The First Cow(EN)Subtitles
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1 00:04:42 Leave it.
2 00:04:43 Leave it. Leave it.
3 00:09:45 Who's there?
4 00:10:24 Cookie.
5 00:10:26 I want some of that buffalo steak for breakfast,
6 00:10:31 the fried cakes.
7 00:10:33 Finished all that back at Colter's Hell.
8 00:10:36 How about that soda bread?
9 00:10:42 There's none of that left either, I'm afraid.
10 00:10:46 You find anything out there tonight?
11 00:10:49 Mushrooms,
12 00:10:51 digger squirrel.
13 00:10:56 I had the squirrel, but it got away.
14 00:11:00 Well, what's in the larder?
15 00:11:02 10 dry biscuits, some jerky, salt.
16 00:11:06 Nothing else?
17 00:11:08 No.
18 00:11:11 It's the Cookie's job to improvise.
19 00:11:15 This is a land of abundance, Mr. Figowitz,
20 00:11:19 and you are charged with finding our vittles
21 00:11:21 until we reach Fort Tillikum.
22 00:11:24 - Hold up there, mister. - You understand that, I'm sure.
23 00:11:26 Share the wealth!
24 00:11:29 He's drinking more than his share!
25 00:11:37 Damn it! That's wasting it.
26 00:11:53 Sons of bitches!
27 00:13:18 Hello?
28 00:13:21 You all right?
29 00:13:24 Hungry.
30 00:13:30 Your cook has retired for the night?
31 00:13:37 I don't think so.
32 00:13:41 You could call him here for a moment.
33 00:13:50 I'm the cook.
34 00:13:52 I see.
35 00:13:57 I've been walking for a long time.
36 00:14:02 I might stay here awhile.
37 00:14:14 Wait.
38 00:15:42 You speak good English
39 00:15:46 for an Indian.
40 00:15:52 I'm not Indian.
41 00:15:56 I'm Chinese.
42 00:16:01 I didn't know there were Chinese in these parts.
43 00:16:05 Everyone is here.
44 00:16:12 That's why you're here, isn't it?
45 00:16:17 Trapped our share.
46 00:16:30 What's your name?
47 00:16:34 King-Lu.
48 00:16:36 That's what they call me.
49 00:16:38 - You? - Otis Figowitz.
50 00:16:44 They call me Cookie.
51 00:16:46 Good to meet you.
52 00:16:54 There are, uh, some men chasing me,
53 00:16:59 Russians.
54 00:17:00 Have you seen them?
55 00:17:11 Why are men chasing you?
56 00:17:14 I... might have killed one of their friends.
57 00:17:21 Chenamus, my friend.
58 00:17:27 They called him a thief,
59 00:17:30 and then gutted him from neck to loin.
60 00:17:33 I had a pistol.
61 00:17:35 I took a shot. I got one in the neck,
62 00:17:40 and he came after me,
63 00:17:44 and I ran.
64 00:17:49 What happened to your clothes?
65 00:17:52 I stuffed them into hollow trees,
66 00:17:55 threw my gun in a creek and...
67 00:18:05 Come on.
68 00:18:08 You can sleep here.
69 00:19:32 When we find that whore son,
70 00:19:33 he'll never set foot in this shit forest.
71 00:19:39 Okay, so what I'm hearing, there's about two days...
72 00:19:43 At the most. At the most.
73 00:19:46 - Midday? - No.
74 00:19:49 It was then after midday when we get there.
75 00:19:57 Move out! We got directions.
76 00:20:00 North and west to Fort Tillikum,
77 00:20:05 about two days journey.
78 00:20:07 Hit the river, head downstream,
79 00:20:11 downriver at every branch.
80 00:20:16 And there's a murderer in the woods, so stay close.
81 00:20:46 The Russians said the elk are gone this time of year.
82 00:20:49 And what else did that Russian say?
83 00:20:51 Said the company is paying three silver ingots
84 00:20:53 for every beaver pelt, two copper for every muskrat.
85 00:21:00 And there's beer at the fort.
86 00:21:02 And other things.
