:16:01
I thank you, sir knight.
:16:03
There are questions
that I would ask of you...
:16:05
...as soon as your tongue is loose again.
:16:08
At your command, milady.
:16:11
What is the news from the Holy Land?
:16:14
Alas, milady, I can add little
to what you must already know.
:16:17
The war has ended
in a truceless truce once more...
:16:20
...and Richard vanished upon the wind
that once made up the better part of him.
:16:25
Richard should've stayed at home
and kept England...
:16:28
...and left Jerusalem to be lost
by knights like you...
:16:31
...who lost it anyway.
:16:35
Are you for Richard, milord, or for John?
:16:38
Richard and John had the same mother
:16:41
One was a Norman
So, what was the other?
:16:43
Both were Norman, true.
:16:46
But Richard, with all his faults,
was for England.
:16:49
And John?
:16:51
John is for John.
:16:55
Then you're against John?
:16:57
That's another Norman question.
Shall I answer it for you, milord?
:17:01
No, I would have my questions
answered first. Sir knight...
:17:04
...I believe there were tournaments
between Saxon and Norman knights...
:17:08
...to prove which was more valiant.
- Aye, milady, in the Holy Land.
:17:12
The Saxons were at last taught
to bow to their betters.
:17:15
And yet, I hear the Saxons
won the tournaments.
:17:18
How does a Saxon lady come to know
so much of such distant matters?
:17:22
Only from the tales I hear, sir knight.
:17:25
And I was told that
in the tournament at Acre...
:17:28
...Richard of England led five
of his Saxon knights into combat...
:17:32
...and vanquished all
who challenged them.
:17:34
The one who fell was named De Bracy.
:17:37
And another, Bois-Guilbert.
:17:41
True, milady. I blush, but I admit it.
:17:44
I can still feel the dust in my mouth.
Is it out of your teeth yet, Guilbert?
:17:49
A broken saddle girth caused my fall,
not the bumpkin of a knight I tilted.
:17:54
And who was this bumpkin of a knight?
:17:57
He named himself Wilfred of lvanhoe.