Cowboy poetry
Cowboy poetry is a form of poetry which grew out of a tradition of extemporaneous composition carried on by workers on cattle drives and ranches.[citation needed] After a day of work, cowboys would gather around a campfire and entertain one another with tall tales and folk songs. Illiteracy was common, so poetic forms were employed to aid memory.[citation needed]
Authorship
Contrary to common belief, cowboy poetry does not actually have to be written by cowboys, though adherents would claim that authors should have some connection to the cowboy life such that they can write poetry with an "insider's perspective". One example of a popular "cowboy poem" written by a non-cowboy is "The Ride of Paul Venarez" by Eben E. Rexford, a 19th-Century freelance author.
Style
Newcomers are surprised to hear cowboy poetry that is contemporary. Many people tend to focus on the historic cowboy lifestyle, but the work that cowboys do continues. The cowboy lifestyle is a living tradition that exists in western North America and other areas, thus, contemporary cowboy poetry is still being created, still being recited, and still entertaining many camp visitors around campfires and convention halls. Much of what is known as "old time" country music originates from the rhyming couplet style often seen in cowboy poetry along with guitar music.
Themes
Typical themes of cowboy poetry include:[citation needed]
- Ranch work and those who perform it
- Western lifestyle
- Landscape of the American and Canadian West
- Cowboy values and practices
- Humorous anecdotes
- Memories of times and people long gone
- Sarcasm regarding modern contraptions and/or ways
The following is a verse from LaVerna Johnson's poem "Homestead", which exhibits traditional cowboy poetry features:
- We hear calls of cattle lowing, voices carry on the breeze
- As it wanders down the canyon, then meanders through the trees.
- While we stop to smell the sage, light shimmers "quakie's" golden leaves,
- And it sure feels good to be back home again.
(Note the use of cowboy vernacular such as quakie (Populus tremuloides, trembling poplar or aspen know as a "quakie tree").
Though it deals with those who work with livestock and nature, it would be incorrect to categorize cowboy poetry as pastoral. Cowboy poetry is noted for its romantic imagery, but at no time does it sacrifice realism in favor of it.
Few examples of experimental verse are known in cowboy poetry. One argument is that cowboy poetry is meant to be recited and should "sound like poetry." The counter-argument runs that imposing a particular structure on cowboy poetry would move the focus away from the subject matter. Regardless, most cowboy poets stay within more classical guidelines, especially rhyming verse. So-called free verse poetry is uncommon in cowboy poetry.
Poetry weeks
Cowboy poetry continues to be written and celebrated today. Baxter Black is probably the most famous, and possibly the most prolific, contemporary cowboy poet. Many cities in the United States and Canada have annual "roundups" dedicated to cowboy poetry. Cowboy Poetry week is celebrated each April in the United States and Canada.[1]
Prominent cowboy poets
- S. Omar Barker
- Baxter Black
- Arthur Chapman
- Badger Clark
- Bruce Kiskaddon
- Wally McRae
- Joel Nelson
- Georgie Sicking
- Red Steagall
- Steven Fromholz
- Waddie Mitchell
- Paul Zarzyski
- {Dan Hess}
In addition, Robert W. Service is sometimes classified as a cowboy poet.
Famed spoken-word artist Bingo Gazingo has done at least one cowboy poem, "Everything's OK at the OK Corral."
See also
Notes
External links
- National Cowboy Poetry Gathering, Elko, Nevada
- Cowboy Poetry Gathering, Heber City, Utah
- Pincher Creek, Alberta, Cowboy Gathering
- Cowboy and Western Poetry at the Bar-D Ranch
- Jim Janke's Old West Cowboy Poetry
- Texas Cowboy Poetry Gathering
- Video from Texas Cowboy Poetry Gathering
- cowboy poetry gathering in Cartersville, GA
- Website of the Alberta Cowboy Poetry Association
- "Cowboy Poets" film at folkstreams.net
- Western & Cowboy Poetry by Clark Crouch
- Waddie Mitchell web page