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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Guide to Life and Literature of the Southwest, by J. Frank Dobie
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
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+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
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+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Guide to Life and Literature of the
+Southwest, by J. Frank Dobie
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Guide to Life and Literature of the Southwest
+
+Author: J. Frank Dobie
+
+Release Date: November 10, 2009 [EBook #314]
+Last Updated: January 26, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIFE AND LITERATURE OF THE SOUTHWEST ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Keller, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ GUIDE TO LIFE AND LITERATURE OF THE SOUTHWEST
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Revised And Enlarged In Both Knowledge And Wisdom
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By J. Frank Dobie
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="mynote">
+ <p>
+ Dallas, 1952
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Southern Methodist University Press
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Not copyright in 1942 Again not copyright in 1952</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anybody is welcome to help himself to any of it in any way
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NUMBER: 52-11834
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ S.M.U. PRESS
+ </p>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> A Preface With Some Revised Ideas </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> 1. A Declaration </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> 2. Interpreters of the Land </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> 3. General Helps </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> 4. Indian Culture; Pueblos and Navajos </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> 5. Apaches, Comanches, and Other Plains
+ Indians </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> 6. Spanish-Mexican Strains </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> 7. Flavor of France </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> 8. Backwoods Life and Humor </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> 9. How the Early Settlers Lived </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> 10. Fighting Texians </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> 11. Texas Rangers </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> 12. Women Pioneers </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> 13. Circuit Riders and Missionaries </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> 14. Lawyers, Politicians, J. P.'s </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> 15. Pioneer Doctors </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> 16. Mountain Men </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> 17. Santa Fe and the Santa Fe Trail </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> 18. Stagecoaches, Freighting </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> 19. Pony Express </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> 20. Surge of Life in the West </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> 21. Range Life: Cowboys, Cattle, Sheep </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> 22. Cowboy Songs and Other Ballads </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> 23. Horses: Mustangs and Cow Ponies </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> 24. The Bad Man Tradition </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> 25. Mining and Oil </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> 26. Nature; Wild Life; Naturalists </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> 27. Buffaloes and Buffalo Hunters </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> 28. Bears and Bear Hunters </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> 29. Coyotes, Lobos, and Panthers </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> 30. Birds and Wild Flowers </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0032"> 31. Negro Folk Songs and Tales </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> 32. Fiction&mdash;Including Folk Tales </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> 33. Poetry and Drama </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0035"> 34. Miscellaneous Interpreters and
+ Institutions </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> 35. Subjects for Themes </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ A Preface With Some Revised Ideas
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT HAS BEEN ten years since I wrote the prefatory "Declaration" to this
+ now enlarged and altered book. Not to my generation alone have many things
+ receded during that decade. To the intelligent young as well as to the
+ intelligent elderly, efforts in the present atmosphere to opiate the
+ public with mere pictures of frontier enterprise have a ghastly unreality.
+ The Texas Rangers have come to seem as remote as the Foreign Legion in
+ France fighting against the Kaiser. Yet this <i>Guide</i>, extensively
+ added to and revised, is mainly concerned, apart from the land and its
+ native life, with frontier backgrounds. If during a decade a man does not
+ change his mind on some things and develop new points of view, it is a
+ pretty good sign that his mind is petrified and need no longer be
+ accounted among the living. I have an inclination to rewrite the
+ "Declaration," but maybe I was just as wise on some matters ten years ago
+ as I am now; so I let it stand.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Do I contradict myself?
+ Very well then I contradict myself.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I have heard so much silly bragging by Texans that I now think it would be
+ a blessing to themselves&mdash;and a relief to others&mdash;if the
+ braggers did not know they lived in Texas. Yet the time is not likely to
+ come when a human being will not be better adapted to his environments by
+ knowing their nature; on the other hand, to study a provincial setting
+ from a provincial point of view is restricting. Nobody should specialize
+ on provincial writings before he has the perspective that only a good deal
+ of good literature and wide history can give. I think it more important
+ that a dweller in the Southwest read <i>The Trial and Death of Socrates</i>
+ than all the books extant on killings by Billy the Kid. I think this
+ dweller will fit his land better by understanding Thomas Jefferson's oath
+ ("I have sworn upon the altar of God eternal hostility against every form
+ of tyranny over the mind of man") than by reading all the books that have
+ been written on ranch lands and people. For any dweller of the Southwest
+ who would have the land soak into him, Wordsworth's "Tintern Abbey," "Ode:
+ Intimations of Immortality," "The Solitary Reaper," "Expostulation and
+ Reply," and a few other poems are more conducive to a "wise passiveness"
+ than any native writing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are no substitutes for nobility, beauty, and wisdom. One of the
+ chief impediments to amplitude and intellectual freedom is provincial
+ inbreeding. I am sorry to see writings of the Southwest substituted for
+ noble and beautiful and wise literature to which all people everywhere are
+ inheritors. When I began teaching "Life and Literature of the Southwest" I
+ did not regard these writings as a substitute. To reread most of them
+ would be boresome, though <i>Hamlet</i>, Boswell's <i>Johnson</i>, Lamb's
+ <i>Essays</i>, and other genuine literature remain as quickening as ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very likely I shall not teach the course again. I am positive I shall
+ never revise this <i>Guide</i> again. It is in nowise a bibliography. I
+ have made more additions to the "Range Life" chapter than to any other. I
+ am a collector of such books. A collector is a person who gathers unto
+ himself the worthless as well as the worthy. Since I did not make a nickel
+ out of the original printing of the <i>Guide</i> and hardly expect to make
+ enough to buy a California "ranch" out of the present printing, I have
+ added several items, with accompanying remarks, more for my own pleasure
+ than for benefit to society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Were the listings halved, made more selective, the book might serve its
+ purpose better. Anybody who wants to can slice it in any manner he
+ pleases. I am as much against forced literary swallowings as I am against
+ prohibitions on free tasting, chewing, and digestion. I rate censors,
+ particularly those of church and state, as low as I rate character
+ assassins; they often run together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I'd like to make a book on <i>Emancipators of the Human Mind</i>&mdash;Emerson,
+ Jefferson, Thoreau, Tom Paine, Newton, Arnold, Voltaire, Goethe.... When I
+ reflect how few writings connected with the wide open spaces of the West
+ and Southwest are wide enough to enter into such a volume, I realize
+ acutely how desirable is perspective in patriotism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hundreds of the books listed in this <i>Guide</i> have given me pleasure
+ as well as particles for the mosaic work of my own books; but, with minor
+ exceptions, they increasingly seem to me to explore only the exteriors of
+ life. There is in them much good humor but scant wit. The hunger for
+ something afar is absent or battened down. Drought blasts the turf, but
+ its unhealing blast to human hope is glossed over. The body's thirst for
+ water is a recurring theme, but human thirst for love and just thinking is
+ beyond consideration. Horses run with their riders to death or victory,
+ but fleeting beauty haunts no soul to the "doorway of the dead." The land
+ is often pictured as lonely, but the lone way of a human being's essential
+ self is not for this extravert world. The banners of individualism are
+ carried high, but the higher individualism that grows out of long looking
+ for meanings in the human drama is negligible. Somebody is always riding
+ around or into a "feudal domain." Nobody at all penetrates it or
+ penetrates democracy with the wisdom that came to Lincoln in his
+ loneliness: "As I would not be a SLAVE, so I would not be a MASTER. This
+ expresses my idea of democracy. Whatever differs from this, to the extent
+ of the difference, is no democracy." The mountains, the caves, the
+ forests, the deserts have had no prophets to interpret either their
+ silences or their voices. In short, these books are mostly only the stuff
+ of literature, not literature itself, not the very stuff of life, not the
+ distillations of mankind's "agony and bloody sweat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An ignorant person attaches more importance to the chatter of small voices
+ around him than to the noble language of remote individuals. The more he
+ listens to the small, the smaller he grows. The hope of regional
+ literature lies in out-growing regionalism itself. On November 11, 1949, I
+ gave a talk to the Texas Institute of Letters that was published in the
+ Spring 1950 issue of the <i>Southwest Review</i>. The paragraphs that
+ follow are taken therefrom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good writing about any region is good only to the extent that it has
+ universal appeal. Texans are the only "race of people" known to
+ anthropologists who do not depend upon breeding for propagation. Like
+ princes and lords, they can be made by "breath," plus a big white hat&mdash;which
+ comparatively few Texans wear. A beef stew by a cook in San Antonio,
+ Texas, may have a different flavor from that of a beef stew cooked in
+ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, but the essential substances of potatoes and
+ onions, with some suggestion of beef, are about the same, and geography
+ has no effect on their digestibility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A writer&mdash;a regional writer, if that term means anything&mdash;will
+ whenever he matures exercise the critical faculty. I mean in the Matthew
+ Arnold sense of appraisal rather than of praise, or, for that matter, of
+ absolute condemnation. Understanding and sympathy are not eulogy. Mere
+ glorification is on the same intellectual level as silver tongues and juke
+ box music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In using that word INTELLECTUAL, one lays himself liable to the accusation
+ of having forsaken democracy. For all that, "fundamental brainwork" is
+ behind every respect-worthy piece of writing, whether it be a lightsome
+ lyric that seems as careless as a redbird's flit or a formal epic, an
+ impressionistic essay or a great novel that measures the depth of human
+ destiny. Nonintellectual literature is as nonexistent as education without
+ mental discipline, or as "character building" in a school that is slovenly
+ in scholarship. Billboards along the highways of Texas advertise certain
+ towns and cities as "cultural centers." Yet no chamber of commerce would
+ consider advertising an intellectual center. The culture of a
+ nineteenth-century finishing school for young ladies was divorced from
+ intellect; genuine civilization is always informed by intellect. The
+ American populace has been taught to believe that the more intellectual a
+ professor is, the less common sense he has; nevertheless, if American
+ democracy is preserved it will be preserved by thought and not by physics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Editors of all but a few magazines of the country and publishers of most
+ of the daily newspapers cry out for brightness and vitality and at the
+ same time shut out critical ideas. They want intellect, but want it
+ petrified. Happily, the publishers of books have not yet reached that form
+ of delusion. In an article entitled "What Ideas Are Safe?" in the <i>Saturday
+ Review of Literature</i> for November 5, 1949, Henry Steele Commager says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we establish a standard of safe thinking, we will end up with no
+ thinking at all.... We cannot... have thought half slave and half free....
+ A nation which, in the name of loyalty or of patriotism or of any sincere
+ and high-sounding ideal, discourages criticism and dissent, and puts a
+ premium on acquiescence and conformity, is headed for disaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unless a writer feels free, things will not come to him, he cannot burgeon
+ on any subject whatsoever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1834 Davy Crockett's <i>Autobiography</i> was published. It is one of
+ the primary social documents of America. It is as much Davy Crockett,
+ whether going ahead after bears in a Tennessee canebrake or going ahead
+ after General Andrew Jackson in Congress, as the equally plain but also
+ urbane <i>Autobiography</i> of Franklin is Benjamin Franklin. It is
+ undiluted regionalism. It is provincial not only in subject but in point
+ of view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No provincial mind of this day could possibly write an autobiography or
+ any other kind of book co-ordinate in value with Crockett's "classic in
+ homespun." In his time, Crockett could exercise intelligence and still
+ retain his provincial point of view. Provincialism was in the air over his
+ land. In these changed times, something in the ambient air prevents any
+ active intelligence from being unconscious of lands, peoples, struggles
+ far beyond any province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not long after the Civil War, in Harris County, Texas, my father heard a
+ bayou-billy yell out:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Whoopee! Raised in a canebrake and suckled by a she-bear!
+ The click of a six-shooter is music to my ear!
+ The further up the creek you go, the worse they git,
+ And I come from the head of it! Whoopee!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If it were now possible to find some section of country so far up above
+ the forks of the creek that the owls mate there with the chickens, and if
+ this section could send to Congress one of its provincials untainted by
+ the outside world, he would, if at all intelligent, soon after arriving on
+ Capitol Hill become aware of interdependencies between his remote province
+ and the rest of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biographies of regional characters, stories turning on local customs,
+ novels based on an isolated society, books of history and fiction going
+ back to provincial simplicity will go on being written and published. But
+ I do not believe it possible that a good one will henceforth come from a
+ mind that does not in outlook transcend the region on which it is focused.
+ That is not to imply that the processes of evolution have brought all
+ parts of the world into such interrelationships that a writer cannot
+ depict the manners and morals of a community up Owl Hoot Creek without
+ enmeshing them with the complexities of the Atlantic Pact. Awareness of
+ other times and other wheres, not insistence on that awareness, is the
+ requisite. James M. Barrie said that he could not write a play until he
+ got his people off on a kind of island, but had he not known about the
+ mainland he could never have delighted us with the islanders&mdash;islanders,
+ after all, for the night only. Patriotism of the right kind is still a
+ fine thing; but, despite all gulfs, canyons, and curtains that separate
+ nations, those nations and their provinces are all increasingly
+ interrelated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sharp line of time or space, like that separating one century from
+ another or the territory of one nation from that of another, can delimit
+ the boundaries of any region to which any regionalist lays claim. Mastery,
+ for instance, of certain locutions peculiar to the Southwest will take
+ their user to the Aztecs, to Spain, and to the border of ballads and Sir
+ Walter Scott's romances. I found that I could not comprehend the coyote as
+ animal hero of Pueblo and Plains Indians apart from the Reynard of Aesop
+ and Chaucer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a noble opinion respecting censorship and freedom of the press, handed
+ down on March 18, 1949, Judge Curtis Bok of Pennsylvania said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is no longer possible that free speech be guaranteed Federally and
+ denied locally; under modern methods of instantaneous communication such a
+ discrepancy makes no sense.... What is said in Pennsylvania may clarify an
+ issue in California, and what is suppressed in California may leave us the
+ worse in Pennsylvania. Unless a restriction on free speech be of national
+ validity, it can no longer have any local validity whatever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the qualities that any good regional writer has in common with other
+ good writers of all places and times is intellectual integrity. Having it
+ does not obligate him to speak out on all issues or, indeed, on any issue.
+ He alone is to judge whether he will sport with Amaryllis in the shade or
+ forsake her to write his own <i>Areopagitica</i>. Intellectual integrity
+ expresses itself in the tune as well as argument, in choice of words&mdash;words
+ honest and precise&mdash;as well as in ideas, in fidelity to human nature
+ and the flowers of the fields as well as to principles, in facts reported
+ more than in deductions proposed. Though a writer write on something as
+ innocuous as the white snails that crawl up broomweed stalks and that
+ roadrunners carry to certain rocks to crack and eat, his intellectual
+ integrity, if he has it, will infuse the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing is too trivial for art, but good art treats nothing in a trivial
+ way. Nothing is too provincial for the regional writer, but he cannot be
+ provincial-minded toward it. Being provincial-minded may make him a
+ typical provincial; it will prevent him from being a representative or
+ skilful interpreter. Horace Greeley said that when the rules of the
+ English language got in his way, they did not stand a chance. We may be
+ sure that if by violating the rules of syntax Horace Greeley sometimes
+ added forcefulness to his editorials, he violated them deliberately and
+ not in ignorance. Luminosity is not stumbled into. The richly savored and
+ deliciously unlettered speech of Thomas Hardy's rustics was the creation
+ of a master architect who had looked out over the ranges of fated mankind
+ and looked also into hell. Thomas Hardy's ashes were placed in Westminster
+ Abbey, but his heart, in accordance with a provision of his will, was
+ buried in the churchyard of his own village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have never tried to define regionalism. Its blanket has been put over a
+ great deal of worthless writing. Robert Frost has approached a satisfying
+ conception. "The land is always in my bones," he said&mdash;the land of
+ rock fences. But, "I am not a regionalist. I am a realmist. I write about
+ realms of democracy and realms of the spirit." Those realms include The
+ Woodpile, The Grindstone, Blueberries, Birches, and many other features of
+ the land North of Boston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To an extent, any writer anywhere must make his own world, no matter
+ whether in fiction or nonfiction, prose or poetry. He must make something
+ out of his subject. What he makes depends upon his creative power,
+ integrated with a sense of form. The popular restriction of creative
+ writing to fiction and verse is illogical. Carl Sandburg's life of Lincoln
+ is immeasurably more creative in form and substance than his fanciful <i>Potato
+ Face</i>. Intense exercise of his creative power sets, in a way, the
+ writer apart from the life he is trying to sublimate. Becoming a
+ Philistine will not enable a man to interpret Philistinism, though
+ Philistines who own big presses think so. Sinclair Lewis knew Babbitt as
+ Babbitt could never know either himself or Sinclair Lewis.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ J. F. D.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <i>The time of Mexican primroses</i> 1952
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ 1. A Declaration
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IN THE UNIVERSITY of Texas I teach a course called "Life and Literature of
+ the Southwest." About 1929 I had a brief guide to books concerning the
+ Southwest mimeographed; in 1931 it was included by John William Rogers in
+ a booklet entitled <i>Finding Literature on the Texas Plains</i>. After
+ that I revised and extended the guide three or four times, during the
+ process distributing several thousand copies of the mimeographed forms.
+ Now the guide has grown too long, and I trust that this printing of it
+ will prevent my making further additions&mdash;though within a short time
+ new books will come out that should be added.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the guide is fragmentary, incomplete, and in no sense a bibliography.
+ Its emphases vary according to my own indifferences and ignorance as well
+ as according to my own sympathies and knowledge. It is strong on the
+ character and ways of life of the early settlers, on the growth of the
+ soil, and on everything pertaining to the range; it is weak on information
+ concerning politicians and on citations to studies which, in the manner of
+ orthodox Ph.D. theses, merely transfer bones from one graveyard to
+ another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is designed primarily to help people of the Southwest see significances
+ in the features of the land to which they belong, to make their
+ environments more interesting to them, their past more alive, to bring
+ them to a realization of the values of their own cultural inheritance, and
+ to stimulate them to observe. It includes most of the books about the
+ Southwest that people in general would agree on as making good reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have never had any idea of writing or teaching about my own section of
+ the country merely as a patriotic duty. Without apologies, I would
+ interpret it because I love it, because it interests me, talks to me,
+ appeals to my imagination, warms my emotions; also because it seems to me
+ that other people living in the Southwest will lead fuller and richer
+ lives if they become aware of what it holds. I once thought that, so far
+ as reading goes, I could live forever on the supernal beauty of Shelley's
+ "The Cloud" and his soaring lines "To a Skylark," on the rich melancholy
+ of Keats's "Ode to a Nightingale," on Cyrano de Bergerac's ideal of a free
+ man, on Wordsworth's philosophy of nature&mdash;a philosophy that has
+ illuminated for me the mesquite flats and oak-studded hills of Texas&mdash;on
+ the adventures in Robert Louis Stevenson, the flavor and wit of Lamb's
+ essays, the eloquent wisdom of Hazlitt, the dark mysteries of Conrad, the
+ gaieties of Barrie, the melody of Sir Thomas Browne, the urbanity of
+ Addison, the dash in Kipling, the mobility, the mightiness, the lightness,
+ the humor, the humanity, the everything of Shakespeare, and a world of
+ other delicious, high, beautiful, and inspiring things that English
+ literature has bestowed upon us. That literature is still the richest of
+ heritages; but literature is not enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here I am living on a soil that my people have been living and working and
+ dying on for more than a hundred years&mdash;the soil, as it happens, of
+ Texas. My roots go down into this soil as deep as mesquite roots go. This
+ soil has nourished me as the banks of the lovely Guadalupe River nourish
+ cypress trees, as the Brazos bottoms nourish the wild peach, as the gentle
+ slopes of East Texas nourish the sweet-smelling pines, as the barren,
+ rocky ridges along the Pecos nourish the daggered lechuguilla. I am at
+ home here, and I want not only to know about my home land, I want to live
+ intelligently on it. I want certain data that will enable me to
+ accommodate myself to it. Knowledge helps sympathy to achieve harmony. I
+ am made more resolute by Arthur Hugh Clough's picture of the dripping
+ sailor on the reeling mast, "On stormy nights when wild northwesters
+ rave," but the winds that have bit into me have been dry Texas northers;
+ and fantastic yarns about them, along with a cowboy's story of a herd of
+ Longhorns drifting to death in front of one of them, come home to me and
+ illuminate those northers like forked lightning playing along the top of
+ black clouds in the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No informed person would hold that the Southwest can claim any
+ considerable body of PURE LITERATURE as its own. At the same time, the
+ region has a distinct cultural inheritance, full of life and drama, told
+ variously in books so numerous that their very existence would surprise
+ many people who depend on the Book-of-the-Month Club for literary
+ guidance. Any people have a right to their own cultural inheritance,
+ though sheeplike makers of textbooks and sheeplike pedagogues of American
+ literature have until recently, either wilfully or ignorantly, denied that
+ right to the Southwest. Tens of thousands of students of the Southwest
+ have been assigned endless pages on and listened to dronings over Cotton
+ Mather, Increase Mather, Jonathan Edwards, Anne Bradstreet, and other
+ dreary creatures of colonial New England who are utterly foreign to the
+ genius of the Southwest. If nothing in written form pertaining to the
+ Southwest existed at all, it would be more profitable for an inhabitant to
+ go out and listen to coyotes singing at night in the prickly pear than to
+ tolerate the Increase Mather kind of thing. It is very profitable to
+ listen to coyotes anyhow. I rebelled years ago at having the tradition,
+ the spirit, the meaning of the soil to which I belong utterly disregarded
+ by interpreters of literature and at the same time having the Increase
+ Mather kind of stuff taught as if it were important to our part of
+ America. Happily the disregard is disappearing, and so is Increase Mather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If they had to be rigorously classified into hard and fast categories,
+ comparatively few of the books in the lists that follow would be rated as
+ pure literature. Fewer would be rated as history. A majority of them are
+ the stuff of history. The stuff out of which history is made is generally
+ more vital than formalized history, especially the histories habitually
+ forced on students in public schools, colleges, and universities. There is
+ no essential opposition between history and literature. The attempt to
+ study a people's literature apart from their social and, to a less extent,
+ their political history is as illogical as the lady who said she had read
+ Romeo but had not yet got to Juliet. Nearly any kind of history is more
+ important than formal literary history showing how in a literary way
+ Abraham begat Isaac and Isaac begat Jacob. Any man of any time who has
+ ever written with vigor has been immeasurably nearer to the dunghill on
+ which he sank his talons while crowing than to all literary ancestors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great deal of chronicle writing that makes no pretense at being
+ belles-lettres is really superior literature to much that is so
+ classified. I will vote three times a day and all night for John C.
+ Duval's <i>Adventures of Bigfoot Wallace</i>, Charlie Siringo's <i>Riata
+ and Spurs</i>, James B. Gillett's <i>Six Years with the Texas Rangers</i>,
+ and dozens of other straightaway chronicles of the Southwest in preference
+ to "The Culprit Fay" and much other watery "literature" with which
+ anthologies representing the earlier stages of American writing are
+ padded. Ike Fridge's pamphlet story of his ridings for John Chisum&mdash;chief
+ provider of cattle for Billy the Kid to steal&mdash;has more of the juice
+ of reality in it and, therefore, more of literary virtue than some of
+ James Fenimore Cooper's novels, and than some of James Russell Lowell's
+ odes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The one thing essential to writing if it is to be read, to art if it is to
+ be looked at, is vitality. No critic or professor can be hired to pump
+ vitality into any kind of human expression, but professors and critics
+ have taken it out of many a human being who in his attempts to say
+ something decided to be correct at the expense of being himself&mdash;being
+ natural, being alive. The priests of literary conformity never had a
+ chance at the homemade chronicles of the Southwest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The orderly way in which to study the Southwest would be to take up first
+ the land, its flora, fauna, climate, soils, rivers, etc., then the
+ aborigines, next the exploring and settling Spaniards, and finally, after
+ a hasty glance at the French, the English-speaking people who brought the
+ Southwest to what it is today. We cannot proceed in this way, however.
+ Neither the prairies nor the Indians who first hunted deer on them have
+ left any records, other than hieroglyphic, as to their lives. Some
+ late-coming men have written about them. Droughts and rains have had far
+ more influence on all forms of life in the Southwest and on all forms of
+ its development culturally and otherwise than all of the Coronado
+ expeditions put together. I have emphasized the literature that reveals
+ nature. My method has been to take up types and subjects rather than to
+ follow chronology.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chronology is often an impediment to the acquiring of useful knowledge. I
+ am not nearly so much interested in what happened in Abilene, Kansas, in
+ 1867&mdash;the year that the first herds of Texas Longhorns over the
+ Chisholm Trail found a market at that place&mdash;as I am in picking out
+ of Abilene in 1867 some thing that reveals the character of the men who
+ went up the trail, some thing that will illuminate certain phenomena along
+ the trail human beings of the Southwest are going up today, some thing to
+ awaken observation and to enrich with added meaning this corner of the
+ earth of which we are the temporary inheritors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By "literature of the Southwest" I mean writings that interpret the
+ region, whether they have been produced by the Southwest or not. Many of
+ them have not. What we are interested in is life in the Southwest, and any
+ interpreter of that life, foreign or domestic, ancient or modern, is of
+ value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The term Southwest is variable because the boundaries of the Southwest are
+ themselves fluid, expanding and contracting according to the point of view
+ from which the Southwest is viewed and according to whatever common
+ denominator is taken for defining it. The Spanish Southwest includes
+ California, but California regards itself as more closely akin to the
+ Pacific Northwest than to Texas; California is Southwest more in an
+ antiquarian way than other-wise. From the point of view of the most
+ picturesque and imagination-influencing occupation of the Southwest, the
+ occupation of ranching, the Southwest might be said to run up into
+ Montana. Certainly one will have to go up the trail to Montana to finish
+ out the story of the Texas cowboy. Early in the nineteenth century the
+ Southwest meant Tennessee, Georgia, and other frontier territory now
+ regarded as strictly South. The men and women who "redeemed Texas from the
+ wilderness" came principally from that region. The code of conduct they
+ gave Texas was largely the code of the booming West. Considering the
+ character of the Anglo-American people who took over the Southwest, the
+ region is closer to Missouri than to Kansas, which is not Southwest in any
+ sense but which has had a strong influence on Oklahoma. Chihuahua is more
+ southwestern than large parts of Oklahoma. In <i>Our Southwest</i>, Erna
+ Fergusson has a whole chapter on "What is the Southwest?" She finds Fort
+ Worth to be in the Southwest but Dallas, thirty miles east, to be facing
+ north and east. The principal areas of the Southwest are, to have done
+ with air-minded reservations, Arizona, New Mexico, most of Texas, some of
+ Oklahoma, and anything else north, south, east, or west that anybody wants
+ to bring in. The boundaries of cultures and rainfall never follow survey
+ lines. In talking about the Southwest I naturally incline to emphasize the
+ Texas part of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Life is fluid, and definitions that would apprehend it must also be. Yet I
+ will venture one definition&mdash;not the only one&mdash;of an educated
+ person. An educated person is one who can view with interest and
+ intelligence the phenomena of life about him. Like people elsewhere, the
+ people of the Southwest find the features of the land on which they live
+ blank or full of pictures according to the amount of interest and
+ intelligence with which they view the features. Intelligence cannot be
+ acquired, but interest can; and data for interest and intelligence to act
+ upon are entirely acquirable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Studies perfect nature," Bacon said. "Nature follows art" to the extent
+ that most of us see principally what our attention has been called to. I
+ might never have noticed rose-purple snow between shadows if I had not
+ seen a picture of that kind of snow. I had thought white the only natural
+ color of snow. I cannot think of yew trees, which I have never seen,
+ without thinking of Wordsworth's poem on three yew trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nobody has written a memorable poem on the mesquite. Yet the mesquite has
+ entered into the social, economic, and aesthetic life of the land; it has
+ made history and has been painted by artists. In the homely chronicles of
+ the Southwest its thorns stick, its roots burn into bright coals, its
+ trunks make fence posts, its lovely leaves wave. To live beside this
+ beautiful, often pernicious, always interesting and highly characteristic
+ tree&mdash;or bush&mdash;and to know nothing of its significance is to be
+ cheated out of a part of life. It is but one of a thousand factors
+ peculiar to the Southwest and to the land's cultural inheritance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a long time, as he tells in his <i>Narrative</i>, Cabeza de Vaca was a
+ kind of prisoner to coastal Indians of Texas. Annually, during the season
+ when prickly pear apples (<i>tunas</i>, or Indian figs, as they are called
+ in books) were ripe, these Indians would go upland to feed on the fruit.
+ During his sojourn with them Cabeza de Vaca went along. He describes how
+ the Indians would dig a hole in the ground, squeeze the fruit out of <i>tunas</i>
+ into the hole, and then swill up big drinks of it. Long ago the Indians
+ vanished, but prickly pears still flourish over millions of acres of land.
+ The prickly pear is one of the characteristic growths of the Southwest.
+ Strangers look at it and regard it as odd. Painters look at it in bloom or
+ in fruit and strive to capture the colors. During the droughts ranchmen
+ singe the thorns off its leaves, using a flame-throwing machine, easily
+ portable by a man on foot, fed from a small gasoline tank. From Central
+ Texas on down into Central America prickly pear acts as host for the
+ infinitesimal insect called cochineal, which supplied the famous dyes of
+ Aztec civilization.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A long essay might be written on prickly pear. It weaves in and out of
+ many chronicles of the Southwest. A. J. Sowell, one of the best
+ chroniclers of Texas pioneer life, tells in his life of Bigfoot Wallace
+ how that picturesque ranger captain once took one of his wounded men away
+ from an army surgeon because the surgeon would not apply prickly pear
+ poultices to the wound. In <i>Rangers and Pioneers of Texas</i>, Sowell
+ narrates how rattlesnakes were so large and numerous in a great prickly
+ pear flat out from the Nueces River that rangers pursuing bandits had to
+ turn back. Nobody has written a better description of a prickly pear flat
+ than O. Henry in his story of "The Caballero's Way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ People may look at prickly pear, and it will be just prickly pear and
+ nothing more. Or they may look at it and find it full of significances;
+ the mere sight of a prickly pear may call up a chain of incidents, facts,
+ associations. A mind that can thus look out on the common phenomena of
+ life is rich, and all of the years of the person whose mind is thus stored
+ will be more interesting and full.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cabeza de Vaca's <i>Narrative</i>, the chronicles of A. J. Sowell, and O.
+ Henry's story are just three samples of southwestern literature that bring
+ in prickly pear. No active-minded person who reads any one of these three
+ samples will ever again look at prickly pear in the same light that he
+ looked at it before he read. Yet prickly pear is just one of hundreds of
+ manifestations of life in the Southwest that writers have commented on,
+ told stories about, dignified with significance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cotton no longer has the economic importance to Texas that it once had.
+ Still, it is mighty important. In the minds of millions of farm people of
+ the South, cotton and the boll weevil are associated. The boll weevil was
+ once a curse; then it came to be somewhat regarded as a disguised blessing&mdash;in
+ limiting production.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ De first time I seen de boll weevil,
+ He was a-settin' on de square.
+ Next time I seen him, he had all his family dere&mdash;
+ Jest a-lookin' foh a home, jest a-lookin' foh a home.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A man dependent on cotton for a living and having that living threatened
+ by the boll weevil will not be much interested in ballads, but for the
+ generality of people this boll weevil ballad&mdash;the entirety of which
+ is a kind of life history of the insect&mdash;is, while delightful in
+ itself, a veritable story-book on the weevil. Without the ballad, the
+ weevil's effect on economic history would be unchanged; but as respects
+ mind and imagination, the ballad gives the weevil all sorts of
+ significances. The ballad is a part of the literature of the Southwest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I am assigning too many motives of self-improvement to reading. People
+ read for fun, for pleasure. The literature of the Southwest affords bully
+ reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I had read as much as other men, I would know as little," Thomas
+ Hobbes is credited with having said. A student in the presence of Bishop
+ E. D. Mouzon was telling about the scores and scores of books he had read.
+ At a pause the bishop shook his long, wise head and remarked, "My son,
+ when DO you get time to think?" Two of the best educated men I have ever
+ had the fortune of talking with were neither schooled nor widely read.
+ They were extraordinary observers. One was a plainsman, Charles Goodnight;
+ the other was a borderer, Don Alberto Guajardo, in part educated by an old
+ Lipan Indian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here are the books. I list them not so much to give knowledge as to
+ direct people with intellectual curiosity and with interest in their own
+ land to the sources of knowledge; not to create life directly, but to
+ point out where it has been created or copied. On some of the books I have
+ made brief observations. Those observations can never be nearly so
+ important to a reader as the development of his own powers of observation.
+ With something of an apologetic feeling I confess that I have read, in my
+ way, most of the books. I should probably have been a wiser and better
+ informed man had I spent more time out with the grasshoppers, horned
+ toads, and coyotes. November 5, 1942 J. FRANK DOBIE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 2. Interpreters of the Land
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "HE'S FOR A JIG or a tale of bawdry, or he sleeps." Thought employs ideas,
+ but having an idea is not the same thing as thinking. A rooster in a pen
+ of hens has an idea. Thought has never been so popular with mankind as
+ horse opera, horse play, the main idea behind sheep's eyes. Far be it from
+ me to feel contempt for people who cannot and do not want to think. The
+ human species has not yet evolved to the stage at which thought is
+ natural. I am far more at ease lying in grass and gazing without thought
+ process at clouds than in sitting in a chair trying to be logical. Just
+ the same, free play of mind upon life is the essence of good writing, and
+ intellectual activity is synonymous with critical interpretations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the constant disregard of thought, Americans of the mid-twentieth
+ century have added positive opposition. Critical ideas are apt to make any
+ critic suspected of being subversive. The Southwest, Texas especially, is
+ more articulately aware of its land spaces than of any other feature
+ pertaining to itself. Yet in the realm of government, the Southwest has
+ not produced a single spacious thinker. So far as the cultural ancestry of
+ the region goes, the South has been arid of thought since the time of
+ Thomas Jefferson, the much talked-of mind of John C. Calhoun being
+ principally casuistic; on another side, derivatives from the Spanish
+ Inquisition could contribute to thought little more than tribal medicine
+ men have contributed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among historians of the Southwest the general rule has been to be careful
+ with facts and equally careful in avoiding thought-provoking
+ interpretations. In the multitudinous studies on Spanish-American history
+ all padres are "good" and all conquistadores are "intrepid," and that is
+ about as far as interpretation goes. The one state book of the Southwest
+ that does not chloroform ideas is Erna Fergusson's <i>New Mexico: A
+ Pageant of Three Peoples</i> (Knopf, New York, 1952). Essayical in form,
+ it treats only of the consequential. It evaluates from the point of view
+ of good taste, good sense, and an urbane comprehension of democracy. The
+ subject is provincial, but the historian transcends all provincialism. Her
+ sympathy does not stifle conclusions unusable in church or chamber of
+ commerce propaganda. In brief, a cultivated mind can take pleasure in this
+ interpretation of New Mexico&mdash;and that marks it as a solitary among
+ the histories of neighboring states.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The outstanding historical interpreter of the Southwest is Walter Prescott
+ Webb, of the University of Texas. <i>The Great Plains</i> utilizes
+ chronology to explain the presence of man on the plains; it is primarily a
+ study in cause and effect, of water and drought, of adaptations and lack
+ of adaptations, of the land's growth into human imagination as well as
+ economic institutions. Webb uses facts to get at meanings. He fulfils
+ Emerson's definition of Scholar: "Man Thinking." In <i>Divided We Stand</i>
+ he goes into machinery, the feudalism of corporation-dominated economy,
+ the economic supremacy of the North over the South and the West. In <i>The
+ Great Frontier</i> (Houghton Mifilin, Boston, 1952) he considers the
+ Western Hemisphere as a frontier for Europe&mdash;a frontier that brought
+ about the rise of democracy and capitalism and that, now vanished as a
+ frontier, foreshadows the vanishment of democracy and capitalism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In <i>Virgin Land: The American West as Symbol and a Myth</i> (Harvard
+ University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1950) Henry Nash Smith plows
+ deep. But the tools of this humanistic historian are of delicate finish
+ rather than of horsepower. To him, thinking is a joyful process and
+ lucidity out of complexity is natural. He compasses Parrington's <i>Main
+ Currents in American Thought</i> and Beadle's Dime Novels along with
+ agriculture and manufacturing. Excepting the powerful books by Walter
+ Prescott Webb, not since Frederick Jackson Turner, in 1893, presented his
+ famous thesis on "The Significance of the Frontier in American History"
+ has such a revealing evaluation of frontier movements appeared As a matter
+ of fact, Henry Nash Smith leaves Turner's ideas on the dependence of
+ democracy upon farmers without more than one leg to stand upon. Not being
+ a King Canute, he does not take sides for or against social evolution.
+ With the clearest eyes imaginable, he looks into it. Turner's <i>The
+ Frontier in American History</i> (1920) has been a fertile begetter of
+ interpretations of history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of being the usual kind of jokesmith book or concatenation of tall
+ tales, <i>Folk Laughter on the American Frontier</i> by Mody C. Boatright
+ (Macmillan, New York, 1949) goes into the human and social significances
+ of humor. Of boastings, anecdotal exaggerations, hide-and-hair metaphors,
+ stump and pulpit parables, tenderfoot baitings, and the like there is
+ plenty, but thought plays upon them and arranges them into patterns of
+ social history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mary Austin (1868-1934) is an interpreter of nature, which for her
+ includes naturally placed human beings as much as naturally placed
+ antelopes and cacti. She wrote <i>The American Rhythm</i> on the theory
+ that authentic poetry expresses the rhythms of that patch of earth to
+ which the poet is rooted. Rhythm is experience passed into the
+ subconscious and is "distinct from our intellectual perception of it."
+ Before they can make true poetry, English-speaking Americans will be in
+ accord with "the run of wind in tall grass" as were the Pueblo Indians
+ when Europeans discovered them. But Mary Austin's primary importance is
+ not as a theorist. Her spiritual depth is greater than her intellectual.
+ She is a translator of nature through concrete observations. She
+ interprets through character sketches, folk tales, novels. "Anybody can
+ write facts about a country," she said. She infuses fact with
+ understanding and imagination. In <i>Lost Borders</i>, <i>The Land of
+ Little Rain</i>, <i>The Land of Journey's Ending</i>, and <i>The Flock</i>
+ the land itself often seems to speak, but often she gets in its way. She
+ sees "with an eye made quiet by the power of harmony." <i>Earth Horizons</i>,
+ a stubborn book, is Mary Austin's inner autobiography. <i>The Beloved
+ House</i>, by T. M. Pearce (Caxton, Caldwell, Idaho, 1940), is an
+ understanding biography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joseph Wood Krutch of Columbia University spent a year in Arizona, near
+ Tucson. Instead of talking about his <i>The Desert Year</i> (Sloane, New
+ York, 1952), I quote a representative paragraph:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In New England the struggle for existence is visibly the struggle of plant
+ with plant, each battling his neighbor for sunlight and for the spot of
+ ground which, so far as moisture and nourishment are concerned, would
+ support them all. Here, the contest is not so much of plant against plant
+ as of plant against inanimate nature. The limiting factor is not the
+ neighbor but water; and I wonder if this is, perhaps, one of the things
+ which makes this country seem to enjoy a kind of peace one does not find
+ elsewhere. The struggle of living thing against living thing can be
+ distressing in a way that a mere battle with the elements is not. If some
+ great clump of cactus dies this summer it will be because the cactus has
+ grown beyond the capacity of its roots to get water, not because one green
+ fellow creature has bested it in some limb-to-limb struggle. In my more
+ familiar East the crowding of the countryside seems almost to parallel the
+ crowding of the cities. Out here there is, even in nature, no congestion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Southwest</i>, by Laura Adams Armer (New York, 1935, OP) came from long
+ living and brooding in desert land. It says something beautiful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Talking to the Moon</i>, by John Joseph Mathews (University of Chicago
+ Press, 1945) is set in the blackjack country of eastern Oklahoma. This
+ Oxford scholar of Osage blood built his ranch house around a fireplace,
+ flanked by shelves of books. His observations are of the outside, but they
+ are informed by reflections made beside a fire. They are not bookish at
+ all, but the spirits of great writers mingle with echoes of coyote wailing
+ and wood-thrush singing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Sky Determines: An Interpretation of the Southwest</i>, by Ross Calvin
+ (New York, 1934; republished by the University of New Mexico Press) lives
+ up to its striking title. The introductory words suggest the essence of
+ the book:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In New Mexico whatever is both old and peculiar appears upon examination
+ to have a connection with the arid climate. Peculiarities range from the
+ striking adaptations of the flora onward to those of fauna, and on up to
+ those of the human animal. Sky determines. And the writer once having
+ picked up the trail followed it with certainty, and indeed almost
+ inevitably, as it led from ecology to anthropology and economics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cultivated intellect is the highest form of civilization. It is
+ inseparable from the arts, literature, architecture. In any civilized
+ land, birds, trees, flowers, animals, places, human contributors to life
+ out of the past, all are richer and more significant because of
+ representations through literature and art. No literate person can listen
+ to a skylark over an English meadow without hearing in its notes the
+ melodies of Chaucer and Shelley. As the Southwest advances in maturity of
+ mind and civilization, the features of the land take on accretions from
+ varied interpreters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not necessary for an interpreter to write a whole book about a
+ feature to bring out its significance. We need more gossipy books&mdash;something
+ in the manner of <i>Pinon Country</i> by Haniel Long (Duell, Sloan and
+ Pearce, New York, 1941), in which one can get a swift slant on Billy the
+ Kid, smell the pinon trees, feel the deeply religious attitude toward his
+ corn patch of a Zuni Indian. Roy Bedichek's chapters on the mockingbird,
+ in <i>Adventures with a Texas Naturalist</i>, are like rich talk under a
+ tree on a pleasant patch of ground staked out for his claim by an
+ April-voiced mockingbird. In <i>The Voice of the Coyote</i> I tried to
+ compass the whole animal, and I should think that the "Father of
+ Song-Making" chapter might make coyote music and the night more
+ interesting and beautiful for any listener. Intelligent writers often
+ interpret without set purpose, and many books under various categories in
+ this <i>Guide</i> are interpretative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 3. General Helps
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THERE IS no chart to the Life and Literature of the Southwest. An attempt
+ to put it all into an alphabetically arranged encyclopedia would be
+ futile. All guides to knowledge are too long or too short. This one at the
+ outset adds to its length&mdash;perhaps to its usefulness&mdash;by citing
+ other general reference works and a few anthologies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Books of the Southwest: A General Bibliography</i>, by Mary Tucker,
+ published by J. J. Augustin, New York, 1937, is better on Indians and the
+ Spanish period than on Anglo-American culture. <i>Southwest Heritage: A
+ Literary History with Bibliography</i>, by Mabel Major, Rebecca W. Smith,
+ and T. M. Pearce, University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 1938,
+ revised 1948, takes up the written material under the time-established
+ heads of Fiction, Poetry, Drama, etc., with due respect to chronological
+ development. <i>A Treasury of Southern Folklore</i>, 1949, and <i>A
+ Treasury of Western Folklore</i>, 1951, both edited by B. A. Botkin and
+ both published by Crown, New York, are so liberal in the extensions of
+ folklore and so voluminous that they amount to literary anthologies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of possible use in working out certain phases of life and literature
+ common to the Southwest as well as to the West and Middle West are the
+ following academic treatises: <i>The Frontier in American Literature</i>,
+ by Lucy Lockwood Hazard, New York, 1927; <i>The Literature of the Middle
+ Western Frontier</i>, by Ralph Leslie Rusk, New York, 1925; <i>The Prairie
+ and the Making of Middle America</i>, by Dorothy Anne Dondore, Cedar
+ Rapids, Iowa, 1926; <i>The Literature of the Rocky Mountain West 1803-1903</i>,
+ by L. J. Davidson and P. Bostwick, Caldwell, Idaho, 1939; and <i>The
+ Rediscovery of the Frontier</i>, by Percy H. Boynton, Chicago, 1931.
