:20:15
You.
:20:17
- What's your name?
- Owen.
:20:21
Sir.
:20:23
- Are you supposed to be here?
- Yes, sir.
:20:26
Well, not exactly. You see, sir...
:20:29
Only, you've got my solo tenor
out there.
:20:34
- I've got your what?
- 612 Williams, sir.
:20:37
We were going to practise this
afternoon with the company choir.
:20:41
But you've got my only solo tenor
working in the cold water.
:20:46
Well, I hope he sings
better than he works.
:20:49
Indeed, sir. He does.
:20:57
Every piece of wood in this
blistering country's eaten by ants.
:21:01
The heat and the dust, sir.
Very nasty on the larynx.
:21:08
Mr Bromhead lets you have a choir?
:21:10
Every Welsh regiment has a choir,
sir.
:21:13
Mr Bromhead is English,
but he is a proper gentleman.
:21:18
There's no doubt of that.
:21:20
- And what do you sing?
- Me, sir? Baritone, sir.
:21:25
Good.
:21:27
I can find work for baritones
as well as tenors.
:21:41
See what you make of that.
Below the escarpment.
:21:44
- Two riders.
- Gallopers from the column, sir?
:21:49
Very wonderful things,
these, sir, aren't they?