1. Yeah, mate, I said 30, you can't
expect to get away with it like that.
Copy !req
2. Make a better deal or it's off.
Copy !req
3. OK? Well, I'll see you tomorrow then,
ten o'clock, my place.
Copy !req
4. One forty-nine, please.
Copy !req
5. - How much is the milk?
- Forty-nine pence.
Copy !req
6. - Thank you very much.
- Thank you.
Copy !req
7. One pound, please. Thank you.
Copy !req
8. Uh-uh. Too much.
Much too much butter.
Copy !req
9. I like butter.
Copy !req
10. Denis.
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11. Mmm.
Copy !req
12. - Milk's gone up.
- Hm?
Copy !req
13. - 49p a pint.
- Good grief!
Copy !req
14. We'll have to economize.
Copy !req
15. I suppose we could always sell the car.
Copy !req
16. - Or take in paying guests.
Copy !req
17. Watch out. She's on the prowl.
Copy !req
18. Eat your egg.
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19. - Goodness! There you are.
- Yes. Here we are.
Copy !req
20. How did this happen?
How could she possibly have got out?
Copy !req
21. It's very, very important
that the front door is left locked.
Copy !req
22. - Of course.
- Please, make it clear
Copy !req
23. - to whoever's on after you.
- Dixon.
Copy !req
24. I'm afraid I'm going to have
to phone the station about this.
Copy !req
25. - Anything could have happened.
- I understand.
Copy !req
26. Maria, she's starting to clear
her husband's cupboard, so...
Copy !req
27. - Mm-hm.
- I may need your help.
Copy !req
28. Can you bring up any cases
that you can find in the basement?
Copy !req
29. Of course.
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30. Mm!
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31. Beautiful day.
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32. - Mm...
- Oh, you've made a start.
Copy !req
33. Carol's coming soon,
I'll get some bags.
Copy !req
34. Anything you want to go to Mark,
I'll bring up a suitcase for it.
Copy !req
35. Uh-uh.
Copy !req
36. No, no, no, no. The grey.
Copy !req
37. - You sure?
- Mm...
Copy !req
38. Definitely the grey.
Copy !req
39. Righty oh. Boss knows best.
Copy !req
40. Don't let her take
my paper away.
Copy !req
41. Oh, I haven't had a chance
to look at that yet, dear.
Copy !req
42. Sorry.
Copy !req
43. Atta girl.
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44. Ah! Damn!
Copy !req
45. - Damn it.
- Blot it.
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46. - Blot it.
- Pardon?
Copy !req
47. You're supposed to be looking after her.
Copy !req
48. Now look what you've done.
Copy !req
49. Are they to keep
the loonies out or you in?
Copy !req
50. Hm...
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51. I'll be off then.
Copy !req
52. Wear your scarf.
There is a chill out there.
Copy !req
53. Good morning, Lady Thatcher.
Are you all right?
Copy !req
54. - How are you feeling?
- I'm fine, thank you, Susie.
Copy !req
55. I've just been reading
about the bombings.
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56. - Of course. Frightful.
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57. - Sorry.
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58. These are the books for you to sign.
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59. I brought as many as I could find.
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60. Shall we go through your appointments?
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61. We said we'd go through them today.
Copy !req
62. Yes. Of course, dear. Today.
Copy !req
63. The invitation has come
from Downing Street
Copy !req
64. for the unveiling of your portrait.
I'll put that on the mantelpiece,
Copy !req
65. and there's an invitation
from Lord Armstrong
Copy !req
66. for lunch on the first Friday
of next month.
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67. I said no, because you have
a concert that afternoon,
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68. but if you'd like to...
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69. It looks like a very
interesting program.
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70. What are they playing?
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71. Um, I think they said...
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72. Rodgers & Hammerstein.
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73. Oh.
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74. Oh...
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75. - Silly man.
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76. Oh, he hasn't got his scarf on.
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77. - Did someone cover the butter?
- I'll go.
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78. - Leave it!
- Margaret.
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79. Good girl.
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80. Tomorrow, no matter what they do,
it'll be business as usual.
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81. Two of the small beef,
Mr. Roberts.
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82. What is the life blood
of any community?
Copy !req
83. It's business.
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84. Not just big business,
but small businesses, like mine.
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85. Margaret! Cups!
Copy !req
86. We on this island are strong.
Copy !req
87. We're self-reliant. Sometimes,
we're plain bloody-minded.
Copy !req
88. But we also believe
in helping each other.
Copy !req
89. And I don't mean by state handouts.
Copy !req
90. Margaret, do you want
to come to the pictures?
Copy !req
91. She's not coming out,
she's got to study.
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92. - Miss Hoity-Toity!
Copy !req
93. Never run with the crowd,
Margaret. Go your own way.
Copy !req
94. Go your own way.
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95. Never run with the crowd.
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96. Open it then.
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97. I've got a place at Oxford.
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98. Don't let me down, Margaret.
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99. Mother!
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100. My hands are still damp.
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101. "Margaret Roberts."
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102. Oh!
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103. - Tea.
- Margaret! Cups!
Copy !req
104. They're talking about you again.
Copy !req
105. Wha... What time is it?
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106. Sun's not quite over the yardarm.
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107. - It's time for tea.
Copy !req
108. - Look, Margaret.
Copy !req
109. What have you got on your head?
Copy !req
110. Found it in the cupboard,
and thought, bugger it,
Copy !req
111. it's Friday, why not fancy dress?
Copy !req
112. - You look ridiculous.
- Boss lady no like?
Copy !req
113. No, Denis, boss lady no like.
Copy !req
114. She's made a start,
that's the main thing.
Copy !req
115. No, no, no. It's going fine.
Copy !req
116. But it's taken Carol eight years
to persuade her to let his things go.
Copy !req
117. Feet!
Copy !req
118. Well, it's her pills.
Copy !req
119. You can never be sure she's taking them.
I think sometimes she hides them.
Copy !req
120. Oh, rumbled!
Copy !req
121. They give her about an hour's
clarity, then she slips again.
Copy !req
122. Can I suggest you remove
the sticker from the back of your car?
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123. - Sorry. It's always cash...
- Then take the sticker off!
Copy !req
124. I call that false advertising,
wouldn't you?
Copy !req
125. - I've got another...
- I would say keep the change,
Copy !req
126. but there isn't any change.
Copy !req
127. Hello, June. Any news?
Copy !req
128. Look, I brought every single bag
I could find.
Copy !req
129. He gave a speech recently,
trying to come up with a broad base...
Copy !req
130. Hello, Ma.
Copy !req
131. Bloody taxi driver
wouldn't take my card.
Copy !req
132. I said don't have a sticker saying
you take Visa and then insist on cash.
Copy !req
133. Oh! Can you believe it?
Copy !req
134. Rummaging around the bottom of my bag.
He didn't get a tip.
Copy !req
135. I didn't know that you were
dropping by today, dear.
Copy !req
136. Yes, you said yesterday,
we were going to start on Dad's things.
Copy !req
137. The cupboards,
then I was going to help you dress.
Copy !req
138. - You've got Michael and...
- Jacqueline.
Copy !req
139. - Coming for dinner tonight.
- Yes, of course.
Copy !req
140. We're having halibut.
Copy !req
141. This is a major
catastrophe that has struck our capital.
Copy !req
142. - As you can see...
- Isn't it terrible?
Copy !req
143. They think it's al-Qaeda.
Copy !req
144. are trying to get
all the people out of the building.
Copy !req
145. The Prime Minister and his senior staff
were due to be staying at the hotel,
Copy !req
146. - but checked out earlier.
- Denis!
Copy !req
147. It'll be fine.
Come get your head down.
Copy !req
148. - It's ten to three, for God's sake.
- Denis!
Copy !req
149. At ten to three
this morning, an explosion
Copy !req
150. extensively damaged
the Grand Hotel in Brighton...
Copy !req
151. Brighton, scene
of the Conservative Party conference.
Copy !req
152. the Prime Minister and
a number of her Cabinet were staying.
Copy !req
153. They escaped unhurt,
but it's reported that...
Copy !req
154. Five people have died,
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155. many others are injured,
some critically.
Copy !req
156. The IRA have claimed
responsibility.
Copy !req
157. We must release a statement,
offering our condolences.
Copy !req
158. I'm sure they've already...
Copy !req
159. We must never, ever, ever
give in to terrorists.
Copy !req
160. Is it warm in here?
Copy !req
161. Now, Ma, are we going long
or just below the knee tonight?
Copy !req
162. Oh, below the knee,
I should think.
Copy !req
163. No! Don't... Don't move those.
Copy !req
164. I haven't finished sorting.
Copy !req
165. I hear you went out today.
Copy !req
166. You mustn't go out on your own,
Mummy. We've talked about that.
Copy !req
167. There was no milk.
Copy !req
168. Call Robert, he'll get it
for you if June's not up.
Copy !req
169. I am not for the knacker's yet.
Copy !req
170. - Now, take it easy, Margaret.
- No one's saying that.
Copy !req
171. If I can't go out to buy a pint of milk,
what is the world coming to?
