13/02/2012

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:00:07. > :00:12.Tonight - in sickness and in health - parted after a lifetime by a stay

:00:12. > :00:15.in hospital that went terribly wrong.

:00:15. > :00:23.I can see her every day and I know that she's comfortable and that's

:00:23. > :00:26.consolation, but it doesn't bring her back home.

:00:26. > :00:29.We take a Valentine's day trip to the cinema and a love affair with

:00:29. > :00:37.Tyneside's silver screen. He was just entranced by the magic

:00:37. > :00:40.of the cinema and the pleasure it could bring to ordinary people.

:00:40. > :00:50.And the tomb readers casting light on a mysterious medieval message

:00:50. > :00:50.

:00:50. > :01:00.from England's bloodiest battle. Stories from the heart of the North

:01:00. > :01:11.

:01:11. > :01:17.Elderly, frail, vulnerable - the people who could most expect the

:01:17. > :01:21.very best from the NHS. But even the prime minister has said there

:01:21. > :01:26.is a real problem with nursing care for older people in our hospitals.

:01:26. > :01:34.Is he right? I've been contacted about some worrying cases right

:01:34. > :01:37.here in the North East. Nurses who attended to your every

:01:37. > :01:40.need. Who'd find time to keep you company. It may be a rose-tinted

:01:40. > :01:44.view. But still, it's a very different picture of healthcare

:01:44. > :01:51.than the one I've been told about. Staggered and gutted that a human

:01:51. > :01:55.being can be treated in that way. That person who's there, they're

:01:55. > :02:00.the world to you, but for them tohe's just a number, well he's not

:02:00. > :02:03.he was my dad - my daughter's granddad.

:02:03. > :02:07.People have contacted me to say they were worried at standards of

:02:07. > :02:12.care their relatives received. It's put on one particular hospital in

:02:12. > :02:15.the spotlight. The University Hospital of North Durham - or UHND.

:02:15. > :02:25.Opened in 2001 and run by the County Durham and Darlington NHS

:02:25. > :02:29.

:02:29. > :02:32.Foundation Trust. Elderly patient Betty Howarth went in there with

:02:32. > :02:35.shingles last winter. Whenever we went in, there was a

:02:35. > :02:41.strong smell of urine. On three occasions we had to ask for bedding

:02:41. > :02:46.to be changed because it was soaked. We reckon she was not showered for

:02:46. > :02:52.seven weeks. Her hair wasn't washed for a month.

:02:52. > :02:55.Then there's Fred Simpson, a cancer patient. He couldn't swallow, so

:02:55. > :02:59.when he was brought any meals they were just left on the table because

:02:59. > :03:02.he couldn't eat it. I proceeded to bring him soup every day.

:03:02. > :03:05.should you be expected to bring in food for your own dad in hospital?

:03:05. > :03:13.Not really, I would not have thought so, because he's in their

:03:13. > :03:16.care. And generally what Sandra saw on the ward worried her. One time I

:03:16. > :03:19.went in there were tablets on the floor. There was an elderly guy

:03:19. > :03:23.wandering around with his pyjama bottoms off. There was a gentleman

:03:23. > :03:26.in the bed opposite me Dad and every time we went in, myself, my

:03:26. > :03:32.husband told the nurses that he'd soiled himself. The room absolutely

:03:32. > :03:42.stank. It doesn't end there. A patient

:03:42. > :03:42.

:03:42. > :03:46.emailed us. An older lady on the same ward asked three different

:03:46. > :03:50.nurses to go to the toilet. They all told her to wait so over an

:03:50. > :03:54.hour later she had an accident in the bed. Nurse said, "Do you go in

:03:54. > :04:00.the bed at home Edna? No. Well you need to tell someone if you want to

:04:00. > :04:03.go." So what are the standards of elderly care in there really like?

:04:03. > :04:06.The body which inspects hospitals, the Care Quality Commission, says

:04:06. > :04:09.it went into the hospital last August. They are still finalising

:04:09. > :04:12.their report - but they did publish a draft on their website before

:04:12. > :04:16.withdrawing it again. I have a copy and it makes for interesting

:04:16. > :04:20.reading. "Elderly patients told the Care

:04:20. > :04:30.Quality Commission they were treated with respect and dignity."

:04:30. > :04:31.

