William De Vere (1844-1904) called himself “The Tramp Poet of the West.” His
doggerel verse celebrated the life of mining camps, usually observed from the
four walls of a saloon. The
“stories” promised by the title of the book are often character sketches of
the poet’s drinking buddies and acquaintances.
About tramping itself, there’s not a great deal.
Another poem set in Creede, “Jeff and Joe,” is dated March
27, 1892. It’s a tribute to the friendship of Soapy Smith and gambler Joe
Simmons. After 30 years together, the poem goes, and loyal to each other
through thick and thin, Jeff visits Joe’s deathbed. Reviewing his life, Joe
asks if he’s ever done another man wrong, and Jeff assures him that he hasn’t.
The title piece, “Jim Marshall’s New Pianner,” tells of the
arrival of a much-awaited piano at a tent saloon in a San Juan mining camp in
Colorado called “The Needles.” Much to everyone’s chagrin, there’s not a soul
among them who knows how to play it. Just then, a stranger walks in, a tramp,
who takes a seat at the instrument and bangs out an impromptu concert of
popular songs that sends his listeners into paroxysms of delight.
The chief interest of the poem is the list of late
19th-century tunes that make up the program, ranging from “Comin’ Through the
Rye,” “Little Annie Rooney,” “Stick to Your Mother, Tom,” and “Johnny Get Your
Gun” to snatches of Aida. Finished, he
walks out again without a word.
In “Kinder Susp’shuss,” a stranger walks into another
saloon, sets up a camera and proceeds to take a photograph of the assembled throng.
The click of the shutter surprises the customers, who mistake it for the
cocking of a pistol. The photographer and his camera are quickly the target of
a fusillade that pulverizes them both.
While practitioners of fire-and-brimstone religion get
little respect among this crowd, “The Parson’s Box” tells of a “sky pilot” in
Durango, Colorado, who wins their approval. His gospel is light on law and
heavy on forgiveness, and his sermons and prayers are nicely short. Most
effectively, he warms them with a sentimental word about their families and
sweethearts back home.
After the prayer, one listener, with tears in his eyes,
passes a hat. When the parson leaves, the men put up a box on the saloon wall,
where they make a practice of chipping in a share of their faro winnings. And
on Sundays they close down for an hour to go to his church.
Most famous. De Vere
was remembered chiefly for two poems. The first is a reportedly
autobiographical account of his return to the mine fields from Denver where he
had squandered a fortune in gold during the previous winter. Berating himself,
he turns down a ride in a teamster's wagon to walk behind it in the dust as punishment for
his stupidity. “Walk, jist walk,” he tells himself.
The other, “Two Little Busted Shoes,” recounts a moment in Soapy
Smith’s Orleans Club, in Creede, Colorado, where the poet has stored his trunk.
Opening it, he reveals to the assemblage of patrons a pair of “busted” shoes
belonging to one of his children. The sight of them puts them all in a pensive
mood as their thoughts travel homeward to the loved ones they have left behind,
who depend on their safe return.
Later, the crowd that has assembled at Joe’s grave carries out his
last wishes, passing around bottles of Pommery Sec champagne to toast his
departure and singing “Auld Lang Syne.” And the poem ends:
They drank an’ sang. The pure
white snow
Fell softly on the grave of Joe.
Another poem, “Roger,” is a tribute to a dog that’s been a
faithful companion to the poet in places all over the map, from Dodge City to
Butte to Santa Fe. Roger, we learn, has saved the poet’s life by once waking him
from a drunken slumber while his shack had caught fire.
Altogether, the poems capture something of the frontier as
it was found in the mining camps of the lawless Old West. The point of view in
them is that of the “tramp,” the itinerant and wanderer. Maybe prospector or
preacher, he is typically some kind of gambler:
When the big excitement came
Every man that played a game,
Square or sure, that could
succeed,
Packed his grip and went to
Creede.
Gamblers, miners, suckers,
marks,
Spieler, macers, bunco sharks,
Men of money, men of greed—
Every one fetched up in Creede.
In the preface, De Vere claims that it’s all true; it all
happened; and no names have been changed. Much of it seems observed through an
alcohol haze, softened and romanticized by a heavy dose of nostalgia. The title
poem ends by accounting for each of the men who marveled at the concert they
were treated to by the unknown pianist:
The Needles camp is busted,
“Burrell Wade’s” in Kansas City,
“Tom Kane” shot “Riley Lambert,”
and was “strangled,” more’s the pity
“Clabe Jones” is down in Mexico,
a stealin’ Texas meat,
And “Walter Fletcher’s” writin’
songs in Forty-seventh street.