+ Anyone interested in vitality in any phase of American writing will find
+ Vernon L. Parrington's <i>Main Currents in American Thought</i> (three
+ vols.), New York, 1927-39, an opener-up of avenues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps the best anthology of southwestern narratives is <i>Golden Tales
+ of the Southwest</i>, selected by Mary L. Becker, New York, 1939. Two
+ anthologies of southwestern writings are <i>Southwesterners Write</i>,
+ edited by T. M. Pearce and A. P. Thomason, University of New Mexico Press,
+ Albuquerque, 1946, and <i>Roundup Time</i>, edited by George Sessions
+ Perry, Whittlesey House, New York, 1943. Themes common to the Southwest
+ are represented in <i>Western Prose and Poetry</i>, an anthology put
+ together by Rufus A. Coleman, New York, 1932, and in <i>Mid Country:
+ Writings from the Heart of America</i>, edited by Lowry C. Wimberly,
+ University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, 1945.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the southern tradition that has flowed into the Southwest Franklin J.
+ Meine's <i>Tall Tales of the Southwest</i>, New York, 1930, OP, is the
+ best anthology published. It is the best anthology of any kind that I know
+ of. <i>A Southern Treasury of Life and Literature</i>, selected by Stark
+ Young, New York, 1937, brings in Texas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anthologies of poetry are listed under the heading of "Poetry and Drama."
+ The outstanding state bibliography of the region is <i>A Bibliography of
+ Texas</i>, by C. W. Raines, Austin, 1896. Since this is half a century
+ behind the times, its usefulness is limited. At that, it is more useful
+ than the shiftless, hit-and-miss, ignorance-revealing <i>South of Forty:
+ From the Mississippi to the Rio Grande: A Bibliography</i>, by Jesse L.
+ Rader, Norman, Oklahoma, 1947. Henry R. Wagner's <i>The Plains and the
+ Rockies</i>, "a contribution to the bibliography of original narratives of
+ travel and adventure, 1800-1865," which came out 1920-21, was revised and
+ extended by Charles L. Camp and reprinted in 1937. It is stronger on
+ overland travel than on anything else, only in part covers the Southwest,
+ and excludes a greater length of time than Raines's <i>Bibliography</i>.
+ Now published by Long's College Book Co., Columbus, Ohio.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mary G. Boyer's <i>Arizona in Literature</i>, Glendale, California, 1934,
+ is an anthology that runs toward six hundred pages. <i>Texas Prose
+ Writings</i>, by Sister M. Agatha, Dallas, 1936, OP, is a meaty, critical
+ survey. L. W. Payne's handbook-sized <i>A Survey of Texas Literature</i>,
+ Chicago, 1928, is complemented by a chapter entitled "Literature and Art
+ in Texas" by J. Frank Dobie in <i>The Book of Texas</i>, New York, 1929.
+ OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>A Guide to Materials Bearing on Cultural Relations in New Mexico</i>,
+ University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 1944, is so logical and
+ liberal-minded that in some respects it amounts to a bibliography of the
+ whole Southwest; it recognizes the overriding of political boundaries by
+ ideas, human types, and other forms of culture. The <i>New Mexico
+ Quarterly</i>, published by the University of New Mexico, furnishes
+ periodically a bibliographical record of contemporary literature of the
+ Southwest. <i>New Mexico's Own Chronicle</i>, edited by Maurice G. Fulton
+ and Paul Horgan (Dallas, 1937, OP), is an anthology strong on the
+ historical side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the lists that follow, the symbol OP indicates that the book is out of
+ print. Many old books obviously out of print are not so tagged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 4. Indian Culture; Pueblos and Navajos
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE LITERATURE on the subject of Indians is so extensive and ubiquitous
+ that, unless a student of Americana is pursuing it, he may find it more
+ troublesome to avoid than to get hold of. The average old-timer has for
+ generations regarded Indian scares and fights as the most important theme
+ for reminiscences. County-minded historians have taken the same point of
+ view. The Bureau of American Ethnology of the Smithsonian Institution has
+ buried records of Indian beliefs, ceremonies, mythology, and other
+ folklore in hundreds of tomes; laborious, literal-minded scholars of other
+ institutions have been as assiduous. In all this lore and tabulation of
+ facts, the Indian folk themselves have generally been dried out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Anglo-American's policy toward the Indian was to kill him and take his
+ land, perhaps make a razor-strop out of his hide. The Spaniard's policy
+ was to baptize him, take his land, enslave him, and appropriate his women.
+ Any English-speaking frontiersman who took up with the Indians was dubbed
+ "squaw man"&mdash;a term of sinister connotations. Despite pride in
+ descending from Pocahontas and in the vaunted Indian blood of such
+ individuals as Will Rogers, crossbreeding between Anglo-Americans and
+ Indians has been restricted, as compared, for instance, with the
+ interdicted crosses between white men and black women. The Spaniards, on
+ the other hand, crossed in battalions with the Indians, generating <i>mestizo</i>
+ (mixed-blooded) nations, of which Mexico is the chief example.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a result, the English-speaking occupiers of the land have in general
+ absorbed directly only a minimum of Indian culture&mdash;nothing at all
+ comparable to the Uncle Remus stories and characters and the spiritual
+ songs and the blues music from the Negroes. Grandpa still tells how his
+ own grandpa saved or lost his scalp during a Comanche horse-stealing raid
+ in the light of the moon; Boy Scouts hunt for Indian arrowheads; every
+ section of the country has a bluff called Lovers' Leap, where, according
+ to legend, a pair of forlorn Indian lovers, or perhaps only one of the
+ pair, dived to death; the maps all show Caddo Lake, Kiowa Peak, Squaw
+ Creek, Tehuacana Hills, Nacogdoches town, Cherokee County, Indian Gap, and
+ many another place name derived from Indian days. All such contacts with
+ Indian life are exterior. Three forms of Indian culture are, however,
+ weaving into the life patterns of America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (1) The Mexicans have naturally inherited and assimilated Indian lore
+ about plants, animals, places, all kinds of human relationships with the
+ land. Through the Mexican medium, with which he is becoming more
+ sympathetic, the gringo is getting the ages-old Indian culture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) The Pueblo and Navajo Indians in particular are impressing their arts,
+ crafts, and ways of life upon special groups of Americans living near
+ them, and these special groups are transmitting some of their
+ acquisitions. The special groups incline to be arty and worshipful, but
+ they express a salutary revolt against machined existence and they have
+ done much to revive dignity in Indian life. Offsetting dilettantism, the
+ Museum of New Mexico and associated institutions and artists and other
+ individuals have fostered Indian pottery, weaving, silversmithing,
+ dancing, painting, and other arts and crafts. Superior craftsmanship can
+ now depend upon a fairly reliable market; the taste of American buyers has
+ been somewhat elevated.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ O mountains, pure and holy, give me
+ a song, a strong and holy song to bless
+ my flock and bring the rain!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This is from "Navajo Holy Song," as rendered by Edith Hart Mason. It
+ expresses a spiritual content in Indian life far removed from the We and
+ God, Incorporated form of religion ordained by the National Association of
+ Manufacturers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (3) The wild freedom, mobility, and fierce love of liberty of the mounted
+ Indians of the Plains will perhaps always stir imaginations&mdash;something
+ like the charging Cossacks, the camping Arabs, and the migrating Tartars.
+ There is no romance in Indian fights east of the Mississippi. The mounted
+ Plains Indians always made a big hit in Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show.
+ Little boys still climb into their seats and cry out when red horsemen of
+ the Plains ride across the screen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See "Apaches, Comanches, and Other Plains Indians," "Mountain Men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ APPLEGATE, FRANK G. <i>Indian Stories from the Pueblos</i>, Philadelphia,
+ 1929. Charming. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ASTROV, MARGOT (editor), <i>The Winged Serpent</i>, John Day, New York,
+ 1946. An anthology of prose and poetry by American Indians. Here are
+ singular expressions of beauty and dignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AUSTIN, MARY. <i>The Trail Book</i>, 1918, OP; <i>One-Smoke Stories</i>,
+ 1934, Houghton Mifflin, Boston. Delightful folk tales, each leading to a
+ vista.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BANDELIER, A. F. <i>The Delight Makers</i>, 1918, Dodd, Mead, New York.
+ Historical fiction on ancient pueblo life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COOLIDGE, DANE and MARY. <i>The Navajo Indians</i>, Boston, 1930.
+ Readable; bibliography. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COOLIDGE, MARY ROBERTS. <i>The Rain-Makers</i>, Boston, 1929. OP. This
+ thorough treatment of the Indians of Arizona and New Mexico contains an
+ excellent account of the Hopi snake ceremony for bringing rain. During any
+ severe drought numbers of Christians in the Southwest pray without snakes.
+ It always rains eventually&mdash;and the prayer-makers naturally take the
+ credit. The Hopis put on a more spectacular show. See Dr. Walter Hough's
+ <i>The Hopi Indians</i>, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1915. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CUSHING, FRANK HAMILTON. <i>Zuni Folk Tales</i>, 1901; reprinted, 1931, by
+ Knopf, New York. <i>My Adventures in Zuni</i>, Santa Fe, 1941. <i>Zuni
+ Breadstuff</i>, Museum of the American Indian, New York, 1920. Cushing had
+ rare imagination and sympathy. His retellings of tales are far superior to
+ verbatim recordings. <i>Zuni Breadstuff</i> reveals more of Indian
+ spirituality than any other book I can name. All OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEHUFF, ELIZABETH. <i>Tay Tay's Tales</i>, 1922; <i>Tay Tay's Memories</i>,
+ 1924. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOUGLAS, FREDERIC H., and D HARNONCOURT, RENE. <i>Indian Art of the United
+ States</i>, Simon and Schuster, New York, 1941.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DYK, WALTER. <i>Son of Old Man Hat</i>, New York, 1938. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FERGUSSON, ERNA. <i>Dancing Gods</i>, Knopf, New York, 1931. Erna
+ Fergusson is always illuminating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FOREMAN, GRANT. <i>Indians and Pioneers</i>, 1930, and <i>Advancing the
+ Frontier</i>, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1933. Grant Foreman is
+ prime authority on the so-called "Civilized Tribes." University of
+ Oklahoma Press has published a number of excellent volumes in "The
+ Civilization of the American Indian" series.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILLMOR, FRANCES, and WETHERILL, LOUISA WADE. <i>Traders to the Navajos</i>,
+ Boston, 1936; reprinted by University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque,
+ 1952. An account not only of the trading post Wetherills but of the
+ Navajos as human beings, with emphasis on their spiritual qualities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GODDARD, P. E. <i>Indians of the Southwest</i>, New York, 1921. Excellent
+ outline of exterior facts. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HAMILTON, CHARLES (editor). <i>Cry of the Thunderbird</i>, Macmillan, New
+ York, 1951. An anthology of writings by Indians containing many
+ interesting leads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HEWETT, EDGAR L. <i>Ancient Life in the American Southwest</i>,
+ Indianapolis, 1930. OP. A master work in both archeology and Indian
+ nature. (With Bertha P. Dretton) <i>The Pueblo Indian World</i>,
+ University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 1945.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HODGE, F. W. <i>Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico</i>,
+ Washington, D. C., 1907. Indispensable encyclopedia, by a very great
+ scholar and a very fine gentleman. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LABARRE, WESTON. <i>The Peyote Cult</i>, Yale University Press, New Haven,
+ 1938.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LAFARGE, OLIVER. <i>Laughing Boy</i>, Boston, 1929. The Navajo in fiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LUMMIS, C. F. <i>Mesa, Canon, and Pueblo</i>, New York, 1925; <i>Pueblo
+ Indian Folk Tales</i>, New York, 1910. Lummis, though self-vaunting and
+ opinionated, opens windows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MATTHEWS, WASHINGTON. <i>Navajo Legends</i>, Boston, 1897; <i>Navajo
+ Myths, Prayers and Songs</i>, Berkeley, California, 1907.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MOONEY, JAMES. <i>Myths of the Cherokees</i>, in Nineteenth Annual Report
+ of the Bureau of Ethnology, Washington, 1902. Outstanding writing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NELSON, JOHN LOUW. <i>Rhythm for Rain</i>, Boston, 1937. Based on ten
+ years spent with the Hopi Indians, this study of their life is a moving
+ story of humanity. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PEARCE, J. E. <i>Tales That Dead Men Tell</i>, University of Texas Press,
+ Austin, 1935. Eloquent, liberating to the human mind; something rare for
+ Texas scholarship. Pearce was professor of anthropology at the University
+ of Texas, an emancipator from prejudices and ignorance. It is a pity that
+ all the college students who are forced by the bureaucrats of Education&mdash;Education
+ spelled with a capital E&mdash;"the unctuous elaboration of the obvious"&mdash;do
+ not take anthropology instead. Collegians would then stand a chance of
+ becoming educated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PETRULLO, VICENZO. <i>The Diabolic Root: A Study of Peyotism, the New
+ Indian Religion, among the Delawares</i>, University of Pennsylvania
+ Press, Philadelphia, 1934. The use of peyote has now spread northwest into
+ Canada. See Milly Peacock Stenberg's <i>The Peyote Culture among Wyoming
+ Indians</i>, University of Wyoming Publications, Laramie, 1946, for
+ bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ REICHARD, GLADYS A. <i>Spider Woman</i>, 1934, and <i>Dezba Woman of the
+ Desert</i>, 1939. Both honest, both OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIMMONS, LEO W. (editor). <i>Sun Chief: The Autobiography of a Hopi Indian</i>,
+ Yale University Press, New Haven, 1942. The clearest view into the mind
+ and living ways, including sex life, of an Indian that has been published.
+ Few autobiographers have been clearer; not one has been franker. A
+ singular human document.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 5. Apaches, Comanches, and Other Plains Indians
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE APACHES and the bareback Indians of the Plains were extraordinary <i>hombres
+ del campo&mdash;</i>men of the outdoors, plainsmen, woodsmen, trailers,
+ hunters, endurers. They knew some phases of nature with an intimacy that
+ few civilized naturalists ever attain to. It is unfortunate that most of
+ the literature about them is from their enemies. Yet an enemy often
+ teaches a man more than his friends and makes him work harder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See "Indian Culture," "Texas Rangers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BOURKE, JOHN G. <i>On the Border with Crook</i>, London, 1892. Reprinted
+ by Long's College Book Co., Columbus, Ohio. A truly great book, on both
+ Apaches and Arizona frontier. Bourke had amplitude, and he knew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BUCKELEW, F. M. <i>The Indian Captive</i>, Bandera, Texas, 1925. Homely
+ and realistic. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CATLIN, GEORGE. <i>Letters and Notes on the Manners, Customs and
+ Conditions of the North American Indians, Written during Eight Years'
+ Travel, 1832-39</i>, 1841. Despite many strictures, Catlin's two volumes
+ remain standard. I am pleased to find Frank Roe, in <i>The North American
+ Buffalo</i>, standing up for him. In <i>Pursuit of the Horizon: A Life of
+ George Catlin, Painter and Recorder of the American Indian</i>, New York,
+ 1948, Loyd Haberly fails in evaluating evidence but brings out the man's
+ career and character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CLUM, WOODWORTH. <i>Apache Agent</i>, Boston, 1936. Worthy autobiography
+ of a noble understander of the Apache people. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COMFORT, WILL LEVINGTON. <i>Apache</i>, Dutton, New York, 1931. Noble;
+ vivid; semifiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DAVIS, BRITTON. <i>The Truth about Geronimo</i>, Yale University Press,
+ New Haven, 1929. Davis helped run Geronimo down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DESHIELDS, JAMES T. <i>Cynthia Ann Parker</i>, St. Louis, 1886; reprinted
+ 1934. Good narrative of noted woman captive. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOBIE, J. FRANK. <i>The Mustangs</i>, Little, Brown, Boston, 1952. The
+ opening chapters of this book distil a great deal of research by scholars
+ on Plains Indian acquisition of horses, riding, and raiding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GRINNELL, GEORGE BIRD. <i>The Cheyenne Indians</i>, New Haven, 1923. This
+ two-volume work supersedes <i>The Fighting Cheyennes</i>, 1915. It is
+ noble, ample, among the most select books on Plains Indians. <i>Blackfoot
+ Lodge Tales: The Story of a Prairie People</i>, 1892, shows Grinnell's
+ skill as storyteller at its best. <i>Pawnee Hero Stories and Folk Tales</i>,
+ 1893, is hardly an equal but it reveals the high values of life held by
+ representatives of the original plainsmen. <i>The Story of the Indian</i>,
+ 1895, is a general survey. All OP. Grinnell's knowledge and power as a
+ writer on Indians and animals has not been sufficiently recognized. He
+ combined in a rare manner scholarship, plainsmanship, and the worldliness
+ of publishing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust. caption = George Catlin, in <i>North American Indians</i> (1841)}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HALEY, J. EVETTS. <i>Fort Concho and the Texas Frontier</i>, San Angelo
+ Standard-Times, San Angelo, Texas, 1952. Mainly a history of military
+ activities against Comanches and other tribes, laced with homilies on the
+ free enterprise virtues of the conquerors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LEE, NELSON. <i>Three Years among the Comanches</i>, 1859.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LEHMAN, HERMAN. <i>Nine Years with the Indians</i>, Bandera, Texas, 1927.
+ Best captive narrative of the Southwest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LOCKWOOD, FRANK C. <i>The Apache Indians</i>, Macmillan, New York, 1938.
+ Factual history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LONG LANCE, CHIEF BUFFALO CHILD. <i>Long Lance</i>, New York, 1928. OP.
+ Long Lance was a Blackfoot only by adoption, but his imagination
+ incorporated him into tribal life more powerfully than blood could have.
+ He is said to have been a North Carolina mixture of Negro and Croatan
+ Indian; he was a magnificent specimen of manhood with swart Indian
+ complexion. He fought in the Canadian army during World War I and thus
+ became acquainted with the Blackfeet. No matter what the facts of his
+ life, he wrote a vivid and moving autobiography of a Blackfoot Indian in
+ whom the spirit of the tribe and the natural life of the Plains during
+ buffalo days were incorporated. In 1932 in the California home of Anita
+ Baldwin, daughter of the spectacular "Lucky" Baldwin, he absented himself
+ from this harsh world by a pistol shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LOWIE, ROBERT H. <i>The Crow Indians</i>, New York, 1935. This scholar and
+ anthropologist lived with the Crow Indians to obtain intimate knowledge
+ and then wrote this authoritative book. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MCALLISTER, J. GILBERT. "Kiowa-Apache Tales," in <i>The Sky Is My Tipi</i>,
+ edited by Mody C. Boatright (Texas Folklore Society Publication XXII),
+ Southern Methodist University Press, Dallas, 1949. Wise in exposition;
+ true-to-humanity and delightful in narrative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MCGILLICUDDY, JULIA B. <i>McGillicuddy Agent</i>, Stanford University
+ Press, California, 1941. Dr. Valentine T. McGillicuddy, Scotch in
+ stubbornness, honesty, efficiency, and individualism, was U.S. Indian
+ agent to the Sioux and knew them to the bottom. In the end he was defeated
+ by the army mind and the bloodsuckers known as the "Indian Ring." The
+ elements of nobility that distinguish the man distinguish his wife's
+ biography of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MCLAUGHLIN, JAMES. My <i>Friend the Indian</i>, 1910, 1926. OP. McLaughlin
+ was U.S. Indian agent and inspector for half a century. Despite
+ priggishness, he had genuine sympathy for the Indians; he knew the Sioux,
+ Nez Perces, and Cheyennes intimately, and few books on Indian plainsmen
+ reveal so much as his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MARRIOTT, ALICE. <i>The Ten Grandmothers</i>, University of Oklahoma
+ Press, Norman, 1945. Narratives of the Kiowas&mdash;a complement to James
+ Mooney's <i>Calendar History of the Kiowa Indians</i>, in Seventeenth
+ Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, Washington, 1893. Alice
+ Marriott, author of other books on Indians, combines ethnological science
+ with the art of writing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MATHEWS, JOHN JOSEPH. <i>Wah'Kon-Tah: The Osage and the White Man's Road</i>,
+ University of Oklahoma Press, 1932. This book of essays on the character
+ of and certain noble characters among the Great Osages, including their
+ upright agent Leban J. Miles, has profound spiritual qualities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NEIHARDT, JOHN G. <i>Black Elk Speaks</i>, New York, 1932. OP. Black Elk
+ was a holy man of the Ogalala Sioux. The story of his life as he told it
+ to understanding John G. Neihardt is more of mysteries and spiritual
+ matters than of mundane affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RICHARDSON, R. N. <i>The Comanche Barrier to the South Plains</i>,
+ Glendale, California, 1933. Factual history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RISTER, CARL C. <i>Border Captives</i>, University of Oklahoma Press,
+ Norman, 1940.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RUXTON, GEORGE F. <i>Adventures in Mexico and the Rocky Mountains</i>,
+ London, 1847. Vivid on Comanche raids. See Ruxton in "Surge of Life in the
+ West."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SCHULTZ, J. W. <i>My Life as an Indian</i>, 1907. OP. In this
+ autobiographical narrative of the life of a white man with a Blackfoot
+ woman, facts have probably been arranged, incidents added. Whatever his
+ method, the author achieved a remarkable human document. It is true not
+ only to Indian life in general but in particular to the life of a "squaw
+ man" and his loved and loving mate. Among other authentic books by Schultz
+ is <i>With the Indians of the Rockies</i>, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1912.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SMITH, C. L. and J. D. <i>The Boy Captives</i>, Bandera, Texas, 1927. A
+ kind of classic in homeliness. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VESTAL, STANLEY. <i>Sitting Bull</i>, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1932.
+ Excellent biography. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WALLACE, ERNEST, and HOEBEL, E. ADAMSON. <i>The Comanches: Lords of the
+ South Plains</i>, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1952. A
+ wide-compassing and interesting book on a powerful and interesting people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WELLMAN, PAUL I. <i>Death on the Prairie</i> (1934), <i>Death in the
+ Desert</i> (1935); both reprinted in <i>Death on Horseback</i>, 1947. All
+ OP. Graphic history, mostly in narrative, of the struggle of Plains and
+ Apache Indians to hold their homelands against the whites.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WILBARGER, J. W. <i>Indian Depredations in Texas</i>, 1889; reprinted by
+ Steck, Austin, 1936. Its stirring narratives made this a household book
+ among Texans of the late nineteenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 6. Spanish-Mexican Strains
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE MEXICAN Revolution that began in 1910 resulted in a rich development
+ of the native cultural elements of Mexico, the art of Diego Rivera being
+ one of the highlights of this development. The native culture is closer to
+ the Mexican earth and to the indigenes than to Spain, notwithstanding
+ modern insistence on the Latin in Latin-American culture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Spaniards, through Mexico, have had an abiding influence on the
+ architecture and language of the Southwest. They gave us our most
+ distinctive occupation, ranching on the open range. They influenced mining
+ greatly, and our land titles and irrigation laws still go back to Spanish
+ and Mexican sources. After more than a hundred years of occupation of
+ Texas and almost that length of time in other parts of the Southwest, the
+ English-speaking Americans still have the rich accumulations of lore
+ pertaining to coyotes, mesquites, prickly pear, and many other plants and
+ animals to learn from the Mexicans, who got their lore partly from
+ intimate living with nature but largely through Indian ancestry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See "Fighting Texians," "Santa Fe and the Santa Fe Trail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AIKEN, RILEY. "A Pack Load of Mexican Tales," in <i>Puro Mexicano</i>,
+ published by Texas Folklore Society, 1935. Now published by Southern
+ Methodist University Press, Dallas. Delightful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ALEXANDER, FRANCES (and others). <i>Mother Goose on the Rio Grande</i>,
+ Banks Upshaw, Dallas, 1944. Charming rhymes in both Spanish and English in
+ charming form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ APPLEGATE, FRANK G. <i>Native Tales of New Mexico</i>, Philadelphia, 1932.
+ Delicious; the real thing. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ATHERTON, GERTRUDE. <i>The Splendid Idle Forties</i>, New York, 1902.
+ Romance of Mexican California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AUSTIN, MARY. <i>One-Smoke Stories</i>, Boston, 1934. Short tales of
+ Spanish-speaking New Mexicans, also of Indians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BANDELIER, A. F. <i>The Gilded Man</i>, New York, 1873. The dream of El
+ Dorado.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BARCA, MADAM CALDERON DE LA. <i>Life in Mexico</i>, 1843; reprinted by
+ Dutton about 1930. Among books on Mexican life to be ranked first both in
+ readability and revealing qualities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BELL, HORACE. <i>On the Old West Coast</i>, New York, 1930. A golden
+ treasury of anecdotes. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BENTLEY, HAROLD W. <i>A Dictionary of Spanish Terms in English</i>, New
+ York, 1932. In a special way this book reveals the Spanish-Mexican
+ influence on life in the Southwest; it also guides to books in English
+ that reflect this influence. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BISHOP, MORRIS. <i>The Odyssey of Cabeza de Vaca</i>, New York, 1933.
+ Better written than Cabeza de Vaca's own narrative. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BLANCO, ANTONIO FIERRO DE. <i>The Journey of the Flame</i>, Boston, 1933.
+ Bully and flavorsome; the Californias. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BOLTON, HERBERT E. <i>Spanish Exploration in the Southwest</i>, 1916. The
+ cream of explorer narratives, well edited. <i>Coronado on the Turquoise
+ Trail</i> (originally published in New York, 1949, under the title <i>Coronado:
+ Knight of Pueblos and Plains</i>; now issued by University of New Mexico
+ Press, Albuquerque). By his own work and by directing other scholars, Dr.
+ Bolton has surpassed all other American historians of his time in output
+ on Spanish-American history. <i>Coronado</i> is the climax of his many
+ volumes. Its fault is being too worshipful of everything Spanish and too
+ uncritical. A little essay on Coronado in Haniel Long's <i>Pinon Country</i>
+ goes a good way to put this belegended figure into proper perspective.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BRENNER, ANITA. <i>Idols Behind Altars</i>, 1929. OP. The pagan worship
+ that endures among Mexican Indians. <i>The Wind that Swept Mexico: The
+ History of the Mexican Revolution, 1910-1942</i>, 1943, OP. <i>Your
+ Mexican Holiday</i>, revised 1947. No writer on modern Mexico has a
+ clearer eye or clearer intellect than Anita Brenner; she maintains good
+ humor in her realism and never lapses into phony romance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CABEZA DE VACA'S <i>Narrative</i>. Any translation procurable. One is
+ included in <i>Spanish Explorers in the Southern United States</i>, edited
+ by F. W. Hodge and T. H. Lewis, now published by Barnes &amp; Noble, New
+ York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most dramatic and important aftermath of Cabeza de Vaca's twisted walk
+ across the continent was Coronado's search for the Seven Cities of Cibola.
+ Coronado's precursor was Fray Marcos de Niza. <i>The Journey of Fray
+ Marcos de Niza</i>, by Cleve Hallenbeck, with illustrations and
+ decorations by Jose Cisneros, is one of the most beautiful books in format
+ published in America. It was designed and printed by Carl Hertzog of El
+ Paso, printer without peer between the Atlantic and the Pacific, and is
+ issued by Southern Methodist University Press, Dallas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CASTANEDA'S narrative of Coronado's expedition. Winship's translation is
+ preferred. It is included in <i>Spanish Explorers in the Southern United
+ States</i>, cited above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CATHER, WILLA. <i>Death Comes for the Archbishop</i>, Knopf, New York,
+ 1927. Classical historical fiction on New Mexico.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CUMBERLAND, CHARLES C. <i>Mexican Revolution: Genesis under Madero</i>,
+ University of Texas Press, Austin, 1952. Bibliography. To know Mexico and
+ Mexicans without knowing anything about Mexican revolutions is like
+ knowing the United States in ignorance of frontiers, constitutions, and
+ corporations. The Madero revolution that began in 1910 is still going on.
+ Mr. Cumberland's solid book, independent in itself, is to be followed by
+ two other volumes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DE SOTO. Hernando de Soto made his expedition from Florida north and west
+ at the time Coronado was exploring north and east. <i>The Florida of the
+ Inca</i>, by Garcilaso de la Vega, translated by John and Jeannette
+ Varner, University of Texas Press, Austin, 1951, is the first complete
+ publishing in English of this absorbing narrative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DIAZ, BERNAL. <i>History of the Conquest</i>. There are several
+ translations. A book of gusto and humanity as enduring as the results of
+ the Conquest itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOBIE, J. FRANK. <i>Coronado's Children</i>, 1930. Legendary tales of the
+ Southwest, many of them derived from Mexican sources. <i>Tongues of the
+ Monte</i>, 1935. A pattern of the soil of northern Mexico and its folk. <i>Apache
+ Gold and Yaqui Silver</i>, 1939. Lost mines and money in Mexico and New
+ Mexico. Last two books published by Little, Brown, Boston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOMENECH, ABBE. <i>Missionary Adventures in Texas and Mexico</i>, London,
+ 1858. Delightful folklore, though Domenech would not have so designated
+ his accounts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FERGUSSON, HARVEY. <i>Blood of the Conquerors</i>, 1921. Fiction. OP. <i>Rio
+ Grande</i>, Knopf, New York, 1933. Best interpretations yet written of
+ upper Mexican class.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FLANDRAU, CHARLES M. <i>Viva Mexico!</i> New York, 1909; reissued, 1951.
+ Delicious autobiographic narrative of life in Mexico.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FULTON, MAURICE G., and HORGAN, PAUL (editors). <i>New Mexico's Own
+ Chronicle</i>, Dallas, 1937. OP. Selections from writers about the New
+ Mexico scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILPATRICK, WALLACE. <i>The Man Who Likes Mexico</i>, New York, 1911. OP.
+ Bully reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GONZALEZ, JOVITA. Tales about Texas-Mexican vaquero folk in <i>Texas and
+ Southwestern Lore</i>, in <i>Man, Bird, and Beast</i>, and in <i>Mustangs
+ and Cow Horses</i>, Publications VI, VIII, and XVI of Texas Folklore
+ Society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust. caption = Jose Cisneros: Fray Marcos, in <i>The Journey of Fray
+ Marcos de Niza</i> by Cleve Hallenbeck (1949)}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GRAHAM, R. B. CUNNINGHAME. <i>Hernando De Soto</i>, London, 1912.
+ Biography. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HARTE, BRET. <i>The Bell Ringer of Angels</i> and other legendary tales of
+ California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LAUGHLIN, RUTH. <i>Caballeros</i>. When the book was published in 1931,
+ the author was named Ruth Laughlin Barker; after she discarded the Barker
+ part, it was reissued, in 1946, by Caxton, Caldwell, Idaho. Delightful
+ picturings of Mexican&mdash;or Spanish, as many New Mexicans prefer&mdash;life
+ around Santa Fe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LEA, TOM. <i>The Brave Bulls</i>. See under "Fiction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LUMMIS, C. F. <i>Flowers of Our Lost Romance</i>, Boston, 1929. Humanistic
+ essays on Spanish contributions to southwestern civilization. OP. <i>The
+ Land of Poco Tiempo</i>, New York, 1913 (reissued by University of New
+ Mexico Press, 1952), in an easier style. <i>A New Mexico David</i>, 1891,
+ 1930. Folk tales and sketches. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MERRIAM, CHARLES. <i>Machete</i>, Dallas, 1932. Plain and true to the <i>gente</i>.
+ OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NIGGLI, JOSEPHINA. <i>Mexican Village</i>, University of North Carolina
+ Press, Chapel Hill, 1945. A collection of skilfully told stories that
+ reveal Mexican life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O'SHAUGHNESSY, EDITH. <i>A Diplomat s Wife in Mexico</i>, New York, 1916;
+ <i>Diplomatic Days</i>, 1917; <i>Intimate Pages of Mexican History</i>,
+ 1920. Books of passion and power and high literary merit, interpretative
+ of revolutionary Mexico. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OTERO, NINA. <i>Old Spain in Our Southwest</i>, New York, 1936. Genuine.
+ OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PORTER, KATHERINE ANNE. <i>Flowering Judas</i>. See under "Fiction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PRESCOTT, WILLIAM H. <i>Conquest of Mexico</i>. History that is
+ literature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ REMINGTON, FREDERIC W. <i>Pony Tracks</i>, New York, 1895. Includes
+ sketches of Mexican ranch life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROSS, PATRICIA FENT. <i>Made in Mexico: The Story of a Country's Arts and
+ Crafts</i>, Knopf, New York, 1952. Picturesquely and instructively
+ illustrated by Carlos Merida.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TANNENBAUM, FRANK. <i>Peace by Revolution</i>, Columbia University Press,
+ New York, 1933; <i>Mexico: The Struggle for Peace and Bread</i>, Knopf,
+ New York, 1950. Tannenbaum dodges nothing, not even the church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Terry's Guide to Mexico</i>. It has everything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Texas Folklore Society. Its publications are a storehouse of Mexican
+ folklore in the Southwest and in Mexico also. Especially recommended are
+ <i>Texas and Southwestern Lore</i> (VI), <i>Man, Bird, and Beast</i>
+ (VIII), <i>Southwestern Lore</i> (IX), <i>Spur-of-the-Cock</i> (XI), <i>Puro
+ Mexicano</i> (XII), <i>Texian Stomping Grounds</i> (XVII), <i>Mexican
+ Border Ballads and Other Lore</i> (XXI), <i>The Healer of Los Olmos and
+ Other Mexican Lore</i> (XXIV, 1951). All published by Southern Methodist
+ University Press, Dallas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TOOR, FRANCES. A <i>Treasury of Mexican Folkways</i>, Crown, New York,
+ 1947. An anthology of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TURNER, TIMOTHY G.<i> Bullets, Bottles and Gardenias</i>, Dallas, 1935.
+ Obscurely published but one of the best books on Mexican life. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 7. Flavor of France
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THERE IS little justification for including Louisiana as a part of the
+ Southwest. Despite the fact that the French flag&mdash;tied to a pole in
+ Louisiana&mdash;once waved over Texas, French influence on it and other
+ parts of the Southwest has been minor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ARTHUR, STANLEY CLISBY. <i>Jean Laffite, Gentleman Rover</i> (1952) and <i>Audubon:
+ An Intimate Life of the American Woodsman</i> (1937), both published by
+ Harmanson&mdash;Publisher and Bookseller, 333 Royal St., New Orleans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CABLE, GEORGE W. <i>Old Creole Days: Strange True Stories of Louisiana</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHOPIN, KATE. <i>Bayou Folk</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FORTIER, ALCEE. Any of his work on Louisiana.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HEARN, LAFCADIO. <i>Chita</i>. A lovely story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOUTEL. <i>Journal</i> of La Salle's career in Texas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KANE, HARNETT T. <i>Plantation Parade: The Grand Manner in Louisiana</i>
+ (1945), <i>Natchez on the Mississippi</i> (1947), <i>Queen New Orleans</i>
+ (1949), all published by Morrow, New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KING, GRACE. <i>New Orleans: The Place and the People; Balcony Stories.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MCVOY, LIZZIE CARTER. <i>Louisiana in the Short Story</i>, Louisiana State
+ University Press, 1940.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SAXON, LYLE. <i>Fabulous New Orleans; Old Louisiana; Lafitte the Pirate</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 8. Backwoods Life and Humor
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE SETTLERS who put their stamp on Texas were predominantly from the
+ southern states&mdash;and far more of them came to Texas to work out of
+ debt than came with riches in the form of slaves. The plantation owner
+ came too, but the go-ahead Crockett kind of backwoodsman was typical. The
+ southern type never became so prominent in New Mexico, Arizona, and
+ California as in Texas. Nevertheless, the fact glares out that the code of
+ conduct&mdash;the riding and shooting tradition, the eagerness to stand up
+ and fight for one's rights, the readiness to back one's judgment with a
+ gun, a bowie knife, money, life itself&mdash;that characterized the whole
+ West as well as the Southwest was southern, hardly at all New England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The very qualities that made many of the Texas pioneers rebels to society
+ and forced not a few of them to quit it between sun and sun without
+ leaving new addresses fitted them to conquer the wilderness&mdash;qualities
+ of daring, bravery, reckless abandon, heavy self-assertiveness. A lot of
+ them were hell-raisers, for they had a lust for life and were maddened by
+ tame respectability. Nobody but obsequious politicians and priggish
+ "Daughters" wants to make them out as models of virtue and conformity. A
+ smooth and settled society&mdash;a society shockingly tame&mdash;may
+ accept Cardinal Newman's definition, "A gentleman is one who never gives
+ offense." Under this definition a shaded violet, a butterfly, and a
+ floating summer cloud are all gentlemen. "The art of war," said Napoleon,
+ "is to make offense." Conquering the hostile Texas wilderness meant war
+ with nature and against savages as well as against Mexicans. Go-ahead
+ Crockett's ideal of a gentleman was one who looked in another direction
+ while a visitor was pouring himself out a horn of whiskey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Laying aside climatic influences on occupations and manners, certain
+ Spanish influences, and minor Pueblo Indian touches, the Southwest from
+ the point of view of the bedrock Anglo-Saxon character that has made it
+ might well include Arkansas and Missouri. The realism of southern folk and
+ of a very considerable body of indigenous literature representing them has
+ been too much overshadowed by a kind of <i>So Red the Rose</i>
+ idealization of slave-holding aristocrats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ALLSOPP, FRED W. <i>Folklore of Romantic Arkansas</i>, 2 vols., Grolier
+ Society, 1931. Allsopp assembled a rich and varied collection of materials
+ in the tone of "The Arkansas Traveler." OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ARRINGTON, ALFRED W. <i>The Rangers and Regulators of the Tanaha</i>, 18
+ 56. East Texas bloodletting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BALDWIN, JOSEPH G. <i>The Flush Times of Alabama and Mississippi</i>,
+ 1853.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BLAIR, WALTER. <i>Horse Sense in American Humor from Benjamin Franklin to
+ Ogden Nash</i>, 1942. OP. <i>Native American Humor</i>, 1937. OP. <i>Tall
+ Tale America</i>, Coward-McCann, New York, 1944. Orderly analyses with
+ many concrete examples. With Franklin J. Meine as co-author, <i>Mike Fink,
+ King of Mississippi River Keelboatmen</i>, 1933. Biography of a folk type
+ against pioneer and frontier background. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BOATRIGHT, MODY C. <i>Folk Laughter on the American Frontier</i>. See
+ under "Interpreters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CLARK, THOMAS D. <i>The Rampaging Frontier</i>, 1939. OP. Historical
+ picturization and analysis, fortified by incidents and tales of
+ "Varmints," "Liars," "Quarter Horses," "Fiddlin'," "Foolin' with the
+ Gals," etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CROCKETT, DAVID. <i>Autobiography</i>. Reprinted many times. Scribner's
+ edition in the "Modern Students' Library" includes <i>Colonel Crockett's
+ Exploits and Adventures in</i> <i>Texas</i>. Crockett set the backwoods
+ type. See treatment of him in Parrington's <i>Main Currents in American
+ Thought</i>. Richard M. Dorson's <i>Davy Crockett, American Comic Legend</i>,
+ 1939, is a summation of the Crockett tradition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FEATHERSTONHAUGH, G. W. <i>Excursion through the Slave States</i>, London,
+ 1866. Refreshing on manners and characters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FLACK, CAPTAIN. <i>The Texas Ranger, or Real Life in the Backwoods</i>,
+ London, 1866.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GERSTAECKER, FREDERICK. <i>Wild Sports in the Far West</i>. Nothing better
+ on backwoods life in the Mississippi Valley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HAMMETT, SAMUEL ADAMS (who wrote under the name of Philip Paxton), <i>Piney
+ Woods Tavern; or Sam Slick in Texas</i> and <i>A Stray Yankee in Texas</i>.
+ Humor on the roughneck element. For treatment of Hammett as man and writer
+ see <i>Sam Slick in Texas</i>, by W. Stanley Hoole, Naylor, San Antonio,
+ 1945.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HARRIS, GEORGE W. <i>Sut Lovingood</i>, New York, 1867. Prerealism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOGUE, WAYMAN. <i>Back Yonder</i>. Minton, Balch, New York, 1932. Ozark
+ life. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOOPER, J. J. <i>Adventures of Captain Simon Suggs</i>, 1845. OP.
+ Downright realism. Like Longstreet, Hooper in maturity wanted his realism
+ forgotten. An Alabama journalist, he got into the camp of respectable
+ slave-holders and spent the later years of his life shouting against the
+ "enemies of the institution of African slavery." His life partly explains
+ the lack of intellectual honesty in most southern spokesmen today. <i>Alias
+ Simon Suggs: The Life and Times of Johnson Jones Hooper</i>, by W. Stanley
+ Hoole, University of Alabama Press, 1952, is a careful study of Hooper's
+ career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HUDSON, A. P. <i>Humor of the Old Deep South</i>, New York, 1936. An
+ anthology. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LONGSTREET, A. B. <i>Georgia Scenes</i>, 1835. Numerous reprints. Realism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MASTERSON, JAMES R. <i>Tall Tales of Arkansas</i>, Boston, 1943. OP. The
+ title belies this excellent social history&mdash;by a scholar. It has
+ become quite scarce on account of the fact that it contains unexpurgated
+ versions of the notorious speech on "Change the Name of Arkansas"&mdash;which
+ in 1919 in officers' barracks at Bordeaux, France, I heard a lusty
+ individual recite with as many variations as Roxane of <i>Cyrano de
+ Bergerac</i> wanted in love-making. When Fred W. Allsopp, newspaper
+ publisher and pillar of Arkansas respectability, found that this book of
+ unexpurgations had been dedicated to him by the author&mdash;a Harvard
+ Ph.D. teaching in Michigan&mdash;he almost "had a colt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MEINE, FRANKLIN J. (editor). <i>Tall Tales of the Southwest</i>, Knopf,
+ New York, 1930. A superbly edited and superbly selected anthology with
+ appendices affording a guide to the whole field of early southern humor
+ and realism. No cavalier idealism. The "Southwest" of this excellent book
+ is South.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OLMSTED, FREDERICK LAW. <i>A Journey in the Seaboard Slave States</i>,
+ 1856. <i>A Journey Through Texas</i>, 1857. Invaluable books on social
+ history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ POSTL, KARL ANTON (Charles Sealsfield or Francis Hardman, pseudonyms). <i>The
+ Cabin Book; Frontier Life</i>. Translations all OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RANDOLPH, VANCE. <i>We Always Lie to Strangers</i>, Columbia University
+ Press, New York, 1951. A collection of tall tales of the adding machine
+ variety. Fertile in invention but devoid of any yearning for the beautiful
+ or suggestion that the human spirit hungers for something beyond horse
+ play; in short, typical of American humor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROURKE, CONSTANCE. <i>American Humor</i>, 1931; <i>Davy Crockett</i>,
+ 1934; <i>Roots of American Culture and Other Essays</i>, 1942, all
+ published by Harcourt, Brace, New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THOMPSON, WILLIAM T. <i>Major Jones's Courtship</i>, Philadelphia, 1844.
