:32:02
	PACINO: Margaret was the queen
before the war.
:32:04
	She was a Lancaster,
and she was dethroned by the Yorks.
:32:08
	She's a ghost of the past,
haunting the Yorks with her curses.
:32:11
	A husband and a son...
:32:14
	Don't you think she rants and raves
around the castle like this a lot?
:32:18
	PARSONS: No!
ALLEN: No?
:32:20
	I don't think so.
I think she just comes in this day...
:32:24
	...because it's a crisis time.
She feels it.
:32:27
	Give way, dull clouds,
to my quick curses!
:32:31
	It's primordial.
:32:33
	She brings that kind of music
into this experience.
:32:37
	Poor painted queen.
:32:40
	The day will come that thou shalt wish
for me to help thee...
:32:44
	...curse this poisonous
bunchback'd toad.
:32:48
	LINDFORS: Reading this play,
as I take word by word...
:32:51
	...everything she says happens.
:32:54
	Beware of yonder dog! Look.
:32:57
	Have not to do with him,
beware of him.
:33:00
	Sin, death, and hell
have set their marks on him...
:33:04
	...and all their messengers
await on him.
:33:08
	PACINO: Thou hateful wither'd hag,
have done thy charm.
:33:11
	And leave out thee?
:33:13
	Stay, dog, for thou shalt hear me.
:33:18
	The worm of conscience
still begnaw thy soul.
:33:23
	Thou elvish-mark'd, abortive,
rooting hog.
:33:30
	Live each of you
the subjects to his hate...
:33:37
	...and he to yours,
and all of you to God's!
:33:43
	We don't say a word. We let her go.
:33:45
	REDGRAVE: The music...
Literally, I mean the music...
:33:49
	... and the thoughts and the concepts...
:33:52
	... and the feelings have not been
divorced from the words.
:33:57
	In England, you've had centuries in
which word has been totally divorced...