87 00:21:05 - And women? - More than one.
88 00:21:19 Keep on down the river from here one more day.
89 00:21:21 Hungry as hell.
90 00:21:24 Cookie, find me some food.
91 00:21:26 Eat your damn hand. We'll be there tomorrow.
92 00:21:28 I want food tonight,
93 00:21:30 or I'm taking it out on this one.
94 00:21:33 I'm sick of looking at this one.
95 00:21:37 Can't wait to be done with him.
96 00:21:39 Can't wait to never see him again.
97 00:21:42 When you get your cut at the fort,
98 00:21:46 I'll be waiting for you outside the gates,
99 00:21:50 waiting for you with your sack full of silver.
100 00:21:53 - Leave him alone! - No. No!
101 00:27:06 Fancy boots, lad.
102 00:27:13 Fancy boots.
103 00:27:27 He said she'd be there in about... in 6 months.
104 00:27:36 How much do you want for this?
105 00:27:40 This?
106 00:27:41 It's a deal.
107 00:27:44 Oysters! Clams! Oysters! Clams!
108 00:27:53 Five twists, six twists, half off.
109 00:27:56 Those look like Jean-Baptiste's boots!
110 00:29:06 Five twists, six twists, half off.
111 00:29:09 Six twists, half off.
112 00:29:11 Six twists, six twists.
113 00:30:37 Flowers... the flowers are different shaped.
114 00:30:40 - Maybe it was bodies. - Still clusters
115 00:30:44 I'm telling you, it was up somewhere on Snake River.
116 00:30:48 - Don't know nothing. - That's true.
117 00:30:50 - Your body knows more than your brain. - Hold tight.
118 00:30:51 Then they start hitting each other in the head.
119 00:30:53 I'm getting to that.
120 00:30:55 Then, they start hitting each other...
121 00:30:57 Got the whole ship?
122 00:30:59 - We got two on the ship. - No blocking.
123 00:31:01 He was under Ruby. Lived as a slave up there
124 00:31:04 for 3 years before he got free.
125 00:31:05 How was it, being a slave?
126 00:31:07 He didn't like it.
127 00:31:19 Uh, whiskey please.
128 00:31:25 - How much? - Two.
129 00:31:36 You know what it's like in there.
130 00:31:38 No way of knowing.
131 00:31:44 That's what I saw.
132 00:31:48 I'm telling you, it's the first one,
133 00:31:50 first cow in the Territory.
134 00:31:55 Shipped it all the way up to Saint Francisco.
135 00:31:59 Saint Luis Obispo.
136 00:32:02 I heard Saint Francisco.
137 00:32:06 I spoke to the ferryman,
138 00:32:09 and he was the one bringing the cow.
139 00:32:12 You need to ask the Chief Factor about that.
140 00:32:15 Chief Factor ordered two cows and a calf,
141 00:32:18 and that's a true story,
142 00:32:20 but the other ones died on the way.
143 00:32:22 What good is one cow to anyone?
144 00:32:24 Cow needs a stud.
145 00:32:26 Chief Factor wants milk in his tea.
146 00:32:30 Like a proper English gentleman.
147 00:32:33 Like a proper lady.
148 00:32:39 This ain't a place for cows.
149 00:32:41 God would have put cows here if it was.
150 00:32:43 Ah, it's no place for white men either then, huh?
151 00:32:49 Well, look who's here.
152 00:32:51 Brilliant William!
153 00:32:54 I need a few sunbeams, William.
154 00:32:55 Can you gather me up a dozen sunbeams?
155 00:32:58 They're on the ground just laying around everywhere.
156 00:33:00 - Any old beams will do. - I'll have a beer.
157 00:33:03 Here's a question.
158 00:33:05 What does a tongue taste like?
159 00:33:07 Do you ever think about that?
160 00:33:09 I bet you have some distinct opinions
161 00:33:11 about what your tongue tastes like.
162 00:33:14 Am I right, William?
163 00:33:15 Oh, traders all...
164 00:33:16 Whatcha saying there, Brilliant William?
165 00:33:18 Something brilliant ain't bad.
