:07:03
And then when I had to wait again...
:07:06
I guess I thought
it would never really happen.
:07:09
It has, Jenny.
:07:12
But I'll make it up to you
for every one of those years.
:07:19
There'll be a lady sitting here.
:07:21
Have you any white wine?
:07:25
I almost got married once myself.
:07:27
It was all set till her family came West
in a covered wagon.
:07:30
If you could have seen her family,
you'd know why the wagon was covered.
:07:38
Miss Ballard, you're just in time for supper.
:07:41
Mr. Hampton, this is my fiancé, Mr. Warren.
:07:44
A surprise and a pleasure.
:07:47
Mr. Hampton is one of the
coach passengers.
:07:49
How do you do?
:07:50
We've been looking forward to meeting you.
I hope you'll join us for supper.
:07:54
- Thank you, but he's...
- Why not?
:07:57
This may not be
the mansion house in Atlanta...
:07:59
but you'll make three lonely bachelors
think it is.
:08:02
Mr. Burgess, Mr. Warren.
:08:04
- Mr. Weatherby, Mr. Warren.
- Glad to know you.
:08:06
Be seated.
:08:15
I tell you, the South had a better Army.
:08:17
We rode better, we fought better,
we were led by better men.
:08:21
And so we were defeated.
:08:22
Defeat. Fellow once said, "What is defeat?"
You go home.
:08:26
- War is terrible.
- Not always, Miss Ballard.
:08:29
When a man's dead, he don't worry
about the color of his uniform.
:08:33
I still say
the war could have been prevented.
:08:35
- How?
- By peaceful means.
:08:38
Negotiation, compromise, reason.
:08:41
If you stay out in the West, you're going to
find you can't negotiate with a bowie knife...
:08:45
or reason with a six-shooter.
:08:47
I seen Gettysburg.
:08:49
Two years later,
you could still smell the blood.
:08:52
And I saw Richmond
after they burned it to the ground.
:08:55
I've seen enough
and I've had enough of killing.
:08:58
I'm sick of violence and force.