:10:02
	My concern was more
international affairs.
:10:05
	Or foreign policy, so to speak.
:10:10
	Not that I ever held high office,
mind you.
:10:15
	No, any influence I exerted
was in an unofficial capacity.
:10:19
	Excuse me, sir.
:10:21
	Have you ever met Mr. Churchill?
:10:24
	He came to the house occasionally.
Again, in the early 1 930s.
:10:29
	He was a bloody warmonger!
:10:31
	Honestly, Harry! We wouldn't have won
the war without him.
:10:35
	Not content to fight Germans,
he sent troops in against the miners.
:10:39
	-What about the war?
-Yes, all right.
:10:41
	He did well in the war,
but he should've stepped down.
:10:44
	-And Mr. Eden?
-He made a right bugger of Suez!
:10:48
	Yes, I met Mr. Eden.
Yes, occasionally.
:10:51
	How do you do? Richard Carlisle.
:10:53
	Rotten luck about your car,
but nice to have you.
:10:56
	-Everyone has been most kind.
-He says he knows foreign affairs.
:11:00
	Is that so, indeed?
:11:02
	In an unofficial capacity.
:11:04
	-He knows Mr. Churchill.
-And Mr. Eden.
:11:08
	Really?
:11:10
	Yes, well, it was my good fortune
to have consorted...
:11:15
	...with many men of influence
from Europe and from America.
:11:24
	Mr. Taylor...
:11:25
	...l really feel I ought to retire now
because I'm feeling rather tired.
:11:29
	No wonder, sir.
Running out of petrol...
:11:32
	...then having to hear Smith's
political opinions.
:11:35
	Just step this way, sir.
:11:37
	I'm going to Stanbury in the
morning. I'll give you a lift...
:11:41
	...and we could pick up
a can of petrol on the way.
:11:44
	-I'd hate to inconvenience you.
-Not at all. Would 7:30 suit you?
:11:49
	You'll enjoy talking to Dr. Carlisle.
Watch this step.
:11:53
	Excuse Harry Smith.
:11:55
	He will go on about his politics.
I don't mean he's not right.
:11:58
	Democracy is why we fought Hitler, and
we lost a few lads in this village...