:28:00
And I damn near won the last one.
Still, as long as I get trotted out...
:28:05
for Christmas courts and
state occasions now and then...
:28:10
for I do like to see you...
:28:13
it's enough.
:28:18
I'm famished.
Let's go in to dinner.
:28:20
Arm in arm.
And hand in hand.
:28:25
You're still
a marvel of a man.
:28:29
And you're my lady.
:28:43
It's an odd thing, Eleanor.
:28:45
I've fought and bargained
all these years...
:28:48
as if the only thing I had to live
for was what happened after I was dead.
:28:53
I've something else
to live for now.
:28:55
I've blundered onto peace.
:28:59
On Christmas eve.
:29:01
Since Louis died, while Philip
grew, I've had no France to fight.
:29:06
In that lull, I've found how
good it is to write a law...
:29:10
or make a tax more fair
or sit in judgment to decide...
:29:14
which peasant gets a cow.
:29:17
I tell you, there is nothing
more important in the world.
:29:21
Now the french boy's big enough,
and I'm sick of war.
:29:30
Do you still need
the vexin, Henry?
:29:34
It's as vital as it ever was. My troops
there are one day away from paris.
:29:37
That's a march of 20 miles.
I must keep it.
:29:40
Henry, dear,
:29:43
if Alais does not marry Richard,
I will see you lose the vexin.
:29:47
Well, I thought
you'd never say it.
:29:50
I can do it.
:29:53
You can try.
:29:56
We have a pack of barons we
should look the loving couple for.