They really didn’t sucessfully talk things out there, did they?
Dishonor not your mothers; now attest
That those whom you called fathers did beget you.
Promise that you’re not bastards. :eek:
“Close the wall up with our English dead?”
“Ummm…Sir, could please use a wall of Elves instead?” Sorry Audra.
This war would have gone a lot better if Henry was riding Data.
You, again with the sex talk
Your naked infants spitted upon pikes
There’s an image. :eek:
“de fingres”
Such a funny scene after the babies on spikes.
It’s code for “Just fraking surrender. You know we’ll fraking beat your town into a pulp.”
“Go down upon him. You have power enough.”
That’s a fascinating strategy. He’ll never expect that.
On the last podcast Audra talked about how the term “Norman” comes from Norseman cuz the Vikings came down and attakced France coming through scandinanvia
** bard snort ***
“Who left the fraking raincoats ON THE BOAT!!”
Loved Ian Holm as Blibo Baggins of course, but this has gotta be my favoriate Ian Holm performance.
Yep, that’s all part of how the English language developed after the Battle of Hasting. It’s kind of fascinating, since the Romans held the British Isles for quite a while, but for Latin to really enter English, it took an infusion of Vikings, filtered through French.
Britain and France have such fascinating histories. Looked at side by side with the U.S’s the United States history is positively boring.
“We shall not seek a battle as we are, yet as we are, we shall not shun’t.”
Bad. Ass. :eek:
“none of the french women upbraied in disdainful language”
?? Really? That seems kinda strict.
The herald is thinking. “Okay, could you stop talking so fancy. I gotta remember all this stuff. Oh, frak it. I’ll just make it up when I deliver the message. Who’s gonna know?”
“Um. Yeah. Harry said you smell. And that you should come and get him.”