The Sea Hawk
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

:33:02
Thank you, milady.
:33:03
May I present my niece,
Doña Maria Alvarez de Cordoba?

:33:11
Your niece will grace England
by her presence.

:33:14
You're very kind, Your Majesty.
:33:16
And you are very beautiful.
:33:28
Don Alvarez...
:33:30
my Lord Chancellor informs me
you bring new grievances...

:33:33
from your much-aggrieved monarch,
King Phillip.

:33:35
There is nothing my lord and king
desires more...

:33:37
than an end to grievances
between our two nations...

:33:40
and the growth of friendship.
:33:41
Then it may be well to consider
friendship grows slowly...

:33:44
when nurtured only by complaints.
:33:46
May I suggest
that the misunderstandings...

:33:48
between ourselves
and His Excellency's government...

:33:50
arise from one source alone:
:33:52
The piratical acts of English privateers.
:33:55
Reprisals, Lord Wolfingham,
are not piratical acts.

:33:58
Last year, did not King Phillip
confiscate 12 English ships...

:34:01
Ioaded with grain in Spanish ports?
:34:03
Do I understand Your Grace to justify...
:34:05
this murderous assault on my ship
on the grounds of...

:34:08
You forget, Don Alvarez,
the Queen needs justify nothing.

:34:12
However, I had no intention of forgetting
an insult to an ambassador to the court.

:34:17
How much treasure was there,
Don Alvarez?

:34:19
Approximately £30,000,
besides the loss of the ship.

:34:26
And where is Capt. Thorpe?
:34:28
As soon as I was informed
of the incident...

:34:30
I took the liberty of summoning here
all the Sea Hawks now in port.

:34:33
You are very thoughtful, milord.
:34:37
Admit the Sea Hawks at once.
:34:49
Capt. Frobisher, Capt. Hawkins...
:34:52
Capt. Wolfe, Capt. Stanley...
:34:56
Capt. Logan, Capt. Latour.

prev.
next.