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Tag: ballad

  • Stephen Vincent Benét’s “The Ballad of William Sycamore”

    Image:  Stephen Vincent Benét

    Stephen Vincent Benét’s “The Ballad of William Sycamore”

    Not strictly a cowboy poem, Benét’s ballad, however, offers the mind-set of an individual close to the land, preferring the rural life to the urban.

    Introduction and Text of “The Ballad of William Sycamore”

    Stephen Vincent Benét’s “The Ballad of William Sycamore” features 19 rimed, stanzas of traditional ballad form. The subject is the rustic life of William Sycamore, narrated by Sycamore himself from just before his birth to after his death.

    The Ballad of William Sycamore

    My father, he was a mountaineer,
    His fist was a knotty hammer;
    He was quick on his feet as a running deer,
    And he spoke with a Yankee stammer.

    My mother, she was merry and brave,
    And so she came to her labor,
    With a tall green fir for her doctor grave
    And a stream for her comforting neighbor.

    And some are wrapped in the linen fine,
    And some like a godling’s scion;
    But I was cradled on twigs of pine
    In the skin of a mountain lion.

    And some remember a white, starched lap
    And a ewer with silver handles;
    But I remember a coonskin cap
    And the smell of bayberry candles.

    The cabin logs, with the bark still rough,
    And my mother who laughed at trifles,
    And the tall, lank visitors, brown as snuff,
    With their long, straight squirrel-rifles.

    I can hear them dance, like a foggy song,
    Through the deepest one of my slumbers,
    The fiddle squeaking the boots along
    And my father calling the numbers.

    The quick feet shaking the puncheon-floor,
    And the fiddle squealing and squealing,
    Till the dried herbs rattled above the door
    And the dust went up to the ceiling.

    There are children lucky from dawn till dusk,
    But never a child so lucky!
    For I cut my teeth on “Money Musk”
    In the Bloody Ground of Kentucky!

    When I grew as tall as the Indian corn,
    My father had little to lend me,
    But he gave me his great, old powder-horn
    And his woodsman’s skill to befriend me.

    With a leather shirt to cover my back,
    And a redskin nose to unravel
    Each forest sign, I carried my pack
    As far as a scout could travel.

    Till I lost my boyhood and found my wife,
    A girl like a Salem clipper!
    A woman straight as a hunting-knife
    With eyes as bright as the Dipper!

    We cleared our camp where the buffalo feed,
    Unheard-of streams were our flagons;
    And I sowed my sons like the apple-seed
    On the trail of the Western wagons.

    They were right, tight boys, never sulky or slow,
    A fruitful, a goodly muster.
    The eldest died at the Alamo.
    The youngest fell with Custer.

    The letter that told it burned my hand.
    Yet we smiled and said, “So be it!”
    But I could not live when they fenced the land,
    For it broke my heart to see it.

    I saddled a red, unbroken colt
    And rode him into the day there;
    And he threw me down like a thunderbolt
    And rolled on me as I lay there.

    The hunter’s whistle hummed in my ear
    As the city-men tried to move me,
    And I died in my boots like a pioneer
    With the whole wide sky above me.

    Now I lie in the heart of the fat, black soil,
    Like the seed of the prairie-thistle;
    It has washed my bones with honey and oil
    And picked them clean as a whistle.

    And my youth returns, like the rains of Spring,
    And my sons, like the wild-geese flying;
    And I lie and hear the meadow-lark sing
    And have much content in my dying.

    Go play with the towns you have built of blocks,
    The towns where you would have bound me!
    I sleep in my earth like a tired fox,
    And my buffalo have found me.

    Reading: 

    Commentary on “The Ballad of William Sycamore”

    Speaking from two unlikely locales, William Sycamore narrates a fascinating tale of a fanciful life.

    First Movement: Rough and Tumble Parents

    The speaker describes his parents as scrappy, rough survivors. His mountaineer father had fists that resembled hammers; he ran as fast as a deer, and had a Yankee accent.  His mother was merry and brave and also quite a tough woman, giving birth to the narrator under a tall green fir with no one to help her but “a stream for her comforting neighbor.”

