Currently Reading,
?Buck Peters, Ranchman. A Hopalong Cassidy Novel? Clarence E. Mulford 1912. Thanks to my local library.
From the Dust Jacket, ?Bill ?Hopalong? Cassidy, [is] an illiterate, tobacco-chewing, hard drinking, able-swearing son of the Old West.?
If you are only familiar with Hopalong from the films, Mulford?s novels will come as a revelation.
This one, in fact, doesn't star Hopalong, but his friends Tex and Buck.
He loved word-games and language. And he depicts Cowboys as a group of uneducated but intelligent men who speak their own language and revel in it. If you understand, you are identified as someone to take seriously, if you don?t you are instantly identified as an outsider. In places I am reminded of James Joyce.
Extract: -
?Tex? arrives at the Ranch of the title, to work with his friend Buck.
At the beginning, he is talking to his Horse.
He is met by ?Dirty? who introduces him to the Ranch Hands.
[ ?Ha! By the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way bums!? He had turned to cross the Jill and saw Pop Snow basking in the failing sunlight. ??Why-Not? ? well, Why not? I will!??
?Come a long way stranger?? Asked Dirty, his gaze wandering over the tell-tale mud. He had come the wrong way for profit, but Dirty always asked, on Principle: he hated to get out of practice.
Tex swung his right leg over the Pony?s neck and sat sideways, looking indolently at the pickled specimen who sat insolently regarding him.
?Plucked from a branch of the Mussel Shell,? murmured Tex, ?When time was young?; and them drawled, ?Tolerable, tolerable, been a-comin? thirty year, Just about.?
Dirty looked at him with frank disgust, spat carefully, and turning on his seat no more than was absolutely necessary, stuck his head in at the open door and yelled, ?Hey Boys! Come on out and meet Mr Comin? Thirty. Comin? is bashful ?bout drinkin with strangers, so get acquaint.? ]
If, like me you are a lover of language, you will love Mulford.
Cheers!