Patton
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1:22:00
After all I've been through. . .
1:22:03
. . .imagine getting killed
by an oxcart.

1:22:07
No, Brad, there's only one proper way
for a professional soldier to die.

1:22:11
That's from the last bullet
of the last battle of the last war.

1:22:16
At least the 3rd Army earned its pay.
1:22:20
In our drive across Europe,
we liberated. . .

1:22:23
. . . 1 2,000 cities and towns. . .
1:22:25
. . .and inflicted a million and a half
enemy casualties.

1:22:28
I sense from now on, just being
a good soldier won't mean a thing.

1:22:32
I'm afraid we're gonna have to be
diplomats, administrators, you name it.

1:22:37
God help us.
1:22:43
George, I want to say one thing.
1:22:48
You've done a magnificent job
here in Europe.

1:22:51
That's right, George.
1:22:53
That soldier you slapped did more to
win the war than any other private.

1:23:01
I'll see you for dinner.
1:23:03
Six-thirty?
1:23:20
PATTON:
For over a thousand years...

1:23:22
...Roman conquerors
returning from the wars...

1:23:25
...enjoyed the honor of a triumph,
a tumultuous parade.

1:23:31
In the procession came trumpeters
and musicians and strange animals...

1:23:35
...from the conquered territories...
1:23:38
... together with carts laden with
treasure and captured armaments.

1:23:43
The conqueror rode
in a triumphal chariot...

1:23:46
... the dazed prisoners
walking in chains before him.

1:23:50
Sometimes, his children,
robed in white...

1:23:53
...stood with him in the chariot,
or rode the trace horses.

1:23:58
A slave stood behind the conqueror...

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