:04:31. > :04:34.But for patients with dementia it doesn't look as good. The

:04:34. > :04:37.inspection team wrote, "We saw on more than one occasion that staff

:04:38. > :04:42.were rather dismissive or ignored their behaviour. One lady who was

:04:42. > :04:45.in a ward at the end of a corridor was crying out - we had to prompt a

:04:45. > :04:47.nurse to offer the lady reassurance." The inspectors also

:04:47. > :04:51.observed five patients who"'were not given the help or prompting

:04:51. > :04:55.they needed to eat or drink" and when the meals were cleared away,

:04:55. > :05:01.most of it was uneaten. The staff were also overheard referring to

:05:01. > :05:03.patients who needed help with eating as "feeders". The draft we

:05:03. > :05:13.have seen from the visit last August says that improvements must

:05:13. > :05:16.be made in two key areas surrounding respect and nutrition.

:05:16. > :05:19.A CQC spokesman told us the inspectors returned in January to

:05:19. > :05:22.check that was happening and that the final report is now likely to

:05:22. > :05:25.show that hospital is compliant with essential standards. It's a

:05:25. > :05:27.far cry from this idealistic view of hospital care. Even so, the

:05:27. > :05:30.Patients Association and the Alzheimer's Society say these

:05:30. > :05:36.worrying stories are repeated across the country. Angela Rippon

:05:36. > :05:39.campaigns for both organisations. Ream after ream after ream. Case

:05:39. > :05:42.after case after case. Of individuals all basically saying

:05:42. > :05:44.the same thing, that their buzzers are ignored, they're not fed

:05:44. > :05:47.properly, they're becoming dehydrated, they're not being

:05:47. > :05:57.helped with the toilet. Imagine lying in a bed in your own faeces,

:05:57. > :05:58.

:05:58. > :06:02.and your own urine, how degrading is that?

:06:02. > :06:08.Even the Prime Minister is calling for change in our hospitals. But

:06:08. > :06:12.why is it happening? It's easy to talk about nurses being too busy

:06:12. > :06:15.but surely this is just about basic care? Absolutely and it makes

:06:15. > :06:19.really difficult reading and very painful things for us to hear, but

:06:19. > :06:22.what that is telling me is that the amount of work and care that is

:06:22. > :06:32.required on that ward, there are insufficient people available to do

:06:32. > :06:32.

:06:32. > :06:35.We've met the trust here in Durham - they told us that they now have

:06:35. > :06:39.more staff on elderly wards and have a number of schemes to make

:06:39. > :06:42.sure the patients are fed properly. They said they had not been given

:06:42. > :06:44.sufficient information about the families we featured so couldn't

:06:44. > :06:49.comment, but they say they are fully compliant with the required

:06:49. > :06:52.standards. The Trust added that "As in any hospital there are times

:06:52. > :06:58.when we do not meet the expectations of patients - we work

:06:58. > :07:04.hard to make sure that lessons are learned." Fred Simpson's daughter

:07:05. > :07:09.was shocked when she visited after he'd had a routine biopsy.

:07:09. > :07:13.I leaned over to kiss him on the head and when I put the hand on the

:07:13. > :07:16.bed and lifted it up, there was a hand print of blood where I put my

:07:16. > :07:19.hand down. I pulled the sheet back and where they'd done this liver

:07:20. > :07:26.biopsy it was just running out like a tap. The blood was everywhere, it

:07:26. > :07:32.was horrendous. In its annual report the Trust says

:07:32. > :07:35.that the number of patients falling in its care is a cause for concern.

:07:35. > :07:39.He'd been buzzing to go to the toilet during the night, and no-one

:07:39. > :07:44.came and he'd got up to go to the toilet and next day when I went in,

:07:44. > :07:51.he had this massive gash on his head. You can imagine seeing him

:07:51. > :07:59.and thinking what's happened to you? And it happened to Betty

:07:59. > :08:02.Howarth as well. She fell going to the toilet on her own. Betty had

:08:02. > :08:05.broken her femur - her hip joint. What happened next - it's all there

:08:05. > :08:11.in black and white. In the hospital's own notes. Nurses find

:08:11. > :08:15.Betty on the toilet floor. They call for a doctor. That was at

:08:15. > :08:18.9.30pm. Three hours pass. Still no sign, that doctor was too busy so

:08:18. > :08:28.they were told to call another doctor. 2am - still no medical

:08:28. > :08:31.attention from a doctor. It's now 3.30am. Betty's been six hours with

:08:31. > :08:35.a broken bone and no proper pain relief, doctors are bleeped again.