+ Realism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THORPE, T. B. <i>The Hive of the Bee-Hunter</i>, New York, 1854. This
+ excellent book should be reprinted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WATTERSON, HENRY. <i>Oddities in Southern Life and Character</i>, Boston,
+ 1882. An anthology with interpretative notes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WILSON, CHARLES MORROW. <i>Backwoods America</i>. University of North
+ Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, 1935. Well ordered survey with excellent
+ samplings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WOOD, RAY. <i>The American Mother Goose</i>, 1940; <i>Fun in American Folk
+ Rhymes</i>, 1952; both published by Lippincott, Philadelphia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 9. How the Early Settlers Lived
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ DESPITE THE FACT that the tendency of a majority of early day rememberers
+ has been to emphasize Indian fights, killings, and other sensational
+ episodes, chronicles rich in the everyday manners and customs of the folk
+ are plentiful. The classic of them all is Noah Smithwick's <i>The
+ Evolution of a State</i>, listed below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See also "Backwoods Life and Humor," "Pioneer Doctors," "Women Pioneers,"
+ "Fighting Texians."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BARKER, E. C. <i>The Austin Papers</i>. Four volumes of sources for any
+ theme in social history connected with colonial Texans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BATES, ED. F. <i>History and Reminiscences of Denton County</i>, Denton,
+ Texas, 1918. A sample of much folk life found in county histories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BELL, HORACE. <i>On the Old West Coast</i>, New York, 1930. Social history
+ by anecdote. California. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BRACHT, VIKTOR. <i>Texas in 1848</i>, translated from the German by C. F.
+ Schmidt, San Antonio, 1931. Better on natural resources than on human
+ inhabitants. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CARL, PRINCE OF SOLMS-BRAUNFELS. <i>Texas, 1844-1845</i>. Translation,
+ Houston, 1936. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COX, C. C. "Reminiscences," in Vol. VI of <i>Southwestern Historical
+ Quarterly</i>. One of the best of many pioneer recollections published by
+ the Texas State Historical Association.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CROCKETT, DAVID. Anything about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DICK, EVERETT. <i>The Sod House Frontier</i> (1937) and <i>Vanguards of
+ the Frontier</i> (1941). Both OP. Life on north-ern Plains into Rocky
+ Mountains, but applicable to life southward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOBIE, J. FRANK. <i>The Flavor of Texas</i>, 1936. OP. Considerable social
+ history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FENLEY, FLORENCE. <i>Oldtimers: Their Own Stories</i>, Uvalde, Texas,
+ 1939. OP. Faithful reporting of realistic detail. Southwest Texas, mostly
+ ranch life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FRANTZ, JOE B. <i>Gail Borden, Dairyman to a Nation</i>. University of
+ Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1951. This biography of a newspaperman and
+ inventor brings out sides of pioneer life that emphasis on fighting,
+ farming, and ranching generally overlooks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GERSTAECKER, FREDERICK. <i>Wild Sports in the Far West</i>, 1860. Dances
+ are among the sports.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HARRIS, MRS. DILUE. "Reminiscences," edited by Mrs. A. B. Looscan, in
+ Vols. IV and VII of <i>Southwestern Historical Quarterly</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HART, JOHN A. <i>History of Pioneer Days in Texas and Oklahoma</i>; no
+ date. Extended and republished under the title of <i>Pioneer Days in the
+ Southwest</i>, 1909. Much on frontier ways of living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOFF, CAROL <i>Johnny Texas</i>, Wilcox and Follett, Chicago, 1950.
+ Juvenile, historical fiction. Delightful in both text and illustrations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOGAN, WILLIAM R. <i>The Texas Republic: A Social and Economic History</i>,
+ University of Oklahoma Press, 1946. Long on facts, short on intellectual
+ activity; that is, on interpretations from the perspective of time and
+ civilization.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOLDEN, W. C. <i>Alkali Trails</i>, Dallas, 1930. Pioneer life in West
+ Texas. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOLLEY, MARY AUSTIN. <i>Texas... in a Series of Letters</i>, Baltimore,
+ 1833; reprinted under the title of <i>Letters of an American Traveler</i>,
+ edited by Mattie Austin Hatcher, Dallas, 1933. First good book on Texas to
+ be printed. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Lamar Papers</i>. Six volumes of scrappy source material on Texas
+ history and life, issued by Texas State Library, Austin. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LEWIS, WILLIE NEWBURY. <i>Between Sun and Sod</i>, Clarendon, Texas, 1938.
+ OP. Again, want of perspective.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LUBBOCK, F. R. Six <i>Decades in Texas</i>, Austin, 1900.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MCCONNELL, H. H. <i>Five Years a Cavalryman</i>, Jacksboro, Texas, 1889.
+ Bully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ McDANFIELD, H. F., and TAYLOR, NATHANIEL A. <i>The Coming Empire, or 2000
+ Miles in Texas on Horseback</i>, New York, 1878; privately reprinted,
+ 1937. Delightful travel narrative. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MCNEAL, T. A. <i>When Kansas Was Young</i>, New York, 1922. Episodes and
+ characters of Plains country. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OLMSTED, FREDERICK LAW. <i>A Journey Through Texas</i>, New York, 1857.
+ Olmsted journeyed in order to see. He saw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ READ, OPIE. <i>An Arkansas Planter</i>, 1896. Pleasant fiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RICHARDSON, ALBERT D. <i>Beyond the Mississippi</i>, Hartford, 1867. What
+ a traveling journalist saw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RISTER, CARL C. <i>Southern Plainsmen</i>, University of Oklahoma Press,
+ 1938. Though pedestrian in style, good social data. Bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROEMER, DR. FERDINAND. <i>Texas</i>, translated from the German by Oswald
+ Mueller, San Antonio, 1935. OP. Roemer, a geologist, rode through Texas in
+ the forties and made acute observations on the land, its plants and
+ animals, and the settlers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SCHMITZ, JOSEPH WILLIAM. <i>Thus They Lived</i>, Naylor, San Antonio,
+ 1935. This would have been a good social history of Texas had the writer
+ devoted ten more years to the subject. Unsatisfactory bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHIPMAN, DANIEL. <i>Frontier Life, 58 Years in Texas</i>, n.p., 1879. One
+ of the pioneer reminiscences that should be reprinted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SMITH, HENRY. "Reminiscences," in <i>Southwestern Historical Quarterly</i>,
+ Vol. XIV. Telling details.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SMITHWICK, NOAH. <i>The Evolution of a State</i>, Austin, 1900. Reprinted
+ by Steck, Austin, 1935. Best of all books dealing with life in early
+ Texas. Bully reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Southwestern Historical Quarterly</i>, published since 1897 by Texas
+ State Historical Association, Austin. A depository of all kinds of
+ history; the first twenty-five or thirty volumes are the more interesting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SWEET, ALEXANDER E., and KNOX, J. ARMOY. <i>On a Mexican Mustang Through
+ Texas</i>, Hartford, 1883. Humorous satire, often penetrating and ruddy
+ with actuality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WALLIS, JONNIE LOCKHART. <i>Sixty Years on the Brazos: The Life and
+ Letters of Dr. John Washington Lockhart</i>, privately printed, Los
+ Angeles, 1930. In notebook style, but as rare in essence as it is among
+ dealers in out-of-print books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WAUGH, JULIA NOTT. <i>Castroville and Henry Castro</i>, San Antonio, 1934.
+ OP. Best-written monograph dealing with any aspect of Texas history that I
+ have read.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WYNN, AFTON. "Pioneer Folk Ways," in <i>Straight Texas</i>, Texas Folklore
+ Society Publication XIII, 1937.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 10. Fighting Texians
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE TEXAS PEOPLE belong to a fighting tradition that the majority of them
+ are proud of. The footholds that the Spaniards and Mexicans held in Texas
+ were maintained by virtue of fighting, irrespective of missionary
+ baptizing. The purpose of the Anglo-American colonizer Stephen F. Austin
+ to "redeem Texas from the wilderness" was accomplished only by fighting.
+ The Texans bought their liberty with blood and maintained it for nine
+ years as a republic with blood. It was fighting men who pushed back the
+ frontiers and blazed trails.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fighting tradition is now giving way to the oil tradition. The Texas
+ myth as imagined by non-Texans is coming to embody oil millionaires in
+ airplanes instead of horsemen with six-shooters and rifles. See Edna
+ Ferber's Giant (1952 novel). Nevertheless, many Texans who never rode a
+ horse over three miles at a stretch wear cowboy boots, and a lot of Texans
+ are under the delusion that bullets and atomic bombs can settle
+ complexities that demand informed intelligence and the power to think.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I have pointed out in <i>The Flavor of Texas</i>, the chronicles of men
+ who fought the Mexicans and were prisoners to them comprise a unique unit
+ in the personal narratives and annals of America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of the books listed under the headings of "Texas Rangers," "How the
+ Early Settlers Lived," and "Range Life" specify the fighting tradition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BEAN, PETER ELLIS. <i>Memoir</i>, published first in Vol. I of Yoakum's <i>History
+ of Texas</i>; in 1930 printed as a small book by the Book Club of Texas,
+ Dallas, now OP. A fascinating narrative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BECHDOLT, FREDERICK R. <i>Tales of the Old Timers</i>, New York, 1924.
+ Forceful retelling of the story of the Mier Expedition and of other
+ activities of the "fighting Texans." OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHABOT, FREDERICK C. <i>The Perote Prisoners</i>, San Antonio, 1934.
+ Annotated diaries of Texas prisoners in Mexico. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOBIE, J. FRANK. <i>The Flavor of Texas</i>, Dallas, 1936. OP. Chapters on
+ Bean, Green, Duval, Kendall, and other representers of the fighting
+ Texans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DUVAL, JOHN C. <i>Adventures of Bigfoot Wallace</i>, 1870; <i>Early Times
+ in Texas</i>, 1892. Both books are kept in print by Steck, Austin. For
+ biography and critical estimate, see <i>John C. Duval: First Texas Man of
+ Letters</i>, by J. Frank Dobie (illustrated by Tom Lea), Dallas, 1939. OP.
+ <i>Early Times in Texas</i>, called "the <i>Robinson Crusoe</i> of Texas,"
+ is Duval's story of the Goliad Massacre and of his escape from it. Duval
+ served as a Texas Ranger with Bigfoot Wallace, who was in the Mier
+ Expedition. His narrative of Bigfoot's <i>Adventures</i> is the
+ rollickiest and the most flavorsome that any American frontiersman has yet
+ inspired. The tiresome thumping on the hero theme present in many
+ biographies of frontiersmen is entirely absent. Stanley Vestal wrote <i>Bigfoot
+ Wallace</i> also, Boston, 1942. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ERATH, MAJOR GEORGE G. <i>Memoirs</i>, Texas State Historical Association,
+ Austin, 1923. Erath understood his fellow Texians. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILLETT, JAMES B. <i>Six Years with the Texas Rangers</i>, 1921. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GREEN, THOMAS JEFFERSON. <i>Journal of the Texan Expedition against Mier</i>,
+ 1845; reprinted by Steck, Austin, 1936. Green was one of the leaders of
+ the Mier Expedition. He lived in wrath and wrote with fire. For
+ information on Green see <i>Recollections and Reflections</i> by his son,
+ Wharton J. Green, 1906. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOUSTON, SAM. <i>The Raven</i>, by Marquis James, 1929, is not the only
+ biography of the Texan general, but it is the best, and embodies most of
+ what has been written on Houston excepting the multivolumed <i>Houston
+ Papers</i> issued by the University of Texas Press, Austin, under the
+ editorship of E. C. Barker. Houston was an original character even after
+ he became a respectable Baptist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENDALL, GEORGE W. <i>Narrative of the Texan Santa Fe Expedition</i>,
+ 1844; reprinted by Steck, Austin, 1936. Two volumes. Kendall, a New
+ Orleans journalist in search of copy, joined the Santa Fe Expedition sent
+ by the Republic of Texas to annex New Mexico. Lost on the Staked Plains
+ and then marched afoot as a prisoner to Mexico City, he found plenty of
+ copy and wrote a narrative that if it were not so journalistically verbose
+ might rank alongside Dana's <i>Two Years Before the Mast</i>. Fayette
+ Copeland's <i>Kendall of the Picayune</i>, 1943 but OP, is a biography. An
+ interesting parallel to Kendall's <i>Narrative is Letters and Notes on the
+ Texan Santa Fe Expedition, 1841-1842</i>, by Thomas Falconer, with Notes
+ and Introduction by F. W. Hodge, New York, 1930. OP. The route of the
+ expedition is logged and otherwise illuminated in <i>The Texan Santa Fe
+ Trail</i>, by H. Bailey Carroll, Panhandle-Plains Historical Society,
+ Canyon, Texas, 1951.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LEACH, JOSEPH. <i>The Typical Texan: Biography of an American Myth</i>,
+ Southern Methodist University Press, Dallas, 1952. At the time Texas was
+ emerging, the three main types of Americans were Yankees, southern
+ aristocrats, Kentucky westerners embodied by Daniel Boone. Texas took over
+ the Kentucky tradition. It was enlarged by Crockett, who stayed in Texas
+ only long enough to get killed, Sam Houston, and Bigfoot Wallace. Novels,
+ plays, stories, travel books, and the Texans themselves have kept the
+ tradition going. This is the main thesis of the book. Mr. Leach fails to
+ note that the best books concerning Texas have done little to keep the
+ typical Texan alive and that a great part of the present Texas Brags
+ spirit is as absurdly unrealistic as Mussolini's splurge at making
+ twentieth-century Italians imagine themselves a {illust. caption = John W.
+ Thomason, in his <i>Lone Star Preacher</i> (1941)} reincarnation of
+ Caesar's Roman legions. Mr. Leach dissects the myth and then swallows it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LINN, JOHN J. <i>Reminiscences of Fifty Years in Texas</i>, 1883;
+ reprinted by Steck, Austin, 1936. Mixture of personal narrative and
+ historical notes, written with energy and prejudice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MAVERICK, MARY A. <i>Memoirs</i>, 1921. OP. Mrs. Maverick's husband, Sam
+ Maverick, was among the citizens of San Antonio haled off to Mexico as
+ prisoners in 1842.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MORRELL, Z. N. <i>Fruits and Flowers in the Wilderness</i>, 1872. OP.
+ Morrell, a circuit-riding Baptist preacher, fought the Indians and the
+ Mexicans. See other books of this kind listed under "Circuit Riders and
+ Missionaries."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PERRY, GEORGE SESSIONS. Texas, A <i>World in Itself</i>, McGraw-Hill, New
+ York, 1942. Especially good chapter on the Alamo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SMYTHE, H. <i>Historical Sketch of Parker County, Texas</i>, 1877. One of
+ various good county histories of Texas replete with fighting. For
+ bibliography of this extensive class of literature consult <i>Texas County
+ Histories</i>, by H. Bailey Carroll, Texas State Historical Association,
+ Austin, 1943. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SONNICHSEN, C. L. <i>I'll Die Before I'll Run: The Story of the Great
+ Feuds of Texas</i>&mdash;and of some not great. Harper, New York, 1951.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SOWELL, A. J. <i>Rangers and Pioneers of Texas</i>, 1884; <i>Life of
+ Bigfoot Wallace</i>, 1899; <i>Early Settlers and Indian Fighters of
+ Southwest Texas</i>, 1900. All OP; all meaty with the character of
+ ready-to-fight but peace-seeking Texas pioneers. Sowell will some day be
+ recognized as an extraordinary chronicler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STAPP, WILLIAM P. <i>The Prisoners of Perote</i>, 1845; reprinted by
+ Steck, Austin, 1936. Journal of one of the Mier men who drew a white bean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THOMASON, JOHN W. <i>Lone Star Preacher</i>, Scribner's, New York, 1941.
+ The cream, the essence, the spirit, and the body of the fighting tradition
+ of Texas. Historical novel of Civil War.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WEBB, WALTER PRESCOTT. <i>The Texas Rangers</i>, Houghton Mifflin, Boston,
+ 1935. See under "Texas Rangers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WILBARGER, J. W. <i>Indian Depredations in Texas</i>, 1889; reprinted by
+ Steck, Austin, 1936. Narratives that have for generations been a household
+ heritage among Texas families who fought for their land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 11. Texas Rangers
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE TEXAS RANGERS were never more than a handful in number, but they were
+ picked men who knew how to ride, shoot, and tell the truth. On the Mexican
+ border and on the Indian frontier, a few rangers time and again proved
+ themselves more effective than battalions of soldiers.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Oh, pray for the ranger, you kind-hearted stranger,
+ He has roamed over the prairies for many a year;
+ He has kept the Comanches from off your ranches,
+ And chased them far over the Texas frontier.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ BANTA, WILLIAM. <i>Twenty-seven Years on the Texas Frontier</i>, 1893;
+ reprinted, 1933. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GAY, BEATRICE GRADY. <i>Into the Setting Sun</i>, Santa Anna, Texas, 1936.
+ Coleman County scenes and characters, dominated by ranger character. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILLETT, JAMES B. <i>Six Years with the Texas Rangers</i>, printed for the
+ author at Austin, Texas, 1921. He paid the printer cash for either one or
+ two thousand copies, as he told me, and sold them personally. Edited by
+ Milo M. Quaife, the book was published by Yale University Press in 1925.
+ This edition was reprinted, 1943, by the Lakeside Press, Chicago, in its
+ "Lakeside Classics" series, which are given away by the publishers at
+ Christmas annually and are not for sale&mdash;except through second-hand
+ dealers. Meantime, in 1927, the narrative had appeared under title of <i>The
+ Texas Ranger</i>, "in collaboration with Howard R. Driggs," a professional
+ neutralizer for school readers of any writing not standardized, published
+ by World Book Co., Yonkers-on-Hudson, New York. All editions OP. I regard
+ Gillett as the strongest and straightest of all ranger narrators. He
+ combined in his nature wild restlessness and loyal gentleness. He wrote in
+ sunlight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GREER, JAMES K. <i>Buck Barry</i>, Dallas, 1932. OP. <i>Colonel Jack Hays,
+ Texas Frontier Leader and California Builder</i>, Dutton, New York, 1952.
+ Hays achieved more vividness in reputation than narratives about him have
+ attained to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JENNINGS, N. A. <i>The Texas Ranger</i>, New York, 1899; reprinted 1930,
+ with foreword by J. Frank Dobie. OP. Good narrative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MALTBY, W. JEFF. <i>Captain Jeff</i>, Colorado, Texas, 1906. Amorphous.
+ OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MARTIN, JACK. <i>Border Boss</i>, San Antonio, 1942. Mediocre biography of
+ Captain John R. Hughes. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PAINE, ALBERT BIGELOW. <i>Captain Bill McDonald</i>, New York, 1909. Paine
+ did not do so well by "Captain Bill" as he did in his rich biography of
+ Mark Twain. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PIKE, JAMES. <i>Scout and Ranger</i>, 1865, reprinted 1932 by Princeton
+ University Press. Pike drew a long bow; interesting. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RAYMOND, DORA NEILL. <i>Captain Lee Hall of Texas</i>, Norman, Oklahoma,
+ 1940. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ REID, SAMUEL C. <i>Scouting Expeditions of the Texas Rangers</i>, 1859;
+ reprinted by Steck, Austin, 1936. Texas Rangers in Mexican War.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBERTS, DAN W. <i>Rangers and Sovereignty</i>, 1914. OP. Roberts was
+ better as ranger than as writer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBERTS, MRS. D. W. (wife of Captain Dan W. Roberts). A <i>Woman's
+ Reminiscences of Six Years in Camp with The Texas Rangers</i>, Austin,
+ 1928. OP. Mrs. Roberts was a sensible and charming woman with a seeing
+ eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SOWELL, A. J. <i>Rangers and Pioneers of Texas</i>, San Antonio, 1884. A
+ graphic book down to bedrock. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WEBB, WALTER PRESCOTT. <i>The Texas Rangers</i>, Houghton Mifflin, Boston,
+ 1935. The beginning, middle, and end of the subject. Bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 12. Women Pioneers
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ONE REASON for the ebullience of life and rollicky carelessness on the
+ frontiers of the West was the lack&mdash;temporary&mdash;of women. The
+ men, mostly young, had given no hostages to fortune. They were generally
+ as free from family cares as the buccaneers. This was especially true of
+ the first ranches on the Great Plains, of cattle trails, of mining camps,
+ logging camps, and of trapping expeditions. It was not true of the
+ colonial days in Texas, of ranch life in the southern part of Texas, of
+ homesteading all over the West, of emigrant trails to California and
+ Oregon, of backwoods life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Various items listed under "How the Early Settlers Lived" contain material
+ on pioneer women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ALDERSON, NANNIE T., and SMITH, HELENA HUNTINGTON. A <i>Bride Goes West</i>,
+ New York, 1942. Montana in the eighties. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BAKER, D. W. C. A <i>Texas Scrapbook</i>, 1875; reprinted, 1936, by Steck,
+ Austin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BROTHERS, MARY HUDSON. A <i>Pecos Pioneer</i>, 1943. OP. The best part of
+ this book is not about the writer's brother, who cowboyed with Chisum's
+ Jinglebob outfit and ran into Billy the Kid, but is Mary Hudson's own
+ life. Only Ross Santee has equaled her in description of drought and rain.
+ The last chapters reveal a girl's inner life, amid outward experiences, as
+ no other woman's chronicle of ranch ways&mdash;sheep ranch here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CALL, HUGHIE. <i>Golden Fleece</i>, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1942. Hughie
+ Call became wife of a Montana sheepman early in this century. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CLEAVELAND, AGNES MORLEY. <i>No Life for a Lady</i>, Houghton Mifflin,
+ Boston, 1941. Bright, witty, penetrating; anecdotal. Best account of
+ frontier life from woman's point of view yet published. New Mexico is the
+ setting, toward turn of the century. People who wished Mrs. Cleaveland
+ would write another book were disappointed when her <i>Satan's Paradise</i>
+ appeared in 1952.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ELLIS, ANNE. <i>The Life of An Ordinary Woman</i>, 1929, and <i>Plain Anne
+ Ellis</i>, 1931, both OP. Colorado country and town. Books of
+ disillusioned observations, wit, and wisdom by a frank woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FAUNCE, HILDA. <i>Desert Wife</i>, 1934. OP. Desert loneliness at a Navajo
+ trading post.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HARRIS, MRS. DILUE. Reminiscences, in <i>Southwestern Historical Quarterly</i>,
+ Vols. IV and VII.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KLEBERG, ROSA. "Early Experiences in Texas," in <i>Quarterly of the Texas
+ State Historical Association</i> (initial title for <i>Southwestern
+ Historical Quarterly</i>), Vols. I and II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MAGOFFIN, SUSAN SHELBY. <i>Down the Santa Fe Trail</i>, 1926. OP. She was
+ juicy and a bride, and all life was bright to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MATTHEWS, SALLIE REYNOLDS. <i>Interwoven</i>, Houston, 1936. Ranch life in
+ the Texas frontier as a refined and intelligent woman saw it. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MAVERICK, MARY A. <i>Memoirs</i>, San Antonio, 1921. OP. Essential.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PICKRELL, ANNIE DOOM. <i>Pioneer Women in Texas</i>, Austin, 1929. Too
+ much lady business but valuable. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ POE, SOPHIE A. <i>Buckboard Days</i>, edited by Eugene Cunningham,
+ Caldwell, Idaho, 1936. Mrs. Poe was there&mdash;New Mexico.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RAK, MARY KIDDER. <i>A Cowman's Wife</i>, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1934.
+ The external experiences of an ex-teacher on a small Arizona ranch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RHODES, MAY D. <i>The Hired Man on Horseback</i>, 1938. Biography of
+ Eugene Manlove Rhodes, but also warm-natured autobiography of the woman
+ who ranched with "Gene" in New Mexico. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RICHARDS, CLARICE E. <i>A Tenderfoot Bride</i>, Garden City, N. Y., 1920.
+ OP. Charming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STEWART, ELINOR P. <i>Letters of a Woman Homesteader</i>, Boston, 1914.
+ OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WHITE, OWEN P. <i>A Frontier Mother</i>, New York, 1929. OP. Overdone, as
+ White overdid every subject he touched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WILBARGER, J. W. <i>Indian Depredations in Texas</i>, 1889; reprinted by
+ Steck, Austin, 1936. A glimpse into the lives led by families that gave
+ many women to savages&mdash;for death or for Cynthia Ann Parker captivity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WYNN, AFTON. "Pioneer Folk Ways," in <i>Straight Texas</i>, Texas Folklore
+ Society Publication XIII, 1937. Excellent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 13. Circuit Riders and Missionaries
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ NOTWITHSTANDING both the tradition and the facts of hardshooting,
+ hard-riding cowboys, of bad men, of border lawlessness, of inhabitants who
+ had left some other place under a cloud, of frontier towns "west of God,"
+ hard layouts and conscienceless "courthouse crowds"&mdash;notwithstanding
+ all this, the Southwest has been and is religious-minded. This is not to
+ say that it is spiritual-natured. It belongs to H. L. Mencken's "Bible
+ Belt." "Pass-the-Biscuits" Pappy O'Daniel got to be governor of Texas and
+ then U.S. senator by advertising his piety. A politician as "ignorant as a
+ Mexican hog" on foreign affairs and the complexities of political economy
+ can run in favor of what he and the voters call religion and leave an
+ informed man of intellect and sincerity in the shade. The biggest
+ campmeeting in the Southwest, the Bloys Campmeeting near Fort Davis,
+ Texas, is in the midst of an enormous range country away from all
+ factories and farmers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since about 1933 the United States Indian Service has not only allowed but
+ rather encouraged the Indians to revert to their own religious ceremonies.
+ They have always been religious. The Spanish colonists of the Southwest,
+ as elsewhere, were zealously Catholic, and their descendants have
+ generally remained Catholic. The first English-speaking settlers of the
+ region&mdash;the colonists led by Stephen F. Austin to Texas&mdash;were
+ overwhelmingly Protestant, though in order to establish Mexican
+ citizenship and get titles to homestead land they had, technically, to
+ declare themselves Catholics. One of the causes of the Texas Revolution as
+ set forth by the Texans in their Declaration of Independence was the
+ Mexican government's denial of "the right of worshipping the Almighty
+ according to the dictates of our own conscience." A history of
+ southwestern society that left out the Bible would be as badly gapped as
+ one leaving out the horse or the six-shooter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See chapter entitled "On the Lord's Side" in Dobie's <i>The Flavor of
+ Texas</i>. Most of the books listed under "How the Early Settlers Lived"
+ contain information on religion and preachers. Church histories are about
+ as numerous as state histories. Virtually all county histories take into
+ account church development. The books listed below are strong on personal
+ experiences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ASBURY, FRANCIS. Three or more lives have been written of this
+ representative pioneer bishop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BOLTON, HERBERT E. <i>The Padre on Horseback</i>, 1932. Life of the Jesuit
+ missionary Kino. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BROWNLOW, W. G. <i>Portrait and Biography of Parson Brownlow, the
+ Tennessee Patriot</i>, 1862. Brownlow was a very representative figure.
+ Under the title of <i>William G Brownlow, Fighting Parson of the Southern
+ Highland</i>, E. M Coulter has brought out a thorough life of him,
+ published by University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, 1937.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BURLESON, RUFUS C. <i>Life and Writings</i>, 1901. OP. The
+ autobiographical part of this amorphously arranged volume is a social
+ document of the first rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CARTWRIGHT, PETER. <i>Autobiography</i>, 1857. Out of Kentucky, into
+ Indiana and then into Illinois, where he ran against Lincoln for Congress,
+ Cartwright rode with saddlebags and Bible. Sandburg characterizes him as
+ "an enemy of whisky, gambling, jewelry, fine clothes, and higher
+ learning." He seems to me more unlovely in his intolerance and
+ sectarianism than most circuit riders of the Southwest, but as a militant,
+ rough-and-ready "soldier of the Lord" he represented southwestern
+ frontiers as well as his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CRANFILL, J. B. <i>Chronicle, A Story of Life in Texas</i>, 1916. Cranfill
+ was a lot of things besides a Baptist preacher&mdash;trail driver,
+ fiddler, publisher, always an observer. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEVILBISS, JOHN WESLEY. <i>Reminiscences and Events</i> (compiled by H. A.
+ Graves), 1886. The very essence of pioneering,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOMENECH, ABBE. <i>Missionary Adventures in Texas and Mexico</i>
+ (translated from the French), London, 1858. OP. The Abbe always had eyes
+ open for wonders. He saw them. Delicious narrative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ EVANS, WILL G. <i>Border Skylines</i>, published in Dallas, 1940, for
+ Bloys Campmeeting Association, Fort Davis, Texas. Chronicles of the men
+ and women&mdash;cow people&mdash;and cow country responsible for the best
+ known campmeeting, held annually, Texas has ever had. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GRAVIS, PETER W. <i>25 Years on the Outside Row of the Northwest Texas
+ Annual Conference</i>, Comanche, Texas, 1892. Another one of those small
+ personal records, privately printed but full of juice. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LIDE, ANNA A. <i>Robert Alexander and the Early Methodist Church in Texas</i>,
+ La Grange, Texas, 1935. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MORRELL, Z. N. <i>Fruits and Flowers in the Wilderness</i>, 1872. Though
+ reprinted three times, last in 1886, long OP. In many ways the best
+ circuit rider's chronicle of the Southwest that has been published.
+ Morrell fought Indians and Mexicans in Texas and was rich in other
+ experiences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MORRIS, T. A. <i>Miscellany</i>, 1884. The "Notes of Travel"&mdash;particularly
+ to Texas in 1841&mdash;are what makes this book interesting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PARISOT, P. F. <i>Reminiscences of a Texas Missionary</i>, 1899. Mostly
+ the Texas-Mexican border.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ POTTER, ANDREW JACKSON, commonly called the Fighting Parson. <i>Life</i>
+ of him by H. A. Graves, 1890, not nearly so good as Potter was himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THOMASON, JOHN W. <i>Lone Star Preacher</i>, Scribner's, New York, 1941.
+ Fiction, true to humanity. The moving story of a Texas chaplain who
+ carried a Bible in one hand and a captain's sword in the other through the
+ Civil War.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 14. Lawyers, Politicians, J. P.'s
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ STEPHEN F. AUSTIN wanted to exclude lawyers, along with roving
+ frontiersmen, from his colonies in Texas, and hoped thus to promote a
+ utopian society. The lawyers got in, however. Their wit, the anecdotes of
+ which they were both subject and author, and the political stories they
+ made traditional from the stump, have not been adequately set down. As
+ criminal lawyers they stood as high in society as corporation lawyers
+ stand now and were a good deal more popular, though less wealthy. The code
+ of independence that fostered personal violence and justified killings&mdash;in
+ contradistinction to murders&mdash;and that ran to excess in outlaws
+ naturally fostered the criminal lawyer. His type is now virtually
+ obsolete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Keen observers, richly stored in experience and delightful in talk, as
+ many lawyers of the Southwest have been and are, very few of them have
+ written on other than legal subjects. James D. Lynch's <i>The Bench and
+ the Bar of Texas</i> (1885) is confined to the eminence of "eminent
+ jurists" and to the mastery of "masters of jurisprudence." What we want is
+ the flavor of life as represented by such characters as witty Three-Legged
+ Willie (Judge R. M. Williamson) and mysterious Jonas Harrison. It takes a
+ self-lover to write good autobiography. Lawyers are certainly as good at
+ self-loving as preachers, but we have far better autobiographic records of
+ circuit riders than of early-day lawyers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like them, the pioneer justice of peace resides more in folk anecdotes
+ than in chroniclings. Horace Bell's expansive <i>On the Old West Coast</i>
+ so represents him. A continent away, David Crockett, in his <i>Autobiography</i>,
+ confessed, "I was afraid some one would ask me what the judiciary was. If
+ I knowed I wish I may be shot." Before this, however, Crockett had been a
+ J. P. "I gave my decisions on the principles of common justice and honesty
+ between man and man, and relied on natural born sense, and not on law
+ learning to guide me; for I had never read a page in a law book in all my
+ life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COOMBES, CHARLES E. <i>The Prairie Dog Lawyer</i>, Dallas, 1945. OP.
+ Experiences and anecdotes by a lawyer better read in rough-and-ready
+ humanity than in law. The prairie dogs have all been poisoned out from the
+ West Texas country over which he ranged from court to court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HAWKINS, WALACE. <i>The Case of John C. Watrous, United States Judge for
+ Texas: A Political Story of High Crimes and Misdemeanors</i>, Southern
+ Methodist University Press, Dallas, 1950. More technical than social.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KITTRELL, NORMAN G. <i>Governors Who Have Been and Other Public Men of
+ Texas</i>, Houston, 1921. OP. Best collection of lawyer anecdotes of the
+ Southwest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBINSON, DUNCAN W. <i>Judge Robert McAlpin Williamson, Texas'
+ Three-Legged Willie</i>, Texas State Historical Association, Austin, 1948.
+ This was the Republic of Texas judge who laid a Colt revolver across a
+ Bowie knife and said: "Here is the constitution that overrides the law."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SONNICHSEN, C. L. <i>Roy Bean, Law West of the Pecos</i>, Macmillan, New
+ York, 1943. Roy Bean (1830-1903), justice of peace at Langtry, Texas,
+ advertised himself as "Law West of the Pecos." He was more picaresque than
+ picturesque; folk imagination gave him notoriety. The Texas State Highway
+ Department maintains for popular edification the beer joint wherein he
+ held court. Three books have been written about him, besides scores of
+ newspaper and magazine articles. The only biography of validity is
+ Sonnichsen's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SLOAN, RICHARD E. <i>Memories of an Arizona Judge</i>, Stanford,
+ California, 1932. Full of humanity. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SMITH, E. F. <i>A Saga of Texas Law: A Factual Story of Texas Law,
+ Lawyers, Judges and Famous Lawsuits</i>, Naylor, San Antonio, 1940.
+ Interesting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 15. Pioneer Doctors
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ BEFORE the family doctors came, frontiersmen sawed off legs with handsaws,
+ tied up arteries with horsetail hair, cauterized them with branding irons.
+ Before homemade surgery with steel tools was practiced, Mexican <i>curanderas</i>
+ (herb women) supplied <i>remedios</i>, and they still know the medicinal
+ properties of every weed and bush. Herb stores in San Antonio,
+ Brownsville, and El Paso do a thriving business. Behind the <i>curanderas</i>
+ were the medicine men of the tribes. Not all their lore was superstition,
+ as any one who reads the delectable autobiography of Gideon Lincecum,
+ published by the Mississippi Historical Society in 1904, will agree.
+ Lincecum, learned in botany, a sharply-edged individual who later moved to
+ Texas, went out to live with a Choctaw medicine man and wrote down all his
+ lore about the virtues of native plants. The treatise has never been
+ printed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extraordinary life of Lincecum has, however, been interestingly
+ delineated in Samuel Wood Geiser's <i>Naturalists of the Frontier</i>,
+ Southern Methodist University Press, 1937, 1948, and in Pat Ireland
+ Nixon's <i>The Medical Story of Early Texas</i>, listed below. No
+ historical novelist could ask for a richer theme than Gideon Lincecum or
+ Edmund Montgomery, the subject of I. K. Stephens' biography listed below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BUSH, I. J. <i>Gringo Doctor</i>, Caldwell, Idaho, 1939. OP. Dr. Bush
+ represented frontier medicine and surgery on both sides of the Rio Grande.
+ Living at El Paso, he was for a time with the Maderistas in the revolution
+ against Diaz.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COE, URLING C. <i>Frontier Doctor</i>, New York, 1939. OP. Not of the
+ Southwest but representing other frontier doctors. Lusty autobiography
+ full of characters and anecdotes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DODSON, RUTH. "Don Pedrito Jaramillo: The Curandero of Los Olmos," in <i>The
+ Healer of Los Olmos and Other Mexican Lore</i> (Publication of the Texas
+ Folklore Society XXIV), edited by Wilson M. Hudson, Southern Methodist
+ University Press, Dallas, 1951. Don Pedrito was no more of a fraud than
+ many an accredited psychiatrist, and he was the opposite of offensive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NIXON, PAT IRELAND. <i>A Century of Medicine in San Antonio</i>, published
+ by the author, San Antonio, 1936. Rich in information, diverting in
+ anecdote, and tonic in philosophy. Bibliography. <i>The Medical Story of
+ Early Texas, 1528-1835</i> [San Antonio], 1946. Lightness of life with
+ scholarly thoroughness; many character sketches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RED, MRS. GEORGE P. <i>The Medicine Man in Texas</i>, Houston, 1930.
+ Biographical. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STEPHENS, I. K. <i>The Hermit Philosopher of Liendo</i>, Southern
+ Methodist University Press, Dallas, 1951. Well-conceived and well-written
+ biography of Edmund Montgomery&mdash;illegitimate son of a Scottish lord,
+ husband of the sculptress Elisabet Ney&mdash;who, after being educated in
+ Germany and becoming a member of the Royal College of Physicians of
+ London, came to Texas with his wife and sons and settled on Liendo
+ Plantation, near Hempstead, once known as Sixshooter Junction. Here, in
+ utter isolation from people of cultivated minds, he conducted scientific
+ experiments in his inadequate laboratory and thought out a philosophy said
+ to be half a century ahead of his time. He died in 1911. His life was the
+ drama of an elevated soul of complexities, far more tragic than any life
+ associated with the lurid "killings" around him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WOODHULL, FROST. "Ranch Remedios," in <i>Man, Bird, and Beast</i>, Texas
+ Folklore Society Publication VIII, 1930. The richest and most readable
+ collection of pioneer remedies yet published.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 16. Mountain Men
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AS USED HERE, the term "Mountain Men" applies to those trappers and
+ traders who went into the Rocky Mountains before emigrants had even sought
+ a pass through them to the west or cattle had beat out a trail on the
+ plains east of them. Beaver fur was the lodestar for the Mountain Men.
+ Their span of activity was brief, their number insignificant. Yet hardly
+ any other distinct class of men, irrespective of number or permanence, has
+ called forth so many excellent books as the Mountain Men. The books are
+ not nearly so numerous as those connected with range life, but when one
+ considers the writings of Stanley Vestal, Sabin, Ruxton, Fer gusson,
+ Chittenden, Favour, Garrard, Inman, Irving, Reid, and White in this Seld,
+ one doubts whether any other form of American life at all has been so well
+ covered in ballad, fiction, biography, history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See James Hobbs, James O. Pattie, and Reuben Gold Thwaites under "Surge of
+ Life in the West," also "Santa Fe and the Santa Fe Trail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ALTER, J. CECIL. <i>James Bridger</i>, Salt Lake City, 1925. A hogshead of
+ life. Bibliography. OP. Republished by Long's College Book Co., Columbus,
+ Ohio.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BONNER, T. D. <i>The Life and Adventures of James P. Beckwourth, 1856</i>;
+ reprinted in 1931, with an illuminating introduction by Bernard DeVoto.
+ OP. Beckwourth was the champion of all western liars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BREWERTON, G. D. <i>Overland with Kit Carson</i>, New York, 1930. Good
+ narrative. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHITTENDEN, <i>H. M. The American Fur Trade of the</i> <i>Far West</i>,
+ New York, 1902. OP. Basic work. Bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CLELAND, ROBERT GLASS. <i>This Reckless Breed of Men: The Trappers and Fur
+ Traders of the Southwest</i>, Knopf, New York, 1950. Fresh emphasis on the
+ California-Arizona-New Mexico region by a knowing scholar. Economical in
+ style without loss of either humanity or history. Bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CONRAD, HOWARD L. <i>Uncle Dick Wootton</i>, 1890. Primary source. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COYNER, D. H. <i>The Lost Trappers</i>, 1847.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DAVIDSON, L. J., and BOSTWICK, P. <i>The Literature of the Rocky Mountain
+ West 1803-1903</i>, Caxton, Caldwell, Idaho, 1939. Davidson and Forrester
+ Blake, editors. <i>Rocky Mountain Tales</i>, University of Oklahoma Press,
+ Norman, 1947.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEVOTO, BERNARD. <i>Across the Wide Missouri</i>, Houghton Mifflin,
+ Boston, 1947. Superbly illustrated by reproductions of Alfred Jacob
+ Miller. DeVoto has amplitude and is a master of his subject as well as of
+ the craft of writing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FAVOUR, ALPHEUS H. <i>Old Bill Williams, Mountain Man</i>, University of
+ North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, 1936. Flavor and facts both. Full
+ bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FERGUSSON, HARVEY. <i>Rio Grande</i>, 1933, republished by Tudor, New
+ York. The drama and evolution of human life in New Mexico, written out of
+ knowledge and with power. <i>Wolf Song</i>, New York, 1927. OP. Graphic
+ historical novel of Mountain Men. It sings with life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GARRARD, LEWIS H. <i>Wah-toyah and the Taos Trail</i>, 1850. One of the
+ basic works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GRANT, BLANCHE C. <i>When Old Trails Were New&mdash;The Story of Taos</i>,
+ New York, 1934. OP. Taos was rendezvous town for the free trappers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GUTHRIE, A. B., JR. <i>The Big Sky</i>, Sloane, New York, 1947 (now
+ published by Houghton Mifflin, Boston). "An unusually original novel,
+ superb as historical fiction."&mdash;Bernard DeVoto. I still prefer Harvey
+ Fergusson's <i>Wolf Song</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HAMILTON, W. T. <i>My Sixty Years on the Plains</i>, New York, 1905. Now
+ published by Long's College Book Co., Columbus, Ohio.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ INMAN, HENRY. <i>The Old Santa Fe Trail</i>, 1897.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IRVING, WASHINGTON. <i>The Adventures of Captain Bonneville</i> and <i>Astoria</i>.
