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#Outlander: Blood of My Blood

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Transcript
00:00Previously...
00:16Now that your father has passed, there are plenty of folk more than eager to see the demise of Clan Mackenzie.
00:21Tis a time for celebration, is it not?
00:24The Kinshal of Daan were the most, and with him gone, he's lost our power.
00:29Have you seen Ellen?
00:30Some are going off with Malcolm Grant.
00:32They've got to be lost our way!
00:34We must make amends without delay.
00:36Where in God's name have you been?
00:38What does that matter?
00:39On principle alone, I will not tell you.
00:42Give Ellen to Malcolm Grant.
00:43How is it you came into the service of the Grants?
00:45Met Malcolm in Inverness.
00:47Asked me to be the gladio.
00:48Ah, thereby hangs a tale.
00:50You have to be unseen.
00:57Sweetheart!
00:59Long the way, o'er the bridge I crossed.
01:14For my love, for my love that's lost.
01:22By the bridge, in the verdant moss.
01:29Where I watch, where I wait, for my love that's lost.
01:37The
01:43The
01:54The
01:58I'll see you next time.
02:28THE END
02:58THE END
03:28THE END
03:30I'VE READ A PROMISE TO THE MAN THAT I WOULDN'T LEAVE ANYONE BEHIND THIS TIME
03:32PLEASE DID MAKE A PROMISE
03:33FOR ORDER'S IN HIS MAGESTY'S ARMY
03:35YOUR ORDER IS TO STAND DOWN
03:37I'VE BEEN STOOD
03:39SIR
03:41I THINK I CAN DO THIS SIR
03:43IF YOU'D JUST LET ME TRY
03:44I SAID STAND DOWN
03:46DO YOU HEAR ME?
03:48DO YOU HEAR ME?
03:50STANDER
04:04STOP
04:06Weecho!
04:36Easy now. Easy. Make work. Make work.
04:48All right, William.
04:49All right. Let's have a look.
04:55No!
04:57It's just a blighting wound, will it?
04:59You will notice a wound.
05:00That's right, that's right.
05:06You're my mother.
05:11I wanted to say sorry for joining up.
05:17Can you hand me hand to her?
05:19Certainly not. You can hand it to her yourself.
05:22All right? Good man.
05:24Picture me.
05:27You just rest, will you?
05:28You disobeyed a direct order, Beecham.
05:37I'd be quite within my rights to shoot you.
05:45If I did, I fear the regiment would run me through.
05:48His mother deserved to have him home, son.
05:54One way or the other.
05:57Indeed she does.
05:59In the future, Lieutenant, if you have one,
06:03try to restrain yourself.
06:06You have my words, son.
06:09As you were.
06:10To whom it may concern,
06:24I write to you from hell on earth.
06:26The Western Front.
06:28Here I have learned a thousand different ways to suffer.
06:32Countless different ways to die.
06:33I've lost more friends than I care to remember.
06:37But even death itself is kinder than some of the things that I have seen.
06:42Things that I wish I could erase from my mind with every fiber of my being.
06:49All around me, brave souls cling to their last shreds of dignity.
06:54And men who once laughed and loved lie alongside boys
06:58who have barely had time to do either.
07:00Buried in some bloody bit of foreign soil.
07:08It is possible to withstand physical pain.
07:13But an injured mind is, I fear, irreparable.
07:17Particularly one bearing the immortal wounds of war.
07:20I find myself destined, perhaps, to join the hordes of men
07:24who are aching for peace and waiting for death.
07:27Not fearing it as such.
07:29Not the when.
07:31Or the where of it.
07:33Not even the how.
07:35But the why.
07:37And so, before that time comes,
07:40I write not just as a soldier,
07:43but as a witness to the tragedy that's unfolding daily in this infernal place.
07:48To let you know that we are trying.
07:51Holding on to sanity as best we can.
07:54Holding on to a dwindling hope.
07:55But fear is a powerful poison.
07:59You're the only person I know who take a break from reading to read even more.
08:23What is it today?
08:25Botany?
08:25Physics?
08:26Chemistry?
08:27Biochemistry.
08:27Well, when your break is over,
08:31have a look at the new work assignments.
08:36Oh, goodness me.
08:37Balloon trolley.
08:39Oh, my goodness, sorry.
08:40You can barely make out a word.
