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Cowboy Songs, and Other Frontier Ballads
Cowboy Songs, and Other Frontier Ballads

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JACK DONAHOO

Come, all you bold, undaunted men,You outlaws of the day,It's time to beware of the ball and chainAnd also slavery.Attention pay to what I say,And verily if you do,I will relate you the actual fateOf bold Jack Donahoo.He had scarcely landed, as I tell you,Upon Australia's shore,Than he became a real highwayman,As he had been before.There was Underwood and Mackerman,And Wade and Westley too,These were the four associatesOf bold Jack Donahoo.Jack Donahoo, who was so brave,Rode out that afternoon,Knowing not that the pain of deathWould overtake him soon.So quickly then the horse policeFrom Sidney came to view;"Begone from here, you cowardly dogs,"Says bold Jack Donahoo.The captain and the sergeantStopped then to decide."Do you intend to fight usOr unto us resign?""To surrender to such cowardly dogsIs more than I will do,This day I'll fight if I lose my life,"Says bold Jack Donahoo.The captain and the sergeantThe men they did divide;They fired from behind himAnd also from each side;It's six police he did shoot downBefore the fatal ballDid pierce the heart of DonahooAnd cause bold Jack to fall.And when he fell, he closed his eyes,He bid the world adieu;Come, all you boys, and sing the songOf bold Jack Donahoo.

UTAH CARROLL

And as, my friend, you ask me what makes me sad and still,And why my brow is darkened like the clouds upon the hill;Run in your pony closer and I'll tell to you the taleOf Utah Carroll, my partner, and his last ride on the trail.'Mid the cactus and the thistles of Mexico's fair lands,Where the cattle roam in thousands, a-many a herd and brand,There is a grave with neither headstone, neither date nor name,—There lies my partner sleeping in the land from which I came.We rode the range together and had rode it side by side;I loved him as a brother, I wept when Utah died;We were rounding up one morning, our work was almost done,When on the side the cattle started on a mad and fearless run.The boss man's little daughter was holding on that side.She rushed; the cattle saw the blanket, they charged with maddened fear.And little Varro, seeing the danger, turned her pony a paceAnd leaning in the saddle, tied the blanket in its place.In leaning, she lost her balance and fell in front of that wild tide.Utah's voice controlled the round-up. "Lay still, little Varro," he cried.His only hope was to raise her, to catch her at full speed,And oft-times he had been known to catch the trail rope off his steed.His pony reached the maiden with a firm and steady bound;Utah swung out from the saddle to catch her from the ground.He swung out from the saddle, I thought her safe from harm,As he swung in his saddle to raise her in his arm.But the cinches of his saddle had not been felt before,And his back cinch snapt asunder and he fell by the side of Varro.He picked up the blanket and swung it over his headAnd started across the prairie; "Lay still, little Varro," he said.Well, he got the stampede turned and saved little Varro, his friend.Then he turned to face the cattle and meet his fatal end.His six-shooter from his pocket, from the scabbard he quickly drew,—He was bound to die defended as all young cowboys do.His six-shooter flashed like lightning, the report rang loud and clear;As the cattle rushed in and killed him he dropped the leading steer.And when we broke the circle where Utah's body lay,With many a wound and bruise his young life ebbed away."And in some future morning," I heard the preacher say,"I hope we'll all meet Utah at the round-up far away."Then we wrapped him in a blanket sent by his little friend,And it was that very red blanket that brought him to his end.

THE BULL-WHACKER

I'm a lonely bull-whackerOn the Red Cloud line,I can lick any son of a gunThat will yoke an ox of mine.And if I can catch him,You bet I will or try,I'd lick him with an ox-bow,—Root hog or die.It's out on the roadWith a very heavy load,With a very awkward teamAnd a very muddy road,You may whip and you may holler,But if you cuss it's on the sly;Then whack the cattle on, boys,—Root hog or die.It's out on the roadThese sights are to be seen,The antelope and buffalo,The prairie all so green,—The antelope and buffalo,The rabbit jumps so high;It's whack the cattle on, boys,—Root hog or die.It's every day at twelveThere's something for to do;And if there's nothing else,There's a pony for to shoe;I'll throw him down,And still I'll make him lie;Little pig, big pig,Root hog or die.Now perhaps you'd like to knowWhat we have to eat,A little piece of breadAnd a little dirty meat,A little black coffee,And whiskey on the sly;It's whack the cattle on, boys,—Root hog or die.There's hard old times on Bitter CreekThat never can be beat,It was root hog or dieUnder every wagon sheet;We cleaned up all the Indians,Drank all the alkali,And it's whack the cattle on, boys,—Root hog or die.There was good old times in Salt LakeThat never can pass by,It was there I first spiedMy China girl called Wi.She could smile, she could chuckle,She could roll her hog eye;Then it's whack the cattle on, boys,—Root hog or die.Oh, I'm going homeBull-whacking for to spurn,I ain't got a nickel,And I don't give a dern.'Tis when I meet a pretty girl,You bet I will or try,I'll make her my little wife,—Root hog or die.