+ The latter book was founded on Robert Stuart's Narratives. In 1935 these
+ were prepared for the press, with much illuminative material, by Philip
+ Ashton Rollins and issued under the title of <i>The Discovery of the
+ Oregon Trail</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LARPENTEUR, CHARLES. <i>Forty Years a Fur Trader on the Upper Missouri</i>,
+ edited by Elliott Coues, New York, 1898. As Milo Milton Quaife shows in an
+ edition of the narrative issued by the Lakeside Press, Chicago, 1933, the
+ indefatigable Coues just about rewrote the old fur trader's narrative. It
+ is immediate and vigorous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LAUT, A. C. <i>The Story of the Trapper</i>, New York, 1902. A popular
+ survey, emphasizing types and characters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LEONARD, ZENAS. <i>Narrative of the Adventures of Zenas Leonard</i>,
+ Clearfield, Pa., 1839. In 1833 the Leonard trappers reached San Francisco
+ Bay, boarded a Boston ship anchored near shore, and for the first time in
+ two years varied their meat diet by eating bread and drinking "Coneac."
+ One of the trappers had a gun named Knock-him-stiff. Such earthy details
+ abound in this narrative of adventures in a brand new world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LOCKWOOD, FRANK C. <i>Arizona Characters</i>, Los Angeles, 1928. Very
+ readable biographic sketches. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MILLER, ALFRED JACOB. <i>The West of Alfred Jacob Miller</i>, with an
+ account of the artist by Marvin C. Ross, University of Oklahoma Press,
+ Norman, 1950. Although Miller painted the West during 1837-38, only now is
+ he being discovered by the public. This is mainly a picture book, in the
+ top rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PATTIE, JAMES OHIO. <i>The Personal Narrative of James O. Pattie of
+ Kentucky</i>, Cincinnati, 1831. Pattie and his small party went west in
+ 1824. For grizzlies, thirst, and other features of primitive adventure the
+ narrative is primary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ REID, MAYNE. <i>The Scalp Hunters</i>. An antiquated novel, but it has
+ some deep-dyed pictures of Mountain Men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROSS, ALEXANDER. <i>Adventures of the First Settlers on the Oregon or
+ Columbia River</i> (1849) and <i>The Fur Hunters of the Far West</i>
+ (1855). The trappers of the Southwest can no more be divorced from the
+ trappers of the Hudson's Bay Company than can Texas cowboys from those of
+ Montana.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RUSSELL, OSBORNE. <i>Journal of a Trapper</i>, Boise, Idaho, 1921. In the
+ winter of 1839, at Fort Hall on Snake River, Russell and three other
+ trappers "had some few books to read, such as Byron, Shakespeare and
+ Scott's works, the Bible and Clark's Commentary on it, and some small
+ works on geology, chemistry and philosophy." Russell was wont to speculate
+ on Life and Nature. In perspective he approaches Ruxton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RUXTON, GEORGE F. <i>Life in the Far West</i>, 1848; reprinted by the
+ University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1951, edited by LeRoy R. Hafen. No
+ other contemporary of the Mountain Men has been so much quoted as Ruxton.
+ He remains supremely readable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SABIN, EDWIN L. <i>Kit Carson Days</i>, 1914. A work long standard, rich
+ on rendezvous, bears, and many other associated subjects. Bibliography.
+ Republished in rewritten form, 1935. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VESTAL, STANLEY (pseudonym for Walter S. Campbell). <i>Kit Carson</i>,
+ 1928. As a clean-running biographic narrative, it is not likely to be
+ superseded. <i>Mountain Men</i>, 1937, OP; <i>The Old Santa Fe Trail</i>,
+ 1939. Vestal's "Fandango," a tale of the Mountain Men in Taos, is among
+ the most spirited ballads America has produced. It and a few other
+ Mountain Men ballads are contained in the slight collection, <i>Fandango</i>,
+ 1927. Houghton Mifflin, Boston, published the aforementioned titles. <i>James
+ Bridger, Mountain Man</i>, Morrow, New York, 1946, is smoother than J.
+ Cecil Alter's biography but not so savory. <i>Joe Meek, the Merry Mountain
+ Man</i>, Caxton, Caldwell, Idaho, 1952.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WHITE, STEWART EDWARD. <i>The Long Rifle</i>, 1932, and <i>Ranchero</i>,
+ 1933, Doubleday, Doran, Garden City, N. Y. Historical fiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 17. Santa Fe and the Santa Fe Trail
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THERE WAS Independence on the Missouri River, then eight hundred miles of
+ twisting trail across hills, plains, and mountains, all uninhabited save
+ by a few wandering Indians and uncountable buffaloes. Then there was Santa
+ Fe. On west of it lay nearly a thousand miles of wild broken lands before
+ one came to the village of Los Angeles. But there was no trail to Los
+ Angeles. At Santa Fe the trail turned south and after crawling over the
+ Jornada del Muerto&mdash;Journey of the Dead Man&mdash;threading the great
+ Pass of the North (El Paso) and crossing a vast desert, reached Chihuahua
+ City.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Looked at in one way, Santa Fe was a mud village. In another way, it was
+ the solitary oasis of human picturesqueness in a continent of vacancy.
+ Like that of Athens, though of an entirely different quality, its fame was
+ out of all proportion to its size. In a strong chapter, entitled "A
+ Caravan Enters Santa Fe," R. L. Duffus <i>(The Santa Fe Trail)</i>
+ elaborates on how for all travelers the town always had "the lure of
+ adventure." Josiah Gregg doubted whether "the first sight of the walls of
+ Jerusalem were beheld with much more tumultuous and soul-enrapturing joy"
+ than Santa Fe was by a caravan topping the last rise and, eight hundred
+ miles of solitude behind it, looking down on the town's shining walls and
+ cottonwoods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No other town of its size in America has been the subject of and focus for
+ as much good literature as Santa Fe. Pittsburgh and dozens of other big
+ cities all put together have not inspired one tenth of the imaginative
+ play that Santa Fe has inspired. Some of the transcontinental railroads
+ probably carry as much freight in a day as went over the Santa Fe Trail in
+ all the wagons in all the years they pulled over the Santa Fe Trail. But
+ the Santa Fe Trail is one of the three great trails of America that,
+ though plowed under, fenced across, and cemented over, seem destined for
+ perennial travel&mdash;by those happily able to go without tourist guides.
+ To quote Robert Louis Stevenson, "The greatest adventures are not those we
+ go to seek." The other two trails comparable to the Santa Fe are also of
+ the West&mdash;the Oregon Trail for emigrants and the Chisholm Trail for
+ cattle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For additional literature see "Mountain Men," "Stagecoaches, Freighting,"
+ "Surge of Life in the West."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CATHER, WILLA. <i>Death Comes for the Archbishop</i>, Knopf, New York,
+ 1927. Historical novel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CONNELLEY, W. E. (editor). <i>Donithan's Expedition</i>, 1907. Saga of the
+ Mexican War. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DAVIS, W. W. H. <i>El Gringo, or New Mexico and Her People</i>, 1856;
+ reprinted by Rydal, Santa Fe, 1938. OP. Excellent on manners and customs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DUFFUS, R. L. <i>The Santa Fe Trail</i>, New York, 1930. OP. Bibliography.
+ Best book of this century on the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DUNBAR, SEYMOUR. <i>History of Travel in America</i>, 1915; revised
+ edition issued by Tudor, New York, 1937.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GREGG, JOSIAH. <i>Commerce of the Prairies</i>, two vols., 1844.
+ Reprinted, but all OP. Gregg wrote as a man of experience and not as a
+ professional writer. He wrote not only the classic of the Santa Fe trade
+ and trail but one of the classics of bedrock Americana. It is a commentary
+ on civilization in the Southwest that his work is not kept in print.
+ Harvey Fergusson, in <i>Rio Grande</i>, has written a penetrating
+ criticism of the man and his subject. In 1941 and 1944 the University of
+ Oklahoma Press, Norman, issued two volumes of the <i>Diary and Letters of
+ Josiah Gregg</i>, edited by Maurice G. Fulton with Introductions by Paul
+ Horgan. These volumes, interesting in themselves, are a valuable
+ complement to Gregg's major work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ INMAN, HENRY. <i>The Old Santa Fe Trail</i>, 1897. A mine of lore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LAUGHLIN, RUTH (formerly Ruth Laughlin Barker). <i>Caballeros</i>, New
+ York, 1931; republished by Caxton, Caldwell, Idaho, 1946. Essayical goings
+ into the life of things. Especially delightful on burros. A book to be
+ starred. <i>The Wind Leaves No Shadow</i>, New York, 1948; Caxton, 1951. A
+ novel around Dona Tules Barcelo, the powerful, beautiful, and silvered
+ mistress of Santa Fe's gambling <i>sala</i> in the 1830's and '40's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MAGOFFIN, SUSAN SHELBY. <i>Down the Santa Fe Trail</i>, Yale University
+ Press, New Haven, 1926. Delectable diary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PILLSBURY, DOROTHY L. <i>No High Adobe</i>, University of New Mexico
+ Press, Albuquerque, 1950. Sketches, pleasant to read, that make the <i>gente</i>
+ very real.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RUXTON, GEORGE FREDERICK. <i>Adventures in Mexico and the Rocky Mountains</i>,
+ London, 1847. In 1924 the second half of this book was reprinted under
+ title of <i>Wild Life in the Rocky Mountains</i>. In 1950, with additional
+ Ruxton writings discovered by Clyde and Mae Reed Porter, the book, edited
+ by LeRoy R. Hafen, was reissued under title of <i>Ruxton of the Rockies</i>,
+ University of Oklahoma Press, Norman. Santa Fe is only one incident in it.
+ Ruxton illuminates whatever he touches. He was in love with the wilderness
+ and had a fire in his belly. Other writers add details, but Ruxton and
+ Gregg embodied the whole Santa Fe world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VESTAL, STANLEY. <i>The Old Santa Fe Trail</i>, Houghton Mifflin, Boston,
+ 1939.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 18. Stagecoaches, Freighting
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A GOOD INTRODUCTION to a treatment of the stagecoach of the West would be
+ Thomas De Quincey's "The English Mail-Coach." The proper place to read
+ about the coaches would be in Doctor Lyon's Pony Express Museum, out from
+ Pasadena, California. May it never perish! Old Monte drives up now and
+ then in Alfred Henry Lewis' <i>Wolfville</i> tales, and Bret Harte made
+ Yuba Bill crack the Whip; but, somehow, considering all the excellent
+ expositions and reminiscing of stage-coaching in western America, the
+ proud, insolent, glorious figure of the driver has not been adequately
+ pictured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Literature on "Santa Fe and the Santa Fe Trail" is pertinent. See also
+ under "Pony Express."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BANNING, WILLIAM, and BANNING, GEORGE HUGH. <i>Six Horses</i>, New York,
+ 1930. A combination of history and autobiography. Routes to and in
+ California; much of Texas. Enjoyable reading. Excellent on drivers,
+ travelers, stations, "pass the mustard, please." Bibliography. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CONKLING, ROSCOE P. and MARGARET B. <i>The Butterfield Overland Trail,
+ 1857-1869</i>, Arthur H. Clark Co., Glendage, California. Three volumes
+ replete with facts from politics in Washington over mail contracts to
+ Horsehead Crossing on the Pecos River.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOBBIE, J. FRANK. Chapter entitled "Pistols, Poker and the Petit
+ Mademoiselle in a Stagecoach," in <i>The Flavor of Texas</i> 1936. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DUFFUS, R. L. <i>The Santa Fe Trail</i> New York, 1930. Swift reading.
+ Well selected bibliography. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FREDERICK, J. V. <i>Ben Holladay, the Stage Coach King</i>, Clark,
+ Glendale, California, 1940. Bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HALEY, J. EVETTS. Chapter v, "The Stage-Coach Mail," in <i>Fort Concho and
+ the Texas Frontier</i>, illustrated by Harold Bugbee, San Angelo
+ Standard-Times, San Angelo, Texas, 1952. Strong on frontier crossed by
+ stage line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HUNGERFORD, EDWARD. <i>Wells Fargo: Advancing the Frontier</i>, Random
+ House, New York, 1949. Written without regard for the human beings that
+ the all-swallowing corporation crushed. Facts on highwaymen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ INMAN, HENRY. <i>The Old Santa Fe Trail</i>, New York, 1897. OP. <i>The
+ Great Salt Lake Trail</i>, 1898. OP. Many first-hand incidents and
+ characters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MAJORS, ALEXANDER. <i>Seventy Years on the Frontier</i>, Chicago, 1893.
+ Reprinted by Long's College Book Co., Columbus, Ohio. Majors was the lead
+ steer of all freighters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ORMSBY, W. L. <i>The Butterfield Overland Mail</i>, edited by Lyle H.
+ Wright and Josephine M. Bynum, Huntington Library, San Marino, California,
+ 1942. Ormsby rode the stage from St. Louis to San Francisco in 1858 and
+ contributed to the New York <i>Herald</i> the lively articles now made
+ into this book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROOT, FRANK A., and CONNELLEY, W. E. <i>The Overland Stage to California</i>,
+ Topeka, Kansas, 1901. Reprinted by Long's College Book Co., Columbus,
+ Ohio. A full storehouse. Basic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SANTLEBEN, AUGUST. <i>A Texas Pioneer</i>, edited by I. D. Affleck, New
+ York, 1910. OP. Best treatise available on freighting on Chihuahua Trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TWAIN, MARK. <i>Roughing It</i>, 1871. Mark Twain went west by stage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WINTHER, O. O. <i>Express and Stagecoach Days in California</i>, Stanford
+ University Press, 1926. Compact, with bibliography. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 19. Pony Express
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ "PRESENTLY the driver exclaims, `Here he comes!'
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ "Every neck is stretched and every eye strained. Away across the endless
+ dead level of the prairie a black speck appears against the sky. In a
+ second or two it becomes a horse and rider, rising and falling, rising and
+ falling sweeping towards us nearer and nearer&mdash;growing more and more
+ distinct, more and more sharply defined&mdash;nearer and still nearer, and
+ the flutter of the hoofs comes faintly to the ear&mdash;another instant a
+ whoop and a hurrah from our upper deck [of the stagecoach], a wave of the
+ rider's hand, but no reply, and man and horse burst past our excited
+ faces, and go swinging away like a belated fragment of a storm."&mdash;Mark
+ Twain, <i>Roughing It</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A word cannot be defined in its own terms; nor can a region, or a feature
+ of that region. Analogy and perspective are necessary for comprehension.
+ The sense of horseback motion has never been better realized than by
+ Kipling in "The Ballad of East and West." See "Horses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BRADLEY, GLENN D.<i> The Story of the Pony Express</i>, Chicago, 1913.
+ Nothing extra. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BREWERTON, G. D. <i>Overland with Kit Carson</i>, New York, 1930.
+ Bibliography on West in general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPMAN, ARTHUR. <i>The Pony Express</i>, Putnam's, New York, 1932. Good
+ reading and bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOBIE, J. FRANK. Chapter on "Rides and Riders," in <i>On the Open Range</i>,
+ published in 1931; reprinted by Banks Up shaw, Dallas. Chapter on "Under
+ the Saddle" in <i>The Mustangs</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HAPEN, LEROY. <i>The Overland Mail</i>, Cleveland, 1926. Factual,
+ bibliography. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROOT, FRANK A., and CONNELLEY, W. E. <i>The Overland Stage to California</i>,
+ Topeka, Kansas, 1901. Reprinted by Long's College Book Co., Columbus,
+ Ohio. Basic work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VISSCHER, FRANK J. <i>A Thrilling and Truthful History of the Pony Express</i>,
+ Chicago, 1908. OP. Not excessively "thrilling."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 20. Surge of Life in the West
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE WANDERINGS of Cabeza de Vaca, Coronado, De Soto, and La Salle had long
+ been chronicled, although the chronicles had not been popularized in
+ English, when in 1804 Captain Meriwether Lewis and Captain William Clark
+ set out to explore not only the Louisiana Territory, which had just been
+ purchased for the United States by President Thomas Jefferson, but on west
+ to the Pacific. Their <i>Journals</i>, published in 1814, initiated a
+ series of chronicles comparable in scope, vitality, and manhood adventure
+ to the great collection known as <i>Hakluyt's Voyages</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between 1904 and 1907 Reuben Gold Thwaites, one of the outstanding editors
+ of the English-speaking world, brought out in thirty-two volumes his epic
+ <i>Early Western Travels</i>. This work includes the Lewis and Clark <i>Journals</i>,
+ every student of the West, whether Northwest or Southwest, goes to the
+ collection sooner or later. It is a commentary on the values of life held
+ by big rich boasters of patriotism in the West that virtually all the
+ chronicles in the collection remain out of print.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An important addendum to the Thwaites collection of <i>Early Western
+ Travels</i> is "The Southwest Historical Series," edited by Ralph P.
+ Bieber&mdash;twelve volumes, published 1931-43, by Clark, Glendale,
+ California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stampede to California that began in 1849 climaxed all migration
+ orgies of the world in its lust for gold; but the lust for gold was merely
+ one manifestation of a mighty population's lust for life. Railroads raced
+ each other to cross the continent. Ten million Longhorns were going up the
+ trails; from Texas while the last of a hundred million buffaloes, killed
+ in herds&mdash;the greatest slaughter in history&mdash;were being skinned.
+ Dodge City was the Cowboy Capital of the world, and Chicago was becoming
+ "hog butcher of the world." Miller and Lux were expanding their ranges so
+ that, as others boasted, their herds could trail from Oregon to Baja
+ California and bed down every night on Miller and Lux's own grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hubert Howe Bancroft (1832-1918) was massing in San Francisco at his own
+ expense the greatest assemblage of historical documents any one individual
+ ever assembled. While his interviewers and note-takers sorted down tons of
+ manuscript, he was employing a corps of historians to write what, at first
+ designed as a history of the Pacific states, grew in twenty-eight volumes
+ to embrace also Alaska, British Columbia, Texas, Mexico, and Central
+ America, aside from five volumes on the Native Races and six volumes of
+ essays. Meantime he was printing these volumes in sets of thousands and
+ selling them through an army of agents that covered America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Collis P. Huntington (1821-1900) was building the Southern Pacific
+ Railroad into a network, interlocked with other systems and steamship
+ lines, not only enveloping California land but also the whole economic and
+ political life of that and other states, with headquarters in the U.S.
+ Congress. Then his nephew, Henry E. Huntington (1850-1927), taking over
+ his wealth and power, was building gardens at San Marino, California,
+ collecting art, books, and manuscripts to make, without benefit of any
+ institution of learning and in defiance of all the slow processes of
+ tradition found at Oxford and Harvard, a Huntington Library and a
+ Huntington Art Gallery that, set down amid the most costly botanical
+ profusion imaginable, now rival the world's finest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dreams were of empire. Old men and young toiled as "terribly" as
+ mighty Raleigh. The "spacious times" of Queen Elizabeth seemed, indeed, to
+ be translated to another sphere, though here the elements that went into
+ the mixture were less diverse. Boom methods of Gargantuan scale were
+ applied to cultural factors as well as to the physical. Few men stopped to
+ reflect that while objects of art may be bought by the wholesale, the
+ development of genuine culture is too intimately personal and too
+ chemically blended with the spiritual to be bartered for. The Huntingtons
+ paid a quarter of a million dollars for Gainsborough's "The Blue Boy." It
+ is very beautiful. Meanwhile the mustang grapevine waits for some artist
+ to paint the strong and lovely grace of its drapery and thereby to enrich
+ for land-dwellers every valley where it hangs over elm or oak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most of the books in this section could be placed in other sections. Many
+ have been. They represent the vigor, vitality, energy, and daring
+ characteristic of our frontiers. To quote Harvey Fergusson's phrase, the
+ adventures of mettle have always had "a tension that would not let them
+ rest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BARKER, EUGENE C. <i>The Life of Stephen F. Austin</i>, Dallas, 1925.
+ Republished by Texas State Historical Association, Austin. Iron-wrought
+ biography of the leader in making Texas Anglo-American.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BELL, HORACE. <i>Reminiscences of a Ranger, or Early Times in California</i>,
+ Los Angeles, 1881; reprinted, but OP. In this book and in <i>On the Old
+ West Coast</i>, Bell caught the lift and spiritedness of life-hungry men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BIDWELL, JOHN (1819-1900). <i>Echoes of the Past</i>, Chico, California
+ (about 1900). Bidwell got to California several years before gold was
+ discovered. He became foremost citizen and entertained scientists,
+ writers, scholars, and artists at his ranch home. His brief accounts of
+ the trip across the plains and of pioneer society in California are
+ graphic, charming, telling. The book goes in and out of print but is not
+ likely to die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BILLINGTON, RAY ALLEN. <i>Westward Expansion: A History of the American
+ Frontier</i>, Macmillan, New York, 1949. This Alpha to Omega treatise
+ concludes with a seventy-five-page, double-column, fine-print bibliography
+ which not only lists but comments upon most books and articles of any
+ consequence that have been published on frontier history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BOURKE, JOHN G. <i>On the Border with Crook</i>, New York, 1891. Now
+ published by Long's College Book Co., Columbus, Ohio. Bourke had an eager,
+ disciplined mind, at once scientific and humanistic; he had imagination
+ and loyalty to truth and justice; he had a strong body and joyed in
+ frontier exploring. He was a captain in the army but had nothing of the
+ littleness of the army mind exhibited by Generals Nelson Miles and O. O.
+ Howard in their egocentric reminiscences. I rank his book as the meatiest
+ and richest of all books dealing with campaigns against Indians. In its
+ amplitude it includes the whole frontier. General George Crook was a wise,
+ generous, and noble man, but his <i>Autobiography</i> (edited by Martin F.
+ Schmitt; University of Oklahoma Press) lacks that power in writing
+ necessary to turn the best subject on earth into a good book and capable
+ also, as Darwin demonstrated, of turning earthworms into a classic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BURNHAM, FREDERICK RUSSELL. <i>Scouting on Two Continents</i>, New York,
+ 1926; reprinted, Los Angeles, 1942. A brave book of enthralling interest.
+ The technique of scouting in the Apache Country is illuminated by that of
+ South Africa in the Boer War. Hunting for life, Major Burnham carried it
+ with him. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEVOTO, BERNARD. <i>The Year of Decision 1846</i>, Houghton Mifflin,
+ Boston, 1943. Critical interpretation as well as depiction. The Mexican
+ War, New Mexico, California, Mountain Men, etc. DeVoto's <i>Across the
+ Wide Missouri</i> is wider in spirit, less bound to political
+ complexities. See under "Mountain Men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ EMORY, LIEUTENANT COLONEL WILLIAM H. <i>Notes of a Military Reconnaissance
+ from Fort Leavenworth, in Missouri, to San Diego, in California, including
+ Part of the Arkansas, Del Norte, and Gila Rivers</i>, Washington, 1848.
+ Emory's own vivid report is only one item in <i>Executive Document No. 41</i>,
+ 30th Congress, 1st Session, with which it is bound. Lieutenant J. W.
+ Albert's <i>Journal</i> and additional <i>Report on New Mexico</i>, St.
+ George Cooke's Odyssey of his march from Santa Fe to San Diego, another <i>Journal</i>
+ by Captain A. R. Johnson, the Torrey-Englemann report on botany,
+ illustrated with engravings, all go to make this one of the meatiest of a
+ number of meaty government publications. The Emory part of it has been
+ reprinted by the University of New Mexico Press, under title of <i>Lieutenant
+ Emory Reports</i>, Introduction and Notes by Ross Calvin, Albuquerque,
+ 1951.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Emory's great two-volume <i>Report on United States and Mexican Boundary
+ Survey</i>, Washington 1857 and 1859, is, aside from descriptions of
+ borderlands and their inhabitants, a veritable encyclopedia, wonderfully
+ illustrated, on western flora and fauna. United States Commissioner on
+ this Boundary Survey (following the Mexican War) was John Russell
+ Bartlett. While exploring from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific and far
+ down into Mexico, he wrote <i>Personal Narrative of Explorations and
+ Incidents in Texas, New Mexico, California, Sonora and Chihuahua</i>.
+ published in two volumes, New York, 1854. For me very little rewritten
+ history has the freshness and fascination of these strong, firsthand
+ personal narratives, though I recognize many of them as being the stuff of
+ literature rather than literature itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FOWLER, JACOB. <i>The Journal of Jacob Fowler, 1821-1822</i>, edited by
+ Elliott Coues, New York, 1898. Hardly another chronicle of the West is so
+ Defoe-like in homemade realism, whether on Indians and Indian horses or
+ Negro Paul's experience with the Mexican "Lady" at San Fernando de Taos.
+ Should be reprinted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GAMBRELL, HERBERT. <i>Anson Jones: The Last President of Texas</i>, Garden
+ City, New York, 1948; now distributed by Southern Methodist University
+ Press, Dallas, Texas. Anson Jones was more surged over than surgent.
+ Infused with a larger comprehension than that behind many a world figure,
+ this biography of a provincial figure is perhaps the most artfully written
+ that Texas has produced. It goes into the soul of the man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOBBS, JAMES. <i>Wild Life in the Far West</i>, Hartford, 1872. Hobbs saw
+ just about all the elephants and heard just about all the owls to be seen
+ and heard in the Far West including western Mexico. Should be reprinted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HULBERT, ARCHER BUTLER. <i>Forty-Niners: The Chronicle of the California
+ Trail</i>, Little, Brown, Boston, 1931. Hulbert read exhaustively in the
+ exhausting literature by and about the gold hunters rushing to California.
+ Then he wove into a synthetic diary the most interesting and illuminating
+ records on happenings, characters, ambitions, talk, singing, the whole
+ life of the emigrants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IRVING, WASHINGTON. Irving made his ride into what is now Oklahoma in
+ 1832. He had recently returned from a seventeen-year stay in Europe and
+ was a mature literary man&mdash;as mature as a conforming romanticist
+ could become Prairie life refreshed him. A <i>Tour on the Prairies</i>,
+ published in 1835, remains refreshing. It is illuminated by <i>Washington
+ Irving on the Prairie; or, A Narrative of the Southwest in the Year 1832</i>,
+ by Henry Leavitt Ellsworth (who accompanied Irving), edited by Stanley T.
+ Williams and Barbara D. Simison, New York, 1937; by <i>The Western
+ Journals of Washington Irving</i>, excellently edited by John Francis
+ McDermott, Norman, Oklahoma, 1944; and by Charles J. Latrobe's <i>The
+ Rambler in North America, 1832-1833</i>, New York, 1835.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JAMES, MARQUIS. <i>The Raven</i>, Bobbs-Merrill, Indianapolis, 1929.
+ Graphic life of Sam Houston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KURZ, RUDOLPH FRIEDERICH. <i>Journal of Rudolph Friederich Kurz: ... His
+ Experiences among Fur Traders and American Indians on the Mississippi and
+ Upper Missouri Rivers, during the Years of 1846-1852</i>, U.S. Bureau of
+ Ethnology Bulletin 115, Washington, 1937. The public has not had a chance
+ at this book, which was printed rather than published. Kurz both saw and
+ recorded with remarkable vitality. He was an artist and the volume
+ contains many reproductions of his paintings and drawings. One of the most
+ readable and illuminating of western journals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LEWIS, OSCAR. <i>The Big Four</i>, New York, 1938. Railroad magnates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LOCKWOOD, FRANK C. <i>Arizona Characters</i>, Los Angeles, California,
+ 1928. Fresh sketches of representative men. The book deserves to be better
+ known than it is. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LYMAN, GEORGE D. <i>John Marsh Pioneer</i>, New York, 1930. Prime
+ biography and prime romance. Laid mostly in California. This book almost
+ heads the list of all biographies of western men. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PARKMAN, FRANCIS. <i>The Oregon Trail</i>, 1849. Parkman knew how to write
+ but some other penetrators of the West put down about as much. School
+ assignments have made his book a recognized classic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PATTIE, JAMES O. <i>Personal Narrative</i>, Cincinnati, 1831; reprinted,
+ but OP. Positively gripping chronicle of life in New Mexico and the
+ Californias during Mexican days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PIKE, ZEBULON M. <i>The Southwestern Expedition of Zebulon M. Pike</i>,
+ Philadelphia, 1810. The 1895 edition edited by Elliott Coues is the most
+ useful to students. No edition is in print. Pike's explorations of the
+ Southwest (1806-7) began while the great Lewis and Clark expedition
+ (1804-6) was ending. His journal is nothing like so informative as theirs
+ but is just as readable. <i>The Lost Pathfinder</i> is a biography of Pike
+ by W. Eugene Hollon, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1949.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TWAIN, MARK. <i>Roughing It</i>, 1872. Mark Twain was a man who wrote and
+ not merely a writer in man-form. He was frontier American in all his
+ fibers. He was drunk with western life at a time when both he and it were
+ standing on tiptoe watching the sun rise over the misty mountain tops, and
+ he wrote of what he had seen and lived before he became too sober. <i>Roughing
+ It</i> comes nearer catching the energy, the youthfulness, the blooming
+ optimism, the recklessness, the lust for the illimitable in western life
+ than any other book. It deals largely with mining life, but the surging
+ vitality of this life as reflected by Mark Twain has been the chief common
+ denominator of all American frontiers and was as characteristic of Texas
+ "cattle kings" when grass was free as of Virginia City "nabobs" in
+ bonanza.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 21. Range Life: Cowboys, Cattle, Sheep
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE COWBOY ORIGINATED in Texas. The Texas cowboy, along with the Texas
+ cowman, was an evolvement from and a blend of the riding, shooting,
+ frontier-formed southerner, the Mexican-Indian horseback worker with
+ livestock (the vaquero), and the Spanish open-range rancher. The blend was
+ not in blood, but in occupational techniques. I have traced this genesis
+ with more detail in <i>The Longhorns</i>. Compared with evolution in
+ species, evolution in human affairs is meteor-swift. The driving of
+ millions of cattle and horses from Texas to stock the whole plains area of
+ North America while, following the Civil War, it was being denuded of
+ buffaloes and secured from Indian domination, enabled the Texas cowboy to
+ set his impress upon the whole ranching industry. The cowboy became the
+ best-known occupational type that America has given the world. He exists
+ still and will long exist, though much changed from the original. His fame
+ derives from the past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Romance, both genuine and spurious, has obscured the realities of range
+ and trail. The realities themselves have, however, been such that few
+ riders really belonging to the range wished to lead any other existence.
+ Only by force of circumstances have they changed "the grass beneath and
+ the sky above" for a more settled, more confining, and more materially
+ remunerative way of life. Some of the old-time cowboys were little more
+ adaptable to change than the Plains Indians; few were less reluctant to
+ plow or work in houses. Heaven in their dreams was a range better watered
+ than the one they knew, with grass never stricken by drought, plenty of
+ fat cattle, the best horses and comrades of their experience, more of
+ women than they talked about in public, and nothing at all of golden
+ streets, golden harps, angel wings, and thrones; it was a mere extension,
+ somewhat improved, of the present. Bankers, manufacturers, merchants, and
+ mechanics seldom so idealize their own occupations; they work fifty weeks
+ a year to go free the other two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For every hired man on horseback there have been hundreds of plowmen in
+ America, and tens of millions of acres of rangelands have been plowed
+ under, but who can cite a single autobiography of a laborer in the fields
+ of cotton, of corn, of wheat? Or do coal miners, steelmongers, workers in
+ oil refineries, factory hands of any kind of factory, the employees of
+ chain stores and department stores ever write autobiographies? Many scores
+ of autobiographies have been written by range men, perhaps half of them by
+ cowboys who never became owners at all. A high percentage of the
+ autobiographies are in pamphlet form; many that were written have not been
+ published. The trail drivers of open range days, nearly all dead now, felt
+ the urge to record experiences more strongly than their successors. They
+ realized that they had been a part of an epic life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact that the hired man on horseback has been as good a man as the
+ owner and, on the average, has been a more spirited and eager man than the
+ hand on foot may afford some explanation of the validity and vitality of
+ his chroniclings, no matter how crude they be. On the other hand, the fact
+ that the rich owner and the college-educated aspirant to be a cowboy soon
+ learned, if they stayed on the range, that <i>a man's a man for a' that</i>
+ may to some extent account for a certain generous amplitude of character
+ inherent in their most representative reminiscences. Sympathy for the life
+ biases my judgment; that judgment, nevertheless, is that some of the
+ strongest and raciest autobiographic writing produced by America has been
+ by range men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust. caption = Tom Lea, in <i>The Longhorns</i> by J. Frank Dobie
+ (1941)}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is not to say that these chronicles are of a high literary order.
+ Their writers have generally lacked the maturity of mind, the reflective
+ wisdom, and the power of observation found in personal narratives of the
+ highest order. No man who camped with a chuck wagon has written anything
+ remotely comparable to Charles M. Doughty's <i>Arabia Deserta</i>, a
+ chronicle at once personal and impersonal, restrainedly subjective and
+ widely objective, of his life with nomadic Bedouins. Perspective is a
+ concomitant of civilization. The chronicles of the range that show
+ perspective have come mostly from educated New Englanders, Englishmen, and
+ Scots. The great majority of the chronicles are limited in subject matter
+ to physical activities. They make few concessions to "the desire of the
+ moth for the star"; they hardly enter the complexities of life, including
+ those of sex. In one section of the West at one time the outstanding
+ differences among range men were between owners of sheep and owners of
+ cattle, the ambition of both being to hog the whole country. On another
+ area of the range at another time, the outstanding difference was between
+ little ranchers, many of whom were stealing, and big ranchers, plenty of
+ whom had stolen. Such differences are not exponents of the kind of
+ individualism that burns itself into great human documents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seldom deeper than the chronicles does range fiction go below physical
+ surface into reflection, broodings, hungers&mdash;the smolderings deep
+ down in a cowman oppressed by drought and mortgage sitting in a rocking
+ chair on a ranch gallery looking at the dust devils and hoping for a
+ cloud; the goings-on inside a silent cowboy riding away alone from an
+ empty pen to which he will never return; the streams of consciousness in a
+ silent man and a silent woman bedded together in a wind-lashed frame house
+ away out on the lone prairie. The wide range of human interests leaves
+ ample room for downright, straightaway narratives of the careers of strong
+ men. If the literature of the range ever matures, however, it will include
+ keener searchings for meanings and harder struggles for human truths by
+ writers who strive in "the craft so long to lerne." For three-quarters of
+ a century the output of fiction on the cowboy has been tremendous, and it
+ shows little diminution. Mass production inundating the masses of readers
+ has made it difficult for serious fictionists writing about range people
+ to get a hearing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The code of the West was concentrated into the code of the range&mdash;and
+ not all of it by any means depended upon the six-shooter. No one can
+ comprehend this code without knowing something about the code of the Old
+ South, whence the Texas cowboy came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mexican goats make the best eating in Mexico and mohair has made good
+ money for many ranchers of the Southwest. Goats, goat herders, goatskins,
+ and wine in goatskins figure in the literature of Spain as prominently as
+ six-shooters in Blazing Frontier fiction&mdash;and far more pleasantly.
+ Read George Borrow's <i>The Bible in Spain</i>, one of the most delectable
+ of travel books. Beyond a few notices of Mexican goat herders, there is on
+ the subject of goats next to nothing readable in American writings. Where
+ there is no competition, supremacy is small distinction; so I should
+ offend no taste by saying that "The Man of Goats" in my own <i>Tongues of
+ the Monte</i> is about the best there is so far as goats go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although sheep are among the most salient facts of range life, they have,
+ as compared with cattle and horses, been a dim item in the range
+ tradition. Yet, of less than a dozen books on sheep and sheepmen, more
+ than half of them are better written than hundreds of books concerning
+ cowboy life. Mary Austin's <i>The Flock</i> is subtle and beautiful;
+ Archer B. Gilfillan's <i>Sheep</i> is literature in addition to having
+ much information; Hughie Call's <i>Golden Fleece</i> is delightful;
+ Winifred Kupper's <i>The Golden Hoof</i> and <i>Texas Sheepman</i> have
+ charm&mdash;a rare quality in most books on cows and cow people. Among
+ furnishings in the cabin of Robert Maudslay, "the Texas Sheepman," were a
+ set of Sir Walter Scott's works, Shakespeare, and a file of the <i>Illustrated
+ London News</i>. "A man who read Shakespeare and the <i>Illustrated London
+ News</i> had little to contribute to
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Come a ti yi yoopee
+ Ti yi ya!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ O. Henry's ranch experiences in Texas were largely confined to a sheep
+ ranch. The setting of his "Last of the Troubadours" is a sheep ranch. I
+ nominate it as the best range story in American fiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cowboy Songs" and "Horses" are separate chapters following this. The
+ literature cited in them is mostly range literature, although precious
+ little in all the songs rises to the status of poetry. A considerable part
+ of the literature listed under "Texas Rangers" and "The Bad Man Tradition"
+ bears on range life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ABBOTT, E. C., and SMITH, HELENA HUNTINGTON. We <i>Pointed Them North</i>,
+ New York, 1939. Abbott, better known as Teddy Blue, used to give his
+ address as Three Duce Ranch, Gilt Edge, Montana. Helena Huntington Smith,
+ who actually wrote and arranged his reminiscences, instead of currying him
+ down and putting a checkrein on him, spurred him in the flanks and told
+ him to swaller his head. He did. This book is franker about the women a
+ rollicky cowboy was likely to meet in town than all the other range books
+ put together. The fact that Teddy Blue's wife was a half-breed Indian,
+ daughter of Granville Stuart, and that Indian women do not object to the
+ truth about sex life may account in part for his frankness. The book is
+ mighty good reading. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ADAMS, ANDY. <i>The Log of a Cowboy</i> (1903). In 1882, at the age of
+ twenty-three, Andy Adams came to Texas from Indiana. For about ten years
+ he traded horses and drove them up the trail. He knew cattle people and
+ their ranges from Brownsville to Caldwell, Kansas. After mining for
+ another decade, he began to write. If all other books on trail driving
+ were destroyed, a reader could still get a just and authentic conception
+ of trail men, trail work, range cattle, cow horses, and the cow country in
+ general from <i>The Log of a Cowboy</i>. It is a novel without a plot, a
+ woman, character development, or sustained dramatic incidents; yet it is
+ the classic of the occupation. It is a simple, straightaway narrative that
+ takes a trail herd from the Rio Grande to the Canadian line, the hands
+ talking as naturally as cows chew cuds, every page illuminated by an easy
+ intimacy with the life. Adams wrote six other books. <i>The Outlet, A
+ Texas Matchmaker, Cattle Brands</i>, and <i>Reed Anthony, Cowman</i> all
+ make good reading. <i>Wells Brothers</i> and <i>The Ranch on the Beaver</i>
+ are stories for boys. I read them with pleasure long after I was grown.
+ All but <i>The Log of a Cowboy</i> are OP, published by Houghton Mifflin,
+ Boston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ADAMS, RAMON F. <i>Cowboy Lingo</i>, Boston, 1936. A dictionary of cowboy
+ words, figures of speech, picturesque phraseology, slang, etc., with
+ explanations of many factors peculiar to range life. OP. <i>Western Words</i>,
+ University of Oklahoma Press, 1944. A companion book. <i>Come an' Get It</i>,
+ University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1952. Informal exposition of chuck
+ wagon cooks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ALDRIDGE, REGINALD. <i>Ranch Notes</i>, London, 1884. Aldridge, an
+ educated Englishman, got into the cattle business before, in the late
+ eighties, it boomed itself flat. His book is not important, but it is
+ maybe a shade better than <i>Ranch Life in Southern Kansas and the Indian
+ Territory</i> by Benjamin S. Miller, New York, 1896. Aldridge and Miller
+ were partners, and each writes kindly about the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ALLEN, JOHN HOUGHTON. <i>Southwest</i>, Lippincott, Philadelphia, 1952. A
+ chemical compound of highly impressionistic autobiographic nonfiction and
+ highly romantic fiction and folk tales. The setting is a ranch of Mexican
+ tradition in the lower border country of Texas, also saloons and bawdy
+ houses of border towns. Vaqueros and their work in the brush are intensely
+ vivid. The author has a passion for superlatives and for "a joyous
+ cruelty, a good cruelty, a young cruelty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ARNOLD, OREN, and HALE, J. P. <i>Hot Irons</i>, Macmillan, New York, 1940.
+ Technique and lore of cattle brands. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AUSTIN, MARY. <i>The Flock</i>, Boston, 1906, OP. Mary Austin saw the
+ meanings of things; she was a creator. Very quietly she sublimated life
+ into the literature of pictures and emotions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Australian ranching is not foreign to American ranching. The best book on
+ the subject that I have found is <i>Pastures New</i>, by R. V. Billis and
+ A. S. Kenyon, London, 1930.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BARNARD, EVAN G. ("Parson"). <i>A Rider of the Cherokee Strip</i>,
+ Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1936. Savory with little incidents and cowboy
+ humor. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BARNES, WILL C. <i>Tales from the X-Bar Horse Camp</i>, Chicago, 1920. OP.
+ Good simple narratives. <i>Apaches and Longhorns</i>, Los Angeles, 1941.
+ Autobiography. OP. <i>Western Grazing Grounds and Forest Ranges</i>,
+ Chicago, 1913. OP. Governmentally factual. Barnes was in the U.S. Forest
+ Service and was informed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BARROWS, JOHN R. <i>Ubet</i>, Caldwell, Idaho, 1934. Excellent on
+ Northwest; autobiographical. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BECHDOLT, FREDERICK R. <i>Tales of the Old Timers</i>, New York, 1924.
+ Vivid, economical stories of "The Warriors of the Pecos" (Billy the Kid
+ and the troubles on John Chisum's ranch-empire), of Butch Cassidy and his
+ Wild Bunch in their Wyoming hide-outs, of the way frontier Texans fought
+ Mexicans and Comanches over the open ranges. Research clogs the style of
+ many historians; perhaps it is just as well that Bechdolt did not search
+ more extensively into the arcana of footnotes. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BOATRIGHT, MODY C. <i>Tall Tales from Texas Cow Camps</i>, Dallas, 1934.
+ The tales are tall all right and true to cows that never saw a milk
+ bucket. OP. Reprinted 1946 by Haldeman-Julius, Girard, Kansas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BOREIN, EDWARD. <i>Etchings of the West</i>, edited by Edward S.
+ Spaulding, Santa Barbara, California, 1950. OP. A very handsome folio;
+ primarily a reproduction of sketches, many of which are on range subjects.
+ Ed Borein tells more in them than hundreds of windbags have told in tens
+ of thousands of pages. They are beautiful and authentic, even if they are
+ what post-impressionists call "documentary." Believers in the True Faith
+ say now that Leonardo da Vinci is documentary in his painting of the
+ Lord's Supper. Ed Borein was a great friend of Charlie Russell's but not
+ an imitator. <i>Etchings of the West</i> will soon be among the rarities
+ of Western books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BOWER, B. M. <i>Chip of the Flying U</i>, New York, 1904. Charles Russell
+ illustrated this and three other Bower novels. Contrary to his denial, he
+ is supposed to have been the prototype for Chip. A long time ago I read <i>Chit
+ of the Flying U</i> and <i>The Lure of the Dim Trails</i> and thought them
+ as good as Eugene Manlove Rhodes's stories. That they have faded almost
+ completely out of memory is a commentary on my memory; just the same, a
+ character as well named as Chip should, if he have substance beyond his
+ name, leave an impression even on weak memories. B. M. Bower was a woman,
+ Bower being the name of her first husband. A Montana cowpuncher named
+ "Fiddle Back" Sinclair was her second, and Robert Ellsworth Cowan became
+ the third. Under the name of Bud Cowan he published a book of
+ reminiscences entitled <i>Range Rider</i> (Garden City, N. Y., 1930). B.