08:43I've got you all.
08:44Thank you very much.
08:47I think I can remember.
08:48Regiments 4 and 9 on desk A.
09:00Paul Capel, regiments 8 and 11 on desk E
09:05and Passchendaele, regiments 6, 12 and 99 on C and J
09:13I've no idea how you do that but it certainly makes my life easier
09:17I'll take Passchendaele then
09:20Living through these incredibly uncertain times
09:25Is this not enough of a thrill for you?
09:27You need to be careful Julia, all this civil disobedience stuff
09:33I remember the hunger strikes and that woman who died jumping in front of the king's horse
09:39Emily Davison, well things are different now
09:42We're turning the tide of public opinion in our favour with our war work
09:45I'm very proud of the work we do, I just hope that one day
09:49like many of the highly educated women involved
09:52that I'll be admitted to university and eventually earn a degree
09:54And then we're going to award women a degree surely
09:57First matriculated female undergraduates at a British university for the Edinburgh Seven
10:021869, yes they may not have been permitted to graduate
10:06I knew it
10:08There have been many since, remarkable women
10:11You have a memory like a bloody steel trap
10:14There's one here about a soldier who had to have both arms amputated because of gangrene
10:18Set his comrades nicknamed him Octopus
10:21It's awful isn't it?
10:23If we didn't laugh we'd sob for all of eternity
10:27I thought I'd start to feel numb to it after three years
10:31I don't think I'll ever get used to the fact that so many of them are so very young
10:35Come on then
10:37They'll be waiting for us to finish
10:39They'll be waiting for us to finish
10:41Mother, I hope this short note finds you well
10:43Mother, I hope this short note finds you well
10:45Dearest auntie Phyllis spent last night in the shower
10:47To let you know my whole heart to see you
10:49I'm still with all my life
10:51Sorry, ma'am, I'm right
10:53When a film was kind of hidden
10:55The weather has been continuously bad
10:57I am so very weary
10:59I have a terrible feeling
11:01I must close now
11:03Keep me in your presence
11:05Please, remember me
11:23I suppose I could have written this letter to my brother
11:27But I realize that every man in Passchendaele is a brother of mine
11:31Only here, you see
11:33Brother slays brother
11:35In a world where their father, God himself, is dead
11:39So instead, this is an open letter
11:41To ask, quite sincerely
11:43What is there to live for?
11:49Ah, passioned hell
11:51Yes, yes, of course
12:01If God is not dead, then he has forgotten us
12:05And I am starting to forget, perhaps
12:07Not what we are fighting for
12:09But what we are dying for
12:11What we are dying for
12:13Yours, Lieutenant Henry Beecham
12:15Dear Lieutenant Beecham
12:17Dear Lieutenant Beecham
12:19You asked a difficult question
12:21To which there is no answer
12:23To which there is no answer
12:25If God is not dead
12:27If God is not dead
12:29If God is not dead
12:31Then he has forgotten us
12:33If God is not dead
12:35Then he has forgotten us
12:37Then I am starting to forget, perhaps
12:39Lieutenant Henry Beecham
12:43Dear Lieutenant Beecham
12:45You asked a difficult question
12:47To which there is no easy answer
12:49But I feel compelled to reply
12:51My name is Julia Morriston
12:53And like you, I often wonder why
12:57Why must we live through this abominable war?
12:59I do not know
13:01But the naturalist in me finds comfort
13:05In the arms of Mother Nature
13:07Nature always finds a way
13:09I am reminded of the raindrop
13:11Never too small or insignificant
13:13To make a difference
13:15Beautifully volatile
13:17Evaporating, falling as precipitation
13:19Joining the rivers until it becomes the ocean
13:21There is a certain alchemy to it
13:25We too are shaped and changed by our suffering
13:29Until we are strong enough
13:31Until we are strong enough
13:32Like water
13:33To carve our way through rock
13:35I've known suffering and grief
13:39When my parents died
13:41I was determined to carry on doing
13:43What I knew would make them proud
13:45I paused my studies
13:47To make my own small contribution
13:49To the war effort
13:51So I know what it is to feel alone
13:53And to ask why
13:55When all else fails
13:57Take a deep breath
13:59And remember England
14:01Is still here
14:03Do not give up lieutenant
14:05And if you need to confide in someone
14:07You may write back to me
14:09And perhaps boldly
14:11I shall expect to reply
14:13A R R T
14:15To be honest
14:20So I could pick my opinions
14:21Like opinion
14:22To like
14:25To be honest
14:26Here
14:27Please
14:40Dear Julia, I hardly know where to begin.
