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ON THE EDGE OF COMMON SENSE

Daydreamin’ about quitting the old job

Posted

Now and then I get to thinkin’ I should quit this feedlot job.

Go and ride with Buster, what’s-his-name, his Texas wagon mob.

Maybe move to old Montana, wear them bat wings for a while

Or do California day work in the old vaquero style.

I get my Western magazines, shoot, I keep’em by my chair

And I read’em after lunchin’, sometimes wishin’ I was there.

See, it all looks so romantic. All they do is brand and ride

Maybe gather up some wild ones, push’em down the other side

While the cameras keep on snappin’, set against a scenic view

Lookin’ picturesque and Western, quintessential buckaroo.

It’s not often that reporters come by here and spend a day

And the stories that they usually write are mostly exposé

And I really cant remember any artist incidents.

All the painters that Ive ever seen were workin on the fence.

Cause nobody wants to see us cowboys dressed in overshoes

In our insulated covies on a feedlot winter cruise,

Sortin, fats in some bleak alley with the mud up to our knees,

Shovelin’ bunks or treatin’ sick ones, fightin’ flies or allergies.

I take a little nap sometimes, in my chair there after lunch

And I dream that I am workin’ for some rope and ride’em bunch

Where a roaming photo graffer lookin’ for the real thing

Is dazzled by my cowboyness, the essence of my being.

And he poses me majestic by the River Babylon

Mounted on my paint caballo, conchos glistening in the sun.

But at five till one I waken with the image in my mind

Of the picture he has taken for the cover, but I find

I’m portrayed in all my glory standin’ in the chronic pen

Lookin’ at a scruffy lump jaw that needs lancin’ once again.

I get up and grab my jacket that’s the color of manure

And I head back to the feedlot, catch some horses for the shoer,

But I worry if my heroes in that cowboy magazine

Ever get a lick of work done, ’cause they always look so clean.

Baxter Black

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