Copy !req
172. Really, Carol.
Please don't fuss about it.
Copy !req
173. You've always been like this,
fuss, fuss, fuss.
Copy !req
174. You must find something better
to do with your time.
Copy !req
175. It's most unattractive in a woman.
Copy !req
176. When I was your age,
Copy !req
177. the last thing I wanted to do
was fuss around my mother.
Copy !req
178. Four down, nine letters.
Copy !req
179. Something B,
something T, something N...
Copy !req
180. Something, something, something.
Refusal to change course.
Copy !req
181. - Obstinate.
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182. - What?
- I knew you'd get it.
Copy !req
183. Ob... I'll wear the pearls.
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184. I'll wear the pearls.
Copy !req
185. There they are.
Copy !req
186. My little twins.
Copy !req
187. Thank you, dear.
Copy !req
188. It's nearly all familiar faces:
Copy !req
189. - William, Michael and his lovely wife.
- Jacqueline.
Copy !req
190. And then there's Peter,
James R, James T,
Copy !req
191. and that very nice man
we met last year.
Copy !req
192. - I remember.
- He's bringing his new lady friend,
Copy !req
193. just to mix things up a bit,
because we're rather short of women,
Copy !req
194. but I'm sure we'll manage.
Copy !req
195. I've always preferred
the company of men.
Copy !req
196. - Ma?
Copy !req
197. Ah, Miss Roberts. Hoping to be
chosen as our candidate for Parliament.
Copy !req
198. Well, I don't like coalitions,
I never have.
Copy !req
199. Start on the outside, work your way in.
Copy !req
200. Attlee has his sights set on
the steel industry, you mark my words.
Copy !req
201. [man 2] They'll be nationalizing
the bloody air next.
Copy !req
202. Yes, hold your breath, sir.
That's government property.
Copy !req
203. Dreadful.
Copy !req
204. Was your father a political man,
too, Miss Roberts?
Copy !req
205. Oh, yes, to his core.
Copy !req
206. And Mayor of Grantham.
Copy !req
207. - And a grocer as well.
- Yes.
Copy !req
208. And did you help... in the...
Copy !req
209. - Oh, yes. It was a family business.
- ... shop?
Copy !req
210. A very good starting point
for the political life, I'm sure.
Copy !req
211. That and a degree from Oxford.
Copy !req
212. No, don't. Whiskey, please.
Copy !req
213. What I do think is
that a man should be encouraged
Copy !req
214. to stand on his own two feet.
Copy !req
215. Yes, we help people.
Of course we help people.
Copy !req
216. But for those that can do,
they must just get up and do.
Copy !req
217. And if something's wrong,
they shouldn't just whine about it,
Copy !req
218. they should get in there and do
something about it, change things.
Copy !req
219. With all due respect, Miss Roberts,
what may have served in Grantham...
Copy !req
220. Can serve very well
for the people of Dartford, too.
Copy !req
221. - Really?
- I know much more than those
Copy !req
222. who have never lived
on a limited income.
Copy !req
223. Just like the man or woman
in the street,
Copy !req
224. when I am short one week,
I have to make economies the next.
Copy !req
225. Nothing like a slice
of fiscal responsibility.
Copy !req
226. A man might call it
fiscal responsibility,
Copy !req
227. a woman
might call it good housekeeping.
Copy !req
228. I'm not sure a home economics lesson
Copy !req
229. is quite what the Dartford
constituents need.
Copy !req
230. They see industry being nationalized,
Copy !req
231. the unions on the up,
the pound on the slide.
Copy !req
232. Whoever can sort that lot out,
he's my man.
Copy !req
233. - Or woman?
Copy !req
234. Ladies, shall we?
Copy !req
235. Miss Roberts, do join the ladies.
Copy !req
236. Well. That's told us!
Copy !req
237. So, Margaret, how would you have dealt
with this if you'd been Prime Minister?
Copy !req
238. Where?
Copy !req
239. The bombings, Mummy.
Copy !req
240. Today.
Copy !req
241. We were just talking about them.
Copy !req
242. No... yes.
Copy !req
243. We have always lived alongside evil.
Copy !req
244. But it has never been so patient,
Copy !req
245. so avid for carnage,
Copy !req
246. so eager to carry innocents
along with it into oblivion.
Copy !req
247. Hear, hear.
Copy !req
248. Western civilization
must root out this evil,
Copy !req
249. wherever it hides, or she risks defeat
Copy !req
250. at the hands of global terror
in a nuclear age. Unimaginable.
Copy !req
251. The Prime Minister made a very
good statement, I thought.
Copy !req
252. Yes. Clever man.
Quite a smoothie.
Copy !req
253. Miss Thatcher, it's been such
a pleasure to meet you.
Copy !req
254. - You don't mind if I sit down.
- No, no.
Copy !req
255. I heard you speak at the conference
in Brighton in 1984,
Copy !req
256. just after the IRA
bombed the Grand Hotel.
Copy !req
257. You were remarkable.
Copy !req
258. I hope you appreciate
what an inspiration you've been
Copy !req
259. to women like myself.
Copy !req
260. Well, it used to be
about trying to do something.
Copy !req
261. You see. Now, it's about
trying to be someone.
Copy !req
262. - Mm. Anyway, I... thank you.
Copy !req
263. - Good night, Lady Thatcher.
- Good night to you.
Copy !req
264. I am so pleased to see
your mother looking so well.
Copy !req
265. - Yes, doesn't she.
- She certainly does.
Copy !req
266. William, great to see you,
thank you so much for coming.
Copy !req
267. Thank you.
It was lovely, absolutely lovely.
Copy !req
268. - Can I call you a taxi?
- No, no...
Copy !req
269. OK, hold on to me, that's right.
Copy !req
270. Ah.
Copy !req
271. Better.
Copy !req
272. Do the clasp. I can't quite...
Copy !req
273. - OK.
Copy !req
274. Yes.
Copy !req
275. - Oh, you have an eyelash.
- Oh?
Copy !req
276. - Make a wish.
Copy !req
277. Oh, I spoke to Dr. Michael today.
Copy !req
278. He's very good. Very expensive.
Copy !req
279. I know you're not due
to see him for another month,
Copy !req
280. but I've spoken to him
and he can fit you in tomorrow.
Copy !req
281. Just for a checkup.
Copy !req
282. Ma, please.
Copy !req
283. What does Mark think about it?
Copy !req
284. - Mark?
- Mm.
Copy !req
285. Tell him to come up.
I want to talk to him about this.
Copy !req
286. Mark's with Sarah and the children.
Copy !req
287. Well, tell him to come up and see me
after he's kissed them good night,
Copy !req
288. would you, Carol, darling?
Copy !req
289. He's not here, Mummy.
Copy !req
290. Mark lives in South Africa.
Copy !req
291. And you're not Prime Minister anymore.
Copy !req
292. And Dad is, uh...
Copy !req
293. Dad is dead.
Copy !req
294. You look exhausted, dear.
Copy !req
295. You really must try
to get some sleep.
Copy !req
296. Taxis will be few and far
between at this hour.
Copy !req
297. Righty oh. Night-night, Ma.
Sleep well.
Copy !req
298. Good night, dear.
Copy !req
299. Twenty-four-year-old
Miss Margaret Roberts lost her bid
Copy !req
300. to win a seat in Parliament today,
but she has put new life
Copy !req
301. into the Dartford
Conservative Association.
Copy !req
302. Winning candidate, Mr. Dodds,
had better watch out.
Copy !req
303. This bright young woman is on his tail.
Copy !req
304. - Eat.
- Oh. Disaster.
Copy !req
305. Hang on. Hang on.
Copy !req
306. Hang on.
Copy !req
307. You shaved thousands off their
majority. You did splendidly.
Copy !req
308. Not splendidly enough.
Copy !req
309. Ah, I see. Self-pity.
Copy !req
310. No one's saying
you don't need a safe seat.
Copy !req
311. You deserve a safe seat.
Copy !req
312. But it does not come unless
you learn to play the game a little.
Copy !req
313. - What game?
- You're a grocer's daughter.
Copy !req
314. - And proud of being...
- And in their eyes...
Copy !req
315. a single grocer's daughter.
Copy !req
316. But if you were to become the wife
of a moderately successful businessman,
Copy !req
317. then you'd get to Parliament.
Copy !req
318. And I'd get to be the happiest man in...
Copy !req
319. wherever they select you.
Copy !req
320. Margaret, will you marry me?
Copy !req
321. Well?
Copy !req
322. Yes.
Copy !req
323. Yes!
Copy !req
324. - Oh...
- What?
Copy !req
325. I love you so much, but...
Copy !req
326. I will never be one
of those women, Denis,
Copy !req
327. who stays silent and pretty
on the arm of her husband.
Copy !req
328. Or remote and alone in the kitchen,
doing the washing-up, for that matter.
Copy !req
329. We'll get a help for that.
Copy !req
330. No. One's life must matter, Denis.
Copy !req
331. Beyond all the cooking
and the cleaning and the children,
Copy !req
332. one's life must mean more than that.
