:19:00
your dauntless courage,
and your superb, swift sword.
:19:03
You have the poet's gift
of exaggeration.
:19:05
Sir, you should read
my histories.
:19:08
But you belittle your talent.
Modesty as well as valor.
:19:11
The Code of ancient Camelot
still lives.
:19:14
Hardly worthy of Camelot.
Still, it's one less dragon.
:19:22
Well done, Knight!
Congratulations.
:19:24
Our gratitude,
mine and King Einon's.
:19:26
Uh, you can keep your gratitude.
I'll take the gold.
:19:29
- Yours or the king's.
- Gold, Knight?
:19:32
We made a bargain, remember?
One dragon put down, one bag of gold.
:19:35
Your honor has a price,
Sir Knight?
:19:38
It has expenses.
:19:40
Honor won't feed my belly
nor shoe my horse.
:19:42
The priest is right.
:19:44
It is your duty to protect King Einon's
vassals as a knight of the realm.
:19:48
Not of this realm.
I bend no knee to Einon.
:19:52
I should have known.
Foreign riffraff!
:19:55
Well, begone, vagabond,
before I arrest you!
:19:59
Back to work, you scum!
:20:01
If King Einon's wheat
isn't cut before the rain...
:20:04
I'll do a little cutting
of my own!
:20:07
Sir Knight!
Sir Knight, wait!
:20:11
Sir Knight!
:20:13
Hear me out!
:20:15
I'm on a pilgrimage.
Might we travel together?
:20:17
The road's still free,
unless Einon's taxed it.
:20:30
A road tax, King Einon. Hmm?
:20:34
A road tax.
:20:37
They are your roads, after all.
:20:39
People really ought to pay
for the privilege of using them.
:20:41
- And those that can't pay
will have to work it off.
- Ingenious, Felton.
:20:44
Only you could keep such a good brain
under such a bad hat.
:20:47
That's very good, "bad hat".
:20:50
Out of my way, peacock.
:20:53
Brok, some are good at hunting men,
some are good at hunting money.
:20:56
Both have value for me.