21Well, Godfrey, read aloud item nine
50:28on the agenda list of ten.
50:31During the final division of the estate of Horace Delaney,
50:34there appeared an actress.
50:37An actress who claimed to be the widow.
50:43A dispatch arrived from Dublin.
50:45The marriage is confirmed and is legal.
50:52What is the significance of this, Mr. Godfrey?
50:57It's not written down.
50:59You have to work it out.
51:02Gosh.
51:03Pettifer, hm?
51:05The girl is an opportunity.
51:09Right.
51:10Tell them the possibilities of this opportunity.
51:14She would have a claim against James Delaney for...
51:20shared ownership of Nootka.
51:22Bravo!
51:24A whore actress to the rescue of the mighty East.
51:30It is not a foregone conclusion.
51:33She would need to file suit.
51:35Oh, Mr. Thoit.
51:39This widow will have sole claim on Nootka
51:43in the event of James Delaney's death.
51:46An event which may be imminent.
51:53Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome to London, violin virtuoso, Nicola Mori.
52:11Tonight, composer Ludwig van Beethoven's Sixth Symphony.
52:20Welcome to In the Voselis.
52:21Thanks.
52:221
52:25ORGAN PLAYS
52:55ORGAN PLAYS
53:25ORGAN PLAYS
53:27Linz, please don't.
53:30What?
53:31I missed you. I couldn't bear to see you alone.
53:33You know, this is so old, I could even laugh at you.
53:37And yet you came outside to see me.
53:38Because otherwise you would have come to me
53:40and made very loud declarations.
53:42I would, yes. Is it my loudness that troubles you?
53:44In the forest, no.
53:48In the jungle, no.
53:52You used to straighten your skirts
53:55and march away like nothing had ever happened.
53:59Who marched away?
54:05And thank God you did.
54:07God?
54:10This is very simple, James.
54:13Take away a little ancient history.
54:15You live in the east, I live in the west.
54:16There are no practical difficulties.
54:18Apart from that great big river,
54:22that connects us.
54:25Did you really eat flesh?
54:27Why don't you tell your friends that you're sick
54:37and you can come and hear everything?
54:38I would laugh at you, but you're not well.
54:49Ah, ah, ah.
54:50And I can't stand to have you this close to me.
54:52Well, that is a shame, isn't it?
54:53Because I will always be this close to you.
54:59Won't I?
55:08Won't I?
55:38Won't I?
55:59Won't I?
56:03Won't I?
56:07Oh, boss.
56:37Oh, boss.
57:07Oh, boss.
Recommended
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