14:48But you are right.
14:49There was profound magic in your words.
14:52Some strange alchemy that produced in me a glimmer of hope.
14:56Dear Henry, remember that our very existence itself is miraculous.
15:02As human beings, we have a profound capacity for love and goodness.
15:05Julia, I've been devouring your letters.
15:08I so hope you got my last ones in order.
15:10Tuesdays might arrive after Wednesdays.
15:12Henry, have you heard from your brother Lamb?
15:15Has he uncovered a new Egyptian pharaoh?
15:17I can't wait to hear what you've been up to.
15:20What you've been reading this week.
15:21Still in your Scottish phase.
15:23I adore Scotland.
15:25The flora and the fauna.
15:27The landscape, the archaeology.
15:29Something inescapably romantic about all of it.
15:33Folklorist J.F. Campbell writes of a man who joins the circle dance of a fairy ring in the Highlands.
15:38When he comes out, he feels as though he's only been gone for a moment.
15:43But really, it's been years.
15:46That's how our letters feel to me.
15:48I could spend an eternity in the dance of our words.
15:51The poet, John Dunn, writes,
15:55More than kisses, letters mingle souls.
16:00I think you know by now that I find in you a kindred spirit, a soulmate.
16:05But just to be on the safe side, I'm sealing this letter with a kiss.
16:10I'll raise you some Robert Burns for your John Dunn.
16:18My heart's in the Highlands.
16:20My heart is not here.
16:22My heart's in the Highlands.
16:24A chasing the deer.
16:26Or it would be.
16:28If it wasn't on the battlefield.
16:30With you.
16:31Should I be worried?
16:33Are you going to run off with some handsome Highlander?
16:36I've never made the journey, but I've always longed to visit Scotland.
16:40Sounds as if I might have to start packing.
16:43If only to stay in this fairy dance with you.
16:47As it happens,
16:49I am trying to convince my commanding officer to allow me my leave in the coming month.
16:53Not enough time for a trip all the way up north, but London, perhaps?
16:57That would be wonderful.
17:27Did you know that my greatest fear is not death, but us never having the chance to meet?
17:34Bell, wait.
17:38Bellum.
17:42Peter.
17:43Yes.
17:45Lefty has another one from his betting.
17:47All right.
17:48All right.
17:48All right.
17:48I have decided to call you my hope.
18:17For that is what you are to me.
18:20Fingers crossed my leave will come through.
18:33Hope springs eternal.
18:38I've never heard your voice, Henry.
18:41But the silence is deafening.
18:43It's been two weeks and a day since your last letter.
18:47I won't despair just yet, since hope is our byword.
18:51But I am frightened, Henry.
19:06Is he still intending to take his leave?
19:08Last I heard, if reinforcements arrive.
19:12And if he's still...
19:14You might have to brace yourself, my dear.
19:17I don't know.
19:26I make a lot of noise.
19:27Hope springs a ton.
19:57Henry?
20:03Julia.
20:21My hope.
20:27Oh, I don't know what I'm doing.
20:55I don't know what I'm doing.
21:01Wait, wait, wait. I'm not worried that we're not married yet, eh?
21:04Yet. Not exactly up there with the proposals of great literary masterpieces, but...
21:10Yes, I accept.
21:13That bastard thing.
21:20You know, I thought I'd have to put away my dreams to go to war.
21:26Oh, here you are.
21:32Oh, God.
21:33Oh, God.
21:34No, stay still.
21:35Stay still.
21:36For God's sake.
21:38I know.
21:39Time.
21:40I know.
21:41I know.
21:42I know.
21:43I know.
21:44I know.
21:45I know.
21:47Okay.
21:48I know.
21:49Oh, my God.
22:16What was it? We promised each other again?
22:18For richer or poorer, for better or worse, through doors wide and narrow.
22:24Yes, my darling, something like that.
22:27Oh, I can't believe we did it.
22:29I'm so very glad the priest was able to fit us in.
22:32So am I.
22:35Well, welcome home, Mrs. Peachum.
