[Hopalong Cassidy’s Rustler Round-Up by Clarence Edward Mulford]@TWC D-Link book
Hopalong Cassidy’s Rustler Round-Up

CHAPTER IV
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Both dog and master were vagrants, and they were tolerated because it was a matter of supreme indifference as to who came or how long they stayed as long as the ethics and the unwritten law of the cow country were inviolate.

And the breaking of these caused no unnecessary anxiety, for justice was both speedy and sure.
When the outcast Sioux and his yellow dog had drifted into town some few months before they had caused neither expostulation nor inquiry, as the cardinal virtue of that whole broad land was to ask a man no questions which might prove embarrassing to all concerned; judgment was of observation, not of history, and a man's past would reveal itself through actions.

It mattered little whether he was an embezzler or the wild chip from some prosperous eastern block, as men came to the range to forget and to lose touch with the pampered East; and the range absorbed them as its own.
A man was only a man as his skin contained the qualities necessary; and the illiterate who could ride and shoot and live to himself was far more esteemed than the educated who could not do those things.

The more a man depends upon himself and the closer is his contact to a quick judgment the more laconic and even-poised he becomes.

And the knowledge that he is himself a judge tends to create caution and judgment.


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