Copy !req
333. I cannot die washing up a tea cup.
Copy !req
334. I mean it, Denis.
Copy !req
335. Say you understand.
Copy !req
336. That's why I want to marry you, my dear.
Copy !req
337. Oh.
Copy !req
338. Now eat.
Copy !req
339. Oh!
Copy !req
340. Oh...
Copy !req
341. There we go.
Copy !req
342. There they are, my little twins.
Copy !req
343. Oh... Mark.
Copy !req
344. Cornwall, wasn't it?
Copy !req
345. Bloody hell.
Copy !req
346. Look at 'em, little imps.
Copy !req
347. You never really got golf,
did you?
Copy !req
348. You look happy.
Copy !req
349. Yes, I do, don't I?
Copy !req
350. You're drinking too much.
Copy !req
351. Whatcha doing?
Not like you, looking back.
Copy !req
352. Don't want to dig around too deep, M,
don't know what you might find.
Copy !req
353. You can rewind it,
but you can't change it.
Copy !req
354. They grow up
so fast, don't they?
Copy !req
355. Mark.
Copy !req
356. Oh...
Copy !req
357. Mr. Eric Deakins,
Copy !req
358. Labor, 13,437.
Copy !req
359. Mr. Ivan Spence, Liberal,
Copy !req
360. 12,260.
Copy !req
361. - We won!
Copy !req
362. Mrs. Margaret Thatcher,
Conservative,
Copy !req
363. 29,697.
Copy !req
364. I can now announce the new
Member of Parliament for Finchley,
Copy !req
365. - 1959...
- Come along, please!
Copy !req
366. Mrs. Margaret Thatcher.
Copy !req
367. Please!
Copy !req
368. Mummy, don't go!
Copy !req
369. You promised! Hey! Mummy!
Copy !req
370. Wait, Mummy!
Copy !req
371. Please don't go!
Copy !req
372. No.
Copy !req
373. - Oh!
Copy !req
374. Mrs. Thatcher.
Copy !req
375. Excuse me. Sorry.
Copy !req
376. Mrs. Thatcher, Airey Neave.
Copy !req
377. Welcome to the madhouse.
Follow me.
Copy !req
378. The Honorable Lady,
the Member of Parliament for Finchley!
Copy !req
379. Order! Order!
Copy !req
380. The Right Honorable Lady,
the Secretary of State for Education.
Copy !req
381. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Copy !req
382. The Right Honorable Gentleman
knows very well that we had no choice
Copy !req
383. - but to close the schools.
Copy !req
384. - Shame!
- Disgrace!
Copy !req
385. Because his union paymasters
Copy !req
386. have called a strike deliberately
to cripple our economy.
Copy !req
387. - Rubbish!
- Teachers cannot teach
Copy !req
388. when there is no heating,
no lighting in their classrooms.
Copy !req
389. And I ask the Right Honorable
Gentleman, whose fault is that?
Copy !req
390. Yours!
Copy !req
391. Methinks the Right Honorable
Lady doth screech too much.
Copy !req
392. And if she wants us
to take her seriously,
Copy !req
393. she must learn to calm down!
Copy !req
394. - Very good!
- If the Right Honorable Gentleman
Copy !req
395. could perhaps attend more closely
to what I am saying,
Copy !req
396. rather than how I am saying it,
Copy !req
397. he may receive a valuable
education in spite of himself!
Copy !req
398. Why has... Why has this
Conservative government failed?
Copy !req
399. - It hasn't failed.
Copy !req
400. Why has it forced
so many in the public sector
Copy !req
401. into taking strike action
to save their own jobs?
Copy !req
402. Minister, the breakdown
in essential public services,
Copy !req
403. in transport, in electricity,
in sanitation,
Copy !req
404. is not the fault of the trade unions.
Copy !req
405. It's entirely the fault
of the trade unions.
Copy !req
406. But of this Conservative government
Copy !req
407. in which you so shamefully serve!
Copy !req
408. These power cuts will continue
unless we can reach a compromise.
Copy !req
409. The miners are asking
for a 35 percent increase in wages.
Copy !req
410. Obviously, we can't
go anywhere near that.
Copy !req
411. The unions are not our enemies
and never have been.
Copy !req
412. We want, and have always wanted,
the broadest consensus.
Copy !req
413. - Hear, hear.
- I'm sure we are all in agreement
Copy !req
414. that we must do nothing for the moment
Copy !req
415. that will further inflame
the current situation.
Copy !req
416. - Hear, hear, Prime Minister.
- The fact of the matter is,
Copy !req
417. it's absolutely crucial
that we are seen by the public
Copy !req
418. to be acting as conciliators
and not aggressors.
Copy !req
419. Hear, hear.
Copy !req
420. - Yes, Education Secretary.
- Yes, Prime Minister.
Copy !req
421. With the miners' union leader today
Copy !req
422. calling for the army to mutiny
in support of the strikes,
Copy !req
423. this seems the wrong time
for conciliation.
Copy !req
424. - Be patient.
Copy !req
425. They'll come back on
again in a moment.
Copy !req
426. - Anybody got a shilling?
- Ah, Boy Scout.
Copy !req
427. Be prepared.
Copy !req
428. Thank you, Margaret.
Copy !req
429. Oh! It lives.
Copy !req
430. Your thoughts are duly noted.
Copy !req
431. Compromise,
compromise, compromise...
Copy !req
432. We on this island are strong.
Copy !req
433. We're self-reliant.
Copy !req
434. Napoleon called us a nation
of shopkeepers.
Copy !req
435. He meant it as an insult,
but to me it's a compliment.
Copy !req
436. That's why he couldn't beat us,
that's why Hitler can't beat us.
Copy !req
437. We Conservatives believe
in giving people the freedom
Copy !req
438. and opportunity to fulfill their own
potential, especially the young.
Copy !req
439. There's no good in pretending we're
all equal, we're not all the same,
Copy !req
440. never have been, never will be.
Copy !req
441. We should encourage our children
to aspire to achieve more than we have,
Copy !req
442. for our children today
will be the leaders of tomorrow.
Copy !req
443. It's 1974,
you'd think it was World War II.
Copy !req
444. Blackouts, no petrol. It's a mess.
Copy !req
445. Heath should resign now and make way
Copy !req
446. for someone who's not afraid
to tackle the unions.
Copy !req
447. I swear, it's all gone
completely out of my head.
Copy !req
448. My driving instructor says
I should pass, but I feel
Copy !req
449. as if I've hardly had any lessons.
Which is ridiculous, isn't it?
Copy !req
450. - Maybe third time lucky.
- Right.
Copy !req
451. The only thing you should
remember is that everyone else
Copy !req
452. is either reckless or inept.
Usually both.
Copy !req
453. One must be brave if one
is to take the wheel.
Copy !req
454. - Right oh.
- Right, move.
Copy !req
455. Move to your right a little bit.
Copy !req
456. But if I move to the right, aren't
I on the wrong side of the road?
Copy !req
457. - Carol!
- Well, he's in the way!
Copy !req
458. - To the right. Move to the right!
Copy !req
459. - Hey! Look out!
Copy !req
460. So sorry! Terribly sorry!
Copy !req
461. Hey, look at me, driving!
Copy !req
462. Thanks, Ma, that was terrific!
Copy !req
463. I really feel like I've got
a handle on it now.
Copy !req
464. You should have seen us, Pa.
Copy !req
465. Are you trying to cook
your own breakfast?
Copy !req
466. - Denis!
- I can boil a bloody egg.
Copy !req
467. Mummy took me for a test drive.
Copy !req
468. We went absolutely everywhere.
All over the place.
Copy !req
469. - Yeah?
- I've decided. I'm going to run.
Copy !req
470. What for?
Copy !req
471. I'm going to run
for Leader of the Party.
Copy !req
472. - Silly me!
- Good luck!
Copy !req
473. All the time I thought
I was having a driving lesson,
Copy !req
474. it was all about my mother,
just for a change!
Copy !req
475. - What's she on about?
- Her driving test this morning!
Copy !req
476. - Oh, right. Of course.
- Are you saying you want
Copy !req
477. to be Prime Minister?
Copy !req
478. Oh! What I'm saying is that
someone must force the point,
Copy !req
479. someone must say the un-sayable.
Copy !req
480. None of these men have the guts.
Copy !req
481. - The Prime Minister has been
Copy !req
482. very loyal to you, MT.
Copy !req
483. But he's weak,
and he's weakened the party.
Copy !req
484. One must know when to go.
Copy !req
485. You're shaking. Here, let me...
Copy !req
486. I can do it!
Copy !req
487. Goodness me!
Copy !req
488. What is the matter
with everyone this morning?
Copy !req
489. I've told you what the matter is.
Copy !req
490. The business is a bit rocky
at the moment
Copy !req
491. and the doctor says I need a rest.
Copy !req
492. Do you need a rest?
Copy !req
493. Oh, God.
Copy !req
494. We both know it's highly unlikely
Copy !req
495. that I would ever be elected leader.
Copy !req
496. I'll never be elected leader.
But I will run. I will run.