166 00:33:20 He's always good for some clever opinions.
167 00:33:23 What's the difference between a river and a lake?
168 00:33:26 You figure that one out yet?
169 00:33:28 Willy?
170 00:33:30 I'm not bothering him.
171 00:33:31 I'm just asking him an honest question.
172 00:33:33 What about the chicken and the egg?
173 00:33:36 He knew for sure it was a chicken
174 00:33:37 until he thought about it from the egg's point of view.
175 00:33:40 That one really hurt your old noggin.
176 00:33:43 Didn't it, William?
177 00:33:44 Yep. Yep. I think that's how you got
178 00:33:46 this crack in your brain bone.
179 00:33:52 Willy, better do something,
180 00:33:53 or your head is going to blow.
181 00:33:56 You, watch him 'til I'm done.
182 00:34:07 Make some proper money, eh?
183 00:34:43 Hello, Cookie.
184 00:34:47 Thought I might find you here sooner or later.
185 00:34:52 I never thought I'd ever see you again.
186 00:34:55 I was lucky.
187 00:34:57 Those, uh, Russian villains,
188 00:35:00 they left the country just after I left you.
189 00:35:09 Well, here I am,
190 00:35:11 free and easy, right back where I was.
191 00:35:21 Uh, where are all your kind friends?
192 00:35:24 Oh, they mostly went south, some north.
193 00:35:31 But not you.
194 00:35:32 Not yet.
195 00:35:34 No one would have me.
196 00:35:38 And, uh, where are you staying in the meantime?
197 00:35:42 I got a tent a mile that way,
198 00:35:47 other side of the hill.
199 00:35:49 I've got a place a mile thataway.
200 00:35:54 Mm, I've got a bottle there, too.
201 00:35:59 Maybe you'd, uh, like to come help me drink it.
202 00:36:05 Uh, of course, I would, but...
203 00:36:10 Well, leave him.
204 00:36:11 He's fine.
205 00:36:16 He's fine.
206 00:36:20 Well, you wait here.
207 00:36:24 All right?
208 00:36:26 Your daddy will be back soon.
209 00:36:41 - Damn it, James! - Well, I put it there.
210 00:36:45 I've been in these parts close to two years now.
211 00:36:48 I've thought about leaving more than once,
212 00:36:50 but I sense opportunity here.
213 00:36:54 Ships coming in and out every week.
214 00:36:56 More raw materials than anywhere I've seen,
215 00:36:58 and I've been all over.
216 00:37:16 You've been everywhere.
217 00:37:20 I caught my first trade ship to Canton when I was nine.
218 00:37:25 From there, I sailed to London,
219 00:37:27 Africa, saw the pyramids.
220 00:37:31 This is a land of riches, I tell you.
221 00:37:40 I see something in this land I haven't seen before.
222 00:37:45 Pretty much everywhere has been touched by now.
223 00:37:49 But this is still new,
224 00:37:52 more nameless things around here
225 00:37:53 than you can shake an eel at.
226 00:38:01 Doesn't seem new to me, seems old.
227 00:38:19 Everything is old if you look at it that way.
228 00:38:33 History isn't here yet.
229 00:38:37 It's coming, but we got here early this time.
230 00:38:45 Maybe this time, we can be ready for it.
231 00:38:53 We can take it on our own terms.
232 00:39:12 It's not much to look at, I know.
233 00:39:47 Here's to... something.
234 00:40:08 You make yourself easy. I'll get a fire going.
235 00:43:03 Looks better already.
236 00:43:08 Relax. Sit. Sit.
237 00:43:45 Where are you from, Cookie?
238 00:43:50 Maryland.
239 00:43:53 Never been.
240 00:43:57 It's fine.
241 00:43:59 I don't remember it much.
242 00:44:01 Not fine enough to stay, huh?
243 00:44:09 My mother died when I was born,
244 00:44:12 and then my father died.
245 00:44:15 I had to move on to find work.
246 00:44:17 Well... I never stopped moving.
247 00:44:48 I had an idea once. Furs are one thing,
248 00:44:51 but there's a precious oil in the beavers, too.
