:36:01
You should know that.
:36:03
What, what?
:36:05
Get him ready.
:36:08
Look at his piss.
We're back to lemonade.
:36:11
It's still a bit inky.
:36:13
That's yesterday's.
This is today's.
:36:14
Here, piss the elder,
piss the younger.
:36:21
Go on! Hyah! Hyah!
:36:28
The matter before this
house
:36:30
is a bill to provide for the
care of His Majesty's person,
:36:34
and for the administration
of the royal authority
:36:37
during the continuance
of His Majesty's illness.
:36:40
Hear, hear!
:36:42
Mr Speaker,
:36:44
we on this side of the House
count ourselves fortunate
:36:48
that we have in the person
of the Prince of Wales
:36:52
a young man of such
character and aptitude.
:37:02
What now?
:37:06
And so, Mr Speaker,
I would like to set out
:37:11
some measures of
long overdue reform,
:37:14
and, yes,
I may be bold to say it,
:37:18
necessary expenditure...
:37:29
I've just been with His Majesty
:37:32
for two hours of uninterrupted
conversation with him.
:37:36
- He means he's talking again.
- No, damn it!
:37:39
Well, yes, but not 15 to the
dozen, and not nonsense, either.
:37:43
He's actually
a damn clever fellow.
:37:45
Had me reading Shakespeare.
:37:47
Have you read King Lear?
Tragic story.
:37:49
Of course!
:37:50
If that fool of a messenger
had got a move on,
:37:54
Cordelia wouldn't
have been hanged,
:37:56
Lear wouldn't have died, and
it would have ended happily.
:37:58
As it is, it's so damned tragic.