    While some folks can boast of clean linen fine to swaddle them, Sycamores cradle was a pile of pine twigs and he was wrapped in the skin of a mountain lion. Instead of “a starched lap / And a ewer with silver handles,” he recalls “a coonskin cap / And the smell of bayberry candles.”

    Thus, Sycamore has set the scene of his nativity as rustic and rural, no modern conveniences to spoil him. He idealizes those attributes as he sees them making him strong and capable of surviving in a dangerous world.

    Second Movement: Fun in the Cabin

    Sycamore describes the cabin in which he grew up by focusing on the fun he saw the adults have when they played music and danced. Their visitors were tall, lank, “brown as snuff,” and they brought their long, straight squirrel rifles with them.

    He focuses on the fiddle squealing and the dancing to a foggy song. The raucous partying was so intense that it rattled the herbs hanging over the door and caused a great cloud of dust to rise to the ceiling. He considers himself a lucky child to have experienced such, as well as being able to “cut [his] teeth on ‘Money Musk’ / In the Bloody Ground of Kentucky!”

    Third Movement:  Tall as Indian Corn

    The speaker reports that he grew as tall as the Indian corn, and while his father had little to offer him in things, his father did give him a woodsman skill, which he found helpful. With his homespun gear, a leather shirt on his back, he was able to navigate the woodlands like a profession scout.

    Fourth Movement: A Sturdy Wife

    Reaching adulthood, Sycamore married a sturdy woman, whom he describes as “straight as a hunting-knife / With eyes as bright as the Dipper!” The couple built their home where the buffalo feed, where the streams had no names. They raised sons who were “right, tight boys, never sulky or slow.” 

    The oldest son died at the Alamo, and the youngest died with Custer. While the letters delivering the news of their fallen sons “burned [his] hand,” the grieving parents stoically said, “so be it!” and push ahead with their lives.  What finally broke the speaker’s heart, however, was the fencing of his land, referring the government parceling land to individual owners.

    Fifth Movement:  Gutsy, Self-Reliance

    The speaker still shows his gutsy, self-reliance in his breaking of a colt that bucked him off and rolled over him.  After he recovered, however, he continues to hunt, and while the “city-men tried to move [him],” he refused to be influenced by any city ways. He died “in [his] boots like a pioneer /  With the whole wide sky above [him].”

    Sixth Movement:  Speaking from Beyond

    Speaking from beyond the grave somewhat like a Spoon River resident, only with more verve and no regret, William Sycamore describes his astral environment as a fairly heavenly place.

    He is young again, reminding him of spring rain that returns every year, and his sons are free souls reminding him of wild geese in flight.  He hears the meadow-lark, and he avers that he is very contented in his after-life state.

    Sycamore disdained the city, as most rustics do, so he uses his final stanza to get in one last dig: “Go play with the town you have built of blocks.” He then insists that he would never be bound by a town, but instead he sleeps “in my earth like a tired fox, / And my buffalo have found me.”  In his peaceful, afterlife existence, William Sycamore differs greatly from the typical Spoon River reporter.

    image: Stephen Vincent Benét – Commemorative Stamp 

    Brief Life Sketch of Stephen Vincent Benét

    The works of Stephen Vincent Benét (1898–1943) [1] have influenced many other writers.  Cowboy poet Joel Nelson claims that “The Ballad of William Sycamore” made him fall in love with poetry.  Dee Brown’s title Bury my Heart at Wounded Knee comes directly from the final line of Benét’s poem titled “American Names” [2].

    The book-length poem, John Brown’s Body, won him his first Pulitzer Prize in 1929 and remains the poet’s most famous work. Benét first published “The Ballad of William Sycamore” in the New Republic in 1922.    Benét’s literary talent extended to other forms, including short fiction and novels.  He also excelled in writing screenplays, librettos, an even radio broadcasts.

    Born July 22, 1898, in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania [3] Benét graduated from Yale University in 1919 where instead of a typical thesis, he substituted his third collection of poems.  His father was a military man who appreciated literary studies.  His brother William and his sister Laura both became writers as well.

    Benét’s first novel The Beginning of Wisdom was published in 1921, after which he relocated to France to study at the Sorbonne.  He married the writer Rosemary Carr, and they returned to the USA in 1923, where his writing career blossomed.

