登陆注册
37636400000013

第13章 The Cowboy (4)

Sometimes they roped him and wished they could let him go, for a grizzly bear is uncommonly active and straightforward in his habits at close quarters.The extreme difficulty of such a combat, however, gave it its chief fascination for the cowboy.Of course, no one horse could hold the bear after it was roped, but, as one after another came up, the bear was caught by neck and foot and body, until at last he was tangled and tripped and hauled about till he was helpless, strangled, and nearly dead.It is said that cowboys have so brought into camp a grizzly bear, forcing him to half walk and half slide at the end of the ropes.

No feat better than this could show the courage of the plainsman and of the horse which he so perfectly controlled.

Of such wild and dangerous exploits were the cowboy's amusements on the range.It may be imagined what were his amusements when he visited the "settlements." The cow-punchers, reared in the free life of the open air, under circumstances of the utmost ******* of individual action, perhaps came off the drive or round-up after weeks or months of unusual restraint or hardship, and felt that the time had arrived for them to "celebrate." Merely great rude children, as wild and untamed and untaught as the herds they led, they regarded their first look at the "settlements" of the railroads as a glimpse of a wider world.They pursued to the uttermost such avenues of new experience as lay before them, almost without exception avenues of vice.It is strange that the records of those days should be chosen by the public to be held as the measure of the American cowboy.Those days were brief, and they are long since gone.The American cowboy atoned for them by a quarter of a century of faithful labor.

The amusements of the cowboy were like the features of his daily surroundings and occupation--they were intense, large, Homeric.

Yet, judged at his work, no higher type of employee ever existed, nor one more dependable.He was the soul of honor in all the ways of his calling.The very blue of the sky, bending evenly over all men alike, seemed to symbolize his instinct for justice.

Faithfulness and manliness were his chief traits; his standard--to be a "square man."Not all the open range will ever be farmed, but very much that was long thought to be irreclaimable has gone under irrigation or is being more or less successfully "dryfarmed." The man who brought water upon the arid lands of the West changed the entire complexion of a vast country and with it the industries of that country.Acres redeemed from the desert and added to the realm of the American farmer were taken from the realm of the American cowboy.

The West has changed.The curtain has dropped between us and its wild and stirring scenes.The old days are gone.The house dog sits on the hill where yesterday the coyote sang.There are fenced fields and in them stand sleek round beasts, deep in crops such as their ancestors never saw.In a little town nearby is the hurry and bustle of modern life.This town is far out upon what was called the frontier, long after the frontier has really gone.

Guarding its ghost here stood a little army post, once one of the pillars, now one of the monuments of the West.

Out from the tiny settlement in the dusk of evening, always facing toward where the sun is sinking, might be seen riding, not so long ago, a figure we should know.He would thread the little lane among the fences, following the guidance of hands other than his own, a thing he would once have scorned to do.He would ride as lightly and as easily as ever, sitting erect and jaunty in the saddle, his reins held high and loose in the hand whose fingers turn up gracefully, his whole body free yet firm in the saddle with the seat of the perfect horseman.At the boom of the cannon, when the flag dropped fluttering down to sleep, he would rise in his stirrups and wave his hat to the flag.Then, toward the edge, out into the evening, he would ride on.The dust of his riding would mingle with the dusk of night.We could not see which was the one or the other.We could only hear the hoofbeats passing, boldly and steadily still, but growing fainter, fainter, and more faint.For permission to use in this chapter material from the author's "The Story of the Cowboy," acknowledgment is made to D.

Appleton & Co.

同类推荐
  • 田赋考辨

    田赋考辨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 灵鬼志

    灵鬼志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 淋浊遗精门

    淋浊遗精门

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 毗尼日用切要

    毗尼日用切要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 嵩山太无先生气经

    嵩山太无先生气经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 动漫人物评说

    动漫人物评说

    来自于读者对动漫的理解,希望分享给大家更好阅读。
  • 漫漫时光中有你

    漫漫时光中有你

    十七岁的心动五年的等待二十二岁正式在一起二十四岁的婚礼到最后还是只剩下了他自己。
  • 九曜封魔传

    九曜封魔传

    “何止是没流氓了,人都没了,全关门了,都跑了,今天晚上要饿肚子了。。。。。。。。。。”这时陈剑才想起来,下山是来吃饭的。
  • 皇上万岁万万岁:太监公公有喜了

    皇上万岁万万岁:太监公公有喜了

    前世,人善被欺就算了,反正她换地满血复活了,可为毛?这世,她还被欺?穿成公主,才享几天福,国就被灭了,父兄都惨死了,艾玛,老虎不发威,真当她是helloKitty?女扮太监溜到那高高在上的帝王身边,等一个契合的时机然后······
  • 改造白雪公主

    改造白雪公主

    [花雨授权]在商场上他有过人的生意手腕,是人人敬畏三分的对象;在家庭中他那温驯可人的妻子,是人人羡慕的“最佳老婆”典范。他拥有人人称羡的一切。谁知在他感觉人生完美的同时,他柔弱美丽的老婆却跟他说要“分居”!
  • 彩虹糖果心

    彩虹糖果心

    童佑凌!她总是喜欢以微笑来面对人生。乖巧可爱的外表下有着坚强独立的个性,只要认为是对的事情,就会坚持去做。始终相信,“一直坚持总能看见彩虹的,虽然过程很苦,但是却很美好!”在一次“糖果冰淇淋”的试吃上,不小心打碎了韩诺一要送给女友的心爱之物,因爱结仇。那,他们之间又会发生怎样惊天动地的故事呢……
  • 穿越之景王妃

    穿越之景王妃

    只是参加个古文物展览,却遇到穿越这种事情。看现代小女生怎么玩转古代。
  • 王朝之天策纪

    王朝之天策纪

    历史长河总让人流连忘返,每个朝代总有挥之不去的亮点。本书杜撰出一个虚无的朝代,讲述的却是中国历史。主人公从少年开始,领着一帮志同道合的兄弟们,继承父兄之志,为国家统一而征战四方;山河粗安之际,却被迫参与皇位之争,导致亲情相悖;登上皇位却要面对强敌欺凌,几番征战,国家最终一统,励精图治,开创盛世,终究还是要面对后辈们无休止的夺嫡之乱……大是大非,儿女情长,艰难抉择。几番风雨过后,延续华夏优秀传统,造福苍生!
  • 斩开流萤见桃花

    斩开流萤见桃花

    天下要经常洗一洗,就像洗件白袍子,洗天下的老爷叫做爵公爷,高处的神神仙仙,低处的蝇营狗苟,他都管。这一年是个大年头,爵公老爷走人间……有个嚷嚷着写故事的家伙,写下了第一个字……噫……
  • 中国最美的地方精华特辑.游遍台湾

    中国最美的地方精华特辑.游遍台湾

    本书介绍了20处台湾最美的地方、21种宝岛古今厚味、7大风情写意。