:41:15
George. No, George, please.
:41:18
Ahem.
:41:20
Please let me stay
with him. Please.
:41:23
No, madam.
:41:25
On what authority?
:41:27
Medical authority, ma'am.
:41:29
On the authority of a son,
who cares for his sick father.
:41:34
But I'm his wife.
Don't I care for him, too?
:41:37
Possibly, madam.
:41:38
But in his current
frame of mind,
:41:41
I'm afraid His Majesty
does not seem to care for you.
:41:49
No!
:41:54
Come, madam.
:41:55
Let me show Your Majesty
where they have lodged us.
:42:03
This is Sir Lucas Pepys,
Lord Chancellor,
:42:06
whom I've taken
the liberty of consulting.
:42:09
The more the merrier.
:42:11
Are you familiar with
His Majesty's condition?
:42:13
I have spent a lifetime
:42:15
studying the anfractuosities
of the human understanding.
:42:21
An... what?
:42:22
The mind, sir, and it's, uh...
:42:24
delinquencies.
:42:27
If it were possible,
I would value an early view
:42:31
of one of His Majesty's motions.
:42:33
Yes. That could be arranged,
couldn't it?
:42:36
But what's the matter with him?
:42:38
Persistent delirium...
:42:40
and the pulse
sometimes rises to 110.
:42:42
The pulse varies.
It doesn't signify.
:42:44
I agree.
:42:45
I've always found the stool
:42:47
more... eloquent than the pulse.
:42:53
So, uh, what do you suggest?
:42:56
An immediate purge.
:42:58
Warren?
:42:59
He needs blistering.