Captain Blood
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:29:03
-Not so hasty.
-Just a moment.

:29:05
There's something I'd like to ask you.
:29:08
Well, gentlemen?
:29:10
Have you been thinking of leaving us,
Doctor?

:29:12
Leaving? Now, Doctor.
:29:16
How could a slave think of leaving?
:29:18
Or even if he were fool enough to try,
by what means could he hope to escape?

:29:22
And where, for example,
could he raise the few pounds necessary...

:29:26
to purchase even a small boat?
:29:28
-We might supply it.
-You?

:29:32
-Now, gentlemen.
-Now, let's talk this thing over.

:29:36
Now, if you'll just sit down here.
:29:39
Now then, how much will you need?
:29:42
£20 might buy a small wherry,
£10 more might equip it.

:29:45
He's right.
:29:47
-He means--
-You needn't tell me what he means.

:29:49
I know two Christian gentlemen
when I see them.

:29:53
Two men whose hearts are bleeding
for a brother doctor in distress.

:29:59
But it's too much to ask,
too noble a gesture to hope for.

:30:02
No, my good man, not at all.
:30:04
But who would buy the boat?
:30:06
We would not dare,
and you, a slave, you could not.

:30:09
True.
:30:11
That would be my part. To find someone.
A man as eager to escape as I.

:30:15
-A man held here for debt, say.
-Then it's a bargain?

:30:20
Gentlemen,
you've opened for me the gates of hope.

:30:25
Doctor.
:30:31
-My dear colleague.
-Gentlemen.

:30:38
Now we have him.
:30:40
We've only to get him involved
and reveal his plan.

:30:43
He'll steal very little of our business
when he's in irons.

:30:47
Gentlemen.
:30:50
There's one thing slipped
my mind entirely.

:30:54
Simple-minded men might think this
an opportunity for trickery...

:30:58
but brilliant men like yourselves
will remember in what favor I stand...


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