+ M. Bower wrote a slight introduction to it; neither he nor she says
+ anything about being married to the other. In the best of her fiction she
+ is truer to life than he is in a good part of his nonfiction. Her chaste
+ English is partly explained in an autobiographic note contributed to <i>Adventure</i>
+ magazine, December 10, 1924. Her restless father had moved the family from
+ Minnesota to Montana. There, she wrote, he "taught me music and how to
+ draw plans of houses (he was an architect among other things) and to read
+ <i>Paradise Lost</i> and Dante and H. Rider Haggard and the Bible and the
+ Constitution&mdash;and my taste has been extremely catholic ever since."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BRANCH, E. DOUGLAS. <i>The Cowboy and His Interpreters</i>, New York,
+ 1926. Useful bibliography on range matters, and excellent criticism of two
+ kinds of fiction writers. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BRATT, JOHN. <i>Trails of Yesterday</i>, Chicago, 1921. John Bratt,
+ twenty-two years old, came to America from England in 1864, went west, and
+ by 1870 was ranching on the Platte. He became a big operator, but his
+ reminiscences, beautifully printed, are stronger on camp cooks and other
+ hired hands than on cattle "kings." Nobody ever heard a cowman call
+ himself or another cowman a king. "Cattle king" is journalese.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BRISBIN, GENERAL JAMES S. <i>The Beef Bonanza; or, How to Get Rich on the
+ Plains</i>, Philadelphia, 1881. One of several books of its decade
+ designed to appeal to eastern and European interest in ranching as an
+ investment. Figureless and with more human interest is <i>Prairie
+ Experiences in Handling Cattle and Sheep</i>, by Major W. Shepherd (of
+ England), London? 1884.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BRONSON, EDGAR BEECHER. <i>Cowboy Life on the Western Plains</i>, Chicago,
+ 1910. <i>The Red Blooded</i>, Chicago, 1910. Freewheeling nonfiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BROOKS, BRYANT B. <i>Memoirs</i>, Gardendale, California, 1939. The book
+ never was published; it was merely printed to satisfy the senescent vanity
+ of a property-worshiping, cliche-parroting reactionary who made money
+ ranching before he became governor of Wyoming. He tells a few good
+ anecdotes of range days. Numerous better books pertaining to the range are
+ NOT listed here; this mediocrity represents a particular type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BROTHERS, MARY HUDSON. A <i>Pecos Pioneer</i>, University of New Mexico
+ Press, Albuquerque, 1943. Superior to numerous better-known books. See
+ comment under "Women Pioneers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BROWN, DEE, and SCHMITT, MARTIN F. <i>Trail Driving Days</i>, Scribner's,
+ New York, 1952. Primarily a pictorial record, more on the side of action
+ than of realism, except for post-trailing period. Excellent bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BURTON, HARLEY TRUE. A <i>History of the J A Ranch</i>, Austin, 1928.
+ Facts about one of the greatest ranches of Texas and its founder, Charles
+ Goodnight. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CALL, HUGHIE. <i>Golden Fleece</i>, Boston, 1942. Hughie married a
+ sheepman, and after mothering the range as well as children with him for a
+ quarter of a century, concluded that Montana is still rather masculine.
+ Especially good on domestic life and on sheepherders. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CANTON, FRANK M. <i>Frontier Trails</i>, edited by E. E. Dale, Boston,
+ 1930. OP. Good on tough hombres.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CLAY, JOHN. My <i>Life on the Range</i>, privately printed, Chicago, 1924.
+ OP. John Clay, an educated Scot, came to Canada in 1879 and in time
+ managed some of the largest British-owned ranches of North America. His
+ book is the best of all sources on British-owned ranches. It is just as
+ good on cowboys and sheepherders. Clay was a fine gentleman in addition to
+ being a canny businessman in the realm of cattle and land. He appreciated
+ the beautiful and had a sense of style.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CLELAND, ROBERT GLASS. <i>The Cattle on a Thousand Hills</i>, Huntington
+ Library, San Marino, California, 1941 (revised, 1951). Scholarly work on
+ Spanish-Mexican ranching in California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CLEAVELAND, AGNES MORLEY. <i>No Life for a Lady</i>, Houghton Mifflin,
+ Boston, 1941. Best book on range life from a woman's point of view ever
+ published. The setting is New Mexico; humor and humanity prevail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COLLINGS, ELLSWORTH. <i>The 101 Ranch</i>, University of Oklahoma Press,
+ Norman, 1937. The 101 Ranch was far more than a ranch; it was a unique
+ institution. The 101 Ranch Wild West Show is emphasized in this book. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COLLINS, DENNIS. <i>The Indians' Last Fight or the Dull Knife Raid</i>,
+ Press of the Appeal to Reason, Girard, Kansas, n.d. Nearly half of this
+ very scarce book deals autobiographically with frontier range life.
+ Realistic, strong, written from the perspective of a man who "wanted
+ something to read" in camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COLLINS, HUBERT E. <i>Warpath and Cattle Trail</i>, New York, 1928. The
+ pageant of trail life as it passed by a stage stand in Oklahoma;
+ autobiographical. Beautifully printed and illustrated. Far better than
+ numerous other out-of-print books that bring much higher prices in the
+ second-hand market.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CONN, WILLIAM (translator). <i>Cow-Boys and Colonels: Narrative of a
+ Journey across the Prairie and over the Black Hills of Dakota</i>, London,
+ 1887; New York (1888?). More of a curiosity than an illuminator, the book
+ is a sparsely annotated translation of <i>Dans les Montagnes Rocheuses</i>,
+ by Le Baron E. de Mandat-Grancey, Paris, October, 1884. (The only copy I
+ have examined is of 1889 printing.) It is a gossipy account of an
+ excursion made in 1883-84; cowboys and ranching are viewed pretty much as
+ a sophisticated Parisian views a zoo. The author must have felt more at
+ home with the fantastic Marquis de Mores of Medora, North Dakota. The book
+ appeared at a time when European capital was being invested in western
+ ranches. It was followed by <i>La Breche aux Buffles: Un Ranch Francais
+ dans le Dakota</i>, Paris, 1889. Not translated so far as I know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COOK, JAMES H. <i>Fifty Years on the Old Frontier</i>, 1923. Cook came to
+ Texas soon after the close of the Civil War and became a brush popper on
+ the Frio River. Nothing better on cow work in the brush country and trail
+ driving in the seventies has appeared. OP. A good deal of the same
+ material was put into Cook's <i>Longhorn Cowboy</i> (Putnam's, 1942), to
+ which the pushing Mr. Howard R. Driggs attached his name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COOLIDGE, DANE. <i>Texas Cowboys</i>, 1937. Thin, but genuine. <i>Arizona
+ Cowboys</i>, 1938. <i>Old California Cowboys</i>, 1939. All well
+ illustrated by photographs and all OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cox, JAMES. <i>The Cattle Industry of Texas and Adjacent Territory</i>,
+ St. Louis, 1895. Contains many important biographies and much good
+ history. In 1928 I traded a pair of store-bought boots to my uncle Neville
+ Dobie for his copy of this book. A man would have to throw in a young
+ Santa Gertrudis bull now to get a copy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CRAIG, JOHN R. <i>Ranching with lords and Commons</i>, Toronto, 1903.
+ During the great boom of the early 1880'S in the range business, Craig
+ promoted a cattle company in London and then managed a ranch in western
+ Canada. His book is good on mismanaged range business and it is good on
+ people, especially lords, and the land. He attributes to De Quincey a
+ Latin quotation that properly, I think, belongs to Thackeray. He quotes
+ Hamlin Garland: "The trail is poetry; a wagon road is prose; the railroad,
+ arithmetic." He was probably not so good at ranching as at writing. His
+ book supplements <i>From Home to Home</i>, by Alex. Staveley Hill, New
+ York, 1885. Hill was a major investor in the Oxley Ranch, and was, I
+ judge, the pompous cheat and scoundrel that Craig said he was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CRAWFORD, LEWIS F. <i>Rekindling Camp Fires: The Exploits of Ben Arnold
+ (Connor)</i>, Bismarck, North Dakota, 1926. OP. The skill of Lewis F.
+ Crawford of the North Dakota Historical Society made this a richer
+ autobiography than if Arnold had been unaided. He was squaw man, scout,
+ trapper, soldier, deserter, prospector, and actor in other occupations as
+ well as cowboy. He had a fierce sense of justice that extended to Indians.
+ His outlook was wider than that of the average ranch hand. <i>Badlands and
+ Broncho Trails</i>, Bismarck, 1922, is a slight book of simple narratives
+ that catches the tune of the Badlands life. OP. <i>Ranching Days in Dakota</i>,
+ Wirth Brothers, Baltimore, 1950, is good on horse-raising and the terrible
+ winter of 1886-87.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CULLEY, JOHN. <i>Cattle, Horses, and Men</i>, Los Angeles, 1940. Much
+ about the noted Bell Ranch of New Mexico. Especially good on horses.
+ Culley was educated at Oxford. When I visited him in California, he had on
+ his table a presentation copy of a book by Walter Pater. His book has the
+ luminosity that comes from cultivated intelligence. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DACY, GEORGE F. <i>Four Centuries of Florida Ranching</i>, St. Louis,
+ 1940. OP. In <i>Crooked Trails</i>, Frederic Remington has a chapter
+ (illustrated) on "Cracker Cowboys of Florida," and <i>Lake Okeechobee</i>,
+ by A. J. Hanna and Kathryn Abbey, Indianapolis, 1948, treats of modern
+ ranching in Florida, but the range people of that state have been too
+ lethargic-minded to write about themselves and no Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
+ has settled in their midst to interpret them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DALE, E. E. <i>The Range Cattle Industry</i>, Norman, Oklahoma, 1930.
+ Economic aspects. Bibliography. <i>Cow Country,</i> Norman, Oklahoma,
+ 1942. Bully tales and easy history. Both books are OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DANA, RICHARD HENRY. <i>Two Years Before the Mast</i>, 1841. This
+ transcript of reality has been reprinted many times. It is the classic of
+ the hide and tallow trade of California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DAVID, ROBERT D. <i>Malcolm Campbell, Sheriff</i>, Casper, Wyoming, 1932.
+ Much of the "Johnson County War" between cowmen and thieving nesters. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DAYTON, EDSON C. <i>Dakota Days</i>. Privately printed by the author at
+ Clifton Springs, New York, 1937&mdash;three hundred copies only. Dayton
+ was more sheepman than cowman. He had a spiritual content. His very use of
+ the word <i>intellectual</i> on the second page of his book; his estimate
+ of Milton and Gladstone, adjacent to talk about a frontier saloon; his
+ consciousness of his own inner growth&mdash;something no extravert cowboy
+ ever noticed, usually because he did not have it; his quotation to express
+ harmony with nature:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I have some kinship to the bee,
+ I am boon brother with the tree;
+ The breathing earth is part of me&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ all indicate a refinement that any gambler could safely bet originated in
+ the East and not in Texas or the South.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOBIE, J. FRANK. <i>A Vaquero of the Brush Country</i>, 1929. Much on
+ border troubles over cattle, the "skinning war," running wild cattle in
+ the brush, mustanging, trail driving; John Young's narrative, told in the
+ first person, against range backgrounds. <i>The Longhorns</i>, illustrated
+ by Tom Lea, 1941. History of the Longhorn breed, psychology of stampedes;
+ days of maverickers and mavericks; stories of individual lead steers and
+ outlaws of the range; stories about rawhide and many other related
+ subjects. The book attempts to reveal the blend made by man, beast, and
+ range. Both books published by Little, Brown, Boston. <i>The Mustangs</i>,
+ 1952. See under "Horses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FORD, GUS L. <i>Texas Cattle Brands</i>, Dallas, 1936. A catalogue of
+ brands. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FRENCH, WILLIAM. <i>Some Recollections of a Western Ranchman</i>, London,
+ 1927. A civilized Englishman remembers. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GANN, WALTER. <i>The Trail Boss</i>, Boston, 1937. Faithful fiction, with
+ a steer that Charlie Russell should have painted. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GARD, WAYNE. <i>Frontier Justice</i>, University of Oklahoma Press,
+ Norman, 1949. This book could be classified under "The Bad Man Tradition,"
+ but it has authentic chapters on fence-cutting, the so-called "Johnson
+ County Cattlemen's War" of Wyoming, and other range "difficulties."
+ Clearly written from an equable point of view. Useful bibliography of
+ range books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GIBSON, J. W. (Watt). <i>Recollections of a Pioneer</i>, St. Joseph,
+ Missouri (about 1912). Like many another book concerned only incidentally
+ with range life, this contains essential information on the subject. Here
+ it is trailing cattle from Missouri to California in the 1840's and
+ 1850's. Cattle driving from the East to California was not economically
+ important. The outstanding account on the subject is <i>A Log of the
+ Texas-California Cattle Trail, 1854</i>, by James G. Bell, edited by J.
+ Evetts Haley, published in the <i>Southwestern Historical Quarterly</i>,
+ 1932 (Vols. XXXV and XXXVI). Also reprinted as a separate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust. caption = Tom Lea, in <i>The Longhorns</i> by J. Frank Dobie
+ (1941)}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILFILLAN, ARCHER B. <i>Sheep</i>, Boston, 1929. With humor and grace,
+ this sheepherder, who collected books on Samuel Pepys, tells more about
+ sheep dogs, sheep nature, and sheepherder life than any other writer I
+ know. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GIPSON, FRED. <i>Fabulous Empire</i>, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1946.
+ Biography of Zack Miller of the 101 Ranch and 101 Wild West Show.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GOODWYN, FRANK. <i>Life on the King Ranch</i>, Crowell, New York, 1951.
+ The author was reared on the King Ranch. He is especially refreshing on
+ the vaqueros, their techniques and tales.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GRAY, FRANK S. <i>Pioneer Adventures</i>, 1948, and <i>Pioneering in
+ Southwest Texas</i>, 1949, both printed by the author, Copperas Cove,
+ Texas. These books are listed because the author has the perspective of a
+ civilized gentleman and integrates home life on frontier ranches with
+ range work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GREER, JAMES K. <i>Bois d'Arc to Barbed Wire</i>, Dallas, 1936.
+ Outstanding horse lore. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HAGEDORN, HERMANN. <i>Roosevelt in the Bad Lands</i>, Boston, 1921. A
+ better book than Roosevelt's own <i>Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail</i>.
+ OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HALEY, J. EVETTS. <i>The XIT Ranch of Texas</i>, Chicago, 1929. As county
+ and town afford the basis for historical treatment of many areas, ranches
+ have afforded bases for various range country histories. Of such this is
+ tops. A lawsuit for libel brought by one or more individuals mentioned in
+ the book put a stop to the selling of copies by the publishers and made it
+ very "rare." <i>Charles Goodnight, Cowman and Plainsman</i>, Boston, 1936,
+ reissued by University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1949. Goodnight,
+ powerful individual and extraordinary observer, summed up in himself the
+ whole life of range and trail. Haley's book, packed with realities of
+ incident and character, paints him against a mighty background. <i>George
+ W. Littlefield, Texan</i>, University of Oklahoma Presss Norman, Okla.,
+ 1943, is a lesser biography of a lesser man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HAMILTON, W. H. <i>Autobiography of a Cowman</i>, in <i>South Dakota
+ Historical Collections</i>, XIX (1938), 475-637. A first-rate narrative of
+ life on the Dakota range.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HAMNER, LAURA V. <i>Short Grass and Longhorns</i>, Norman, Oklahoma, 1943.
+ Sketches of Panhandle ranches and ranch people. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HARRIS, FRANK. <i>My Reminiscences as a Cowboy</i>, 1930. A blatant
+ farrago of lies, included in this list because of its supreme
+ worthlessness. However, some judges might regard the debilitated and
+ puerile lying in <i>The Autobiography of Frank Tarbeaux</i>, as told to
+ Donald H. Clarke, New York, 1930, as equally worthless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HART, JOHN A., and Others. <i>History of Pioneer Days in Texas and
+ Oklahoma</i>. No date or place of publication; no table of contents. This
+ slight book was enlarged into <i>Pioneer Days in the Southwest from 1850
+ to 1879</i>, "Contributions by Charles Goodnight, Emanuel Dubbs, John A.
+ Hart and Others," Guthrie, Oklahoma, 1909. Good on the way frontier ranch
+ families lived. The writers show no sense of humor and no idea of being
+ literary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HASTINGS, FRANK S. <i>A Ranchman's Recollections</i>, Chicago, 1921. OP.
+ Hastings was urbane, which means he had perspective; "Old Gran'pa" is the
+ most pulling cowhorse story I know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HENRY, O. <i>Heart of the West</i>. Interpretative stories of Texas range
+ life, which O. Henry for a time lived. His range stories are scattered
+ through several volumes. "The Last of the Troubadours" is a classic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HENRY, STUART. <i>Our Great American Plains</i>, New York, 1930. OP. An
+ unworshipful, anti-Philistinic picture of Abilene, Kansas, when it was at
+ the end of the Chisholm Trail. While not a primary range book, this is
+ absolutely unique in its analysis of cow-town society, both citizens and
+ drovers. Stuart Henry came to Abilene as a boy in 1868. His brother was
+ the first mayor of the town. After graduating from the University of
+ Kansas in 1881, he in time acquired "the habit of authorship." He had
+ written a book on London and <i>French Essays and Profiles</i> and <i>Hours
+ with Famous Parisians</i> before he returned to Kansas for a subject. Some
+ of his non-complimentary characterizations of westerners aroused a mighty
+ roar among panegyrists of the West. They did not try to refute his
+ anecdote about the sign of the Bull Head Saloon. This sign showed the
+ whole of a great red bull. The citizens of Abilene were used to seeing
+ bulls driven through town and they could go out any day and see bulls with
+ cows on the prairie. Nature might be good, but any art suggesting nature's
+ virility was indecent. There was such an uprising of Victorian taste that
+ what distinguishes a bull from a cow had to be painted out. A similar
+ artistic operation had to be performed on the bull signifying Bull Durham
+ tobacco&mdash;once the range favorite for making cigarettes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HILL, J. L. <i>The End of the Cattle Trail</i>, Long Beach, California
+ [May, 1924]. Rare and meaty pamphlet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOLDEN, W. C. <i>Rollie Burns</i>, Dallas, 1932. Biography of a Plains
+ cowman. OP. <i>The Spur Ranch</i>, Boston, 1934. History of a great Texas
+ ranch. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HORN, TOM. <i>Life of Tom Horn... Written by Himself, together with His
+ Letters and Statements by His Friends, A Vindication</i>. Published (for
+ John C. Coble) by the Louthan Book Company, Denver, 1904. Who wrote the
+ book has been somewhat in debate. John C. Coble's name is signed to the
+ preface attributing full authorship to Horn. Of Pennsylvania background,
+ wealthy and educated, he had employed Horn as a stock detective on his
+ Wyoming ranch. He had the means and ability to see the book through the
+ press. A letter from his wife to me, from Cheyenne, June 21,1926, says
+ that Horn wrote the book. Charles H. Coe, who succeeded Horn as stock
+ detective in Wyoming, says in <i>Juggling a Rope</i> (Pendleton, Oregon,
+ 1927, P. 108), that Horn wrote it. I have a copy, bought from Fred
+ Rosenstock of the Bargain Book Store in Denver, who got it from Hattie
+ Horner Louthan, of Denver also. For years she taught English in the
+ University of Denver, College of Commerce, and is the author of more than
+ one textbook. The Louthan Book Company of Denver was owned by her family.
+ This copy of <i>Tom Horn</i> contains her bookplate. On top of the first
+ page of the preface is written in pencil: "I wrote this&mdash;`Ghost
+ wrote.' H. H. L." Then, penciled at the top of the first page of "Closing
+ Word," is "I wrote this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Glendolene Myrtle Kimmell was a schoolteacher in the country where Tom
+ Horn operated. As her picture shows, she was lush and beautiful. Pages
+ 287-309 print "Miss Kimmell's Statement." She did her best to keep Tom
+ Horn from hanging. She frankly admired him and, it seems to me, loved him.
+ Jay Monaghan, <i>The Legend of Tom Horn, Last of the Bad Men</i>,
+ Indianapolis and New York, 1946, says (p. 267), without discussion or
+ proof, that after Horn was hanged and buried Miss Kimmell was "writing a
+ long manuscript about a Sir Galahad horseman who was `crushed between the
+ grinding stones of two civilizations,' but she never found a publisher who
+ thought her book would sell. It was entitled <i>The True Life of Tom Horn</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The main debate has been over Horn himself. The books about him are not
+ highly important, but they contribute to a spectacular and highly
+ controversial phase of range history, the so-called Johnson County War of
+ Wyoming. Mercer's <i>Banditti of the Plains</i>, Mokler's <i>History of
+ Natrona County, Wyoming</i>, Canton's <i>Frontier Trails</i>, and David's
+ <i>Malcolm Campbell, Sheriff</i> (all listed in this chapter) are primary
+ sources on the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOUGH, EMERSON. <i>The Story of the Cowboy</i>, New York, 1897. Exposition
+ not nearly so good as Philip Ashton Rollins' <i>The Cowboy. North of 36</i>,
+ New York, 1923. Historical novel of the Chisholm Trail. The best character
+ in it is Old Alamo, lead steer. A young woman owner of the herd trails
+ with it. The success of the romance caused Emerson Hough to advise his
+ friend Andy Adams to put a woman in a novel about trail driving&mdash;so
+ Andy Adams told me. Adams replied that a woman with a trail herd would be
+ as useless as a fifth wheel on a wagon and that he would not violate
+ reality by having her. For a devastation of Hough's use of history in <i>North
+ of 36</i> see the Appendix in Stuart Henry's <i>Conquering Our Great
+ American Plains</i>. Yet the novel does have the right temper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOYT, HENRY F. <i>A Frontier Doctor</i>, Boston, 1929. Texas Panhandle and
+ New Mexico during Billy the Kid days. Reminiscences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HUNT, FRAZIER. <i>Cat Mossman: Last of the Great Cowmen</i>, illustrated
+ by Ross Santee, Hastings House, New York, 1951. Few full-length
+ biographies of big operators among cowmen have been written. This reveals
+ not only Cap Mossman's operations on enormous ranges, but the man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HUNTER, J. MARVIN (compiler). <i>The Trail Drivers of Texas</i>, two
+ volumes, Bandera, Texas, 1920, 1923. Reprinted in one volume, 1925. All
+ OP. George W. Saunders, founder of the Old Time Trail Drivers Association
+ and for many years president, prevailed on hundreds of old-time range and
+ trail men to write autobiographic sketches. He used to refer to Volume II
+ as the "second edition"; just the same, he was not ignorant, and he had a
+ passion for the history of his people. The chronicles, though chaotic in
+ arrangement, comprise basic source material. An index to the one-volume
+ edition of <i>The Trail Drivers of Texas</i> is printed as an appendix to
+ <i>The Chisholm Trail and Other Routes</i>, by T. U. Taylor, San Antonio,
+ 1936&mdash;a hodgepodge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JAMES, WILL. <i>Cowboys North and South</i>, New York, 1924. <i>The
+ Drifting Cowboy</i>, 1925. <i>Smoky</i>&mdash;a cowhorse story&mdash;1930.
+ Several other books, mostly repetitious. Will James knew his frijoles, but
+ burned them up before he died, in 1942. He illustrated all his books. The
+ best one is his first, written before he became sophisticated with life&mdash;without
+ becoming in the right way more sophisticated in the arts of drawing and
+ writing. <i>Lone Cowboy: My Life Story</i> (1930) is without a date or a
+ geographical location less generalized than the space between Canada and
+ Mexico.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JAMES, W. S. <i>Cowboy Life in Texas</i>, Chicago, 1893. A genuine cowboy
+ who became a genuine preacher and wrote a book of validity. This is the
+ best of several books of reminiscences by cowboy preachers, some of whom
+ are as lacking in the real thing as certain cowboy artists. Next to <i>Cowboy
+ Life in Texas</i>, in its genre, might come <i>From the Plains to the
+ Pulpit</i>, by J. W. Anderson, Houston, 1907. The second edition (reset)
+ has six added chapters. The third, and final, edition, Goose Creek, Texas,
+ 1922, again reset, has another added chapter. J. B. Cranfill was a trail
+ driver from a rough range before he became a Baptist preacher and
+ publisher. His bulky <i>Chronicle, A Story of Life in Texas</i>, 1916, is
+ downright and concrete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KELEHER, WILLIAM A. <i>Maxwell Land Grant: A New Mexico Item</i>, Santa
+ Fe, 1942. The Maxwell grant of 1,714,764 acres on the Cimarron River was
+ at one time perhaps the most famous tract of land in the West. This
+ history brings in ranching only incidentally; it focuses on the land
+ business, including grabs by Catron, Dorsey, and other affluent
+ politicians. Perhaps stronger on characters involved during long
+ litigation over the land, and containing more documentary evidence, is <i>The
+ Grant That Maxwell Bought</i>, by F. Stanley, The World Press, Denver,
+ 1952 (a folio of 256 pages in an edition of 250 copies at $15.00). Keleher
+ is a lawyer; Stanley is a priest. Harvey Fergusson in his historical novel
+ <i>Grant of Kingdom</i>, New York, 1950, vividly supplements both.
+ Keleher's second book, <i>The Fabulous Frontier</i>, Rydal, Santa Fe,
+ 1945, illuminates connections between ranch lands and politicians;
+ principally it sketches the careers of A. B. Fall, John Chisum, Pat
+ Garrett, Oliver Lee, Jack Thorp, Gene Rhodes, and other New Mexico
+ notables.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENT, WILLIAM. <i>Reminiscences of Outdoor Life</i>, San Francisco, 1929.
+ OP. This is far from being a straight-out range book. It is the easy talk
+ of an urbane man associated with ranches and ranch people who was equally
+ at home in a Chicago office and among fellow congressmen. He had a
+ country-going nature and gusto for character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KING, FRANK M. <i>Wranglin' the Past</i>, Los Angeles, 1935. King went all
+ the way from Texas to California, listening and looking. OP. His second
+ book, <i>Longhorn Trail Drivers</i> (1940), is worthless. His <i>Pioneer
+ Western Empire Builders</i> (1946) and <i>Mavericks</i> (1947) are no
+ better. Most of the contents of these books appeared in <i>Western
+ Livestock Journal</i>, Los Angeles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KUPPER, WINIFRED. <i>The Golden Hoof</i>, New York, 1945. Story of the
+ sheep and sheep people of the Southwest. Facts, but, above that, truth
+ that comes only through imagination and sympathy. OP. <i>Texas Sheepman</i>,
+ University of Texas Press, Austin, 1951. The edited reminiscences of
+ Robert Maudslay. He drove sheep all over the West, and lived up to the
+ ideals of an honest Englishman in writing as well as in ranching. He had a
+ sense of humor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LAMPMAN, CLINTON PARKS. <i>The Great Western Trail</i>, New York, 1939.
+ OP. In the upper bracket of autobiographic chronicles, by a sensitive man
+ who never had the provincial point of view. Lampman contemplated as well
+ as observed He felt the pathos of human destiny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LANG, LINCOLN A. <i>Ranching with Roosevelt</i>, Philadelphia, 1926.
+ Civilized. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LEWIS, ALFRED HENRY. <i>Wolfville</i> (1897) and other Wolfville books.
+ All OP. Sketches and rambling stories faithful to cattle backgrounds;
+ flavor and humanity through fictionized anecdote. "The Old Cattleman," who
+ tells all the Wolfville stories, is a substantial and flavorsome creation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LOCKWOOD, FRANK C. <i>Arizona Characters</i>, Los Angeles, 1928. Skilfully
+ written biographies. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MCCARTY, JOHN L. <i>Maverick Town</i>, University of Oklahoma Press, 1946.
+ Tascosa, Texas, on the Canadian River, with emphasis on the guns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MCCAULEY, JAMES EMMIT. <i>A Stove-up Cowboy's Story</i>, with Introduction
+ by John A. Lomas and Illustrations by Tom Lea, Austin, 1943. OP. "My
+ parents be poor like Job's turkey," McCauley wrote. He was a common
+ cowhand with uncommon saltiness of speech. He wrote as he talked. "God
+ pity the wight for whom this vivid, honest story has no interest," John
+ Lomax pronounced. It is one of several brief books of reminiscences
+ brought out in small editions in the "Range Life Series," under the
+ editorship of J. Frank Dobie, by the Texas Folklore Society. The two
+ others worth having are <i>A Tenderfoot Kid on Gyp Water</i>, by Carl
+ Peters Benedict (1943) and <i>Ed Nichols Rode a Horse</i>, as told to Ruby
+ Nichols Cutbirth (1943).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MCCOY, JOSEPH G. <i>Historic Sketches of the Cattle Trade of the West and
+ Southwest</i>, Kansas City, 1874. In 1867, McCoy established at Abilene,
+ Kansas, terminus of the Chisholm Trail, the first market upon which Texas
+ drovers could depend. He went broke and thereupon put his sense,
+ information, and vinegar into the first of all range histories. It is a
+ landmark. Of the several reprinted editions, the one preferred is that
+ edited by Ralph P. Bieber, with an information-packed introduction and
+ many illuminating notes, Glendale, California, 1940. This is Volume VIII
+ in the "Southwest Historical Series," edited by Bieber, and the index to
+ it is included in the general index to the whole series. Available is an
+ edition published by Long's College Book Co., Columbus, Ohio. About the
+ best of original sources on McCoy is <i>Twenty Years of Kansas City's Live
+ Stock and Traders</i>, by Cuthbert Powell, Kansas City, 1893&mdash;one of
+ the rarities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MACKAY, MALCOLM S. <i>Cow Range and Hunting Trail</i>, New York, 1925.
+ Among the best of civilized range books. Fresh observations and something
+ besides ordinary narrative. OP. Illustrations by Russell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MANDAT-GRANCEY, BARON E. DE. See Conn, William.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MERCER, A. S. <i>Banditti of the Plains, or The Cattlemen's Invasion of
+ Wyoming in 1892</i>, Cheyenne, 1894; reprinted at Chicago in 1923 under
+ title of <i>Powder River Invasion, War on the Rustlers in 1892</i>,
+ "Rewritten by John Mercer Boots." Reprinted 1935, with Foreword by James
+ Mitchell Clarke, by the Grabhorn Press, San Francisco. All editions OP.
+ Bloody troubles between cowmen and nesters in Wyoming, the "Johnson County
+ War." For more literature on the subject, consult the entry under Tom Horn
+ in this chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MILLER, LEWIS B. <i>Saddles and Lariats</i>, Boston, 1912. A fictional
+ chronicle, based almost entirely on facts, of a trail herd that tried to
+ get to California in the fifties. The author was a Texan. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MOKLER, ALFRED JAMES. <i>History of Natrona County, Wyoming, 1888-1922</i>,
+ Chicago, 1923. Contains some good material on the "Johnson County War."
+ This book is listed as an illustration of many county histories of western
+ states containing concrete information on ranching. Other examples of such
+ county histories are S. D. Butcher's <i>Pioneer History of Custer County</i>
+ (Nebraska), Broken Bow, Nebraska, 1901; <i>History of Jack County</i>
+ (Texas), Jacksboro, Texas (about 1935); <i>Historical Sketch of Parker
+ County and Weatherford, Texas</i>, St. Louis, 1877.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MORA, JO. <i>Trail Dust and Saddle Leather</i>, Scribner's, New York,
+ 1946. No better exposition anywhere, and here tellingly illustrated, of
+ reatas, spurs, bits, saddles, and other gear. <i>Californios</i>,
+ Doubleday, Garden City, N. Y., 1949. Profusely illustrated. Largely on
+ vaquero techniques. Jo Mora knew the California vaquero, but did not know
+ the range history of other regions and, therefore, judged as unique what
+ was widespread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NIMMO, JOSEPH, JR. <i>The Range and Ranch Cattle Traffic in the Western
+ States and Territories</i>, Executive Document No. 267, House of
+ Representatives, 48th Congress, 2nd Session, Washington, D. C., 1885.
+ Printed also in one or more other government documents. A statistical
+ record concerning grazing lands, trail driving, railroad shipping of
+ cattle, markets, foreign investments in ranches, etc. This document is the
+ outstanding example of factual material to be found in various government
+ publications, Volume III of the <i>Tenth Census of the United States</i>
+ (1880) being another. <i>The Western Range: Letter from the Secretary of
+ Agriculture</i>, etc (a "letter" 620 pages long), United States Government
+ Printing Office, Washington, 1936, lists many government publications both
+ state and national.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NORDYKE, LEWIS. <i>Cattle Empire</i>, Morrow, New York, 1949. History,
+ largely political, of the XIT Ranch. Not so careful in documentation as
+ Haley's <i>XIT Ranch of Texas</i>, and not so detailed on ranch
+ operations, but thoroughly illuminative on the not-heroic side of big
+ businessmen in big land deals. The two histories complement each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O'NEIL, JAMES B. <i>They Die But Once</i>, New York, 1935. The
+ biographical narrative of a Tejano who vigorously swings a very big loop;
+ fine illustration of the fact that a man can lie authentically. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OSGOOD, E. S. <i>The Day of the Cattleman</i>, Minneapolis, 1929.
+ Excellent history and excellent bibliography. Northwest. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PEAKE, ORA BROOKS. <i>The Colorado Range Cattle Industry</i>, Clark,
+ Glendale, California, 1937. Dry on facts, but sound in scholarship.
+ Bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PELZER, LOUIS. <i>The Cattlemen's Frontier</i>, Clark, Glendale,
+ California, 1936. Economic treatment, faithful but static. Bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PENDER, ROSE. A <i>Lady's Experiences in the Wild West in 1883</i>, London
+ (1883?); second printing with a new preface, 1888. Rose Pender and two
+ fellow-Englishmen went through Wyoming ranch country, stopping on ranches,
+ and she, a very intelligent, spirited woman, saw realities that few other
+ chroniclers suggest. This is a valuable bit of social history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PERKINS, CHARLES E. <i>The Pinto Horse</i>, Santa Barbara, California,
+ 1927. <i>The Phantom Bull</i>, Boston, 1932. Fictional narratives of
+ veracity; literature. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PILGRIM, THOMAS (under pseudonym of Arthur Morecamp). <i>Live Boys; or
+ Charley and Nasho in Texas</i>, Boston, 1878. The chronicle, little
+ fictionized, of a trail drive to Kansas. So far as I know, this is the
+ first narrative printed on cattle trailing or cowboy life that is to be
+ accounted authentic. The book is dated from Kerrville, Texas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PONTING, TOM CANDY. <i>The Life of Tom Candy Ponting</i>, Decatur,
+ Illinois 1907 reprinted, with Notes and Introduction by Herbert O. Brayer,
+ by Branding Iron Press, Evanston, Illinois, 1952. An account of buying
+ cattle in Texas in 1853, driving them to Illinois, and later shipping some
+ to New York. Accounts of trail driving before about 1870 have been few and
+ obscurely printed. The stark diary kept by George C. Duffield of a drive
+ from San Saba County, Texas, to southern Iowa in 1866 is as realistic&mdash;often
+ agonizing&mdash;as anything extant on this much romanticized subject. It
+ is published in <i>Annals of Iowa</i>, Des Moines, IV (April, 1924),
+ 243-62.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ POTTER, JACK. Born in 1864, son of the noted "fighting parson," Andrew
+ Jackson Potter, Jack became a far-known trail boss and ranch manager. His
+ first published piece, "Coming Down the Trail," appeared in <i>The Trail
+ Drivers of Texas</i>, compiled by J. Marvin Hunter, and is about the
+ livest thing in that monumental collection. Jack Potter wrote for various
+ Western magazines and newspapers. He was more interested in cow nature
+ than in gun fights; he had humor and imagination as well as mastery of
+ facts and a tangy language, though small command over form. His privately
+ printed booklets are: <i>Lead Steer</i> (with Introduction by J. Frank
+ Dobie), Clayton, N. M., 1939; <i>Cattle Trails of the Old West</i> (with
+ map), Clayton, N.M., 1935; <i>Cattle Trails of the Old West</i> (virtually
+ a new booklet), Clayton, N. M., 1939. All OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Prose and Poetry of the Live Stock Industry of the United States</i>,
+ Denver, 1905. Biographies of big cowmen and history based on genuine
+ research. The richest in matter of all the hundred-dollar-and-up rare
+ books in its field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RAINE, WILLIAM MCLEOD, and BARNES, WILL C. <i>Cattle</i>, Garden City, N.
+ Y., 1930. A succinct and vivid focusing of much scattered history. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RAK, MARY KIDDER. <i>A Cowman s Wife</i>, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1934.
+ Unglossed, impersonal realism about life on a small modern Arizona ranch.
+ <i>Mountain Cattle</i>, 1936, and OP, is an extension of the first book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ REMINGTON, FREDERIC. <i>Pony Tracks</i>, New York, 1895 (now published by
+ Long's College Book Co., Columbus, Ohio); <i>Crooked Trails</i>, New York,
+ 1898. Sketches and pictures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RHODES, EUGENE MANLOVE. <i>West Is West, Once in the Saddle, Good Men and
+ True, Stepsons of Light</i>, and other novels. "Gene" Rhodes had the
+ "right tune." He achieved a style that can be called literary. <i>The
+ Hired Man on Horseback</i>, by May D. Rhodes, is a biography of the
+ writer. Perhaps "Paso Por Aqui" will endure as his masterpiece. Rhodes had
+ an intense loyalty to his land and people; he was as gay, gallant, and
+ witty as he was earnest. More than most Western writers, Rhodes was
+ conscious of art. He had the common touch and also he was a writer for
+ writing men. The elements of simplicity and the right kind of
+ sophistication, always with generosity and with an unflagging zeal for the
+ rights of human beings, were mixed in him. The reach of any ample-natured
+ man exceeds his grasp. Rhodes was ample-natured, but he cannot be classed
+ as great because his grasp was too often disproportionately short of the
+ long reach. His fiction becomes increasingly dated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>The Best Novels and, Stories of Eugene Manlove Rhodes</i>, edited by
+ Frank V. Dearing, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1949, contains an
+ introduction, with plenty of anecdotes and too much enthusiasm, by J.
+ Frank Dobie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RICHARDS, CLARICE E. A <i>Tenderfoot Bride</i>, Garden City, N. Y., 1920.
+ The experiences of a ranchman's wife in Colorado. The telling has charm,
+ warmth, and flexibility. In the way that art is always truer than a
+ literal report, <i>A Tenderfoot Bride</i> brings out truths of life that
+ the literalistic <i>A Cowman's Wife</i> by Mary Kidder Rak misses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RICHTER, CONRAD. <i>The Sea of Grass</i>, Knopf, New York, 1937. A poetic
+ portrait in fiction, with psychological values, of a big cowman and his
+ wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RICKETTS, W. P. <i>50 Years in the Saddle</i>, Sheridan, Wyoming, 1942.
+ OP. A natural book with much interesting information. It contains the best
+ account of trailing cattle from Oregon to Wyoming that I have seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RIDINGS, SAM P. <i>The Chisholm Trail</i>, 1926. Sam P. Ridings, a lawyer,
+ published this book himself from Medford, Oklahoma. He had gone over the
+ land, lived with range men, studied history. A noble book, rich in
+ anecdote and character. The subtitle reads: "A History of the World's
+ Greatest Cattle Trail, together with a Description of the Persons, a
+ Narrative of the Events, and Reminiscences associated with the Same." OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBINSON, FRANK C. <i>A Ram in a Thicket</i>, Abelard Press, New York,
+ 1950. Robinson is the author of many Westerns, none of which I have read.
+ This is an autobiography, here noted because it reveals a maturity of mind
+ and an awareness of political economy and social evolution hardly
+ suggested by other writers of Western fiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROLLINS, ALICE WELLINGTON. <i>The Story of a Ranch</i>, New York, 1885.
+ Philip Ashton Rollins (no relation that I know of to Alice Wellington
+ Rollins) went into Charlie Everitt's bookstore in New York one day and
+ said, "I want every book with the word <i>cowboy</i> printed in it." <i>The
+ Story of a Ranch</i> is listed here to illustrate how titles often have
+ nothing to do with subject. It is without either story or ranch; it is
+ about some dilettanteish people who go out to a Kansas sheep farm, talk
+ Chopin, and wash their fingers in finger bowls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROLLINS, PHILIP ASHTON. <i>The Cowboy</i>, Scribner's, New York, 1924.
+ Revised, 1936. A scientific exposition; full. Rollins wrote two Western
+ novels, not important. A wealthy man with ranch experience, he collected
+ one of the finest libraries of Western books ever assembled by any
+ individual and presented it to Princeton University.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROLLINSON, JOHN K. <i>Pony Trails in Wyoming</i>, Caldwell, Idaho, 1941.
+ Not inspired and not indispensable, but honest autobiography. OP. <i>Wyoming
+ Cattle Trails</i>, Caxton, Caldwell, Idaho, 1948. A more significant book
+ than the autobiography. Good on trailing cattle from Oregon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROOSEVELT, THEODORE. <i>Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail</i>, New York,
+ 1888. Roosevelt understood the West. He became the peg upon which several
+ range books were hung, Hagedorn's <i>Roosevelt in the Bad Lands</i> and
+ Lang's <i>Ranching with Roosevelt</i> in particular. A good summing up,
+ with bibliography, is <i>Roosevelt and the Stockman's Association</i>, by
+ Ray H. Mattison, pamphlet issued by the State Historical Society of North
+ Dakota, Bismarck, 1950.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RUSH, OSCAR. <i>The Open Range</i>, Salt Lake City, 1930. Reprinted 1936
+ by Caxton, Caldwell, Idaho. A sensitive range man's response to natural
+ things. The subtitle, <i>Bunk House Philosophy</i>, characterizes the
+ book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RUSSELL, CHARLES M. <i>Trails Plowed Under</i>, 1927, with introduction by
+ Will Rogers. Russell was the greatest painter that ever painted a range
+ man, a range cow, a range horse or a Plains Indian. He savvied the cow,
+ the grass, the blizzard, the drought, the wolf, the young puncher in love
+ with his own shadow, the old waddie remembering rides and thirsts of far
+ away and long ago. He was a wonderful storyteller, and most of his
+ pictures tell stories. He never generalized, painting "a man," "a horse,"
+ "a buffalo" in the abstract. His subjects are warm with life, whether
+ awake or asleep, at a particular instant, under particular conditions. <i>Trails
+ Plowed Under</i>, prodigally illustrated, is a collection of yarns and
+ anecdotes saturated with humor and humanity. It incorporates the materials
+ in two Rawhide Rawlins pamphlets. <i>Good Medicine</i>, published
+ posthumously, is a collection of Russell's letters, illustrations saying
+ more than written words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russell's illustrations have enriched numerous range books, B. M. Bower's
+ novels, Malcolm S. Mackay's <i>Cow Range and Hunting Trail</i>, and
+ Patrick T. Tucker's <i>Riding the High Country</i> being outstanding among
+ them. Tucker's book, autobiography, has a bully chapter on Charlie
+ Russell. <i>Charles M. Russell, the Cowboy Artist: A Bibliography</i>, by
+ Karl Yost, Pasadena, California, 1948, is better composed than its
+ companion biography, <i>Charles M. Russell the Cowboy Artist</i>, by Ramon
+ F. Adams and Homer E. Britzman. (Both OP.) One of the most concrete pieces
+ of writing on Russell is a chapter in <i>In the Land of Chinook</i>, by
+ Al. J. Noyes, Helena, Montana, 1917. "Memories of Charlie Russell," in <i>Memories
+ of Old Montana</i>, by Con Price, Hollywood, 1945, is also good. All right
+ as far as it goes, about a rock's throw away, is "The Conservatism of
+ Charles M. Russell," by J. Frank Dobie, in a portfolio reproduction of <i>Seven
+ Drawings by Charles M. Russell, with an Additional Drawing by Tom Lea</i>,
+ printed by Carl Hertzog, El Paso 1950.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SANTEE, ROSS. <i>Cowboy</i>, 1928. OP. The plotless narrative, reading
+ like autobiography, of a kid who ran away from a farm in East Texas to be
+ a cowboy in Arizona. His cowpuncher teachers are the kind "who know what a
+ cow is thinking of before she knows herself." Passages in <i>Cowboy</i>
+ combine reality and elemental melody in a way that almost no other range
+ writer excepting Charles M. Russell has achieved. Santee is a pen-and-ink
+ artist also. Among his other books, <i>Men and Horses</i> is about the
+ best.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHAW, JAMES C. <i>North from Texas: Incidents in the Early Life of a Range
+ Man in Texas, Dakota and Wyoming, 1852-1883</i>, edited by Herbert O.