22:38I love you, Henry.
22:49Henry, my darling, are you still awake?
22:56I don't like to blow my own trumpet, but it seems I am quite the horologist.
23:00Henry?
23:06Henry?
23:07Henry?
23:08Henry?
23:09No!
23:10Oh, God!
23:11There's gas everywhere!
23:12There's gas!
23:13That's right.
23:14There's gas!
23:15It's not, it's gas!
23:16Oh, God!
23:17Oh, God!
23:18Oh, God!
23:19Oh, God!
23:20Oh, God!
23:21Oh, God!
23:22There's gas everywhere!
23:23There's gas!
23:24Oh, God!
23:25Oh, God!
23:26I'm...
23:27I'm...
23:28I'm...
23:29I'm not, I'm not...
23:31I'm not...
23:32With me...
23:34You are here.
23:35I can't.
23:36I can't.
23:39Dear Lieutenant Peachum,
23:41my name is Julian Morrison,
23:43and like you I often wonder...
23:46why.
23:47Oh, oh, oh.
23:52Oh, oh.
23:54Julia.
23:55Julia.
23:56Oh.
23:57Oh.
23:58Oh.
23:59Oh.
24:00Oh.
24:00My heart.
24:02Oh.
24:02Oh.
24:03Oh.
24:04Oh.
24:05Oh.
24:06Oh.
24:07Oh.
24:10Oh.
24:12Oh.
24:15Yes, my darling.
24:17Hold on to your work.
24:47My ring.
25:02Oh, no.
25:07Get down.
25:17Oh, no.
25:47Henry?
25:54Henry?
25:55This isn't funny.
26:00Henry?
26:07Henry?
26:22Henry?
26:37Henry?
26:50Henry?
26:54Henry?
26:59Henry?
27:01Henry?
27:04Henry?
27:07Excuse me! Excuse me!
27:13Excuse me!
27:15Have you...
27:17Have you by any chance seen a man on this road?
27:20Wavy hair, blue eyes?
27:31We had an accident in our motor car.
27:33My husband and I.
27:34And somehow we were separated.
27:37There's a shot of high.
27:39Hello.
27:43I don't know Gaelic, I'm afraid.
27:45Do you speak any English at all?
27:47I'm sorry.
27:50Please, can you help me?
27:52Perhaps...
27:53Perhaps you could...
27:54You could ask the authorities in Inverness?
27:56To send help?
27:58Inverness?
27:59Inverness, yes, yes, yes.
28:01Yes, that's right.
28:02Oh, I'd be ever so grateful.
28:04I'm sorry.
28:05I'm sorry.
28:06I'm sorry.
28:07I'm sorry.
28:08I'm sorry.
28:09I'm sorry.
28:10I'm sorry.
28:11I'm sorry.
28:12I'm sorry.
28:13I'm sorry.
28:14Oh, no.
28:15See, I have to stay here to look for my husband.
28:19What are you...
28:20What are you...
28:21No!
28:22Get over me!
28:23Go ahead.
28:24No!
28:25No!
28:26No!
28:27Debbie!
28:28No!
28:32No!
28:33No!
28:35No!
28:36No!
28:38I don't need your victory...
28:39No!
30:10I'm feeling a wee bit better, dearie.
30:28What are you doing?
30:30Just trying to help, if you'll let me.
30:33Where am I?
30:37Castle Leathers.
30:39I'm Mistress Porter, housekeeper.
30:43And the people that brought me here?
30:45The Conners have gone, lass.
30:47Done their part.
30:50I don't understand.
30:52Delivered you here as payment for their debts.
30:55They owe her a fair amount.
31:07You good girl!
31:10Get her!
31:10No!
31:10Get your hands off of me!
31:12My, my, a Sassanac!
31:14And a fiery one.
31:18Can't keep me here like some sort of prisoner!
31:21I hope you didn't speak to your last master this way.
31:24Master.
31:25Mistress Porter, a maidservant needs more suitable attire.
31:31Yes, my Laird.
31:31I am not your maidservant.
31:34I am Julia Beecham of Hyde Park, London.
31:37I think you'll find that you're now the property of Simon Beaufort Fraser of Leathers.
31:42Lord Lovett.
31:43Father.
32:03We should press for the Conner's coin instead.
32:05And why on earth would I do that?
