I read it as a little bit of a threat. The pirate who insulted Eleanor is part of a crew that's recently brought in a lot of goods to Nassau and made a lot of money for themselves. So the relationship between Nassau and the crew is an important one. It's not a relationship Eleanor is willing to throw away by, say, ejecting a member of the crew from her establishment (even one who insulted her), but she's also reminding him subtly that he shouldn't do anything to endanger the relationship either (such as insulting her again). And then she sort of finishes off the encounter in a lighthearted way -- with a dirty joke -- but also one that puts her in a bit of a victor's role. Taking his insult and turning it into something good for her (plus reminding him that she has far more economic power than him and potentially even his entire crew).
Gotta give Eleanor credit. She certainly knows how to run a business. If not an empire.
Suffering period!
19th, 20th & 21st Centuries Police.
❤
Savage 😎
Honestly, don’t get it can make someone explain the scene to me
I read it as a little bit of a threat.
The pirate who insulted Eleanor is part of a crew that's recently brought in a lot of goods to Nassau and made a lot of money for themselves. So the relationship between Nassau and the crew is an important one.
It's not a relationship Eleanor is willing to throw away by, say, ejecting a member of the crew from her establishment (even one who insulted her), but she's also reminding him subtly that he shouldn't do anything to endanger the relationship either (such as insulting her again). And then she sort of finishes off the encounter in a lighthearted way -- with a dirty joke -- but also one that puts her in a bit of a victor's role. Taking his insult and turning it into something good for her (plus reminding him that she has far more economic power than him and potentially even his entire crew).
@@queerlybeloved257 well said! thanks
@@queerlybeloved257Max is better
Tragedy period!
Misbehaviour!
Wasting time.
Cringe