+ Brayer. Branding Iron Press, Evanston, Illinois, 1952. Edition limited to
+ 750 copies. I first met this honest autobiography by long quotations from
+ it in Virginia Cole Trenholm's <i>Footprints on the Frontier</i> (Douglas,
+ Wyoming, 1945), wherein I learned that Shaw's narrative had been privately
+ printed in Cheyenne in 1931, in pamphlet form, for gifts to a few friends
+ and members of the author's family. I tried to buy a copy but could find
+ none for sale at any price. This reprint is in a format suitable to the
+ economical prose, replete with telling incidents and homely details. It
+ will soon be only a little less scarce than the original.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHEEDY, DENNIS. <i>The Autobiography of Dennis Sheedy</i>. Privately
+ printed in Denver, 1922 or 1923. Sixty pages bound in leather and as
+ scarce as psalm-singing in "fancy houses." The item is not very important
+ in the realm of range literature but it exemplifies the successful
+ businessman that the judicious cowman of open range days frequently
+ became.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHEFFY, L. F. <i>The Life and Times of Timothy Dwight Hobart, 1855-1935</i>,
+ Panhandle-Plains Historical Society, Canyon, Texas, 1950. Hobart was
+ manager for the large J A Ranch, established by Charles Goodnight. He had
+ a sense of history. This mature biography treats of important developments
+ pertaining to ranching in the Texas Panhandle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIRINGO, CHARLES A. A <i>Texas Cowboy, or Fifteen Years on the Hurricane
+ Deck of a Spanish Cow Pony</i>, 1885. The first in time of all cowboy
+ autobiographies and first, also, in plain rollickiness. Siringo later told
+ the same story with additions under the titles of <i>A Lone Star Cowboy, A
+ Cowboy Detective</i>, etc., all out of print. Finally, there appeared his
+ <i>Riata and Spurs</i>, Boston, 1927, a summation and extension of
+ previous autobiographies. Because of a threatened lawsuit, half of it had
+ to be cut and additional material provided for a "Revised Edition." No
+ other cowboy ever talked about himself so much in print; few had more to
+ talk about. I have said my full say on him in an introduction, which
+ includes a bibliography, to <i>A Texas Cowboy</i>, published with Tom Lea
+ illustrations by Sloane, New York, 1950. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SMITH, ERWIN E., and HALEY, J. EVETTS. <i>Life on the Texas Range</i>,
+ photographs by Smith and text by Haley, University of Texas Press, Austin,
+ 1952. Erwin Smith yearned and studied to be a sculptor. Early in this
+ century he went with camera to photograph the life of land, cattle,
+ horses, and men on the big ranches of West Texas. In him feeling and
+ perspective of artist were fused with technical mastership. "I don't
+ mean," wrote Tom Lea, "that he made just the best photographs I ever saw
+ on the subject. I mean the best pictures. That includes paintings,
+ drawings, prints." On 9 by 12 pages of 100-pound antique finish paper, the
+ photographs are superbly reproduced. Evetts Haley's introduction
+ interprets as well as chronicles the life of a strange and tragic man. The
+ book is easily the finest range book in the realm of the pictorial ever
+ published.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SMITH, WALLACE. <i>Garden of the Sun</i>, Los Angeles, 1939. OP. Despite
+ the banal title, this is a scholarly work with first-rate chapters on
+ California horses and ranching in the San Joaquin Valley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SNYDER, A. B., as told to Nellie Snyder Yost. <i>Pinnacle Jake</i>,
+ Caxton, Caldwell, Idaho, 1951. The setting is Nebraska, Wyoming, and
+ Montana from the 1880's on. Had Pinnacle Jake kept a diary, his accounts
+ of range characters, especially camp cooks and range horses, with emphasis
+ on night horses and outlaws, could not have been fresher or more precise
+ in detail. Reading this book will not give a new interpretation of open
+ range work with big outfits, but the aliveness of it in both narrative and
+ sketch makes it among the best of old-time cowboy reminiscences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SONNICHSEN, C. L. <i>Cowboys and Cattle Kings: Life on the Range Today</i>,
+ University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1950. An interviewer's findings
+ without the historical criticism exemplified by Bernard DeVoto on the
+ subject of federal-owned ranges (in essays in <i>Harper's Magazine</i>
+ during the late 1940'S).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STANLEY, CLARK, "better known as the Rattlesnake King." <i>The Life and
+ Adventures of the American Cow-Boy</i>, published by the author at
+ Providence, Rhode Island, 1897. This pamphlet of forty-one pages, plus
+ about twenty pages of Snake Oil Liniment advertisements, is one of the
+ curiosities of cowboy literature. It includes a collection of cowboy
+ songs, the earliest I know of in time of printing, antedating by eleven
+ years Jack Thorp's booklet of cowboy songs printed at Estancia, New
+ Mexico, in 1908. Clark Stanley no doubt used the contents of his pamphlet
+ in medicine show harangues, thus adding to the cowboy myth. As time went
+ on, he added scraps of anecdotes and western history, along with
+ testimonials, to the pamphlet, the latest edition I have seen being about
+ 1906, printed in Worcester, Massachusetts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STEEDMAN, CHARLES J. <i>Bucking the Sagebrush</i>, New York, 1904. OP.
+ Charming; much of nature. Illustrated by Russell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust. caption = Charles M. Russell, in <i>The Virginian</i> by Owen
+ Wister}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STEVENS, MONTAGUE. <i>Meet Mr. Grizzly</i>, University of New Mexico
+ Press, Albuquerque, 1943. Stevens, a Cambridge Englishman, ranched,
+ hunted, and made deductions. See characterization under "Bears and Bear
+ Hunters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STREETER, FLOYD B. <i>Prairie Trails and Cow Towns</i>, Boston, 1936. OP.
+ This brings together considerable information on Kansas cow towns. Primary
+ books on the subject, besides those by Stuart Henry, McCoy, Vestal, and
+ Wright herewith listed, are <i>The Oklahoma Scout</i>, by Theodore
+ Baughman, Chicago, 1886; <i>Midnight and Noonday</i>, by G. D. Freeman,
+ Caldwell, Kansas, 1892; biographies of Wild Bill Hickok, town marshal;
+ Stuart N. Lake's biography of Wyatt Earp, another noted marshal; <i>Hard
+ Knocks</i>, by Harry Young, Chicago, 1915, not too prudish to notice dance
+ hall girls but too Victorian to say much. Many Texas trail drivers had
+ trouble as well as fun in the cow towns. <i>Life and Adventures of Ben
+ Thompson</i>, by W. M. Walton, 1884, reprinted at Bandera, Texas, 1926,
+ gives samples. Thompson was more gambler than cowboy; various other men
+ who rode from cow camps into town and found themselves in their element
+ were gamblers and gunmen first and cowboys only in passing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STUART, GRANVILLE. <i>Forty Years on the Frontier</i>, two volumes,
+ Cleveland, 1925. Nothing better on the cowboy has ever been written than
+ the chapter entitled "Cattle Business" in Volume II. A prime work
+ throughout. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THORP, JACK (N. Howard) has a secure place in range literature because of
+ his contribution in cowboy songs. (See entry under "Cowboy Songs and Other
+ Ballads.") In 1926 he had printed at Santa Fe a paper-backed book of 123
+ pages entitled <i>Tales of the Chuck Wagon</i>, but "didn't sell more than
+ two or three million copies." Some of the tales are in his posthumously
+ published reminiscences, <i>Pardner of the Wind</i> (as told to Neil
+ McCullough Clark, Caxton, Caldwell, Idaho, 1945). This book is richest on
+ range horses, and will be found listed in the section on "Horses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TOWNE, CHARLES WAYLAND, and WENTWORTH, EDWARD NORRIS. <i>Shepherd's Empire</i>,
+ University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1945. Not firsthand in the manner of
+ Gilfillan's <i>Sheep</i>, nor charming and light in the manner of Kupper's
+ <i>The Golden Hoof</i>, but an essayical history, based on research. The
+ deference paid to Mary Austin's <i>The Flock</i> marks the author as
+ civilized. Towne wrote the book; Wentworth supplied the information.
+ Wentworth's own book, <i>America's Sheep Trails</i>, Iowa State College
+ Press, Ames, 1948, is ponderous, amorphous, and in part, only a eulogistic
+ "mugbook."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TOWNSHEND, R. B. <i>A Tenderfoot in Colorado</i>, London, 1923; <i>The
+ Tenderfoot in New Mexico</i>, 1924. Delightful as well as faithful.
+ Literature by an Englishman who translated Tacitus under the spires of
+ Oxford after he retired from the range.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TREADWELL, EDWARD F. <i>The Cattle King</i>, New York, 1931; reissued by
+ Christopher, Boston. A strong biography of a very strong man&mdash;Henry
+ Miller of California.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TRENHOLM, VIRGINIA COLE. <i>Footprints on the Frontier</i>, Douglas,
+ Wyoming, 1945. OP. The best range material in this book is a reprint of
+ parts of James C. Shaw's <i>Pioneering in Texas and Wyoming</i>, privately
+ printed at Cheyenne in 1931.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TRUETT, VELMA STEVENS. <i>On the Hoof in Nevada</i>, Gehrett-Truett-Hall,
+ Los Angeles, 1950. A 613-page album of cattle brands&mdash;priced at
+ $10.00. The introduction is one of the sparse items on Nevada ranching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TUCKER, PATRICK T. <i>Riding the High Country</i>, Caldwell, Idaho, 1933.
+ A brave book with much of Charlie Russell in it. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VESTAL, STANLEY (pen name for Walter S. Campbell). <i>Queen of Cow Towns,
+ Dodge City</i>, Harper, New York, 1952. "Bibulous Babylon," "Killing of
+ Dora Hand," and "Marshals for Breakfast" are chapter titles suggesting the
+ tenor of the book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Vocabulario y Refranero Criollo</i>, text and illustrations by Tito
+ Saudibet, Guillermo Kraft Ltda., Buenos Aires, 1945. North American ranges
+ have called forth nothing to compare with this fully illustrated,
+ thorough, magnificent history-dictionary of the gaucho world. It stands
+ out in contrast to American slapdash, puerile-minded pretenses at
+ dictionary treatises on cowboy life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He who knows only the history of his own country does not know it." The
+ cowboy is not a singular type. He was no better rider than the Cossack of
+ Asia. His counterpart in South America, developed also from Spanish
+ cattle, Spanish horses, and Spanish techniques, is the gaucho. Literature
+ on the gaucho is extensive, some of it of a high order. Primary is <i>Martin
+ Fierro</i>, the epic by Jose Hernandez (published 1872-79). A translation
+ by Walter Owen was published in the United States in 1936. No combination
+ of knowledge, sympathy, imagination, and craftsmanship has produced
+ stories and sketches about the cowboy equal to those on the gaucho by W.
+ H. Hudson, especially in <i>Tales of the Pampas</i> and <i>Far Away and
+ Long Ago</i>, and by R. B. Cunninghame Graham, whose writings are
+ dispersed and difficult to come by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WEBB, WALTER PRESCOTT. <i>The Great Plains</i>, Ginn, Boston, 1931. While
+ this landmark in historical interpretation of the West is by no means
+ limited to the subject of grazing, it contains a long and penetrating
+ chapter entitled "The Cattle Kingdom." The book is an analysis of land,
+ climate, barbed wire, dry farming, wells and windmills, native animal
+ life, etc. No other work on the plains country goes so meatily into causes
+ and effects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WELLMAN, PAUL I. <i>The Trampling Herd</i>, Doubleday, Garden City, N. Y.,
+ 1939; reissued, 1951. An attempt to sum up the story of the cattle range
+ in America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WHITE, STEWART EDWARD. <i>Arizona Nights</i>, 1902. "Rawhide," one of the
+ stories in this excellent collection, utilizes folk motifs about rawhide
+ with much skill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WILLIAMS, J. R. <i>Cowboys Out Our Way</i>, with an Introduction by J.
+ Frank Dobie, Scribner's, New York, 1951. An album reproducing about two
+ hundred of the realistic, humorous, and human J. R. Williams syndicated
+ cartoons. This book was preceded by <i>Out Our Way</i>, New York, 1943,
+ and includes numerous cartoons therein printed. There was an earlier and
+ less extensive collection. Modest Jim Williams has been progressively
+ dissatisfied with all his cartoon books&mdash;and with cartoons not in
+ books. I like them and in my Introduction say why.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WISTER, OWEN. <i>The Virginian</i>, 1902. Wister was an outsider looking
+ in. His hero, "The Virginian," is a cowboy without cows&mdash;like the
+ cowboys of Eugene Manlove Rhodes; but this hero does not even smell of
+ cows, whereas Rhodes's men do. Nevertheless, the novel authentically
+ realizes the code of the range, and it makes such absorbing reading that
+ in fifty years (1902-52) it sold over 1,600,000 copies, not counting
+ foreign translations and paper reprints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wister was an urbane Harvard man, of clubs and travels. In 1952 the
+ University of Wyoming celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of the
+ publication of <i>The Virginian</i>. To mark the event, Frances K. W.
+ Stokes wrote <i>My Father Owen Wister</i>, a biographical pamphlet
+ including "ten letters written to his mother during his trip to Wyoming in
+ 1885"&mdash;a trip that prepared him to write the novel. The pamphlet is
+ published at Laramie, Wyoming, name of publisher not printed on it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WRIGHT, PETER. <i>A Three-Foot Stool</i>, New York and London, 1909. Like
+ several other Englishmen who went west, Wright had the perspective that
+ enabled him to comprehend some aspects of ranch life more fully than many
+ range men who knew nothing but their own environment and times. He
+ compares the cowboy to the cowherd described by Queen Elizabeth's Spenser.
+ Into exposition of ranching on the Gila, he interweaves talk on Arabian
+ afreets, Stevenson's philosophy of adventure, and German imperialism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WRIGHT, ROBERT M. <i>Dodge City, Cowboy Capital</i>, Wichita, Kansas,
+ 1913; reprinted. Good on the most cowboyish of all the cow towns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PAMPHLETS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pamphlets are an important source of knowledge in all fields. No
+ first-class library is without them. Most of them become difficult to
+ obtain, and some bring higher prices than whole sets of books. Of numerous
+ pamphlets pertaining to the range, only a few are listed here. <i>History
+ of the Chisum War, or Life of Ike Fridge</i>, by Ike Fridge, Electra,
+ Texas (undated), is as compact as jerked beef and as laconic as
+ conversation in alkali dust. James F. Hinkle, in his <i>Early Days of a
+ Cowboy on the Pecos</i>, Roswell, New Mexico, 1937, says: "One noticeable
+ characteristic of the cowpunchers was that they did not talk much." Some
+ people don't have to talk to say plenty. Hinkle was one of them. At a
+ reunion of trail drivers in San Antonio in October, 1928, Fred S. Millard
+ showed me his laboriously written reminiscences. He wanted them printed. I
+ introduced him to J. Marvin Hunter of Bandera, Texas, publisher of <i>Frontier
+ Times</i>. I told Hunter not to ruin the English by trying to correct it,
+ as he had processed many of the earth-born reminiscences in <i>The Trail
+ Drivers of Texas</i>. He printed Millard's <i>A Cowpuncher of the Pecos</i>
+ in pamphlet form shortly thereafter. It begins: "This is a piece I wrote
+ for the Trail Drivers." They would understand some things on which he was
+ not explicit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About 1940, as he told me, Bob Beverly of Lovington, New Mexico, made a
+ contract with the proprietor of the town's weekly newspaper to print his
+ reminiscences. By the time the contractor had set eighty-seven pages of
+ type he saw that he would lose money if he set any more. He gave Bob
+ Beverly back more manuscript than he had used and stapled a pamphlet
+ entitled <i>Hobo of the Rangeland</i>. The philosophy in it is more
+ interesting to me than the incidents. "The cowboy of the old West worked
+ in a land that seemed to be grieving over something&mdash;a kind of
+ sadness, loneliness in a deathly quiet. One not acquainted with the plains
+ could not understand what effect it had on the mind. It produced a
+ heartache and a sense of exile."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crudely printed, but printed as the author talked, is <i>The End of the
+ Long Horn Trail</i>, by A. P. (Ott) Black, Selfridge, North Dakota
+ (August, 1939). As I know from a letter from his <i>compadre</i>, Black
+ was blind and sixty-nine years old when he dictated his memoirs to a
+ college graduate who had sense enough to retain the flavor. Black's
+ history is badly botched, but reading him is like listening. "It took two
+ coons and an alligator to spend the summer on that cotton plantation....
+ Cowpunchers were superstitious about owls. One who rode into my camp one
+ night had killed a man somewhere and was on the dodge. He was lying down
+ by the side of the campfire when an owl flew over into some hackberry
+ trees close by and started hooting. He got up from there right now, got
+ his horse in, saddled up and rode off into the night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Alley is&mdash;or was&mdash;a teacher. His <i>Memories of Roundup
+ Days</i>, University of Oklahoma Press, 1934 (just twenty small pages), is
+ an appraisal of range men, a criticism of life seldom found in old-timers
+ who look back. On the other hand, some pamphlets prized by collectors had
+ as well not have been written. Here is the full title of an example: <i>An
+ Aged Wanderer, A Life Sketch of J. M. Parker, A Cowboy of the Western
+ Plains in the Early Days</i>. "Price 40 cents. Headquarters, Elkhorn Wagon
+ Yard, San Angelo, Texas." It was printed about 1923. When Parker wrote it
+ he was senile, and there is no evidence that he was ever possessed of
+ intelligence. The itching to get into print does not guarantee that the
+ itcher has anything worth printing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the best reminiscences have been pried out of range men. In 1914
+ the Wyoming Stock Growers Association resolved a Historical Commission
+ into existence. A committee was appointed and, naturally, one man did the
+ work. In 1923 a fifty-five-page pamphlet entitled <i>Letters from Old
+ Friends and Members of the Wyoming Stock Growers Association</i> was
+ printed at Cheyenne. It is made up of unusually informing and pungent
+ recollections by intelligent cowmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 22. Cowboy Songs and Other Ballads
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ {illust. Lyrics = Kind friends, if you will listen, A story I will tell
+ A-bout a final bust-up, That happened down in Dell.}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COWBOY SONGS and ballads are generally ranked alongside Negro spirituals
+ as being the most important of America's contributions to folk song. As
+ compared with the old English and Scottish ballads, the cowboy and all
+ other ballads of the American frontiers generally sound cheap and shoddy.
+ Since John A. Lomax brought out his collection in 1910, cowboy songs have
+ found their way into scores of songbooks, have been recorded on hundreds
+ of records, and have been popularized, often&mdash;and naturally&mdash;without
+ any semblance to cowboy style, by thousands of radio singers. Two general
+ anthologies are recommended especially for the cowboy songs they contain:
+ <i>American Ballads and Folk Songs</i>, by John A. and Alan Lomax,
+ Macmillan, New York, 1934; <i>The American Songbag</i>, by Carl Sandburg,
+ Harcourt, Brace, New York, 1927.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LARRIN, MARGARET. <i>Singing Cowboy</i> (with music), New York, 1931. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LOMAX, JOHN A., and LOMAX, ALAN. <i>Cowboy Songs and Other Frontier
+ Ballads</i>, Macmillan, New York, 1938. This is a much added-to and
+ revised form of Lomax's 1910 collection, under the same title. It is the
+ most complete of all anthologies. More than any other man, John A. Lomax
+ is responsible for having made cowboy songs a part of the common heritage
+ of America. His autobiographic <i>Adventures of a Ballad Hunter</i>
+ (Macmillan, 1947) is in quality far above the jingles that most cowboy
+ songs are.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Missouri, as no other state, gave to the West and Southwest. Much of
+ Missouri is still more southwestern in character than much of Oklahoma.
+ For a full collection, with full treatment, of the ballads and songs,
+ including bad-man and cowboy songs, sung in the Southwest there is nothing
+ better than <i>Ozark Folksongs</i>, collected and edited by Vance
+ Randolph, State Historical Society of Missouri, Columbia, 1946-50. An
+ unsurpassed work in four handsome volumes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OWENS, WILLIAM A. <i>Texas Folk Songs</i>, Southern Methodist University
+ Press, Dallas, 1950. A miscellany of British ballads, American ballads,
+ "songs of doleful love," etc. collected in Texas mostly from country
+ people of Anglo-American stock. Musical scores for all the songs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Texas Folklore Society has published many cowboy songs. Its
+ publications <i>Texas and Southwestern Lore</i> (1927) and <i>Follow de
+ Drinkin' Gou'd</i> (1928) contain scores, with music and anecdotal
+ interpretations. Other volumes contain other kinds of songs, including
+ Mexican.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THORP, JACK (N. Howard). <i>Songs of the Cowboys</i>, Boston, 1921. OP.
+ Good, though limited, anthology, without music and with illuminating
+ comments. A pamphlet collection that Thorp privately printed at Estancia,
+ New Mexico, in 1908, was one of the first to be published. Thorp had the
+ perspective of both range and civilization. He was a kind of troubadour
+ himself. The opening chapter, "Banjo in the Cow Camps," of his posthumous
+ reminiscences, <i>Pardner of the Wind, is</i> delicious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 23. Horses: Mustangs and Cow Ponies
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE WEST WAS DISCOVERED, battled over, and won by men on horseback.
+ Spanish conquistadores saddled their horses in Vera Cruz and rode until
+ they had mapped the continents from the Horn to Montana and from the
+ Floridas to the harbors of the Californias. The padres with them rode on
+ horseback, too, and made every mission a horse ranch. The national dance
+ of Mexico, the Jarabe, is an interpretation of the clicking of hoofs and
+ the pawing and prancing of spirited horses that the Aztecs noted when the
+ Spaniards came. Likewise, the chief contribution made by white men of
+ America to the folk songs of the world&mdash;the cowboy songs&mdash;are
+ rhythmed to the walk of horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Astride horses introduced by the conquistadores to the Americas, the
+ Plains Indians became almost a separate race from the foot-moving tribes
+ of the East and the stationary Pueblos of the Rockies. The men that later
+ conquered and corralled these wild-riding Plains Indians were plainsmen on
+ horses and cavalrymen. The earliest American explorers and trappers of
+ both Plains and Rocky Mountains went out in the saddle. The first
+ industrial link between the East and the West was a mounted pack train
+ beating out the Santa Fe Trail. On west beyond the end of this trail, in
+ Spanish California, even the drivers of oxen rode horseback. The first
+ transcontinental express was the Pony Express.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outlaws and bad men were called "long riders." The Texas Ranger who
+ followed them was, according to his own proverb, "no better than his
+ horse." Booted sheriffs from Brownsville on the Rio Grande to the Hole in
+ the Wall in the Big Horn Mountains lived in the saddle. Climactic of all
+ the riders rode the cowboy, who lived with horse and herd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Old West the phrase "left afoot" meant nothing short of being left
+ flat on your back. "A man on foot is no man at all," the saying went. If
+ an enemy could not take a man's life, the next best thing was to take his
+ horse. Where cow thieves went scot free, horse thieves were hanged, and to
+ say that a man was "as common as a horse thief" was to express the nadir
+ of commonness. The pillow of the frontiersmen who slept with a six-shooter
+ under it was a saddle, and hitched to the horn was the loose end of a
+ stake rope. Just as "Colonel Colt" made all men equal in a fight, the
+ horse made all men equal in swiftness and mobility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proudest names of civilized languages when literally translated mean
+ "horseman": eques, caballero, chevalier, cavalier. Until just yesterday
+ the Man on Horseback had been for centuries the symbol of power and pride.
+ The advent of the horse, from Spanish sources, so changed the ways and
+ psychology of the Plains Indians that they entered into what historians
+ call the Age of Horse Culture. Almost until the automobile came, the whole
+ West and Southwest were dominated by a Horse Culture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Material on range horses is scattered through the books listed under
+ "Range Life," "Stagecoaches, Freighting," "Pony Express."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No thorough comprehension of the Spanish horse of the Americas is possible
+ without consideration of this horse's antecedents, and that involves a
+ good deal of the horse history of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BROWN, WILLIAM ROBINSON. <i>The Horse of the Desert</i> (no publisher or
+ place on title page), 1936; reprinted by Macmillan, New York. A noble,
+ beautiful, and informing book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CABRERA, ANGEL. <i>Caballos de America</i>, Buenos Aires, 1945. The
+ authority on Argentine horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CARTER, WILLIAM H. <i>The Horses of the World</i>, National Geographic
+ Society, Washington, D. C., 1923. A concentrated survey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Cattleman</i>. Published at Fort Worth, this monthly magazine of the
+ Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association began in 1939 to issue,
+ for September, a horse number. It has published a vast amount of material
+ both scientific and popular on range horses. Another monthly magazine
+ worth knowing about is the <i>Western Horseman</i>, Colorado Springs,
+ Colorado.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DENHARDT, ROBERT MOORMAN. <i>The Horse of the Americas</i>, University of
+ Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1947. This historical treatment of the Spanish
+ horse could be better ordered; some sections of the book are little more
+ than miscellanies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOBIE, J. FRANK. <i>The Mustangs</i>, illustrated by Charles Banks Wilson,
+ Little, Brown, Boston, 1952. Before this handsome book arrives at the wild
+ horses of North America, a third of it has been spent on the Arabian
+ progenitors of the Spanish horse, the acquisition of the Spanish horse by
+ western Indians, and the nature of Indian horses. There are many
+ narratives of mustangs and mustangers and of Spanish-blooded horses under
+ the saddle. The author has tried to compass the natural history of the
+ animal and to blend vividness with learning. The book incorporates his <i>Tales
+ of the Mustang</i>, a slight volume published in an edition of only three
+ hundred copies in 1936. It also incorporates a large part of <i>Mustangs
+ and Cow Horses</i>, edited by Dobie, Boatright, and Ransom, and issued by
+ the Texas Folklore Society, Austin, 1940&mdash;a volume that went out of
+ print not long after it was published.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DODGE, THEODORE A. <i>Riders of Many Lands</i>, New York, 1893.
+ Illustrations by Remington. Wide and informed views.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GRAHAM, R. B. CUNNINGHAME. <i>The Horses of the Conquest</i>, London,
+ 1930. Graham was both historian and horseman, as much at home on the
+ pampas as in his ancient Scottish home. This excellent book on the Spanish
+ horses introduced to the Western Hemisphere is in a pasture to itself.
+ Reprinted in 1949 by the University of Oklahoma Press, with introduction
+ and notes by Robert Moorman Denhardt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust. caption = Charles Banks Wilson, in <i>The Mustangs</i> by J.
+ Frank Dobie (1952)}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GREER, JAMES K. <i>Bois d'Arc to Barbed Wire</i>, Dallas, 1936. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HASTINGS, FRANK. <i>A Ranchman's Recollections</i>, Chicago, 1921. "Old
+ Gran'pa" is close to the best American horse story I have ever read. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HAYES, M. HORACE. <i>Points of the Horse</i>, London, 1904. This and
+ subsequent editions are superior in treatment and illustrations to earlier
+ editions. Hayes was a far traveler and scholar as well as horseman. One of
+ the less than a dozen best books on the horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JAMES, WILL. <i>Smoky</i>, Scribner's, New York, 1930. Perhaps the best of
+ several books that Will James&mdash;always with illustrations&mdash;has
+ woven around horse heroes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LEIGH, WILLIAM R. <i>The Western Pony</i>, New York, 1933. One of the most
+ beautifully printed books on the West; beautiful illustrations;
+ illuminating text. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MULLER, DAN. <i>Horses</i>, Reilly and Lee, Chicago, 1936. Interesting
+ illustrations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PATTULLO, GEORGE. <i>The Untamed</i>, New York, 1911. A collection of
+ short stories, among which "Corazon" and "Neutria" are excellent on
+ horses. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PERKINS, CHARLES ELLIOTT. <i>The Pinto Horse</i>, Santa Barbara,
+ California, 1927. A fine narrative, illustrated by Edward Borein. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RIDGEWAY, W. <i>The Origin and Influence of the Thoroughbred Horse</i>,
+ Cambridge, England, 1905. A standard work, though many of its conclusions
+ are disputed, especially by Lady Wentworth in her <i>Thoroughbred Racing
+ Stock and Its Ancestors</i>, London, 1938.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SANTEE, ROSS. <i>Men and Horses</i>, New York, 1926. Three chapters of
+ this book, "A Fool About a Horse," "The Horse Wrangler," and "The Rough
+ String," are especially recommended. <i>Cowboy</i>, New York, 1928,
+ reveals in a fine way the rapport between the cowboy and his horse. <i>Sleepy
+ Black,</i> New York, 1933, is a story of a horse designed for younger
+ readers; being good on the subject, it is good for any reader. All OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIMPSON, GEORGE GAYLOR. <i>Horses: The Story of the Horse Family in the
+ Modern World and through Sixty Million Years of History</i>, Oxford
+ University Press, New York, 1951. In the realm of paleontology this work
+ supplants all predecessors. Bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STEELE, RUFUS. <i>Mustangs of the Mesas</i>, Hollywood, California, 1941.
+ OP. Modern mustanging in Nevada; excellently written narratives of
+ outstanding mustangs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STONG, PHIL. <i>Horses and Americans</i>, New York, 1939. A survey and a
+ miscellany combined. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust. caption = Charles M. Russell, in <i>The Untamed</i> by George
+ Pattullo (1911)}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THORP, JACK (N. Howard) as told to Neil McCullough Clark. <i>Pardner of
+ the Wind</i>, Caxton, Caldwell, Idaho, 1945. Two chapters in this book
+ make the "Spanish thunderbolts," as Jack Thorp called the mustangs and
+ Spanish cow horses, graze, run, pitch, and go gentle ways as free as the
+ wind. "Five Hundred Mile Horse Race" is a great story. No other range man
+ excepting Ross Santee has put down so much everyday horse lore in such a
+ fresh way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TWEEDIE, MAJOR GENERAL W. <i>The Arabian Horse: His Country and People</i>,
+ Edinburgh and London, 1894. One of the few horse books to be classified as
+ literature. Wise in the blend of horse, land, and people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WENTWORTH, LADY. <i>The Authentic Arabian Horse and His Descendants</i>,
+ London, 1945. Rich in knowledge and both magnificent and munificent in
+ illustrations. Almost immediately after publication, this noble volume
+ entered the rare book class.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WYMAN, WALKER D. <i>The Wild Horse of the West</i>, Caxton, Caldwell,
+ Idaho, 1945. A scholarly sifting of virtually all available material on
+ mustangs. Readable. Only thorough bibliography on subject so far
+ published.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 24. The Bad Man Tradition
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ PLENTY of six-shooter play is to be found in most of the books about
+ old-time cowboys; yet hardly one of the professional bad men was a
+ representative cowboy. Bad men of the West and cowboys alike wore
+ six-shooters and spurs; they drank each other's coffee; they had a
+ fanatical passion for liberty&mdash;for themselves. But the representative
+ cowboy was a reliable hand, hanging through drought, blizzard, and high
+ water to his herd, whereas the bona fide bad man lived on the dodge.
+ Between the killer and the cowboy standing up for his rights or merely
+ shooting out the lights for fun, there was as much difference as between
+ Adolf Hitler and Winston Churchill. Of course, the elements were mixed in
+ the worst of the bad men, as they are in the best of all good men. No
+ matter what deductions analysis may lead to, the fact remains that the
+ western bad men of open range days have become a part of the American
+ tradition. They represent six-shooter culture at its zenith&mdash;the wild
+ and woolly side of the West&mdash;a stage between receding bowie knife
+ individualism of the backwoods and blackguard, machine-gun gangsterism of
+ the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The songs about Sam Bass, Jesse James, and Billy the Kid reflect popular
+ attitude toward the hard-riding outlaws. Sam Bass, Jesse James, Billy the
+ Kid, the Daltons, Cole Younger, Joaquin Murrieta, John Wesley Hardin, Al
+ Jennings, Belle Starr, and other "long riders" with their guns in their
+ hands have had their biographies written over and over. They were not
+ nearly as immoral as certain newspaper columnists lying under the cloak of
+ piety. As time goes on, they, like antique Robin Hood and the late Pancho
+ Villa, recede from all realistic judgment. If the picture show finds in
+ them models for generosity, gallantry, and fidelity to a code of liberty,
+ and if the public finds them picturesque, then philosophers may well be
+ thankful that they lived, rode, and shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust. caption = Tom Lea: Pancho Villa, in <i>Southwest Review</i>
+ (1951)}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The long-tailed heroes of the revolver," to pick a phrase from Mark
+ Twain's unreverential treatment of them in <i>Roughing It</i>, often did
+ society a service in shooting each other&mdash;aside from providing
+ entertainment to future generations. As "The Old Cattleman" of Alfred
+ Henry Lewis' <i>Wolfville</i> stories says, "A heap of people need a heap
+ of killing." Nor can the bad men be logically segregated from the
+ long-haired killers on the side of the law like Wild Bill Hickok and Wyatt
+ Earp. W. H. Hudson once advanced the theory that bloodshed and morality go
+ together. If American civilization proceeds, the rage for collecting books
+ on bad men will probably subside until a copy of Miguel Antonio Otero's <i>The
+ Real Billy the Kid</i> will bring no higher price than a first edition of
+ A. Edward Newton's <i>The Amenities of Book-Collecting</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See "Fighting Texians," "Texas Rangers," "Range Life," "Cowboy Songs and
+ Other Ballads."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AIKMAN, DUNCAN. <i>Calamity Jane and the Lady Wildcats</i>, 1927. OP.
+ Patronizing in the H. L. Mencken style.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BILLY THE KID. We ve got to take him seriously, not so much for what he
+ was&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ There are twenty-one men I have put bullets through,
+ And Sheriff Pat Garrett must make twenty-two&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ as for his provocations. Popular imagination, represented by writers of
+ all degrees, goes on playing on him with cumulative effect. As a figure in
+ literature the Kid has come to lead the whole field of western bad men.
+ The <i>Saturday Review</i>, for October 11, 1952, features a philosophical
+ essay entitled "Billy the Kid: Faust in America&mdash;The Making of a
+ Legend." The growth of this legend is minutely traced through a period of
+ seventy-one years (1881-1952) by J. C. Dykes in <i>Billy the Kid: The
+ Bibliography of a Legend</i>, University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque,
+ 1952 (186 pages). It lists 437 titles, including magazine pieces,
+ mimeographed plays, motion pictures, verses, pamphlets, fiction. In a
+ blend of casualness and scholarship, it gives the substance and character
+ of each item. Indeed, this bibliography reads like a continued story, with
+ constant references to both antecedent and subsequent action. Pat Garrett,
+ John Chisum, and other related characters weave all through it. A
+ first-class bibliography that is also readable is almost a new genre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pat F. Garrett, sheriff of Lincoln County, New Mexico, killed the Kid
+ about midnight, July 14, 1881. The next spring his <i>Authentic Life of
+ Billy the Kid</i> was published at Santa Fe, at least partly written,
+ according to good evidence, by a newspaperman named Ash Upton. This
+ biography is one of the rarities in Western Americana. In 1927 it was
+ republished by Macmillan, New York, under title of <i>Pat F. Garrett's
+ Authentic Life of Billy the Kid</i>, edited by Maurice G. Fulton. This is
+ now OP but remains basic. The most widely circulated biography has been <i>The
+ Saga of Billy the Kid</i> by Walter Noble Burns, New York, 1926. It
+ contains a deal of fictional conversation and it has no doubt contributed
+ to the Robin-Hoodizing of the lethal character baptized as William H.
+ Bonney, who was born in New York in 1859 and now lives with undiminished
+ vigor as Billy the Kid. Walter Noble Burns was not so successful with <i>The
+ Robin Hood of El Dorado: The Saga of Joaquin Murrieta</i> (1932), or,
+ despite hogsheads of blood, with <i>Tombstone</i> (1927).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CANTON, FRANK M. <i>Frontier Trails</i>, Boston, 1930.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COE, GEORGE W. <i>Frontier Fighter</i>, Boston, 1934; reprinted by
+ University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque. The autobiography of one of
+ Billy the Kid's men as recorded by Nan Hillary Harrison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COOLIDGE, DANE. <i>Fighting Men of the West</i>, New York, 1932.
+ Biographical sketches. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CUNNINGHAM, EUGENE. <i>Triggernometry</i>, 1934; reprinted by Caxton,
+ Caldwell, Idaho. Excellent survey of codes and characters. Written by a
+ man of intelligence and knowledge. Bibliography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FORREST, E. R. <i>Arizona's Dark and Bloody Ground</i>, Caxton, Caldwell,
+ Idaho, 1936.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GARD, WAYNE. <i>Sam Bass</i>, Boston, 1936. Most of the whole truth. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HALEY, J. EVETTS. <i>Jeff Milton&mdash;A Good Man with a Gun</i>,
+ University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1949. Jeff Milton the whole man as
+ well as the queller of bad men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HENDRICKS, GEORGE. <i>The Bad Man of the West</i>, Naylor, San Antonio,
+ 1941. Analyses and classifications go far toward making this treatment of
+ old subjects original. Excellent bibliographical guide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOUGH, EMERSON. <i>The Story of the Outlaw</i>, 1907. OP. An omnibus
+ carelessly put together with many holes in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LAKE, STUART. <i>Wyatt Earp</i>, Boston, 1931. Best written of all gunmen
+ biographies. Earp happened to be on the side of the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LANKFORD, N. P. <i>Vigilante Days and Ways</i>, 1890, 1912. OP. Full
+ treatment of lawlessness in the Northwest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LOVE, ROBERTUS. <i>The Rise and Fall of Jesse James</i>, New York, 1926.
+ Excellently written. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RAINE, WILLIAM MCLEOD. <i>Famous s and Western Outlaws</i>, Doubleday,
+ Garden City, N. Y., 1929. A rogues' gallery. <i>Guns of the Frontier</i>,
+ Boston, 1940. Another miscellany. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RASCOE, BURTON. <i>Belle Starr</i>, New York, 1941. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RIPLEY, THOMAS. <i>They Died with Their Boots On</i>, 1935. Mostly about
+ John Wesley Hardin. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SABIN, EDWIN L. <i>Wild Men of the Wild West</i>, New York, 1929.
+ Biographic survey of killers from the Mississippi to the Pacific. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WILD BILL HICKOK. The subject of various biographies, among them those by
+ Frank J. Wilstach (1926) and William E. Connelley (1933). The <i>Nebraska
+ History Magazine</i> (Volume X) for April-June 1927 is devoted to Wild
+ Bill and contains a "descriptive bibliography" on him by Addison E.
+ Sheldon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WOODHULL, FROST. Folk-Lore Shooting, in <i>Southwestern Lore</i>,
+ Publication IX of the Texas Folklore Society, 1931. Rich. Humor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 25. Mining and Oil
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ DURING the twentieth century oil has brought so much money to the
+ Southwest that the proceeds from cattle have come to look like tips. This
+ statement is not based on statistics, though statistics no doubt exist&mdash;even
+ on the cost of catching sun perch. Geological, legal, and economic
+ writings on oil are mountainous in quantity, but the human drama of oil
+ yet remains, for the most part, to be written. It is odd to find such a
+ modern book as Erna Fergusson's <i>Our Southwest</i> not mentioning oil.
+ It is odd that no book of national reputation comes off the presses about
+ any aspect of oil. The nearest to national notice on oil is the daily
+ report of transactions on the New York Stock Exchange. Oil companies
+ subsidize histories of themselves, endow universities with money to train
+ technicians they want, control state legislatures and senates, and dictate
+ to Congress what they want for themselves in income tax laws; but so far
+ they have not been able to hire anybody to write a book about oil that
+ anybody but the hirers themselves wants to read. Probably they don't read
+ them. The first thing an oilman does after amassing a few millions is buy
+ a ranch on which he can get away from oil&mdash;and on which he can spend
+ some of his oil money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ People live a good deal by tradition and fight a good deal by tradition
+ also, voting more by prejudice. When one considers the stream of cow
+ country books and the romance of mining living on in legends of lost mines
+ and, then, the desert of oil books, one realizes that it takes something
+ more than money to make the mare of romance run. Geology and economics are
+ beyond the aim of this <i>Guide</i>, but if oil money keeps on buying up
+ ranch land, the history of modern ranching will be resolved into the
+ biographies of a comparatively few oilmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BOATRIGHT, MODY C. <i>Gib Morgan: Minstrel of the Oil Fields</i>. Texas
+ Folklore Society, Austin, 1945. Folk tales about Gib rather than
+ minstrelsy. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BOONE, LALIA PHIPPS. <i>The Petroleum Dictionary</i>, University of
+ Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1952. "More than 6,000 entries: definitions of
+ technical terms and everyday expressions, a comprehensive guide to the
+ language of the oil industry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CAUGHEY, JOHN WALTON. <i>Gold Is the Cornerstone</i> (1948). Adequate
+ treatment of the discovery of California gold and of the miners. <i>Rushing
+ for Gold</i> (1949). Twelve essays by twelve writers, with emphasis on
+ travel to California. Both books published by University of California
+ Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CENDRARS, BLAISE. <i>Sutter's Gold</i>, London, 1926. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CLARK, JAMES A., and HALBOUTY, MICHEL T. <i>Spindletop</i>, Random House,
+ New York, 1952. On January 10, 1901, the Spindletop gusher, near Beaumont,
+ Texas, roared in the oil age. This book, while it presumes to record what
+ Pat Higgins was thinking as he sat in front of a country store, seems to
+ be "the true story." The bare facts in it make drama.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DE QUILLE, DAN (pseudonym for William Wright). <i>The Big Bonanza</i>,
+ Hartford, 1876. Reprinted, 1947. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOBIE, J. FRANK. <i>Coronado's Children</i>, Dallas, 1930; reprinted by
+ Grosset and Dunlap, New York. Legendary tales of lost mines and buried
+ treasures of the Southwest. <i>Apache Gold and Yaqui Silver</i>, Little,
+ Brown, Boston, 1939. More of the same thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ EMRICH, DUNCAN, editor. <i>Comstock Bonanza</i>, Vanguard, New York, 1950.
