Cromwell
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:41:04
This tired, sickening man,
this country oaf...

:41:08
...crude in speech and manner?
:41:16
This rough fellow...
:41:21
...does he display the bearing
of a king?

:41:29
-You are the one man who can govern.
-ln the name of God...

:41:34
...did we cut the head off this king
only to steal his crown?

:41:39
This hollow golden ring,
this worthless trinket.

:41:44
Give it to a whore,
for the price of her bed!

:41:47
lf you would find a head to fit it,
let it adorn some court jester...

:41:51
...or some strolling player
that he may play your king, but not l.

:41:56
Power must be absolute,
or it be no power at all.

:42:00
lt was not for power that we did this.
Have you not understood that yet?

:42:05
Now, lreton, mark me,
and mark me well.

:42:09
That you be hard-set upon courses
has not escaped me...

:42:12
...and if you seek to use me
towards such ends...

:42:15
...though l love you like a brother,
l swear, l will destroy you.

:42:30
Every freeborn Englishman be he
the lowest of the lowest...

:42:36
...is entitled to a voice
in the governing of this country.

:42:40
But there is no vote for the poor,
for the underprivileged...

:42:43
...no vote for all those
who took up arms...

:42:46
...to put down the very autocracy that
this Parliament now imposes upon us.

:42:53
You did not vote this Parliament
into office.

:42:57
This gaggle of buffoons, these villains!

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