Deadwood, Season Two

Deadwood is a HBO television drama that originally aired from March 2004 to August 2006, set in the 1870s in Deadwood, Dakota Territory. It features many historical figures, such as Wild Bill Hickok, Seth Bullock, Sol Star, Calamity Jane, and Al Swearengen.

Al Swearengen:
Age impedes my stream, no f***ing fear of you.

Seth Bullock:
Get in here.

Al Swearengen:
All in due f***ing course but tell me one thing first, Bullock, as I stand here f***ing humbled. Does the widow Garret have a going f***ing hard rock concern and five-stamp mill crushing gold out of her quartz all day and f***ing night?

Seth Bullock:
What?

Al Swearengen:
Or does she cast her lot with the camp, furnish others here a chance to develop what they got, to hang on or even prosper?

Seth Bullock:
You pie-faced cocksucker, get in here and account for your insult.

Al Swearengen:
Or, with you at her ear - among other points of entry - instead of doing your civic duty, does she ship her f***ing loot to Denver?

Seth Bullock:
Civic duty? Opposed by her own and her dead husband's family, to put her assets at play in a camp with no law or government worth the name?

Al Swearengen:
See as here where she lives and struck lucky, civic duty? Yeah! And it's time for her and some others to quit their f***ing shirking, Yankton's making its move. Ah, the f***ing thing!

Seth Bullock:
Meaning what, "Yankton's making its move"? Without more insults.

Al Swearengen:
We're getting ass-f***ed. Carved into counties, but not one f***ing commissioner coming from the hills.

Seth Bullock:
How do you have this information?

Al Swearengen:
From the governor himself in a pricey little personal note. They want to make us a trough for Yankton's snouts, and them hoopleheads out there, they need buttressing against going over to those cocksuckers. Now I can handle my areas, but there's dimensions and f***ing angles I'm not expert at. You would be if you'd sheathe your prick long enough.

Seth Bullock:
Shut up.

Al Swearengen:
And resume being the upright pain in the balls that graced us all last summer.

Seth Bullock:
Shut up, you son of a bitch.

Al Swearengen:
Jesus Christ. Bullock, the world abounds in cunt of every kind, including hers. [Bullock removes his Sheriff's badge] Of course, if it would steer you from something stupid, I, uh, could always profess another position.

Seth Bullock:
Will I find you've got a knife on you?

Al Swearengen:
I won't need no f***ing knife.

Cy Tolliver:
Now that's an attitude right there I want us to counsel on. Smart-alecky sort of attitude and almost with a quality of.. f***in' anger to it. I don't find the exact f***in' words for it, but it f***in' disturbs and concerns me.

Francis Wolcott:
By my lights, I feel I manage well.

Cy Tolliver:
Well, you can say that, Mr. Wolcott, yet I hear accounts that you're a dangerous lay, and that adds to my feeling disturbed. Are you inclined, sir, every so often to.. 'ride one off the cliff'? Girls, I mean.

Francis Wolcott:
I am disturbed at my private conduct being spoken of.

Cy Tolliver:
Well, I should think you f***in' would be. And to think of Mr. Hearst's disturbance if he was to f***in' know. Because, that's a dangerous habit to indulge when you're not among friends.

Francis Wolcott:
Are you my friend, Mr. Tolliver?

Cy Tolliver:
And someone past surprise at habits or inclination, or turns of events, and who don't confuse himself far as sitting in judgment with our Lord in f***in' heaven.

Francis Wolcott:
I see

Cy Tolliver:
And who would never tattle to your employer or jeopardize what's got to be a handsome f***in' income. God damn right, I am your friend, Mr. Wolcott. All I can't provide for the party is the cliff.

Francis Wolcott:
Believing yourself past surprise does not commend you to me as a friend. A man inadequately sophisticated or merely ignorant, or simply stupid, may believe himself past surprise, then be surprised to discover, for example, that Mr. Hearst already knows of my inclinations and finds them immaterial. Suggesting as a corollary that your skills for blackmail and manipulation no longer are assets to you, and for your fatuous belief in their efficacy, in fact have become liabilities. In short, you've overplayed your hand. Now I should think, in consequence, now recognizing yourself as a man past his time, that during this last transitional period you would devote yourself with grateful and quiet diligence to such uses as others may still find you suitable.

Hearst:
[slaps the wall of his room in the Grand Central Hotel] These walls are coming down.

Wolcott:
They'll be your walls soon.

Hearst:
Ever since I was a child in Missouri I've been down ever hole I could find.

Wolcott:
Boy-the-earth-talks-to.

Hearst:
Yeah, I've told you, that's what the Indians call me.

Wolcott:
Yes.

Hearst:
It talks to you too, Francis, I know. Our time together, your hearing has stayed keen. But this gambler Tolliver, who was our agent for buying the claims has spoken to me about you. He says that you've killed women. Prostitutes. That he has disposed of the bodies for you.

Wolcott:
[stunned, fumbles putting out his cigar]

Hearst:
WELL!?

Wolcott:
When I was in Campeche, you wrote a letter on my behalf.

Hearst:
To the Jefe de Policia.

Wolcott:
"I am aware of Mr. Wolcott's difficulty. You will find me personally grateful for any adjustments you may make in his case." What did you think that was about?

Hearst:
I didn't think about it. You were my agent in Mexico! You had many responsibilities. You asked me for the letter and I wrote it!

Wolcott:
As when the earth talks to you particularly, you never ask its reasons.

Hearst:
I don't need to know why I'm lucky!

Wolcott:
What if the earth talks to us to get us to arrange its amusements?

Hearst:
That sounds like goddamned nonsense to me.

Wolcott:
Suppose to you it whispers, "You are king over me. I exist to flesh your will."

Hearst:
Nonsense.

Wolcott:
And to me... "There is no sin." It happened in Mexico and now it's happened here.

Hearst:
We must end our connection, you understand that, Francis. Make a severance you think is fair. You know I won't quibble. Does some spirit overtake you? Is that what you mean by the "talk"?

Wolcott:
No.

Hearst:
It tells me where the color is. That's all it tells me. My God.


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