POETRY.
BY THE COTTONWOOD TREE, BY E. L. BEERS, “ Then why do I sell it? ’’ you ask me again, “ Big cabin an’ clearin’ an’ all ? ” Well, stranger, I’ll tell you, though maybe you’ll think It ain’t any reason at all; There’s plenty of hardship in pioneer life— A hard-workin’ stint at the bast — Bat I’d stick to it yet, it it wasn’t for this, A heart like a log in my breast. D’ye see, over there by the cottonwood tree, A climbin’ rose, close by a mound, Inside of a fence made of rough cedar boughs ? Prairie wolves ain’t too good to come round. Well, Hetty, my darling old woman, lies there ; Not very old, either, yon sec : She wa’nt more’n twenty the year we come weßt • . . . She’d ha’ been—comm’ grass—thirtythree.
What a round little face an’ a cheek like a peach She had, little Hetty, be sure ; What courage to take me 1 She knew all the while I was friendless and terrible poor. How she worked with a will at our first little hut, In the field, and among garden stuff, Till her forehead was burned, and her poor little hand, Through its hardships, got rugged and rough I But many a time, when I come in the door Quite sudden, I’ve found her just there, With eyelids all red an’ her face to the east— You see, all her own folks was there. I cheered her, an’ told her we’d go by an’ by, ... When the clearin’ and ploughm was through ; And then came the baby—he wa’n’t very strong— So that Hetty had plenty to do. But after awhile she got gloomy again ; She would bide in the cornfield to cry ; We hadn’t no meetin’ to speak of, you see— No woman to talk to was nigh.
An’ she wanted to show little Joe to the folks; She was hungry, I s’pose, for the sight Of faces she’d seen all the days of her life— That was nat’ral, stranger, an’ right.
But just when she thought to go over the plains The devils of Sioux was about ; So poor Hetty waited a harvest or two, Through the summer of locusts and drought. That left us poor people. The next cornin’ spring Such a wearisome fever come round. An’, stranger—bold on till I tell you—there, now, It laid little Joe in the ground; I know’d then I’d got to send Hetty off East, If I cared about keepin’ her here ; She pined to a shadder, an’ moped by his grave, Though her eyes brighter grew, and more clear. If you’d seen her poor face when I told her I’d go And take her home visitin’ I Well, I’ll never forget how she put out her hands Into mine, an’, fur joy, cried a spell. She didn’t feel strong, though, that week or the next, An’ the cough an’ the fever increased ; While softly she whispered—she couldn’t speak loud : “ You’ll take me by’m by, to tbe East ? ” She never got East any further than that—(And a hand pointed off to the mound) ; But I’m goin’ to take her an* Joe, when I go, To her father’s old bury in’ ground. This, stranger, ’a the reason I’m willin’ to sell ; You can buy at a bargain, you see ; It’s mighty good land fur a settler to own, But it looks like a graveyard to me.
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Bibliographic details
Globe, Volume XXII, Issue 1851, 28 January 1880, Page 3
Word Count
565POETRY. Globe, Volume XXII, Issue 1851, 28 January 1880, Page 3
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