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A sampling of Rhonda's poems
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Rhondas Books
A CHRISTMAS TO REMEMBER
It was chilly in
the bunkhouse, but the cribbage game was hot . . .
Ol’ Cookie was in
the kitchen stirrin’ somethin’ in a pot,
Follered by the
beady eye of a packrat on the beam;
Now Duff an’ Stub
was partners, Tom an’ Doc the challenge team,
A rivalry of
long-standing – best man’d be hard to pick.
Earl sat on the
foot of his bunk, jest ‘a whittlin’ on a stick . . .
Jesse’s finger
follered words laboriously down a line,
On a greasy page
of the Will James book he thought was so fine.
Stretched out
upon his soogans with his tongue stuck out in thought,
The sight of him
touched Cookie’s heart, an’ he wished now he had bought
That pair of
spurs in Murphy’s store when last they’d rode to town .
. .
The lad was young
. . . should have some gifts . . . Cook’s forehead
creased in frown.
He tidied up his
domicile, polished the lamp chimney bright
‘Till one by one
they stretched an’ yawned an’ turned in for the night.
Wasn’t long ‘till
the boy was snorin’, ‘bout like a spotted hog,
Then cookie
stealthily made the rounds, some memories to jog.
He beckoned ‘em
out to the kitchen, an’ some’a them was mad;
But Cookie
soothed their feathers an’ said, “It’s about the lad.
“Y’know,
tomorra’s Christmas, an’ I think it’d be a crime
If he doesn’t
have some presents ‘cuz we never spent a dime,
Nor turned a hand
to make somethin’ to fill his heart with joy.
What can we do? Let’s make a
plan . . . because, he is
our
boy….
His Ma is dead,
his Pa run off, he works hard ever’ day;
A holiday with us
old codgers can’t be very gay!”
Their minds
a’stir they crept back to bed, but plans kept all awake
. . .
Cookie decided he
had the stuff to bake a chawklit cake;
Duff dug around
in his warbag ‘till he fumbled out a book;
Tom remembered
the pair ‘a spurs hung high up on a hook
Above the rafters
out in the barn, unused since old Bart died.
Stub figgered he
could give the kid that hackamore he’d tied,
‘An maybe if he’d
do that Earl would part with his new reins . . .
Doc thought to
gift his too-tight-boots would save his feet some pains.
With Jesse
snorin’ in his bunk they rode early for a pine,
Tied all the
presents on it, plus anything to add shine;
Each shaved an’
fetched a clean shirt, so’s to brighten up the scene.
Some boughs with
cones an’ berries gave the table a touch of green
When Cookie
served up the hearty stew, an’ toddies made with gin.
Young Jesse’s
eyes was dancin’, his face was wreathed in a grin . . .
He said,
“Fellers, ya’ took me by surprise . . . an’ I’ve no
gifts to bring . . .
‘Cept somethin’
my momma taught me, a Christmas song to sing….”
An so he stood
an’ filled the place with a joy that set things right
As with a pleasing voice he
sang four verses of
Silent Night.
Thus friends so
dear shared Christmas cheer, and their holiday, with
love . . .
An’ each was sure
he felt a stir of blessing, from above….
©Rhonda
Sedgwick Stearns 12-15-08
4W BILL
That’s what’s
scratched on this headstone, just a plain ol’ rock of
brown –
In a lonely
cemetery, in a little Wyoming town . . .
As I stand here
with these flowers, his face is fuzzy in my brain,
But, I can see
his Rochelle Hills, forty miles distant through the
rain,
When I lift my
eyes and face the West. Yep, he loved those hills….
Shall I tell you, what I can,
of this man they called
4W Bill?
His story starts
down in Texas, what little of it that we know . . .
Him sittin’
a’straddle a wagon tongue, his young heart filled with
woe.
‘Bout daylight, a
feller come, in a rented rig from town,
An,’ spyin’ this
here little lad, his forehead creased up in a frown.