Copy !req
497. Just to nip at their heels and make them
reaffirm the principles on which
Copy !req
498. - the Conservative Party must stand.
Copy !req
499. There's so much to do.
Copy !req
500. You're insufferable,
Margaret, do you know that?
Copy !req
501. Denis, you married someone
Copy !req
502. who is committed to public service,
you knew that.
Copy !req
503. - And it is my duty...
- Don't call it duty.
Copy !req
504. It's ambition that's gotten
you this far. Ambition.
Copy !req
505. And the rest of us, me, the children,
we can all go to hell!
Copy !req
506. Don't worry about me, I'll be fine!
Copy !req
507. Where did you go?
Copy !req
508. - South Africa.
- Yes.
Copy !req
509. How many days passed
before you realized I'd gone?
Copy !req
510. Probably had to ask
the cleaning woman where I was.
Copy !req
511. When did I lose track of everyone?
Copy !req
512. - Too busy climbing the greasy pole, MT.
- How did I...?
Copy !req
513. Mrs. Thatcher,
I understand you recently visited
Copy !req
514. - the United States of America.
- Oh, oh...
Copy !req
515. What is it you took away
from your visit which may be of value,
Copy !req
516. - here in Great Britain?
- That's rather easy to answer.
Copy !req
517. They are unafraid of success.
Copy !req
518. We in Great Britain and in Europe
Copy !req
519. are formed mostly by our history.
Copy !req
520. They, on the other hand,
are formed by their philosophy.
Copy !req
521. Not by what has been,
but by what can be.
Copy !req
522. Oh, we have a great deal that
we can learn from them, yes.
Copy !req
523. Oh, yes!
Copy !req
524. Well...
Copy !req
525. Uh...
Copy !req
526. For a start, that hat has got to go.
Copy !req
527. And the pearls.
Copy !req
528. In fact,
I think all hats may have to go.
Copy !req
529. You look and sound like
a privileged Conservative wife,
Copy !req
530. and we've already got her vote.
Copy !req
531. You've got lovely hair,
but we need to do something
Copy !req
532. with it, to make it more...
Copy !req
533. - Important.
- Yes. Give it more impact.
Copy !req
534. But the main thing is your voice.
Copy !req
535. It's too high,
and it has no authority.
Copy !req
536. Methinks the lady
doth screech too much.
Copy !req
537. People don't want to be harangued
by a woman or hectored.
Copy !req
538. Persuaded, yes. That "Oh, yes,"
at the end of the interview,
Copy !req
539. that's authoritative,
that's the voice of a leader.
Copy !req
540. Quite.
Copy !req
541. It's all very well to talk
about changing my voice, Mr. Reece,
Copy !req
542. but for some of my colleagues to imagine
me as their leader...
Copy !req
543. would be like imagining,
I don't know,
Copy !req
544. being led into battle
by their chambermaid.
Copy !req
545. It's my background and my sex.
Copy !req
546. No matter how I've tried,
and I have tried, to fit in,
Copy !req
547. I know I will never be
truly one of them.
Copy !req
548. If I may say so, I think
that's your trump card.
Copy !req
549. You're flying in the face of everything
the Tories have been thus far.
Copy !req
550. It's really terribly exciting.
Copy !req
551. One simply has
to maximize your appeal,
Copy !req
552. bring out all your qualities,
Copy !req
553. and make you look, and sound,
like the leader that you could be.
Copy !req
554. You've got it in you
to go the whole distance.
Copy !req
555. Absolutely.
Copy !req
556. What... Prime Minister?
Copy !req
557. Oh, no. Oh, no, no, no.
Copy !req
558. In Britain?
Copy !req
559. There will be no
female Prime Minister here,
Copy !req
560. not in my lifetime. No.
Copy !req
561. And I told Airey, I don't
expect to win the leadership,
Copy !req
562. but I am going to run,
just to shake up the party.
Copy !req
563. Respectfully, Margaret, I disagree.
Copy !req
564. If you want to change this party,
lead it.
Copy !req
565. If you want to change
the country, lead it.
Copy !req
566. What we're talking
about here today is surface.
Copy !req
567. What's crucial is
that you hold your course,
Copy !req
568. and stay true to who you are.
Copy !req
569. Never be anything
other than yourself.
Copy !req
570. Leave us to do the rest.
Copy !req
571. Gentlemen, I am in your hands.
Copy !req
572. I may be persuaded
to surrender the hat.
Copy !req
573. But the pearls were a gift from my
husband on the birth of our twins,
Copy !req
574. and, um,
Copy !req
575. they are absolutely non-negotiable.
Copy !req
576. And...
Copy !req
577. Good, I think we can lose
the handbag, Mrs. Thatcher. Yes?
Copy !req
578. And hands down by side.
Copy !req
579. - Right up.
Copy !req
580. Because this isn't about the voice,
it's about belief.
Copy !req
581. The very core. So a nice deep breath
and really fill out against my hands.
Copy !req
582. You're calling Mr. Thatcher,
how would you do that?
Copy !req
583. - Denis.
- Yes, I want authority.
Copy !req
584. - I want conviction, I want...
- Denis.
Copy !req
585. That's right, one more time,
and breathing in. And...
Copy !req
586. Denis.
Copy !req
587. - Yes, M!
- Sorry. No, no, no.
Copy !req
588. You are the backbone
of our nation!
Copy !req
589. Small firms like
Loveday's Ice Cream.
Copy !req
590. - So nice to meet you, ladies.
- Nice to meet you.
Copy !req
591. I'll just have a small one,
because I'm watching my figure.
Copy !req
592. Whoo! That's for you, young man!
Copy !req
593. I passionately
believe that it's the growth
Copy !req
594. of small businesses
into larger ones
Copy !req
595. that is critical for Britain's future.
Copy !req
596. Well, it has to be something icy
on a stick for Denis.
Copy !req
597. That's the only way
that we will produce jobs,
Copy !req
598. real jobs, jobs that sustain.
Copy !req
599. The Trade Union Movement
was founded to protect workers.
Copy !req
600. Now it persecutes them.
It stops them from working.
Copy !req
601. It is killing jobs and it is bringing
this country to its knees.
Copy !req
602. I say enough.
It's time to get up.
Copy !req
603. It's time to go to work.
Copy !req
604. It's time to put the "Great"
back into Great Britain!
Copy !req
605. The incompetence
of the Labor government...
Copy !req
606. - ... continue to misinform
Copy !req
607. and spend in this incessant
and blasé manner.
Copy !req
608. - We have paid the price...
- Mrs. Thatcher, they're ready for you.
Copy !req
609. - Thank you.
- Give 'em hell.
Copy !req
610. - You look magnificent.
Copy !req
611. Next stop, Prime Minister.
Copy !req
612. - Oh, Airey...
- Let's go.
Copy !req
613. The new leader
of the Conservative Party,
Copy !req
614. - Margaret Thatcher!
Copy !req
615. Hm...
Copy !req
616. - Good night, Margaret.
- Oh...
Copy !req
617. My money's on the filly to win.
Copy !req
618. Oh...
Thanks, Airey. Good night.
Copy !req
619. No!
Copy !req
620. No, no! No! Airey!
Copy !req
621. Airey!
Copy !req
622. The Irish National
Liberation Army has claimed
Copy !req
623. responsibility
for the death of MP Airey Neave,
Copy !req
624. Margaret Thatcher's spokesman
on Northern Ireland.
Copy !req
625. If you want
to change the party, lead it.
Copy !req
626. If you want to change
the country, lead it.
Copy !req
627. You've got it in you
to go the whole distance.
Copy !req
628. - Now, as the test draws near,
Copy !req
629. - I ask your help.
Copy !req
630. That together we can shake off
the shackles of Socialism
Copy !req
631. and restore to greatness this
country that we love...
Copy !req
632. And the only way is
for the Conservative Party to win!
Copy !req
633. Is she gonna get there?
Watch those blocks rise...
Copy !req
634. Go, Maggie!
Copy !req
635. It's Friday the 4th
of May, an historic day for Britain,
Copy !req
636. a Conservative government
led by Mrs. Thatcher is set to lead...
Copy !req
637. Mrs. Bandaranaike
in Sri Lanka, Mrs. Gandhi in India,
Copy !req
638. but never in the West has there
ever been a woman Prime Minister.
Copy !req
639. The place that she has
now secured in British history,
Copy !req
640. as the first woman ever to be
invited to form a government.
Copy !req
641. The bonus of one of the most
famous addresses in the world,
Copy !req
642. Number 10 Downing Street.
Copy !req
643. This is it.
Steady the buffs, old girl.
Copy !req
644. - Good afternoon.
- Congratulations, Prime Minister.
Copy !req
645. - I should just like to say
Copy !req
646. that I take very seriously
the trust placed in me
Copy !req
647. by the British people today,
and I will work hard every day
Copy !req
648. to live up to that responsibility.
Copy !req
649. And now, I should like to share with you
Copy !req
650. a prayer of St. Francis of Assisi.
Copy !req
651. Where there is discord,
may we bring harmony.