+ A collection of writings, garnered mostly from West Coast magazines and
+ newspapers, bearing on mining in Nevada during the boom days of Mark
+ Twain's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust. caption = Tom Lea, in <i>Santa Rita</i> by Martin W. Schwettmann
+ (1943)}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Roughing It</i>. James G. Gally's writing is a major discovery in a
+ minor field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FORBES, GERALD. <i>Flush Production: The Epic of Oil in the Gulf-Southwest</i>,
+ University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1942.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILLIS, WILLIAM R. <i>Goldrush Days with Mark Twain</i>, New York, 1930.
+ OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GLASSCOCK, LUCILLE. <i>A Texas Wildcatter</i>, Naylor, San Antonio, 1952.
+ The wildcatter is Mrs. Glasscock's husband. She chronicles this player's
+ main moves in the game and gives an insight into his energy-driven
+ ambition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HOUSE, BOYCE. <i>Oil Boom</i>, Caxton, Caldwell, Idaho, 1941. With Boyce
+ House's earlier <i>Were You in Ranger?</i>, this book gives a contemporary
+ picture of the gushing days of oil, money, and humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LYMAN, GEORGE T. <i>The Saga of the Comstock Lode</i>, 1934, and <i>Ralston's
+ Ring</i>, 1937. Both published by Scribner's, New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MCKENNA, JAMES <i>A. Black Range Tales</i>, New York, 1936. Reminiscences
+ of prospecting life. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MATHEWS, JOHN JOSEPH. <i>Life and Death of an Oilman: The Career of E. W.
+ Marland</i>, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1951. Mature in style
+ and in interpretative power, John Joseph Mathews goes into the very life
+ of an oilman who was something else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RISTER, C. C. <i>Oil! Titan of the Southwest</i>, University of Oklahoma
+ Press, Norman, 1949. Facts in factual form. Plenty of oil wealth and
+ taxes; nothing on oil government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHINN, CHARLES H. <i>Mining Camps</i>, 1885, reprinted by Knopf, New York,
+ 1948. Perhaps the most competent analysis extant on the behavior of the
+ gold hunters, with emphasis on their self-government. <i>The Story of the
+ Mine as Illustrated by the Great Comstock Lode of Nevada</i>, New York,
+ 1896. OP. Shinn knew and he knew also how to combine into form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STUART, GRANVILLE. <i>Forty Years on the Frontier</i>, Cleveland, 1925.
+ Superb on California and Montana hunger for precious metals. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TAIT, SAMUEL W. <i>Wildcatters: An Informal History of Oil-Hunting in
+ America</i>, Princeton University Press, 1946. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TWAIN, MARK. <i>Roughing It</i>. The mining boom itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 26. Nature; Wild Life; Naturalists
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "NO MAN," says Mary Austin, "has ever really entered into the heart of any
+ country until he has adopted or made up myths about its familiar objects."
+ A man might reject the myths but he would have to know many facts about
+ its natural life and have imagination as well as knowledge before entering
+ into a country's heart. The history of any land begins with nature, and
+ all histories must end with nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The character of a country is the destiny of its people," wrote Harvey
+ Fergusson in <i>Rio Grande</i>. Ross Calvin, also of New Mexico, had the
+ same idea in mind when he entitled his book <i>Sky Determines</i>.
+ "Culture mocks at the boundaries set up by politics," Clark Wissler said.
+ "It approaches geographical boundaries with its hat in its hand." The
+ engineering of water across mountains, electric translation of sounds,
+ refrigeration of air and foods, and other technical developments carry
+ human beings a certain distance across some of nature's boundaries, but no
+ cleverness of science can escape nature. The inhabitants of Yuma, Arizona,
+ are destined forever to face a desert devoid of graciousness. Technology
+ does not create matter; it merely uses matter in a skilful way&mdash;uses
+ it up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Man advances by learning the secrets of nature and taking advantage of his
+ knowledge. He is deeply happy only when in harmony with his work and
+ environments. The backwoodsman, early settler, pioneer plainsman, mountain
+ man were all like some infuriated beast of Promethean capabilities tearing
+ at its own vitals. Driven by an irrational energy, they seemed intent on
+ destroying not only the growth of the soil but the power of the soil to
+ reproduce. Davy Crockett, the great bear killer, was "wrathy to kill a
+ bear," and as respects bears and other wild life, one may search the
+ chronicles of his kind in vain for anything beyond the incidents of chase
+ and slaughter. To quote T. B. Thorpe's blusterous bear hunter, the whole
+ matter may be summed up in one sentence: "A bear is started and he is
+ killed." For the average American of the soil, whether wearing out a farm,
+ shotgunning with a headlight the last doe of a woodland, shooting the last
+ buffalo on the range, trapping the last howling lobo, winging the last
+ prairie chicken, running down in an automobile the last antelope, making a
+ killer's target of any hooting owl or flying heron that comes within
+ range, poisoning the last eagle to fly over a sheep pasture for him the
+ circumstances of the killing have expressed his chief intellectual
+ interest in nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sure sign of advancing civilization has been the rapidly changing
+ popular attitude toward nature during recent years. People are becoming
+ increasingly interested not merely in conserving game for sportsmen to
+ shoot, but in preserving all wild life, in observing animals, in
+ cultivating native flora, in building houses that harmonize with climate
+ and landscape. Roger Tory Peterson's <i>Field Guide to the Birds</i> has
+ become one of the popular standard works of America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of the American Indian is&mdash;despite taboos and squalor&mdash;a
+ story of harmonizations with nature. "Wolf Brother," in <i>Long Lance</i>,
+ by Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance, is a poetic concretion of this harmony.
+ As much at ease with the wilderness as any Blackfoot Indian was George
+ Frederick Ruxton, educated English officer and gentleman, who rode
+ horseback from Vera Cruz to the Missouri River and wrote <i>Adventures in
+ Mexico and the Rocky Mountains</i>. In this book he tells how a lobo
+ followed him for days from camp to camp, waiting each evening for his
+ share of fresh meat and sometimes coming close to the fire at night. Any
+ orthodox American would have shot the lobo at first appearance. Ruxton had
+ the civilized perspective on nature represented by Thoreau and Saint
+ Francis of Assisi. Primitive harmony was run over by frontier wrath to
+ kill, a wrath no less barbaric than primitive superstitions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the coyote's howl is more tonic than all theories about nature; the
+ buck's whistle more invigorating; the bull's bellow in the canyon more
+ musical; the call of the bobwhite more serene; the rattling of the
+ rattlesnake more logical; the scream of the panther more arousing to the
+ imagination; the odor from the skunk more lingering; the sweep of the
+ buzzard in the air more majestical; the wariness of the wild turkey
+ brighter; the bark of the prairie dog lighter; the guesses of the
+ armadillo more comical; the upward dartings and dippings of the
+ scissortail more lovely; the flight of the sandhill cranes more fraught
+ with mystery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is an abundance of printed information on the animal life of
+ America, to the west as well as to the east. Much of it cannot be
+ segregated; the earthworm, on which Darwin wrote a book, knows nothing of
+ regionalism. The best books on nature come from and lead to the
+ Grasshopper's Library, which is free to all consultants. I advise the
+ consultant to listen to the owl's hoot for wisdom, plant nine bean rows
+ for peace, and, with Wordsworth, sit on an old gray stone listening for
+ "authentic tidings of invisible things." Studies are only to "perfect
+ nature." In the words of Mary Austin, "They that make the sun noise shall
+ not fail of the sun's full recompense."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like knowledge in any other department of life, that on nature never comes
+ to a stand so long as it has vitality. A continuing interest in natural
+ history is nurtured by <i>Natural History</i>, published by the American
+ Museum of Natural History, New York; <i>Nature</i>, published in
+ Washington, D. C.; <i>The Living Wilderness</i>, also from Washington; <i>Journal
+ of Mammalogy</i>, a quarterly, Baltimore, Maryland; <i>Audubon Magazine</i>
+ (formerly <i>Bird Lore</i>), published by the National Audubon Society,
+ New York; <i>American Forests</i>, Washington, D. C., and various other
+ publications.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition to books of natural history interest listed below, others are
+ listed under "Buffaloes and Buffalo Hunters," "Bears and Bear Hunters,"
+ "Coyotes, Lobos, and Panthers," "Birds and Wild Flowers," and
+ "Interpreters." Perhaps a majority of worthy books pertaining to the
+ western half of America look on the outdoors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ADAMS, W. H. DAVENPORT (from the French of Benedict Revoil). <i>The Hunter
+ and the Trapper of North America</i>, London, 1875. A strange book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ARNOLD, OREN. <i>Wild Life in the Southwest</i>, Dallas, 1936. Helpful
+ chapters on various characteristic animals and plants. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BAILEY, VERNON. <i>Mammals of New Mexico</i>, United States Department of
+ Agriculture, Bureau of Biological Survey, Washington, D. C., 1931. <i>Biological
+ Survey of Texas</i>, 1905. OP. The "North American Fauna Series," to which
+ these two books belong, contains or points to the basic facts covering
+ most of the mammals of the Southwest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BAILLIE-GROHMAN, WILLIAM A. <i>Camps in the Rockies</i>, 1882. A true
+ sportsman, Baillie-Grohman was more interested in living animals than in
+ just killing. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BEDICHEK, ROY. <i>Adventures with a Texas Naturalist</i>, Doubleday,
+ Garden City, N. Y., 1947. To be personal, Roy Bedichek has the most richly
+ stored mind I have ever met; it is as active as it is full. Liberal in the
+ true sense of the word, it frees other minds. Here, using facts as a
+ means, it gives meanings to the hackberry tree, limestone, mockingbird,
+ Inca dove, Mexican primrose, golden eagle, the Davis Mountains, cedar
+ cutters, and many another natural phenomenon. <i>Adventures with a Texas
+ Naturalist</i> is regarded by some good judges as the wisest book in the
+ realm of natural history produced in America since Thoreau wrote.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The title of Bedichek's second book, <i>Karankaway Country</i> (Garden
+ City, 1950), is misleading. The Karankawa Indians start it off, but it
+ goes to coon inquisitiveness, prairie chicken dances, the extinction of
+ species to which the whooping crane is approaching, browsing goats,
+ dignified skunks, swifts in love flight, a camp in the brush, dust,
+ erosion, silt&mdash;always with thinking added to seeing. The foremost
+ naturalist of the Southwest, Bedichek constantly relates nature to
+ civilization and human values.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BROWNING, MESHACH. <i>Forty-Four Years of the Life of a Hunter</i>, 1859;
+ reprinted, Philadelphia, 1928. Prodigal on bear and deer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CAHALANE, VICTOR H. <i>Mammals of North America</i>, Macmillan, New York,
+ 1947. The author is a scientist with an open mind on the relationships
+ between predators and game animals. His thick, delightfully illustrated
+ book is the best dragnet on American mammals extant. It contains excellent
+ lists of references.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CATON, JUDGE JOHN DEAN. <i>Antelope and Deer of America</i>, 1877.
+ Standard work. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOBIE, J. FRANK. <i>The Longhorns</i> (1941) and <i>The Mustangs</i>
+ (1952), while hardly to be catalogued as natural history books, go farther
+ into natural history than most books on cattle and horses go. <i>On the
+ Open Range</i> (1931; reprinted by Banks Upshaw, Dallas) contains a number
+ of animal stories more or less true. Ben Lilly of <i>The Ben Lilly Legend</i>
+ (Boston, 1950) thought that God had called him to hunt. He spent his life,
+ therefore, in hunting. He saw some things in nature beyond targets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DODGE, RICHARD I. <i>The Hunting Grounds of the Great West</i>, London,
+ 1877. Published in New York the same year under title of <i>The Plains of
+ the Great West and Their Inhabitants</i>. Outstanding survey of
+ outstanding wild creatures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DUNRAVEN, EARL OF. <i>The Great Divide</i>, London, 1876; reprinted under
+ title of <i>Hunting in the Yellowstone</i>, 1925. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ELLIOTT, CHARLES (editor). <i>Fading Trails</i>, New York, 1942.
+ Humanistic review of characteristic American wild life. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FLACK, CAPTAIN. <i>The Texas Ranger, or Real Life in the Backwoods</i>,
+ 1866; another form of <i>A Hunter's Experience in the Southern States of
+ America</i>, by Captain Flack, "The Ranger," London, 1866.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GANSON, EVE. <i>Desert Mavericks</i>, Santa Barbara, California, 1928.
+ Illustrated; delightful. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GEISER, SAMUEL WOOD. <i>Naturalists of the Frontier</i>, Southern
+ Methodist University Press, Dallas, 1937; revised and enlarged edition,
+ 1948. Biographies of men who were characters as well as scientists,
+ generally in environments alien to their interests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GERSTAECKER, FREDERICK. <i>Wild Sports in the Far West</i>, 1854. A
+ translation from the German. Delightful reading and revealing picture of
+ how backwoodsmen of the Mississippi Valley "lived off the country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GRAHAM, GID. <i>Animal Outlaws</i>, Collinsville, Oklahoma, 1938. OP. A
+ remarkable collection of animal stories. Privately printed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GRINNELL, GEORGE BIRD. Between 1893 and 1913, Grinnell, partly in
+ collaboration with Theodore Roosevelt, edited five volumes for The Boone
+ and Crockett Club that contain an extraordinary amount of information,
+ written mostly by men of civilized perspective, on bears, deer, mountain
+ sheep, buffaloes, cougars, elk, wolves, moose, mountains, and forests. The
+ series, long out of print, is a storehouse of knowledge not to be
+ overlooked by any student of wild life in the West. The titles are: <i>American
+ Big-Game Hunting</i>, 1893; <i>Hunting in Many Lands</i>, 1895; <i>Trail
+ and Camp-Fire</i>, 1897; <i>American Big Game in Its Haunts</i>, 1904; <i>Hunting
+ at High Altitudes</i>, 1913.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GRINNELL, JOSEPH; DIXON, JOSEPH S.; and LINSDALE, JEAN M. <i>Fur-Bearing
+ Mammals of California: Their Natural History, Systematic Status, and
+ Relation to Man</i>, two volumes, University of California Press,
+ Berkeley, 1937. The king, so far, of all state natural histories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HALL, E. RAYMOND. <i>Mammals of Nevada</i>, University of California
+ Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1946. So far as my knowledge goes, this
+ is the only respect-worthy book extant pertaining to the state whose
+ economy is based on fees from divorces and gambling and whose best-known
+ citizen is Senator Pat McCarran.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HARTMAN, CARL G. <i>Possum</i>, University of Texas Press, Austin, 1952.
+ This richly illustrated book comprehends everything pertaining to the
+ subject from prehistoric marsupium to baking with sweet potatoes in a
+ Negro cabin. It is the outcome of a lifetime's scientific investigation
+ not only of possums but of libraries and popular talk. Thus, in addition
+ to its biographical and natural history aspects, it is a study in the
+ evolution of man's knowledge about one of the world's folkiest creatures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust. caption = Charles M. Russell, in <i>The Blazed Trail of the Old
+ Frontier</i> by Agnes C. Laut (1926)}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HORNADAY, WILLIAM T. <i>Camp Fires on Desert and Lava</i>, London, n.d.
+ OP. Dr. Hornaday, who died in 1937, was the first director of the New York
+ Zoological Park. He was a great conservationist and an authority on the
+ wild life of America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HUDSON, W. H. <i>The Naturalist in La Plata</i>, New York, 1892. Not about
+ the Southwest or even North America, but Hudson's chapters on "The Puma,"
+ "Some Curious Animal Weapons," "The Mephitic Skunk," "Humming Birds," "The
+ Strange Instincts of Cattle," "Horse and Man," etc. come home to the
+ Southwest. Few writers tend to make readers so aware; no other has written
+ so delightfully of the lands of grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ INGERSOLL, ERNEST. <i>Wild Neighbors</i>, New York, 1897. OP. A superior
+ work. Chapter II, "The Father of Game," is on the cougar; Chapter IV, "The
+ Hound of the Plains," is on the coyote; there is an excellent essay on the
+ badger. Each chapter is provided with a list of books affording more
+ extended treatment of the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JAEGER, EDMUND C. <i>Denizens of the Desert</i>, Boston, 1922. OP. "Don
+ Coyote," the roadrunner, and other characteristic animals. <i>Our Desert
+ Neighbors</i>, Stanford University Press, California, 1950.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LOCKE, LUCIE H. <i>Naturally Yours, Texas</i>, Naylor, San Antonio, 1949.
+ Charm must never be discounted; it is far rarer than facts, and often does
+ more to lead to truth. This slight book is in verse and drawings, type
+ integrated with delectable black-and-white representations of the prairie
+ dog, armadillo, sanderling, mesquite, whirlwind, sand dune, mirage, and
+ dozens of other natural phenomena. The only other book in this list to
+ which it is akin is Eve Ganson's <i>Desert Mavericks</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LUMHOLTZ, CARL. <i>Unknown Mexico</i>, New York, 1902. Nearly anything
+ about animals as well as about Indians and mountains of Mexico may be
+ found in this extraordinary two-volume work. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MCILHENNY, EDWARD A. <i>The Alligator s Life History</i>, Boston, 1935.
+ OP. The alligator got farther west than is generally known&mdash;at least
+ within reach of Laredo and Eagle Pass on the Rio Grande. McIlhenny's book
+ treats&mdash;engagingly, intimately, and with precision&mdash;of the
+ animal in Louisiana. Hungerers for anatomical biology are referred to <i>The
+ Alligator and Its Allies</i> by A. M. Reese, New York, 1915. I have more
+ to say about McIlhenny in Chapter 30.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MARCY, COLONEL R. B. <i>Thirty Years of Army Life on the Border</i>, New
+ York, 1866. Marcy had a scientific mind and a high sense of values. He
+ knew how to write and what he wrote remains informing and pleasant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MARTIN, HORACE T. <i>Castorologia, or The History and Traditions of the
+ Canadian Beaver</i>, London, 1892. OP. The beaver is a beaver, whether on
+ Hudson's Bay or the Mexican side of the Rio Grande. Much has been written
+ on this animal, the propeller of the trappers of the West, but this famous
+ book remains the most comprehensive on facts and the amplest in
+ conception. The author was humorist as well as scientist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MENGER, RUDOLPH. <i>Texas Nature Observations and Reminiscences</i>, San
+ Antonio, 1913. OP. Being of an educated German family, Dr. Menger found
+ many things in nature more interesting than two-headed calves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MILLS, ENOS. <i>The Rocky Mountain Wonderland, Wild Life on the Rockies,
+ Waiting in the Wilderness</i>, and other books. Some naturalists have
+ taken exception to some observations recorded by Mills; nevertheless, he
+ enlarges and freshens mountain life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MUIR, JOHN. <i>The Mountains of California, Our National Parks</i>, and
+ other books. Muir, a great naturalist, had the power to convey his wise
+ sympathies and brooded-over knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MURPHY, JOHN MORTIMER. <i>Sporting Adventures in the Far West</i>, London,
+ 1879. One of the earliest roundups of game animals of the West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NEWSOME, WILLIAM M. <i>The Whitetailed Deer</i>, New York, 1926. OP.
+ Standard work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PALLISER, JOHN. <i>The Solitary Hunter; or Storting Adventures in the
+ Prairies</i>, London, 1857.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROOSEVELT, THEODORE. <i>Outdoor Pastimes of an American Hunter</i>, with a
+ chapter entitled "Books on Big Game"; <i>Hunting Adventures in the West;
+ The Wilderness Hunter; Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail; A Book Lover's
+ Holiday in the Open; The Deer Family</i> (in collaboration).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SEARS, PAUL B. <i>Deserts on the March</i>, University of Oklahoma Press,
+ Norman, 1935. Dramatic picturization of the forces of nature operating in
+ what droughts of the 1930's caused to be called "the Dust Bowl." "Drought
+ and Wind and Man" might be another title.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SETON, ERNEST THOMPSON. <i>Wild Animals I Have Known; Lives of the Hunted</i>.
+ Probably no other writer of America has aroused so many people, young
+ people especially, to an interest in our wild animals. Natural history
+ encyclopedias he has authored are <i>Life Histories of Northern Animals</i>,
+ New York, 1920, and <i>Lives of Game Animals</i>, New York, 1929. Seton's
+ final testament, <i>Trail of an Artist Naturalist</i> (Scribner's, New
+ York, 1941), has a deal on wild life of the Southwest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THORPE, T. B. <i>The Hive of the Bee-Hunter</i>, New York, 1854. OP.
+ Juicy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WARREN, EDWARD ROYAL. <i>The Mammals of Colorado</i>, University of
+ Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1942. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 27. Buffaloes and Buffalo Hunters
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE LITERATURE on the American bison, more popularly called buffalo, is
+ enormous. Nearly everything of consequence pertaining to the Plains
+ Indians touches the animal. The relationship of the Indian to the buffalo
+ has nowhere been better stated than in Note 49 to the Benavides <i>Memorial</i>,
+ edited by Hodge and Lummis. "The Great Buffalo Hunt at Standing Rock," a
+ chapter in <i>My Friend the Indian</i> by James McLaughlin, sums up the
+ hunting procedure; other outstanding treatments of the buffalo in Indian
+ books are to be found in <i>Long Lance</i> by Chief Buffalo Child Long
+ Lance; <i>Letters and Notes on... the North American Indians</i> by George
+ Catlin; <i>Forty Years a Fur Trader</i> by Charles Larpenteur. Floyd B.
+ Streeter's chapter on "The Buffalo Range" in <i>Prairie Trails and Cow
+ Towns</i> lists twenty-five sources of information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bibliography that supersedes all other bibliographies is in the book
+ that supersedes all other books on the subject&mdash;Frank Gilbert Roe's
+ <i>The North American Buffalo</i>. More about it in the list that follows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearly all men who got out on the plains were "wrathy to kill" buffaloes
+ above all else. The Indians killed in great numbers but seldom wastefully.
+ The Spaniards were restrained by Indian hostility. Mountain men, emigrants
+ crossing the plains, Santa Fe traders, railroad builders, Indian fighters,
+ settlers on the edge of the plains, European sportsmen, all slaughtered
+ and slew. Some observed, but the average American hunter's observations on
+ game animals are about as illuminating as the trophy-stuffed den of a rich
+ oilman or the lockers of a packing house. Lawrence of Arabia won his name
+ through knowledge and understanding of Arabian life and through power to
+ lead and to write. Buffalo Bill won his name through power to exterminate
+ buffaloes. He was a buffalo man in the way that Hitler was a Polish Jew
+ man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust. caption = Harold D. Bugbee: Buffaloes
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a pleasure to note the writings of sportsmen with inquiring minds
+ and of scientists and artists who hunted. Three examples are: <i>The
+ English Sportsman in the Western Prairies</i>, by the Hon. Grantley F.
+ Berkeley, London, 1861; <i>Travels in the Interior of North America,
+ 1833-1834</i>, by Maximilian, Prince of Wied (original edition, 1843),
+ included in that "incomparable storehouse of buffalo lore from early
+ eye-witnesses," <i>Early Western Travels</i>, edited by Reuben Gold
+ Thwaites; George Catlin's <i>Letters and Notes on the Manners, Customs and
+ Conditions of the North American Indians</i>, London, 1841.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three aspects of the buffalo stand out: the natural history of the great
+ American animal; the interrelationship between Indian and buffalo; the
+ white hunter&mdash;and exterminator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ALLEN, J. A. <i>The American Bison, Living and Extinct</i>, Cambridge,
+ Mass., 1876. Reprinted in 9th Annual Report of the United States
+ Geological and Geographical Survey, Washington, 1877. Basic and rich work,
+ much of it appropriated by Hornaday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BRANCH, E. DOUGLAS. <i>The Hunting of the Buffalo</i>, New York, 1925.
+ Interpretative as well as factual. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COOK, JOHN R. <i>The Border and the Buffalo</i>. Topeka, Kansas, 1907.
+ Personal narrative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DIXON, OLIVE. <i>Billy Dixon</i>, Guthrie, Oklahoma, 1914; reprinted,
+ Dallas, 1927. Bully autobiography; excellent on the buffalo hunter as a
+ type. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DODGE, R. I. <i>The Plains of the Great West and Their Inhabitants</i>,
+ New York, 1877. One of the best chapters of this source book is on the
+ buffalo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GARRETSON, MARTIN S. <i>The American Bison</i>, New York Zoological
+ Society, New York, 1938. Not thorough, but informing. Limited
+ bibliography. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GRINNELL, GEORGE BIRD (1849-1938) may be classed next to J. A. Allen and
+ W. T. Hornaday as historian of the buffalo. His primary sources were the
+ buffaloed plains and the Plains Indians, whom he knew intimately. "In
+ Buffalo Days" is a long and excellent essay by him in <i>American Big-Game
+ Hunting</i>, edited by Theodore Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell, New
+ York, 1893. He has another long essay, "The Bison," in <i>Musk-Ox, Bison,
+ Sheep and Goat</i> by Caspar Whitney, George Bird Grinnell, and Owen
+ Wister, New York, 1904. His noble and beautifully simple <i>When Buffalo
+ Ran</i>, New Haven, 1920, is specific on work from a buffalo horse. Again
+ in his noble two-volume work on <i>The Cheyenne Indians</i> (1923)
+ Grinnell is rich not only on the animal but on the Plains Indian
+ relationship to it. All OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HALEY, J. EVETTS. <i>Charles Goodnight, Cowman and Plainsman</i>, 1936.
+ Goodnight killed and also helped save the buffalo. Haley has preserved his
+ observations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HORNADAY, W. T. <i>Extermination of the American Bison</i> (Smithsonian
+ Reports for 1887, published in 1889, Part II). Hornaday was a good
+ zoologist but inferior in research.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ INMAN, HENRY. <i>Buffalo Jones Forty Years of Adventure</i>, Topeka,
+ Kansas, 1899. A book rich in observations as well as experience, though
+ Jones was a poser. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LAKE, STUART N. <i>Wyatt Earp</i>, Boston, 1931. Early chapters excellent
+ on buffalo hunting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MCCREIGHT, M. I. <i>Buffalo Bone Days</i>, Sykesville, Pa., 1939. OP. A
+ pamphlet strong on buffalo bones, for fertilizer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PALLISER, JOHN (and others). <i>Journals, Detailed Reports, and
+ Observations, relative to Palliser's Exploration of British North America,
+ 1857-1860</i>, London, 1863. According to Frank Gilbert Roe, "a mine of
+ inestimable information" on the buffalo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Panhandle-Plains Historical Review</i>, Canyon, Texas. Articles and
+ reminiscences, <i>passim</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PARKMAN, FRANCIS. <i>The Oregon Trail</i>, 1847. Available in various
+ editions, this book contains superb descriptions of buffaloes and
+ prairies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ POE, SOPHIE A. <i>Buckboard Days</i> (edited by Eugene Cunningham),
+ Caldwell, Idaho, 1936. Early chapters. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROE, FRANK GILBERT. <i>The North American Buffalo</i>, University of
+ Toronto Press, 1951. A monumental work comprising and critically reviewing
+ virtually all that has been written on the subject and supplanting much of
+ it. No other scholar dealing with the buffalo has gone so fully into the
+ subject or viewed it from so many angles, brought out so many aspects of
+ natural history and human history. In a field where ignorance has often
+ prevailed, Roe has to be iconoclastic in order to be constructive. If his
+ words are sometimes sharp, his mind is sharper. The one indispensable book
+ on the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RYE, EDGAR. <i>The Quirt and the Spur</i>, Chicago, 1909. Rye was in the
+ Fort Griffin, Texas, country when buffalo hunters dominated it. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SCHULTZ, JAMES WILLARD. <i>Apauk, Caller of Buffalo</i>, New York, 1916.
+ OP. Whether fiction or nonfiction, as claimed by the author, this book
+ realizes the relationships between Plains Indian and buffalo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WEEKES, MARY. <i>The Last Buffalo Hunter</i> (as told by Norbert Welsh),
+ New York, 1939. OP. The old days recalled with upspringing sympathy.
+ Canada&mdash;but buffaloes and buffalo hunters were pretty much the same
+ everywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ West Texas Historical Association (Abilene, Texas) <i>Year Books</i>.
+ Reminiscences and articles, <i>passim</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WILLIAMS, O. W. A privately printed letter of eight unnumbered pages,
+ dated from Fort Stockton, Texas, June 30, 1930, containing the best
+ description of a buffalo stampede that I have encountered. It is
+ reproduced in Dobie's <i>On the Open Range</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 28. Bears and Bear Hunters
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE BEAR, whether black or grizzly, is a great American citizen. Think of
+ how many children have been put to sleep with bear stories! Facts about
+ the animal are fascinating; the effect he has had on the minds of human
+ beings associated with him transcends naturalistic facts. The tree on
+ which Daniel Boone carved the naked fact that here he "Killed A. Bar In
+ the YEAR 1760" will never die. Davy Crockett killed 105 bars in one
+ season, and his reputation as a bar hunter, plus ability to tell about his
+ exploits, sent him to Congress. He had no other reason for going. The
+ grizzly was the hero of western tribes of Indians from Alaska on down into
+ the Sierra Madre. Among western white men who met him, occasionally in
+ death, the grizzly inspired a mighty saga, the cantos of which lie
+ dispersed in homely chronicles and unrecorded memories as well as in
+ certain vivid narratives by Ernest Thompson Seton, Hittell's John Capen
+ Adams, John G. Neihardt, and others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For all that, neither the black bear nor the grizzly has been amply
+ conceived of as an American character. The conception must include a vast
+ amount of folklore. In a chapter on "Bars and Bar Hunters" in <i>On the
+ Open Range</i> and in "Juan Oso" and "Under the Sign of Ursa Major,"
+ chapters of <i>Tongues of the Monte</i>, I have indicated the nature of
+ this dispersed epic in folk tales.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In many of the books listed under "Nature; Wild Life; Naturalists" and
+ "Mountain Men" the bear "walks like a man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ALTER, J. CECIL. <i>James Bridger</i>, Salt Lake City, 1922 reprinted by
+ Long's College Book Co., Columbus, Ohio. Contains several versions of the
+ famous Hugh Glass bear story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HITTELL, THEODORE H. <i>The Adventures of John Capen Adams</i>, 1860;
+ reprinted 1911, New York. OP. Perhaps no man has lived who knew grizzlies
+ better than Adams. A rare personal narrative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MILLER, JOAQUIN. <i>True Bear Stories</i>, Chicago, 1900. OP. Truth
+ questionable in places; interest guaranteed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MILLER, LEWIS B. <i>Saddles and Lariats</i>, Boston, 1909. OP. The chapter
+ "In a Grizzly's Jaws" is a wonderful bear story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MILLS, ENOS A. <i>The Grizzly, Our Greatest Wild Animal</i>, Houghton
+ Mifflin, Boston, 1919. Some naturalists have accused Mills of having too
+ much imagination. He saw much and wrote vividly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NEIHARDT, JOHN G. <i>The Song of Hugh Glass</i>, New York, 1915. An epic
+ in vigorous verse of the West's most famous man-and-bear story. This
+ imagination-rousing story has been told over and over, by J. Cecil Alter
+ in <i>James Bridger</i>, by Stanley Vestal in <i>Mountain Men</i>, and by
+ other writers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROOSEVELT, THEODORE. <i>Hunting Adventures</i> in the {illust. caption =
+ Charles M. Russell, in <i>Fifteen Thousand Miles by Stage</i> by Carrie
+ Adell Strahorn (1915 ) <i>West</i> (1885) and <i>The Wilderness Hunter</i>
+ (1893)&mdash;books reprinted in parts or wholly under varying titles.
+ Several narratives of hunts intermixed with baldfaced facts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SETON, ERNEST THOMPSON. <i>The Biography of a Grizzly</i>, 1900; now
+ published by Appleton-Century-Crofts, New York. <i>Monarch, the Big Bear
+ of Tallac</i>, 1904. Graphic narratives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SKINNER, M. P. <i>Bears in the Yellowstone</i>, Chicago, 1925. OP. A
+ naturalist's rounded knowledge, pleasantly told.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STEVENS, MONTAGUE. <i>Meet Mr. Grizzly</i>, University of New Mexico
+ Press, Albuquerque, 1943. Montague Stevens graduated from Trinity College,
+ Cambridge, in 1881 and came to New Mexico to ranch. As respects deductions
+ on observed data, his book is about the most mature yet published by a
+ ranchman. Goodnight experienced more, had a more ample nature, but he
+ lacked the perspective, the mental training, to know what to make of his
+ observations. Another English rancher, R. B. Townshend, had perspective
+ and charm but was not a scientific observer. So far as sense of smell
+ goes, <i>Meet Mr. Grizzly</i> is as good as W. H. Hudson's <i>A Hind in
+ Richmond Park</i>. On the nature and habits of grizzly bears, it is better
+ than <i>The Grizzly</i> by Enos Mills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WRIGHT, WILLIAM H. <i>The Grizzly Bear: The Narrative of a
+ Hunter-Naturalist, Historical, Scientific and Adventurous</i>, New York,
+ 1928. OP. This is not only the richest and justest book published on the
+ grizzly; it is among the best books of the language on specific mammals.
+ Wright had a passion for bears, for their preservation, and for arousing
+ informed sympathy in other people. Yet he did not descend to propaganda.
+ <i>His The Black Bear</i>, London, n.d., is good but no peer to his work
+ on the grizzly. Also OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 29. Coyotes, Lobos, and Panthers
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I SEPARATE COYOTES, lobos, and panthers from the mass of animals because
+ they, along with bears, have made such an imprint on human imagination.
+ White-tailed deer are far more common and more widely dispersed. Men,
+ women also, by the tens of thousands go out with rifles every fall in
+ efforts to get near them; but the night-piercing howl and the cunning ways
+ of the coyote, the panther's track and the rumor of his scream have
+ inspired more folk tales than all the deer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lore and facts about these animals are dispersed in many books not
+ classifiable under natural history. Lewis and Clark and nearly all the
+ other chroniclers of Trans-Mississippi America set down much on wild life.
+ James Pike's <i>Scout and Ranger</i> details the manner in which, he says,
+ a panther covered him up alive, duplicating a fanciful and delightful tale
+ in Gerstaecker's <i>Wild Sports in the Far West</i>. James B. O'Neil
+ concludes <i>They Die but Once</i> with some "Bedtime Stories" that&mdash;almost
+ necessarily&mdash;bring in a man-hungry panther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COYOTES AND LOBOS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two full-length books on Brother Coyote listed below specify most of
+ the printed literature on the animal. (He is "Brother" in Mexican tales
+ and I feel much more brotherly toward him than I feel toward character
+ assassins in political power.) It would require another book to catalogue
+ in detail all the writings that include folk tales about Don Coyote.
+ Ethnologists and scientific folklorists recognize what they call "the
+ Coyote Circle" in the folklore of many tribes of Indians. Morris Edward
+ Opler in <i>Myths and Legends of the Lipan Apache Indians</i>, 1940, and
+ in <i>Myths and Tales of the Chiricahua Apache Indians</i>, 1942 (both
+ issued by the American Folklore Society, New York) treats fully of this
+ cycle. Numerous tales that belong to the cycle are included by J. Gilbert
+ McAllister, an anthropologist who writes as a humanist, in his extended
+ collection, "Kiowa-Apache Tales," in <i>The Sky Is My Tipi</i>, edited by
+ Mody C. Boatright for the Texas Folklore Society (Publication XXII),
+ Southern Methodist University Press, Dallas, 1949.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Literary retellers of Indian coyote folk tales have been many. The
+ majority of retellers from western Indians include Coyote. One of the very
+ best is Frank B. Linderman, in <i>Indian Why Stories</i> and <i>Indian
+ Old-Man Stories</i>. These titles are substantive: <i>Old Man Coyote</i>
+ by Clara Kern Bayliss (New York, 1908, OP), <i>Coyote Stories</i> by
+ Mourning Dove (Caldwell, Idaho, 1934, OP); <i>Don Coyote</i> by Leigh Peck
+ (Boston, 1941) gets farther away from the Indian, is more juvenile. The <i>Journal
+ of American Folklore</i> and numerous Mexican books have published
+ hundreds of coyote folk tales from Mexico. Among the most pleasingly told
+ are <i>Picture Tales frown Mexico</i> by Dan Storm, 1941 (Lippincott,
+ Philadelphia). The first two writers listed below bring in folklore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CUSHING, FRANK HAMILTON. <i>Zuni Breadstuff</i>, Museum of the American
+ Indian, Heye Foundation, New York, 1920. This extraordinary book, one of
+ the most extraordinary ever written on a particular people, is not made up
+ of coyote lore alone. In it the coyote becomes a character of dignity and
+ destiny, and the telling is epic in dignity as well as in prolongation.
+ Frank Hamilton Cushing was a genius; his sympathy, insight, knowledge, and
+ mastery of the art of writing enabled him to reveal the spirit of the Zuni
+ Indians as almost no other writer has revealed the spirit of any other
+ tribe. Their attitude toward Coyote is beautifully developed. Cushing's <i>Zuni
+ Folk Tales</i> (Knopf, New York, 1901, 1931) is climactic on "tellings"
+ about Coyote.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOBIE, J. FRANK. <i>The Voice of the Coyote</i>, Little, Brown, Boston,
+ 1949. Not only the coyote but his effect on human imagination and
+ ecological relationships. Natural history and folklore; many tales from
+ factual trappers as well as from Mexican and Indian folk. This is a
+ strange book in some ways. If the author had quit at the end of the first
+ chapter, which is on coyote voicings and their meaning to varied
+ listeners, he would still have said something. The book includes some, but
+ by no means all, of the material on the subject in <i>Coyote Wisdom</i>
+ (Publication XIV of the Texas Folklore Society, 1938) edited by J. Frank
+ Dobie and now distributed by Southern Methodist University Press, Dallas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GRINNELL, GEORGE BIRD. Wolves and Wolf Nature, in <i>Trail and Camp-Fire</i>,
+ New York, 1897. This long chapter is richer in facts about the coyote than
+ anything published prior to <i>The Voice of the Coyote</i>, which borrows
+ from it extensively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LOFBERG, LILA, and MALCOLMSON, DAVID. <i>Sierra Outpost</i>, Duell, Sloan
+ and Pearce, New York, 1941. An extraordinary detailment of the friendship
+ between two people, isolated by snow high in the California Sierras, and
+ three coyotes. Written with fine sympathy, minute in observations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MATHEWS, JOHN JOSEPH. <i>Talking to the Moon</i>, University of Chicago
+ Press, 1945. A wise and spiritual interpretation of the black-jack country
+ of eastern Oklahoma, close to the Osages, in which John Joseph Mathews
+ lives. Not primarily about coyotes, the book illuminates them more than
+ numerous books on particular animals illuminate their subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MURIE, ADOLPH. <i>Ecology of the Coyote in the Yellowstone</i>, United
+ States Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1940. An example of
+ strict science informed by civilized humanity. <i>The Wolves of Mount
+ McKinley</i>, United States Government Printing Of ice, Washington, D. C.,
+ 1944. Murie's combination of prolonged patience, science, and sympathy
+ behind the observations has never been common. His ecological point of
+ view is steady. Highly interesting reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ YOUNG, STANLEY PAUL (with Edward A. Goldman). <i>The Wolves of North
+ America</i>, American Wildlife Institute, Washington, D. C., 1944. Full
+ information, full bibliography, without narrative power. <i>Sketches of
+ American Wildlife</i>, Monumental Press, Baltimore, 1946. This slight book
+ contains pleasant chapters on the Puma, Wolf, Coyote, Antelope and other
+ animals characteristic of the West. (With Hartley H. T. Jackson) <i>The
+ Clever Coyote</i>, Stackpole, Harrisburg, Pa., and Wildlife Management
+ Institute, Washington, D. C., 1951. Emphasis upon the economic status and
+ control of the species, an extended classification of subspecies, and a
+ full bibliography make this book and Dobie's <i>The Voice of the Coyote</i>
+ complemental to each other rather than duplicative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PANTHERS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anybody who so wishes may call them mountain lions. Where there were Negro
+ mammies, white children were likely to be haunted in the night by fear of
+ ghosts. Otherwise, for some children of the South and West, no imagined
+ terror of the night equaled the panther's scream. The Anglo-American lore
+ pertaining to the panther is replete with stories of attacks on human
+ beings. Indian and Spanish lore, clear down to where W. H. Hudson of the
+ pampas heard it, views the animal as <i>un amigo de los cristianos</i>&mdash;a
+ friend of man. The panther is another animal as interesting for what
+ people associated with him have taken to be facts as for the facts
+ themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BARKER, ELLIOTT S. <i>When the Dogs Barked `Treed'</i>, University of New
+ Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 1946. Mainly on mountain lions, but firsthand
+ observations on other predatory animals also. Before he became state game
+ warden, the author was for years with the United States Forest Service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HIBBEN, FRANK C. <i>Hunting American Lions</i>, New York, 1948; reprinted
+ by University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque. Mr. Hibben considers
+ hunting panthers and bears a terribly dangerous business that only
+ intrepid heroes like him-self would undertake. Sometimes in this book, but
+ more awesomely in <i>Hunting American Bears</i>, he manages to out-zane
+ Zane Grey, who had to warn his boy scout readers and puerile-minded
+ readers of added years that <i>Roping Lions in the Grand Canyon</i> is
+ true in contrast to the fictional <i>Young Lion Hunter</i>, which uses
+ some of the same material.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HUDSON, W. H. <i>The Naturalist in La Plata</i>, New York, 1892. A chapter
+ in this book entitled "The Puma, or Lion of America" provoked an attack
+ from Theodore Roosevelt (in <i>Outdoor Pastimes of an American Hunter</i>);
+ but it remains the most delightful narrative-essay yet written on the
+ subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ YOUNG, STANLEY PAUL, and GOLDMAN, EDWARD A. <i>The Puma, Mysterious
+ American Cat</i>, American Wildlife Institute, Washington, D. C., 1946.
