Well Windy Bill was a Texas man And he could rope, you bet The steer that Windy hadn't tied He had not met him yet But the boys they talked of a little black steer Who's a kind of a bad outlaw Who lived way down at the bottoms At the foot of a rocky draw Well, this old black steer had stood his ground With punchers from everywhere The boys give Windy two-to-one That he could not quite get there So Windy takes out his old roan horse Who's withers and like to roar And prepares to tackle that little black brute That lives down in the draw Ow! ♪ With his sam slick tree, his brazos bits His chaps and taps to boot And his old Macguey tied hard and fast Bill goes to tackle the brute And the little rope horse he sauntered around And that steer began to paw Then he stuck his tail straight up in the air And he heads down through the draw Well, Windy's horse went after him Like-a he'd been eatin' corn Windy stuck that old Macguey Right around that black steer's horns And the little ropin' horse he shut it right down And the cinches bust like straw And the old macguey and the sam slick tree Went driftin' down the draw Wow ♪ Well-a Windy lands in the big rock pile And his face and hands are scratched Well, he said he could always rope the steer But he guess he'd met his match And he pays his debts like a little old man Without no bit of jaw And allows old black steer was the boss Of everything in that draw Well, the moral of the story boys Is very plain to see When you go out to rope your steer Don't you tie hard your macguey But you take your dallies like a man To the California law And you won't see your old rimfire Go driftin' down the draw