<p class="tit-song">THE BUFFALO SKINNERS <span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="page158" name="page158"></SPAN>(p. 158)</span></p>
<p>Come all you jolly fellows and listen to my song,<br/>
There are not many verses, it will not detain you long;<br/>
It's concerning some young fellows who did agree to go<br/>
And spend one summer pleasantly on the range of the buffalo.</p>
<p>It happened in Jacksboro in the spring of seventy-three,<br/>
A man by the name of Crego came stepping up to me,<br/>
Saying, "How do you do, young fellow, and how would you like to go<br/>
And spend one summer pleasantly on the range of the buffalo?"</p>
<p>"It's me being out of employment," this to Crego I did say,<br/>
"This going out on the buffalo range depends upon the pay.<br/>
But if you will pay good wages and transportation too,<br/>
I think, sir, I will go with you to the range of the buffalo."</p>
<p>"Yes, <span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="page159" name="page159"></SPAN>(p. 159)</span> I will pay good wages, give transportation too,<br/>
Provided you will go with me and stay the summer through;<br/>
But if you should grow homesick, come back to Jacksboro,<br/>
I won't pay transportation from the range of the buffalo."</p>
<p>It's now our outfit was complete—seven able-bodied men,<br/>
With navy six and needle gun—our troubles did begin;<br/>
Our way it was a pleasant one, the route we had to go,<br/>
Until we crossed Pease River on the range of the buffalo.</p>
<p>It's now we've crossed Pease River, our troubles have begun.<br/>
The first damned tail I went to rip, Christ! how I cut my thumb!<br/>
While skinning the damned old stinkers our lives wasn't a show,<br/>
For the Indians watched to pick us off while skinning the buffalo.</p>
<p>He fed us on such sorry chuck I wished myself most dead,<br/>
It was old jerked beef, croton coffee, and sour bread.<br/>
Pease <span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="page160" name="page160"></SPAN>(p. 160)</span> River's as salty as hell fire, the water I could never go,—<br/>
O God! I wished I had never come to the range of the buffalo.</p>
<p>Our meat it was buffalo hump and iron wedge bread,<br/>
And all we had to sleep on was a buffalo robe for a bed;<br/>
The fleas and gray-backs worked on us, O boys, it was not slow,<br/>
I'll tell you there's no worse hell on earth than the range of the buffalo.</p>
<p>Our hearts were cased with buffalo hocks, our souls were cased with steel,<br/>
And the hardships of that summer would nearly make us reel.<br/>
While skinning the damned old stinkers our lives they had no show,<br/>
For the Indians waited to pick us off on the hills of Mexico.</p>
<p>The season being near over, old Crego he did say<br/>
The crowd had been extravagant, was in debt to him that day,—<br/>
We coaxed him and we begged him and still it was no go,—<br/>
We left old Crego's bones to bleach on the range of the buffalo.</p>
<p>Oh, <span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="page161" name="page161"></SPAN>(p. 161)</span> it's now we've crossed Pease River and homeward we are bound,<br/>
No more in that hell-fired country shall ever we be found.<br/>
Go home to our wives and sweethearts, tell others not to go,<br/>
For God's forsaken the buffalo range and the damned old buffalo.</p>
<h4>Range of the Buffalo <span class="pagenum"><SPAN id="page162" name="page162"></SPAN>(p. 162)</span></h4>
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