Monday, April 20, 2020

"THAT WORTHLESS MESQUITE"


 "THAT WORTHLESS MESQUITE"
( a poet once wrote a verse--which posited:
   " that worthless mesquite," but then
he followed with a pensive thought:
          "that mysterious mesquite..." )

A MESQUITE PASTURE

Ole Wylie, the rancher from 
  the Frio Draw, north of Clovis,
has been pondering a poem
  or a story about mesquite
pastures---now onto I reckon,
  about three years...

Billy, the skilled scientist, tackled
  the job and is still "mulling it"
I think...and he found those grand
  (almost extinct) Texas pastures
to be both "useless", ah...but also
                 "mysterious."

Another writer--me--walked them 
   a right smart seventy years ago,
and found them to be 
  "among the grandest miracles
        of all creation."

"POP" had one, about twenty or
   thirty acres, right across  the road
from "the Old Home Place."
    a never-to-be-forgotten-pasture 
---the Creator's handiwork!

A young lad of the time, when "hunting"
   had not been dubbed yet as 
as "evil," would  take the old 
   Cloverine Salve single shot .22
with a few fuzzy rounds searched
  out of Grandma's ash tray (full
of straight pins, safety pins, buttons,
   spools of thread, and lint) 
and go across the road to Pop's
   Mesquite Pasture
and roam his heart out "hunting."

He never kilt anything, and hardly
  ever even shot  the beat-up-rifle---
BUT, he was "hunting."
   ("Hunting" really means more 
        than "hunting," you know...)

That glorious wilderness was replete
  with field- larks, mockingbirds,
chickadees, plain old sparrows, and
  seemingly filled with singing birds,
of all kinds--answering, antiphonally---
   as choral people would say.

The place was covered, in places
   thickly--by big and small 
mesquite bushes..."bear grass,"
   yuccas, cacti, weeds,  and various 
grasses, some  knee high...

Blue quail were sheltering  from
  soaring  hungry hawks under
the thickest of these bushes...  
  and especially along fence rows...

Bull snakes seemed to be everywhere
   to a young boy, to whom 
all snakes .... were scary..
  (a big one crwled right between 
my feet once...and I ran for fifty yards!)

There were likely the ever-present
  rattlers, but I never saw one.

Also there were plenty wildflowers
  of various clumps and kinds,
some giving off subtle nice aromas...

Creatures that were especially fond
   of these wild places were jack rabbits
and cottontails...the little 'bunny"
   cottontails just scampered everywhere
it seemed...the jacks sat upright
  and listened    with their long ears...

Oh to be once more, in my 
    worn Red Wing boots
(acquired much later in life---they 
  have a thousand miles on them)
out on a cool, but sunny fall  day,
   walking Pop's mesquite pasture
        one more time...watching
the wispy white clouds float rapidly 
    across the sky, as if searching
for the main cloud bank
   which left during the night...

Walking with the old Cloverine
  Salve .22 which one of Pop's 
boys had earned by selling 
   a dozen cans or more of a
      popular ointment of the time
 But it is never to be, All are "gone
    with the wind..."
    
  POP left in '73, and someone 
got the old .22, which ever rested
    empty in the back BR corner
by the Philco Radio...
   and many  perhaps --most--
of Texas' mesquite pastures have.  
   been deep-plowed under. to 
get more farming land for 
   cotton and maize.

As with many good things. American,
    the mesquite pastures  are mostly
gone,                  once and for  all---
      never to be seen again.
---------
Mil

3 APRIL 2020

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