32:08The coffers are dwindling.
32:10The house is in need of repair.
32:11Oh, that may be.
32:14But I have my own particular needs to think of as well.
32:26Please.
32:26Please.
32:41Excuse me.
32:46Excuse me, gentlemen.
32:50Sassanac.
32:53Sassanac.
32:55What a nurse.
32:56Oh, Jillian.
33:14What a sucker to us.
33:16Excuse me, sir.
33:40I'm, uh, I'm with for a lady, uh, dark hair, blue eyes.
33:43A lady?
33:45Oh, you'll not find one of those in here, sir.
33:47There's a few bonny, uh, bonny faces right enough, Sassanac, but, uh, all of them are bollocks.
33:53Forgive me.
34:00Aye.
34:01What are you having?
34:04Yes.
34:05I'll have a, uh, kind of ale, please.
34:08Yeah, what does then?
34:09Well, sir, I am rather urgently looking for a lady by the name of Julia Beach, and if...
34:13Uh, sorry, I don't seem to, uh, have any, um...
34:22You owe me.
34:26As I was saying, Mr. Grant, the terms we're proposing are quite generous.
34:30Three dwellings on fertile land at Bobbles Grantland, in exchange for money's owed.
34:36Ah, surprisingly generous offer from the Campbells.
34:41Do you think so?
34:43Aye.
34:43I can assure you, Mr. Grant, of the good condition of the properties mentioned.
34:49You'll be able to house a fair few families.
34:53Aye, I think your dad will approve.
34:56Do you hope they brought the deeds to those properties, hmm?
35:00What in God's name did he just say?
35:11Why?
35:11How dare you involve yourself in clan matters?
35:16I'm sorry, please.
35:17I meant nothing by it.
35:19Should have kept your mouth closed then.
35:21Wait!
35:24Maybe slit his throat first.
35:26Hold!
35:26Now, what were you saying in there?
35:36You were kind enough to pay for my aim.
35:39I was merely pointing you out what I'm sure you already noticed.
35:42Please.
35:43I don't want to be involved.
35:44Too late for that now.
35:46Tell me what you meant by what you said.
35:50Tell me what you meant by what you said.
35:54You tell that to my father.
36:10You'll begin with the washing and mending and windows and stairs.
36:25The chamber pots need emptying as well.
36:26And you'll assist a cook, of course.
36:29Please.
36:30Ma'am.
36:32Mistress Porter.
36:34Mistress Porter, I don't belong here.
36:36I came to the Highlands with my husband on holiday.
36:39Holy day?
36:41Which holy day would that be?
36:42He had business in Edinburgh, so he thought we'd turn it into a longer trip.
36:45But I cannot explain it.
36:48I lost him.
36:51How long's it been since his passing?
36:54No, he hasn't passed away.
36:56He's alive.
36:57And he must be looking for me.
37:00Well, hasn't he found you yet, has he?
37:02If it's been more than a fortnight, then...
37:05I've a doubt he's coming for you now.
37:12What?
37:13What day is it now?
37:15I must have knocked the sense out of you.
37:17It's a Saturday.
37:18Saturday.
37:21Saturday when?
37:24I think she'll be asking me what year it is, or who sits upon the throne.
37:30King George V.
37:33King George I.
37:36In the year of our Lord, 1714.
37:40Goodness me.
37:45No, it...
37:47It...
37:47It can't be.
37:48I...
37:48I have a husband.
37:52I have...
37:52I have a daughter.
37:53Claire.
37:55I...
37:55I need to get back to them.
37:57I must.
37:58I'm sorry for your lass.
38:00But you've been sold to us.
38:02And here you'll stay.
38:03But I have no patience for impertinence or disobedience, mind you.
38:07And neither does the Laird.
38:08And one last thing.
38:17On occasion, our Laird can be most attentive.
38:23Try not to linger in his presence.
38:24Now, wash that look off your face and come and find me in the kitchen.
38:35Let's just leave.
38:48Come on.
38:49Let's go.
39:50Our laird, Isaac Grant, I present Mr. Henry Beecham.
40:06My son says you have something to tell me.
40:11It was merely an observation.
40:14An observation.
40:17I've been trying to get what the Campbells owe me for months.
40:20So I do hope that what you have for me is more than an observation.
40:24Sasanach.
