How I Won the War
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:26:03
- Come on, come on!
- Where've you been?

:26:06
Get out. Come on, come on.
:26:10
Get out.
:26:13
Looking after their feet, are you, boy?
See they get plenty of tea.

:26:16
Curious thing, that, give the British soldier
plenty of tea, and he'll die for you.

:26:22
Of course, I'm a poet.
I expect things. I love the desert.

:26:26
You took me for an ignorant old fire-eater.
No. I'm sleeping with the desert.

:26:31
Not unusual. Pat a white rump in the
desert and you'll startle an Englishman.

:26:35
The Englishman loves the desert.
:26:37
- You?
- I'm trying, sir.

:26:40
Er, I play the piano. Not boasting.
Just a fact, that's all. Working class.

:26:45
I think you should. Look after their feet,
boy. They can't be trusted with their feet.

:26:50
Feet and brew-ups and you'll find
you can do anything with him.

:26:53
Keep a tight rein on his habits.
Those of a pig, mostly.

:26:57
But even a pig has his moment. Carries
the blue ribbon. Don't despise your men.

:27:02
They've given me a good life
so don't despise them. Here.

:27:05
Share these out amongst them.
:27:11
- Remember me, Grapple of the Bedoo.
- I won't bloody remember you.

:27:16
- He used to be a fascist, sir.
- It takes all sorts.

:27:20
Fascism is something you grow out of.
I tried to change the worid myself.

:27:24
Doesn't do. I wouldn't think anything
of you if you hadn't been a fascist.

:27:28
Keep them at it
so they don't have time for dirty things.

:27:31
Come on, young fella,
you've only got three more days.

:27:34
No time for poetry.
:27:43
- There goes a very gallant gentleman.
- Oh, I know, sir, like you, sir.

:27:48
Thank you, sir,
for not holding fascism against me.

:27:52
I was a great mate of Mosley's. I held his
voice for him while he lost his meetings.

:27:58
Hey, hey, I'd just like to say a few words.

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