Copy !req
652. Where there is error,
may we bring truth.
Copy !req
653. Where there is doubt,
may we bring faith.
Copy !req
654. And where there is despair,
may we bring hope.
Copy !req
655. - Shoulders back, tummies in!
Copy !req
656. - Thank you, Michael.
Copy !req
657. - Look this way, please.
Copy !req
658. Three, two, one.
Copy !req
659. Robert, could you bring the car
around? She's been ready for ages.
Copy !req
660. I am perfectly healthy.
Copy !req
661. No need for any of this.
Copy !req
662. Just let them look
under the bonnet, MT.
Copy !req
663. Make sure everything is hunky dory.
Copy !req
664. Oh, really, this is
becoming quite tiresome.
Copy !req
665. - What is?
- You.
Copy !req
666. I was on my own
for 24 years before I met you,
Copy !req
667. and I can manage perfectly well
without you now.
Copy !req
668. So will you please go away,
Copy !req
669. and stop bothering me?
Copy !req
670. Just look straight ahead,
straight at me, that's it.
Copy !req
671. - Are you noticing night sweats?
- No.
Copy !req
672. - Hallucinations?
- No.
Copy !req
673. - Sleep?
- Yes. I sleep.
Copy !req
674. Four, five hours a night.
Copy !req
675. So you wake early?
Copy !req
676. And I stay up late. I always have.
Copy !req
677. We just want to keep
abreast of it, that's all.
Copy !req
678. Yes. Of course.
Copy !req
679. Grief is a very natural state.
Copy !req
680. My husband has
been gone for years.
Copy !req
681. Cancer.
Copy !req
682. Carol says you've decided to let his
things go. Probably a good thing.
Copy !req
683. Yes. It was my idea. To Oxfam.
Copy !req
684. Perfectly good stuff.
People can use these things.
Copy !req
685. Hm...
Copy !req
686. Still, it must be a bit disorientating.
Copy !req
687. - You are bound to be feeling...
- What?
Copy !req
688. What am I "bound to be feeling"?
Copy !req
689. People don't think anymore.
They feel.
Copy !req
690. "How are you feeling?"
"Oh, I don't feel comfortable."
Copy !req
691. "Oh, I'm so sorry,
we, the group, we're feeling..."
Copy !req
692. Do you know,
one of the great problems of our age
Copy !req
693. is that we are governed by people
who care more about feelings
Copy !req
694. than they do about thoughts and ideas?
Copy !req
695. Now, thoughts and ideas,
that interests me.
Copy !req
696. Ask me what I am thinking.
Copy !req
697. What are you thinking, Margaret?
Copy !req
698. Watch your thoughts,
for they become words.
Copy !req
699. Watch your words,
for they become actions.
Copy !req
700. Watch your actions,
for they become habits.
Copy !req
701. Watch your habits,
for they become your character.
Copy !req
702. And watch your character,
for it becomes your destiny.
Copy !req
703. What we think, we become.
Copy !req
704. My father always said that.
Copy !req
705. And I think I am fine.
Copy !req
706. But I do so appreciate
your kind concern.
Copy !req
707. Oh, do please answer that.
Copy !req
708. It might be someone
who needs you.
Copy !req
709. I'll give Carol a quick ring,
let her know we're back,
Copy !req
710. and then I'll put your
electric blanket on.
Copy !req
711. Steady, steady, steady!
Copy !req
712. Damn. Fore!
Copy !req
713. What about that medicine man, eh?
Copy !req
714. Ah. Cold supper.
Copy !req
715. Standards are slipping, Margaret.
Copy !req
716. You really gave it to that
quack, didn't you, darling?
Copy !req
717. Just like the old days.
Hallucinations, my eye!
Copy !req
718. How dare he? But then, you give us
all the runaround, don't you?
Copy !req
719. I know you can hear me, sweetheart,
so there's no use pretending you can't.
Copy !req
720. Enough. Denis, enough!
Copy !req
721. Dismissed!
Copy !req
722. She does it in the end. Kills him.
Copy !req
723. I don't know why you're
being so scratchy.
Copy !req
724. It's not as if you've
got anyone else to talk to.
Copy !req
725. "When the Himalayan peasant
meets the he-bear in his pride..."
Copy !req
726. It's a marvel to me that you can still
quote whole chunks of Kipling,
Copy !req
727. but try remembering the name
of that woman who just made you
Copy !req
728. that god-awful cold collation.
Copy !req
729. No? Come on, you can do it.
Copy !req
730. Month of the year.
Copy !req
731. One syllable.
Copy !req
732. Rhymes with moon.
Copy !req
733. - June.
- June! Bingo!
Copy !req
734. Knew you'd get there in the end.
Copy !req
735. "When the Himalayan peasant
meets the he-bear in his pride,
Copy !req
736. he shouts to scare the monster,
who will often turn aside."
Copy !req
737. - "But the she-bear, thus accosted,
Copy !req
738. rends the peasant tooth and nail,
Copy !req
739. for the female of the species
is more deadly than the male."
Copy !req
740. - "When Nag, the basking cobra,
Copy !req
741. hears the careless foot of man..."
Copy !req
742. If I can't hear you, I can't see you.
Copy !req
743. If I can't see you, you're not here.
Copy !req
744. And if you're not here,
I'm not going mad.
Copy !req
745. I will not go mad.
Copy !req
746. I won't go mad...
I will not go mad...
Copy !req
747. I will not go mad. I will not.
Copy !req
748. Baroness Thatcher made
an apparently routine visit
Copy !req
749. to her doctors today.
Copy !req
750. Although rarely seen in public,
Copy !req
751. Britain's longest-serving
Prime Minister of the twentieth century,
Copy !req
752. remains a controversial figure.
Copy !req
753. Almost lovingly dubbed
by the Soviets "The Iron Lady,"
Copy !req
754. she is credited,
with her friend Ronald Reagan,
Copy !req
755. with a decisive role
in the ending of the Cold War.
Copy !req
756. - Margaret...
- Her supporters claim she transformed
Copy !req
757. the British economy and reversed
the country's post-war decline.
Copy !req
758. - I am so sorry.
- Her detractors blame
Copy !req
759. her savage public spending cuts
and sweeping privatization of...
Copy !req
760. - I... don't recognize myself.
Copy !req
761. Hm...
Copy !req
762. Am I out of the doghouse yet?
Copy !req
763. Oh. They're unveiling
that portrait of me
Copy !req
764. at Number 10 next month.
Copy !req
765. Mm.
Copy !req
766. Yes, it's... the invitation,
it's on the mantelpiece.
Copy !req
767. So it'll be Churchill,
Copy !req
768. Lloyd George and me.
Copy !req
769. - Just the three of us.
Copy !req
770. I said I didn't want any big fuss...
Copy !req
771. - No.
- ... but they insisted.
Copy !req
772. Lovely little article in The Telegraph.
Copy !req
773. "The Woman Who Changed
the Face of History."
Copy !req
774. Huh...
Copy !req
775. Less than two years ago,
Copy !req
776. the Prime Minister quoted St. Francis...
Copy !req
777. Yes, and talked about bringing faith,
Copy !req
778. - hope, and harmony to this country.
Copy !req
779. Mm... Denis?
Copy !req
780. Can the Right Honorable Lady deny
Copy !req
781. that having brought about the highest
level of unemployment since 1934...
Copy !req
782. - ... the biggest fall in total output
Copy !req
783. in steel and coal production
in one year since 1931 ...
Copy !req
784. and the biggest collapse
in industrial production since 1921?
Copy !req
785. - Order! Order!
Copy !req
786. Can she also accept
that her free-market economics,
Copy !req
787. designed to create
a growing middle class,
Copy !req
788. ensures that the rich get richer
and the poor are irrelevant?
Copy !req
789. Out! Out! Out!
Maggie! Maggie! Maggie!
Copy !req
790. - Out! Out! Out!
- Look at me!
Copy !req
791. Look at me!
You're supposed to be a mother!
Copy !req
792. You're not a mother,
you're a monster!
Copy !req
793. You're a monster!
Copy !req
794. May we have a word,
Prime Minister?
Copy !req
795. Yes, but in order
to arrive at the palace on time,
Copy !req
796. Geoffrey and I are will be walking out
of that door in 15 minutes.
Copy !req
797. - As you can see...
- I know you're running late, Margaret,
Copy !req
798. but we have to address
this situation
Copy !req
799. in the light of tomorrow's
blistering press coverage.
Copy !req
800. Blistering! The knives are out.
Copy !req
801. Your draft budget has
been leaked, Geoffrey.
Copy !req
802. They are baying for our blood.
Copy !req
803. Michael, we can't possibly buckle
at the first sign of difficulty.
Copy !req
804. - No one is saying we have to buckle.
- But is this really the time
Copy !req
805. to be making these spending cuts
Copy !req
806. in the middle of one
of the deepest recessions
Copy !req
807. this country has ever experienced?
Copy !req
808. - We need a plan of action, Margaret.
- Absolutely. A strategy.
Copy !req
809. - We must be armed.
- Agreed.