40:25Yes, well, in my experience as solicitor, a lack of legal paperwork is never a good sign when it comes to property.
40:36That's it?
40:40Well, it seems you're unfamiliar with how we conduct our affairs here in the Highlands.
40:58A man's word is his bond.
41:03And quite right.
41:04Then I shan't trouble you any further.
41:08If you just kindly let me go, I could...
41:11Tell him what you told me at the well.
41:12Well, I mean, judging by what I heard, you know, if you were to accept the properties that the other party were offering...
41:26The Campbells?
41:27The Campbells were offering.
41:30Um, there would be no guarantee of ownership on the land on which they sit.
41:34You see, the written contract must state that you would own the land and collect the rents, not the, uh, the Campbells.
41:41Told you, Dad.
41:43He has an eye for the particulars.
41:45Well, with all due respect, it wasn't the particulars that drew my attention.
41:48It was your advisor.
41:51Padre Drummond is my blade here.
41:54Apart from my son here, he's my most trusted counsel.
41:57And my right hand in all matters.
42:00What observation do you have to make about him, then?
42:12He was misrepresenting you.
42:16Why don't you search this most trusted Obladeus for a sack of coins?
42:21Not his usual purse.
42:27Mr. Buck.
42:41You idiot, bastard!
42:48Put him down!
42:49Ah!
42:51Urcani.
43:05Urcani.
43:08Versassinach.
43:21How would you like to be my new blade here?
43:38What about the other fellow?
43:42Never mind him.
43:46Well, unfortunately, there are other matters occupying my time.
43:51See, I'm actually urgently searching for someone.
43:55Our business would take you all across the Grand Lands and beyond.
43:59An opportunity to kill two bars with one stone, perhaps.
44:05I'm afraid as much as I'd like to accept.
44:08You're not obliged, of course.
44:11You're free to continue on your own.
44:14And good luck to you.
44:16But I'm an Englishman.
44:19Alone, in the Highlands, without protection.
44:26You would have all this at your disposal.
44:31And the strength of the Grand Name behind you.
44:34I see.
44:43It was very well, then.
44:45I'd like to accept.
44:48Let's have a drum.
44:49I see.
45:08Oh, my God.
45:38Oh, my God.
46:08Oh, my God.
46:38Oh, my God.
47:08Oh, my God.
47:10Oh, my God.
47:12Oh, my God.
47:14Oh, my God.
47:16Oh, my God.
47:18Oh, my God.
47:20Oh, my God.
47:22Oh, my God.
47:24Oh, my God.
47:26Oh, my God.
47:28Oh, my God.
47:30Oh, my God.
47:32Oh, my God.
47:34Oh, my God.
47:36Oh, my God.
47:38Oh, my God.
47:40Oh, my God.
47:42Oh, my God.
47:44Oh, my God.
47:46Oh, my God.
47:48Very well. Not this time.
48:18Enough there for a long journey.
48:31Please, sir.
48:33Brian. Please.
48:35Mr. Fraser, I believe your father is the laird.
48:38I don't belong here.
48:40I'm trying to find my husband. Please let me go. I beg you.
48:46That may be true.
48:48But you'll not find him tonight.
48:50There's a storm coming.
48:53The island storm's unforgiving.
48:54If you're caught out here, you'll soon be humbled.
48:57You'll suffer a fate much worse.
48:59I've weathered many a storm.
49:01I appreciate your concern, but I will take my chances.
49:03My dad will not.
49:05He'll send his man Balak out after you.
49:08A matter of pride.
49:14Please.
49:14Balak!
49:20No!
49:23Give your hand over me!
49:26No!
49:26No!
49:27Let me...
49:28Let me go!
49:29No!
49:30No!
49:32Let me go!
49:33What have you to say for yourself?
49:39I have told you I do not belong here.
49:42I am no one's prisoner or servant for that matter.
49:44I was doing what anyone in my position would have done.
49:47Balak!
49:48Twenty should be less than enough to temper that insolence.
49:54Father, it wasn't her.
49:55It was me.
49:58I asked Balak here.
50:00I did her in her attempt.
50:03I heard her pleas to Ian.
50:06I convinced her to go.
50:07Mistress Porter, take her new maid, Severn, to her quarter to make sure that she's secured for the night.
50:23Give him the twenty, then.
