Now, the Special English Program AMERICAN STORIES.
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Today we tell a traditional American story called a
"tall tale." A tall tale is a story about a person who is larger than life. The
descriptions in the story are exaggerated – much greater than in real life. Long
ago, the people who settled in undeveloped areas in America first told tall
tales. After a hard day's work, people gathered to tell each other funny
stories.
Pecos Bill was a
larger than life hero of the American West.
No one knows who first told stories about Pecos Bill. Cowboys may have invented the stories. Others say Edward O'Reilly invented the
character in stories he wrote for The Century Magazine in the early nineteen
hundreds. The stories were collected in
a book called "The Saga of Pecos Bill" published in nineteen twenty-three.
Another writer, James Cloyd Bowman, wrote an
award-winning children's book called "Pecos Bill: The Greatest Cowboy of All
Time." The book won the Newbery Honor in
nineteen thirty-eight.
Pecos Bill was not a historical person. But he does represent the spirit of early
settlers in the American West. His unusual childhood and extraordinary actions tell
about people who believed there were no limits to what they could do. Now, here is Barbara Klein with our story.
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STORYTELLER:
Pecos
Bill had one of the strangest childhoods a boy ever had. It all started after his father decided that
there was no longer enough room in east Texas for his family.
"Pack up, Ma!" he cried. "Neighbors movin' in fifty miles away! It's getting' too crowded!"
So they loaded up a wagon with all their things. Now some say they had fifteen children while
others say eighteen. However many there
were, the children were louder than thunder.
And as they set off across the wild country of west Texas, their mother
and father could hardly hear a thing.
Now,
as they came to the Pecos River, the wagon hit a big rock. The force threw little Bill out of the wagon
and he landed on the sandy ground. Mother
did not know Bill was gone until she gathered the children for the midday
meal. Mother set off with some of the
children to look for Bill, but they could find no sign of him.
Well, some
people say Bill was just a baby when his family lost him. Others say he was four years old. But all agree that a group of animals called
coyotes found Bill and raised him. Bill did all the things those animals did,
like chase lizards and howl at the moon.
He became as good a coyote as any.
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Now, Bill spent seventeen
years living like a coyote until one day a cowboy rode by on his horse. Some say the cowboy was one of Bill's
brothers. Whoever he was, he took one
look at Bill and asked, "What are you?"
Bill
was not used to human language. At
first, he could not say anything. The
cowboy repeated his question. This time, Bill said, "varmint."
That is a word used for any kind of wild
animal.
"No you aren't," said the cowboy.
"Yes,
I am," said Bill. "I have fleas."
"Lots
of people have fleas," said the cowboy.
"You don't have a tail."
"Yes,
I do," said Bill.
"Show it to me
then," the cowboy said.
Bill
looked at his backside and realized that he did not have a tail like the other
coyotes. "Well, what am I then?" asked
Bill.
"You're a
cowboy! So start acting like one!" the
cowboy cried out. Well that was all Bill
needed to hear. He said goodbye to his
coyote friends and left to join the world of humans.
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Now,
Pecos Bill was a good cowboy. Still, he hungered for adventure. One day he heard about a rough group of men. There
is some debate over what the group was called. But one storyteller calls it the "Hell's Gate
Gang."
So Bill set out
across the rough country to find this gang of men. Well, Bill's horse soon was injured so Bill
had to carry it for a hundred miles. Then
Bill met a rattlesnake fifty feet long. The
snake made a hissing noise and was not about to let Bill pass. But after a tense minute, Bill beat the snake
until it surrendered. He felt sorry for the varmint, though, and wrapped it
around his arm.
After
Bill walked another hundred miles, he came across an angry mountain lion. There was a huge battle, but Bill took
control of the big cat and put his saddle on it. He rode that mountain lion all the way to the
camp of the Hell's Gate Gang.
Now, when Bill saw the gang he shouted
out, "Who's the boss around here?"
A huge cowboy, nine feet tall, took one look at Bill
and said in a shaky voice, "I was the boss.
But you are the boss from here on in."
With his gang, Pecos Bill was able to create the
biggest ranch in the Southwest. Bill and
his men had so many cattle that they needed all of New Mexico to hold
them. Arizona was the pasture where the
cattle ate grass.
Pecos
Bill invented the art of being a cowboy.
He invented the skill of throwing a special rope called a lasso over a
cow's head to catch wandering cattle.
Some
say he used a rattlesnake for a lasso.
Others say he made a lasso so big that it circled the whole Earth.
Bill
invented the method of using a hot branding iron to permanently put the mark of
a ranch on a cow's skin. That helped
stop people from stealing cattle. Some
say he invented cowboy songs to help calm the cattle and make the cowboy's life
easier. But he is also said to have
invented tarantulas and scorpions as jokes. Cowboys have had trouble with those
poisonous creatures ever since.
Now, Pecos Bill could ride
anything that ever was. So, as some tell
the story, there came a storm bigger than any other. It all happened during the worst drought the
West had ever seen. It was so dry that
horses and cows started to dry up and blow away in the wind. So when Bill saw the windstorm, he got an
idea. The huge tornado kicked across the
land like a wild bronco. But Bill jumped
on it without a thought.
He
rode that tornado across Texas, New Mexico and Arizona, all the time squeezing
the rain out of it to save the land from drought. When the storm was over, Bill fell off the
tornado. He landed in California. He left a hole so deep that to this day it is
known as Death Valley.
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Now, Bill
had a horse named Widow Maker. He got
that name because any man who rode that horse would be thrown off and killed
and his wife would become a widow. No one could ride that horse but Bill.
And
Widow Maker, in the end, caused the biggest problem for Pecos Bill. You see, one day Bill saw a woman. Not just any woman, but a wild, red- haired
woman, riding a giant catfish down the Rio Grande River.
Her name was Slue-foot Sue. And Bill fell in love with her at first
sight. Well, Bill would not rest until
he had asked for her hand in marriage. And
Slue-foot Sue accepted.
On
their wedding day, Pecos Bill dressed in his best buckskin suit. And Sue wore a beautiful white dress with a
huge steel-spring bustle in the back. It
was the kind of big dress that many women wore in those days — the bigger the
better.
Now, after the marriage ceremony
Slue-foot Sue got a really bad idea. She
decided that she wanted to ride Widow Maker.
Bill begged her not to try. But
she had her mind made up.
Well, the second she jumped on the horse's back he
began to kick and buck like nothing anyone had ever seen. He sent Sue flying so high that she sailed clear
over the new moon.
She
fell back to Earth, but the steel-spring bustle just bounced her back up as
high as before.
Now, there are many different stories
about what happened next. One story says
Bill saw that Sue was in trouble. She
would keep bouncing forever if nothing was done. So he took his rope out -- though some say it
was a huge rattlesnake -- and lassoed Sue to catch her and bring her down to Earth. Only, she just bounced him back up with her.
Somehow the two came to rest on the moon. And that's where they stayed. Some people say they raised a family up there.
Their children were as loud and wild as Bill and Sue were in their younger days. People say the sound of thunder that
sometimes carries over the dry land around the Pecos River is nothing more than
Pecos Bill's family laughing up a storm.
(SOUND)
(MUSIC: "(There'll Never Be Another) Pecos Bill")
ANNOUNCER:
This tall tale of Pecos Bill was adapted
for Special English and produced by Mario Ritter. Your storyteller was Barbara Klein. I'm Steve
Ember.