Welcome to Stories & Reflections

These are a collection of my stories & poems. I started at a young age writing in the early 50's. They weren't up to any great standard, but I enjoyed writing and they have improved with age.

My first poem went:

Oh my darling, oh my dear,
I love you like a bottle of beer.
Even though you are a flop,
I'd go as far as drink Soda Pop.
Pretty profound, don't ya think? At least I knew Rhyme and meter. Or as my Aussie friend would say, Pitch & Time.

From time to time I will include poetry or a story that I really enjoy. Submit a poem or story to tink43@tcsn.net and if apropriate it will be include.

Don't forget to give an opinion...

Make sure you check your cinches...

Chuck Martin



Friday, January 18, 2008

The Braggart


The Braggart”

Chuck Martin

Jim Thomas was a braggart, and could talk your ear off. He was so full of verbal lather it’ed fill a shaving mug. Wind him up on a subject, and he could go on and on. He just wouldn’t shut up. If you said you had ten head a cattle ready for sale, why he’d say he had twenty. If you said you had the fastest horse in the county, why his was fastest in the state. If you said you’d walked all the way up Pike’s Pike, he’d say he crawled all the way up and never rested. You knew he was fabricating, and he knew you knew, but it didn’t make no difference.
One Sunday morning after church I set to go fishing with my friend Tom. Driving up I could see he was heading for the barn. I walked over to greet him, and saw Tom had a cow hitched to a corral board.
“How’s it goin’, Tom?”
“Pretty good. Cows got some grub worm sores I gotta’ lance. We kin take off after I do that an’ take care of a couple other things.” There’s always something needs to be done, or fixed, when your in the ranch business.
If you didn’t know, grub worms are the larvae of bomb flies that travel through cattle’s hair. They borrow into skin, then head for the back of the cow. A sore develops as the larvae grows, full of green puss. You have to stand aside when you cut and squeeze as the contents can fly about ten feet. Tom opened his razor sharp knife.
“Hey, fella’s what’s up?” Jim yelled as he shuffled towards us from his pickup.
“Man here he comes,” Tom said. “I hope he don’t wanna’ go fishin’ with us.”
“Yeah,” I said, “that guy‘s as full of wind as a bull at corn time. Don‘t know how we‘ll get rid a’ him.”
”You fixin’ to lance that sore?” Jim said when he walked up.
“Naw,” Tom answered, “I’m fixin’ to skin this cow. What does it look like I’m doin’?”

Jim ignored the question, “I had a cow one time had a sore twice that size…”
“Yeah,” I interrupted, “an’ I suppose you had to use a chain saw to lance it?”
“Almost. Say, what you guys up to today?”
“We’re goin’ fishing.” Tom said, and realizing he’d said the wrong thing turned and proceeded to do the surgery. He brought the knife up to lance the thing…
“Hey, if’n it’s all right kin I get my rod an’ come along. I was fishin’ last week and come up with a four pound trout. Yeah, took me twenty-five minutes to land that sucker. I measured it an’ it weighed fi…”
Tom cut into the sore and squeezed. Jim, standing directly behind us, mouth wide open, didn’t get to finish his brag. We finished Toms chores, and took off for the lake. Jim followed us out. We sat there all day, and never caught a dang thing. Jim didn’t speak much.

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