249 00:44:53 That's worth something in China.
250 00:44:55 They use it for medicine over there.
251 00:44:58 If a man could take a batch of that precious beaver oil
252 00:45:01 on a ship to Canton, he could make his fortune.
253 00:45:08 Why don't you?
254 00:45:13 Eh, oil is in the glands.
255 00:45:15 Glands never make it back to the fort,
256 00:45:18 just rot away in the woods.
257 00:45:22 Anyway, I don't have contacts in Canton.
258 00:45:26 I'm from the north.
259 00:45:27 They hate a Northerner there.
260 00:45:30 Worse than a white man to them.
261 00:45:37 What I'd really like is a farm.
262 00:45:44 Land south of here is wide-open.
263 00:45:50 The world wants filberts.
264 00:45:57 Or walnuts.
265 00:46:04 Or almonds.
266 00:46:12 Something you can pick up and send,
267 00:46:18 but you can't just grow a tree.
268 00:46:21 It takes time.
269 00:46:32 It's the getting started that's the puzzle.
270 00:46:35 No way for a poor man to start.
271 00:46:39 You need capital,
272 00:46:42 or you need some kind of miracle.
273 00:46:44 You need leverage.
274 00:46:50 Or a crime.
275 00:46:59 I'd like to open a hotel someday,
276 00:47:06 a place for travelers.
277 00:47:10 Or a bakery.
278 00:47:19 That's nice.
279 00:47:27 A hotel and a bakery,
280 00:47:32 with wild-huckleberry pies.
281 00:47:36 You could do that here.
282 00:47:39 Someplace warmer.
283 00:48:03 It has holes in it,
284 00:48:05 and it looks like the face of a man.
285 00:48:09 It's just one black rock.
286 00:48:12 That's a weather stone.
287 00:48:15 It makes rain, they say.
288 00:48:19 They say it was a powerful spirit once
289 00:48:22 and got turned into stone.
290 00:48:26 If anyone sits on it, it rains.
291 00:48:32 You really believe in that?
292 00:48:40 I believe different things in different places.
293 00:50:21 Saw a cow today.
294 00:50:28 It wasn't far from Chief Factor's house.
295 00:50:34 In a meadow.
296 00:50:44 I'd like some of that milk.
297 00:50:47 I-I'm not a milk drinker.
298 00:50:50 It doesn't agree with me.
299 00:50:54 I wouldn't drink it.
300 00:50:58 I'd use it for cookies.
301 00:51:05 Or scones.
302 00:51:09 Nothing better than buttermilk biscuits.
303 00:51:16 I'm tired of this flour-and-water bread.
304 00:51:41 What else do you need to make good biscuits, Cookie?
305 00:51:46 Flour, some sugar,
306 00:51:50 salt,
307 00:51:54 baking soda.
308 00:52:06 How long does it take to milk a cow?
309 00:52:10 Not long.
310 00:52:13 - Make much noise? - No.
311 00:52:16 Can cows give milk at night?
312 00:52:21 As long as she wasn't milked after dinner.
313 00:53:50 I'll go up and keep an eye on things from here.
314 00:53:54 Give me a lift.
315 00:54:06 If I see anything, I'll, uh, give a call.
316 00:54:09 - All right. - I'll do an owl.
317 00:54:13 I don't think you can get up there.
318 00:54:43 Hello.
319 00:54:46 How are you?
320 00:54:49 Didn't expect company this late at night, did you?
321 00:54:57 Well, here we are.
322 00:55:16 Sorry about your husband.
323 00:55:22 I heard he didn't make it all the way.
324 00:55:27 And your calf...
325 00:55:33 It's a terrible thing.
326 00:55:38 Terrible.
327 00:55:44 But you got a nice place here.
328 00:55:50 You do.
329 00:55:50 You got a real nice little place here, don't you?
330 00:58:26 How much do you think someone would pay for
331 00:58:27 a biscuit like that?
332 00:58:32 I wish we had some honey.
333 00:58:39 A glass of whiskey is two silver coins.
334 00:58:42 A pickle is three.
