Home
Fictions/Novels
Short Stories
Poems
Essays
Plays
Nonfictions
 
Authors
All Titles
 






In Association with Amazon.com

Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Eugene Field > Text of Kansas City vs. Detroit

A poem by Eugene Field

Kansas City vs. Detroit

________________________________________________
Title:     Kansas City vs. Detroit
Author: Eugene Field [More Titles by Field]

A rooster flapped his wings and crowed
A merrysome cockadoodledoo,
As out of the west a cowboy rode
To the land where the peach and the clapboard grew,
Humming a gentle tralalaloo.

"O insect with the gilded wing,"
The cowboy cried, "Pray tell me true
Why do you crane your neck and sing
That wearisome cockadoodledoo?
Would you like to learn the tralalaloo?"

Now the rooster squawked an impudent word
Whereat the angered cowboy threw
His lariat at the haughty bird
And choked him until his gills were blue
And his eyes hung out an inch or two.

"Now hear me sing," the cowboy cried;
"It ain't no cockadoodledoo--
It's a song we sing on the prairies wide--
The simple song of tralalaloo,
Which is cowboy slang for 12 to 2."


[The end]
Eugene Field's poem: Kansas City Vs. Detroit

________________________________________________



GO TO TOP OF SCREEN