THE "METIS" SONG OF THE BUFFALO HUNTERS

By RobideauHurrah for the buffalo hunters!Hurrah for the cart brigade!That creak along on its winding way,While we dance and sing and play.Hurrah, hurrah for the cart brigade!Hurrah for the Pembinah hunters!Hurrah for its cart brigade!For with horse and gun we roll alongO'er mountain and hill and plain.Hurrah, hurrah for the cart brigade!We whipped the Sioux and scalped them too,While on the western plain,And rode away on our homeward wayWith none to say us nay,—Hurrah, hurrah for the cart brigade! Hurrah!Mon ami, mon ami, hurrah for our black-haired girls!That braved the Sioux and fought them too,While on Montana's plains.We'll hold them true and love them too,While on the trail of the Pembinah, hurrah!Hurrah, hurrah for the cart brigade of Pembinah!We have the skins and the meat so sweet.And we'll sit by the fire in the lodge so neat,While the wind blows cold and the snow is deep.Then roll in our robes and laugh as we sleep.Hurrah, hurrah for the cart brigade! Hurrah!Hurrah! Hurrah!

THE COWBOY'S LAMENT

As I walked out in the streets of Laredo,As I walked out in Laredo one day,I spied a poor cowboy wrapped up in white linen,Wrapped up in white linen as cold as the clay."Oh, beat the drum slowly and play the fife lowly,Play the Dead March as you carry me along;Take me to the green valley, there lay the sod o'er me,For I'm a young cowboy and I know I've done wrong."I see by your outfit that you are a cowboy,"These words he did say as I boldly stepped by."Come sit down beside me and hear my sad story;I was shot in the breast and I know I must die."Let sixteen gamblers come handle my coffin,Let sixteen cowboys come sing me a song,Take me to the graveyard and lay the sod o'er me,For I'm a poor cowboy and I know I've done wrong."My friends and relations, they live in the Nation,They know not where their boy has gone.He first came to Texas and hired to a ranchman,Oh, I'm a young cowboy and I know I've done wrong."Go write a letter to my gray-haired mother,And carry the same to my sister so dear;But not a word of this shall you mentionWhen a crowd gathers round you my story to hear."Then beat your drum lowly and play your fife slowly,Beat the Dead March as you carry me along;We all love our cowboys so young and so handsome,We all love our cowboys although they've done wrong."There is another more dear than a sister,She'll bitterly weep when she hears I am gone.There is another who will win her affections,For I'm a young cowboy and they say I've done wrong."Go gather around you a crowd of young cowboys,And tell them the story of this my sad fate;Tell one and the other before they go furtherTo stop their wild roving before 'tis too late."Oh, muffle your drums, then play your fifes merrily;Play the Dead March as you go along.And fire your guns right over my coffin;There goes an unfortunate boy to his home."It was once in the saddle I used to go dashing,It was once in the saddle I used to go gay;First to the dram-house, then to the card-house,Got shot in the breast, I am dying to-day."Get six jolly cowboys to carry my coffin;Get six pretty maidens to bear up my pall.Put bunches of roses all over my coffin,Put roses to deaden the clods as they fall."Then swing your rope slowly and rattle your spurs lowly,And give a wild whoop as you carry me along;And in the grave throw me and roll the sod o'er me,For I'm a young cowboy and I know I've done wrong."Go bring me a cup, a cup of cold water,To cool my parched lips," the cowboy said;Before I turned, the spirit had left himAnd gone to its Giver,—the cowboy was dead.We beat the drum slowly and played the fife lowly,And bitterly wept as we bore him along;For we all loved our comrade, so brave, young, and handsome,We all loved our comrade although he'd done wrong.