:08:35. > :08:39.No-one came. It was 10 and � hours from the record of the fall, to a

:08:39. > :08:42.doctor actually seeing her. 10 and � hours! What do you make of that?

:08:42. > :08:50.Well, I could have got assistance there more quickly had we been on

:08:50. > :08:53.the fells in Cumbria. In an inquiry the Trust accepted that Betty's

:08:53. > :08:57.wait for a doctor to was" entirely inappropriate "although the fall

:08:57. > :09:02.could not have been prevented. The Trust also accepted that the level

:09:02. > :09:04.of personal care for Betty was" unacceptable ". Because the Trust

:09:04. > :09:09.said it would address these shortcomings the ombudsman decided

:09:09. > :09:12.not to investigate further. Betty only went into hospital with

:09:12. > :09:18.shingles, but when it was time to leave, a nurse delivered the news

:09:18. > :09:28.Brian feared most. I sat listening and then her hand

:09:28. > :09:37.

:09:37. > :09:40.came on mine and on Betty's and they said she'll not be coming home.

:09:40. > :09:43.I've known Betty for 72 years and to have her taken away is... I can

:09:43. > :09:51.see her every day and I know that she's comfortable and that's

:09:51. > :09:54.consolation, but it doesn't bring her back home.

:09:54. > :09:59.So have we gone from this idyllic view of nursing, to an altogether

:09:59. > :10:03.different picture nowadays? In terms of Fred Simpson's cancer,

:10:03. > :10:09.there was nothing anyone could've done. He passed away a few weeks

:10:09. > :10:12.later. Sandra was too upset to complain about his treatment.

:10:12. > :10:22.Meanwhile Brian Howarth's getting used to living apart from his wife

:10:22. > :10:30.

:10:30. > :10:33.after 60 years. Betty's now in a private care home. I know she's

:10:34. > :10:37.well cared for and when I go to bed at night, she's not there, beside

:10:37. > :10:43.me but I can rest my head on the pillow and go to sleep knowing that

:10:43. > :10:48.she's cared for. It was prying he got in contact and last as to tell

:10:48. > :10:57.this story, so if you have anything like this to tell us, please get in

:10:57. > :11:01.touch with us. If you do not have your Valentine's

:11:01. > :11:05.gift yet, how about a romantic night-time attack the cinema?

:11:05. > :11:09.Newcastle has had a love affair with the silver screen. The

:11:09. > :11:19.Tyneside Cinema is 75 years old this month and despite admitting to

:11:19. > :11:20.

:11:20. > :11:24.a facelift, it still has a special place in the heart of its audience.

:11:24. > :11:28.Down an alley way, some time in their mid- 80s, the cinema were

:11:28. > :11:34.Kirsop and notebook filled with short hand. What he had found was

:11:34. > :11:39.the key to one of the greatest love stories Tyneside has ever known,

:11:39. > :11:44.Britain by the cinema's founder, Dixon Scott. He was just entranced

:11:44. > :11:54.by the magic of the cinema and the pleasure and a light he could bring

:11:54. > :11:59.

:11:59. > :12:06.to ordinary people. Laughter, tears, glamour, beauty. We do that for you.

:12:06. > :12:10.It began 75 years ago this month course stop an entrepreneurial

:12:10. > :12:14.picture house owner had had a brainwave, he called at the

:12:14. > :12:19.Newcastle News theatre. People who did not have access to television

:12:19. > :12:24.at the time, they may not have the time would the money to buy again

:12:24. > :12:28.the newspaper, they could drop by the use the term. They could see

:12:28. > :12:33.the news reels with the news of the day. He was not just in it for what

:12:33. > :12:38.the money. He wanted a place where working people and their families

:12:38. > :12:42.could gain information about what was happening in the world. It was

:12:42. > :12:50.expanding people's understanding of the world in ways that had a been

:12:50. > :12:54.possible up to that point. He did create a place where the

:12:54. > :13:04.experiences of people could be whitened and their interests

:13:04. > :13:04.

:13:04. > :13:14.developed. Big occasions for me where Cup finals, when Newcastle

:13:14. > :13:22.

