Spartacus
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2:48:02
l want your love, Varinia.
2:48:08
You think by threatening
to kill my child...

2:48:10
you'll make me love you?
2:48:12
l did not threaten
to kill your child.

2:48:22
l'm sorry, Varinia.
2:48:31
One shouldn't grieve forever.
2:48:34
l'm not grieving.
2:48:36
l'm remembering.
2:48:38
Do l interfere
with your memories?

2:48:42
No.
2:48:46
You tread the ridge
between truth and insult...

2:48:48
with the skill
of a mountain goat!

2:48:54
What do you remember
when you think about Spartacus?

2:49:00
lt doesn't distress you
to talk about him?

2:49:02
No.
2:49:05
Well, then...
2:49:08
what sort of a man was he...
2:49:12
really?
2:49:17
He was a man
who began all alone...

2:49:20
like an animal.
2:49:23
Yet on the day he died...
2:49:25
thousands and thousands
would gladly have died in his place.

2:49:30
What was he?
Was he a god?

2:49:34
He wasn't a god.
2:49:36
He was a simple man.
2:49:38
A slave.
2:49:43
l loved him.
2:49:46
He was an outlaw!
A murderer!

2:49:48
An enemy to everything fiĆ½ne
and decent that Rome ever built!

2:49:53
Damn you! You tell me.
2:49:55
- Why did you love him?
- l can't tell you.

2:49:59
l can't tell you things
you can never understand.


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