LOVE IN DISGUISE

As William and Mary stood by the seashoreTheir last farewell to take,Returning no more, little Mary she said,"Why surely my heart will break.""Oh, don't be dismayed, little Mary," he said,As he pressed the dear girl to his side,"In my absence don't mourn, for when I returnI'll make little Mary my bride."Three years passed on without any news.One day as she stood by the doorA beggar passed by with a patch on his eye,"I'm home, oh, do pity, my love;Have compassion on me, your friend I will be.Your fortune I'll tell besides.The lad you mourn will never returnTo make little Mary his bride."She startled and trembled and then she did say,"All the fortune I have I freely giveIf what I ask you will tell unto me,—Say, does young William yet live?""He lives and is true and poverty poor,And shipwreck has suffered beside;He'll return no more, because he is poor,To make little Mary his bride.""No tongue can tell the joy I do feelAlthough his misfortune I mourn,And he's welcome to me though poverty poor,His jacket all tattered and torn.I love him so dear, so true and sincere,I'll have no other beside;Those with riches enrobed and covered with goldCan't make little Mary their bride."The beggar then tore the patch from his eye,His crutches he laid by his side,Coat, jacket and bundle; cheeks red as a rose,'Twas William that stood by her side."Then excuse me, dear maid," to her he said,"It was only your love I tried."So he hastened away at the close of the dayTo make little Mary his bride.

MUSTANG GRAY

There once was a noble ranger,They called him Mustang Gray;He left his home when but a youth,Went ranging far away.But he'll go no more a-ranging,The savage to affright;He has heard his last war-whoop,And fought his last fight.He ne'er would sleep within a tent,No comforts would he know;But like a brave old Tex-i-an,A-ranging he would go.When Texas was invadedBy a mighty tyrant foe,He mounted his noble war-horseAnd a-ranging he did go.Once he was taken prisoner,Bound in chains upon the way,He wore the yoke of bondageThrough the streets of Monterey.A senorita loved him,And followed by his side;She opened the gates and gave to himHer father's steed to ride.God bless the senorita,The belle of Monterey,She opened wide the prison doorAnd let him ride away.And when this veteran's life was spent,It was his last commandTo bury him on Texas soilOn the banks of the Rio Grande;And there the lonely traveler,When passing by his grave,Will shed a farewell tearO'er the bravest of the brave.And he'll go no more a-ranging,The savage to affright;He has heard his last war-whoop,And fought his last fight.

YOUNG COMPANIONS

Come all you young companionsAnd listen unto me,I'll tell you a storyOf some bad company.I was born in PennsylvaniaAmong the beautiful hillsAnd the memory of my childhoodIs warm within me still.I did not like my fireside,I did not like my home;I had in view far rambling,So far away did roam.I had a feeble mother,She oft would plead with me;And the last word she gave meWas to pray to God in need.I had two loving sisters,As fair as fair could be,And oft beside me kneelingThey oft would plead with me.I bid adieu to loved ones,To my home I bid farewell,And I landed in ChicagoIn the very depth of hell.It was there I took to drinking,I sinned both night and day,And there within my bosomA feeble voice would say:"Then fare you well, my loved one,May God protect my boy,And blessings ever with himThroughout his manhood joy."I courted a fair young maiden,Her name I will not tell,For I should ever disgrace herSince I am doomed for hell.It was on one beautiful evening,The stars were shining bright,And with a fatal daggerI bid her spirit flight.So justice overtook me,You all can plainly see,My soul is doomed foreverThroughout eternity.It's now I'm on the scaffold,My moments are not long;You may forget the singerBut don't forget the song.

