The Town Called Hell
There is a legend of a town called Hell
I
hardly know to tell it well.
Jake Cotter was a peaceful man,
A kind and loving
Gentle man
And he loved the fair Bonnie Christina
The fair the frail and lovely,
The
lady named Bonnie Christina
It is important to know
In this tale of
woe
That fair and frail and lovely
Was the lady named Bonnie Christina
And Jake Cotter
was a peaceful man
A kind and loving Gentle man,
Who loved the fair Bonnie Christina
Christina
lived in a town called Hell
That town, it was named exceedingly well
Hot
desert winds they stabbed the eye
And parched the punishing merciless sky
The sun with unrelenting
beat
Oppressed with all the desert heat
That beats upon the tired brain
And can very well
drive man insane.
Lance Bowie lived in the town called Hell
He
was a rich man, truth to tell
With fist and whip and firebrand
He ruled the place with an
iron hand
He owned the water in the only well
That fed the people
in the town called Hell.
One morning through the dust and heat
Was
heard the hoof beats rhythmic beat
Through the waving bending rays
That make mirage
and mental daze
Almost like a dream he rode
Alone and silent against
the sky
Jud Barth caught him with his eye.
Jud
was a just and righteous man
With leathered skin and desert tan
He’d lived
in Hell for many a year
He hated the paralyzing fear
That filled the hearts of the people near.
He
knew that someday a thing would be
Some outsider would come and see
Of Lance Bowie’s fabled
tyranny
And would somehow set the people free
Around the campfires he’d often
tell
His impossible dream for the town called Hell.
As the stranger
came to clearer sight
Jud’s weary eyes they saw a light
He offered the stranger a
drink of water
The gentle man that was called Jake Cotter
Refreshed,
the stranger told his heart,
As brother to new-found brother’s heart
“I’ve
crossed this desert, dry and wide,
To find myself a loving bride”
“There’s
one in this town, worthy and fair,
Who smiles and loves with gentle flair
She has flowing
golden hair
The lady named Bonnie Christina”
Love
came swift and love came sure
For Christina could scarcely more endure
The cruel hearts
that I hate to tell,
Were living in the town called Hell
Jud Barth took Christina’s
hand
“In all this lonely desert land,
You’ll never find a love more true,
Than
this Jake Cotter offers you”
Jake and Christina, their hearts took flight,
As
they whispered love’s plans to the summer’s night
But in their love they were left alone,
For
the townspeople’s hearts had become as stone.
And one looked on
with hatefulled sneer,
With angry, murderous, lust filled leer,
Lance clenched his teeth
and spit on the floor
And strode angrily through the tavern door
Who
was this stranger, could anyone say,
Who walked freely among them night and day?
It
was in the square one sweltering day
A terrible fight in the public way
For Lance had threatened
to stop the well
And kill all the people of the town called Hell
The
well was in the middle of town,
Where weary women let buckets down,
Then, in tribute
to tyranny’s way,
The men of the town were forced to pay
Jake
Cotter was a gentle man
He sat on the well and held her hand
And asked what a strange thing
this could be
That the people did not get their water free.
“Lance
owns the land,” her voice a tear
He’s owned it for many, many a year
He
dug the well with his own hand
He dug it out of the desert sand
One
by one, as people came,
He’d treat them equally the same
My land, my water, my property,
You
just don’t drink if you won’t pay me
And no one has dared
dig another well,
Nearby to this, in this town called Hell
So
in the square, that sweltering day
Came a terrible fight in the public way
Lance’s whip
lashed sharp and deep
But Jake had a promise yet to keep
His loving Blood
fell to the sand
As Lance’s whip did rip his hand
With
strength of love
His hand stained red,
He smote Lance Bowie’s
Proud-filled
head
The stone cold heart
At last was dead
The
earth it shook with a sudden roar
And rolling and turning of the sandy floor.
In every corner
of the town
The walls came falling helpless down.
The howling wind
blew it all away
Desolate to this very day,
No passing stranger could ever tell
That this was the
place of the town called Hell.
The sun shone bright on a brand new day,
And
my heart can gladly say,
Jud, Jake and Christine rode swift away
To
a land of bright and endless day
(c)
1998 2011 "Christina Walden Ehn"