Jul 4, 1145am ~~ Review asap.
Jul 5 ~~ I was inspired to read this book after reading Tom Lea's The Wonderful Country. Lea used Six Years as a source for depicting the life of the Texas Rangers in his story, as well as for the title of his book.
I did enjoy this memoir, but not quite as much as I had expected to. There are a lot of place names tossed around, and people's names too. That kind of thing can get a bit overwhelming for me to keep track of, and I tend to zone out. I think maybe it would be fun to read the book again with a map handy so I can follow along as we go around the state.
I especially enjoyed the section where Gillett described his years in the El Paso area. I lived there myself for many years so I was quite familiar with at least the place names there.
This is not a politically correct story. It does take place in Texas beginning in 1875, after all. There is a bit of the 'good Indian' type of thing, and various other unacceptable ideas, but as always with people and books of that era, a reader has to decide for themselves how much is too much.
What tickled me the most was the joy the author took in living the Ranger life. A big part of that was lived in camps in what we would now think of as quite primitive conditions, but the author thrived on it. Sometimes it seemed like the whole bunch were just overgrown boys, especially in winter camps when there was not much scouting to do.
But I especially appreciated a feeling expressed by the author when he talked about how Texas was in those early days. Not for being a native Texan (I'm not, even though I lived there for about 25 years) but because I have often wished I could have seen America before humans got to it. Here is what Gillett says:
"All of western Texas was a real frontier then, and for one who loved nature and God's own creation, it was a paradise on earth. The hills and valleys were teeming with deer and turkeys, thousands of buffalo and antelope were on the plains, and the streams all over Texas were full of fish. Bear caves and bee trees abounded. In the springtime one could travel for hundreds of miles on a bed of flowers. Oh, how I wish I had the power to describe the wonderful country as I saw it then! How happy I am now in my old age that I am a native Texan and saw the grand frontier before it was marred by the hand of man."
There are some pictures scattered throughout the book, including one showing Gillett with another author by the name of Herman Lehmann, who had written a book about the years he spent with the Apache and Comanche tribes after being captured as a boy. The picture was taken in 1924, but they had actually 'met' back in 1875 during Gillett's first fight with the Rangers against what he called 'redskins'. They were formally introduced years later in San Antonio, where the picture was taken. Lehmann wrote a book that was published in 1927, and thanks to a tip from GR friend Alan, I was expecting to read something about Lehmann in this book. Of course now I am very tempted to find Lehmann's own book and see what he has to say about the world!