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Looking up to a Poet
Courtesy of the
Crosby Journal
BY
CECILE WEHRMAN
When cowboy poet
T.J. Casey started working with school children, he hoped they would look up
to him and
appreciate the
cowboy heritage of the American West.
Children can't help but look up to the 6-foot 3 inch cowboy, but their
response to him has as much to do with
his demeanor as his
height.
"I kind of put myself on their level," Casey says, and it doesn't hurt that he
uses live students to demonstrate
the finer points of
steer roping.
Casey is spending the week at Divide County Elementary School as an artist in
residence in cooperation with
Meadowlark Arts
Council and the North Dakota Council on the Arts.
Besides exposing students to traditional cowboy poetry, Casey will be at the
center of a program Thursday
night that is open
to the public.
The poet got to work first thing Monday with students in grades five and six.
Maria Overbo's class spent some time with Casey getting a background in cowboy
history. He pointed out that
the old time cowboys
came from all over the world, including Spain, Ireland and Scotland, but some
of the first
cowboys were former
slaves.
"The were running away from slavery after the Civil War and they headed west,"
he said, becoming some of the
roughest and
toughest cowboys of all time.
These cowboys never received the recognition they deserved, "and that's not
right," Casey tells the kids.
Though cowboys came from many cultures, their traditions evolved into what
people the world over today think
of as the American
cowboy.
"There's a lot of really neat history that goes along with our culture," and
Casey wants to make sure children realize
that culture is
still alive. Though he himself makes his living as much as a poet and
entertainer, he's still a real
working cowboy, too.
"The cowboy is still here and it's going to be awful hard to get rid of us,"
he says, before leading the children in a
poetry writing
workshop that gets them rhyming faster than a cowpoke can saddle a horse.
Casey lays out a simple and traditional cowboy poetry rhyming scheme then
turns students loose with pen and paper,
but not before
warning them to steer clear of word varmints like "purple," "orange," and
"month."
"If you do figure out something to rhyme with them let me know. I might have
to steal it," he joshes.
"What rhymes with paper?" a student asks.
"Caper," Casey offers, then asks himself, "is that a word? Yeah."
"What rhymes with horse?" another student wants to know.
"Remorse . . .of course . . ."
He spends a lot of time rhyming words and he tells the kids they'll get good
at it too, the more they practice.
The carrot he dangles for getting them to work hard is the promise that the
best of the poems written this week will
be showcased on
websites featuring cowboy poetry from other students. His website is
www.tjcasey.net, and another
site is
www.cowboypoetry.com.
Casey learned poetry at the age of 14, writing his first poem after a long day
of fencing.
"My back is sore, my eyes are red, I think it's time for bed," the poem began.
From that humble beginning, Casey has gone on to publish his cowboy poetry and
win accolades for his poetry, singing
and songwriting. His
CD, "Blue Montana Skies," is currently number 5 on the Sunset Music Chart for
Western Swing.
Casey and students will read cowboy poetry during a community event Thursday
night at 7:30 p.m. at the DCE gymnasium,
followed by a
30-minute show of Casey's music. A free will offering will be taken at the
door.
Prior to the program, Crosby wagon master Lloyd Nygaard will offer covered
wagon rides at the fairgrounds with his team
of horses beginning
at 6:30 p.m.
Nygaard will also demonstrate saddlemaking and leather works at the school on
Thursday.
Students are encouraged to wear cowboy clothes Thursday and they'll eat
specially labeled "cowboy" meals for school lunch all week.
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