Old car, old hat and old Mitch
with his saddle and bedroll in the trunk.
I remember, and smile.
Mitch catching the sun,
sitting on a bench at the Baca House Museum,
his shadow a portrait on the adobe wall.
Talking to tourists, educating each.
The old Baca place was saved.
Mitch had done it.
It was really his museum.
The state of Colorado got the sign.
Mitch got the bench.
But he was an artist at heart -
a cowboy artist.
His paintings were
on the cover of the Western magazines.
Blazing six guns and tall lanky men.
Covered wagons moving along the Johnson Mesa.
A wild horse viewing his domain.
A helpless Eastern girl
saved by a real hero,
and a cowboy roping a horse.
Mitch painted western legends
and he loved his West.
Most of all Mitch knew horses.
Every muscle
and posture he captured on canvas.
He made sure we would know
the look of a horse.
The old '35 Ford would head away from campus.
He left with Fisher's Peak
on his left and the sun in his eyes.
Mitch headed up river
to the valley boxed by stone walls,
where the grass was deep
and trout small and fast.
Here was the home of the cowboy.
He loved it so much
he captured it on canvas.
Oh, yes! Mitch was a cowboy all right.
I can still see the cock of his head;
hear his voice
on afternoons in the sun.
But his friends and family fixed him good.
They built a museum of western art
and named it "Mitch."
Many friends with him now on the other side
will see the irony.
Too much museum for a modest man.
revision 8-5-94
Mitch is a prototype Westerner for me. I really enjoyed him and the wisdom he had. His paintings are more important to me now. Then it was the man I knew at Trinidad Junior College in 1947