335 00:58:45 Men work out in the fort,
336 00:58:47 loaded with silver and shells and company script.
337 00:58:56 I once saw a man spend five good beaver pelts
338 00:58:59 on a broken fork.
339 00:59:12 I think we should test the waters.
340 00:59:15 Next batch, Cookie, we'll take to market.
341 00:59:20 I've heard a fortune is made on this.
342 00:59:22 That seems dangerous.
343 00:59:27 So is anything worth doing.
344 00:59:34 I think they'd like something sweeter.
345 01:00:29 Five twists, six twists half off.
346 01:00:32 Six twists, half off. Six twists, six twists.
347 01:01:00 Fresh Oily Cakes.
348 01:01:02 Best this side of the Sandwich Islands.
349 01:01:05 Don't look like hardtack. Or soda bread.
350 01:01:07 Look like some kind of pancake.
351 01:01:10 It smells good. What's in it?
352 01:01:15 Secret ingredient. Ancient Chinese secret.
353 01:01:19 How much?
354 01:01:20 Five ingots or the equal in trade.
355 01:01:37 Good lord! Give me another.
356 01:01:48 That's 11, all right.
357 01:01:53 I'll give you six ingots for that last one.
358 01:01:56 - Seven shells. - Come on.
359 01:01:58 - Seven shells, one ingot. - Wait, lads. Hold on.
360 01:02:11 Oily cake to this gentleman.
361 01:02:15 We'll have more tomorrow.
362 01:03:16 Made some oily cakes with your milk.
363 01:03:21 They were very good.
364 01:03:23 Couldn't sell them fast enough.
365 01:03:29 A little honey,
366 01:03:35 or it was your milk in the batter that did it.
367 01:03:42 Yeah, yeah.
368 01:03:48 What a good, sweet girl you are.
369 01:03:57 Hold my place. I'll be right back.
370 01:04:05 - No cuts allowed. - I was here.
371 01:04:08 He was saving my spot.
372 01:04:12 One is the limit.
373 01:04:13 I heard it from the Chinaman himself.
374 01:04:20 First come, first served, friends.
375 01:04:52 You ought to make more next time.
376 01:04:56 Only so many we can make in a day, friend.
377 01:05:00 They want to keep them prices up.
378 01:05:02 They're not dumb.
379 01:05:16 Damn it. What's in these things?
380 01:05:17 Tastes like something my mama made.
381 01:05:19 That's our secret, boys.
382 01:05:21 Think of it as a little taste of home.
383 01:05:34 We'll have more tomorrow.
384 01:05:55 Could buy an acre in California for that.
385 01:05:59 It's a start, all right.
386 01:06:02 It won't last much longer, though.
387 01:06:04 They'll get tired of it,
388 01:06:09 and there will be more milk cows here soon.
389 01:06:13 We got a window here, Cookie.
390 01:06:19 This is too much to keep in the house.
391 01:06:21 We need a bank.
392 01:06:25 What about the cottonwood tree?
393 01:06:27 There's a good hole in that.
394 01:06:49 Which side of the tree has the most branches?
395 01:06:54 The outside.
396 01:07:51 Hold one out today.
397 01:07:53 Chief Factor wants one.
398 01:07:55 He'll be here soon.
399 01:08:04 Don't you have work to do?
400 01:08:06 I don't need two shadows, do I?
401 01:08:09 Get busy.
402 01:08:27 Look alive, son.
403 01:08:41 I'm saving mine for later.
404 01:08:48 No one is giving him 50 shells.
405 01:08:50 That ain't worth 50 shells.
406 01:08:53 I've heard about your cakes.
407 01:08:56 I'd like to try one if I may.
408 01:08:58 How much?
409 01:09:01 For you, only 10 silver pieces.
410 01:09:38 A little cinnamon is nice.
411 01:10:18 I taste London in this cake.
412 01:10:24 A bakery I once knew in South Kensington.
413 01:10:34 Astonishing.
414 01:10:41 Where did you learn to do that?
415 01:10:44 I was indentured to a baker in Boston, sir.
416 01:10:49 He taught me the trade.
