How I Won the War
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:55:01
- I got some pretty things.
- No, no.

:55:03
I want to see you coming back
on the high port, grinning.

:55:06
With blood running down arms,
dripping from elbows.

:55:09
I don't care whose blood it is.
Stick it in your mate.

:55:12
Let's have it used. I hate waste.
:55:16
See. See mine.
:55:22
It represents your father,
mine, his before that.

:55:26
It represents battles
fought and won years ago.

:55:29
Battles fought so that we could live
as we wanted to,

:55:31
long before the Americans
were even thought of.

:55:34
They didn't invent living, you know.
It represents tradition, Musketeer.

:55:39
And I for one won't stand
for a dirty tradition.

:55:42
Get the nonsense out of them.
:55:44
I tried to get you interested.
You'll have to learn the hard way.

:55:47
Squad, 'shun!
:55:50
High port.
:55:52
At the throat, point in!
:55:54
Out! En garde. Shout it, Clapper.
:55:57
- In, out, en garde!
- Let's hear from you.

:56:01
Can I see you
for a moment, personal, sir?

:56:03
- What?
- It's the butcher this time, sir.

:56:06
With his steak and his mutton.
She'll do anything for extra.

:56:10
Left nipple, right groin/
:56:13
Left nipple, right groin/
:56:15
Is it now the butcher which is carrying out
intimacy at your home address?

:56:20
- In, out, en garde.
- Is it right, sir?

:56:23
- Is it right a butcher should...
- Whip it out!

:56:25
- Whip it in!
...while her husband is away fighting?

:56:29
- And wipe it.
- At the throat, jab. Shout it, Clapper.

:56:33
At the throat, jab!
:56:35
At the throat, jab! At the throat, jab!
:56:39
- Kill him. Kill the bleeder.
- At the throat, Gripweed!

:56:42
How's this for openers?
:56:49
Now, watch closely.
:56:51
I am about to demonstrate the correct use
of the identification triangle.

:56:58
Oblique, middle and near east.
Oblique, yellow.


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