    The writer won the O. Henry Story Prize and a Roosevelt Medal, in addition to a second Pulitzer Prize, which was awarded posthumously in 1944 for Western Star.  Just a week before spring of 1943, Benét succumbed to a heart attack in New York City; he was four month shy of his 45th birthday.

    Sources

    [1]  Editors.  “Stephen Vincent Benét.”  Academy of American Poets. Accessed January 13, 2026.

    [2] Darla Sue Dollman.  “Buy My Heart at Wounded Knee and Stephen Vincent Benét.” Wild West History.  October 4, 2013.

    [3] Editors.  “Stephen Vincent Benét.”  Poetry Foundation.  Accessed January 13, 2026.

  • E. A. Brininstool’s “Christmas Week in Sagebrush”

    Image:  E. A. Brininstool 

    E. A. Brininstool’s “Christmas Week in Sagebrush”

    E. A. Brininstool’s “Christmas Week in Sagebrush” dramatizes the activities offered in the little town of Sagebrush as the cow pokes, their families, and friends do some shopping and spending on entertainment.

    Introduction with Text of “Christmas Week in Sagebrush”

    Earl Alonzo Brininstool, (E.A.), was born in Warsaw, New York, October 11, 1870.  He wrote and published many articles and books about the Indian Wars, including Fighting Indian Warriors, The Life and Death of Crazy Horse,” and Fighting Red Cloud’s Warriors. Professionally, he passed most of his life in Los Angeles, California.  

    Brininstool’s poem, “Christmas Week in Sagebrush,” appeared in his 1914 book, Trail Dust of a Maverick: Verses of Cowboy Life, the Cattle Range and Desert.  He died at his home in Hollywood, California, on July 28, 1957.

    “Christmas Week in Sagebrush” plays out in five quatrains, and as many cowboy genre poems do, offers a delightful, rhythmic cadence in cowboy dialect, dramatizing the small town of Sagebrush as it fills with the cowboys and their families and friends during the week of Christmas. 

    The cowboy dialect gives the verse an Old West flavor.  Its colorful images pop, as the speaker describes the events in perfectly riming couplets, with the traditional ballad rhythm pattern.

    Christmas Week in Sagebrush

    It is Christmas week in Sagebrush, and the old town’s only store
    Never had, sence it was opened, such a run o’ trade before.
    Ev’ry rancher is a-blowin’ his “dinero” full and free,
    Buyin’ gim-cracks for the young’uns to put on the Christmas tree. 

    The cowboys ride in muffled in their wolf-skin coats and chaps,
    And the rancher’s wife is wearin’ all her extry furs and wraps;
    ‘Cuz nobody takes no chances on a norther breakin’ loose,
    Fer a blizzard on the prairy’s purty apt to raise the deuce.

    The ponies that are standin’ all a-shiver at the rack,
    Champ their bits, and paw and nicker for their riders to come back;
    Ev’ry poker joint is runnin’, and there’s faro and roulette,
    And the booze-joints are a-grabbin’ all the punchers they can get.

    The picter show is crowded full o’ riders off the range
    Who are watchin’ actor cowboys doin’ stunts that’s new and strange;
    Ev’ry film brings groans and hisses, ‘cuz the guys upon the screen
    Go through lots o’ monkey bizness that a cow ranch never seen.

    From the dance halls comes the echoes of a squeaky violin,
    Where the painted dames are ropin’ all the gay cowpunchers in;
    For it’s Christmas week in Sagebrush, and there won’t a puncher go
    Back to ride the wintry ranges when he has a cent to blow!

    Commentary on “Christmas Week in Sagebrush”

    The cowboys and their ken do some shopping and also enjoy some entertainment during a week that includes the sacred holiday of Christmas.

    First Stanza:  The Town Store

    It is Christmas week in Sagebrush, and the old town’s only store
    Never had, sence it was opened, such a run o’ trade before.
    Ev’ry rancher is a-blowin’ his “dinero” full and free,
    Buyin’ gim-cracks for the young’uns to put on the Christmas tree.

    The speaker sets the stage for the events as he first first focuses on the old town’s only store.  The establishment is doing a booming business this week, so big that its never seen so much buying and selling since it first opened.

