:11:01
Louis Venable, can you sit there
and see your daughter dragged off...
:11:06
to be scalped among savages?
:11:08
- But I want to go, Mama.
- You don't know what you want.
:11:11
We start Monday week,
fresh and fair, with two freighters.
:11:14
One with a printing outfit
and the other with the household goods.
:11:17
- Why, we can make it in nine days.
- I forbid it.
:11:19
You're going to stay here with your father
and mother in decent civilization.
:11:24
- I've heard enough.
- I'm going with him, Mother.
:11:27
That's it, honey.
Why, we've had enough of this Wichita.
:11:31
We're going out to a brand new two-fisted,
rip snorting country...
:11:34
full of Indians, rattlesnakes, gun-toters,
and desperados.
:11:39
- Isaiah, I declare.
- Miserable brat, you Boon boy.
:11:45
Master Yancey.
Take me with you to Oklahomy.
:11:48
Please take me, Master Yancey.
:11:50
You ain't going to no Oklahomy.
You're going to take a bath.
:11:53
- Mammy, I want to...
- Get out. Get out.
:11:58
Well, I'll go see
about those freighters, huh?
:12:01
Come on here, Cim. Atta boy.
:12:04
My son, you're going to see more Indians
then you ever thought of.
:12:08
I never heard of such a thing.
:12:11
What do you mean, Sabra?
You're not going.
:12:13
Why a Venable should ever
marry such a man, a buffalo hunter.
:12:17
- Quite right.
- Annie.
:12:19
A quart of whiskey a day,
living in that dreadful Cimarron country.
:12:24
- What is Cimarron?
- Savage, Cousin Hewitt.
:12:27
It means wild, unruly.
Yancey's idea of a name for the boy, Cim.
:12:31
You don't like anything Yancey does.
You never have.
:12:34
And that newspaper of his,
Wichita Wigwam.
:12:36
Editorials about Indian's rights.
:12:39
You might think Yancey
was an Indian himself.
:12:41
Who knows?
Some half-breeds are no darker.
:12:44
- Don't you dare say that.
- I heard he killed a man.
:12:47
I won't listen to you any longer.
I don't care about Yancey's past.
:12:51
I married him because I loved him,
and I'm going with him.
:12:55
- Sabra.
- I never heard of such a thing.