+ Scientific, liberal with information of human interest, bibliography. We
+ get an analysis of the panther's scream but it does not curdle the blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 30. Birds and Wild Flowers
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ NEARLY EVERYBODY ENJOYS to an extent the singing of birds and the colors
+ of flowers; to the majority, however, the enjoyment is casual,
+ generalized, vague, in the same category as that derived from a short
+ spell of prattling by a healthy baby. Individuals who study birds and
+ native flora experience an almost daily refreshment of the spirit and
+ growth of the intellect. For them the world is an unending Garden of
+ Delight and a hundred-yard walk down a creek that runs through town or
+ pasture is an exploration. Hardly anything beyond good books, good
+ pictures and music, and good talk is so contributory to the enrichment of
+ life as a sympathetic knowledge of the birds, wild flowers, and other
+ native fauna and flora around us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The books listed are dominantly scientific. Some include keys to
+ identification. Once a person has learned to use the key for identifying
+ botanical or ornithological species, he can spend the remainder of his
+ life adding to his stature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BIRDS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BAILEY, FLORENCE MERRIAM. <i>Birds of New Mexico</i>, 1928. OP. Said by
+ those who know to be at the top of all state bird books. Much on habits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BEDICHEK, ROY. <i>Adventures with a Texas Naturalist</i> (1947) and <i>Karankaway
+ Country</i> (1950), Doubleday, Garden City, N. Y. These are books of
+ essays on various aspects of nature, but nowhere else can one find an
+ equal amount of penetrating observation on chimney swifts, Inca doves,
+ swallows, golden eagles, mockingbirds, herons, prairie chickens, whooping
+ cranes, swifts, scissortails, and some other birds. As Bedichek writes of
+ them they become integrated with all life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BRANDT, HERBERT. <i>Arizona and Its Bird Life</i>, Bird Research
+ Foundation, Cleveland, 1951. This beautiful, richly illustrated volume of
+ 525 pages lives up to its title; the birds belong to the Arizona country,
+ and with them we get pines, mesquites, cottonwoods, John Slaughter's
+ ranch, the northward-flowing San Pedro, and many other features of the
+ land. Herbert Brandt's <i>Texas Bird Adventures</i>, illustrated by George
+ Miksch Sutton (Cleveland, 1940), is more on the Big Bend country and ranch
+ country to the north than on birds, though birds are here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DAWSON, WILLIAM LEON. <i>The Birds of California</i>, San Diego, etc.,
+ California, 1923. OP. Four magnificent volumes, full in illustrations,
+ special observations on birds, and scientific data.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOBIE, J. FRANK, who is no more of an ornithologist than he is a
+ geologist, specialized on an especially characteristic bird of the
+ Southwest and gathered its history, habits, and folklore into a long
+ article: "The Roadrunner in Fact and Folklore," in <i>In the Shadow of
+ History</i>, Publication XV of the Texas Folklore Society, Austin, 1939.
+ OP. "Bob More: Man and Bird Man," <i>Southwest Review</i>, Dallas, Vol.
+ XXVII, No. 1 (Autumn, 1941).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NICE, MARGARET MORSE. <i>The Birds of Oklahoma</i>, Norman, 1931. OP.
+ United States Biological Survey publication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OBERHOLSER, HARRY CHURCH. The Birds of Texas in manuscript form. "A
+ stupendous work, the greatest of its genre, by the nation's outstanding
+ ornithologist, who has been fifty years making it." The quotation is
+ condensed from an essay by Roy Bedichek in the <i>Southwest Review</i>,
+ Dallas, Vol. XXXVIII, No. 1 (Winter, 1953). Maybe some day some man or
+ woman with means will see the light of civilized patriotism and underwrite
+ the publication of these great volumes. Patriotism that does not act to
+ promote the beautiful, the true, and the good had better pipe down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PETERSON, ROGER TORY. <i>A Field Guide to Western Birds</i> (1941) and <i>A
+ Field Guide to the Birds</i> (birds of the eastern United States, revised
+ 1947), Houghton Mifflin, Boston. These are standard guides for
+ identification. The range, habits, and characteristics of each bird are
+ summarized.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIMMONS, GEORGE FINLEY. <i>Birds of the Austin Region</i>, University of
+ Texas Press, Austin, 1925. A very thorough work, including migratory as
+ well as nesting species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SUTTON, GEORGE MIKSCH. <i>Mexican Birds</i>, illustrated with water-color
+ and pen-and-ink drawings by the author, University of Oklahoma Press,
+ Norman, 1951. The main part of this handsome book is a personal narrative&mdash;pleasant
+ to read even by one who is not a bird man&mdash;of discovery in Mexico. To
+ it is appended a resume of Mexican bird life for the use of other seekers.
+ Sutton's <i>Birds in the Wilderness: Adventures of an Ornithologist</i>
+ (Macmillan, New York, 1936) contains essays on pet roadrunners, screech
+ owls, and other congenial folk of the Big Bend of Texas. <i>The Birds of
+ Brewster County, Texas</i>, in collaboration with Josselyn Van Tyne, is a
+ publication of the Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, University
+ of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, 1937.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Wild Turkey</i>. Literature on this national bird is enormous. Among
+ books I name first <i>The Wild Turkey and Its Hunting</i>, by Edward A.
+ McIlhenny, New York, 1914. OP. McIlhenny was a singular man. His family
+ settled on Avery Island, Louisiana, in 1832; he made it into a famous
+ refuge for wild fowls. The memories of individuals of a family long
+ established on a country estate go back several lifetimes. In two books of
+ Negro folklore and in <i>The Alligator's Life History</i>, McIlhenny wrote
+ as an inheritor. Initially, he was a hunter-naturalist, but scientific
+ enough to publish in the <i>Auk</i> and the <i>Journal of Heredity</i>.
+ Age, desire for knowledge, and practice in the art of living dimmed his
+ lust for hunting and sharpened his interest in natural history. His book
+ on the wild turkey, an extension into publishable form of a manuscript
+ from a civilized Alabama hunter, is delightful and illuminative reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>The Wild Turkey of Virginia</i>, by Henry S. Mosby and Charles O.
+ Handley, published by the Commission of Game and Inland Fisheries of
+ Virginia, Richmond, 1943, is written from the point of view of wild life
+ management. It contains an extensive bibliography. Less technical is <i>The
+ American Wild Turkey</i>, by Henry E. Davis, Small Arms Technical Company,
+ Georgetown, South Carolina, 1949. No strain, or subspecies, of the wild
+ turkey is foreign to any other, but human blends in J. Stokley Ligon,
+ naturalist, are unique. The title of his much-in-little book is <i>History
+ and Management of Merriam's Wild Turkey</i>, New Mexico Game and Fish
+ Commission, through the University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 1946.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WILD FLOWERS AND GRASSES
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scientific literature on botany of western America is extensive. The
+ list that follows is for laymen as much as for botanists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BENSON, LYMAN, and DARROW, ROBERT A. <i>A Manual of Southwestern Desert
+ Trees and Shrubs</i>, Biological Science Bulletin No. 6, University of
+ Arizona, Tucson, 1944. A thorough work of 411 pages, richly illustrated,
+ with general information added to scientific description.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CARR, WILLIAM HENRY. <i>Desert Parade: A Guide to Southwestern Desert
+ Plants and Wildlife</i>, Viking, New York, 1947.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CLEMENTS, FREDERIC E. and EDITH S. <i>Rocky Mountain Flowers</i>, H. W.
+ Wilson, New York, 1928. Scientific description, with glossary of terms and
+ key for identification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ COULTER, JOHN M. <i>Botany of Western Texas</i>, United States Department
+ of Agriculture, Washington, 1891-94. OP. Nothing has appeared during the
+ past sixty years to take the place of this master opus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GEISER, SAMUEL WOOD. <i>Horticulture and Horticulturists in Early Texas</i>,
+ Southern Methodist University Press, Dallas, 1945. Historical-scientific,
+ more technical than the author's <i>Naturalists of the Frontier</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JAEGER, EDMUND C. <i>Desert Wild Flowers</i>, Stanford University Press,
+ California, 1940, revised 1947. Scientific but designed for use by any
+ intelligent inquirer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LUNDELL, CYRUS L., and collaborators. <i>Flora of Texas</i>, Southern
+ Methodist University Press, Dallas, 1942-. A "monumental" work, highly
+ technical, being published part by part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MCKELVEY, SUSAN DELANO. <i>Yuccas of the Southwestern United States</i>,
+ Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1938. Definitive work in two volumes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Range Plant Handbook</i>, prepared by the Forest Service of the United
+ States Department of Agriculture. United States Government Printing
+ Office, Washington, 1937. A veritable encyclopedia, illustrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SCHULZ, ELLEN D. <i>Texas Wild Flowers</i>, Chicago, 1928. Good as a
+ botanical guide and also for human uses; includes lore on many plants. OP.
+ <i>Cactus Culture</i>, Orange Judd, New York, 1932. Now in revised
+ edition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SILVIUS, W. A. <i>Texas Grasses</i>, published by the author, San Antonio,
+ 1933. A monument, of 782 illustrated pages, to a lifetime's disinterested
+ following of knowledge "like a star."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STEVENS, WILLIAM CHASE. <i>Kansas Wild Flowers</i>, University of Kansas
+ Press, Lawrence, 1948. This is more than a state book, and the integration
+ of knowledge, wisdom, and appreciation of flower life with botanical
+ science makes it appeal to layman as well as to botanist. 463 pages, 774
+ illustrations. Applicable to the whole plains area.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ STOCKWELL, WILLIAM PALMER, and BREAZEALE, LUCRETIA. <i>Arizona Cacti</i>,
+ Biological Science Bulletin No. 1, University of Arizona, Tucson, 1933.
+ Beautifully illustrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THORNBER, JOHN JAMES, and BONKER, FRANCES. <i>The Fantastic Clan: The
+ Cactus Family</i>, New York, 1932. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THORP, BENJAMIN CARROLL. <i>Texas Range Grasses</i>, University of Texas
+ Press, Austin, 1952. A survey of 168 species of grasses, their
+ adaptability to soils and regions, and their values for grazing.
+ Beautifully illustrated and printed, but no index.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WHITEHOUSE, EULA. <i>Texas Wild Flowers in Natural Colors</i>, 1936;
+ republished 1948 in Dallas. OP. Toward 200 flowers are pictured in colors,
+ each in conjunction with descriptive material. The finding lists are
+ designed to enable novices to identify flowers. A charming book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {illust. caption = Paisano (roadrunner) means fellow-countryman}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 31. Negro Folk Songs and Tales
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WEST OF A WAVERING line along the western edge of the central parts of
+ Texas and Oklahoma the Negro is not an important social or cultural
+ element of the Southwest, just as the modern Indian hardly enters into
+ Texas life at all and the Mexican recedes to the east. Negro folk songs
+ and tales of the Southwest have in treatment been blended with those of
+ the South. Dorothy Scarborough's <i>On the Trail of Negro Folk-Songs</i>
+ (1925, OP) derives mainly from Texas, but in making up the body of a Negro
+ song, Miss Scarborough says, "You may find one bone in Texas, one in
+ Virginia and one in Mississippi." Leadbelly, a guitar player equally at
+ home in the penitentiaries of Texas and Louisiana, furnished John A. and
+ Alan Lomax with <i>Negro Folk Songs as Sung by Leadbelly</i>, New York,
+ 1936 (OP). The Lomax anthologies, <i>American Ballads and Folk Songs</i>,
+ 1934, and <i>Our Singing Country</i>, 1941 (Macmillan, New York) and Carl
+ Sandburg's <i>American Songbag</i> (Harcourt, Brace, New York, 1927) all
+ give the Negro of the Southwest full representation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three books of loveliness by R. Emmett Kennedy, <i>Black Cameos</i>
+ (1924), <i>Mellows</i> (1925), and <i>More Mellows</i> (1931) represent
+ Louisiana Negroes. All are OP. An excellent all-American collection is
+ James Weldon Johnson's <i>Book of American Negro Spirituals</i>, Viking,
+ New York, 1940. Bibliographies and lists of other books will be found in
+ <i>The Negro and His Songs</i> (1925, OP) and <i>Negro Workaday Songs</i>,
+ by Howard W. Odum and Guy B. Johnson, University of North Carolina Press,
+ Chapel Hill, 1926, and in <i>American Negro Folk-Songs</i>, by Newman I.
+ White, Cambridge, 1928.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A succinct guide to Negro lore is <i>American Folk Song and Folk Lore: A
+ Regional Bibliography</i>, by Alan Lomax and Sidney R. Crowell, New York,
+ 1942. OP.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Narrowing the field down to Texas, J. Mason Brewer's "Juneteenth," in <i>Tone
+ the Bell Easy</i>, Publication X of the Texas Folklore Society, Austin,
+ 1932, is outstanding as a collection of tales. In volume after volume the
+ Texas Folklore Society has published collections of Negro songs and tales
+ A. W. Eddins, Martha Emmons, Gates Thomas, and H. B. Parks being principal
+ contributors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 32. Fiction&mdash;Including Folk Tales
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ FROM THE DAYS of the first innocent sensations in Beadle's Dime Novel
+ series, on through Zane Grey's mass production and up to any present-day
+ newsstand's crowded shelf of <i>Ace High</i> and <i>Flaming Guns</i>
+ magazines, the Southwest, along with all the rest of the West, has been
+ represented in a fictional output quantitatively stupendous. Most of it
+ has betrayed rather than revealed life, though not with the contemptible
+ contempt for both audience and subject that characterizes most of
+ Hollywood's pictures on the same times, people, and places. Certain
+ historical aspects of the fictional betrayal of the West may be found in
+ E. Douglas Branch's <i>The Cowboy and His Interpreters</i>, in <i>The
+ House of Beadle and Adams and Its Dime and Nickel Novels</i>, by Albert
+ Johannsen in two magnificent volumes, and in Jay Monaghan's <i>The Great
+ Rascal: The Life and Adventures of Ned Buntline</i> Buntline having been
+ perhaps the most prolific of all Wild West fictionists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some "Westerns" have a kind of validity. If a serious reader went through
+ the hundreds of titles produced by William McLeod Raine, Dane Coolidge,
+ Eugene Cunningham,. B. M. Bower, the late Ernest Haycox, and other
+ manufacturers of range novels who have known their West at firsthand, he
+ would find, spottedly, a surprising amount of truth about land and men, a
+ fluency in genuine cowboy lingo, and a respect for the code of conduct.
+ Yet even these novels have added to the difficulty that serious writing in
+ the Western field has in getting a hearing on literary, rather than merely
+ Western, grounds. Any writer of Westerns must, like all other creators, be
+ judged on his own intellectual development. "The Western and Ernest
+ Haycox," by James Fargo, in <i>Prairie Schooner</i>, XXVI (Summer, 1952)
+ has something on this subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Actualities in the Southwest seem to have stifled fictional creation. No
+ historical novel dealing with Texas history has achieved the drama of the
+ fall of the Alamo or the drawing of the black beans, has presented a
+ character with half the reality of Sam Houston, Jim Bowie, or Sallie
+ Skull, or has captured the flavor inherent in the talk on many a ranch
+ gallery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Historical fiction dealing with early day Texas is, however, distinctly
+ maturing. As a dramatization of Jim Bowie and the bowie knife, <i>The Iron
+ Mistress</i>, by Paul Wellman (Doubleday, Garden City, New York, 1951), is
+ the best novel published so far dealing with a figure of the Texas
+ revolution. In <i>Divine Average</i> (Little, Brown, Boston, 1952), Elithe
+ Hamilton Kirkland weaves from her seasoned knowledge of life and from
+ "realities of those violent years in Texas history between 1838 and 1858"
+ a story of human destiny. She reveals the essential nature of Range
+ Templeton more distinctly, more mordantly, than history has revealed the
+ essential nature of Sam Houston or any of his contemporaries. The wife and
+ daughter of Range Templeton are the most plausible women in any historical
+ novel of Texas that I have read. The created world here is more real than
+ the actual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the early tale-tellers of the Southwest are Jeremiah Clemens, who
+ wrote <i>Mustang Gray</i>, Mollie E. Moore Davis, of plantation tradition,
+ Mayne Reid, who dared convey real information in his romances, Charles W.
+ Webber, a naturalist, and T. B. Thorpe, creator of "The Big Bear of
+ Arkansas."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fiction that appeared before World War I can hardly be called modern. No
+ fiction is likely to appear, however, that will do better by certain types
+ of western character and certain stages of development in western society
+ than that produced by Bret Harte, with his gamblers; stage drivers, and
+ mining camps; O. Henry with his "Heart of the West" types; Alfred Henry
+ Lewis with his "Wolfville" anecdotes and characters; Owen Wister, whose <i>Virginian</i>
+ remains the classic of cowboy novels without cows; and Andy Adams, whose
+ <i>Log of a Cowboy</i> will be read as long as people want a narrative of
+ cowboys sweating with herds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The authors listed below are in alphabetical order. Those who seem to me
+ to have a chance to survive are not exactly in that order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FRANK APPLEGATE (died 1932) wrote only two books, <i>Native Tales of New
+ Mexico</i> and <i>Indian Stories from the Pueblos</i>, but as a delighted
+ and delightful teller of folk tales his place is secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MARY AUSTIN seems to be settling down as primarily an expositor. Her
+ novels are no longer read, but the simple tales in <i>One-Smoke Stories</i>
+ (her last book, 1934) and in some nonfiction collections, notably <i>Lost
+ Borders</i> and <i>The Flock</i>, do not recede with time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the Southwest can hardly claim Willa Cather, of Nebraska, her <i>Death
+ Comes for the Archbishop</i> (1927), which is made out of New Mexican
+ life, is not only the best-known novel concerned with the Southwest but
+ one of the finest of America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Despite the fact that it is not on the literary map, Will Levington
+ Comfort's <i>Apache</i> (1931) remains for me the most moving and incisive
+ piece of writing on Indians of the Southwest that I have found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If a teller of folk tales and plotless narratives belongs in this chapter,
+ then J. Frank Dobie should be mentioned for the folk tales in <i>Coronado's
+ Children, Apache Gold and Yaqui Silver</i>, and <i>Tongues of the Monte</i>,
+ also for some of his animal tales in <i>The Voice of the Coyote</i>,
+ outlaw and maverick narratives in <i>The Longhorns</i>, and "The Pacing
+ White Steed of the Prairies" and other horse stories in <i>The Mustangs</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The characters in Harvey Fergusson's <i>Wolf Song</i> (1927) are the
+ Mountain Men of Kit Carson's time, and the city of their soul is rollicky
+ Taos. It is a lusty, swift song of the pristine earth. Fergusson's <i>The
+ Blood of the Conquerors</i> (1931) tackles the juxtaposition of
+ Spanish-Mexican and Anglo-American elements in New Mexico, of which state
+ he is a native. <i>Grant of Kingdom</i> (1850) is strong in wisdom life,
+ vitality of character, and historical values.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FRED GIPSON'S <i>Hound-Dog Man</i> and <i>The Home Place</i> lack the
+ critical attitude toward life present in great fiction but they are as
+ honest and tonic as creek bottom soil and the people in them are genuine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FRANK GOODWYN'S <i>The Magic of Limping John</i> (New York, 1944, OP) is a
+ coherence of Mexican characters, folk tales, beliefs, and ways in the
+ ranch country of South Texas. There is something of magic in the telling,
+ but Frank Goodwyn has not achieved objective control over imagination or
+ sufficiently stressed the art of writing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PAUL HORGAN of New Mexico has in <i>The Return of the Weed</i> (short
+ stories), <i>Far from Cibola</i>, and other fiction coped with modern life
+ in the past-haunted New Mexico.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OLIVER LAFARGE'S <i>Laughing Boy</i> (1929) grew out of the author's
+ ethnological knowledge of the Navajo Indians. He achieves character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TOM LEA'S <i>The Brave Bulls</i> (1949) has, although it is a sublimation
+ of the Mexican bullfighting world, Death and Fear of Death for its
+ dominant theme. It may be compared in theme with Stephen Crane's <i>The
+ Red Badge of Courage</i>. It is written with the utmost of economy, and is
+ beautiful in its power. <i>The Wonderful Country</i> (1952), a historical
+ novel of the frontier, but emphatically not a "Western," recognizes more
+ complexities of society. Its economy and directness parallel the style of
+ Tom Lea's drawings and paintings, with which both books are illustrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Sundown</i>, by John Joseph Mathews (1934), goes more profoundly than
+ <i>Laughing Boy</i> into the soul of a young Indian (an Osage) and his
+ people. Its translation of the "long, long thoughts" of the boy and then
+ of "shades of the prison house" closing down upon him is superb writing.
+ The "shades of the prison house" come from oil, with all of the world's
+ coarse thumbs that go with oil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GEORGE SESSIONS PERRY'S <i>Hold Autumn in Your Hand</i> (1941) incarnates
+ a Texas farm hand too poor "to flag a gut-wagon," but with the good
+ nature, dignity, and independence of the earth itself. <i>Walls Rise Up</i>
+ (1939) is a kind of <i>Crock of Gold</i>, both whimsical and earthy, laid
+ on the Brazos River.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KATHERINE ANNE PORTER is as dedicated to artistic perfection as was A. E.
+ Housman. Her output has, therefore, been limited: <i>Flowering Judas</i>
+ (1930, enlarged 1935); <i>Pale Horse, Pale Rider</i> (1939), <i>The
+ Leaning Tower</i> (1944). Her stories penetrate psychology, especially the
+ psychology of a Mexican hacienda, with rare finesse. Her small canvases
+ sublimate the inner realities of men and women. She appeals only to
+ cultivated taste, and to some tastes no other fiction writer in America
+ today is her peer in subtlety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ EUGENE MANLOVE RHODES died in 1934. Most of his novels&mdash;distinguished
+ by intricate plots and bright dialogue&mdash;had appeared in the <i>Saturday
+ Evening Post</i>. His finest story is "Paso Por Aqui," published in the
+ volume entitled <i>Once in the Saddle</i> (1927). Gene Rhodes, who has a
+ canyon&mdash;on which he ranched&mdash;named for him in New Mexico, was an
+ artist; at the same time, he was a man akin to his land and its men. He is
+ the only writer of the range country who has been accorded a biography&mdash;<i>The
+ Hired Man on Horseback</i>, by May D. Rhodes, his wife. See under "Range
+ Life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CONRAD RICHTER'S <i>The Sea of Grass</i> (1937) is a kind of prose poem,
+ beautiful and tragic. Lutie, wife of the owner of the grass, is perhaps
+ the most successful creation of a ranch woman that fiction has so far
+ achieved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DOROTHY SCARBOROUGH'S <i>The Wind</i> (1925) excited the wrath of chambers
+ of commerce and other boosters in West Texas&mdash;a tribute to its
+ realism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>The Grapes of Wrath</i>, by John Steinbeck (1939), made Okies a word in
+ the American language. Although dated by the Great Depression, its
+ humanity and realism are beyond date. It is among the few good novels
+ produced by America in the first half of the twentieth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOHN W. THOMASON, after fighting as a marine in World War I, wrote <i>Fix
+ Bayonets</i> (1926), followed by <i>Jeb Stuart</i> (1930). A native Texan,
+ he followed the southern tradition rather than the western. <i>Lone Star
+ Preacher</i> (1941) is a strong and sympathetic characterization of
+ Confederate fighting men woven into fictional form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In <i>High John the Conqueror</i> (Macmillan, 1948) John W. Wilson conveys
+ real feeling for the tragic life of Negro sharecroppers in the Brazos
+ bottoms. He represents the critical awareness of life that has come to
+ modern fiction of the Southwest, in contrast to the sterile action,
+ without creation of character, in most older fiction of the region.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 33. Poetry and Drama
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "KNOWLEDGE itself is power," Sir Francis Bacon wrote in classical Latin,
+ and in abbreviated form the proverb became a familiar in households and
+ universities alike. But knowledge of what? There is no power in knowledge
+ of mediocre verse.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I had rather flunk my Wasserman test
+ Than read a poem by Edgar A. Guest.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The power of great poetry lies not in knowledge of it but in assimilation
+ of it. Most talk about poetry is vacuous. Poetry can pass no power into
+ any human being unless it itself has power&mdash;power of beauty, truth,
+ wit, humor, pathos, satire, worship, and other attributes, always through
+ form. No poor poetry is worth reading. Taste for the best makes the other
+ kind insipid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Compared with America's best poetry, most poetry of the Southwest is as
+ mediocre as American poetry in the mass is as compared with the great body
+ of English poetry between Chaucer and Masefield. Yet mediocre poetry is
+ not so bad as mediocre sculpture. The mediocre in poetry is merely
+ fatuous; in sculpture, it is ugly. Generations to come will have to look
+ at Coppini's monstrosity in front of the Alamo; it can't rot down or burn
+ up. Volumes of worthless verse, most of it printed at the expense of the
+ versifiers, hardly come to sight, and before long they disappear from
+ existence except for copies religiously preserved in public libraries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Weak fiction goes the same way. But a good deal of very bad prose in the
+ nonfiction field has some value. In an otherwise dull book there may be a
+ solitary anecdote, an isolated observation on a skunk, a single gesture of
+ some human being otherwise highly unimportant, one salty phrase, a side
+ glimpse into the human comedy. If poetry is not good, it is positively
+ nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The earliest poet of historical consequence the only form of his poetical
+ consequence&mdash;of the Southwest was Mirabeau Buonaparte Lamar. He led
+ the Texas cavalry at San Jacinto, became president of the Republic of
+ Texas, organized the futile Santa Fe Expedition, gathered up six volumes
+ of notes and letters for a history of Texas that might have been as
+ raw-meat realistic as anything in Zola or Tolstoy. Then as a poet he
+ reached his climax in "The Daughter of Mendoza"&mdash;a graceful but
+ moonshiny imitation of Tom Moore and Lord Byron. Perhaps it is better for
+ the weak to imitate than to try to be original.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would not take one more than an hour to read aloud all the poetry of
+ the Southwest that could stand rereading. At the top of all I should place
+ Fay Yauger's "Planter's Charm," published in a volume of the same title.
+ With it belongs "The Hired Man on Horseback," by Eugene Manlove Rhodes, a
+ long poem of passionate fidelity to his own decent kind of men, with power
+ to ennoble the reader, and with the form necessary to all beautiful
+ composition. This is the sole and solitary piece of poetry to be found in
+ all the myriads of rhymes classed as "cowboy poetry." I'd want Stanley
+ Vestal's "Fandango," in a volume of the same title. Margaret Bell
+ Houston's "Song from the Traffic," which takes one to the feathered
+ mesquites and the bluebonnets, might come next. Begging pardon of the
+ perpetually palpitating New Mexico lyricists, I would skip most of them,
+ except for bits of Mary Austin, Witter Bynner, Haniel Long, and maybe
+ somebody I don't know, and go to George Sterling's "Father Coyote"&mdash;in
+ California. Probably I would come back to gallant Phil LeNoir's "Finger of
+ Billy the Kid," written while he was dying of tuberculosis in New Mexico.
+ I wouldn't leave without the swift, brilliantly economical stanzas that
+ open the ballad of "Sam Bass," and a single line, "He came of a solitary
+ race," in the ballad of "Jesse James."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several other poets have, of course, achieved something for mortals to
+ enjoy and be lifted by. Their work has been sifted into various
+ anthologies. The best one is<i> Signature of the Sun: Southwest Verse,
+ 1900-1950</i>, selected and edited by Mabel Major and T. M. Pearce,
+ University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 1950. Two other anthologies
+ are <i>Songs of the Cattle Trail and Cow Camp</i>, by John A. Lomax, 1919,
+ reprinted in 1950 by Duell, Sloan and Pearce, New York; <i>The Road to
+ Texas</i>, by Whitney Montgomery, Kaleidograph, Dallas, 1940. Montgomery's
+ Kaleidograph Press has published many volumes by southwestern poets.
+ Somebody who has read them all and has read all the poets represented,
+ without enough of distillation, in <i>Signature of the Sun</i> could no
+ doubt be juster on the subject than I am.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like historical fiction, drama of the Southwest has been less dramatic
+ than actuality and less realistic than real characters. Lynn Riggs of
+ Oklahoma, author of <i>Green Grow the Lilacs</i>, has so far been the most
+ successful dramatist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 34. Miscellaneous Interpreters and Institutions
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ARTISTS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ART MAY BE SUBSTANTIVE, but more than being its own excuse for being, it
+ lights up the land it depicts, shows people what is significant,
+ cherishable in their own lives and environments. Thus Peter Hurd of New
+ Mexico has revealed windmills, Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri has elevated
+ mules. Nature may not literally follow art, but human eyes follow art and
+ literature in recognizing nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The history of art in the Southwest, if it is ever rightly written, will
+ not bother with the Italian "Holy Families" imported by agent-guided
+ millionaires trying to buy exclusiveness. It will begin with clay (Indian
+ pottery), horse hair (vaquero weaving), hide (vaquero plaiting), and horn
+ (backwoods carving). It will note Navajo sand painting and designs in
+ blankets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles M. Russell's art has been characterized in the chapter on "Range
+ Life." He had to paint, and the Old West was his life. More versatile was
+ his contemporary Frederic Remington, author of <i>Pony Tracks, Crooked
+ Trails</i>, and other books, and prolific illustrator of Owen Wister,
+ Theodore Roosevelt, Alfred Henry Lewis, and numerous other writers of the
+ West. Not so well known as these two, but rising in estimation, was
+ Charles Schreyvogle. He did not write; his best-known pictures are
+ reproduced in a folio entitled <i>My Bunkie and Others</i>. Remington,
+ Russell, and Schreyvogle all did superb sculptoring in bronze. One of the
+ finest pieces of sculpture in the Southwest is "The Seven Mustangs" by A.
+ Phimister Proctor, in front of the Texas Memorial Museum at Austin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among contemporary artists, Ross Santee and Will James (died, 1942) have
+ illustrated their own cow country books, some of which are listed under
+ "Range Life" and "Horses." William R. Leigh, author of <i>The Western Pony</i>,
+ is a significant painter of the range. Edward Borein of Santa Barbara,
+ California, has in scores of etchings and a limited amount of book
+ illustrations "documented" many phases of western life. Buck Dunton of
+ Taos illustrated also. His lithographs and paintings of wild animals,
+ trappers, cowboys, and Indians seem secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot name and evaluate modern artists of the Southwest. They are many,
+ and the excellence of numbers of them is nationally recognized. Many
+ articles have been written about the artists who during this century have
+ lived around Taos and painted that region of the Southwest. Some of the
+ better-known names are Ernest L. Blumenschein, Oscar Berninghaus, Ward
+ Lockwood, B. J. O. Nordfeldt, Georgia O'Keeffe, Ila McAfee, Barbara Latham
+ Cook, Howard Cook. Artists thrive in Arizona, Oklahoma, and Texas as well
+ as in New Mexico. Tom Lea, of El Paso, may be quitting painting and
+ drawing to spend the remainder of his life in writing. Perhaps he himself
+ does not know. Jerry Bywaters, who is at work on the history of art in the
+ Southwest, has about quit producing to direct the Dallas Museum of Fine
+ Arts. Alexandre Hogue gives his strength to teaching art in Tulsa
+ University. Exhibitions, not commentators, are the revealers of art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few books, all expensive, reproduce the art of certain depicters of the
+ West and Southwest. <i>Etchings of the West</i>, by Edward Borein, and <i>The
+ West of Alfred Jacob Miller</i> have been noted in other chapters (consult
+ Index). Other recent art works are: <i>Peter Hurd: Portfolio of Landscapes
+ and Portraits</i>, University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 1950; <i>Gallery
+ of Western Paintings</i>, edited by Raymond Carlson, McGraw-Hill, New
+ York, 1951 (unsatisfactory reproduction); <i>Frederic Remington, Artist of
+ the Old West</i>, by Harold McCracken, Lippincott, Philadelphia, 1947
+ (biography and check list with many reproductions); <i>Portrait of the Old
+ West</i>, by Harold McCracken, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1952 (samplings of
+ numerous artists).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In February, 1946, Robert Taft of the University of Kansas began
+ publishing in the <i>Kansas Historical Quarterly</i> chapters, richly
+ illustrated in black and white, in "The Pictorial Record of the Old West."
+ The book to be made from these chapters will have a historical validity
+ missing in most picture books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MAGAZINES
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The leading literary magazine of the region is the <i>Southwest Review</i>,
+ published quarterly at Southern Methodist University, Dallas. The <i>New
+ Mexico Quarterly</i>, published by the University of New Mexico at
+ Albuquerque, the <i>Arizona Quarterly</i>, published by the University of
+ Arizona at Tucson the <i>Colorado Quarterly</i>, published by the
+ University of Colorado at Boulder, and <i>Prairie Schooner</i>, University
+ of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, are excellent exponents of current writing in
+ the Southwest and West. All these magazines are liberated from
+ provincialism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HISTORICAL SOCIETIES
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every state in the Southwest has a state historical organization that
+ publishes. The oldest and most productive of these, outside of California,
+ is the Texas State Historical Association, with headquarters at Austin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HISTORIES
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A majority of the state histories of the Southwest have been written with
+ the hope of securing an adoption for school use. It would require a
+ blacksnake whip to make most juve-niles, or adults either, read these
+ productions, as devoid of picturesqueness, life-blood, and intellectual
+ content as so many concrete slabs. No genuinely humanistic history of the
+ Southwest has ever been printed. There are good factual histories&mdash;and
+ a history not based on facts can't possibly be good&mdash;but the lack of
+ synthesis, of intelligent evaluations, of imagination, of the seeing eye
+ and portraying hand is too evident. The stuff out of which history is
+ woven&mdash;diaries, personal narratives, county histories, chronicles of
+ ranches and trails, etc.&mdash;has been better done than history itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FOLKLORE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Considered scientifically, folklore belongs to science and not to the
+ humanities. When folk and fun are not scienced out of it, it is song and
+ story and in literature is mingled with other ingredients of life and art,
+ as exampled by the folklore in <i>Hamlet</i> and <i>A Midsummer Night's
+ Dream</i>. In "Indian Culture," "Spanish-Mexican Strains," "Backwoods Life
+ and Humor," "Cowboy Songs," "The Bad Man Tradition," "Bears," "Coyotes,"
+ "Negro Folk Songs and Tales," and other chapters of this <i>Guide</i>
+ numerous books charged with folklore have been listed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most active state society of its kind in America has been the Texas
+ Folklore Society, with headquarters at the University of Texas, Austin.
+ Volume XXIV of its Publications appeared in 1951, and it has published and
+ distributed other books. Its Publications are now distributed by Southern
+ Methodist University Press in Dallas. J. Frank Dobie, with constant help,
+ was editor from 1922 to 1943, when he resigned. Since 1943 Mody C.
+ Boatright has been editor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1947 the New Mexico Folklore Society began publishing yearly the <i>New
+ Mexico Folklore Record</i>. It is printed by the University of New Mexico
+ Press. The University of Arizona, Tucson, has published several folklore
+ bulletins. The California Folklore Society publishes, through the
+ University of California Press, Berkeley, <i>Western Folklore</i>, a
+ quarterly. In co-operation with the Southeastern Folklore Society, the
+ University of Florida, Gainesville, publishes the <i>Southern Folklore
+ Quarterly</i>. Levette J. Davidson of the University of Denver, author of
+ <i>A Guide to American Folklore</i>, University of Denver Press, 1951,
+ directs the Western Folklore Conference. The <i>Journal of American
+ Folklore</i> has published a good deal from the Southwest and Mexico. The
+ Sociedad Folklorica de Mexico publishes its own <i>Anurio</i>. Between
+ 1929 and 1932, B. A. Botkin, editor of <i>A Treasury of Southern Folklore</i>,
+ 1949, and A <i>Treasury of Western Folklore</i>, 1951 (Crown, New York),
+ brought out four volumes entitled <i>Folk-Say</i>, University of Oklahoma
+ Press. OP. The volumes are significant for literary utilizations of
+ folklore and interpretations of folks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MUSEUMS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Museums do not belong to the DAR. Their perspective on the past is
+ constructive. The growing museums in Santa Fe, Tucson, Phoenix, Tulsa,
+ Oklahoma City, Houston, San Antonio, Dallas, Austin, Denver, and on west
+ into California represent the art, fauna, flora, geology, archeology,
+ occupations, transportation, architecture, and other phases of the
+ Southwest in a way that may be more informing than many printed volumes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 35. Subjects for Themes
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE OBJECT OF THEME-WRITING is to make a student observe, to become aware,
+ to evaluate, to enrich himself. Any phase of life or literature named or
+ suggested in the foregoing chapters could be taken as a subject for an
+ essay. The most immature essay must be more than a summary; a mere summary
+ is never an essay. The writer must synthesize, make his own combination of
+ thoughts, facts, incidents, characteristics, anecdotes, interpretations,
+ illustrations, according to his own pattern. A writer is a weaver, weaving
+ various threads of various hues and textures into a design that is his
+ own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look into thy heart and write." "Write what you know about." All this is
+ good advice in a way&mdash;but students have to write themes whether they
+ have anything to write or not. The way to get full of a subject, to
+ generate a conveyable interest, is to fill up on the subject. As clouds
+ are but transient forms of matter that "change but cannot die," so most
+ writing, even the best, is but a variation in form of experiences, ideas,
+ observations, emotions that have been recorded over and over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In general, the materials a student weaves are derived from three sources:
+ what he has read, what he has heard, what he has observed and experienced
+ himself. If he chooses to sketch an interesting character, he will make
+ his sketch richer and more interesting if he reads all he can find that
+ illuminates his subject's background. If he sets out to tell a legend or a
+ series of related folk tales or anecdotes, he will improve his telling by
+ reading what he can on the subjects that his proposed narratives treat of
+ and by reading similar narratives already written by others. If he wishes
+ to tell what he knows about rattlesnakes, buzzards, pet coyotes, Brahma
+ cattle, prickly pear, cottonwoods, Caddo Lake, the Brazos River, Santa Fe
+ adobes, or other features of the land, let him bolster and put into
+ perspective his own knowledge by reading what others have said on the
+ matter. Knowledge fosters originality. Reading gives ideas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The list of subjects that follows is meant to be suggestive, and must not
+ be regarded as inclusive. The best subject for any writer is one that he
+ is interested in. A single name or category may afford scores of subjects.
+ For example, take Andy Adams, the writer about cowboys and range life. His
+ campfire yarns, the attitude of his cowboys toward their horses, what he
+ has to say about cows, the metaphor of the range as he has recorded it,
+ the placidity of his cowboys as opposed to Zane Grey sensationalism, etc.,
+ are a few of the subjects to be derived from a study of his books. Or take
+ a category like "How the Early Settlers Lived." Pioneer food,
+ transportation, sociables, houses, neighborliness, loneliness, living on
+ game meat, etc., make subjects. Almost every subject listed below will
+ suggest either variations or associated subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Humor of the Southwest Similes from Nature (Crockett is rich in them)
+ The Code of Individualism The Code of the Range Six-shooter Ethics The
+ Right to Kill The Tradition of Cowboy Gallantry (read Owen Wister's
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>The Virginian</i> and <i>A Journey in Search
+ of Christmas;</i> also novels by
+ Eugene Manlove Rhodes)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Frontier Hospitality Amusements
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (shooting matches, tournaments, play parties, dances,
+ poker, horse races, quiltings,
+ house-raisings)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Western Gambler
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (Bret Harte and Alfred Henry Lewis have
+ idealized him in fiction; he might
+ be contrasted with the Mississippi
+ River gambler)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Indian Captives The Age of Horse Culture
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (Spanish, Indian, Anglo-American; the
+ horse was important enough to
+ any one of these classes to
+ warrant extended study)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Cowboy's Horse The Cowboy Myth
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (Mody Boatright is writing a book
+ on the subject)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Evolution of the Frontier Criminal Lawyer
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Frontier Intellect in the Atomic Age
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ British Chroniclers of the West Civilized
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perspective in Writings on the Old West
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Indian in Fiction
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fictional Betrayal of the West
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The West in Reality and the West on the Screen
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Around the Chuck Wagon: Cowboy Yarns Stretching the Blanket
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Authentic Liars
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Recent Fiction of the Southwest (any writer worth writing about)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Literary Magazines of the Southwest Ranch Women Mexican Labor (on ranch,
+farm, or in town)
+
+Mexican Folk Tales Backwoods Life in Frederick Gerstaecker "The Old
+Catdeman" in Alfred Henry Lewis' <i>Wolfville</i> Books
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Mayne Reid as an Exponent of the Southwest (see estimate of him in <i>Mesa,
+ Canon and Pueblo</i>, by Charles F. Lummis)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Gunman in Fiction and Reality
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (O. Henry, Bret Harte, Alfred
+ Henry Lewis; <i>The Saga of Billy
+ the Kid</i>, by Walter Noble Burns;
+ Gillett's <i>Six Years with the Texas
+ Rangers;</i> Webb's <i>The Texas
+ Rangers;</i> Lake's <i>Wyatt Earp)</i>
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Character of the Trail Drivers Cowboy's Life as Reflected in His Songs
+ "Wrathy to Kill a Bear" (the frontiersman as a destroyer of wild life "I
+ Thought I Might See Something to Shoot at" Anecdotes of the Stump Speaker
+ Exempla of Revivalists and Campmeeting Preachers The Campmeeting
+ Stagecoaching Life on the Santa Fe Trail The Rendezvous of the Mountain
+ Men In the Covered Wagon Squatter Life No Shade From Grass to Wheat From
+ Wheat to Dust Brush (a special study of prickly pear, the mesquite, or
+ some other form of flora could be made)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cotton (whole books are suggested here, the tenant farmer being one of the
+ subjects)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oil Booms Longhorns Coyote Stories Deer Nature, or Whitetails and Their
+ Rattlesnakes, or Rattlesnake Stories Panther Stories Tarantula Lore
+ Grasshopper Plagues The Javelina in Fact and in Folk Tale The Roadrunner
+ (Paisano) Wild Turkeys The Poisoned-Out Prairie Dog Sheep Vanishing Sheep
+ Herders The Bee Hunter Pot Hunters Buffalo Hunters The Bar Hunter and Bar
+ Stories Indian Fighter Indian Hater Scalps Squaw Men Mountain Men and
+ Grizzlies Scouts and Guides Stage Drivers Fiddlers and Fiddle Tunes
+ Frontier Justices of the Peace (Roy Bean set the example) Horse Traders
+ Horse Racers Newspapermen Frontier Schoolteacher Circuit Rider Pony
+ Express Rider Folk Tales of My Community Flavorsome Characters of My
+ Community Stanley Vestal Harvey Fergusson Kansas Cow Towns Drought and
+ Thirst Washington Irving on the West Witty Repartee in Eugene Manlove
+ Rhodes Bigfoot Wallace's Humor Charles M. Russell as Artist of the West
+ (or any other western artist) Learning to See Life Around Me Features of
+ My Own Cultural Inheritance I Heard It Back Home Family Traditions My
+ Family's Interesting Character Doodlebugs in the Sand Bobwhites Blue Quail
+ Coachwhips and Other Good Snakes Mockingbird Habits Jack Rabbit Lore
+ Catfish Lore Herb Remedies
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Criticism of Life" in Southwestern Fiction
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Intellectual Integrity in________________ (Name of writer or writers or
+ some locally prominent newspaper to be supplied)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {pages 197 - 222 are an Index &mdash; not included}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Guide to Life and Literature of the
+Southwest, by J. Frank Dobie
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>