1:26:09
Finished, my lord.
1:26:12
l`ve taken it in at the back...
1:26:15
...added wider epaulets
and looped gold braiding.
1:26:18
-lt`s a horse blanket.
-l don`t know, my lord.
1:26:22
lt`s really quite nice.
1:26:26
-Very nice, my lord.
-Very well. lt`s a nice horse blanket.
1:26:31
Colonel Tavington,
why, after six weeks...
1:26:35
...am l still attending a ball
in South Carolina...
1:26:39
...when l should be attending balls
in North Carolina?
1:26:42
First, the theft of my baggage...
1:26:44
...including my memoirs,
on which l spent countless hours.
1:26:48
Then half the bridges and ferries
between here and Charles Town burned.
1:26:53
lf you can`t protect our supply lines
against militia...
1:26:57
...how do you intend doing so against
the Regulars or the French?
1:27:01
They won`t fight like Regulars.
We can`t find them.
1:27:05
Colonel, they`re militia.
1:27:08
They`re farmers with pitchforks!
1:27:12
They`re rather more than that,
l`m afraid.
1:27:15
Made so by their commander,
this ghost.
1:27:19
Oh, ghost, ghost, ghost.
1:27:23
You created this ghost, colonel.
1:27:27
Your brutality swelled his ranks.
1:27:30
Without them this ghost
would`ve disappeared...
1:27:33
...and l`d be
in North Carolina by now!
1:27:36
ln my defense, my lord--
1:27:38
Oh, enough, enough!
1:27:41
A fine soldier you are,
bested by a bedtime story.
1:27:48
Give me the horse blanket.
1:27:54
O`Hara, our supply ship appears
to have arrived.
1:27:58
Yes, my lord, it has.