:13:22. > :13:29.United used to win. 1951. 52. 55. It was the only way, if he did not

:13:29. > :13:34.go to the match, to feel the at the sphere. It was a place that had a

:13:34. > :13:42.big effect on people, the unforgettable images they saw, of

:13:42. > :13:52.guns booming out during the Battle of El Alamein. The images of the

:13:52. > :13:54.

:13:54. > :14:04.death camps. But also beyond that, it was in its design, and a sort of

:14:04. > :14:06.

:14:06. > :14:12.Cathedral, a palace of culture from a different world. Everywhere was

:14:12. > :14:22.black, monochrome, so to come to a place like this, it really knocked

:14:22. > :14:25.

:14:25. > :14:30.to your eyes out. It was really exotic, it was like something out

:14:31. > :14:35.of Arabian nights. It is just as Dixon Scott had planned it. He had

:14:36. > :14:39.lovingly wrapped his gift in the most elegant of boxers. He was very

:14:39. > :14:44.much behind the look of the building, a reflection of the

:14:44. > :14:54.places he had visited, the styles he liked, and they were all put

:14:54. > :14:55.

:14:55. > :15:00.together in slightly zany way in It is very inviting the way you are

:15:00. > :15:03.invited upstairs. It feels like a series of secret. People are

:15:03. > :15:07.pushing on doors and poking their noses into doors where they should

:15:07. > :15:12.not go. But I like that people have that sense of ownership of the

:15:12. > :15:15.building. People can walk in off the street. How about having a

:15:15. > :15:25.knitting circle? If we can accommodate these people, I would

:15:25. > :15:28.

:15:28. > :15:32.The place has not changed at all in the 28 years I have been here.

:15:32. > :15:35.has not changed a lot. When they did the redevelopment, I spent so

:15:35. > :15:39.much money on the new tables, new chairs and new fittings, and yet,

:15:39. > :15:47.what I wanted from it was people to walk in and say, this is great, it

:15:47. > :15:53.has never changed. Poached egg on toast has been on the menu since

:15:53. > :16:00.1937. Remember the book found in the skip

:16:00. > :16:03.in the alleyway in the Eighties? That was Dixon Scott's notebook.

:16:03. > :16:09.His own private thoughts about how cinema can bring culture to the

:16:09. > :16:12.masses. How the cinemas grew, through the

:16:12. > :16:20.great social need and industrial communities, with no hobbies and no

:16:20. > :16:27.possibility of hobbies, it opened the world to them.

:16:27. > :16:29.This little building has stamped its mark across the crop. -- globe.

:16:29. > :16:34.It has influenced the careers of some of the world's best-known

:16:34. > :16:37.film-makers. Many director is -- many of the

:16:37. > :16:42.directors would not be making the films they are today but was not

:16:42. > :16:45.for this place. They range from Ridley Scott...

:16:45. > :16:47.I forgot to tell you, they are actually Dixon Scott's great

:16:47. > :16:50.nephews. Marshall, Anderson, all of these

:16:50. > :16:55.film-makers who come from the north-east. All of them have been

:16:55. > :17:01.two and loved the Tyneside Cinema. I have an office behind the circle

:17:01. > :17:04.in cinema one. The posters and the ice creams were kept there. For me,

:17:04. > :17:07.and for my directing partner, we developed, produced, post produced

:17:07. > :17:14.and then screened our very first feature film, Killing Time, all at

:17:14. > :17:19.the Tyneside Cinema. It felt like my private cinema so I felt

:17:19. > :17:21.incredibly lucky and incredibly grateful.

:17:21. > :17:29.The film's people saw and experiences they had inspired

:17:29. > :17:33.careers from writer to rock star. The first time I went to the

:17:33. > :17:38.Tyneside Cinema was on an art trip. A Francis Bacon film called Love Is

:17:38. > :17:43.The Devil. I have a very vivid memory of going

:17:43. > :17:48.to see a French film from the 1970s at Tyneside Cinema. I was just

:17:49. > :17:53.entranced by it. I had a real yearning for culture,

:17:53. > :17:57.as I still do. Whatever is available, I will seek it out. And

:17:57. > :18:01.be inspired by it. When you see something as brilliant

:18:01. > :18:07.as that, you think, I would really like to get into this business. I

:18:07. > :18:10.would really like to make stories, to make films.