417 01:10:52 - He was a good baker. - Indeed, he was.
418 01:10:59 What was his name?
419 01:11:02 Barnaby Rose.
420 01:11:06 Never heard of him,
421 01:11:09 but I commend you, sir,
422 01:11:11 on these delicious baked comestibles.
423 01:11:19 I hope you won't be leaving too soon.
424 01:11:25 We have no plans.
425 01:11:30 Very, very good.
426 01:11:40 Hotel in Saint Francisco
427 01:11:42 is harder, more competition.
428 01:11:52 but more opportunity, too,
429 01:11:54 more people coming through.
430 01:11:59 If it's good idea,
431 01:12:03 we'll have enough to go there soon.
432 01:12:06 We have enough to go now.
433 01:12:09 Enough to go but not enough to start.
434 01:12:31 Another cup is another dozen cakes.
435 01:12:34 That's another 60 silver pieces at least.
436 01:13:03 Hello?
437 01:13:06 Good evening.
438 01:13:09 Back again.
439 01:14:03 I-I'm entertaining, uh, a small group next week.
440 01:14:07 Captain Ruby is coming for tea,
441 01:14:11 and I'm tired of all his jests
442 01:14:13 about the savagery of life on the frontier.
443 01:14:19 Tell me.
444 01:14:20 Do you know what a clafoutis is?
445 01:14:23 I do.
446 01:14:26 And could you make one, a-a good one?
447 01:14:28 He loves a clafoutis, and, well, I...
448 01:14:32 I'd like to humiliate him.
449 01:14:35 Well, without fresh raspberries or apricots,
450 01:14:39 I'm not sure.
451 01:14:41 Have you tried bilberry?
452 01:14:46 It's out of season, I believe.
453 01:14:49 We have plenty of blueberries on the bush.
454 01:14:52 I-I would pay you handsomely
455 01:14:53 for a proper blueberry clafoutis.
456 01:15:04 It's a simple enough recipe.
457 01:15:07 If blueberry is available, I'm sure I can make one.
458 01:15:10 Capital.
459 01:15:12 Saturday, then, a clafoutis,
460 01:15:16 and we'll be dining at my residence.
461 01:15:17 You know its whereabouts?
462 01:15:21 I think I've passed by it
463 01:15:22 or I know of it.
464 01:15:25 Teatime.
465 01:16:05 The hotels in Saint Francisco are grand.
466 01:16:10 We can't compete on that scale,
467 01:16:15 and regular travelers need shelter, too.
468 01:16:20 A room with a bed, that's all,
469 01:16:25 a few rooms near the sea.
470 01:16:58 This is a dangerous game we're playing here,
471 01:17:04 and Chief Factor has a delicate palate.
472 01:17:09 He'll taste his milk in there eventually.
473 01:17:34 We can't say no.
474 01:17:37 He'd be suspicious.
475 01:17:41 Where does he think the milk is coming from?
476 01:17:44 Some people can't imagine being stolen from.
477 01:17:51 Too strong.
478 01:17:58 Let's hope he's one of those.
479 01:18:04 How much will we charge,
480 01:18:08 20, 25?
481 01:18:33 That sounds like quite a situation indeed,
482 01:18:37 and in the end, how... how many lashes did you order?
483 01:18:41 20.
484 01:18:46 A fine number, but for mutiny...
485 01:18:49 It was a memorable day for that man.
486 01:18:52 It seems conservative.
487 01:18:55 More than 20 and he would have been useless
488 01:18:57 for the remainder of the voyage.
489 01:18:59 - And he was a young hand? - Mm, not so young.
490 01:19:05 Here is the rub, you see.
491 01:19:07 When one factors the loss of labor from the punished hand
492 01:19:11 versus the gain of labor
493 01:19:13 from those hands who witness the punishment,
494 01:19:17 a stricter punishment can be
495 01:19:20 the more advisable path.
496 01:19:23 Even a properly-rendered death
497 01:19:25 can be useful in the ultimate accounting.
498 01:19:28 It is a highly-motivating spectacle for the indolent,
499 01:19:32 let alone the mutinous.
