The West

 

 

 

Western Wagons

They went with axe and rifle, when the trail was still to blaze,
They went with wife and children, in the prairie-schooner days,
With banjo and with frying pan — Susanna, don’t you cry!
For I’m off to California to get rich out there or die!

We’ve broken land and cleared it, but we’re tired of where we are.
They say that wild Nebraska is a better place by far.
There’s gold in far Wyoming, there’s black earth in Ioway,
So pack up the kids and blankets, for we’re moving out today!

The cowards never started and the weak died on the road,
And all across the continent the endless campfires glowed.
We’d taken land and settled — but a traveler passed by —
And we’re going West tomorrow — Lordy, never ask us why!

We’re going West tomorrow, where the promises can’t fail.
O’er the hills in legions, boys, and crowd the dusty trail!
We shall starve and freeze and suffer. We shall die, and tame the lands.
But we’re going West tomorrow, with our fortune in our hands.

Stephen Vincent Benet

 

 

 

The Ballad of William Sycamore

MY FATHER, he was a mountaineer,
His fist was a knotty hammer;
He was quick on his feet as a running deer,
And he spoke with a Yankee stammer.
 
My mother, she was merry and brave,
And so she came to her labor,
With a tall green fir for her doctor grave
And a stream for her comforting neighbor.
 
And some are wrapped in the linen fine,
And some like a godling’s scion;
But I was cradled on twigs of pine
In the skin of a mountain lion.
 
And some remember a white, starched lap
And a ewer with silver handles;
But I remember a coonskin cap
And the smell of bayberry candles.
 
The cabin logs, with the bark still rough,
And my mother who laughed at trifles,
And the tall, lank visitors, brown as snuff,
With their long, straight squirrel-rifles.
 
I can hear them dance, like a foggy song,
Through the deepest one of my slumbers,
The fiddle squeaking the boots along
And my father calling the numbers.
 
The quick feet shaking the puncheon-floor,
And the fiddle squealing and squealing,
Till the dried herbs rattled above the door
And the dust went up to the ceiling.
 
There are children lucky from dawn till dusk,
But never a child so lucky!
For I cut my teeth on “Money Musk”
In the Bloody Ground of Kentucky!
 
When I grew as tall as the Indian corn,
My father had little to lend me,
But he gave me his great, old powder-horn
And his woodsman’s skill to befriend me.
 
With a leather shirt to cover my back,
And a redskin nose to unravel
Each forest sign, I carried my pack
As far as a scout could travel.
 
Till I lost my boyhood and found my wife,
A girl like a Salem clipper!
A woman straight as a hunting-knife
With eyes as bright as the Dipper!
 
We cleared our camp where the buffalo feed,
Unheard-of streams were our flagons;
And I sowed my sons like the apple-seed
On the trail of the Western wagons.
 
They were right, tight boys, never sulky or slow,
A fruitful, a goodly muster.
The eldest died at the Alamo.
The youngest fell with Custer.
 
The letter that told it burned my hand.
Yet we smiled and said, “So be it!”
But I could not live when they fenced the land,
For it broke my heart to see it.
 
I saddled a red, unbroken colt
And rode him into the day there;
And he threw me down like a thunderbolt
And rolled on me as I lay there.
 
The hunter’s whistle hummed in my ear
As the city-men tried to move me,
And I died in my boots like a pioneer
With the whole wide sky above me.
 
Now I lie in the heart of the fat, black soil,
Like the seed of the prairie-thistle;
It has washed my bones with honey and oil
And picked them clean as a whistle.
 
And my youth returns, like the rains of Spring,
And my sons, like the wild-geese flying;
And I lie and hear the meadow-lark sing
And have much content in my dying.
 
