By crackling fire as the embers die
the stories told, much better than the dust
and bourbon swags makes voices fly
to truth of starlight we can trust
By crackling fire as the embers die
of horses strong and women that I’ve met
the tales unfold to moonlit sky
but deep inside I can’t forget
Come hop along and sing my song
I ain’t gone home till very long
By crackling fire as the embers die
as evening’s silence comes to sunken chest
my sorrow grows but tears are dry
despite the lies my home is best
By crackling fire as the embers die
I go to sleep in silent solitude
around me all the cattle lie
such is my cowboy attitude
Come hop along and sing my song
I ain’t gone home till very long

Cowboy singing by Thomas Eakins
Today at dVerse we are doing Cowboy Poetry under guidance of Shanyn Silinski. Can’t say I can master Cowboy lingo, but I wanted to write something that’s possible to sing so meter is comparatively consistent between the verses. I reckon many cowboys were quite homesick under all the bravado.
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August 10, 2013
Bjorn, I can really feel this poem….sitting around that crackling fire watching the sun go down! You have captured the ‘cowboy attitude.’
very lyrical piece man…i can easily hear the chorus…Come hop along and sing my song I ain’t gone home till very long…you def have me sitting by the fire…smiles.
I can definitely imagine a group of cowboys gathered round the campfire after a hard day’s work and chanting this.
so will you sing this for us tonight at the pub…i’ll bring my guitar…ha… we make a bonfire…a few whiskeys…smiles…cool björn…can def. be a song
Gosh, not only is English not your first language, you can speak/write/sing cowboy! So impressive! This links back to the prosody (?)…I don’t have an email for a new dverse prompt. Well done, Swedish cowboy!
I can imagine you singing this by the crackling fire Bjorn ~ Very nice refraining lines ~
That is full of emotions. I liked the way you used the perspective of a lonely homesick cowboy. I love your refrains; they are always wonderful in giving an extra flavor to your creations.
Bjorn – who knew you were such a cowboy troubadour – wonderful – K
Bjorn, this is about as authentic as Baxter… really loved your refrain and the repeat of the first line. I could hear this being sung and could almost smell the campfire, hear the crackle of wood embers. LOVED THIS. Amy (Yours inspired me to take a crack at it, with much different results!)
Leave it to you to create real cowboy poetry in the hills of Scandia. Really impressed with the form, and the poem must be spoken, sung, and it appears extremely authentic; congrats on this fine effort.
Bjorn – this is awesome! I love it! You brought it all together in a way that can be read, recited or sung around the fire. Thanks for riding with us!
Sweet! Loneliness under brave words, a song.
Nice! As the embers die the reality appears. And truth is always what to build on. “Come along – sing my song.” I like it! 🙂
I love it! I think it gets the emotional tone just right.
Oh yes, lyrics are there and we can all hear the tune in our head. Great song.
I can hear Lee Marvin singing this to his ‘Wandering Star’ tune.
This seems a perfect cowboy song. I think you nailed it!
Cool work Bjorn, the life of the cowboy and you did a great job of capturing the mode of speech as well as the attitude!
…my sorrow grows but tears are dry. (can’t have a happy cowboy, now can we 🙂
my sorrow grows, but tears are dry reminds me of the sound Tears of A Clown”
Midnight Cowboy — A Quick Review
By crackling fire as the embers die
of horses strong and women that I’ve met
the tales unfold to moonlit sky
but deep inside I can’t forget
This is the life that the cowboy holds on dear and for which memories linger on. Too much variety to gather and not to forget easily! Nicely Bjorn!
Hank
Ah, the crackling fire…such a romantic cowboy image, yet he really longs for home. Lovely.
as evening’s silence comes to sunken chest… what a picture this made
I think it has a nice cowboy cadence and that lazy feel
You’ve mastered it! 😉
Beautiful write, Bjorn! You capture the moment in wonderful form!
I got the cowboy thing from the first few words that showed up in my email in-box. Yee-haw. Good job.
Hi Bjorn – yeah, I could feel the attitude as I sang along. A nice sing a long..:)
I love the resonance of this a real song with a glow
Bjorn, love this…wonderful rhythm and flow…perfect sense of the cowboy life and dreams.
Love the repetitive line – and “bourbon swags makes voices fly.” Good one.