“Hey, there young
sprout – who the heck are you? An’ what’cha doin’ here?
Loiterin’ ‘round
my wagon, prob’ly plund’rin’ through my gear?
Though the
quiv’rin chin touched tiny chest, tears could still be
seen,
A’ coursin’ down
the boy’s lean cheeks, pushin dust ahead of their
stream;
Then, with a
determined shiver, he reared back an’ lifted his head.
As he fixed the
man with his bravest stare, this is what he said:
“Mister, my name
is Bill.” “Well, tell me, what’s yore other name?”,
Come back like a
shot; this man had no time, to play a small boy’s game.
The child (who
looked to be four or five), vowed that he didn’t have
one –
“Just Bill,” he
mumbled . . . stretching like a cat, warmed by the
rising sun.
As Bill slid off
the wagon tongue, it seemed he found his voice,
An’ told the man
he’d been left by some cowboys, who gave him no choice….
“They found me,
an’ then I lived with them, an’ I was mighty happy,
For a roundup
home . . . an’ fam’ly . . . since I’d lost my Mam an’
Pappy.”
“But when we come
here, they was upset. Said the outfit sold….
They went
sep’rate ways, to search for jobs, ‘fore the winter
comes on, cold.
They said someone
bought this wagon, teams an’ harness, the cattle too;
They made me
promise to wait here for him – Mister, would that be
you?”
This busy man
pushed back his hat, reached up to scratch his head . .
.
What in the heck
could he do with a boy, whose parents both were dead?
He was here to
inspect the wagon, teams an’ harnesses an’ such –
Then get ‘em
started trailin’ with the cattle . . . had to do so
much….
Yet two bright
eyes pinioned him . . . an’ the question hung on air….
He couldn’t leave
an orphan behind . . . or . . . why should he really
care?
Here he was in
Texas, with an outfit to get to Wyoming . . .
Yet he couldn’t
run from those big eyes, so hurting, and so homing
“I’ll tell ya’
boy,” he ventured, “I’m lookin’ to hire a hand,
A hand who’s
always honest, one that’s willin’ to ride for the brand.
A hand that’s got
some savvy, plenty of talent, plenty of tough;
One that won’t
get soft an’ quit me, if things should get pretty
rough.”
The lad at first
just hung his head, then took a great big gulp,
He turned an’
looked the man in the eye. “Would ya’ beat me to a pulp?
If I was kind’a
short on savvy, or on talent, like you say?
If I couldn’t
stick your rankest bronc, or sometime got in the way?”
“’Cuz I can swear
I’m honest, an’ I sure enough am tuff,
I know about
ridin for the brand, an’ not quittin’ when it’s ruff.”
The busy 4W Ranch
foreman couldn’t help but be impressed,
By this brave
response from one small lad, so obviously distressed.
So he bade the
boy come with him – on Texas turn his back –
And take the long
trek to Wyoming, on that endless cattle track.
Bill reached the
4W Ranch on horseback, an’ came to love the place,
Became a horseman
and a stockman, one who cast a loop with grace.
He was such a
part of the ranch, the brand stuck to his name –
The way he rode
horses in Johnson halters added to his fame.
4W Bill made pony
tracks all up and down the Rochelle Hills,
Across the breaks
both north and south of where the Cheyenne River spills.
Him, and most of
the ones who knew him, passed on long ago;
From childhood, I
vaguely remember him, an’ wish that I could know
The rest of his
story – much more of his life! Yet, I feel some kin,
When I work for
the 4W and ride the same trails . . . is it sin,
To feel a sense
of brotherhood from ridin’ for that brand?
An sleepin’ in a
bedroll upon the same Cheyenne River sand?
I hope you don’t
mind, 4W Bill, as I leave these flowers here –
A token for you
of how many folk, hold your memory dear.
© January 24,
2007 Rhonda Sedgwick Stearns
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