:18:10. > :18:14.Michael went on to write many successful TV series. And a book

:18:14. > :18:20.about the cinema. It has always aimed to bring challenging films to

:18:20. > :18:23.its audiences. It is a nice place to be. They run

:18:23. > :18:26.mainstream films but they also run films that would appeal to a

:18:26. > :18:32.smaller audience. It is very important that kind of tradition is

:18:33. > :18:37.kept up. Cinema is an art form at the end of the day.

:18:37. > :18:42.It was Dixon Scott's greatest passion.

:18:42. > :18:46.Here is, for a man, the perfect love.

:18:46. > :18:49.The course of true love never did it once made. This man has seen

:18:49. > :18:54.some dark days like when the British Film Institute got its

:18:54. > :18:57.hands on the place. It was run from London, and the

:18:57. > :19:02.interest was not there. It was something they had to do in the

:19:03. > :19:06.regions. I am sure most of these places were set up to fail.

:19:06. > :19:09.It looks like it would close in fact, it did. People refused to

:19:09. > :19:19.accept the fact it was closing and they organised themselves, a series

:19:19. > :19:21.

:19:21. > :19:25.of protests screenings, and people Skipping a scene or two, after many

:19:25. > :19:29.minor neck sand tracks and a major facelift, the old lady is as

:19:29. > :19:38.radiant as she was when Newcastle first fell in love with her. --

:19:38. > :19:43.minor nips and tucks. We have built a business for the

:19:43. > :19:46.public, that all the highbrows and their allies cannot kill.

:19:46. > :19:52.He was very imaginative. He came up with this idea of marking the

:19:52. > :19:54.screening of the a film called Broken Blossoms. Down from the

:19:54. > :19:56.ceiling of the cinema flutter today's little artificial blossoms,

:19:56. > :20:04.and thousands upon thousands of these little flower blossoms

:20:04. > :20:12.fluttering down and the audience were completely entranced by this.

:20:12. > :20:15.It is the same with the cinema today. It is a magical place.

:20:15. > :20:18.We have just been amplifying his original vision, in terms of his

:20:18. > :20:26.vision for the space but also his passion for film. We are just

:20:26. > :20:29.carrying on that. I would be lost without the cinema.

:20:29. > :20:38.The next film we are going to see his Australian, and it is

:20:38. > :20:41.erotically explicit. I am sure that from his portrait on

:20:41. > :20:45.the staircase, as you go up through the cinema, he is looking around

:20:45. > :20:55.and nodding with approval at what is going on 75 years after he first

:20:55. > :20:58.

:20:58. > :21:01.If you look around, there are plenty of clues that tell us about

:21:01. > :21:03.our history but in North Yorkshire there is an inscription about a

:21:03. > :21:09.famous battle more than five centuries ago that has baffled

:21:09. > :21:17.historians. It is a a mystery that a noble man slain in that battle

:21:17. > :21:27.took to his grave. Literally. In a chill winter, 550 years ago,

:21:27. > :21:28.

:21:28. > :21:32.the Wars of the Roses tore through On Towton Fields near Tadcaster

:21:32. > :21:38.they lined up for what would become the bloodiest battle ever fought on

:21:38. > :21:48.English soil. Archer against archer, cousin against cousin, steel

:21:48. > :21:58.

:21:58. > :22:03.The unfreezing was it, to cut her last it from dawn until dusk. Many

:22:03. > :22:09.thousands of men died. Countless foot soldiers were lost and many

:22:09. > :22:19.noblemen, too, were to perish on that Palm Sunday in. One of them,

:22:19. > :22:23.the Lancastrian Lord Dacre, would fall in the thick of the action.

:22:23. > :22:28.Fighting in full armour would have been hard work. Hot and thirsty,

:22:28. > :22:31.the Lord removed his helmet and drank what would be his last drink.

:22:31. > :22:34.Some accounts tell of a boy with a crossbow hiding in a burr tree,

:22:34. > :22:43.others say it was a lucky archer who spotted the vulnerable

:22:43. > :22:46.commander. Either way, the end was the same. He fell dead and narrow

:22:46. > :22:49.in his neck. The unlucky Lord ended up buried

:22:49. > :22:52.close to where he fell. In the nearby village of Saxton, the

:22:52. > :22:58.churchyard is the last resting place for the bones of both

:22:58. > :23:04.Lancastrians and Yorkists. They're all equal now. But the ground

:23:04. > :23:08.beneath my feet will be heaving with the dead of the battle. Most

:23:08. > :23:12.of them do not have their names in the rest of -- in the history books

:23:12. > :23:15.but this is the final resting place of LAT port.