    All the ranchers and cowboys in the vicinity have come into town to spend their “dinero.” And they will not return home until they have spent every cent. They won’t forget their children on this shopping extravaganza as they are purchasing toys and trinkets—some of which are suitable for decorating the Christmas tree.

    Second Stanza:  Riding to Town

    The cowboys ride in muffled in their wolf-skin coats and chaps,
    And the rancher’s wife is wearin’ all her extry furs and wraps;
    ‘Cuz nobody takes no chances on a norther breakin’ loose,
    Fer a blizzard on the prairy’s purty apt to raise the deuce.

    The speaker describes the cowboys as they ride into town; they are muffled in their wolf-skin coats and chaps. And their wives are all bundled up in “extry furs and wraps” because they don’t want to get caught in a storm that might come whipping up as they make their journey into town.  

    Getting caught in a norther would be a devilish experience, “fer a blizzard on the prairys purty apt to raise the deuce.” But traveling all wrapped up in their wintry best should protect them. 

    Third Stanza:   As Horses Wait 

    The ponies that are standin’ all a-shiver at the rack,
    Champ their bits, and paw and nicker for their riders to come back;
    Ev’ry poker joint is runnin’, and there’s faro and roulette,
    And the booze-joints are a-grabbin’ all the punchers they can get.

    As the cowboys, families, and friends do their gallivanting through town, the horses stand lined up “at the rack,” and they are shivering, wishing to be on the move again: “they Champ their bits, and paw and nicker for their riders to come back.” 

    And not only is the little general store busy, but the entertainment establishments are also full of activity. The poker joints are filled with revelers playing cards, as well as faro and roulette while the bars and saloons are welcoming as many customers as they handle, likely enjoy the booming business.

    Fourth Stanza:   At the Theatre 

    The picter show is crowded full o’ riders off the range
    Who are watchin’ actor cowboys doin’ stunts that’s new and strange;
    Ev’ry film brings groans and hisses, ‘cuz the guys upon the screen
    Go through lots o’ monkey bizness that a cow ranch never seen.

    The movie theatre is full of viewers who are enjoying seeing cowboy actors perform their “stunts”—some of which strike the real cowboys as odd.  The cowboy’s critical eye can detect the various deviations from reality, as they whoop it up and yell at the screen.  They think some of the maneuvers are “monkey bizness” because they are seeing stunts that the real cowboys do not experience.

    Fifth Stanza:   Something for Everybody

    From the dance halls comes the echoes of a squeaky violin,
    Where the painted dames are ropin’ all the gay cowpunchers in;
    For it’s Christmas week in Sagebrush, and there won’t a puncher go
    Back to ride the wintry ranges when he has a cent to blow!

    Adult entertainment is also in evidence as the dance halls emit the echoes of “squeaky violin” music and women with lots of make-up attract the happy cowboys, who are full of energy and eager to spend their money.

    The town of Sagebrush during Christmas week seems to offer something for everybody, and no cow puncher will get back on his horse “to ride the wintry ranges” until he has spent every red cent.

  • Badger Clark’s “A Cowboy’s Prayer”

    Image: Badger Clark

    Badger Clark’s “A Cowboy’s Prayer”

    Badger Clark’s ballad consists of four riming octets, nostalgically dramatizing a celebration of his gratitude to God for his way of life.

    Introduction and Text of “A Cowboy’s Prayer”

    Badger Clark’s “A Cowboy’s Prayer” with the subtitle “Written for Mother”offers a prayer that would make any mother proud, as he celebrates his free lifestyle of living on the open range. Each octet stanza features the rime scheme ABABCDCD. This Badger classic was first published in  The Pacific Monthly, in December of 1906.

    About this poem/prayer, Katie Lee writes in her classic history of cowboy songs and poems starkly titled Ten Thousand Goddam Cattle, A History of the American Cowboy in Song, Story, and Verse, “The language is true to his free-roving spirit and gives insight to the code he lived by the things he expected of himself.”