50:26No, no!
50:27Don't make me say it again, or you'll both be joining him.
50:44And if I sh'ma, there's only a few lashes.
50:47Would you like the cones?
51:01Or shall I?
51:17The Bladiers' Quarters.
51:23I think you'll find it to your liking.
51:25If not, you can sleep in the barn with the other beasts.
51:31You don't like me much, do you?
51:34Don't akin you well enough to have formed an opinion.
51:40Huh?
51:42Your predecessor.
51:45Now, who?
51:47Didn't like much at all.
52:17I must apologise for the conduct of the younger Mackenzie.
52:31Since the death of his father this past month, he's not been himself.
52:35No, I'd say that his fisticuffs spoke quite clearly to the younger Grant's face.
52:42Hmm?
52:46The Laird is not pleased.
52:48What can I do, on behalf of the Mackenzie's, to make things right with the Grants?
52:56I'm not sure that there is anything you can do.
52:59Perhaps you might consider an offer, a betrothal, between our Ellen Mackenzie and Malcolm Grant, their marriage come harvest time.
53:15A gesture of peace, and an alliance that will benefit both clans.
53:19The Laird, he wants Dougal Mackenzie's head, not his sister's hand.
53:28You're still a stranger in these parts, not been with the Grants long at all.
53:39Here at the gathering, I couldn't help but notice that you've been asking for a woman.
53:43There were plenty to hand, but none to your liking.
53:52No.
53:54But I have found particular tastes.
54:00Perhaps we could help each other.
54:03You bring an offer of a betrothal to the Grants, and I will offer my assistance in satisfying your particular tastes.
54:13I will put your offer before the Laird.
54:43My dearest Henry, my last memory with you was at the Circle of Stones.
55:02There was a deafening sound like an angry swarm of bees.
55:06And then you were gone.
55:09Or perhaps I was.
55:10Perhaps I am dead.
55:17Perhaps I have lost my mind.
55:21Have I fallen through the looking glass?
55:23My dearest Julia, everywhere I turn I search for your face, but it remains elusive.
55:34Each day I am forced to play a role, to wear a mask of bravery that feels foreign to me.
55:41The memory of you and Claire is my only solace.
55:44A single thread keeping me tethered to hope.
55:51Without you, I am adrift.
55:55A man lost in a sea of uncertainty and longing.
55:59I am the same as I ever was.
56:04Mad with love for you.
56:06Our beautiful Claire and our unborn child.
56:09But my circumstances have changed.
56:24There are some unfathomable obstacles in our path.
56:30I don't know how this letter could possibly reach you.
56:39Perhaps it will simply be a record of my thoughts.
56:45I vow to you, with every fiber of my being, that I will find my way back to you.
56:52No matter the distance, or the time that separates us, I will not rest until we are reunited.
57:06You are surely home by now with our darling girl.
57:10I must believe that you are.
57:12How could I bear this otherwise?
57:15Kiss her for me.
57:16Tell her I love her.
57:18I promise to find a way to both of you.
57:21Just as your first letter found me.
57:24I'll find a way back to you.
57:27You are my anchor.
57:30My love.
57:31And my reason for enduring this madness.
57:36Sealed with a kiss, Henry.
57:51I need her.
57:52I need her.
57:53Yeah.
57:54I need to know me.
57:55I'm going to tell her.
57:56I need to hope you will be that ever.
57:57Yeah.
57:57I'm going to kill you, Mr.
57:59Amos, I am.
58:00I want to pour out a few minutes.
58:01My order from 코理, for me.
58:02I need to let you know you can help me out his way from you.
58:06You are my-
58:07What?
58:09No?
58:10What?
58:11I hope for me.
58:12My mother does recognize you.
58:13I know you can help me out your character.
58:15And you...
58:15I need to know you.
58:16So that you'll find your factual divide
58:17your deeds that are to be found on your death
58:48Nailed it!
59:19To Malcolm Grant.
59:21I'll ask you to your face.
59:23Have you anything to confess?
59:25Describe the woman you see.
59:26Her name is Julia.
59:27I'll send word when I find her.
59:29Tell me it isn't true.
59:31We're a worse at times.
59:32How could you do this to me?
59:34If you were chief, you'd rescind the offer he made.
59:37You're not yet layered, Colin.
59:40There are still moves to be made.