HeywoodJablomy said: Cooper was chompin' at the bit to tell about the innocence of those boys, and the judge cut him off at every opportunity.
If you mean innocent of charges; they weren't. They were with Miller when he killed the rancher and rustled the cattle, and continued to ride with him. Guilty.
If you mean innocence of maturity, it wouldn't matter. They were old enough to know better.
joeparkson said:
Yet in that scene, he deliberately disallowed testimony that would have kept those two boys from hanging.
Cooper had nothing to say to the judge to prevent the boys from hanging. Cooper felt bad about two boys so young being hanged, but they were guilty. The judge knew this because he had heard Cooper's testimony in his chambers when Cooper first brought the three in. If the boys had helped Cooper when Miller tried to overpower him to escape instead of just seeing who would win the fight, the judge would have granted leniency.
We feel bad for them when they hang because they seemed like decent boys. If they had never met Miller, they may have lived their whole lives without breaking the law. But they were old enough to know better and made choices that cost them their lives.
It is bad to drink Jobus rum. Very bad.
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