Captain Blood
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:10:00
I can bring a hundred from Bridgwater,
the town where I live.

:10:03
We've no time for all this.
:10:06
lf these other traitors
are as stubborn as you...

:10:08
I may sit here till the next assizes.
:10:12
Very well, then.
:10:13
There's a witness I'll give you
that you can't deny:

:10:16
yourself, sir.
:10:17
For if I'm not physician,
how is it I know that you're a dying man?

:10:26
The death to which you're dooming
hundreds of poor men daily...

:10:29
in a frantic effort to send their souls
to perdition before your own...

:10:33
is a light pleasantry...
:10:35
compared to the bleeding death
in the lungs...

:10:38
to which the great Judge
has condemned you.

:10:40
Now, fellow,
we'll be done with the witnesses...

:10:44
and I will convict you
out of your own rascally mouth.

:10:49
When this Pitt came to summon you,
as you claim...

:10:52
did you know you were called
to attend another rebel?

:10:55
My business was with his wounds,
not his politics.

:10:58
Did you know the law...
:11:00
that any person who does
knowingly receive, harbor, comfort...

:11:03
or succor a rebel
is as guilty as if he himself bore arms?

:11:08
I only knew my sacred duty as a physician.
:11:12
Your sacred duty, rogue, is to your king!
:11:19
I thought it was to my fellow man.
:11:28
lt's a fearful thing
to send a man's soul to perdition...

:11:33
but I am bound by my conscience...
:11:35
and my love of my king to deal out justice.
:11:44
Therefore, I instruct you,
gentlemen of the jury...

:11:48
that inasmuch as Peter Blood
has admitted...

:11:51
aiding a traitor to your king...
:11:53
you do bring in a verdict of guilty...
:11:56
that he may be hanged...
:11:58
for the high treason he has committed.

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