"We don't have to win, just fight. Who's with
me?"
I am Wallace.
-- Malcom Wallace
Sons of Scotland. I am William Wallace.
And I see a whole army of my countrymen here in defiance of tyranny.
You have come to fight as free men, and free men you are.
What will you do without freedom, will you fight ? (No.)
Fight against that, no, we will run. And, we
will live.
Aye, fight and you might die. Run and you will live,
for at least a while And dying in your beds many
years from now, would you be willing to trade all the days from
this day to that. For one chance, just one chance, to come
back here and tell your enemies they may take our lives but they
will never take our freedom!
-- William Wallace & Scotland's People
Here are the kings (of England's) terms,
leave and you will get estates, titles, from which you will pay
taxes, and...
Wait here are Scotland's terms, lower your flags, and march
straight back to England stopping at every home to beg for forgiveness
for hundreds of years of theft, rape and murder. Do that and your
men will live, do it not and every one of you will die today.
You are outmatched; you have no heavy cavalry.
I'm not finished! Before we let you leave, your
commander will cross that field, present himself before this army,
put his head between his own legs, and kiss his @ss.
-- William Wallace & England's Army Spokesman
"You're so concerned with squabbling for the
scraps from Longshank's table that you've missed your God-given
right to something better. There is a difference between us. You
think the people of this country exist to provide you with position.
I think your position exists to provide those people with freedom.
And I go to make sure that they have it."
-- William Wallace
"History is written by those who hang heroes."
-- Robert the Bruce
"After the beheading, William Wallace's body
was torn to pieces. His head was set on London Bridge, his arms
and legs sent to the four corners of Britain as a warning. It
did not have the effect that Longshanks planned."
-- Robert, Narrator
"In the year of our Lord 1314, patriots of Scotland, starving
and outnumbered, charged the fields at Bannockburn. They fought
like warrior poets. They fought like Scotsmen. And won their freedom."