Saturday, 6 August 2011

A Cowboy Poem


To Her

Cut loose a hundred rivers,
Roaring across my trail,
Swift as the lightning quivers,
Loud as a mountain gale.
I build me a boat of slivers;
I weave me a sail of fur,
And ducks may founder and die
But I
Cross that river to her!

Bunch the deserts together,
Hang three suns in the vault;
Scorch the lizards to leather,
Strangle the springs with salt.
I fly with a buzzard feather,
I dig me wells with a spur,
And snakes may famish and fry
But I
Cross that desert to her!

Murder my sleep with revel;
Make me ride through the bogs
Knee to knee with the devil,
Just ahead of the dogs.
I harrow the Bad Lands level,
I teach the tiger to purr,
For saints may wallow and lie
But I
Go clean-hearted to her!

Badger Clark

3 comments:

  1. Baxter Black is who you need to look up for cowboy poetry. Unless this is yours under a new assumed name. You aren't making up poetry while you punch cattle are you?

    ReplyDelete
  2. "I build me a boat of slivers;
    I weave me a sail of fur," - I love the musicality of this poem ... and its message.

    xxx

    ReplyDelete


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