Major Dundee
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:12:17
Sit down.
:12:26
Five years.
:12:29
You're still blaming me
instead of yourself, huh?

:12:35
I'll say one thing, Ben,
you sure haven't mellowed any.

:12:38
When are you going to learn
you made all your own troubles?

:12:41
Who had me cashiered out of the regiment?
:12:43
I cast one vote out of five.
:12:46
Two of those votes were for my acquittal.
:12:48
But not you. Not my own captain.
:12:51
Not my own friend.
:12:53
The conscience of the court
was not my concern.

:12:56
What did concern you, Amos?
:13:02
- That the man I killed was a Yankee?
- He was your brother officer.

:13:05
It was a duel of honor.
:13:08
You're Southern born,
you knew what that meant.

:13:11
If he had killed me, and he had a chance...
:13:14
- would you have convicted him?
- I would.

:13:17
You're a liar.
:13:18
You voted to please the generals
in Washington.

:13:22
You voted a promotion
for Amos Charles Dundee.

:13:27
You're a traitor to your country, Ben.
You gonna blame me for that, too?

:13:31
Sergeant!
:13:35
Yes, sir.
:13:38
I should have known better
than to try to talk to you.

:13:43
You'll try again, Major.
:13:50
The Major had asked for thieves,
renegades and deserters...

:13:54
and that's what he got.
After four hours he had accepted only three.


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