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The
Desperado - Page 2 |
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The bad man of genuine sort rarely looked the part assigned to him in the
popular imagination. The long-haired blusterer, adorned with a dialect
that never was spoken, serves very well in fiction about the West, but
that is not the real thing. The most dangerous man was apt to be quiet and
smooth-spoken. When an antagonist blustered and threatened, the most
dangerous man only felt rising in his own soul, keen and stern, that
strange exultation which often comes with combat for the man naturally
brave. A Western officer of established reputation once said to me, while
speaking of a recent personal difficulty into which he had been forced: "I
hadn't been in anything of that sort for years, and I wished I was out of
it. Then I said to myself, 'Is it true that you are getting old—have you
lost your nerve?' Then all at once the old feeling came over me, and I was
just like I used to be. I felt calm and happy, and I laughed after that. I
jerked my gun and shoved it into his stomach. He put up his hands and
apologized. 'I will give you a hundred dollars now,' he said, 'if you will
tell me where you got that gun.' I suppose I was a trifle quick for him."
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Shooting, 1901, W.T. Smedley
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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The virtue of the "drop" was eminently respected among bad men.
Sometimes, however, men were killed in the last desperate conviction that
no man on earth was as quick as they. What came near being an incident of
that kind was related by a noted Western sheriff.
"Down on the edge of the Pecos Valley," said he, "a dozen miles below old
Fort Sumner, there used to be a little saloon, and I once captured a man
there. He came in from somewhere east of our territory, and was wanted for
murder. The reward offered for him was twelve hundred dollars. Since he
was a stranger, none of us knew him, but the sheriff's descriptions sent
in said he had a freckled face, small hands, and a red spot in one eye. I
heard that there was a new saloon-keeper in there, and thought he might be
the man, so I took a deputy and went down one day to see about it.
"I told my deputy not to shoot until he saw me go after my gun. I didn't
want to hold the man up unless he was the right one, and I wanted to be
sure about that identification mark in the eye. Now, when a bartender is
waiting on you, he will never look you in the face until just as you raise
your glass to drink. I told my deputy that we would order a couple of
drinks, and so get a chance to look this fellow in the eye. When he
looked up, I did look him in the eye, and there was the red spot!
"I dropped my glass and jerked my gun and covered him, but he just
wouldn't put up his hands for a while. I didn't want to kill him, but I
thought I surely would have to. He kept both of his hands resting on the
bar, and I knew he had a gun within three feet of him somewhere. At last
slowly he gave in. I treated him well, as I always did a prisoner, told
him we would square it if we had made any mistake. We put irons on him and
started for Las Vegas with him in a wagon. The next morning, out on the
trail, he confessed everything to me. We turned him over, and later he was
tried and hung. I always considered him to be a pretty bad man. So far as
the result was concerned, he might about as well have gone after his gun.
I certainly thought that was what he was going to do. He had sand. I could
just see him stand there and balance the chances in his mind.
"Another of the nerviest men I ever ran up against," the same officer went
on, reflectively, "I met when I was sheriff of Dona Aña County,
New Mexico. I was in Las Cruces, when there came in a sheriff from over in the
Indian Nations looking for a fugitive who had broken out of a
penitentiary after killing a guard and another man or so. This sheriff
told me that the criminal in question was the most desperate man he had
ever known, and that no matter how we came on him, he would put up a fight
and we would have to kill him before we could take him. We located our
man, who was cooking on a ranch six or eight miles out of town. I told the
sheriff to stay in town, because the man would know him and would not know
us. I had a Mexican deputy along with me.
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More men have been killed in this street than
in any other in America.
This photo appeared in The Story of
the Outlaw. Though Hough doesn't
say it in this narrative, the lawman he is
speaking of is
Pat Garrett and
this most dangerous street is in
Lincoln,
New Mexico. |
"I put out my deputy on one side of the house and went in. I found my man
just wiping his hands on a towel after washing his dishes. I threw down on
him, and he answered by smashing me in the face, and then jumping through
the window like a squirrel. I caught at him and tore the shirt off his
back, but I didn't stop him. Then I ran out of the door and caught him on
the porch. I did not want to kill him, so I struck him over the head with
the handcuffs I had ready for him. He dropped, but came up like a flash,
and struck me so hard with his fist that I was badly jarred. We fought
hammer and tongs for a while, but at length he broke away, sprang
through the door, and ran down the hall. He was going to his room after
his gun. At that moment my Mexican came in, and having no sentiment about
it, just whaled away and shot him in the back, killing him on the spot.
The doctors said when they examined this man's body that he was the most
perfect physical specimen they had ever seen. I can testify that he was a
fighter. The sheriff offered me the reward, but I wouldn't take any of it.
I told him that I would be over in his country some time, and that I was
sure he would do as much for me if I needed his help. I hope that if I do
have to go after his particular sort of bad people, I'll be lucky in
getting the first start on my man. That man was as desperate a fighter as
I ever saw or expect to see. Give a man of that stripe any kind of a show
and he's going to kill you, that's all. He knows that he has no chance
under the law.
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"Sometimes they got away with desperate chances, too, as many a peace
officer has learned to his cost. The only way to go after such a man is to
go prepared, and then to give him no earthly show to get the best of you.
I don't mean that an officer ought to shoot down a man if he has a show to
take his prisoner alive; but I do mean that he ought to remember that he
may be pitted against a man who is just as brave as he is, and just
as good with a gun, and who is fighting for his life."
Of course, such a man as this, whether confronted by an officer of the law
or by another man against whom he has a personal grudge, or who has in any
way challenged him to the ordeal of weapons, was steadfast in his own
belief that he was as brave as any, and as quick with weapons. Thus, until
at length he met his master in the law of human progress and civilization,
he simply added to his own list of victims, or was added to the list of
another of his own sort. For a very long time, moreover, there existed a
great region on the frontier where the law could not protect. There was
good reason, therefore, for a man's learning to depend upon his own
courage and strength and skill. He had nothing else to protect him,
whether he was good or bad. In the typical days of the Western bad man,
life was the property of the individual, and not of society, and one man
placed his life against another's as the only way of solving hard personal
problems. Those days and those conditions brought out some of the boldest
and most reckless men the earth ever saw. Before we freely criticize them,
we ought fully to understand them.
Go To Next Chapter -
The Imitation Desperado
Compiled and
edited by
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, updated March,
2010.
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Other Works by Emerson Hough:
The Story of
the Outlaw - A Study of the Western Desperado - Entire Text
The Cattle Kings
The Cattle Trails
Cowboys on the American Frontier
The Frontier In History
The Indian Wars
Mines of
Idaho & Montana
Pathways To the West
The Range of
the American West
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About the Author: Excerpted from the book The Story of the
Outlaw; A Study of the Western Desperado, by
Emerson Hough;
Outing Publishing Company, New York, 1907. This story is not verbatim as
it has been edited for clerical errors and updated for the modern reader.
About the Author:
Emerson Hough (1857–1923).was an
author and journalist who wrote factional accounts and historical novels
of life in the
American
West. His works helped establish the Western as a popular genre in
literature and motion pictures.
For years,
Hough wrote the feature "Out-of-Doors" for the Saturday
Evening Post and contributed to other major magazines.
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Old
West Books -
Legends of America and
the
Rocky Mountain General Store has collected a number of
Old West
books for our frontier enthusiasts. For many of these, we have
only one available. To see this varied collection, click
HERE!
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