Sun and Saddle Leather

Charles Badger Clark (1883 - 1957)

Cowboy Poetry began as a 19th Century Performance Art staged around a crackling campfire, referencing tall tales and personal stories, lost girlfriends, and love of the vast unboundaried West. It was best accompanied by a hot tin cup of boiled coffee, dunked biscuits, and beef jerky. The rhymed couplets were easy to remember, and once the day's drive was done, everybody had a few hours to listen to friends and wonder at the stars. Badger Clark gave voice and record to this unique American folk art, and built on it to express his own creative genius. He was declared the first Poet Laureate of South Dakota, or as he liked to say, “Poet Lariat.” Summary by Ed Humpal

Genre(s): Single author

Language: English

Section Chapter Reader Time
Play 00 Preface Eileen Tipping
00:09:18
Play 01 Ridin' Ed Humpal
00:02:37
Play 02 The Song of the Leather Ed Humpal
00:02:14
Play 03 A Bad Half Hour Ed Humpal
00:02:08
Play 04 From Town Ed Humpal
00:02:35
Play 05 A Cowboy's Prayer Ed Humpal
00:02:20
Play 06 The Christmas Trail Ed Humpal
00:02:43
Play 07 A Border Affair Ed Humpal
00:02:10
Play 08 The Bunk-House Orchestra Ed Humpal
00:02:12
Play 09 The Outlaw Ed Humpal
00:02:03
Play 10 The Legend of Boastful Bill Ed Humpal
00:03:03
Play 11 The Tied Maverick Ed Humpal
00:02:18
Play 12 The Roundup Lullaby Ed Humpal
00:03:04
Play 13 The Trail o' Love Ed Humpal
00:02:15
Play 14 Bachin' Ed Humpal
00:02:16
Play 15 The Glory Trail Ed Humpal
00:03:01
Play 16 Bacon Ed Humpal
00:01:44
Play 17 The Lost Pardner Ed Humpal
00:02:43
Play 18 God's Reserves Ed Humpal
00:02:59
Play 19 The Married Man Ed Humpal
00:03:20
Play 20 The Old Cow Man Ed Humpal
00:02:47
Play 21 The Plainsmen Ed Humpal
00:03:09
Play 22 The Westerner Ed Humpal
00:02:32
Play 23 The Wind is Blowin' Ed Humpal
00:01:45
Play 24 On Boot Hill Ed Humpal
00:01:51