This one,as many of my poems do, comes with a story..Sorry but the story is longer than the poem. But it may give you some insight as to why and how I write.
As a kid I used to go with my best friend Rick Bowen to his aunt and uncles ranch in Baggs Wyoming. We would save our money all year (I had a paper route) and take the Greyhound from Los Angeles to Rawlins. "Uncle" Frank and "Aunt Nette would pick us up. We would work harvesting hay and rounding up cattle all summer. Rick had this girl friend Bev who would come from her daddys home in Rawlins and spend the summer with us
Rick was one year older than I and when he graduated, moved to Uncle franks ranch to live. Somewhere between his getting there and about a year later Bev said she was pregnant and claimed it was Ricks. Big to do the end result being Rick ran away. No one ever heard anything about him and it turned out that Bev "confessed" that she had made it up to get Rick to marry her. That was Roughly 1957
Fast forward to 1971.
I,of course by this time was out of school, married and one Son and one on the way My parents still lived in the same house where I grew up
According to Mom The phone rang and a man asked to speak to me
My Mom told him I had married and moved etc and asked what was this about
Man said he was from the Idaho Coroners Dept and needed me to identify a body.
Seems the "body" had a business card I had made in the school print shop as a project. My name the address and our phone number. it was the only "clue" they had.
So I went.
When I got there it was Rick. Older, beat up, worn out but still Rick.
I asked what happened and he told me the circumstances that the railroad worker reported to the Sheriff as to how and where he found the body.
The poem written a year later tells Ricks Story as near as I can make it out.
a cowboy christmas
Cowboy Christmas
Its Christmas Eve beneath the bridge
Up North near the Canuck line
And underneath, an old man sits
A fire makes tin cans shine
He's old and tired and near stove in
His days are at an end
The snow and ice on trestles and beams
Are a Christmas tree to him
His Christmas meal
A can of stew heated on the fire
With melted snow, and a old tea bag
With bread cooked on a wire
As it draws dark and the cold grabs hold
He thinks of years gone by
Of other Christmas's come and gone
The years, how they did fly
Of other Christmas nights like this
In countries far away
And all alone at some outpost
No tree, nor place to Pray
But all in all he thinks aloud
“My life was not that bad
I've lived through War and fought like hell
And always made it back”
And now he thinks its time at last
To point myself toward home
“Tomorrow morning at first light
I'll start once more alone”
He leaves the fire for its last warmth
There's naught around to burn
And covered with a old worn sheet
His bag beneath his head
Under the frozen bridge he sleep
With home inside his head
“Tomorrow morning” fills his dreams
The goal a glowing light
On the road the snowplow runs
Clearing the way ahead
To make it safe for travelers
Headed where ere they go
The plow digs in and clears the road
Throws snow and ice aside
And dumps its gray and frozen load
It’s path is clean and wide
The plow man done he parks his rig
And heads his truck toward home
To warmth and family and love
A wife , a girl, a son
At supper time the girl says Grace
And starts with "God Protect"
Those travelers and unfortunates
Who aren’t, like us, as blessed
With supper done and baths and hugs
The children go to bed
The man and wife alone at last
Reflect on what they have
Its 2am on Christmas day
And over that old bridge
The morning freight
Comes rumbling past
And shakes that icy ridge
Beneath the bridge the fire is out
The snow had washed it down
And underneath the snow and ice
A cowboy has gone home
©Pony 1989