Copy !req
810. There's a perception, Margaret,
rightly or wrongly,
Copy !req
811. that we are now completely
out of touch with the country.
Copy !req
812. Really.
How much is a pack of Lurpak?
Copy !req
813. - Lurpak?
- Butter, Francis.
Copy !req
814. Forty-two pence.
Anchor butter is 40 pence.
Copy !req
815. Flora margarine,
still the cheapest, at 38p.
Copy !req
816. I can assure you
I am not out of touch.
Copy !req
817. - Sorry. I didn't hear you.
Copy !req
818. - What did you say?
- Nothing, Prime Minister. Nothing.
Copy !req
819. No, no, please.
Don't try to hide you opinions.
Copy !req
820. Goodness me, I'd much rather you were
open and straightforward about them,
Copy !req
821. instead of continuously and damagingly
leaking them to the press.
Copy !req
822. Well?
Copy !req
823. - Well...
- People can't pay their mortgages.
Copy !req
824. The manufacturing industry
is practically on its knees.
Copy !req
825. Honest, hard-working, decent
people are losing their homes.
Copy !req
826. - It's terribly shameful.
- The point is, Prime Minister,
Copy !req
827. we must moderate the pace...
Copy !req
828. If we even have a hope
of winning the next election.
Copy !req
829. Ah. Worried about our careers, are we?
Copy !req
830. - Really.
- That's quite absurd.
Copy !req
831. Gentlemen, if we don't cut
spending, we will be bankrupt.
Copy !req
832. Yes, the medicine is harsh,
Copy !req
833. but the patient requires it
in order to live.
Copy !req
834. Should we withhold the medicine?
Copy !req
835. No. We are not wrong.
Copy !req
836. We did not seek election
and win in order to manage
Copy !req
837. the decline of a great nation.
Copy !req
838. The people of this country
chose us because they believe
Copy !req
839. we can restore the health
of the British economy,
Copy !req
840. and we will do just that.
Copy !req
841. Barring a failure of nerve.
Copy !req
842. Anything else?
Copy !req
843. - Prime Minister.
- Prime Minister.
Copy !req
844. You have saved the day once again,
Crawfie. You're an angel.
Copy !req
845. You can't just
close down a conversation
Copy !req
846. because it's not
what you wish to hear.
Copy !req
847. Oh, Geoffrey, I don't expect everyone
to just sit there and agree with me.
Copy !req
848. But what kind of leader am I
if I don't try to get my own way,
Copy !req
849. do what I know to be right?
Copy !req
850. Yes. But, Margaret...
Copy !req
851. one must be careful not to test
one's colleagues' loyalties too far.
Copy !req
852. We are now one split nation,
Copy !req
853. with a huge gulf dividing
the employed from the unemployed.
Copy !req
854. The Thatcher plan is
to break the Trade Union Movement.
Copy !req
855. There must be closures
of uneconomic coal mines.
Copy !req
856. We seek only an efficient industry.
Copy !req
857. The miners are being starved
back to work, the need is desperate!
Copy !req
858. There are those
who would say hold back,
Copy !req
859. there are those
who would make us retreat,
Copy !req
860. but we shall never give in to them.
Copy !req
861. We shall never waver, not for a second,
Copy !req
862. in our determination to see
this country prosper once again.
Copy !req
863. A car bomb has exploded
outside Harrods department store,
Copy !req
864. killing six people and injuring 71.
Copy !req
865. Eleven soldiers died
today when two bombs were detonated
Copy !req
866. during military parades
in Hyde Park and Regent's Park.
Copy !req
867. Seven horses also died in the blast.
Copy !req
868. The IRA have claimed responsibility.
Copy !req
869. And now,
it must be business as usual.
Copy !req
870. Come on, love, come to bed.
Copy !req
871. I don't know why you do this
to yourself every year.
Copy !req
872. It's a speech at conference,
not the Magna Carta.
Copy !req
873. Time to call it a day, darling.
Copy !req
874. It's ten to three, for God's sake.
Copy !req
875. Oh, I know, I'm coming, DT.
Copy !req
876. - Come on...
- Nearly there.
Copy !req
877. Denis!
Copy !req
878. Denis!
Copy !req
879. Oh, there you are.
Are you all right?
Copy !req
880. My shoes!
Copy !req
881. That's
when I thought I'd lost you.
Copy !req
882. Mark?
Copy !req
883. Hello, darling.
Copy !req
884. Oh... No. No, I'm fine.
Copy !req
885. I... I'm very well.
Copy !req
886. How... How is, uh...
Copy !req
887. Sarah?
Copy !req
888. Yes, and the children?
Copy !req
889. Oh.
Copy !req
890. Oh, you can't.
Copy !req
891. That's a pity.
Copy !req
892. Well, I was hoping to see you.
Copy !req
893. Yes. Oh, no, that's fine.
Copy !req
894. Really, darling. That's fine.
Copy !req
895. Of course. Another time.
Copy !req
896. Yes, darling.
Copy !req
897. Yes. I can't wait. Lovely.
Copy !req
898. Yes.
Copy !req
899. Mark?
Copy !req
900. Mm...
Copy !req
901. Oh. Oh, dear.
Copy !req
902. That was Mark.
Copy !req
903. Not able to come.
Copy !req
904. That boy's always going AWOL.
Copy !req
905. Well, it costs him a great deal
to fly everyone up here.
Copy !req
906. There you go, making excuses for him.
Now look where it's got you.
Copy !req
907. Did you know that Yul Brynner
was a gypsy from Vladivostok?
Copy !req
908. Yes. Yes, he moved
to Paris when he was 14.
Copy !req
909. And he played the King of Siam
Copy !req
910. 4,625 times
Copy !req
911. on the London and Broadway stages.
Copy !req
912. - What are you doing?
- One likes to make an effort.
Copy !req
913. - A snifter?
- You're dead, Denis.
Copy !req
914. - Well, if I'm dead, who you talking to?
Copy !req
915. - Shall we dance?
- Oh.
Copy !req
916. Oh!
Copy !req
917. - The Falkland Islands,
Copy !req
918. the British colony
in the South Atlantic, has fallen.
Copy !req
919. Argentina claims its marines
went ashore
Copy !req
920. as a spearhead this morning
to capture key targets,
Copy !req
921. including the capital, Port Stanley.
Copy !req
922. Gentlemen, the Argentinean junta,
which is a fascist gang,
Copy !req
923. has invaded our sovereign territory.
This cannot be tolerated.
Copy !req
924. May I make plain
my negotiating position:
Copy !req
925. I will not negotiate
with criminals or thugs.
Copy !req
926. The Falkland Islands
belong to Britain,
Copy !req
927. and I want them back.
Copy !req
928. Gentlemen, I need you to tell me today
if that is possible.
Copy !req
929. Possible... just, Prime Minister.
Copy !req
930. We can have a task force ready
to sail in 48 hours.
Copy !req
931. - Forty-eight hours. But?
- But...
Copy !req
932. We have a very narrow weather window.
Copy !req
933. We can't fight in winter down there,
nobody can.
Copy !req
934. If we are going, we have to go now.
Copy !req
935. Why were the islands left
without any naval protection?
Copy !req
936. In the last round of defense cuts,
Copy !req
937. we judged the risk of invasion
to be small.
Copy !req
938. - Did we?
- And if you remember, Prime Minister,
Copy !req
939. you agreed that we should reduce
the naval presence in the area
Copy !req
940. to an absolute minimum.
Copy !req
941. Margaret, the cost of sending 28,000 men
and a hundred ships 12,000 miles,
Copy !req
942. almost to Argentina,
will be absolutely crippling.
Copy !req
943. I don't think we should be worrying
about money at this point, Geoffrey.
Copy !req
944. We can't afford to go to war.
Copy !req
945. We have to go now.
Copy !req
946. Now.
Copy !req
947. The government
has now decided
Copy !req
948. that a large task force will sail,
Copy !req
949. as soon as all preparations
are complete.
Copy !req
950. - Prime Minister,
Copy !req
951. we do still have three weeks
before our ships reach the islands.
Copy !req
952. [man 2] All we're saying is
that we shouldn't give up
Copy !req
953. on trying to find a diplomatic solution.
Copy !req
954. The US Secretary of State
has arrived, Prime Minister.
Copy !req
955. So you are proposing
to go to war over these islands.
Copy !req
956. They are thousands of miles away,
a handful of citizens,
Copy !req
957. politically and economically
insignificant, if you'll excuse me.
Copy !req
958. Just like Hawaii... I imagine.
Copy !req
959. - I'm sorry?
- 1941,
Copy !req
960. when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor.
Copy !req
961. Did America go, cap in hand,
Copy !req
962. and ask Tojo for a peaceful
negotiation of terms?
Copy !req
963. Did she turn her back
on her own citizens there
Copy !req
964. because the islands were thousands
of miles away
Copy !req
965. from the mainland United States?
Copy !req
966. No! No! No!
Copy !req
967. We will stand on principle,
or we will not stand at all.
Copy !req
968. But, Margaret, with all due respect,
when one has been to war...
