Man of La Mancha
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:47:00
but I can love the gentle
spirit that moves him...

:47:03
to measure his sword with evil.
:47:04
I shall concern myself
with his madness, father...

:47:07
and leave the care
of his spirit in your hands.

:47:11
Sanson? I had hoped for so much
for us, for you, really.

:47:15
Everything was to be for you...
:47:18
my uncle's house, his lands.
:47:20
That's true, doctor. In time,
they would all be yours.

:47:25
Or you a priest or pawnbroker?
:47:28
What I meant was...
:47:31
- consider the challenge.
- Challenge?

:47:33
Think what cleverness
it would take...

:47:35
to wean him from his madness.
:47:37
Turn him from his course.
:47:39
To persuade him
to come back home.

:47:42
To bring him to see
the same world?

:47:45
Hmm. That is a challenge.
:47:48
Enormous.
:47:49
To work within his lunacy...
:47:51
to cure him through
the very terms that are his own.

:47:56
Come, father. We shall do it.
:48:00
We will return now to the inn,
the kitchen.

:48:03
Yay!
:48:09
It is imperative
each knight has a lady...

:48:13
for a knight without a lady...
:48:16
is a body without a soul.
:48:19
To whom would he dedicate
his conquests?

:48:22
What vision sustain him when
he sallies forth to do battle...

:48:27
with evil and with giants?
:48:31
Don Quixote,
having found his lady...

:48:33
sends Sancho Panza to her
with a missive.

:48:36
Missive? What's a missive?
:48:39
It's a sort of letter.
:48:40
He warned me to give it
only into your hands.

:48:43
Well, let's see it.
:48:46
I can't read.
:48:48
Neither can I, but my master,
foreseeing such a possibility...

:48:52
recited it to me,
so I could commit it to heart.

:48:55
What made him think
I couldn't read?

:48:56
Well, as he explained it...
:48:58
most noblewomen are so busy
with their needlework...


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