:55:11
Welt, I've spoken my piece.
I only hope it registers.
:55:17
Don't get up. Please.
:55:21
Paynter.
:55:24
Have the pharmacist send some more
aspirin. My headache's much worse.
:55:28
Yes, sir.
:55:40
This is what is known in literature
as the pregnant pause.
:56:04
There's only one thing left to do:
Write to Walter Winohell.
:56:08
I almost felt sorry for him.
:56:11
Don't be so sentimental.
:56:13
I thought it was a pretty good speech.
:56:15
It was as close to an apology as
he could get. We could've backed him up.
:56:20
What could we have said? He turned
yellow the first time we saw action.
:56:24
Look, Princeton, you knew nothing about
DeVriess; you know less about Queeg.
:56:30
He's a tired man.
His nerves are shot.
:56:33
It's happened before--a man loses his
head--after what Queeg's gone through.
:56:36
That's a very endearing explanation.
But it won't hold.
:56:41
Has it ever occurred to you
that our captain might be unbalanced?
:56:44
-Cut the jokes.
-I'm no psychiatrist...
:56:46
but I know something
about abnormal behavior.
:56:48
Captain Queeg has every symptom
of acute paranoia.
:56:51
It's just a question of time
before he goes over the line.
:56:54
-Step outside, Keith.
-I'd like to stay.
:56:57
Let him.
He studied psychology at college.