    A Cowboy’s Prayer

    (Written for Mother)

    Oh Lord, I’ve never lived where churches grow.
    I love creation better as it stood
    That day You finished it so long ago
    And looked upon Your work and called it good.
    I know that others find You in the light
    That’s sifted down through tinted window panes,
    And yet I seem to feel You near tonight
    In this dim, quiet starlight on the plains. 

    I thank You, Lord, that I am placed so well,
    That You have made my freedom so complete;
    That I’m no slave of whistle, clock or bell,
    Nor weak-eyed prisoner of wall and street.
    Just let me live my life as I’ve begun
    And give me work that’s open to the sky;
    Make me a pardner of the wind and sun,
    And I won’t ask a life that’s soft or high.

    Let me be easy on the man that’s down;
    Let me be square and generous with all.
    I’m careless sometimes, Lord, when I’m in town,
    But never let ’em say I’m mean or small!
    Make me as big and open as the plains,
    As honest as the hawse between my knees,
    Clean as the wind that blows behind the rains,
    Free as the hawk that circles down the breeze!

    Forgive me, Lord, if sometimes I forget.
    You know about the reasons that are hid.
    You understand the things that gall and fret;
    You know me better than my mother did.
    Just keep an eye on all that’s done and said
    And right me, sometimes, when I turn aside,
    And guide me on the long, dim, trail ahead
    That stretches upward toward the Great Divide.

    Clark’s “A Cowboy’s Prayer”

    Commentary on “A Cowboy’s Prayer”

    This poem, written in the traditional ballad form, reveals a grateful cowboy, who loves his rustic way of life and gives thanks for God for it. 

    First Stanza:  Addressing the Lord

    Oh Lord, I’ve never lived where churches grow.
    I love creation better as it stood
    That day You finished it so long ago
    And looked upon Your work and called it good.
    I know that others find You in the light
    That’s sifted down through tinted window panes,
    And yet I seem to feel You near tonight
    In this dim, quiet starlight on the plains. 

    The speaker begins his payer by addressing the Lord, telling Him that he has never been one to attend church, because “[he’s]  never lived where churches grow.” But he admits that he loves creation just as the Lord finished it before mankind began to build things.

    The speaker then confides that while others may find the Lord “in the light that is sifted down through tinted window panes,” he feels Him near, “In this dim, quiet starlight on the plains.” The speaker wants to assure the Divine that despite his absence from houses of worship, he worships without a house while simply stationed out on the open plains created by the Great Creator.

    Second Stanza:  Thanking the Lord

    I thank You, Lord, that I am placed so well,
    That You have made my freedom so complete;
    That I’m no slave of whistle, clock or bell,
    Nor weak-eyed prisoner of wall and street.
    Just let me live my life as I’ve begun
    And give me work that’s open to the sky;
    Make me a pardner of the wind and sun,
    And I won’t ask a life that’s soft or high.

    The speaker offers his heartfelt gratitude to the Lord for his blessings. He is especially grateful that the Lord has made “[his] freedom so complete.” He then catalogues the places where he would not feel so free, places where he would have to heed the call “of whistle, clock or bell.”

    He asks the Lord to continue blessing him this way: “Just let me live my life as I’ve begun / And give me work that’s open to the sky.” He avers that he will not ever be asking “for a life that’s soft or high.”

    Third Stanza:  Praying for Wisdom

    Let me be easy on the man that’s down;
    Let me be square and generous with all.
    I’m careless sometimes, Lord, when I’m in town,
    But never let ’em say I’m mean or small!
    Make me as big and open as the plains,
    As honest as the hawse between my knees,
    Clean as the wind that blows behind the rains,
    Free as the hawk that circles down the breeze!

    The speaker then asks for the guidance and wisdom to treat other people with respect and honor. He admits that sometimes he is careless, especially when he is in town. But he asks that he never be mean or small. He wants others to think well of him because he behaves properly.

    The speaker asks for three things, honesty, cleanliness, and freedom. Thus, he asks the Lord to make him,  “As honest as the hawse between my knees, / Clean as the wind that blows behind the rains, / Free as the hawk that circles down the breeze!”

    Fourth Stanza:  Praying for Guidance

    Forgive me, Lord, if sometimes I forget.
    You know about the reasons that are hid.
    You understand the things that gall and fret;
    You know me better than my mother did.
    Just keep an eye on all that’s done and said
    And right me, sometimes, when I turn aside,
    And guide me on the long, dim, trail ahead
    That stretches upward toward the Great Divide.