:23:15. > :23:19.The tomb dates from the 15th century and the years have been far

:23:19. > :23:22.from kind. The ancient inscription has all but worn away and the last

:23:22. > :23:25.time the words were legible enough to transcribe was probably in the

:23:25. > :23:28.Victorian era. No-one can be sure how accurate the previous

:23:28. > :23:30.interpretations of the complicated Latin actually were, and in recent

:23:30. > :23:40.times, archaeologists have never attempted to record exactly what

:23:40. > :23:44.

:23:44. > :23:47.remains of the inscription. Until now.

:23:47. > :23:49.A team from the University of York, led by archaeologist Tim Sutherland,

:23:50. > :23:52.are hoping to make a definitive record of the tomb's Latin

:23:52. > :24:02.inscription and confirm what was actually chiselled into the stone

:24:02. > :24:08.

:24:08. > :24:11.500 years ago. It says, here lies Lord Baker. -- Lord Dacre. Although

:24:12. > :24:19.it is abbreviated Latin text, and therefore not a simple case of

:24:19. > :24:26.reading it, and also, as you can see, there are sizable chunk

:24:26. > :24:31.missing. Recording best with millimetre precision for the first

:24:31. > :24:36.time will give us new information. The person who originally

:24:36. > :24:44.transcribed to this did it several hundred years ago and so, do we

:24:44. > :24:49.believe them? As with everything, we think we know a lot more than we

:24:49. > :24:52.actually do know. The team set up their equipment and

:24:52. > :24:55.prepare to take hundreds of photographs of the top of the tomb.

:24:55. > :25:05.Before they can begin, though, they'll need darkness and a lot of

:25:05. > :25:06.

:25:06. > :25:10.patience on a chilly night. We are moving a lighter over the surface

:25:10. > :25:13.to bring out the shadows and taking photographs from multiple

:25:13. > :25:23.directions and then we will stitch it together to see as much detail

:25:23. > :25:30.

:25:30. > :25:34.as possible. We will combine a all of these photos into one photograph

:25:34. > :25:37.and that will allow us to record the inscription that was left on

:25:37. > :25:39.the tomb. It is a real jigsaw of light but

:25:39. > :25:49.immediately the photographs offer a tantalising glimpse of abbreviated

:25:49. > :25:59.Latin text. That is brilliant. You can see a really faint but in the

:25:59. > :26:05.middle. Is that a bit of graffiti? It is going very well, we are

:26:05. > :26:13.already finding things. There appears to be some graffiti.

:26:13. > :26:18.Probably 200 years old or something. You can see the effect now. It is

:26:18. > :26:22.blindingly obvious. Almost impossible to think you cannot see

:26:22. > :26:32.this in daylight. The team work through the night,

:26:32. > :26:38.

:26:38. > :26:41.managing to faithfully record every mark on the top of the tomb. It is

:26:41. > :26:45.just over one month since they photographed that to him. Now that

:26:46. > :26:48.the University of York they are starting to peace it together. And

:26:48. > :26:58.initial analysis quickly shows that the weathering of the tomb's

:26:58. > :26:58.

:26:58. > :27:03.lettering is far worse than anyone thought. It is obvious that a lot

:27:03. > :27:11.of the stone has gone and it is extremely difficult to read full

:27:11. > :27:20.words or reconstruct the entire -- entire inscription. We have lost a

:27:21. > :27:30.lot of the surface. When this was fresh, it would have been almost as

:27:30. > :27:33.smooth as this table top. This is just the start. Now we need to put

:27:33. > :27:38.the day trying to a computer and now we have to spend a long time

:27:38. > :27:44.manipulating all of the images, and interpreting every single line on

:27:44. > :27:50.the surface of that to him. Once the letters are pieced together,

:27:50. > :27:59.Latin experts will have their say on the meaning of the words. 10 is

:27:59. > :28:09.convinced it is worth Prix effort. It will only exist in this manner

:28:09. > :28:13.

:28:13. > :28:16.for a certain amount of time before it is crumbling into dust. For the

:28:16. > :28:18.moment, the exact inscription on Lord Dacre's tomb may remain a

:28:18. > :28:21.perplexing puzzle but the archaeologists have managed, at the