LACKEY BILL

Come all you good old boys and listen to my rhymes,We are west of Eastern Texas and mostly men of crimes;Each with a hidden secret well smothered in his breast,Which brought us out to Mexico, way out here in the West.My parents raised me tenderly, they had no child but me,Till I began to ramble and with them could never agree.My mind being bent on rambling did grieve their poor hearts sore,To leave my aged parents them to see no more.I was borned and raised in Texas, though never come to fame,A cowboy by profession, C.W. King, by name.Oh, when the war was ended I did not like to work,My brothers were not happy, for I had learned to shirk.In fact I was not able, my health was very bad,I had no constitution, I was nothing but a lad.I had no education, I would not go to school,And living off my parents I thought it rather cool.So I set a resolution to travel to the West,My parents they objected, but still I thought it best.It was out on the Seven Rivers all out on the Pecos stream,It was there I saw a country I thought just suited me.I thought I would be no stranger and lead a civil life,In order to be happy would choose myself a wife.On one Sabbath evening in the merry month of MayTo a little country singing I happened there to stray.It was there I met a damsel I never shall forget,The impulse of that moment remains within me yet.We soon became acquainted, I thought she would fill the bill,She seemed to be good-natured, which helps to climb the hill.She was a handsome figure though not so very tall;Her hair was red as blazes, I hate it worst of all.I saw her home one evening in the presence of her pap,I bid them both good evening with a note left in her lap.And when I got an answer I read it with a rush,I found she had consented, my feelings was a hush.But now I have changed my mind, boys, I am sure I wish her well.Here's to that precious jewel, I'm sure I wish her well.This girl was Miss Mollie Walker who fell in love with me,She was a lovely Western girl, as lovely as could be,She was so tall, so handsome, so charming and so fair,There is not a girl in this whole world with her I could compare.She said my pockets would be lined with gold, hard work then I'd leave o'erIf I'd consent to live with her and say I'd roam no more.My mind began to ramble and it grieved my poor heart sore,To leave my darling girl, her to see no more.I asked if it made any difference if I crossed o'er the plains;She said it made no difference if I returned again.So we kissed, shook hands, and parted, I left that girl behind.She said she'd prove true to me till death proved her unkind.I rode in the town of Vagus, all in the public square;The mail coach had arrived, the post boy met me there.He handed me a letter that gave me to understandThat the girl I loved in Texas had married another man.So I read a little farther and found those words were true.I turned myself all around, not knowing what to do.I'll sell my horse, saddle, and bridle, cow-driving I'll resign,I'll search this world from town to town for the girl I left behind.Here the gold I find in plenty, the girls to me are kind,But my pillow is haunted with the girl I left behind.It's trouble and disappointment is all that I can see,For the dearest girl in all the world has gone square back on me.

WHOOPEE TI YI YO, GIT ALONG LITTLE DOGIES

As I walked out one morning for pleasure,I spied a cow-puncher all riding alone;His hat was throwed back and his spurs was a jingling,As he approached me a-singin' this song,Whoopee ti yi yo, git along little dogies,It's your misfortune, and none of my own.Whoopee ti yi yo, git along little dogies,For you know Wyoming will be your new home.Early in the spring we round up the dogies,Mark and brand and bob off their tails;Round up our horses, load up the chuck-wagon,Then throw the dogies upon the trail.It's whooping and yelling and driving the dogies;Oh how I wish you would go on;It's whooping and punching and go on little dogies,For you know Wyoming will be your new home.Some boys goes up the trail for pleasure,But that's where you get it most awfully wrong;For you haven't any idea the trouble they give usWhile we go driving them all along.When the night comes on and we hold them on the bedground,These little dogies that roll on so slow;Roll up the herd and cut out the strays,And roll the little dogies that never rolled before.Your mother she was raised way down in Texas,Where the jimson weed and sand-burrs grow;Now we'll fill you up on prickly pear and chollaTill you are ready for the trail to Idaho.Oh, you'll be soup for Uncle Sam's Injuns;"It's beef, heap beef," I hear them cry.Git along, git along, git along little dogiesYou're going to be beef steers by and by.

THE U-S-U RANGE

O come cowboys and listen to my song,I'm in hopes I'll please you and not keep you long;I'll sing you of things you may think strangeAbout West Texas and the U-S-U range.You may go to Stamford and there see a manWho wears a white shirt and is asking for hands;You may ask him for work and he'll answer you short,

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1

In this song, as in several others, the chorus should come in after each stanza. The arrangement followed has been adopted to illustrate versions current in different sections.

2

Sung to the air of My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean.

3

Attributed to James Barton Adams.

4

Printed as a fugitive ballad in Grandon of Sierra, by Charles E. Winter.

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