Copy !req
969. With all due respect, sir,
Copy !req
970. I have done battle
every single day of my life,
Copy !req
971. and many men have
underestimated me before.
Copy !req
972. This lot seem bound to do the same,
Copy !req
973. but they will rue the day.
Copy !req
974. Now, shall I be mother?
Copy !req
975. Tea, Al, how do you take your tea?
Black or white?
Copy !req
976. The Argentinean ship
the General Belgrano and her escorts
Copy !req
977. are pursuing course 273 degrees
towards the Argentinean mainland.
Copy !req
978. We are tracking them
with our submarine HMS Conqueror.
Copy !req
979. Is this ship a threat?
Copy !req
980. Both of these ships are carrying
Exocet missiles, Prime Minister.
Copy !req
981. Just yesterday,
they launched, then aborted,
Copy !req
982. an attack inside the exclusion zone.
Copy !req
983. There is a risk they could try it again.
Copy !req
984. The Belgrano is sailing
directly away from the islands.
Copy !req
985. Can it really be regarded
as a threat?
Copy !req
986. She's been changing course continually.
Copy !req
987. There's a strong possibility
that they'll attempt a pincer movement
Copy !req
988. on our carrier group.
Copy !req
989. I advise that we engage them.
Copy !req
990. Hit the Belgrano as a warning to the
others, send them all back to port.
Copy !req
991. It'll play badly internationally.
We'll be seen as aggressors.
Copy !req
992. This will be an escalation,
Prime Minister.
Copy !req
993. If there is to be an escalation,
it's better that we start it.
Copy !req
994. It is steaming away, Prime Minister.
Copy !req
995. Sink it.
Copy !req
996. HMS Sheffield,
a Type 42 destroyer,
Copy !req
997. was attacked and hit late this afternoon
by an Argentine missile.
Copy !req
998. It is seen as retaliation
for the sinking of the General Belgrano,
Copy !req
999. in which over 300
Argentinean sailors died.
Copy !req
1000. Prime Minister. The latest casualty
figures from the Sheffield.
Copy !req
1001. - I must write to them.
Copy !req
1002. Prime Minister?
Copy !req
1003. The families.
Copy !req
1004. I must write to them.
Copy !req
1005. A Type 21 frigate, HMS Ardent,
Copy !req
1006. was hit by bombs and rockets.
Copy !req
1007. Antelope went the way
of the other two British ships
Copy !req
1008. - lost so far...
- Foreign Secretary.
Copy !req
1009. I've just been briefed by Admiral
Fieldhouse. He told me, bluntly,
Copy !req
1010. that if the Argentineans are prepared
and willing to risk their aircraft,
Copy !req
1011. they have enough Exocet missiles
to cripple most of our fleet.
Copy !req
1012. President Reagan and President Belaunde
of Peru have some new proposals...
Copy !req
1013. new proposals for the peace plan.
Copy !req
1014. Peace plan?
There will be no appeasement.
Copy !req
1015. This is a war.
It's a war they started,
Copy !req
1016. but by God, we will finish it.
Copy !req
1017. Shall I tell you
what I'm going to write
Copy !req
1018. to every single one of these families,
these heartbroken families?
Copy !req
1019. I'm going to tell them
Copy !req
1020. that no British soldier will die
in vain... for the Falklands.
Copy !req
1021. Lieutenant Colonel Jones.
Captain Wood. Captain Dench.
Copy !req
1022. As the only Prime Minister
in the history of our country
Copy !req
1023. who is also a mother
with a son of my own,
Copy !req
1024. I can imagine your agony,
and your grief.
Copy !req
1025. Prime Minister,
we have secured the beachhead.
Copy !req
1026. The Argentinean troops are
demoralized and ill-equipped.
Copy !req
1027. The paratroops have taken Goose Green.
Copy !req
1028. Shortly after dark last night,
Copy !req
1029. our forces surrounding Port Stanley
carried out what the Commander in Chief
Copy !req
1030. has described
as a brilliant surprise night attack.
Copy !req
1031. Thatcher, bed.
Copy !req
1032. From their new
positions, our forces can see
Copy !req
1033. large numbers
of Argentine soldiers retreating
Copy !req
1034. and streaming back into Port Stanley.
Copy !req
1035. Our forces are moving forward
to exploit their success.
Copy !req
1036. - Well done, Margaret.
- Congratulations.
Copy !req
1037. We congratulate
the men and women
Copy !req
1038. of our armed forces
for their skill, bravery,
Copy !req
1039. and loyalty to this country.
Copy !req
1040. We were faced with an act
of unprovoked aggression,
Copy !req
1041. and we responded
as we have responded in times past:
Copy !req
1042. with unity, strength, and courage...
Copy !req
1043. - ... sure in the knowledge
Copy !req
1044. that though much is sacrificed,
Copy !req
1045. in the end,
right will prevail over wrong.
Copy !req
1046. Hear, hear!
Copy !req
1047. And I put it to the Right
Honorable Gentleman opposite
Copy !req
1048. that this is not a day for him to carp,
Copy !req
1049. find fault, demand inquiries.
Copy !req
1050. They will happen,
I can assure him of that,
Copy !req
1051. for we have nothing to hide.
Copy !req
1052. No. This is a day
Copy !req
1053. to put differences aside,
Copy !req
1054. to hold one's head high
Copy !req
1055. and take pride in being British.
Copy !req
1056. Hear, hear!
Copy !req
1057. Well done, Prime Minister.
Copy !req
1058. Gotcha!
Well, that paid off, old girl!
Copy !req
1059. Your ratings have soared,
Copy !req
1060. from the most hated Prime Minister
of all time to the nation's darling.
Copy !req
1061. The world at your feet,
and Britain was back in business.
Copy !req
1062. The Berlin Wall has
fallen. The gates have been opened!
Copy !req
1063. The police are making no attempt...
Copy !req
1064. I don't agree.
I don't agree in any measure.
Copy !req
1065. Prime Minister, the question of the
European single currency will come up.
Copy !req
1066. I don't think the country is
ready for it yet.
Copy !req
1067. But we cannot bury
our heads in the sand...
Copy !req
1068. A lot of Conservative
MP's and Ministers are saying
Copy !req
1069. that there must be a change
in that style of management,
Copy !req
1070. that Mrs. Thatcher must listen more,
and on occasion, give in.
Copy !req
1071. The point is, Prime Minister,
Copy !req
1072. I don't think we can sell
the idea of a tax
Copy !req
1073. that asks everyone
to pay the same.
Copy !req
1074. Our policies
may be unpopular,
Copy !req
1075. but they are the right policies.
Copy !req
1076. Prime Minister, I just don't think
we can ask the poorest of the poor
Copy !req
1077. to pay the same amount of tax
as a multi-millionaire.
Copy !req
1078. There you go again! Why not?
Copy !req
1079. - Because...
- Because people, on the whole,
Copy !req
1080. think that the tax
is manifestly unfair.
Copy !req
1081. Nonsense. Errant nonsense.
Copy !req
1082. This is a simple proposition.
Copy !req
1083. If you live in this country,
you must pay for the privilege.
Copy !req
1084. Something, anything.
If you pay nothing, you care nothing.
Copy !req
1085. What do you care
where you throw your rubbish?
Copy !req
1086. Your council estate is a mess,
your town, graffiti, what do you care?
Copy !req
1087. It's not your problem,
it's somebody else's problem.
Copy !req
1088. It's the government's problem.
Copy !req
1089. Your problem, some of you,
Copy !req
1090. is that you haven't got
the courage for this fight.
Copy !req
1091. No, you haven't had
to fight hard for anything.
Copy !req
1092. It's all been given to you,
and you feel guilty about it.
Copy !req
1093. Well, may I say, on behalf of those
who have had to fight their way up,
Copy !req
1094. and who don't feel guilty about it,
Copy !req
1095. we resent those slackers
who take, take, take,
Copy !req
1096. and contribute nothing
to the community.
Copy !req
1097. And I see the same thing,
the same cowardice
Copy !req
1098. in our fight within the European Union,
cowardice,
Copy !req
1099. for the sovereignty of Britain,
the integrity of the pound!
Copy !req
1100. Some of you... want to make concessions.
Copy !req
1101. Some of you want to make concessions.
Copy !req
1102. I hear, some of you,
Copy !req
1103. agree with the latest French proposals.
Copy !req
1104. Well, why don't you get
on a boat to Calais? Hm?
Copy !req
1105. Why don't you put on a beret,
Copy !req
1106. and pay 85 percent of your income
to the French government!
Copy !req
1107. Right.
Copy !req
1108. What can we realistically hope
to achieve by the end of session,
Copy !req
1109. Lord President? And why have we not made
more progress to date?
Copy !req
1110. What is that?
Is that the timetable?
Copy !req
1111. - I haven't seen that.
- It is, Prime Minister.
Copy !req
1112. - May I see it?
- Yes, yes, of course.
Copy !req
1113. The wording is sloppy here.
Copy !req
1114. - And here.
Copy !req
1115. - If you say so.
- I do say so.