    Again, the speaker acknowledges that he is not perfect, that at times he forgets proper behavior. He admits that he does not know all that God knows: “You know about the reasons that are hid.” And he declares that the Lord knows him “better than my mother did.”

    So the speaker asks God to guard and guide him by watching over him, and when he misbehaves, he begs the Lord to “right me, sometimes, when I turn aside.” He asks God to be with him as he moves “on the long, dim, trail ahead / That stretches up toward the Great Divide”. He masterly employs the metaphoric Great Divide to signal the afterworld as well as a great Western geological phenomenon.

    Image: Badger Clark

  • Cowboy Poetry

    Image:  Created by Grok

    An Introduction to Cowboy Poetry

    Cowboy poetry is a uniquely American literary expression rooted in the lived experience of cattle hands, ranchers, and range-riders in the Western United States. Its origins trace back to the post–Civil War era cattle drives, when cowboys spent long, lonely hours on the open range. 

    In such conditions——spending weeks or months on the trail, under vast skies and silent plains——verse and song offered a way to pass time, reflect on home, commemorate events, and give shape to emotional lives shaped by isolation, danger, and hope [1]. Much of this early poetry existed only in oral form: recited around campfires, in bunkhouses, or during long night watches.

    Formally, cowboy poetry draws on traditions of balladry and folk verse. Its characteristic features include narrative structure, end rime, regular meter, and simple, direct language. 

    The subject matter often centers on horses, cattle, weather, labor, friendship, loneliness, the wide-open landscape, and the moral challenges of frontier life [2]. The language is accessible, the tone often unpretentious, and the verse often intended to be read aloud or sung, rather than reserved for print-only audiences.

    Cowboy Voices

    Among the foundational figures of the  cowboy poetry tradition is Badger Clark (1883–1957). Settling in South Dakota, Clark became the state’s first poet laureate.  His early collection Sun and Saddle Leather (1915) and poems like “A Cowboy’s Prayer” evoke the solitude, majesty,  [3] and spiritual connection to land that define much cowboy verse.

    Another important early contributor is E. A. Brininstool (Earl Alonzo Brininstool, 1870–1953) [4]. Though not a working cowboy himself, he deeply immersed in Western and rodeo culture, producing poems and historical-poetic works that helped bring cowboy themes into print and preserve the memory of a fading frontier world.

    S. Omar Barker (1894–1985), born in New Mexico, provided another voice: a rancher, legislator, teacher [5], and poet whose works such as Buckaroo Ballads and Rawhide Rhymes captured ranch life during a period of transition, preserving its rhythms and stories for new audiences.

    In the mid-to-late twentieth century, Buck Ramsey (1938–1998) revitalized the tradition. After a ranching accident left him paralyzed, Ramsey turned to poetry and music to chronicle his memories of working ranch life——blending authenticity, nostalgia, and spiritual reflection in long narrative poems that helped shape modern cowboy-poetry revival [6].

    David Althouse: Cowboy Poetry and Western Fiction

    Finally, a contemporary example is David Althouse, who represents a living continuation and adaptation of Western literary tradition.

    David Althouse is a native Oklahoman——raised amid hunting, fishing, horseback riding, and other outdoor life. His deep affinity for the landscapes, history, and culture of the American West informs both his poetry and his novels [7].  He has remarked that he finds home “hiking old trails, scaling the slopes, traversing the mesas,” immersing himself in the “sights, sounds, and scents of the West”——and translating them into stories and poems.

    Althouse’s published novels include the following:

    • Hawk Eyes, (Wolfpack Publishing 2016)  A Western historical novel from Althouse, featuring youth, survival, and justice in a rugged frontier milieu.
    • The Guns of Frank Eaton (Wolfpack Publishing 2017), which tells the story of Frank Eaton’s quest for vengeance across the lawless territories of the post-Civil War West. In vivid, action-rich prose, the novel evokes the dangers, moral codes, and harsh beauty of frontier life.
    • Ghost Knights of New Orleans (Next Chapter 2019), a novel that extends his Western interest into a broader historical-fiction narrative: in this work Althouse merges Civil War era intrigue, frontier themes, and broader historical complexity, demonstrating how the legacy of the West can interweave with national histories.

