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O. Henry Encore

Chapter 45: My Broncho
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About This Book

A curated collection of short stories, newspaper sketches, and occasional poems from the author’s periodical writings, drawn from regional and urban material. The pieces range from brief humorous vignettes and satirical barbs to quietly melancholic or ironic tales, many built around everyday scenes and local color. Concise narration, vivid small details, and economical wit shape stories that alternate between comedy and pathos, while the included newspaper verse and sketches provide topical commentary and light entertainment alongside the fiction.

My Broncho

Yoho! Away o’er the mesquite sward,
With stirruped foot and a slackened rein;
With drumming hoofs, the hills toward.
And our track the boundless grassy plain;
Light in the saddle and ready hand;
Ride in the teeth of the wind and sand,
Wind, and sand, and rain.
Knees pressed tight on the saddle flap
Where the lasso dangles from its string
Over the rifle scabbard strap,
And the canteen and suaderos swing;
The wind sings hollow in my ear,
Nor sail nor wheel could follow near,
Sail, nor wheel, nor wing.

On dusty roads and streets there prowl
Bent riders perched on noiseless wheels;
Misshapen things with mannish scowl;
Strange crafts with unknown bows and keels;
Queer fish enmeshed in Folly’s net;
Scare human, flesh, or fowl—scarce yet
Red herring, flesh, or fowl.

Yoho! O’er the hills and far away,
My broncho spurns the gravel slope;
This is the ride for a man alway;
The valleys at gallop, the hills at a lope;
Who would exchange for the senseless wheel
The life and strength that the horsemen feel?
Life, and strength, and hope.

(Houston Daily Post, Sunday morning, April 26, 1896.)