ON BOOT HILL

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Up from the prairie and through the pines,

Over your straggling headboard lines

Winds of the West go by.

You must love them, you booted dead,

More than the dreamers who died in bed—

You old-timers who took your lead

Under the open sky!

Leathery knights of the dim old trail,

Lawful fighters or scamps from jail,

Dimly your virtues shine.

Yet who am I that I judge your wars,

Deeds that my daintier soul abhors,

Wide-open sins of the wide outdoors,

Manlier sins than mine.

Dear old mavericks, customs mend.

I would not glory to make an end

Marked like a homemade sieve.

But with a touch of your own old pride

Grant me to travel the trail I ride.

Gamely and gaily, the way you died,

Give me the nerve to live.

Ay, and for you I will dare assume

Some Valhalla of sun and room

Over the last divide.

There, in eternally fenceless West,

Rest to your souls, if they care to rest,

Or else fresh horses beyond the crest

And a star-speckled range to ride.





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