    Althouse’s dual role——as poet and novelist——illustrates a continuing evolution of the Western literary tradition. While cowboy poetry remains rooted in verse and oral imagery, authors like Althouse enrich the genre by offering full-length fictional narratives that engage with Western history, myth, and landscape, preserving and reimagining frontier life for contemporary readers.

    Continuity and Cultural Significance

    The work of poets from Badger Clark and Brininstool to Barker and Ramsey——and more recently to David Althouse——shows how cowboy poetry has evolved from ephemeral oral verse to printed poetry, and finally into novels of Western historical fiction. This evolution underscores how the memories of the frontier continue to resonate across generations, adapting to new forms while retaining core themes: the land, labor, hardship, freedom, memory, and spirituality.

    Cowboy poetry and Western fiction together serve as a living archive of a vanished but still deeply influential way of life ——a way of life that shaped the American West and, through literary art form, continues to shape our national imagination.

    National Cowboy Poetry Gathering 

    Every January, fans of cowboy poetry and Western heritage hold a convocation for the National Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko, Nevada. The Gathering——first held in 1985——now stretches over a week and features poetry and music performances, workshops in storytelling, gear-making, cooking and traditional crafts, film screenings, dancing, open-mike sessions, and folk-art exhibits. 

    The 2026 dates are January 26–31, which will be the 41st year for this meeting.  Tickets are available from the Western Folklife Center, whose site offers more information about the organization and the gathering.

    Sources

    [1] Paul A. Carlson. “Cowboy Poetry and the Cattle Drive Tradition.” National Geographic History. 2018. 

    [2] James Hoy. “Cowboy Poetry.” Encyclopedia of the Great Plains. University of Nebraska–Lincoln. 2011.

    [3] David Kindy. “Saddle Up With Badger Clark, America’s Original Cowboy Poet.” Smithsonian Magazine. 2020. 

    [4] Curators. “Biography of E. A. Brininstool.” BYU Library.  Accessed December 6, 2025.

    [5] Stephen Zimmer.  “S. Omar Barker — The Cowboy’s Poet.” Ranching Heritage Association. February 17, 2022.  

    [6] Susan Kouyomjian and Laurie E. Jasinski. “Ramsey, Buck (Kenneth Melvin) (1938–1998).” Texas State Historical Association. Published: December 5, 2006.  Updated: September 27, 2015.  

    [7] Curators. “About David Althouse.” Wolfpack Publishing. 2025. 

    Commentaries on Cowboy Poetry

    • David Althouse’s “How Pecos Bill Saved Christmas”  The legendary hero, Pecos Bill, gargling with nitroglycerin and chewing on habanero peppers, saved Christmas one year.  Accompanied by his horse, Widow Maker, Pecos Bill performs his extreme acts throughout cowboy folklore.
    • David Althouse’s “Cowboy Christmas Carol”  A “hard-bitten ol’ cowpoke” experiences a mystical experience that changes his heart in the Christmas ballad.  He will carry his new change of heart into his daily cow poking life as he honors “the Great Trail Boss in the Sky.”
    • A. B. “Banjo” Paterson’s “Clancy of the Overflow” A city-dweller, painting a picture of dirt, noise, and hustling about in the city,  imagines what his life would be like if he could trade places with a drover (cowboy) in the outback, where life would be grounded in nature with many pleasurable sights and sounds.
    • Buck Ramsey’s “Christmas Waltz” This poem/song dramatizes a holiday celebration on the ranch.  The participants all join in a joyful preparation for their celebration as they keep their faith central and focused.
    • Badger Clark’s “A Cowboy’s Prayer”  Badger Clark’s ballad consists of four riming octets, nostalgically dramatizing a celebration of his gratitude to God for his way of life.
    • S. Omar Barker’s “A Cowboy’s Christmas Prayer”  This poem features a humble cowpoke, who is not accustomed to praying but is offering his heart-felt supplication at Christmas time.  As he prays, he reveals the qualities and issues of his life that are most important to him.