Poem : The Meeting
Poet : Arthur Chapman
When walkin’ down a city street, Two thousand miles from home, The pavestones hurtin’ of the feet That never ought to roam, A pony jest reached to one side And grabbed me by the clothes; He smelled the sagebrush, durn his hide— You bet a pony knows! I stopped and petted him, and seen A brand upon his side; I’ll bet across the prairie green He useter hit his stride; Some puncher of the gentle cow Had owned him—that I knows; Which same is why he jest says: “How! There’s sagebrush in your clothes.” He knowed the smell—no doubt it waked Him out of some bright dream; In some far stream his thirst is slaked— He sees the mountains gleam; He bears his rider far and fast, And real the bull thing grows When I come sorter driftin’ past With sagebrush in my clothes. Poor little hoss! It’s tough to be Away from that fair land— Away from that wide prairie sea With all its vistas grand; I feel for you, old hoss, I do— It’s hard the way life goes; I’d like to travel back with you— Back where that sagebrush grows!
