From Welcome to Hard Times
(1960)
“Every time someone puts a little
capital into this Territory I’m called in by the Govenor
and sent on my way. It doesn’t matter I suffer from the
rheumatism, nor that I’m past the age of riding a
horse’s back. If a man files a claim that yields,
there’s a town. If he finds some grass, there’s a
town. Does he dig a well? Another town. Does he stop somewhere
to ease his bladder, there’s a town. Over this land a
thousand times each year towns spring up and it appears I have
to charter them all. But to what purpose? The claim pinches
out, the grass dies, the well dries up, and everyone will ride
off to form up again somewhere else for me to travel. Nothing
fixes in this damned country, people blow around at the whiff
of the wind. You can’t bring the law to a bunch of rocks,
you can’t settle the coyotes, you can’t make a
society out of sand. I sometimes think we’re worse than
the Indians... What is the name of this place, Hard Times? You
are a well-meaning man Mr. Blue, I come across your likes
occasionally. I noticed Blackstone on your desk, and
Chitty’s Pleadings. Well you can read the law as much as
you like but it will be no weapon for the spring when the town
swells with people coming to work your road. You need a peace
officer but I don’t even see you wearing a gun. I look
out of this window and I see cabins, loghouse, cribs, tent,
shanty, but I don’t see a jail. You’d better build
a jail. You’d better find a shootist and build a
jail.”
—Welcome to Hard Times