500 01:19:36 Yes, fair enough, but...
501 01:19:37 some calculations can never truly be made.
502 01:19:41 Now, there you are wrong, Captain.
503 01:19:44 Any question that cannot
504 01:19:46 be calculated is not worth the asking.
505 01:19:52 Here is our baker.
506 01:19:54 Bring the clafoutis in... in here, Cookie.
507 01:19:58 Show the captain.
508 01:20:17 Indeed, it is a fine-looking cake, Mister...
509 01:20:22 Figowitz.
510 01:20:24 And what brought you to the Oregon Territory, Mr. Figowitz?
511 01:20:29 Chance.
512 01:20:31 I hired on with a trapping company.
513 01:20:33 - Ashley's men. - No, a lesser crew.
514 01:20:37 They're trapping out the whole map.
515 01:20:39 There won't be any pelts here much longer.
516 01:20:41 I disagree. The beaver here are endless.
517 01:20:47 Smart animals, the beaver.
518 01:20:51 When I got here, the beaver were everywhere,
519 01:20:54 whole cities of beaver
520 01:20:56 living like people in row houses in New York.
521 01:21:02 Well, in any case,
522 01:21:03 the fashions are changing in Paris.
523 01:21:05 The beaver hat is on the wane.
524 01:21:09 The... The Chinese market remains strong.
525 01:21:12 Beaver will always find a home.
526 01:21:14 It is too beautiful, too supple.
527 01:21:20 Wh-What he's saying is that the men in Paris
528 01:21:25 favor new hats this season.
529 01:21:28 They no longer want beaver fur.
530 01:21:39 But... But I'm saying to him
531 01:21:41 that the beaver here will last forever.
532 01:22:24 He's saying he doesn't understand
533 01:22:26 why the white men hunt so much beaver
534 01:22:27 and never eat the tail.
535 01:22:29 The tail is delicious.
536 01:22:32 Well, maybe I will.
537 01:22:33 I'm sick to death of salmon already.
538 01:22:40 You can tell him that.
539 01:22:43 Ah, here we are.
540 01:22:45 Chinese black tea,
541 01:22:49 very subtle.
542 01:22:54 Cream?
543 01:23:00 Enjoy the cream, Captain.
544 01:23:03 My cow gives so little.
545 01:23:05 She's a lonely girl, I fear.
546 01:23:07 - You have a cow? - Yes. She's only been here
547 01:23:10 for a month or so, sans husband, I'm afraid.
548 01:23:14 I'm hoping to find her a mate within the year.
549 01:23:19 Would you like to see her?
550 01:23:23 Let... Let's take a walk.
551 01:23:26 Shall we?
552 01:24:03 Tell me, Captain,
553 01:24:06 what are the fashions in Paris this year?
554 01:24:12 The ladies are moving away from the Empire silhouette this year.
555 01:24:16 They're favoring fuller skirts and, uh, visible corseting.
556 01:24:22 For the men, broad shoulders and puffed sleeves,
557 01:24:25 trousers for smart day wear,
558 01:24:28 britches and cordon in the country.
559 01:24:31 As for colors, canary yellow and turkey red
560 01:24:35 are the colors du jour.
561 01:24:38 History moves so quickly in Paris.
562 01:24:42 So quickly, it wears itself out.
563 01:24:44 It never reaches here at all.
564 01:25:14 She seems well enough.
565 01:25:17 Yes.
566 01:25:19 And yet she barely produces a thing.
567 01:25:22 - What's her provenance? - Oh, she's of a good line,
568 01:25:27 half Alderney and half from Froment du Leon
569 01:25:31 from the province of Brittany.
570 01:25:49 She's a very fine cow.
571 01:26:03 Froment du Leon from the province of Brittany.
572 01:26:07 The cow has got better breeding than I do.
573 01:26:11 A royal cow.
574 01:26:17 Maybe we should halt for a while.
575 01:26:22 I think the Captain sensed something.
576 01:26:29 Now is our time.
577 01:26:31 Another cow is on the way. And more cows after that.