Go play with the towns you have built of blocks,
The towns where you would have bound me!
I sleep in my earth like a tired fox,
And my buffalo have found me.
Stephen Vincent Benet

The film How The West Was Won (1962) is an uneven work, but it has a magnificent score which captures something of the spirit of the pioneers.    The settlement of the West, from the Appalachians to the Pacific, is perhaps the defining event in the history of our nation and it receives too little historical comment.  Thomas Jefferson thought it would take one hundred generations to settle the land beyond the Mississippi.  Instead, from the ending of the American Revolution to the census of 1890 which proclaimed that the frontier no longer existed, barely five generations had passed, and there were a handful of Americans at the end still living who had lived through almost all of it.  This epic tale is perhaps too large for the historians and thus I have picked out two poems written by Stephen Vincent Benet that convey a small fragment of the passion, grandeur, tragedy and wonder  of it all.

Bonus:

 

 

0 0 votes
Article Rating
9 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Frank
Frank
Sunday, February 19, AD 2023 7:19am

Great selections. Agree with you about the film, it has some weak spots, but we still enjoy watching our DVD every so often. It certainly had an impressive cast! Our other favorites are The Big Country and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. I wish the Hollywood culture wasn’t so totally dead to quality film making, so that we might see good Westerns again. Oh, well. Probably won’t happen in my remaining time in this Vale of Tears, but a guy can dream.

Father of Seven
Father of Seven
Sunday, February 19, AD 2023 8:24am

Frank: don’t hold your breath waiting on Hollywood. I started looking outside the US because Mads Mikkelson is one of my favorite actors. He’s in a Danish financed movie, The Salvation, that is a Western, in English, and incredibly wellcasted. I would recommend it as the next best thing to an old Western. He’s also in a modern version of a Western in a movie called Riders of Justice. It’s subtitled, but I can’t recommend it highly enough. There is almost no chance of either movie being made by Hollywood today. In both, Mads is an actual man who does what an actual man would do. There is more redemption in Riders, and that’s why I like it better. But, both are worth watching.

Frank
Frank
Sunday, February 19, AD 2023 1:21pm

Thanks, FOS. Will check them out!

Dave G.
Dave G.
Sunday, February 19, AD 2023 4:08pm

I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but according to my sons, they do focus on this today. We old timers probably just wouldn’t like how they focus on it. When Mark Shea used to call Manifest Destiny our Lebensraum, it turns out he didn’t pull that out of thin air. Turns out, that is pretty much the official teaching. Anything west of the East Coast involving Europeans, and it was all the same.

Art Deco
Art Deco
Sunday, February 19, AD 2023 6:23pm

Instead, from the ending of the American Revolution to the census of 1890 which proclaimed that the frontier no longer existed, barely five generations had passed

Three generations and change. I carry the Y-chromosome of a man who was an adolescent when the Treaty of Paris was signed. His great-grandson was eight years old when the frontier was declared closed.

John L Flaherty
John L Flaherty
Monday, February 20, AD 2023 2:30pm

“The film How The West Was Won (1962) is an uneven work, but it has a magnificent score which captures something of the spirit of the pioneers.”
I have never seen–or read–a work about historic events which wasn’t “uneven” from one perspective or another. Critiques of America often rapidly become intellectually dishonest: They refuse to admit how the Indian hated the White man every bit as passionately as the White man hated the Indian. …There have been none but sinners here. If nothing else, spreading Westward still brought Christ to this continent in English, plus the economics we live by.

John L Flaherty
John L Flaherty
Monday, February 20, AD 2023 2:49pm

Dave G,
I’ve heard once upon a time about finding a communist if you scratched a liberal. I’ve never heard a competent explanation for why an Indian ought not be condemned for any sinful act or attitude, yet the White man ought be condemned for both.

WK Aiken
WK Aiken
Monday, February 20, AD 2023 3:01pm

I have never seen–or read–a work about historic events which wasn’t “uneven” from one perspective or another.

Pretty sure The Hallelujah Trail is fairly accurate, Martin Landau being cast as an Indian notwithstanding.

Scroll to Top