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Folk Medicine in the Big Thicket
| Article
# : |
11627 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
9 / 1986 |
6,075 Words |
| Author
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Howard Peacock Award-winning writer/photographer Howard Peacock wokrs out of
Woodville, Texas. A free-lancer, he writes for scores of
national and regional publications. |
One day last spring, Jude Hart shot off a piece of his finger. He had wanted to scare a rooster sounding a raucous cocka-doodle-doo and strutting around the front yard. "That rooster just kept crow-in', louder, and louder, and the sound got to pesterin' me," Hart tells it. "I was just trying' to get a little peace and quiet on my front porch."
That morning he went inside his farm house, near Batson, Texas, on the border of Big Thicket woods, and found his ancient .22-caliber pistol. Using a roof support on his porch to steady the gun, he aimed close to the trumpeting rooster. Kapow! Unfortunately, his left forefinger partly covered the hole of the barrel.
Who's to say whether the rooster was scared more by the dust-puffing bullet, the shattering report, or Jude's recriminations? They all happened together. Jude let the screen door slam as he went into the house to get a rag. He poured kerosene on it and wrapped the bleeding finger, making sure the soaked place touched the wound. Muttering, he returned to his chair on the porch, which commanded a peaceful view of the barn, woods, mule pony, and any great grandchildren that might come hollering and running up the dirt road that leads to the porch. The kerosene burned the raw wound a while, then let up. It was good medicine, long taught in the Hart family.
"May be my age," Hart explained, referring to the gunshot goof. "Been handling' guns all my life, and this is the first time I've done a foolhardy thing like that." He laughed. His Stetson, darkened with use and sweat, sits slightly cocked on his head, belying a sense of humor behind the straight, spare frame and inborn
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