578 01:26:33 - And Chief Factor is... - Is a fool.
579 01:26:37 He misses everything right under his nose.
580 01:26:40 Paris this, London that.
581 01:26:44 What kind of woman is he?
582 01:26:50 Men like us, Cookie,
583 01:26:52 we have to make our own way.
584 01:26:55 There are no Empire silhouettes or colors du jour for us.
585 01:27:01 We have to take what we can when the taking is good.
586 01:27:09 I know.
587 01:27:13 We'll sell a little longer,
588 01:27:14 and then we'll make our way south.
589 01:27:22 We haven't even begun, Cookie.
590 01:30:42 Come on back.
591 01:30:44 Come on back, you stupid cat!
592 01:30:47 Inside, before you get me in trouble.
593 01:31:30 Are you all right?
594 01:31:36 - Can you move? - Yeah. Yeah.
595 01:31:39 We got to go.
596 01:31:44 Something... Someone in the meadow!
597 01:31:45 - What? - Attackers all around!
598 01:31:47 - What? - I woke the house! Get dressed.
599 01:31:49 Hurry!
600 01:32:06 God's sake, Thomas!
601 01:32:10 You there!
602 01:33:11 It would appear that someone has been milking your cow.
603 01:33:26 Figowitz,
604 01:33:31 the Chinaman.
605 01:33:37 Figowitz!
606 01:33:49 No, no. Not home.
607 01:34:29 Which way?
608 01:34:31 The deer path is up back up over there,
609 01:34:34 - but the river path is... - Stealing my milk.
610 01:34:37 I'll kill him!
611 01:34:39 Do you hear that?
612 01:34:40 What's that? What's that?
613 01:35:20 There's one crossing the river, sir!
614 01:35:23 We'll overtake him on foot!
615 01:35:25 Use the path downriver!
616 01:35:27 Lloyd, you hurry on, and we'll... we'll follow!
617 01:35:32 Yes, sir!
618 01:37:13 I-Is this your canoe? I need to go downriver.
619 01:39:45 I need to find my friend.
620 01:40:14 And also know where I am.
621 01:45:01 - Not even northwest. - Over here?
622 01:45:06 He's probably got a mustache.
623 01:45:49 Aye, Johnny Hart.
624 01:45:55 The home is totally abandoned, that one.
625 01:45:58 Heart, heart like a red beating heart?
626 01:46:01 No, like, Hart like a deer.
627 01:46:07 Jon Hart...
628 01:46:10 a cheater by any spelling.
629 01:46:13 I've skunked him every game, regardless.
630 01:46:17 He's not a worthy opponent.
631 01:46:20 He prefers to discard just one card to the crib.
632 01:46:23 - One card? - Aye.
633 01:46:27 Abysmal.
634 01:46:32 It's an archaic rule,
635 01:46:34 but he prefers the old ways.
636 01:46:41 The guy a poor adversary is
637 01:46:43 on John Suckling's noble game.
638 01:46:46 Cribbage players are in short supply in this hemisphere.
639 01:46:50 I've suffered for it daily.
640 01:51:34 Thought you were gone.
641 01:51:39 I thought you were gone.
642 01:51:52 You're hurt?
643 01:52:03 It's not good here, Cookie.
644 01:52:07 It's not safe.
645 01:52:11 We have to go.
646 01:52:14 Get away from here.
647 01:52:24 We'll tell our stories later.
648 01:52:28 That's quite a scratch on your head.
649 01:52:31 We'll clean it when we rest.
650 01:52:33 How about that?
651 01:53:19 There's a port at the mouth of the river.
652 01:53:22 We will go downstream and catch the first clipper south.
653 01:53:24 How about that?
654 01:53:37 Why is a baker like a beggar?
655 01:53:43 Why?
656 01:53:50 You'll make it.
657 01:53:53 You just need to stay on your feet.
658 01:55:41 This is, a good place to rest.
659 01:55:46 No one can see us here.
660 01:55:55 You lie there on the needles,
661 01:55:58 and I'll keep first watch.
662 01:57:04 We'll go soon.
663 01:57:07 I've got you.

