
"A Song of the West"
by
Harold Hersey
In thuh good old days a "two-gun" draw wuz part of our eddication. . . .
We hadn't time fer creeds or law . . . we wuz buildin' up a nation.
Frum out thuh East thuh weaklin's came, and in less than one short year
They won their spurs and a he-man's name along thuh old frontier.
Tuh ask a man what hiz past had been wuz somethin' never done,
Fer like as not with a stupid grin yuh'd be starin' down a gun.
A man's own word wuz hiz royal right, hiz title cold and clear. . . .
And what he wuz yuh took on sight along thuh old frontier.
In a game of stud but few got mad . . thuh wise man's hand wuz steady,
Fer thuh ones who smiled were thuh ones who had their shootin'-irons ready.
It wasn't wise tuh bluff a sport who made strange cards appear,
And some who tried found life wuz short along thuh old frontier.
Out on thuh plains where thuh buffalo came down like rollin' thunder,
They have flung their rails where thuh swift trains go, and thuh hills are split asunder,
But who shall say that thuh things that are bring faith or love or fear?
I only know that my dreams are far along the old frontier.
From Singing Rawhide,a book of Western Ballads by Harold Hersey
copyright 1926