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Contract" (notes by Alastair Wilson) |
the poem
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Prairie or bush bred cattle are very wild when they are first herded and driven towards market. At night-time they are liable to stampede at any sudden noise, even that of a stick breaking beneath a horse’s hoofs. It is therefore the duty of a stock man or cowboy who rides round a herd at night to sing continuously, whether he has any musical ability or not. The cattle learn to associate the sound of singing with the men who drive them and to whom they get accustomed. Therefore when they are on a cattle-ship their natural fear of the unaccustomed noises of the sea will be modified if, above the din of the gale, they can hear the strains of the ‘Swanee River’ or ‘Yip-i-addy’.[Verse 6]