1:43:00
	- Bracken.
- He isn't here.
1:43:03
	Come on out or I'll let you have it!
1:43:10
	The state will tolerate
only one verdict from this jury.
1:43:13
	And that verdict should be quick:
Guilty!
1:43:48
	- Clyde Bracken, judge.
- Bracken?
1:43:50
	Where are you, Mr. Holmes?
Clyde Bracken, alive.
1:44:00
	There's the man the law
is looking for, not Leopold Dilg.
1:44:04
	His only crime was that
he had courage and spoke his mind.
1:44:09
	This is your law and your finest
possession. It makes you free.
1:44:13
	Why have you come
to destroy it?
1:44:15
	Take those weapons home
and burn them, and then think.
1:44:20
	Think of this country and of the law
that makes it what it is.
1:44:25
	Think of a world crying
for this very law.
1:44:28
	Then you'll understand why
you ought to guard it...
1:44:31
	...and why the law has got to be the
concern of every citizen...
1:44:34
	...to uphold it for your neighbour
as well as yourself.
1:44:38
	Violence against it is one mistake.
1:44:41
	Another mistake is to look upon
the law as just a set of principles.
1:44:47
	Just so much language
printed on heavy paper.
1:44:50
	Something he recites and then takes it
for granted that justice is being done.
1:44:56
	Both kinds of men are equally wrong.
1:44:59
	The law must be practiced every
minute, to the letter and spirit.