:46:06
No!
:46:17
This is not your egg morning.
:46:21
Well, you certainly think
of everything, Miss Shelley.
:46:32
Too bad about your paper. Still, if you
read yesterday's, why read today's?
:46:37
- Just some more about that man Dilg.
- Dilg?
:46:40
- Oh, the fugitive from justice.
- Or a miscarriage of justice.
:46:45
- Your opinion too?
- It'd be yours if you knew Mr. Holmes.
:46:50
He puts a fellow like Grunstadt
on the bench. Grunstadt takes orders.
:46:55
- Well, the voters may remove him.
- This corruption is too thick.
:47:00
That's the way every decent
person around here feels about it.
:47:04
If feelings influenced law, half the
country would be in jail. Facts.
:47:10
My dear professor, people wind facts
around each other like pretzels.
:47:16
Facts alone, that's a nut
without a kernel.
:47:18
Where's the soul? The instinct?
Where's the warm, human side?
:47:22
Conduct the law on sentimentality and
you will have violence and disorder.
:47:28
Your way, you have a Greek statue.
Beautiful, but dead.
:47:32
All right, two schools of thought.
:47:36
I see your point of view, theoretically.
In fact, I respect it.
:47:41
I wish I could
respect yours, professor.
:47:45
Joseph puts it a little strongly.
He does respect you.
:47:48
He's for the practical side, the
garden-variety type of human experience.
:47:54
- Yes, and makes the law up as he goes.
- Out of common sense, yes.
:47:59
The way I see it, you don't live in this
country, you just take up room in it.