“Cap. Flagler’s in Durango. I am
dallying with the drama,
“Jim Marshall’s jumpin’ corner
lots, way down in Oklohoma,
“Lish Rowe” he takes his Bourbon
straight, when he goes on a bust,
“Tom Gretto’s” out in ’Frisco,
still looking for the dust,
“Old Creek” is up in Ogden, and
the saints snared “Tommy Tanner,”
And a dance hall up in Rico
captured Marshal’s “New Pianner.”
William "Bill" De Vere |
Wrapping up. An
acquaintance, Henry Clay McDougal, remembered De Vere as a man who had been “a
teacher, bar-tender, preacher, prospector, miner, poet, mine-owner, reporter,
Bohemian, editor, cowpuncher, drunkard, actor, merchant, saloon-keeper,
trader,” who had made and lost a fortune in the mines.
A notice in the February 6, 1904, Deseret News reports that “Big Bill” De Vere has been found dying
at an address on 13th Street in New York. The article speaks of his reputation
as a poet, earned over the previous twenty years. It also reports his age as 74, when other sources indicate he would have been only 59 or 60.
The writer remembers him as having led an adventurous and colorful life in
the West, first as a gunslinger and then as a sheriff in Colorado. “Many a
murderer,” the story goes, “has De Vere taken with his revolver and his hands,
and he bears upon his person the scars of countless battles.” Next he ran a Denver gambling house and
opened a theatre, where “his burlesques and afterpieces were famous throughout
the west.” In 1879, he also had a theatre in Leadville called The Comique.
At one time, readers are reminded, De Vere was boss of the
Budweiser saloon in Spokane. He was also celebrated in a stage
farce by Charles Hoyt called A Black Sheep, where he
appeared as a fat, gun-toting editor of an Arizona newspaper. De Vere had two
daughters, Frisco and Denver, named by him after the cities.
Jim Marshall's New Pianner is currently available at google books, Internet Archive, and for the nook. For more of Friday's Forgotten Books, click on over to Patti Abbott's blog.
Jim Marshall's New Pianner is currently available at google books, Internet Archive, and for the nook. For more of Friday's Forgotten Books, click on over to Patti Abbott's blog.
Source: Henry Clay
McDougal, Recollections, 1844-1909, 1910
Image credits: Illustrations
from the book
Coming up: Saturday music, Dwight and Buck
This is a fine review of a delightful book. It reminds me that the early West was richly endowed with humor. People joked their way through troubles.
ReplyDeleteCowboys in particular were portrayed in early novels as gifted with their own style of wit.
DeleteGreat choice, Ron! This is the first time I have come across western stories in verse form. I'd certainly like to read this book. Many thanks.
ReplyDeleteAn early example of what would have been called "cowboy poetry" today.
DeleteA real rounder with a sense of humor. I can't imagine a modern day youth working in so many different jobs or professions. If only he had saved his gold.
ReplyDeleteI suspect that De Vere made up a lot of stories about himself which became part of the myth about him.
DeleteBill De Vere is my great, great, grandfather. He had another daughter, raised in Vermont, named Effie Charlotte Bacon, nee DeVere. When I started reading your post I wasn't sure if this was another man of the same name because I knew none of this about him but the picture is definitely him. I have another book of his " Wit, Humor and Pathos" with an inscription to my great grandmother dated 1894. Also, family legend has it he was in P.T. Barnum's circus, then in Vaudeville, where was famous for the laughing song, and that he was a cousin of Frank and Jesse James. Who knows... Happy to find your post!
ReplyDeleteMany thanks for the additional information about Bill De Vere. His book of poems was a delight to discover.
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ReplyDeleteErin,
ReplyDeleteI am also related to Bill DeVere. He was my great great grandmother's cousin, and at birth, his name was William James, which may add some validity to your family legend. I have been able to find information on Frisco, Denver and Effie, as well as another daughter Catherine York DeVere, born in New York in 1896. Do you know anything about her? I would love to trade information with you some time.
Hi Kelly. Just came upon your comment tonight. I’ve just discovered that his grave is in Brooklyn not far from me so I’m going to have a look. That’s wild. Family ledgend was that he changed his name because the name so as not to be connected to Frank and Jessie. Happy to share what info I have. I’ll check back here more frequently.
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