The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #113876 Message #2425789
Posted By: Arkie
29-Aug-08 - 04:21 PM
Thread Name: Lyr Req: Recitations - Fed up of the same old
Subject: Lyr Add: THE BRONCHO TWISTER'S PRAYER (B Kiskaddon
One more:
THE BRONCHO TWISTER'S PRAYER (sometimes called the Broncho Twister)
Bruce Kiskaddon
It was a little grave yard on the rolling foot hill plains: That was bleached by the sun in summer, swept by winter's snows and rains; There a little bunch of settlers gathered on an autumn day 'Round a home made lumber coffin, with their last respects to pay.
Weary men that wrung their living from that hard and arid land, And beside them stood their women; faded wives with toil worn hands. But among us stood one figure that was wiry, straight and trim. Every one among us know him. 'Twas the broncho twister, Jim.
Just a bunch of hardened muscle tempered with a savage grit, And he had the reputation of a man that never quit. He had helped to build the coffin, he had helped to dig the grave; And his instinct seemed to teach him how he really should behave.
Well, we didn't have a preacher, and the crowd was mighty slim. Just two women with weak voices sang an old time funeral hymn. That was all we had for service. The old wife was sobbing there. For her husband of a life time, laid away without prayer.
She looked at the broncho twister, then she walked right up to him. Put one trembling arm around him and said, "Pray. Please won't you Jim?" You could see his figure straighten, and a look of quick surprise Flashed across his swarthy features, and his hard dare devil eyes.
He could handle any broncho, and he never dodged a fight. 'Twas the first time any body ever saw his face turn white. But he took his big sombrero off his rough and shaggy head, How I wish I could remember what that broncho peeler said.
No, he wasn't educated. On the range his youth was spent. But the maker of creation know exactly what he meant. He looked over toward the mountains where the driftin' shadows played. Silence must have reined in heaven when they heard the way Jim prayed.
Years have passed since that small funeral in that lonely grave yard lot. But it gave us all a memory, and a lot of food for thought. As we stood beside the coffin, and the freshly broken sod, With that reckless broncho breaker talkin' heart to heart with God.
When the prayer at last was over, and the grave had all been filled, On his rough, half broken pony, he rode off toward the hills. Yes, we stood there in amazement as we watched him ride away, For no words could ever thank him. There was nothing we could say. Since we gathered in that grave yard, it's been nearly fifty years. With their joys and with their sorrows, with their hopes and with their fears. But I hope when I have finished, and they lay me with the dead, Some one says a prayer above me, like that broncho twister said.