First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"Gene Sheldon - Bernardo"
"George J. Lewis - Don Alejandro de la Vega"
"Henry Calvin - Sergeant Demetrio López GarcÃa"
"Guy Williams - Don Diego de la Vega (Zorro)"
"Stewart Granger - as Col. Alan MacKenzie (Season 9)"
"No need to push me, Mister. If you're planning on making a move, make it."
"I guess you said it yourself. I'm just a dumb cowboy. Well, maybe I'm dumb enough to believe that people should be honest and dumb enough to try to stop them when they're not."
"Gary Clarke - Steve Hill (Season 1-4)"
"Don Quine - Stacey Grainger (Season 5-6)"
"Charles Bickford - John Grainger (Season 5-6)"
"John McIntire - Clay Grainger (Season 6-8)"
"Tim Matheson as Jim Horn (Season 8)"
"Roberta Shore - Betsy Garth (Season 1-4)"
"James Drury - The Virginian (Season 1-9)"
"My Pa always said, 'Live fast, die laughing,' that's the way to do it."
"Oh, I'm human, all right."
"And Trampas, this is a business trip."
"The thing is, if a woman can't win an argument any other way she can always cry. Then she can't lose."
"The Virginian can track a rabbit all the way to St. Louis."
"Clu Gulager - Sheriff Emmett Ryker (Season 3-6)"
"Randy Boone - Randy Benton (Season 1-3)"
"John Dehner - Morgan Starr (Season 4)"
"He wants to be a hero in a uniform, so he had to go join up! He's a fool! He's about as much cut out to be a soldier as -- If you want to be a soldier you have to learn to take orders. Can you imagine Trampas taking orders from anybody? I mean anybody!"
"She’s just like any other woman - she thinks with her heart instead of her head."
"Now wait a minute. What did you expect me to do, tie him to the horse? Well, you can be sure of one thing. Whatever happens, I'll be blamed for it. I tried. I tried!"
"Sara Lane - Elizabeth Grainger (Season 5-8)"
"Diane Roter - Jennifer - Garth's Niece (Season 4)"
"L. Q. Jones - Andy Belden (Season 2-6; 9)"
"Lee J. Cobb - Judge Henry Garth (Season 1-4)"
"Doug McClure - Trampas (Season 1-9)"
""This is Wyoming in 1897. It's a land of great, open spaces. A land that gives a man plenty of elbow room. Somebody once said that in Wyoming, you could look farther, and see less than any place in the world. Whoever said that couldn't have seen Wyoming as I have. To look at the mountains, and the valleys and the plains, you'd think nothing ever changes out here. Maybe that's true about the land. But it's not true about the people. They change. At least most of them. They've settled down. Twenty years ago, it was a different breed of men that came west. They were looking for adventure and excitement. There was plenty of adventure to go around, and lots of excitement! At first it was the Indians who provided the adventure. And for those who lived to tell about it, there was no question about it's being exciting. It was a time when life was cheap, and man lived for today. The odds were against his being around tomorrow, and he knew it. What's more, he liked it that way. This breed of man loved his life. It was everything he wanted. It was adventure, and excitement, and fun. When he worked hard, he fought hard, and he sure played hard. Then suddenly, one day his world was gone. The prairies and the mountains were the same. The cattle and the horses were the same. The west had grown up. It had changed. But this breed of man was still there. Still looking for the fun and headlong adventure."
"Before she testifies there's something I'd like to say. I don't know what you may have heard here today, what you have already in your minds, but I can tell you this. I was there when Dr. O'Neill made the decision to operate on Mrs. Anderson. She knew the risk she was taking, and she took it. The easy way would have been to let her patient die in agony. And now I want to ask you a question. Would this hearing ever had been held if Pat O'Neill weren't a woman? Doc Spalding has lost patients, every doctor has. So, just lets all of us be sure exactly what it is that's on trial here today. Is it the facts, or our prejudices?"
"I didn't need Trampas to point out the sorry shape we were in, but being Trampas he pointed it out anyhow..."
""Anyone will tell you Trampas is as trustworthy as they come. Take my word for it."
"The dead have to be buried...There’s some things you make time for..."
"She's saving herself for some tall, good looking cowboy with hair the color of autumn wheat."
"Suckers and mules, thats what work's for, and mule's got enough sense to turn his tail on it."
"[To the Virginian] I have never heard such hollerin' and shoutin' since the last time I asked you for a day off."
"Quiet as on cotton on cottontail."
"Quiet as a mouse tip toeing."
"Tighter than the feathers on a prairie chicken's rump."
"[I] feel better than a barn rooster on a prime hoot."
"[He] draws trouble like a summer melon draws flies."
"[It's] hot enough to fry a horseshoe."
"On a long ride with Matt, Chester declares, "Why I'm so hungry, my stomach is growing teeth.""
"Sit there like a boll weevil on a corn cob."
"[He's] got more friends than a dog's got hairs on his back."
"This here [stew] will put muscles in your whiskers."
"Quicker than a rat can run over the roof with a piece of raw liver in his mouth."
"Hold `yer taters."
Young though he was, his radiant energy produced such an impression of absolute reliability that Hedgewar made him the first sarkaryavah, or general secretary, of the RSS.
- Gopal Mukund Huddar
Largely because of the influence of communists in London, Huddar's conversion into an enthusiastic supporter of the fight against fascism was quick and smooth. The ease with which he crossed from one worldview to another betrays the fact that he had not properly understood the world he had grown in.
Huddar would have been 101 now had he been alive. But then centenaries are not celebrated only to register how old so and so would have been and when. They are usually celebrated to explore how much poorer our lives are without them. Maharashtrian public life is poorer without him. It is poorer for not having made the effort to recall an extraordinary life.
I regret I was not there to listen to Balaji Huddar's speech [...] No matter how many times you listen to him, his speeches are so delightful that you feel like listening to them again and again.
By the time he came out of Franco's prison, Huddar had relinquished many of his old ideas. He displayed a worldview completely different from that of the RSS, even though he continued to remain deferential to Hedgewar and maintained a personal relationship with him.