Copy !req
1116. - It's merely a first draft.
Copy !req
1117. This is ridiculous. There are
two "T's" in "committee."
Copy !req
1118. Two "T's." Geoffrey,
this is shameful. Shameful!
Copy !req
1119. I can't even rely on you...
for a simple timetable.
Copy !req
1120. Are you unwell?
Copy !req
1121. Yes, you are unwell.
Copy !req
1122. Give me your pencil.
Give it to me!
Copy !req
1123. If this is the best you can do,
I had better send you to hospital,
Copy !req
1124. and I shall do your job as well
as my own and everyone else's.
Copy !req
1125. Gentlemen, as the Lord President has
chosen to come to Cabinet unprepared...
Copy !req
1126. I shall have to close the meeting.
Copy !req
1127. Good morning.
Copy !req
1128. Can't pay! Won't pay!
Can't pay! Won't pay!
Copy !req
1129. Geoffrey.
Copy !req
1130. My letter of resignation.
Copy !req
1131. Our differences, I'm afraid,
Copy !req
1132. cannot be reconciled.
Copy !req
1133. I have done
what I believe to be right
Copy !req
1134. for my party and my country.
Copy !req
1135. The time has come for others to consider
their own response
Copy !req
1136. to the tragic conflict of loyalties
with which I have myself wrestled...
Copy !req
1137. Geoffrey's speech
in the House of Commons was devastating.
Copy !req
1138. He just couldn't take
any more of the bullying.
Copy !req
1139. He was almost inviting someone
Copy !req
1140. to challenge her for leadership
of the party.
Copy !req
1141. She behaved appallingly.
Copy !req
1142. I wouldn't have spoken
to my gamekeeper like that.
Copy !req
1143. I don't think she can survive this.
Copy !req
1144. I'm here to announce my decision
to put my name forward
Copy !req
1145. as leader of the Conservative Party.
Copy !req
1146. I have nothing but admiration
for our Prime Minister,
Copy !req
1147. Margaret Thatcher,
but I believe our party
Copy !req
1148. and our country need a new leader.
Copy !req
1149. - It's extraordinary...
- I'm the Prime Minister.
Copy !req
1150. make it possible
for Conservative MPs to depose
Copy !req
1151. - a sitting Prime Minister.
- Sweetie.
Copy !req
1152. He already has open support.
Copy !req
1153. As Conservative MPs gather
in Westminster to decide
Copy !req
1154. who they will back
in the leadership contest,
Copy !req
1155. the Prime Minister said
she would not be diverted
Copy !req
1156. from critical international affairs.
Copy !req
1157. Tonight in Paris, Mrs. Thatcher
is among 34 world leaders
Copy !req
1158. who came here to celebrate
the end of the Cold War
Copy !req
1159. and to herald the start of a peaceful
new age of East-West cooperation.
Copy !req
1160. There's a general feeling
that Mrs. Thatcher
Copy !req
1161. is going to win on the first ballot.
Copy !req
1162. "We're going to put it
to bed tomorrow night,"
Copy !req
1163. is how one of her
campaign staff puts it.
Copy !req
1164. M, I think you should
come home and defend yourself, old girl.
Copy !req
1165. Heseltine is campaigning ferociously.
Copy !req
1166. I do think
my time is better spent
Copy !req
1167. seeing an end to the Cold War.
Don't you?
Copy !req
1168. After all this time,
they know what I stand for.
Copy !req
1169. Will she, or will she not,
be in the job tomorrow?
Copy !req
1170. - Margaret, they can't touch you.
Copy !req
1171. Mrs. Thatcher
has failed to win enough votes
Copy !req
1172. to secure an outright win
in the leadership contest
Copy !req
1173. and must now decide whether to put her
name forward for the second round.
Copy !req
1174. As Mrs. Thatcher
leaves Paris for London to make
Copy !req
1175. her last-ditch attempt to pull together
support for her leadership,
Copy !req
1176. the ship may have sailed.
Copy !req
1177. Treachery!
Copy !req
1178. We will never win another
election led by that woman.
Copy !req
1179. We need a leader who listens.
Copy !req
1180. This isn't about her,
it's about the party.
Copy !req
1181. One must know when to go.
Copy !req
1182. The question is,
how does anyone put it to her?
Copy !req
1183. If you were to stand, I, of course,
would vote for you, Prime Minister.
Copy !req
1184. Prime Minister, I, of course,
would vote for you...
Copy !req
1185. But I don't think you can win.
The loyalty of all of my colleagues...
Copy !req
1186. It was the people who put me here.
Copy !req
1187. The loyalty of all of my colleagues
cannot be counted upon.
Copy !req
1188. It's up to them to tell me when to go.
Copy !req
1189. Margaret, you can't
let them do this to you.
Copy !req
1190. Please, boss.
Copy !req
1191. They'll destroy you.
Copy !req
1192. Throw in the towel now, love.
Copy !req
1193. Don't let those bastards
see you humiliated.
Copy !req
1194. You just won't win, darling.
Copy !req
1195. Not this time.
Copy !req
1196. - Oh, Denis.
Copy !req
1197. I am the Prime Minister.
Copy !req
1198. - Order! Order!
Copy !req
1199. The Right Honorable
Gentleman is afraid.
Copy !req
1200. This is their naked
strategy of closing
Copy !req
1201. some coal mines and then selling off...
Copy !req
1202. They believe in striking,
I believe in working!
Copy !req
1203. This is the woman who's
watched ten men on hunger strike
Copy !req
1204. starve themselves to death
and never flinched!
Copy !req
1205. Despicable and cowardly.
Copy !req
1206. - Cynical Falklands war...
- [man 2] More homeowners,
Copy !req
1207. - more shareowners, more savings...
- [man 3] Showing to the bankers...
Copy !req
1208. - Yes, yes, yes!
Copy !req
1209. I offer my resignation
Copy !req
1210. after 11 and a half
extraordinary years...
Copy !req
1211. proud to have left Britain
in a much better state
Copy !req
1212. than when we took office.
Copy !req
1213. What's this then?
Copy !req
1214. A radio.
Copy !req
1215. How useful.
Copy !req
1216. Steady, MT.
Copy !req
1217. - Mrs. Thatcher!
Copy !req
1218. The greatest
Prime Minister since Churchill
Copy !req
1219. deposed by a bunch
of spineless pygmies!
Copy !req
1220. All those years
of taking the tough decisions.
Copy !req
1221. Does any of it matter now?
Copy !req
1222. It's all been turned to mush!
Copy !req
1223. - Hm?
- By these fools!
Copy !req
1224. These lily-livered pinkos!
Copy !req
1225. - These inept placaters.
Copy !req
1226. Very good! These vacillators.
Copy !req
1227. - Vacillators! Poll takers.
- Popularity seekers.
Copy !req
1228. So busy taking
the pulse of the public!
Copy !req
1229. - Weak! Weak! Weak!
- These weak, weak...
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1230. - All of them, weak!
- ... weak men!
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1231. Don't they know
if you take the tough decisions...
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1232. yes, people will hate you today,
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1233. but they'll thank you for generations.
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1234. Or forget you entirely
and chuck you out with the rubbish.
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1235. Oh!
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1236. All I wanted was
to make a difference in the world.
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1237. And you did, love, you did.
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1238. Yes... Oh...
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1239. All I wanted was for my
children to grow up well and be happy,
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1240. happier than I was, certainly.
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1241. He kept all this.
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1242. Oh, yes.
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1243. And I wanted you
to be happy, of course.
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1244. Were you happy, Denis?
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1245. Tell me the truth.
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1246. Denis?
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1247. Here's your bag.
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1248. All packed, sorted.
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1249. Denis, wait.
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1250. Where are your shoes?
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1251. You... You can't go without your shoes.
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1252. - Not yet.
- Steady.
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1253. Yes. Steady.
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1254. - Steady the buffs.
- Steady the buffs.
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1255. No. Not yet!
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1256. Denis! Wait!
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1257. I don't...
I said I don't want you to go yet.
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1258. Denis! Please!
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1259. Not... Don't... No.
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1260. I'm not...
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1261. I don't want to be on my own.
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1262. You're gonna be fine
on your own, love.
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1263. You always have been.
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1264. Denis...
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1265. No, no, no!
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1266. - Mummy.
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1267. - Good God!
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1268. - Mum, are you all right?
- Yes.
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1269. - What have you been doing?
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1270. Mummy, you should have called
for help, silly old sausage.
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1271. Have you not even been in your bed
properly? You've done all this?
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1272. Yes, it's all sorted. Finished.
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1273. Yes, well, don't worry about that.
June and I can crack on with it.
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1274. I was just going to get dressed.
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1275. Shall I call someone,
see if anyone can come and do your hair?
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1276. No... You do it.
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1277. Right, I'm off, June.
Susie's going to drive me.
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1278. - Just loading the car.
- OK. Bye!
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1279. Oh, let me do that, Margaret.
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1280. No, dear, it's all right. I'll do it.
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1281. Carol said you might go
to the House of Lords today?
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1282. - No, no. I'm not going anywhere.
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