:49:36
To the confusion and confounding
of that cursed death's-head knight.
:49:41
- Why couldn't you fools kill him on the field?
- Because he was no fool.
:49:45
How can a Norman hold the throne
of England...
:49:47
...when his knights go down like chaff...
:49:50
...beneath an unknown
Saxon mountebank?
:49:52
Neither a mountebank nor yet unknown.
:49:54
I rode against that knight at Acre,
in the war.
:49:57
Then tell us who he is.
:49:59
The favored henchman of your brother
Richard, my liege. Wilfred of lvanhoe.
:50:03
Ivanhoe? Here in England?
You told me he was dead!
:50:07
He should be, and he shall be
when he and I meet again.
:50:10
I carry his death warrant here
against my breast.
:50:14
Then why is he here?
:50:16
Where else but among Saxons
would he seek the ransom for his Richard?
:50:20
Do you know this?
:50:21
Nay. I do but trust my nose,
sniffing like a badger in a wood.
:50:25
To whom did lvanhoe tip his lance
in gallantry today?
:50:28
To a Jewess named Rebecca, daughter
of Isaac, the banker of his tribe.
:50:32
What could he want of the Jews
except money for the ransom?
:50:35
- Where is he now?
- Not far from the money, if I know lvanhoe.
:50:39
I empower you to find and seize him
and every man who's tried to help him.
:50:43
- Their women too?
- Their women, their servants, their dogs.
:50:47
I want every creature...
:50:49
...Saxon, Jew or Norman,
who's had a hand in aiding Richard.
:50:52
But most urgently, I want lvanhoe...
:50:55
...no matter what it costs.
- You shall have him, my liege.
:50:58
Set about it. De Bracy, go with him.
Front De Boeuf, you too.